RAIN, RAIN GO AWAY - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Transcription

RAIN, RAIN GO AWAY - Chattanooga Times Free Press
...
.
RAIN, RAIN
GO AWAY
Many area schools close
or delay start times today
METRO, B1
Staff Photo by John Rawlston
TO GIVE THE NEWS IMPARTIALLY, WITHOUT FEAR OR FAVOR
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Vol. 144, No. 33 • • •
A CARING PLACE
As Chattanooga’s Orange Grove Center marks its 60th anniversary,
the facility still holds special place in the lives of intellectually challenged in the city
Mayor,
judges
clash at
council
Littlefield’s nominee
for clerk withdraws
after controversy
By Cliff Hightower
Staff Writer
Staff Photo by Jay Bailey
Recycling Tech Ronnie Powell, a client of Orange Grove Center, filters through waste at the John F. Germ Recycling Center.
Employees at the facility sort through waste, dividing it into categories of recyclable material.
A high-ranking staff member
for Mayor Ron Littlefield withdrew her name Tuesday from
consideration as City Court
clerk, and within minutes two
city judges walked out of the
room after being called “unprofessional” by the city’s mayor.
Anita Ebersole, deputy to the
mayor, announced Tuesday she
would withdraw her name from
consideration as City Court
clerk.
But within minutes, Littlefield stood up and proclaimed
the two city judges “unprofessional,” which led to City Court
Judges Russell Bean and Sherry
Paty walking out of the council
chambers.
“If there were concerns about
the clerk’s office, why wasn’t it
addressed four years ago?” Paty
told the council, just before she
walked out.
See COUNCIL, Page A7
By Joan Garrett and Kevin Hardy
Staff Writers
eople told them to toss their kids
aside. Institutions were better
places for them, school officials
and doctors would say. They
needed straps and baby-sitting,
little more.
In 1953, it was illegal to educate the disabled
with state funds. Their medical needs were
complicated, and most lived only into their
20s. Still, a handful of parents with children
who struggle to move and speak and learn
decided to push back.
All revolutions start with discontent.
The group ran an ad in a local newspaper
to find other parents like themselves. They ran
it three times until they got a response. Their
cries got louder.
“Forty parents congealed,” said Rick Rader,
director of the Habilitation Center at Orange
Grove. “The school system gave them an old
P
dilapidated school [Orange Grove] to shut
them up.”
Now Orange Grove, which soon will celebrate its 60th anniversary, is a local and
national model of care for the intellectually
challenged. Its leaders from Chattanooga are
on prominent national boards and committees, including the President’s Committee for
People with Intellectual Disabilities. They
pushed successfully to raise the bar for newborn screening in Tennessee, were the first to
adopt a code of ethics for direct support staff
and co-founded the leading organization in
sensory enrichment research.
Orange Grove leaders are helping set the
tone on issues like dental care, vocational
training and Alzheimer’s treatments for the
intellectually challenged.
See GROVE, Page A8
BY THE
NUMBERS
708
750
146
43
147
People served in
2012, ages ranging
from 8 to 86
The number of fulltime staff at the
Orange Grove Center
Contributed Photo
Four Dalton, Ga., students
started a business called
Bowtie Brand.
People in residential
programs with live-in
house managers
Individuals leasing their
own homes with 24/7
staff support
4 students
build bow tie
business
Vehicles run by
the transportation
department at Orange Grove
Source: Orange Grove Center
By Joy Lukachick
Staff Writer
Study highlights spending
gaps at NCAA schools
A MOMENT
TO REFLECT
By Justin Pope
A visitor stops in front of
the crypt of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. and his wife
Coretta on what would have
been King’s 84th birthday
Tuesday in Atlanta. The
nation officially will mark
the civil rights leaders’ birthday on Monday on Martin
Luther King Jr. Day.
The Associated Press
Annual spending on sports by public universities
in six big-time conferences like the SEC and Big 12
has passed $100,000 per athlete — about six to 12
times the amount those universities are spending
per student on academics, according to a study
released today to greet college presidents arriving
at the NCAA’s annual meeting in Texas.
The study finds the largest gap by far in the SEC,
which combines relatively low academic spending
and explosive coaching salaries.
See NCAA, Page A7
Today’s poll
Yesterday’s results
as of 9 p.m. Tuesday
Do you support public school
vouchers?
Do colleges
spend too much
Q
on athletes?
© 2013 Chattanooga Publishing Co.
See BOW TIES, Page A7
The Associated Press
VOTE ONLINE
Q
timesfreepress.com
Yes: 43 percent No: 56 percent
DALTON, Ga. — Slouched at
his desk in the front row of math
class, 18-year-old Cole Calfee listens as his statistics teacher talks
about companies that don’t pay
taxes.
A classmate smacks the Dalton
High School quarterback on the
back and looks at Cole’s buddy
Robert Hardaway: “They almost
went to jail for tax evasion,” the
classmate said to the teacher.
Calfee and Hardaway laugh.
Last year the two friends and
football players had to learn how
to file a 1065 form in a two-day
rush after getting an emailed
warning from the IRS.
INDEX
Business . . . . . . C1
Classified . . . . . . F1
Comics . . . . . .E2-3
Editorials . . . . .B6-7
Life . . . . . . . . . . . E1
Metro . . . . . . . . . B1
Movies . . . . . . . . E6
National . . . . . . . A4
Newsmakers . . . A2
Obituaries . . . .B2-3
Politics . . . . . . . . A5
Puzzles . . . . E2, F3
Sports . . . . . . . . D1
Television. . . . . . E5
Weather . . . . . . . C6
World . . . . . . . . . A6
A2 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
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METRO/
REGION
■ POLICE SUED The lobby
floor of the Salvation Army
— where former federal
inmates are housed — was
mostly covered in blood.
“That floor was covered,”
said Robin Flores, who filed a
$50 million lawsuit on behalf
of a 37-year-old Chattanooga
man beaten by police. “It was
like someone took a ketchup
bottle and shook it around
and sprayed it.” The lawsuit
filed in Hamilton County Circuit Court names two former
Chattanooga police officers,
three current police officers,
11 unidentified police officers,
the city and Erlanger Health
Systems.
■ JUSTICE REFORM As
Georgia state lawmakers tackle juvenile justice
reform this year, they are
also expected to expand on
last year’s overhaul of the
adult criminal justice system. Last year’s recommendations focused on rewriting
the state’s sentencing laws
to emphasize rehabilitating
relatively low-risk nonviolent offenders in commu-
his powers restored Monday
and Mullis was rewarded
with the chairmanship of
the powerful Rules Committee that decides which bills
come up for vote.
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IN LIFE
IN BUSINESS
27.57
nity-based supervision programs rather sending them
to prison. A special state
council tasked with studying
the issue suggested tweaks
and clarifications to some of
last year’s changes, as well
as including new ideas.
6.72
Dow
13,534.89
■ ALLERGIC REACTION
Those with gluten and other
food allergies or sensitivities can find it difficult to
track down grocery stores
and restaurants that cater
to their situation. But there
are several such businesses
that have opened recently in
Chattanooga.
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Nasdaq
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■ TAMPA LINEBACKER
CHOOSES UTC The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s recent run of All-Southern
Conference and All-America
linebackers helped the Mocs
land a commitment from a
two-star prospect. Linebacker
Terrance Jenkins, of Tampa,
Fla., committed to UTC on
Monday after taking his official
visit last weekend. “That was a
big part of me making my decision,” he said of the postseason
honors earned by recent players, including rising senior Wes
Dothard, a two-time All-SoCon
pick and 2011 All-American. “I
saw that they have productive
linebackers, and for them to
play at that level they have to
have a good coach.”
NEWSMAKERS
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Children from Newtown, Conn., and Sandy Hook Elementary
school perform “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” on ABC’s
“Good Morning America.”
LOS ANGELES — Lindsay
Lohan pleaded not guilty Tuesday to three misdemeanor charges related
to a car crash and was
ordered to appear in
court for a hearing later
this month.
Her plea was entered
by her attorney Shawn
Holley, who declined
to comment after the
hearing. Lohan was not Lindsay
required to attend.
Superior Court Commissioner Jane Godfrey said the
actress must appear at a Jan. 30
pretrial hearing.
Lohan is charged with lying
to police, reckless driving and
obstructing police from performing their duties.
Police suspect Lohan
was driving her sports
car when it slammed
into a dump truck while
she was on her way to
the set of “Liz and Dick”
in early June. Lohan told
police she wasn’t behind
the wheel.
Lohan was on proLohan
bation for a 2011 necklace theft case at the
time and could face up to 245
days in jail if a judge determines
she violated her probation.
Newtown shooting
survivors record song
for charity
L.A. disc jockey who hosted
The Associated Press
six staff members were killed.
They recorded the song at the
home of two former members of
the Talking Heads rock band. It
went on sale Tuesday on Amazon
and iTunes, with proceeds benefiting a local United Way and the
Newtown Youth Academy.
Ten-year-old Kayla Verga says
she’s singing for her friend, Jessica Rekos, who was killed in the
rampage. She says it feels like Jessica is beside her, singing along
with her.
Corea, Shorter, Cole,
Spalding to play at Newport
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Chick Corea
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CIRCULATION / DELIVERY
Not guilty pleas entered
for Lohan’s misdemeanors
NEW YORK — Children who
survived last month’s shooting rampage at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook
Elementary School have recorded
a version of “Over the Rainbow” to
raise money for charity.
Twenty-one children from Newtown, Conn., sang the song Tuesday with singer-songwriter Ingrid
Michaelson on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” Most of them are
current and former students of the
school where 20 first-graders and
WRITE, CALL OR EMAIL
NEWS DEPARTMENTS
■ NEW PASSAT The sportiest, and some might say,
flashiest member of the
Volkswagen Passat family could arrive soon at a
nearby dealer with a madein-Chattanooga badge. The
Passat Performance concept,
boasting a new-to-America
turbocharged engine and
more robust styling and
driving features, was rolled
out at the North American
International Auto Show.
Frank Fischer, chief executive for VW’s Chattanooga
operations, said that if the
concept is given approval,
assembly will take place
at the automaker’s plant in
Chattanooga.
■ MULLIS REWARDED
When Georgia Lt. Gov.
Casey Cagle’s powers were
stripped by Republican state
senators in 2010 in what’s
been described as a “coup,”
Sen. Jeff Mullis, R-Chickamauga, stuck by Cagle’s side.
“He was probably one of the
lieutenant governor’s closest
allies during that period,”
said Nathan Smith, chairman of the Walker County,
Ga., Republican Party and a
writer for the political blog,
PeachPundit.com. Cagle,
who is elected statewide to
preside over the Senate, had
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NEWPORT, R.I. — Saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist
Chick Corea, singer Natalie Cole
and bassist Esperanza Spalding
are among the greats and rising
stars of the jazz world scheduled
to perform at the 59th anniversary
of the Newport Jazz Festival.
The festival’s lineup was
announced Tuesday.
This year is the 59th anniversary of the festival, which was the
first annual jazz festival in the
United States. This year, it runs
Aug. 2 to Aug. 4, and tickets go
on sale Thursday.
The festival will be celebrating
Shorter’s 80th birthday.
Other acts scheduled to appear
include Eddie Palmieri leading his
Salsa Orchestra, Roy Haynes leading his Fountain of Youth Band,
saxophonist Joshua Redman and
New Orleans greats The Dirty
Dozen Brass Band.
‘Shindig!’ dies at 73
McClatchy Newspapers
LOS ANGELES — Jimmy
O’Neill, an Oklahoman
barely out of his teens
when he became Los
Angeles’ top-rated radio
disc jockey and only 24
when he catapulted to
national celebrity as the
host of “Shindig!,” one
of the earliest rock ’n’
roll shows on primetime television, died Jimmy
Friday at his home in
West Hollywood, Calif.
He was 73.
He had diabetes and heart
problems, said his son, James
O’Neill.
In 1959, O’Neill made radio
history as the first voice heard
on KRBC-AM when
it dropped its country-western format for
rock music. It quickly
became a powerhouse in
rock radio and launched
O’Neill into television
in 1964 as the winsome
emcee of “Shindig!”
“Shindig!” was a
blast
of hot air that
O’Neill
featured frenetic dancers (including a young
Teri Garr) and mingled black and
white musicians in an era when
much of the country was still segregated.
Japanese film director
Oshima dies at 80
social issues. Oshima quickly
TOKYO — Nagisa Oshima, rose to fame as a leading Japanese “new wave” direca Japanese director
tor.
known for internaOshima stirred public
tionally acclaimed
indecency debate in Japan
f i l m s “ E m p i re o f
when he released “In the
Passion” and “In the
Realm of the Senses” in
Realm of the Senses,”
1976. Two years later,
has died of pneumoOshima won best director
nia. He was 80.
award at the Canne InterHis off ice says
national Film Festival with
Oshima died Tuesday
“Empire of Passion.”
afternoon at a hospi- Nagisa
Despite suffering a
tal near Tokyo.
Oshima
stroke in 1996, Oshima
A former student
briefly returned to filmactivist from Japan’s
ancient capital of Kyoto, Oshima making in 1999 with “Taboo,” which
debuted in 1959, often depicting became his last work.
The Associated Press
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National
NATIONAL
NEWS
Risk to all ages:
100 kids die
of flu each year
Laid-off man
wins lottery
DENVER — The widow
of a man killed in the Colorado movie theater shootings has sued a psychiatrist
who once saw suspect
James Holmes as a patient,
saying the doctor should
have asked police to detain
Holmes before the shootings.
Chantel Blunk filed suit
in Denver federal court
Monday alleging psychiatrist Lynne Fenton was negligent in not asking police
to place a 72-hour psychiatric hold on Holmes. The
suit says Holmes told Fenton on June 11 that he fantasized about killing people.
Fenton works at the
University of Colorado,
Denver where Holmes was
a student. Holmes withdrew
about five weeks before
he opened fire in the theater on July 20, killing 12,
including Blunk’s husband,
Jonathan, authorities said.
Another 70 people were
injured.
Police capture
man with explosive
MADISON, Wis. —
Police have arrested a man
who allegedly threatened
the Wisconsin Capitol on
his Facebook page and then
told officers he had a molotov cocktail in his backpack
after entering the building.
The arrest occurred
Tuesday afternoon, just
hours before Gov. Scott
Walker was scheduled to
deliver his State of the State
speech to lawmakers at the
Capitol.
Police closed one
entrance and evacuated a
portion of the building as
they investigated the contents of the man’s backpack
outside.
The governor’s administration released a statement saying the suspect is
in custody and charges are
pending.
The Associated Press
Police respond to the report of a shooting at Stevens Institute of Business and Arts
in St. Louis on Tuesday.
Gunman wounds man, self at school
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — A part-time
student strode into the office
of a longtime administrator
at a downtown St. Louis business school Tuesday and shot
the man in the chest, creating
panic in the school before
turning the gun on himself,
police said.
Both men were in surgery
Tuesday afternoon at Saint
Louis University Hospital.
Police Chief Sam Dotson
said he was optimistic both
would survive, but a hospital
spokesman declined to discuss their conditions.
Police did not identify
either man, but Dotson said
the administrator was a longtime employee in his late 40s.
He said the suspect had been
attending Stevens Institute of
Business & Arts off and on
for four years and had no his-
victim.
“This did not appear to
be random,” Dotson said. “It
appeared to be targeted.”
Britanee Jones, 24, hid
under a desk while her classmates ducked into closets or
ran out of the building. Her
mother, Angae Lowery, raced
to the school to make sure
her daughter was safe.
“She sent a text message
and said a gunman was in the
building,” Lowery said. “She
saw him [the gunman] go by
the classroom.”
When Jones emerged
from the building about an
hour-and-a-half after the
shooting, her mother and
another relative greeted her
with shrieks of joy. Jones
declined interview requests,
saying only that she was in
a fashion management class
when the shooting began.
A house is a house, even
if it floats, high court says
McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — A
house that floats on the water
and has no power to move on
its own is a home, not a vessel, the Supreme Court ruled
Tuesday.
The 7-2 decision upholds
laws in California, Washington and other states that
say floating homes that are
attached to the shore and do
not travel are governed by
local laws applying to homes,
not by federal admiralty law
regulating ships and boats.
Homeowners are able to
rely on an array of state and
local laws that protect property owners, and, with this
decision, the same is now true
for the owners of moored casinos and restaurants. State laws
give some protection to store
owners for accidents and injuries suffered by their customers or their employees. But
federal admiralty law gives
more generous protections
House approves
superstorm aid
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More
than 10 weeks after Superstorm Sandy brutalized
parts of the heavily populated Northeast, the House
approved $50.7 billion in
emergency relief for the victims Tuesday night as Republican leaders struggled to close
out an episode that exposed
painful party divisions inside
Congress and out.
RICHMOND, Va.
The vote was 241-180, and
— When Robert Gleason
officials said the Senate was
Jr. walks into Virginia’s
likely to accept the measure
death chamber tonight and
early next week and send it to
is strapped into the rarely
President Barack Obama for
used electric chair, it will
his signature. Democrats supmark the end of a twisted
ported the aid in large numquest to speed his own
bers, but there was substantial
death.
Republican backing, too, in the
Gleason says it’s not
because he wants to die, but GOP-controlled House.
“We are not crying wolf
rather because he knows
here,” said Rep. Chris Smith,
he will kill again if he’s not
R-N.J.
executed. He was already
Democrats were more
serving life in prison when
politically pointed as they
he killed his cellmate then
brushed back Southern convowed to continue killing
servatives who sought either
unless he was put to death.
to reduce the measure or offWhen the system wasn’t
set part of its cost through
moving fast enough, he
spending cuts elsewhere in
strangled another inmate
the budget.
and warned that the body
“I just plead with my colcount would rise if they
leagues not to have a double
didn’t heed his warnings.
Gleason waived his appeals, standard,” said Rep. Carolyn
Maloney of New York. “Not
and he remains in a legal
battle with his former attor- to vote tornado relief to Alaneys as they file last-minute bama, to Louisiana, to Mississippi, Missouri, to — with
appeals to try to save his
Ike, Gustav, Katrina, Rita
life against his wishes.
— but when it comes to the
“Why prolong it? The
Northeast, with the second
end result’s gonna be the
worst storm in the history of
same,” Gleason said.
our country, to delay, delay,
Wire Reports
delay.”
Inmate ready
for death
tory of threats or violence.
Dotson said police arrived
to find a “chaotic” scene with
many students running out of
the five-story historic building in the downtown loft
district of St. Louis. About
40 to 50 people were in the
building when gunfire broke
out, and police evacuated
them before starting a floorby-floor search with tactical
teams and dogs.
They found the administrator, who had been shot in
his fourth-floor office, near
an elevator, Dotson said.
Officers found the suspect
in a stairwell between the
third and fourth floors, he
said. Police found a handgun,
but a spokeswoman wasn’t
sure where.
The motive wasn’t clear,
but Dotson said the shooter
apparently sought out the
to sailors and harbor workers
who are injured working on
vessels.
In Tuesday’s ruling, the high
court narrowed somewhat the
definition of a vessel.
It is not “anything that
floats,” explained Justice Stephen G. Breyer, but something
“actually used for transportation.”
The court ruled for Fane
Lozman, who had parked his
two-story floating home at a
marina in Riviera Beach, Fla.
City officials tried to evict
him from the marina and
later sued him under federal
admiralty law over unpaid
docking fees. They eventually seized the structure as
an abandoned vessel and had
it destroyed.
Lozman appealed, arguing
his home should have been
protected under ordinary real
estate laws, not classified as a
ship subject to being seized.
The Supreme Court agreed.
EXPERIENCE
year. It also was an earlier
than normal flu season.
The government ultimately received reports of 153 flurelated deaths in children,
from 40 states, and most of
them had occurred by the
beginning of January. But the
reporting was scattershot. So
in October 2004, the government started requiring all
states to report flu-related
deaths in kids.
Other things changed, most
notably a broad expansion
of who should get flu shots.
During the terrible 2003-04
season, flu shots were only
advised for children ages 6
months to 2 years.
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention gradually expanded its flu shot
guidance, and by 2008 all
kids 6 months and older were
urged to get the vaccine. As
a result, the vaccination rate
for kids grew from under 10
percent back then to around
40 percent today.
Flu vaccine is also much
more plentiful. Roughly 130
million doses have been distributed this season, compared
to 83 million back then.
The last bad flu season for
children, was 2009-10 — the
year of the new swine flu,
which hit young people especially hard. As of early January
2010, 236 flu-related deaths of
kids had been reported since
the previous August.
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The Associated Press
NEW YORK — How bad
is this flu season, exactly?
Look to the children.
Twenty flu-related deaths
have been reported in kids
so far this winter, one of
the worst tolls this early in
the year since the government started keeping track
in 2004.
But while such a tally is
tragic, that does not mean
this year will turn out to be
unusually bad. Roughly 100
children die in an average
flu season, and it’s not yet
clear the nation will reach
that total.
The deaths this year have
included a 6-year-old girl in
Maine, a 15-year Michigan
student who loved robotics, and 6-foot-4 Texas high
school senior Max Schwolert,
who grew sick in Wisconsin
while visiting his grandparents for the holidays.
“He was kind of a gentle
giant” whose death has had
a huge impact on his hometown of Flower Mound, said
Phil Schwolert, the Texas
boy’s uncle.
Health off icials only
started tracking pediatric flu
deaths nine years ago, after
media reports called attention to children’s deaths.
That was in 2003-04 when
the primary flu germ was
the same dangerous flu bug
as the one dominating this
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Gunn says he decided
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...
. timesfreepress.com
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • A5
Politics
Obama proposing gun limits
Gun show laws
Laws requiring background checks for firearm purchases
made at gun shows vary by state. Here’s a look at which
states require full or partial checks:
SOME
MANDATORY
CHECKS
NO
NO FIREARM
MANDATORY TRANSACTIONS
CHECKS
R.I.
Del.
SOURCE: The Brady Campaign; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms
AP
Gun group chief says
industry not to blame
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — A trade
show expected to draw tens
of thousands of gun enthusiasts and manufacturers opened
Tuesday on the Las Vegas Strip
with the head of an industry
group telling conventiongoers
they weren’t to blame for the
recent mass shooting at a Connecticut elementary school.
“We are not the evildoers,” National Shooting Sports
Foundation chief Steve Sanetti
said. “You didn’t cause the
monstrous crime in Newtown,
and neither did we.”
The start of the annual
Shooting Hunting and Outdoor Trade Show at the
sprawling Sands Expo Convention Center comes amid a
national debate on gun control
following last month’s shoot-
ing in Connecticut, which
left 20 schoolchildren and
six adults dead. The gunman,
who authorities say wielded a
military-style assault rifle, also
killed himself.
In his state-of-the-industry
speech, Sanetti characterized
weapons manufacturers, sellers and buyers as “misunderstood.”
“Ours is a responsible industry that manufactures and sells
lawful products to law-abiding
citizens, who in turn exercise
their constitutional right to
own, use and enjoy firearms
safely and responsibly for lawful purposes,” he said.
Sanetti said the weapons
industry strongly supports
severe penalties for those
who misuse their right to
own firearms.
New York expands gun ban
New York Times News Service
ALBANY, N.Y. — The
New York State Assembly,
which opened its legislative session this year with
a moment of silence for the
victims of the mass shooting
in Newtown, Conn., on Tuesday approved a package of
gun measures that would significantly expand the state’s
ban on assault weapons.
Passage by the Assembly,
on a 104-43 vote, came after
nearly five hours of debate.
The Senate approved the legislation Monday night.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo
signed bill less than an hour
after the state Assembly
approved it by a 104-43 vote
on the second full day of the
2013 legislative session.
“I am proud to be part
of this government, not just
because New York has the
first bill, but because New
York has the best bill,” the
governor, a Democrat, said
at a news conference. “I’m
proud to be a New Yorker
because New York is doing
something — because we are
fighting back.”
The Associated Press
President Barack Obama plans to skirt lawmakers and
move forward on his own authority with steps to curb
the nation’s gun violence.
high-capacity ammunition magazines along with
a requirement for universal
background checks on gun
buyers. But some gun control
advocates worry that opposition from Republicans and
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conservative Democrats, as
well as the National Rifle
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“We’re not going to get an
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White House officials,
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president up for failure, have
emphasized that no single
measure — even an assault
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scourge of gun violence across
the country. But without such
a ban, or other sweeping Congress-approved measures, it’s
unclear whether executive
actions alone can make any
noticeable difference.
“It is a simple fact that
there are limits to what can
be done within existing law,”
White House spokesman Jay
Carney said Tuesday. “Congress has to act on the kinds
of measures we’ve already
mentioned because the
power to do that is reserved
by Congress.”
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is launching the nation’s most sweeping effort to curb gun violence in two decades, setting
up a legislative fight with a
deeply divided Congress that
even some of his staunchest
allies expect to fall short of
its goals.
The broad package Obama
will announce today, just
over a month after the horrific Newtown, Conn., school
shootings, is expected to
include more than a dozen
steps the president can take
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The Associated Press
At least two deadly explosions, possibly caused by
aircraft missiles or bombs,
devastated the campus of
Aleppo University in Syria
on Tuesday as students were
taking exams, a major escalation of the violent struggle
for control of the country’s
largest city. The opposition
and government blamed
each other for the blasts,
among the worst since the
Syrian conflict began nearly
two years ago.
Syria’s ambassador to the
United Nations, Bashar Jaafari, said at a Security Council
meeting that 82 people were
killed and 192 wounded in
the explosions, which he
called a terrorist attack, the
Syrian government’s blanket
terminology for the armed
insurgency against President
Bashar Assad. Opposition
sympathizers said more than
50 people were killed.
The university’s own
press office issued a statement accusing Syrian air
force MiG fighter planes of
targeting the campus in two
missile attacks three minutes apart, destroying buildings and causing “massive
destruction in the surrounding roads.” The statement
denounced the attacks as a
“criminal act.”
It was unclear if the press
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view of the leadership of the
university, which is in a government-controlled part of
the city.
Once the commercial center of Syria, Aleppo has been
struck by numerous shellings, bombings and airstrikes.
But the university been conducting classes and trying to
provide some appearance of
normalcy despite the mayhem
and deprivation that have ravaged other parts of the city,
and the campus area had been
largely spared until Tuesday.
The Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, an anti-government group based in Britain with a network of contacts
in Syria, reported 52 people
were killed and dozens injured
in the explosions at Aleppo
University, while Syria’s staterun SANA news service did
not specify the number of
casualties.
SANA attributed the death
and destruction to at least
two rockets fired by what it
called an unspecified “terrorist group.”
Witness accounts painted a picture of utter panic
as the explosions shattered
examination day with billowing smoke, fire and showers
of fragmented concrete and
glass.
Egyptian train crash kills 19
McClatchy Newspapers
CAIRO — A train derailed
and crashed in Egypt on Tuesday, killing 19 soldiers, the
health ministry said.
The accident happened
when a carriage derailed and
hit a freight train about 20
miles south of Cairo, said Hussein Zakareya, chief of Egypt’s
Railway Authority.
The train was returning to
the capital from the southern
Assiut province with more
than 1,300 conscripts on
board.
President Mohammed
Morsi visited victims of the
crash, who were transported to
a military hospital in Cairo.
“This is a sad day for Egyptians. I send my condolences
to the families of martyrs
who were on their way to
fulfill their national duty and
my prayers to the injured for
speedy recovery,” said Morsi.
Prime Minister Hisham
Qandil visited the scene, where
117 people were injured.
Facing mounting pressure
to improve rail safety, Morsi
appointed a new transportation minister two weeks ago.
“Allocating enough resources for developing railways and
revising the distribution of the
coming budget to save lives of
people would be the priority,”
the deputy chairman of Freedom and Justice Party, Essam
al-Erian, said.
Dozens of people staged
a protest in Cairo’s main
railway station after the
incident, chanting slogans
against the government and
Morsi’s Islamist supporters.
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Explosions strike Syrian
university, killing dozens
BAMAKO, Mali — After a
punishing bombing campaign
failed to halt the advance of alQaida-linked fighters, France
pledged Tuesday to send hundreds more troops into Mali as
it prepared for a land assault
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country.
The move reversed France’s
earlier insistence on providing
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troops.
France plunged headfirst
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colony last week, bombarding
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the Islamist domination of
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But despite five days of
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military camp in the central
Malian town of Diabaly on
Monday.
On Tuesday, France
announced it was tripling the
number of soldiers in Mali
from 800 to 2,500. The offensive was to have been led by
thousands of African troops
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but they have yet to arrive,
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supporting role.
French President Francois
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Tuesday that he believed
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New York Times News Service
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35326640
A6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • A7
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
Council
• Continued from Page A1
• Continued from Page A1
That was just one of the
firsts for the new business
owners, who had started their
own company from nothing
more than their fondness for
bow ties and a sketch on a
napkin.
Now, the 18-year-olds
and two other friends — all
chums since kindergarten
— churn out thousands of
dollars in profit sewing their
own bow ties and selling
them along with T-shirts,
hats and visors under their
Bowtie Brand logo.
And with the help of a
New York manufacturer,
their company will expand
this year and start to offer
silk bow ties.
“It’s been really rewarding to see an idea turn into
something you can hold and
see,” Calfee said.
While their friends cut
grass and flipped burgers for
extra cash, Calfee, Hardaway,
Cole Townsend and Sam
Wilson schemed all summer
in 2011 to find a creative way
to make money.
First, the teens bought a
Sea-Doo personal watercraft
and then tried to turn around
and sell it at a profit. But they
earned only $10 when they
sold it back to the guy they
had bought it from the next
day.
They thought about
inventing, but the ideas were
all stupid, Hardaway said.
What about designing
clothes? Cole Townsend
brought the idea to Hardaway:
“Dude, we need to start
a clothing line, that’s where
it’s at,” Townsend told his
friend.
The teens already wore
checkered bow ties inspired
by Calfee’s dad, who loves to
wear them, and they started
thinking about how to market them. On a napkin at a
cafe in Rome, Ga., Townsend
sketched a striped bow tie,
which the boys turned into
The storm that swooped
in on the council Tuesday
started over the weekend
when Littlefield placed Ebersole’s name on the agenda to
be named City Court clerk.
The job has been handled by
interim City Court Clerk Jan
Turner for the last four and a
half years.
Bean and Paty said in interviews over the weekend they
felt the mayor only intended
to place her in the position so
she could ride out her time
until retirement. They also
questioned her experience and
the fact she would still maintain a salary of $95,000 annually, twice the amount Turner
makes.
Ebersole told council members Tuesday she already had
reached retirement status and
within the city and she only
wanted to go to the position
to help improve it. She told
the council she had years of
previous experience working
within the court system.
But in the end, she said
she wanted the controversy
to die.
“I don’t want to put any
council member in the position of voting for me or
against me,” she said. “I’m
withdrawing my name from
consideration, and no vote is
necessary.”
She told the council she
considered “this matter
ended.”
But Littlefield stood up
after some brief comments
by Councilman Jack Benson
and Bean and said the blame
for no progress at the clerk’s
office rests on the shoulders
of Paty and Bean.
“It’s held back by the judges wanting to keep things the
way they are,” he said.
He told the council the
judges should spend more
time telling what they do
want and less time talking
about what they don’t want.
Paty immediately rose to
respond, but Council Chairwoman Pam Ladd said she
would not accept any more
comments unless it was about
the court clerk position. Councilwoman Deborah Scott began
to speak about an attempt to
“get rid of City Court.”
“You’re out of order,” Ladd
said.
“We heard the executive
office give damnation to the
City Court judges and then
we’re not going to let the judges respond?” Scott responded.
Paty once again tried to
talk, but Ladd told her the
council was moving on.
Paty said afterward the
said. “Why not also govern
how many ancillary personnel you can have?”
NCAA spokesman Erik
Christianson said in a brief
emailed statement that colleges make their own spending decisions and “are reluctant to cede authority over
their budgets to the NCAA.”
Two spokesmen for the SEC
did not respond to phone
messages and emails seeking
comment.
The conceit of the study
— comparing per capita
spending on athletes versus
academic spending — carries
some caveats. Universities
already “spend” widely varying amounts on different types
of students; those in majors
requiring special equipment, or
offering small classes, already
benefit from more spending,
as might those signing up for
extra-curriculars or special
tutoring.
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Median athletic spending
there totaled nearly $164,000
per athlete in 2010. That’s
more than 12 times the $13,390
that SEC schools spent per
student for academic expenses, including instructional
costs and student services.
The schools of the Pac-10
(now the Pac 12), ACC, Big
Ten and Big East also averaged six-figure spending per
student athlete in 2010, the
study finds. Across Division
I, athletic spending — though
still smaller in absolute terms
— rose twice as fast as academic spending between 2005
and 2010. During that period,
the schools competing in the
top-level Football Bowl Subdivision of the NCAA upped
their athletic expenditures
on average $6,200 per athlete
each year, according to data
compiled by the Delta Cost
Project at American Institutes
for Research as part of an
ongoing project with the proreform Knight Commission on
Intercollegiate Athletics.
The report does not provide information about ratios
at individual institutions.
Overall, FBS schools spent
on average $92,000 per athlete
in 2010, or just under seven
times what they were spending per student on academics at a time of falling state
funding for higher education
in much of the country, and
tuition increases widely outpacing inflation. The report
did find, however, the growth
rate seemed to be slowing.
The figures likely won’t
shock college presidents
arriving in Grapevine, Texas,
for the NCAA convention, but
they will highlight their rising
concern over out-of-control
spending on intercollegiate
athletics that threatens to
sink budgets and compromise their academic missions.
Some want the NCAA to do
more to address the issue
even if it can’t legally limit
salaries.
“How many sport video
analysts do you really need?”
said John Dunn, president of
Western Michigan University, who gave a talk Tuesday at a preliminary portion
of the meeting on rising
inequality in college athletics. “How many assistants
for a coach — not assistant
coaches, [but] assistant
office personnel, to keep his
life straight?”
“While the NCAA wants to
avoid being overly intrusive,
they have never had a problem
saying there should be x number of coaches and x number
of scholarships awarded,” he
www.bowtiebrand.com
35277704
• Continued from Page A1
their company logo, which
they called Bowtie Brand.
Online they searched for a
sewing machine, then drove
to Atlanta to buy it — a 1953
Singer manual machine.
“We got thread, and a
needle and some fabric and
started sewing and tried to
make something in the shape
of a bow tie,” Hardaway said.
[The first tie] was awful. It
was terrible.”
But they kept practicing,
and eventually they got good
enough to make an entire tie
in 20 minutes, which got the
teens badgered at school.
“Naturally, you get a lot
of flak,” Calfee said with a
laugh.
Thanks to online marketing, orders started to come in
from all over the country for
the $38 ties with names like
Pink and Green Charleston
Seersucker, The Firehouse,
The Squire and The Washington, all in bright checked
or striped patterns.
Students, friends, football
players all bought ties.
Even assistant football
coach Jim Bennett bought
one.
“At first I thought it was
a joke,” Bennett said. “[But]
they will be successful whatever they set their mind to
do.”
So far they have sold
about 75 ties and hundreds
of hats and T-shirts. They’ve
just sold out of their winter
line and are planning their
spring sales.
But their business is doing
more than putting money in
their pockets.
Last spring, when the
teens started making a profit,
they pledged to give away 10
percent, first to their church,
then to nonprofit organizations and missions.
“Our company is based on
Colossians 3:23, ‘Whatever
you do, work at it with all
your heart, as working for
the Lord, not for men,’” Calfee said.
Some people say the company will dissolve when its
founders get to college. But
the four partners talk about
expanding, one day looking
at investors or even going
on ABC’s “Shark Tank,” a
TV show where millionaires
invest in companies with
good ideas.
Calfee, who is still deciding whether to major in premed or business, said they
hope to take their company
nationwide wherever they go
to school.
“We’ve got to have a bigger
vision than just the Southeast
and be able to take it to the
next level,” he said.
Contact staff writer Joy
Lukachick at jlukachick@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6659.
ONLINE
NCAA
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
Cole Calfee, left, and Robert Hardaway speak about
their clothing company Bowtie Brand.
cil would not let them have a
chance to speak.
“I’m very disappointed
in the council not letting us
respond,” he said.
Contact staff writer Cliff
Hightower at chightower@
timesfreepress.com or 423-7576480. Follow him at twitter.
com/cliffhightower or facebook.com/cliff.hightower.
35277709
Bow ties
judges never opposed any
changes the mayor had for the
City Court system. She said
he never consults them when
changes are being made.
“I’m not opposed to what
they want to do,” she said.
“It’s the manner in which
they do it.”
Bean said as a judge he
could not believe the coun-
35326588
...
. timesfreepress.com
A8 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Two killed, one injured
in college shooting
The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. —
Authorities say two people
were shot and killed and a
teen wounded in the parking
lot of an eastern Kentucky
community college.
A police dispatcher told
The Associated Press the
shooting happened Tuesday
afternoon at Hazard Commu-
nity & Technical college in
Hazard, Ky. The dispatcher
spoke on condition of anonymity because the coroner
on site was the only official
allowed to be quoted by
name.
The dispatcher said the
injured teen was being taken
to the University of Kentucky
hospital.
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Travis Parks interacts with Soundbeam, a piece of technology that translates movement into music, in the Sharon
Thorn Music Center at Orange Grove.
— Rick Rader,
director of the Habilitation Center at
Orange Grove
speaks of a boy who compulsively eats. Another
who compulsively drinks.
Some are terrified of light
and sounds and movements
because of sensory disorders. And it can be difficult
to determine the best treatments. How do you discover
the cause of pain for someone who can hardly communicate? It takes research. And
the fruits of research are all
over Orange Grove.
Orange Grove built a room
called Snoezelen to help
those with sensory disorders. It has a ball pit, padded
floors and tubes of bubbly
water. Soft flashing lights and
angelic music radiate. A fidgety child can swing in a sling
and play with a fiber-optic
shawl of lights. Children can
watch the dark floor illuminate like nighttime stars.
A special dental clinic
eases the nerves of patients
and students. There is a
movie screen on the ceiling
and a jukebox that plays their
favorite songs. Doctors, therapists, advocates, volunteers,
teachers and psychologists
are around each corner. The
dentist is one of six in the
United States who is fellowship trained on intellectual
disabilities.
“We aren’t a think tank,”
Rader said. “We are an action
tank.”
St u d e n t s i n O ra n ge
Grove’s school have needs
too complicated to be served
in regular schools. Unlike
public schools that push
inclusion for special education students, the center provides a secluded environment
for learning and treatment.
Hamilton County Schools
contracts with Orange Grove
to provide services for 63
students — a figure that continues to decline.
Margaret Abernathy,
director of special education
for the school district, said
her department wouldn’t
maintain its relationship
with the center if the programming wasn’t on par.
“I think it’s a very valuable
program for the community,”
said Abernathy, who taught
at Orange Grove for 13 years.
“It serves a particular population of students with a level
of disabilities that require a
very restrictive setting.”
Rader, who has worked to
build Orange Grove’s success
and reputation for 15 years,
clearly is thrilled about the
center being on the cutting edge. He can rattle off
accomplishments and risks
rewarded in every area.
But not all care for the disabled is as comprehensive.
Not all care is as informed
and integrated.
Orange Grove officials
want to expand its services
and adult employment service if possible, if funding
materializes. The center
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Walking through the halls
of Orange Grove will teach
you a lot about the specific
needs of the severely intellectually challenged. Chairs
and contraptions clutter the
entrances to classrooms.
Each is specially designed,
ranging in price from $800 to
$1,500. Some are boards with
straps. Others look like seats
on a space station.
“We don’t hide them,”
Rader said. “We are proud.”
On the walls hang artwork
and historic markers. There
are bumper stickers from the
days when parents fought for
equal access for their children. “One of my kids goes to
school. Why not the other?”
“My kid has more chromosomes than yours.”
Some individuals dance
down the hallway with
smiles that look permanent.
A favorite area for people to
congregate has kites hanging
from the ceiling. A big red
button turns fans on, making
the kites buoy from side to
side. In a music room, a man
named Travis makes his own
jazz with a motion sensor
machine. The teacher plays
piano to accompany him.
Still, many others are
despondent. Moaning instead
of speaking. A woman at
lunch lurches and spits up
her food. A female employee
beside her cleans her mouth
and spoons another bite.
A boy in one classroom
watches visitors with wide
eyes and slides on the floor
to a swing where he’ll sit.
The teacher helps him up.
So many have complex
medical histories. Rader
706-937-3972
35277708
“It’s one of those things
that might not get included
in the promotional brochure
for Chattanooga, but it adds a
depth to this community and
social sensitivity that larger
communities can’t claim,”
Mayor Ron Littlefield said.
Orange Grove, is a private,
nonprofit agency that offers
a continuum of care from
birth to death with schools,
residential programs, group
homes and jobs. Still, what it
offers with a near $35 million
budget isn’t enough.
Desperate parents call
the center from all over the
country. Some have moved
to Chattanooga to establish
residency and qualify their
children for treatment and
education. Others have limited their careers to stay close
to the center.
Orange Grove can accept
only 700 individuals in its
programs, but there is a
waiting list of 7,000 for statefunded services in Tennessee
and 5,717 in need of services
in Georgia, Rader said.
“These are inordinate,
inappropriate and shameful
wait lists,” he said.
And the demand won’t be
satisfied soon. Financing for
disability services just isn’t a
priority for the state and federal government, especially
when so many programs are
at risk of funding cuts, Rader
said. It’s expensive to provide
centers like Orange Grove.
Some individuals rack up
millions of dollars worth of
treatment, he said.
The country is still wrestling with the question: Is it
worth it?
80 N. Three Notch Road • Ringgold, GA
opened two intermediate
care facilities off U.S. Highway 27 recently and has
grown into Georgia.
“There is a misnomer, a
mythology that society takes
care of the least fortunate,”
Rader said. “They may get
care, but they don’t get good
care.”
Contact staff writer Joan
Garrett at jgarrett@times
freepress.com or 423-7576601. Follow her on Twitter
at @JoanGarrettCTFP.
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• Continued from Page A1
“We aren’t a think
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• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013
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RICK DAVIS
Senators
leave us
in the
dark
It’s not because of her
qualifications. No way,
Jose.
Dr. Marilyn Brown is
one of the most qualified
people on the planet to
sit on the TVA board. Her
resume is 26 pages long.
She’s a rock star; if Lebron
James was into energy
efficiency, he’d be Marilyn
Brown.
Nobel Prize co-recipient. More stuff published
than she can remember. Years at Oak Ridge
National Lab. A professor
at Georgia Tech. Easily
one of the smartest people in the
South.
But
two weeks
ago, her
resume
shrank a
bit. All
because
David Cook U.S. Sens.
Lamar
Commentary
Alexander
and Bob Corker refused to
recommend her renomination to the TVA board,
where she’s been serving
for the past two years.
“We encourage the
president to send another
nominee with credentials
better suited to the TVA
board,” their joint statement read.
Friday, a pact of nine
state and national environmental groups delivered a response, an open
letter to the senators,
requesting two things:
The senators explain
their reasons for blocking
her reappointment;
And, if the White
House resubmits her
name for nomination, that
they approve it.
“We have not heard
back from either Senate
office,” emailed Jennifer
Rennicks, director of
policy and communications with the Southern
Alliance for Clean Energy,
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
Drego Trujillo, left; Fabiola Gonzalez, center; and Cesar Trujillo, right, wait as Fabiola Gonzalez opens her umbrella in preparation for
the rainy walk home from Blue Ridge School in Dalton, Ga., early Tuesday afternoon.
SCHOOL TIMES
Flood watch
Several school systems
will open later today or are
closed because of flooded
roads and high water.
Schools in other districts
are expected to make
similar announcements
this morning. Visit
timesfreepress.com for the
latest closings.
Rain may ease but high waters will build
By Tyler Jett
Staff Writer
F
inally, the rain should stop
today, but don’t get too
excited.
The precipitation should
return Thursday. And in between,
the flood conditions aren’t going
anywhere.
Rain will continue through the
early part of this morning before
slowing to a drizzle later this
afternoon, WRCB-TV3 meteorologist Paul Barys said. But before the
rain stops, water levels in streams
and creeks will continue to rise,
causing floods that can affect
today’s traffic routes and class
schedules.
Meanwhile, some roads may
be closed today because of flooding. On Tuesday, law enforcement
officials and emergency responders ordered several roads to shut
down, at least temporarily. That
included Boy Scout Road, West
38th Street and Igou Ferry Road.
And in Chattooga County, Ga.,
that included Lyerly Dam Road,
which closed early in the afternoon and still had not opened as
of Tuesday night.
Barys said the rain should be
light by noon today, though clouds
still will cover the sky. And on
Thursday, more rain should arrive.
If so, the area will mark the ninth
straight day with rain.
“If you’re looking at the whole
kit and kaboodle, we’re talking
about 4 to 6 inches of rain,” Barys
said.
The National Weather Service’s Morristown, Tenn., office
announced that a flood watch in
East Tennessee will remain in
effect until noon today. The rain
shouldn’t be heavy, but its persistence will overwhelm already full
bodies of water.
On Tuesday evening, the Tennessee Emergency Management
Agency declared a state of emerSee WATCH, Page B5
■ Catoosa County — Twohour delay
■ Chattooga County
— Three-hour delay
■ Dade — Two-hour delay
■ Walker — Two-hour delay
■ Hamilton County
Schools — Two-hour delay.
Child care will begin at the
normal time.
■ Marion County — Closed
■ McMinn County —
Closed
■ Notre Dame High School
— Two-hour delay
■ Polk County — Closed
■ Sweetwater City —
Closed
■ Richard Hardy School
— Closed
See COOK, Page B5
Gov. Bill
Haslam
speaks
to a Boy
Scout
group in
Lebanon,
Tenn.,
Tuesday.
Beating prompts suit against city, officers
By Beth Burger
Staff Writer
The Associated Press
Governor
wants more
college grads
The lobby floor of the Salvation Army — where former federal inmates are housed — was
mostly covered in blood.
“That floor was covered,”
said Robin Flores, who filed a
$50 million lawsuit on behalf of
a 37-year-old Chattanooga man
beaten by police. “It was like
someone took a ketchup bottle
and shook it around and sprayed
it.”
The lawsuit filed in Hamilton County Circuit Court names
■ Attorney Robin Flores
is seeking $50 million in
damages on behalf of Adam
Tatum.
two former Chattanooga police
officers, three current police
officers, 11 unidentified police
officers, the city and Erlanger
Health Systems.
Adam Tatum suffered six
fractures to his right leg and two
fractures to his left leg — including a compound fracture — while
he was being arrested on June 14
at the Salvation Army office on
McCallie Avenue.
Officers had responded to a
disorder at the facility where
Tatum was reportedly kicking
a door of the office and had a
knife.
Flores said former Officers
Adam Cooley and Sean Emmer
along with other officers on the
scene and hospital staff did nothing to help Tatum once he was
injured and in custody.
As a result of the incident,
Cooley and Emmer were fired.
The Associated Press
See HASLAM, Page B5
See LAWSUIT, Page B5
Summer of change in store
for new Passport Scholars
By Erik Schelzig
LEBANON, Tenn. — Gov. Bill Haslam
announced Tuesday that he wants to put
Tennessee on a path toward boosting college graduation rates by 23 percentage
points by the year 2025.
Haslam said the state’s current rate of
32 percent of adults holding a post-secondary degree is not enough to meet the
requirements of the modern job market.
The Republican governor said he wants to
improve that number to 55 percent over the
next dozen years.
“It is an ambitious goal, but if we’re
going to compete, we’re going to have to do
that,” Haslam told reporters after speaking
to a Boy Scouts group in Wilson County.
“I’ve always said college is not for everybody, but it has to be for more Tennesseans
than it has in the past.
“And if 60 percent of the new jobs that
are being created are going to require a
degree, then we need to have a population
that mirrors that,” he said.
James Smith, one of the first
responding officers, was not disciplined. Federal authorities have
opened an investigation into
Emmer and Cooley’s actions.
Tatum remains incarcerated
at Silverdale Correctional Facility. He uses a cane to walk, Flores
said.
Flores said he studied the
incident caught on video for
three hours before drafting the
complaint.
“I don’t know if we’ll get any-
By Kevin Hardy
Staff Writer
Contributed Photo
A summer program in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park gave
Chattanoogan Keylee Jones much more than just an education in the
outdoors.
A summer program in
Wyoming’s Grand Teton
National Park gave city girl
Keylee Jones much more
than just an education in the
outdoors.
“What I took from it is
that there is a lot out there
about the world that I haven’t
experienced yet,” she said. “It
just opened my eyes to how
much I was missing out on
and it showed me how far I
actually can go. I don’t have
to limit myself.”
Jones, now a freshman
at Denison University planning on becoming a doctor,
was one of several students
■ To contact Local News • Phone: 423-757-6317 • Fax: 423-668-5062 • Email: news@timesfreepress.com
■ Organizers hope
the program will give
recipients a leg up on
college preparation and
begin to give them a view
of life outside Chattanooga.
selected for the Public Education Foundation’s Passport Scholars, which funds
summer educational trips
for female Hamilton County
high school sophomores.
Organizers hope the program
will give students a leg up
on college preparation and
begin to give them a view of
life outside Chattanooga.
See SCHOLARS, Page B5
B2 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
OBITUARIES
Jimmie Doss
Jimmie Lou Doss, 76, of SoddyDaisy, passed away Monday, Jan.
14, 2013.
Mrs. Doss
was a member of Dallas
Bay Baptist
Church.
She was
preceded in
death by her
parents, Robert and Alta
M cFa rl a n d
Jirlds; sisters, Lorene Parrott,
Catherine May; and brother, Carl
Jirlds.
Survivors include her sons,
Clifton Duggan, of Dayton, Tenn.,
and Ken (Marilyn) Duggan, of
Soddy-Daisy; daughter, Tiffany
(Billy) Swanson, of Soddy-Daisy;
six grandchildren; four greatgrandchildren; three nieces; and
four nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. today in the funeral home
chapel with Dr. David McNabb
officiating.
Interment will follow in Hamilton County Memorial Park.
Share your memories, stories and photos at www.legacy
funeralhome.com.
Arrangements are by Legacy
Funeral Home and Cremation
Center, Soddy-Daisy.
Arthur Dunnigan
Arthur James Dunnigan, 89,
went home to his Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, on Saturday, Jan. 12,
2013.
He was
born on Sept.
4, 1923, in
Richmond,
Va.
He was
educated in
H u n t sv i l l e,
Ala. He enlisted in the U.S.
Army and
served as a Sergeant in World
War II. He was a member of
Orchard Knob Missionary Baptist Church.
He was a hard worker, usually
working two jobs to support his
family. He was a quiet, loyal, loving
and supportive man. He worked
several jobs including 18 years at
Erlanger hospital and retired from
Walter A. Wood Supply after 35
years at the age of 80.
During his retirement, he
enjoyed word games, reading and
watching “Law and Order” (all
of them). He loved to travel and
spend time with his family.
Arthur was preceded in death
by his parents, Harry Dunnigan,
Lou Ollie Kelly Dunnigan-Toney;
and sister, Lucy Battle; and nephew, Abraham Battle.
Precious and loving memories will remain with loving wife
of 60 years, N. Berthene Dunnigan; daughters, Yvonne (Yancey)
Thomas, Lily Dunnigan, of Chattanooga, and Cynthia (Lonnie)
Dawkins, of Nashville; seven
grandchildren, Michael J., Kerry
L., Anthony L. and Kenisha N.
Dunnigan, of Chattanooga, and
Damien O., Jacqueline M. and
Danielle E. Dawkins, of Nashville; eight great-grandchildren;
nieces, nephews, other relatives
and friends.
Services will be held at noon
on Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at
Orchard Knob Missionary Baptist Church.
Interment in Lakewood, East.
The body will lie in state after
noon today at John P. Franklin
Funeral Home, 1101 Dodds Ave.,
622-9995.
Paul Elliot Sr.
Paul Warner Elliot Sr., 77, of
Red Bank, passed away Tuesday,
Jan. 15, 2013.
He was a United States Army
veteran and a member of Laborers Local #846. Paul was born one
of 13 children on Jan. 5, 1936, in
Byron, N.Y.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Margaret S. Elliott; and
daughter, JoAnn Bolden.
Gerald Gawron
Gerald Michael Gawron, 63,
passed away Friday, Jan. 11, 2013.
He brought his family to Tennessee 21 years ago from Buffalo,
N.Y.
He was the husband of Noreen Wagner Gawron (deceased);
father to Shawn Gawron, Blasdell,
N.Y., and Scott Gawron, Ooltewah.
He is also survived by his brother,
David Gawron; nieces, Kim Kowalczyk and Amanda Gawron; and
mother-in-law, Marge Timm.
Prayer services will be held
2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at
Heritage Funeral Home chapel
with Father Gilbert Diaz officiating.
Visit www.heritagefh.com. to
share words of comfort to the
family.
The family will be receiving
friends from noon until 2 p.m.
Thursday at Heritage Funeral
Home & Cremation Services,
7454 East Brainerd Road, Chattanooga.
Katie Brown
Jimmie Doss
Arthur Dunnigan
Paul Elliot Sr.
Gerald Gawron
Edward Glenn Jr.
Marjorie Higdon
Lonnie Hood Sr.
Dorothy Lawrence
Avanell Morris
Katherine Nelson
John Sanders
Alan Thomas
John Turcotte
Tennessee
Don Dowdy
Louise Graig
Edna Hickey
Marjorie Higdon
Marjorie Higdon, 76, Guntersville, Ala., formerly of Signal
Mountain, passed away Monday,
Jan. 15, 2013.
Arrangements to be
announced by Lane Funeral
Home, Ashland Terrace, 423877-3524.
ane Funeral Home
Lonnie Hood Sr.
Lonnie Hood Sr., 72, passed
away on Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013, at
a local health care facility.
Arrangements by John P.
Franklin Funeral Home, 1101
Dodds Ave., 622-9995.
Dorothy Lawrence
Dorothy Hines Lawrence, 80,
passed away on Thursday, Jan. 10,
2013, at a local health care facility.
“ D o t ”
as she was
affectionately
known is a
graduated
from Howard
High’s class
of 1951. She
was formerly
employed
with Chattanooga Public Schools as a substitute teacher for the following
schools: Avondale Elementary,
Joseph E. Smith and Clara Carpenter. Dorothy also performed
private sitting CNA in private
homes, St. Barnabas and later at
the Davis Nursing Home.
She was a faithful member of
Rose of Sharon Missionary Baptist Church where she served
in the following areas: Sunday
school teacher, Senior Choir,
Missionary Society, Women’s
Auxiliary. She also represented
Rose of Sharon in the BM&E
(Baptist, Missionary and Educational) Society at the district
meetings. During her personal
time she enjoyed the following
hobbies of bowling, traveling,
softball and singing.
She was preceded in death by
both of her husbands, Otis Hines
and Lindsey Lawrence; parents,
John and Christine Bigoms;
brother, Williams Bigoms; sister,
Gussie Manns; sister-in-law, Maggie Bigoms; and nephew, Michael
D. Bigoms.
Survivors include brother,
Tony C. Bigoms Sr., of Atlanta;
nephews, Curtis R. Bigoms Sr.
and Tony C. Bigoms, both of
Chattanooga; nieces, Bernadette
(Carlos) Lavender, of Georgia,
and Quennechous “C.C.” Bigoms
Posley, of Chattanooga; greatnephew, Pasqueal Bigoms, Curtis R. Bigoms Jr., Jonah Gadsden,
Tyler Lavender and Tony Bigoms
III; great-niece, Camille Lavender,
all of Atlanta; devoted cousins,
Robert and Elroy Bailey, of Chattanooga, and Barbara Register, of
Staten Island, N.Y.; a host of other
relatives and friends.
Services will be held at noon
Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at Rose
of Sharon Missionary Baptist
Church with Pastor Charles
Moore officiating.
Interment in Chattanooga
National Cemetery.
The body will lie in state after
Georgia
Melvin Ballard
Mary Beasley
Louie Stevenson
Leon Teems
Alabama
Eric Carter
Glennia Gann
Evia Story
EDITOR’S NOTE: Obituaries printed in today’s edition
are submitted by funeral homes. The newspaper prints
the notices as provided. The first 50 words are free. A
charge of 50 cents per word is made for each word after
that. The photo charge is $25. For information on an
individual obituary, contact the appropriate funeral home.
The deadline for obituaries is 3 p.m. daily.
■ For more information about obituaries or to order a
laminated memorial bookmark, call 423-757-6348 or go
to memorialbookmarks.netfirms.com/chattanooganew.
■ To place an In Memory ad, contact the classified
advertising department at 757-6200.
noon today at John P. Franklin
Funeral Home, 1101 Dodds Ave.
622-9995.
Edward Glenn Jr.
Edward Glenn Jr., 28, of Chattanooga, passed away Thursday,
Jan. 10, 2013.
A r ra n ge m e n t s w i l l b e
announced by Taylor Funeral
Home of Chattanooga Inc.
Kermit Lawson
Dorothy Rollins
Charlie Stembridge
Elden Wilson
Elizabeth Wilson
tribute.
The family will receive
friends from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday
at Heritage Funeral Home, 7454
East Brainerd Road, Chattanooga,
TN 37421.
John Sanders
Avanell Morris
Avanell Gillespie “Marcie”
Morris, 85, of Soddy-Daisy, passed
away on Saturday, Jan. 12, 2013.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
today, Jan. 16, in the funeral home
chapel with the Rev. Grady Cooper officiating.
Burial will follow at Hamilton
County Memorial Park.
Visitation is one hour prior to
the service today at the funeral
home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made
to Hospice of Chattanooga, P.O.
Box 46, Chattanooga, TN 37401;
or the Alzheimer’s Association at
www.alz.org.
Condolences and memories
may be shared at www.williamson
andsons.com.
Arrangements are by Williamson & Sons Funeral Home,
8852 Dayton Pike Soddy-Daisy,
TN 37379.
Katherine Nelson
Katherine Dixon Stamey
Nelson, 91, of Ooltewah, went
home to be with her Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ on Monday,
Jan. 14, 2013, at
home.
Mrs. Nels o n wa s a
member of
Covenant
Presbyterian Church.
She attended
Wo m e n ’ s
College of the
University
of North Carolina, where she
received her bachelor’s degree,
and later graduated with a master’s degree in home economics
from the University of Tennessee,
Knoxville. She taught at the college level and eventually taught
public school. She enjoyed family gatherings, Bible study, hymn
singing, sewing, painting, and
arts and crafts.
Mrs. Nelson was preceded in
death by her husband of 54 years,
William Howard Nelson Sr.; her
parents, Robert Franklin Stamey
and Annie Mae Alexander Stamey; and three of her brothers,
the Rev. Robert Stamey, Bill Stamey and the Rev. Ben Stamey.
Surviving family members
include her children, William
Howard (Helen) Nelson Jr.,
Birmingham, Ala.; Helen Anne
Nelson, Katherine Jane Nelson,
both of Ooltewah; grandchildren,
Brian Howard (Deborah) Nelson,
Waxhaw, N.C., Bradley Wayne
(Coy Beth) Nelson, Greenville,
S.C., and Will Thomas Nelson,
Knoxville; great-grandchildren,
Sarah Elise Nelson and Andrew
David Nelson, Nancy Lane Nelson and Henry Thomas Nelson;
sisters, Eliza Stamey Ross, Margaret Stamey Royster, Betty Stamey Simpson; and one brother,
Gilbert (Nancy) Stamey.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, in the funeral
home chapel with the Rev. Render Caines and the Rev. Eric Mullinax officiating.
Interment will follow at Chattanooga National Cemetery.
Special thanks are given to
the fine nurses and caregivers of
Amedisys Hospice and especially
Pam Stewart of Senior Helpers.
Visit www.heritagefh.com to
share words of comfort to the
family and view the memorial
John L. Sanders, 94, went
home to be with his Lord and
Savior on
Sunday, Jan.
13, 2013.
He was
born
to
Edward and
Maggie Roberts Sanders.
He was a wellknown resident of Hixson and was a
member of Hixson First Baptist
Church. Mr. Sanders was a U.S.
Marine veteran of both World
War II in which he received
the Victory Medal and also the
Korean Conflict. He was past
commander of American Legion
Post 159 and former president of
the Hamilton County Democrat
Party.
He was a well-known area
baseball athlete, poet and was a
noted songwriter having written and published “The Ballad
of Lookout Mountain” in 1963
as well many other songs and
poems. He was a retired ironworker.
Gone before him are his
loving wife of 54 years, Lorene
Hanes Sanders; one son, Benny
Sanders; four sisters; and three
brothers.
He leaves behind to cherish
his memories a son, Ernest “Buster” Sanders, of Soddy-Daisy; two
daughters, Beverly Conner, of
Soddy-Daisy, and Alicia (James)
Cambron, of Flat Rock Ala.; several grandchildren, great- and
great-great-grandchildren, several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be at
2 p.m. Thursday at Chattanooga
Memorial Park with Military
Honors with the Rev. Jimmy
Walker officiating.
The family will receive
friends 2-8 p.m. today at the
funeral home.
Memorial contributions may
be made to St. Jude Children’s
Hospital.
You may visit our online register book at www.turnerfamilyfuneralhome.com.
Arrangements by the Highway 58 Chapel of Turner Funeral
Home, 3913 Webb Road, 423-6223171.
Alan Thomas
Alan Downey Thomas, 66, of
Red Bank, went to be with the
Lord on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013.
Funeral services will be held
1 p.m. Thursday at Lane Funeral
Home, Ashland Terrace with the
Rev. Everett Gossett officiating.
Entombment will follow in
Hamilton Memorial Gardens.
Visit www.lanefh.com to
share condolences.
Visitation is 4-8 p.m. today
and 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Thursday at
Lane Funeral Home, Ashland
Terrace, 877-3524.
ane Funeral Home
After his Army retirement in
1976, Don took a second career
at Duracell and retired a second
time after 21 years of service in
2001. He earned his BSBA from
Tusculum College in 1986.
Don was a member of American Legion, the Forty & Eight,
and was a supporter of the Forty
& Eight nursing scholarship program.
Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. today, Jan. 16,
2013, in the chapel of Ralph Buckner Funeral Home with the Rev.
Ed Eldredge and the Rev. Jerry
Timmerman officiating.
Interment will follow at Sunset Memorial Gardens with full
military honors. Jeremy Timmerman, Chase Clark, Rick Simmering, Mark Hirshfeld, Albert
Hirshfeld and Don Brown will
serve as pallbearers. Honorary pallbearers are Steve Clark,
Gerald Gardner, Robert Dowdy,
Bill Woody and Jimmy Meeks. A
white dove release will conclude
the service.
The family suggests donations
be made to American Legion Post
81, Forty & Eight Nursing Scholarship, 227 James Asbury Drive
NW, Cleveland, TN 37312.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Dowdy family guest book at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
Louise Graig
GEORGETOWN — Louise
Stokes Graig, 81, died Monday,
Jan. 14, 2013.
Survivors: children, Barbara
Ponder, Carolyn Stokes, Johnnie
Lee Davis, Connie Sloan, Linda
Crisp, Sandra Clayton and Tonya
Hutton.
Funeral services are 11 a.m.
Thursday at Grissom Funeral
Home.
Visitation from 5-8 p.m.
today.
Please visit: www.grissomfh.
net.
See OBITUARIES, Page B3
IN MEMORY
BEATRICE JOHNSON
SEPT. 8, 1920-JAN. 16, 2011
Momma, it’s been two years
since you left to be with the
Lord. We love and miss you
dearly. Our love for you will
always be in our hearts.
TENNESSEE
Don Dowdy
CLEVELAND — Don E.
Dowdy, 75, passed away Friday,
Jan. 11, 2013.
He was an
exceptional
father, grandfa t h e r a n d
friend. He was
of the Baptist
faith.
He was
preceded in
death by parents, George
and Francis Jackson Dowdy; and
sister, Shirley Dowdy.
He is survived by his wife of
41 years, Alene Gardner Dowdy;
three daughters, Joyce and husband, Steve Clark, of Chattanooga, Terry Dowdy; Kathy and
husband, Jeremy Timmerman,
all of Cleveland; three grandchildren, Chase Clark, Kennedy
Timmerman and Emma Timmerman; one brother, Bob Dowdy;
cousin, Tommie Sorg; and a host
of friends and family.
Don enlisted in the Army
in 1955 with plans to serve his
required three years, but things
happened along the way, and
22 years later he found himself
still serving his country. As Don
explained, “When I finished high
school, it was difficult to get a
job, so I decided to enlist, serve
my three years and get on with
my life.” After his three-year stint
was completed, he discovered
that jobs outside the military
were in short supply. Having only
90 days to re-enlist and maintain
the same rank and pay, Don, on
the 89th day re-enlisted.
As a weapons specialist
(CW03) for all types of weapons
in the armament field, Don served
numerous tours of duty including
Korea, Vietnam and Germany.
He earned the National Defense
Service Medal, Good Conduct
Medal, Army Commendation
Medal (2nd Oak Leaf Cluster),
Bronze Star Medal (lst Oak Leaf
Cluster), Vietnam Service Medal
with one Silver and two Bronze
Stars, Vietnam Campaign Medal
w60 Device, Vietnam Cross of
Gallantry w/Pal and 4 Overseas
Service Stars.
Loved and sadly missed
by your children, Frank Jr.,
Deborah, Brenda and other
family and friends.
IN MEMORY
FRANKLIN A. BONNER
(KOOKIE)
On this day, January 16th,
2009, you were taken away
from us four years ago. The
pain is still the same. Trying
to understand why! But we
know the Lord does not make
mistakes. We thank God for
the time we had
together. We will never
forget or stop loving you and
will never, never rest until
the persons who did this are
brought to Justice. Gone
too soon! Death leaves a
heartache no one can heal,
Love leaves a memory no
one can steal. We miss you.
Family and Friends.
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John Turcotte
John C. Turcotte, 90, of East
Ridge, went home to be with his
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ on
Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013.
John was a veteran of the U.S.
Army serving in the Signal Corps
during WWII.
John received his master’s
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degree in education from
Boston University. Prior
to moving to
Chattanooga
he was program director
at the YMCA
at Burlington,
Vt.
He was
associated with the Hamilton
County School System from
1953 to 1985 and served as health
and physical education teacher,
guidance counselor and assistant
principal.
He was a former member of
the Chattanooga Civitan Club
and Concord Golf Club.
He was a member of Jones
Memorial United Methodist
Church for over 56 years.
He was preceded in death
by his wife of 64 years, Virginia
Turcotte.
Survivors include his son, Jack
Turcotte and his wife, Patricia,
of Dayton, Ohio; daughter, Mary
Clarke and her husband, Jeff, of
Hixson; three grandchildren,
Courtney, Hollie and Ashley; five
great-grandchildren, Madison,
Connor, Katelyn, Jackson and
Alyssa. He will be sadly missed
by his Yorkie, Harley.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Friday at Jones Memorial United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Randy Martin, the
Rev. Larry Dial and the Rev. Mark
Womack officiating.
Burial will be in Chattanooga
National Cemetery with full military honors.
The family will receive
friends from 4-7 p.m. Thursday
at the East Chapel of Chattanooga Funeral Home, 404 S. Moore
Road, and at the church from
10:30–11 a.m. on Friday.
Memorial contributions may
be made to Hospice of Chattanooga, 4411 Oakwood Drive,
Chattanooga; or to Jones Memorial United Methodist Church
4131 Ringgold Road, East Ridge,
TN 37412.
Please share your thoughts
a n d m e m o r i e s a t w w w.
ChattanoogaEastChapel.com.
35319894
Katie B. Brown, 84, of Chattanooga, passed away on Saturday,
Jan. 12, 2013, in a local hospital.
She was retired from the Chattanooga Choo Choo. Katie was
also a member of World Church
of the Living God.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Howard Brown;
mother, Evie Mills; son, Herbert
Wilson Jr.; and grandson, Dennis Lyle.
She leaves to cherish her
memory her children, Willie
(Bonnie) and Glen Wilson, Annie
Ashley, Evelyn Lyle and Shirley
Dean; 10 grandchildren; 10 greatgrandchildren; and good friend,
Jessie Wooten.
Graveside services will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, at
Highland Cemetery with Bishop
Hunter officiating.
The body will lie in state after
noon today at John P. Franklin
Funeral Home, 1101 Dodds Ave.,
622-9995.
Hamilton County
4000 St. Elmo Avenue, Chattanooga, TN 37409
(423) 821-0804
ricomonuments@comcast.net
35276900
Katie Brown
He is survived by his sons,
Jeffery Glen Elliott, Paul Warner
Elliott Jr.; and daughter, Christine
(Daniel) Balabuch, all of Chattanooga.
Services will be private.
Share your memories, stories and photos at www.legacy
funeralhome.com.
Arrangements are by Legacy
Funeral Home and Cremation
Center, Soddy-Daisy.
35284482
HAMILTON COUNTY
...
. timesfreepress.com
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • B3
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
Board to hear complaint about taxi charges Thursday
By Yolanda Putman
Staff Writer
The Chattanooga Taxi
Board will hear complaints
Thursday against a local cab
owner accused of overcharging customers.
Chattanooga police
Inspector Charles Topping
said he will present information about All American
taxi cab owner Randy Van
Van Hooser could not be
reached for comment. He
■ What: Taxi show cause
has been summoned to the
hearing
Thursday hearing.
■ When: 3:30 p.m.
City ordinance sets cab
Thursday
rates for all six cab com■ Where: City Council
panies in the Chattanooga
building, 11th Street
area. The companies — Millennium, Mercury, CheckHooser, who he said improp- er Cab, Jackson Cab, East
erly charged customers for Ridge Cab and All Ameria year.
can — are mandated to fol-
IF YOU GO
low them.
After hearing from Topping, taxi board members
could dismiss the complaints,
give Van Hooser a warning,
or suspend or revoke his
operating license.
Topping said few customers complained about Van
Hooser because they didn’t
know they were being overcharged.
A former All American
employee told him about the
higher fees.
Topping said he has
evidence that Van Hooser
charges $2.50 at the start
of the meter when that
amount should be $2. The
cab owner also charges 25
cents a minute wait time
when it should be 20 cents,
Topping said.
“I don’t think it was just a
mistake,” Topping said.
Taxi advisory board member Tim Duckett, who owns
Millennium, said Van Hooser
has been overcharging his
customers 24 hours a day for
nearly a year.
Contact staff writer
Yolanda Putman at
yputman@timesfreepress.
com or call 423-757-6431.
Chuck Fleischmann gets key U.S. House subcommittee spot
By Chris Carroll
Staff Writer
U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann has landed a spot
on a crucial panel for Tennessee’s 3rd District.
The second-term Republican, whose district includes
Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Tennessee Valley Authority, was appointed
to the House Appropriations
Committee’s Energy & Water
Development Subcommit-
Obituaries
• Continued from Page B2
Edna Hickey
SPRING CITY — Edna Irene
Gillespie Hickey, 80, a loving wife,
mother, grandmother and sister,
went home to be with the Lord
on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013, at her residence.
She was
the daughter
of the late Gail
G. and Bertha
Edna Howell
Gillespie in
Spring City.
Edna graduated from Dayton Carver
High School.
She was a devoted member of
Euchee Chapel AME Zion Church
and served as the church secretary until her recent illness. She
was a member of the Gillespie
singers.
She was employed by Spring
City Manufacturing Co., Sherwood Chair Manufactory in
Spring City and La-Z-Boy Chair
Manufactory in Dayton until
retirement in 1996.
Edna Irene was preceded in
death by her father, Gail G. Gillespie, and mother, Bertha E.
Howell Gillespie; her husband,
Charles William Hickey; five sisters, Nola Locke, Florence Wilkerson, Helen Smith, Mary Ruth
Moore and Emma Lee Peoples;
two brothers, George L. Gillespie
and Olen E. Gillespie; very devoted nephew and niece, Bruce K.
Smith and Alma C. Smith Dixon;
and devoted cousins, Arthur T.
and Beulah Gillespie.
Survivors include three sons,
William (Kimberly) Gillespie,
Charles V. Hickey and Stefan
(Cindy) Hickey, all of Spring
City; three daughters, Darlene
(Alvin) Pendergrass and Vanessa
I. Hickey, of Spring City, Rene’
Wyatt (Charles), of Dayton, Tenn.;
daughter-in-law, Tracy Hickey;
nine grandchildren, Marcus
(Carol) Pendergrass, of Madison,
Ala., LaMar (Kim) Pendergrass, of
Statesville, N.C., Erica Roberts, of
Dayton, Ashsha (Randall) Hughes,
of Nashville, Chanda (Anthony)
Hickey, Kailyn Hickey, Isaiah Gillespie, Zachary Hamilton, all of
Spring City; and a devoted special granddaughter, Charlee Swafford, of Spring City; stepgrandson, Bryson Wyatt, of Crossville,
Tenn.; 12 great-grandchildren,
Jaycee Weatherbee, Mya, Aniesha, Kameron, Elizabeth, Jordyn
and Mason Pendergrass, Hailei
and Noah Hughes, Aubrianna and
Tyler Hickey, Brooklyn Simmons;
sisters, Eunice Rankins, of Columbus, Ohio, Cleo V. (Walt) Jones, of
Townsend, Md., Shirley A. (James)
Oggs, of Spring City; brothers,
Booker T. (Carol) Gillespie, of
Nashville, Alvas C. (Pearlie) Gillespie, of Abilene, Texas; Curtis
L. Gillespie, of Dallas, Texas;
sister-in-law, Sallie Mae Burum;
brother-in-law, Clarence Moore.
A very special devoted niece, Ann
“Sister” Ramsey, of Athens, Tenn.;
devoted cousin, Carlos Donaldson; a host of nieces, nephews,
cousins and friends.
The family will receive friends
from 1 to 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17,
at the Euchee Chapel AME Zion
Church. Funeral will follow with
the Rev. L.B. Tate officiating.
Interment will follow in Euchee/Gillespie Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to Euchee/Gillespie
Cemetery in memory of Edna
Hickey via Charles V. Hickey, 2285
Euchee Chapel Road, Spring City,
TN 37381.
An online register is available
at www.evansmortuary.biz.
tee.
The news was announced
Tuesday after the Ooltewah
Republican expressed interest in joining the subcommittee, which oversees
funding for the U.S. Department of Energy — the federal agency that operates
Oak Ridge.
Energy & Water also
handles TVA issues. Outside observers have said
Fleischmann’s new assign-
“It is my honor and priviment could lead to speedier
lege to serve side by
work at TVA’s Chickside with some of the
amauga Lock project,
hardest workers in
which remains in a
Congress,” Appropristate of gridlock.
ations Chairman Hal
Fleischmann also
Rogers, R-Ky., said in
will serve on approa news release. “It is
priations subcomthrough their dedimittees dealing with
homeland security
cation and steadfast
and labor, health Chuck
commitment to
and human services, Fleischmann responsible governaccording to a coming that we can help
mittee news release.
address the nation’s many
Kermit Lawson
ins; several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
CST Thursday in the funeral
home chapel with Ministers Joe
Sanders, Ronny Vandergriff and
Tyler McCullough officiating
with burial to follow in Palmer
Cemetery.
Visitation: 5-10 p.m. CST today
at Layne Funeral Home, Palmer,
www.laynefuneralhome.com.
ATHENS — Kermit O’Neil
Lawson, 86, passed from this
world at his home on Monday,
Jan. 14, 2013.
Mr. Lawson graduated
from Birchwood High
School and
attended the
University of
Tennessee at
Chattanooga
and the University of
Maryland. He served his country for 13 years in the United
States Army during both World
War II and the Korean War. He
received the Bronze Star for meritorious achievements in ground
operations against the enemy in
Korea.
Mr. Lawson’s first love was
his family, followed closely by
his garden. He left a Garden of
Eden anywhere he lived. He was
a decent, faithful, honest Christian man, church supporter and
member of Ladds Chapel Church
of God in Guild, Tenn.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Nathan and Jessie
Cofer Lawson; both sons, Richard Mitchell Lawson and James
Phillip Lawson; both sons-inlaw, David Scroggins and Steve
Carden; siblings, N.L. Lawson,
Hazel Burton Boyd, Pauline
Moon, Raymond Lawson, Russell
Lawson and Fronia Lawson.
He is survived by his wife
and sweetheart of 57 years, Ruby
Wright Lawson. He loved to tell
the story of how he told his buddies he would marry her the
first time he saw her. Also left to
grieve his passing are daughters,
Portia Lawson, D’Nice Carden;
grandchildren, Kimberly Scroggins, Sarah Zimmerman and her
husband, Tom, Chris Cavalaris
and his wife, Jessica; his cherished great-grandchildren, Lily
Marcum, Huck Zimmerman,
Roan Zimmerman and Benjamin Cavalaris; only surviving
sibling, Nora Lawson Newell
and her husband, Howard; also
many nieces and nephews, several that considered him their
father. He was also greatly loved
and admired by his wife’s entire
extended family.
Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17,
2013, in the chapel of Fike Funeral
Home with the Rev. Mitch Corder and the Rev. Charles Kilgore
officiating.
Interment will follow in
Cofer Cemetery with Joel Robinson, Daniel Kachel III, Adam
Kachel, Matthew Kachel, Jason
Kilgore and Josh Kilgore serving as pallbearers. The service
will conclude with a white dove
release ceremony.
His family will receive friends
from 6-9 p.m. today, Jan. 16, 2013,
at the funeral home.
The family suggests that you
make a donation in Mr. Lawson’s
name to your favorite church or
charity.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Lawson family guest book at
www.fikefh.com.
Dorothy Rollins
PALMER — Dorothy Marie
Rollins, 75, went to sleep in the
arms of Jesus on Tuesday, Jan. 15,
2013, at her home.
She was born in Palmer, Tenn.,
on June 20, 1937, to Ralph and
Marlee Campbell Gholston, who
preceded her in death along with
her sister, Judy Ann Gholston.
She is survived by her husband of 58 years, Richard E. Rollins; son, Dennis Rollins; other
surviving family members, Betty
(Johnny) Harrison, Leonard
(Anna) and Phillip (Marlin) Roll-
Charlie Stembridge
McMINNVILLE — Charlie
Lewis Stembridge, 74, died Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, following an
extended illness.
He was a U.S. Army veteran,
retired custodian, member of the
Central Church of Christ and son
of the late Joe and Linnie Kirby
Stembridge.
He was married to Irene
Crouch Stembridge, of McMinnville, who survives.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m.
CST today, Jan. 16, in High’s Chapel.
Interment will follow in
the Mountain View Cemetery,
McMinnville.
Visitation from noon CST
until time of service today.
High Funeral Home, 931-4732137.
Elden Wilson
CLEVELAND — Elden R.
Wilson, 92, a resident of Cleveland for the past 20 years, passed
away Sunday,
Jan. 13, 2013, at
his home.
He was a
member of
the Seventhday Adventist
Church and
the Georgia
Cumberland
Conference.
He was a
veteran of the U.S. Army serving from 1943 to 1947. He was
employed as a teacher and a
principal and also served as a
preacher.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Thelma Hughes Wilson;
parents, Ronald Wilson and Elda
Snyder Wilson; granddaughter,
Elizabeth Beth Wilson; brothers, Warren Wilson and Wesley
Wilson; and sister, Dorothy Lindguist.
Survivors include his three
children, Ronald Wilson and
wife, Phyllis, of Harrison, Diane
Hodges and husband, Larry, of
Cleveland, and Terry L. Wilson,
of Columbia, S.C.; 11 grandchildren, Kaye Portera, Caryn Bledsoe, Wayne Hodges and Doug
Hodges, all of Cleveland, Rex
Wilson, Tambry Wilson, both
of Harrison, Terri Quarles and
Jennifer Matheson, both of
Ooltewah, Elizabeth Thompson,
of Ringgold, Ga., and Hannah
Wilson and Courtney Wilson,
both of Columbia, S.C.; 17 greatgrandchildren; sister, Helen
Callis and husband, Clarence,
of Portland; brother, Lawrence
Wilson and wife, Merita, of Ringgold, Ga.; and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Friday, Jan. 18,
2013, in the chapel of Ralph Buckner Funeral Home with the Rev.
John Neff, Charles Hindman and
the Rev. Mike Mnich officiating
and Caryn Bledsoe will bring the
eulogy.
Interment will be at 2 p.m.
Friday in Floral Crest Cemetery
in Bryant, Ala., with military honors. Doug Hodges, Wayne Hodg-
es, Austin Olson, Marshall Green,
Rex Wilson, and Daulton Hodges
will serve as pallbearers. Honorary pallbearers will be Ryan
Daughtery, Rex Bledsoe, Peyton
Hodges and Colin Wilson.
The family will receive
friends from 6-8 p.m. today, Jan.
16, 2013, at Ralph Buckner Funeral Home.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Wilson family guest book at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
Elizabeth Wilson
mer U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp,
a longtime appropriations
member who enjoyed significant standing during his 12
years on the Energy & Water
subcommittee. Wamp’s son
Weston unsuccessfully challenged Fleischmann last
year.
Contact staff writer
Chris Carroll at ccarroll@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6610.
Leon Teems
David Gifford officiating.
Burial to follow in Fuller
cemetery.
Family will receive friends
from 4 to 8 p.m. CST Thursday
and 10 a.m. CST until service
time Friday.
SUMMERVILLE — Leon
Teems, 77, died Monday, Jan. 14,
2013.
Funeral service is 3 p.m. today,
Jan. 16, 2013, at Mason Funeral
Home.
Visitation is 1 until 3 p.m.
today, Jan. 16.
Burial will follow in Silver
Hill Church Cemetery.
Mason Funeral Home is
directing.
ALABAMA
CLEVELAND — Elizabeth H.
Wilson, 90, died Monday, Jan. 14,
2013.
Survivors: children, Elizabeth
Adams and Thomas Wilson.
A memorial service will be 11
a.m. Saturday at St. Luke’s Episcopal with visitation one hour
prior to the service.
Please visit: www.grissomfh.
net.
Grissom Funeral Home is in
charge.
GEORGIA
Eric Carter
HOLLYWOOD — Eric Carter,
32, died Monday, Jan. 14, 2013.
Funeral is 2:30 p.m. CST Saturday from Remnant Holiness
Tabernacle in Hollywood.
Burial in Pine Haven Cemetery with Rainsville Funeral
Home Inc. directing, www.rainsvillefuneralhome.com.
Visitation at Remnant Holiness Tabernacle from 5-8 p.m.
CST Friday and 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
CST Saturday.
Melvin Ballard
Glennia Gann
LaFAYETTE — James Melvin
Ballard, 64, of Niceville, Fla., formerly of LaFayette, died Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013.
Melvin was a veteran of the
U.S. Air Force, retiring with 20
years of service.
Preceded in death by brothers,
Bobby Ballard and Ernest Ballard;
father, Doyle Lee Ballard.
Survived by loving wife,
Renae Patterson Ballard; mother,
Ada Inez Ballard, of LaFayette;
daughter, Stephanie (Rob) Brayshaw, of Tallahassee, Fla.; sisters,
Hazel (Marion) Dover, Patsy
Collins, Genelle (Steve) Harris and Darlene (Steve) Dixon;
brothers, Winfred (Joann) Ballard and Wayne (Perri) Ballard,
all of LaFayette; grandchildren,
Evan Brayshaw and Matthew
Brayshaw; several nieces and
nephews also survive.
Funeral from the Wallis Memorial Chapel at 3 p.m.
Thursday. Service conducted by
the Rev. Patrick Cooper.
Interment in McIntyre Cemetery.
Family will receive friends at
the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
today.
Arrangements are by WallisWilbanks Funeral Home, LaFayette.
IDER — Glennia Young Gann,
89, died Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, at
her residence.
Mrs. Gann was a retired textile worker, having worked for
Nation’s Hosiery, Richmond
Hosiery and Buster Brown
Apparel.
She was preceded in death by
parents, Glenn C. “Son” and Icie
Bell Kennimer Young; husband,
R.M. Gann; brothers, Harry Lee
“Bud” Young, Elbert Young, Lonnie “Boots” Young; sisters, Correne Price, Annie L. “Bill” Wilson
and Novella Young.
Survivors include Lynn and
James Sanders, Jennifer and
Joshua Sanders, Hank and Kayti
Sanders, Tyler and Vickie Young;
special nieces, Karen Young,
Gwen Gifford and Bobbie Sue
Gann; several nieces and nephews and a host of friends.
Funeral services are at 1 p.m.
CST Friday at Corner Stone
Funeral Chapel with Brother
Evia Story
HENAGAR — Evia M. Story,
92, died Monday, Jan. 14, 2013.
Survivors include sons and
daughters in-law, Kenneth and
Pat Storey, of Bridgeport, Ala.,
Paul and JoAnn Storey, of Henagar, David and Beverly Story, of
Dalton, Ga., Max and Lucretia
Story, of Henagar, Jeff Story, of
Henagar; daughters and son
in-law, Ann and Bill Smith, of
Henagar, and Carol West, of
Fort Oglethorpe; brother, Gerald Wilson, of Chattanooga; 17
grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
Mrs. Story worked for approximately 20 years as a volunteer
with the Red Cross at DeKalb
Regional Medical Center.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, G.C. “Bud” Story;
parents, Grover and Myrtle
Brown Wilson; sister, Freida
Johnson; great-grandson, Seth
Sharp.
Her funeral will be 2 p.m.
CST today in Kerby Funeral
Chapel with the Rev. Clinton
Graham and the Rev. Rex Creswell officiating.
Burial will be in Henagar
Community Cemetery.
Her family will receive
friends noon CST until time of
funeral today.
IN MEMORY
IN MEMORY
BOBBIE SWAFFORD
FREEMAN
JAN. 13, 1960 - MAY 8, 2009
JEAN SWAFFORD
Mary Beasley
JAN. 16, 1941 - FEB. 15, 2007
TRENTON — Mary Geneva
Beasley, 87, died Monday, Jan. 14,
2013.
Visit www.RyanFuneralHome.net to view full obituary
and share memories and condolences.
Graveside services will be
held 2 p.m. today, Jan. 16, 2013, at
Trenton Baptist Cemetery.
Family will receive friends
from 1 until 2 p.m. at Ryan Funeral Home, Trenton.
Louie Stevenson
ROME — Louie Frank Stevenson, 56, passed away Thursday,
Jan. 10, 2013.
Service at 1 p.m. Thursday
at Mount Zion Baptist Church,
LaFayette with Pastor Rheubein
M. Taylor officiating.
Interment in LaFayette Memorial Gardens.
Arrangements by Willis
Funeral Home, Dalton, Ga.
Loving and missing you
both on your birthdays
and every day.
The Swafford Family.
DEREK ALLMON
OCT. 30, 1986-JAN. 16, 2003
Ten years ago on a cold
snowy night, a very special
soul left us. Your happy and
caring spirit is so greatly
missed. We think or speak
of you daily, as it keeps you
close in our hearts.
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fiscal challenges.”
Fleischmann received his
appropriations assignment in
November, but the subcommittee appointment could
be seen as an equal achievement. During Fleischmann’s
2012 re-election campaign,
critics charged he didn’t
exert influence on any committees with relevance to his
district.
One such critic was Fleischmann’s predecessor — for-
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..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
REGION
REGION
DIGEST
Rainy river trek
VALDOSTA, GA.
Wrestler trapped
inside mats dies
A South Georgia high
school student apparently
climbed atop an upright roll
of wrestling mats, fell into
a center opening and died
after he became trapped
inside, authorities said.
Lowndes High School
student Kendrick Johnson,
17, became lodged upside
down in the roll of mats,
Lowndes County sheriff’s
officials said Monday.
His body was found Friday morning in the high
school’s old gym after his
family reported him missing
Thursday night.
No foul play is suspected,
authorities said. An autopsy
and an investigation by sheriff’s officials and the GBI
found no signs of a struggle,
Sheriff Chris Prine told The
Valdosta Times.
Johnson may have been
reaching for a shoe that had
fallen into the mat, Prine
said. A shoe was found at
the scene.
“We feel like he was trying to reach a shoe that was
down that hole,” the sheriff
said in a statement, adding
no one knows for sure.
Johnson was trapped
upside down, with blood
rushing to his head and
upper extremities, causing
him to pass out, the sheriff
said. Keeping a human body
upside down for an extended period of time can be
deadly, causing hemorrhaging, stroke and heart failure.
Investigators will continue interviewing students
and Johnson’s friends.
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
A barge moves downstream on the Tennessee River through Mullins Cove in Marion County, Tenn., Tuesday. Continuous rain has
pushed many area creeks and rivers to flood stage.
Inman Street renewal plans reviewed
By Paul Leach
Correspondent
CLEVELAND, Tenn. —
Cleveland leaders say they
are keen to rejuvenate Inman
Street, the eastern gateway
to the city.
Public officials and local
stakeholders took an in-depth
look this week at how they
might launch such a renewal,
which targets the stretch of
Inman Street between Gaut
and East streets.
“Cities are now seeing what a positive impact
an appealing gateway can
have on a downtown,” said
Jonathan Jobe, director of
Cleveland’s Development
and Engineering Services.
“[We can do some things]
that can spark redevelopment and increase property
values for property owners
in this area.”
The key will be zoning
changes along the Inman
Street corridor, followed
by infrastructure upgrades
for
curb
appeal and
incentives for
b u s i n e ss e s ,
officials said
Jonathan
Monday.
Jobe
Jobe said
unifying the area’s zoning
to mixed-use is a must. That
will allow for multiple-story
JACKSON, TENN.
The Associated Press
Mullis rewarded for loyalty
Smith said Mullis’ new post is
good news for North Georgia.
When Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey
“It’s amazing to see somebody
Cagle’s powers were stripped by from Chickamauga — a place
Republican state senators in 2010 in most people can’t even pronounce
what’s been described as a “coup,” — became probably the third-most
Sen. Jeff Mullis, R-Chickamauga, powerful person in the Senate,”
The Alabama Departstuck by Cagle’s side.
Smith said. “The folks in our area
ment of Public Health has
“He was probably one of the lieu- should be thrilled to hear that.”
announced the state’s teen
tenant governor’s closest allies durIt makes sense that Cagle would
birth rate has reached a his- ing that period,” said Nathan
pick Mullis, according to Unitoric low.
Smith, chairman of the Walker
versity of Georgia political
Officials say the teen
County, Ga., Republican Party
science professor Charles
birth rate in 2011 fell to 20.9 and a writer for the political
Bullock.
per 1,000 women ages 10
blog PeachPundit.com.
“You want to have a person
to 19. State health officials
Mullis campaigned against
you trust, who you’re close to,
say the figure translates to
the creation of an eight-perwho you can rely on,” Bullock
about 6,700 births to teen
son committee that took away
said. “Certainly Mullis demmothers.
many of the lieutenant goveronstrated his loyalty to Cagle
State health officials
nor’s powers — including the
at the time of the coup two
Jeff Mullis
say babies born to teenage
ability to appoint committee
years ago.”
mothers account for about
members and committee chairmen.
Smith expects that officials from
11.3 percent of births in the
Cagle, who is elected statewide Walker, Catoosa, Dade and Chattooga
state. The 2011 rate is a 58
to preside over the Senate, had his counties in District 53, which Mullis
percent decline from the
powers restored Monday by senators represents, will try to make the most
state’s peak in teen births
when they began their session. He of Mullis’ influence.
in 1973, and a 32 percent
essentially controls the powerful five“They’ll probably be trying to get
decrease since 2000.
member committee on assignments. a lot more ... transportation dollars
— Wire Reports He sits on the committee and appoints and things like that,” Smith said.
two other committee members.
As chairman of the Rules ComThat assignments committee late mittee, Mullis replaces Don Balfour,
REGION CONTACT
Monday appointed Mullis as chair- R-Snellville, who fell out of favor after
man of the powerful Rules Commit- having to pay a $5,000 fine for alleg■ Region editor:
Alex Chambliss
tee that decides which bills come up edly fudging travel expense reports.
423-757-6306
for vote.
Contact staff writer Tim Omarzu
achambliss@timesfreepress
Mullis could not be reached Tues- at tomarzu@timesfreepress.com or
.com
day for comment.
423-757-6651.
Teen births fall
to historic low
Staff Writer
of the District Attorneys’ Association
of Georgia. There are new penalty proATLANTA — As Georgia legis- visions for certain crimes, and the elelators tackle juvenile justice reform ments of other crimes have changed so
this year, they also are expected to that some that used to be felonies are
expand on last year’s overhaul of the now misdemeanors. Those changes
adult criminal justice system.
have to be taken into consideration
Last year’s legislation drew heavily as charges are filed and indictments
on recommendations from a special written, she said.
committee created the year before
“One of the challenges is that at
to study the issue and make
prosecutors’ offices around the
recommendations for rewrit- MORE state people haven’t had raises
ing the state’s sentencing laws Senate
in four years, there’s no new
to emphasize rehabilitating panel
staff that’s been added, and
relatively low-risk nonviolent fastnow we have all these new
offenders in community-based tracks
duties and new code sections
supervision programs rather hospital and a whole new evidence
sending them to prison. In a tax, B8
code to learn, on top of keeping
report released last month that
up with increasing caseloads,”
focused mostly on the juvenile justice Patterson said.
system, the Special Council on CrimiWhen considering recommendanal Justice Reform also recommended tions for this year’s legislative seslawmakers build on those efforts.
sion, the council suggested tweaks to
The report says last year’s over- some of last year’s changes, as well
haul had had a noticeable effect in as including new ideas.
the first five months. Rather than
Last year’s legislation revised pengrowing as projected, the total state alties for drug possession by creating
prison population has remained fairly degrees of possession based on the
steady since June, the report says.
weight of the drugs. The council recBut the implementation of last ommends clarifying that this proviyear’s legislation — coming on top sion doesn’t require the state to prove
of changes to the state evidence code that the defendant knew the exact
that took effect Jan. 1 — has caused weight of the drugs.
some headaches for police and prosProbationers are put on an adminecutors, said Leigh Patterson, Floyd
County district attorney and president
See JUSTICE, Page B8
By Kate Brumback
Staff Photo by Tim Omarzu
By Tim Omarzu
See RENEWAL, Page B8
Legislators eye more
adult justice reforms
Guard charged
after texts defiled
MONTGOMERY, ALA.
Most of the current commercial structures between
East and Gaut streets likely
would need to be replaced to
fit with the new look, which
would have “a downtowntype feel,” Jobe said.
The Cleveland Planning
Commission will begin
reviewing the possibility of
rezoning the area in February, officials said. However,
GEORGIA GENERAL ASSEMBLY
The door to
room 453 in
the Georgia
Capitol is
flanked by
U.S. and
state flags.
Police in Jackson have
State Sen.
charged a hotel security
Jeff Mullis,
guard with defacing a copy
R-Chickaof the Torah and Jewish
mauga, has
prayer books.
left his forAccording to The Jackmer office
son Sun, police charged
Justin Shawn Baker, 24, with in the basement and
felony vandalism.
moved into
Rabbi Gil Perl of Marroom 453
golin Hebrew Academy in
since his
Memphis said he laid out
the texts Friday evening for appointment
as chaira Saturday worship service
man of the
in a conference room of the
state SenDoubletree Hotel in Jackate Rules
son.
Committee.
On Saturday morning, he
This office
found the Torah and several
adjoins
prayer books defaced or
the Rules
written in with phrases that
Committee
included, “Gentiles win,
meeting
Jews lose” and “Submit to
room.
Satan.”
Police said Baker works
for Maxxguard, a security
company, and worked from
10 p.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Saturday at the hotel. He was
arrested Saturday. Police
released information on the
crime Monday.
buildings to have commercial
ventures on the first floor
and residences on the second
floor, he said.
Rezoning also would
remove setback requirements and allow structures
to be closer to the street.
The area, which contains 11
structures and the potential
for three more under existing
zoning, would be allowed to
develop up to 50 structures
under mixed-use zoning.
Rhea chief wants TVA legislation
With the county facing significant
increases in its debt service budget
DAYTON, Tenn. — Rhea Coun- to pay for construction of a new high
ty Executive George Thacker is school, “I think there will be enough
seeking state legislation to provide money to help us,” he said.
for TVA impact payments to counOn another matter, Thacker
ties where the federal installations reported he has been looking into
are located.
the number of fuel cards
Thacker told county
and credit cards that have
commissioners Tuesday
been distributed to county
that he has talked with state
employees.
officials “and I’m going to
“We have 450 fuel cards
keep meeting with legislaassigned to county employtors to get this to happen. If
ees,” he said, “but we only
the law is changed to conhave 200 employees. How
sider [TVA] assets rather
come we have 450 fuel cards?
than construction, as long
You need to look at that —
as a plant is in operation we George
and credit cards, too.”
will continue to get money” Thacker
He pointed out that the
from TVA.
highway department has just 20 of
He reminded commissioners that the fuel cards.
under current law, once construcCommissioner Bill Hollin asked,
tion on the Watts Bar Unit 2 reactor “Do we have 450 vehicles?”
is completed in the next few years,
“No,” Thacker said.
TVA impact payments to the county
will end.
See RHEA, Page B8
By Tom Davis
Correspondent
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • B5
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
POLICENEWS
No fire deaths
in city in 2012
Woman charged
in auto burglary
Nobody in Chattanooga
died in a fire-related death
last year, the city’s fire department announced Tuesday.
Fire Chief Randy Parker
said that, in part, nobody
died in 2012 because the
department educated residents about how to prevent
fires. But Parker also added
that some fires can’t be
prevented and that last year
might have been lucky.
“We always strive to
prevent all fire fatalities in
Chattanooga, but we’re usually disappointed,” Parker
said in a news release. “This
is obviously good news for
us and the city we serve.”
Most fire-related deaths
happen before firefighters
arrive, according to the news
release, because of heat
and toxic smoke. In 2011,
eight people died from fires
in Chattanooga. The year
before, three people died.
Stephanie B. Honeycutt,
29, of Hixson, has been
charged with two counts of
burglary of an auto and two
counts of theft in connection
with incidents last week.
She is set to appear on
Jan. 22 at 5 p.m. in East
Ridge Municipal Court.
Last Friday at 11 p.m. East
Ridge police responded to an
auto burglary at 913 State Line
Road. The victim told police
she saw her car door open
and a woman carrying items
that had been inside the auto.
The suspect had fled in
a black Nissan though she
left items she was carrying.
However, police said a GPS
system still was missing.
Another victim told police
his vehicle had been entered
and items were missing. He
also provided police with the
tag number of the suspect
and later identified her.
Haslam
of Tennessee.
Boyd, 53, will work for
the administration full time
but has volunteered to work
without pay.
In 2009, Boyd co-founded
the tnAchieves, a nonprofit
mentoring and scholarship
organization that has paid
the full community college
tuition of more than 3,200
high school graduates. Sixtyeight percent of those students have been the first in
their families to attend college.
“I am passionate about
i m p rov i n g e d u c at i o n a l
opportunity for all our citizens,” Boyd said in a release.
“To achieve the governor’s
mission, we will need to
broaden the net and to provide greater access.”
Boyd, 53, founded Radio
Systems in 1991. The privately held company makes
technology-based pet products like PetSafe and Invisible Fence.
Scholars
• Continued from Page B1
And with the announcement of the most recent class
of Passport Scholars, PEF will
send area girls to camps and
programs across the country
for free this summer to study
oceanography, criminology
and theater, among other disciplines.
Stacy Lightfoot, PEF’s
vice president of college
and career success, said the
summer programs, most
academically rigorous, will
help students prepare for
college. But the opportunity
also sparks personal change
for the girls, many of whom
enter with little exposure to
the outside world and return
with confidence and independence.
“It opens doors for these
girls,” Lightfoot said. “You
have quiet, shy girls who
come back and are very talkative and comfortable with
Cook
• Continued from Page B1
Tuesday afternoon.
The question hangs in
the air like smog: Why?
Why would the senators
blacklist and block the
renomination of our Southern expert?
You’d think they would
love her. She has a plan to
save you and me billions in
energy costs by 2020. Isn’t
saving money what Republicans are known for?
“I often was unable to
convince some board members that energy efficiency
was a good investment for
TVA,” Brown recently told
The Tennessean.
What? It’s not leprosy. Or
socialism. Energy efficiency
is about saving money and
energy for the environmental
and economic good of our
region, especially at a time
when weather (enjoying the
rain?) is becoming more and
more unpredictable.
“The utilities that pur-
Staff Writer
Staff Reports
Staff Photo by John Rawlston
Lillias McManus holds an umbrella for her aunt, Jereann Hargis, as they make their way to their car through
heavy rain Tuesday afternoon after shopping at the
Walmart in Kimball, Tenn.
Watch
• Continued from Page B1
gency because of rainfall in
eastern Tennessee, as well
as icy conditions in the central and western parts of
the state. Barys said no ice
should stretch into the eastern part of the state.
A flood watch in North
Georgia also will remain
in effect this morning, said
Adam Baker, a meteorologist at the National Weather
Service’s Peachtree City,
Ga., office. The chance of
rain falls to 30 percent this
afternoon and continues to
decrease throughout the day.
But early Thursday morning,
Baker said, the rain should
return to North Georgia.
There is even an outside
chance it could turn to snow,
he said, and black ice could
coat some roads.
Finally, though, the precipitation will take a break
— for real this time, Barys
said. He doesn’t expect any
rain during the weekend,
and the sun should creep out
from behind the clouds on
Friday and stay until early
next week.
Beginning next Tuesday,
though, the low temperatures
may dip below 20 degrees.
Contact staff writer Tyler
Jett at tjett@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6476.
A South Carolina history
professor who has spent a
career writing on race and
politics called recently
passed laws requiring voters
to present identification “one
of the most disgraceful social
issues in American history.”
Dan T. Carter traced the
history of American voting
for a crowd of 100 at The
Chattanoogan hotel Tuesday
during the annual meeting of
the Federal Bar Association’s
Chattanooga chapter.
As he finished the brief
h i s to r y l e ss o n , Ca r te r
paused.
“And here’s where I should
be careful ... but I’m not,” he
said.
The professor then said
that voter fraud is “simply
not happening” and studies
show that voter ID requirements disproportionately
affect minorities.
Carter is a professor
emeritus for the University
of South Carolina and the
author of several books on
race and politics.
Tennessee’s Legislature
passed the Voter ID Act in
2011, requiring governmentissued identification with
photo for voters to cast a ballot. The law was challenged
but was upheld by the state
court of appeals.
He then detailed what he
sees as two other problems
for voting — taking away
voting rights of convicted
Lawsuit
• Continued from Page B1
where close to [$50 million],
but when you look at that
video and the injuries he sustained, I don’t think that’s too
farfetched,” Flores said.
“Within seconds of the
beating, Emmer inflicted a
compound open fracture of
the plaintiff’s left leg there2012-13 PASSPORT SCHOLARS
by causing plaintiff to spurt
Here is a list of this year’s Passport Scholars, their high schools and what programs they
blood from the open fracture
will attend this summer:
all about the lobby,” the com■ Kailey Bowman, Red Bank High School, Jump Start program in criminology, Xavier
plaint states.
University
Flores said Smith and
■ Shania Douglas, East Ridge High, SuperScholar EXCEL program, Xavier University
Emmer delivered more than
of Louisiana
100 blows each to Tatum.
■ Joanna Hernandez, East Ridge High, Summer theater camp, Texas State University
Cooley struck Tatum more
■ Cassandra McAllister, East Hamilton High, Smith Science and Engineering, Smith
than 15 times on the face and
University
head, the complaint states.
■ A. Mikaela Nunley, Hixson High, Summer Scholars Academy, Texas Lutheran
“And it continued. That
University
beating
went on for at least
■ Katherine Staten Sneed, Red Bank High, Acadia Institute of Oceanography
10
minutes.
What I thought
■ LaDeja Thirkill, Brainerd High, Explore-A-College program, Earlham College
was
worse
was
they made
■ Sheyenne Williams, Soddy-Daisy High, Adventures in Veterinary Medicine, Tufts
this guy walk with an obviUniversity
ous fracture and bone stick■ Angelia Umbreit, Howard School, Explore-A-College program, Earlham College
ing out of his leg. They made
him walk 100 feet out to the
themselves.”
a vet since she can remem- throughout high school and street and plop him down.
The summer experiences ber.
college.
cost about $5,000 each, and
“I’m ecstatic,” she said
Williams said she wouldn’t
Lightfoot said most stu- about the program. “I feel have known about Tufts’ prodents would not be able to really blessed to have an gram for high schoolers. In
afford them without Passport opportunity to travel any- fact, she hadn’t even heard
Scholars.
where, no matter where it of Tufts University before
Soddy-Daisy High sopho- is, and go to a college to do her selection to the Passport
more Sheyenne Williams will what I love.”
Scholars program.
attend a veterinary science
The Passport Scholars
“I wouldn’t have even
program at Tufts University program helps match girls thought about it,” she said.
this summer. She said she has with programs that explore
Contact staff writer Kevin
always connected easily with their interests. Afterward, Hardy at 423-757-6249 or
animals and has wanted to be they receive mentorship khardy@timesfreepress.com.
sue and fund initiatives in
energy efficiency will be the
most successful utilities in
the next five or 10 years. The
ones that don’t won’t be,”
said Jimmy Sandlin, head
of the Scottsboro Electric
Power Board, who also said
he was pleased with TVA’s
work toward energy efficiency.
In recent months, Corker
has been outspoken about
needing to inject the board
with business leaders and
those with corporate boardlevel experience.
A fine idea.
But to flood (pun intended) the board with nonacademic business leaders while
at the same time blackballing a global expert in energy
efficiency is to negate a most
valuable perspective. Like
blinding yourself.
Blacklisting Brown also
sends a threatening message to the now nearly allmale board, some of whom
reportedly had no idea
Brown would get left at the
door. Alexander and board
Chairman Bill Sansom are
decades-old friends. My
hunch is that Sansom and
Brown were ideologically
opposed on more than one
level.
(Is this what happens to
people who disagree?)
Blacklisting Brown also
sends an offensive message
to you and me — customer
and citizen — that big decisions like these aren’t important enough to warrant a
meaningful explanation.
Like this is a middle
school dance, where some
people get invited and others
secretly don’t.
After calling Monday and
then calling again Tuesday,
I got an emailed response
Tuesday afternoon from
Corker’s office. It’s essentially the same quote he
gave Th e Te n n e ss e a n .
(Alexander’s office did not
respond to my request for
comment.)
“We approved four of the
five people that were nominated, and while Ms. Brown
certainly might be qualified to serve as a consultant
to TVA, we felt the board
would be better served with
a different nomination,” the
email read.
Once again, this doesn’t
answer anything. Like Marilyn Brown, we’re left in the
dark.
Maybe you should try
calling.
Contact David Cook at
dcook@timesfreepress.com
or 423-757-6329. Follow him
on Facebook and Twitter at
DavidCookTFP.
Ripperlaw.com
35277710
1110 Market St., Ste 500 • Chattanooga, TN
423-756-5034
And Emmer kicks him,”
Flores said.
Flores said he offered the
city a $350,000 settlement
before he filed the lawsuit.
“We didn’t receive a
response,” he said.
Chattanooga Police Chief
Bobby Dodd declined to
comment because an investigation is pending at the federal level and a lawsuit has
been filed.
Contact staff writer Beth
Burger at 423-757-6406 or
bburger@timesfreepress.
com. Follow her on Twitter
at twitter.com/abburger.
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felons and gerrymandering
by political parties.
“No other country in the
Western world does this,”
Carter said of disenfranchising felons.
He blamed both Democrats and Republicans for
gerrymandering and pointed to Iowa’s model as a better way to adjust political
boundaries to accommodate
population shifts. The state
uses an independent committee to redraw political
districts, rather than allowing political parties in power
to accomplish the task.
The meeting also saw the
election of a new federal bar
president. Katharine Gardner
will head the local chapter
for the next year.
Gardner recapped the
partnership the chapter has
formed with Howard School’s
Talented Tenth Leadership
Program.
Eighteen bar members
are working as mentors with
students in the high school’s
program. The chapter bought
13 Kindle Fire tablets for the
school’s advanced placement
history course with textbooks
loaded onto the devices.
Many of the classes at
the school lack enough textbooks to send one home with
each student, Gardner told
the group.
Contact staff writer Todd
South at 423-757-6347 or
tsouth@timesfreepress.com.
Follow him on Twitter @
tsouthCTFP.
34777403
Haslam appointed Randy
Boyd, chairman of Knoxville-based wireless pet fence
maker Radio Systems Corp.,
to become his top higher
education adviser.
Boyd will join a working
group tasked with finding
ways to tackle what the governor called the “iron triangle” of affordability, access
and quality issues for public
colleges and universities in
Tennessee.
“Is the path we’re on
now going to get us there?”
Haslam said. “The answer is
no.”
The panel is made up of
the governor and the head
of the Tennessee Higher
Education Commission, the
chancellor of the Tennessee
Board of Regents and the
president of the University
By Todd South
39900
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• Continued from Page B1
Professor blasts
voter ID laws
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B8 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
The Associated Press
Justice
• Continued from Page B4
istrative caseload after two
years, and the council’s report
says only 18 percent of those
unsupervised probationers are
rearrested, as opposed to 60
percent of active probationers. The council recommends
allowing the probation officers
to focus less on administrative
caseloads so they can focus on
active probation supervision.
The council also recom-
The question is how to
preserve more than $450 million in annual federal support for the Medicaid insurance program, an amount
large enough to account for
as much as a third of what
the state pays hospitals to
treat Medicaid patients.
Senate Bill 24, blessed by
Deal and sponsored by Sen.
Charlie Bethel, R-Dalton,
would empower the state
Board of Community Health
— which includes nine
appointees of the governor
— to establish assessments
on hospitals to generate
money that would be used to
claim the federal support.
Currently, hospitals pay
an assessment on net patient
revenue under a law the General Assembly adopted in 2010
amid sagging tax receipts during the Great Recession. But
that law expires June 30 when
the budget year ends.
Few lawmakers want to preside over steep payment hikes
to hospitals and other health
care providers, moves that
could force some small hospitals to close or curtail services.
But many are equally reluctant
to extend the hospital industry
tax that makes the Medicaid
financing structure work.
mends having probationers
and parolees foot the cost for
required drug screens.
As it did last year, the council recommends that lawmakers establish “mandatory
minimum safety valves” for
drug trafficking offenses that
would allow judges to depart
from mandatory minimum
sentences in specific circumstances. The council also said
courts should have flexibility
in cases where the prosecution and defense agree to a
different sentence for certain
serious violent offenders and
sexual offenders.
The council also recommended that several programs
provided for by last year’s law
be allowed to continue and
said the administrators of the
programs should provide a
status report to the governor’s
office by November.
The council recommends
the creation of an ongoing
oversight council to monitor the implementation of
the reforms enacted last
year and any legislation that
stems from the report in the
current session.
Police arrest man in 2 robberies
Renewal
• Continued from Page B4
members did not expect
any rezoning to be finalized
before early summer.
Community leaders and
business owners expressed
their desire to be part of the
renewal process.
“I just think we need to sit
down and talk about what we
want it to look like, and not
have [it decided] for us,” said
Alma Dotson of Dotson’s
Funeral Home.
Dialogue with community leaders will be essential,
Rhea
• Continued from Page B4
He said he does not know
how many vehicles the county
owns, but is researching that.
“Some of our vehicles get
only nine miles per gallon. I
think we need to look into
whether we could include
four-cylinder” vehicles in the
county fleet.
He also told commissioners a new recycling program
will begin this week at the
Morgantown convenience
center, then be expanded
arrest reports.
He drove to another convenience store — the Mapco
Express at 4711 Brainerd Road
— and went to pay $10 for gas
when he asked for all of the
cash in the register. The clerk
asked if he was serious, and
he pulled the bandana over
the lower half of his face.
The clerk gave him $83.
Chattanooga and East
Ridge police arrested Charlie Fletcher, 20, in connection with Monday’s robber-
ies in Brainerd. Police said
they also suspect Fletcher
committed three robberies
in East Ridge.
Police tracked Fletcher
down by finding his 1979
gray Buick Regal and finding it was registered to him,
according to reports.
Officers went to a house
at 2216 Elmendorf St. and
called Fletcher and the other
occupants out. He was wearing clothes like those worn
by the robber.
said 2nd District Council- for safety and customers.
man Bill Estes, who repCouncilman David May
resents the area.
cited the success of
February’s planning
Chattanooga partnerboard meeting will
ships between the pubmake an ideal place
lic and private sectors
to begin that engageas a way to encourage
ment, he said.
reinvestment in the
Other integral
area. If the area could
ingredients for the
be turned into a magmakeover will be the
net, it would mean
addition of sidewalks Bill Estes
more revenue for the
with streetlamps and
city and improve the
the transition of the street’s quality of life of the nearby
center lane into a landscaped area, he said.
divider, Jobe said. Beyond
“The benefits could be
cosmetic appeal, the pro- enormous,” Estes said.
posed changes are expected
Paul Leach is based in
to have a calming effect on Cleveland. Email him at
traffic, which will be good paul.leach.press@gmail.com.
to Frazier, Wolf Creek and
Evensville. Paper, cardboard,
plastic, glass and steel will
be recycled at the centers,
he said.
Hollin commended his
efforts. “I think we ought to
congratulate George for his
work in solid waste. We can
take a lot out of the landfill,
and maybe sell a little of” the
material.
Thacker said officials at
the Dayton La-Z-Boy plant
have been encouraging recycling efforts, and have been
working with Dayton city
officials to this end, as well.
Tom Davis can be reached
at tsdavis@volstate.net.
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A man with a red bandana
pulled over part of his face
approached the checkout
counter at the Kangaroo convenience store at 4900 Brainerd Road on Monday.
“I have a gun,” the man
told a clerk.
The 24-year-old clerk
handed over about $160 in
cash before the bandit fled
in an older model gray sedan
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Georgia Senate committee
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AT L A N TA — G o v.
Nathan Deal and Senate
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quickly to shore up the state
Medicaid program without
requiring lawmakers to vote
directly on the plan.
A Senate committee
approved a slightly altered
version of the governor’s plan
Tuesday, with only a handful
of audible objections. A vote
by the full Senate is expected
Thursday, the same day Deal
delivers his State of the State
Address and just three days
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..
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Breaking News: 423-757-News
3 reasons your family may
never receive your full estate
Recent legal activity in Tennessee shows
why you should be concerned…
By Norman Sabin
Sabin & Associates, PLLC
CHATTANOOGA — The
funeral is only the start of your
family’s problems. Even though
you’ve worked hard your entire
life and saved up something
you’d like to pass on to your
family, they may end up with
nothing. You can spare your
family a second round of grief.
Keep reading and I’ll share just
3 critical reasons your family
may be facing difficulties.
My name is Norman Sabin, and as an Estate Planning
Attorney here in Tennessee,
I work with families who are
concerned about passing on
their legacy to those they care
about. Recent legal trends
cause me great concern. In this
article, I’d like to highlight just
some of the issues which may
affect your family.
Lost In Probate Court
Chances are high your estate
is going to wind up in probate
court. In probate court they decide if your will is valid, try to
settle disputes, distribute your
assets to your heirs, and settle
any outstanding issues. Probate
court is a very lengthy process
and it may take several years until your will clears probate.
Another problem with probate is its public nature. Everything about your will is in the
public record so virtually anyone from an angry distant relative to someone out to cheat
your family has access to every
single detail of your finances.
Finally, your heirs don’t get
their share of your estate until
Uncle Sam and the lawyers get
their share which can be very
expensive.
But there is a way to pass on
your entire estate—regardless
of its size—to your loved ones
while legally avoiding probate.
I’ll show you how to do this at
an upcoming free seminar.
Not Protecting Yourself
Or Your Estate
You’ve worked hard your
entire life and you’d like to pass
on your estate to your loved
ones. But unless you quickly
take action, there may be nothing left for your family.
Statistics reveal you are six
times more likely to become
disabled before you die. The
US Government Census Bureau expects the disability rate
to double in the next decade.
Yet most people plan their
wills for what will take place
after their death. This is a serious mistake.
Very frequently we see
plans people have made for
their heirs become undone because of the need for long-term
nursing care. This year the national average for a nursing
home stay is almost $73,000
per year. It’s been reported that
more than 500,000 seniors a
year go broke because of these
long-term care costs.
Before Medicaid picks up
a dime, your assets may be exhausted. You may die and leave
nothing to your heirs.
Not Protecting Your Family
Your family’s troubles only start with the funeral. Even if you
think you’ve taken care of your family with a will or a living
trust, recent legal activity shows your family could lose most
or all of your estate. Our free seminar will reveal if your family is at risk and how to fix the problem if they are.
vorce or squander the estate
with foolish financial decisions.
Most wills and trusts I’ve examined do nothing to protect
against these risks.
Many wills and trusts
give your assets outright to
your heirs when you and your
spouse are gone. This is a huge
mistake. If one of your goals
in establishing a trust was to
protect your family, your work
may have been in vain.
There are three principal issues of concern with regard to
protecting your family.
Skyrocketing Divorce Rate
With the divorce rate hovering at 50%, you cannot afford to ignore another very real
danger. In Tennessee, a divorcing spouse can walk away with
50% of your assets if things
are not properly handled. You
worked your entire life to build
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OPINION
B6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
Established 1869 Adolph S. Ochs, Publisher 1878-1935
HARRY AUSTIN
Editorial Page Editor
EDITORIALS
COMMENTARY
Collaborate vs. collaborate
McClatchy Newspapers
For sane gun-control rules
P
resident Obama is expected this
week, possibly today, to make
good on his promise to pursue
saner gun-control policy in the wake of
the Sandy Hook massacre of 20 young
school children and six educators.
Reports suggest he will unveil the most
comprehensive set of new gun-control
proposals in decades. This long-awaited
initiative merits vigorous support.
Unfortunately, Obama’s attempt to
seize this rare moment of opportunity
for building a safer society will necessarily trigger a political battle with one
of the strongest, most brazen political
lobbies in Washington. In this case, it’s
a battle worth having, precisely because
the issue of sensible gun control has
become so needlessly polarized.
The NRA and its supporters wrongly
contend, or pretend, that more sensible
gun rules requiring a universal background check for gun purchases, and a
usable, practical data bank to track criminal and mental health records, amounts
to government over-reach. Such criticism is itself an over-reach, and that is
the problem.
The proposed rule changes — both
those that would require congressional
approval, and those that the president
can implement by executive orders
— would be entirely sensible in their
approach. They would do nothing to
undermine 2nd Amendment rights as
established by the conservative bloc
of the U.S. Supreme in its pivotal 2010
ruling upholding a personal right to
possess guns. That ruling explicitly
upheld reasonable government rules on
gun purchases and exclusions of guncarry rights in sensitive places, such as
schools, government offices and certain
public venues.
The new rules would only make
orderly and much-needed improvements
in public safety through a reliable background check system for purchases of
guns and ammunition, improved reporting requirements by gun vendors and
state and local governments, and establishment of a comprehensive database to
quickly link law enforcement agencies to
criminals, weapons-related crimes and
gun trafficking operations.
Obama’s proposed reinstatement of
the expired ban on assault rifles and highcapacity magazines is a practical proposal. Sportsmen, gun enthusiasts and homeowners have no real need for the sort
of military-grade, rapid-fire capacity that
deranged shooters obviously prefer for
massacres in schools, theaters, shopping
malls and places of worship. But while a
new ban is important, it’s not as important as a universal background check.
Without it, an estimated 40 percent of
gun purchases — those between private
sellers and buyers, mostly at public gun
shows — are made without background
or mental health checks, thus creating
the sewer of guns to criminals.
Equally important is building a better
and more accessible database related to
gun-records and related crimes. State
governments, for example, are not now
required to participate in the federal
system for gun purchases, and many
do not report their background check
findings to federal agencies. More than
two-thirds of the states fail to report
most of their mental health checks, if
they bother to check them at all. That
must change.
Due to congressional restrictions on
gun-related records and uncooperative
state governments, current rules fall
short in many other ways. Records of
background checks, if they are reported
by states, must be quickly disposed of,
and not entered into a database. The
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives is not allowed to make
an unannounced check of a gun-store
owner’s inventory and sales data more
than once year — a clause that easily
boosts illegal gun-trafficking.
The ATF&E is also forbidden, thanks
again to Congress, to keep records in
its database that quickly link gun serial
numbers to purchasers. Congressional
mandates have also made falsification of
gun-sales records a misdemeanor. They
have muddled up the legal language of
allowable gun-trade business without
a dealer’s license. They have restricted
the bureau’s ability to share gun sales
records with local and state law enforcement agencies. They have prohibited
sharing of anything but aggregate data to
the public. They have prevented use of
tracing data in some cases involving gun
dealers licenses. They have barred the
Centers for Disease Control from compiling and studying the number of gunrelated wounds and deaths as a public
health issue. They have barred proposals
to require trigger locks, ammunitionrelated technology, and various crime
tracing techniques.
And to further muddle sane gun-related policy, Congress has barred appointment of a chief administrator to the
ATF&E for six years.
All this must change to prevent guns
from getting into the hands of criminals
and the mentally ill, and to improve public safety. Most Americans, polls show,
now agree with the president’s agenda
for sane gun control. But they will have
to visibly support this cause to bring it
about.
PALO ALTO, Calif. —
col-lab-o-rate [kuh-lab-uhreyt]
verb (used without
object), col-lab-o-rat-ed,
col-lab-o-rat-ing.
1. to work, one with
another;
cooperate, as on
a literary
w o r k :
They collaborated
on a novel.
2.
to
cooperate,
Thomas
usually
Friedman
willingly,
with an enemy nation,
especially with an enemy
occupying one’s country:
He collaborated with the
Nazis during World War
II.
It is often said that Britain
and the United States are two
countries divided by a common language. That is also
true of Washington and Silicon
Valley. The other day, I was
interviewing Alan S. Cohen, an
expert on networks who has
been involved in several successful startups. At one point,
Cohen began talking about
the importance of “collaboration” both within and between
firms in Silicon Valley. Then
he stopped and said it’s interesting that in Silicon Valley
“collaboration” is defined as
something you do with another colleague or company to
achieve greatness — something to be praised — as in:
“They collaborated on that
beautiful piece of software.”
But in Congress “collaboration” means something very
different today. It’s the second
definition — collaboration is
an act of treason — something
you do when you cross over and
vote with the other party. In
Silicon Valley, great “collaborators” are prized; in Washington, they are hanged. Said
Cohen, who was vice president at Nicira, a networking
startup that recently sold for
$1.26 billion: “In Washington,
when they say ‘collaborator’
they mean ‘traitor’; here they
■ In Washington today
collaboration happens
only to avert crises or to
give out pork, not to build
anything great.
mean ‘colleague.”’
It’s not the only reason, but
it’s a big reason that Silicon Valley is thriving more than ever,
finding more ways to solve
bigger and bigger problems
faster, and that Washington
is only capable of producing
11th-hour, patched-together,
Rube Goldberg compromises,
with no due diligence, that
produce only suboptimal outcomes to our biggest problems. In Washington today
collaboration happens only
to avert crises or to give out
pork, not to build anything
great. That is why if Congress
were a startup, the early-stage
investors would have long ago
been wiped out and the firm
shuttered. Cause of death: an
inability of the partners to collaborate. “People in Washington,” said Cohen, “forgot that
they are developers: ‘I am on
this committee. I have to fix
this problem and write some
software to do it,’ and that
requires collaboration. They
have forgotten their job and
the customer.”
Don’t get me wrong, Silicon Valley is not some knitting
circle where everyone happily
shares their best ideas. It is the
most competitive, dog-eat-dog,
I-will-sue-you-if-you-eventhink-about-infringing-mypatents innovation hub in the
world. In that sense, it is, as
politics is and should always
be, a clash of ideas. What Silicon Valley is not, though, is
only a clash of ideas.
Despite the heated competition, lots of collaboration
still happens here for one main
reason: to serve the customer
the best product or service.
One way is through new
open-source innovation platforms like GitHub — a kind
of “Wikipedia for programmers” — where hobbyists,
startups and big firms share
ideas in order to enlist more
people (either within a firm
in restricted ways or from the
outside in a wide open manner) to help improve their software or websites.
Another way is through
“co-opetition.” There are many
examples here of companies
trying to kill each other in one
market but working together
in another — to better serve
customers. Microsoft Windows runs on Apple Macs
because customers wanted
it. When Apple Maps failed,
Apple asked its users to download Google Maps. Finally,
within firms, it is understood
that to thrive in today’s market,
solve the biggest problems and
serve customers, you need to
assemble the best minds from
anywhere in the world.
“When you obsess about
the customer, you end up
defeating your competition
as a byproduct,” said K.R.
Sridhar, the founder of Bloom
Energy, a fuel-cell company.
“When you are just obsessed
about the competition, you
end up killing yourself” as a
byproduct — “because you
are not focused on the customer.”
The far-right lurch of the
GOP’s base has made this problem worse. When President
Barack Obama built his health
care plan on Mitt Romney’s
operating system in Massachusetts, Romney was so focused
on coddling his base to beat
Obama — rather than trying
to improve Obama’s iteration
of Romney’s own design to
best serve all the customers
— that Romney disowned his
own software. What company
would do that?
With collaboration, one
plus one can often turn out
to be four, says Jeff Weiner,
the CEO of LinkedIn, adding:
“I will always work with you
— if I know we’ll get to four.
You can’t build great products
alone. And if everyone understood that you can’t build
great government alone, our
country would be in a different place.”
New York Times News Service
Letters to the Editors
—— ❖ ——
Whizzing bullets
would slow shooter
A Jan. 11 letter stated, “The
knowledge that teachers at
Sandy Hook Elementary
School were armed would
not have come close to stopping the school’s shooter.” I
disagree. Remember, when
the coward heard the sirens
approaching, he killed himself.
Just the threat of facing armed
authorities caused the coward
to kill himself. After his initial
assault, had anyone started
firing bullets at him, not only
would he have been distracted
from his original plan, but if the
good-guy teacher hadn’t killed
him, most likely he would have
killed himself, right then. This
is much more of a likely probability.
If nothing else, bullets coming at you would definitely
change your plans and give
the police more time to get on
scene. The left wing is placing much emphasis on reducing the number of rounds in
a magazine with the idea that
this would slow down the perpetrator while changing magazines. How much more would
bullets coming at the perpetrator slow him down?
ROBERT CRAWFORD
Harrison
TO SUBMIT
LETTERS
■ Keep them topical,
short (200 words or
fewer), legible and not
more often than one
every 30 days. Letters
may be edited for clarity
and length and should
not previously have been
published elsewhere.
■ Must be signed with
name, address and
telephone number.
■ Send to: Editorial page
editor (either Times or
Free Press), P.O. Box
1447, Chattanooga, TN
37401; fax: 423-7576383; or email: letters@
timesfreepress.com.
up for licenses,” (Jan. 12). A few
points, if I may:
I recently received a form
letter asking me to renew my
driver/photo identification
license. It states that, since I’m
now over 60 years of age, I
can choose to get a non-photo
license. One would think that if
our government is really concerned about fraud and identity theft, they would require a
photo on any such identification documents they issue.
Saturday’s article points
out that, once provisions of
the Real ID Act take effect,
these special licenses will be
required to fly commercially
or to enter federal buildings,
among other restrictions. I
I read with interest Satur- would hope, but seriously
day’s article, “ID check beefed doubt, that this will include
Photo ID needed
to fight fraud
registering to vote and actually participating in the voting
process.
Finally, the Wikipedia article on the Real ID Act points
out that Tennessee is among
24 states that have passed legislation opposing Real ID. This
would seem to mean that the
DMV and Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland
Security are acting either in
ignorance of Tennessee law,
or directly against the wishes
of the people as expressed
through their elected representatives.
RONALD KOHLIN
Soddy-Daisy
Be practical
as well as safe
Kudos to those parents
who do not want teachers
armed. A security professional once advised me that
a security force working primarily indoors should never
be armed. They should have
radios directly to 911. They
should stay hidden to advise
the outside. There should be at
least four school officials with
these radios.
The role of school employees is to protect the children
and themselves. There should
be alarm buttons in every
classroom and about every 30
feet in the halls and on every
level in stairways.
Let’s be practical as well as
safe.
DAN CHESANOW
Athens, Tenn.
...
. timesfreepress.com
OPINION
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • B7
Established 1936, Roy McDonald, Founder & Publisher, 1936-1990
Frank McDonald, President and Chairman, 1969-2000
Lee Anderson, Editor, 1958-2013; Publisher, 1990-1999
Drew Johnson, Editor
EDITORIALS
The Right response
•••
In this column, Free Press ediYou criticize the Tennessee law that
torial page editor Drew Johnson
replies to emails, letters to the limits the sale of pseudoephedrine in an
editor and online comments in attempt to curb meth production. What
response to Free Press editorials. is the solution to the meth epidemic?
Submit questions on Twitter: @
I criticize any law that treats innoDrews_Views
cent people as criminals. In the case
It’s been a long time since I respond- of state laws that make it difficult to
ed to readers and the questions have buy pseudoephedrine to treat a head
piled up. Here are my responses to a cold, a failed attempt to prevent a tiny
few of the inquiries I’ve gotten over minority of people from misusing a
product has harmed the majority.
the past few weeks:
The Tennessee General Assembly
The author is an idiot. Why doesn’t should admit its failure and return
he put his name at the top of the page pseudoephedrine products to pharmacy shelves.
and take credit for his opinions?
As to solving the meth epidemic,
My name (Drew Johnson) is at the the first step is admitting that meth
may be a probtop of the page
lem, but it is
every single day
certainly not an
in the masthead.
epidemic. The
Most newspa1918 flu outper editorial secbreak that killed
tions do not feaan estimated 60
ture the names
million people
of authors of
was an epidemic.
editorials. That’s
In 2010, 439,000
because editoripeople were
als are, by their
“current users of
nature, sups
meth” according
posed to reflect
r
e
ap
to the Departthe voice and
sp
ew
N
ment of Health
view of their
y
h
tc
and Human Serpaper — not the
a
l
cC
vices — that’s 1
singular opinion
M
out of every 706
of the editorial’s
Americans. That
author.
doesn’t seem like
The Free Press
editorial page is intended to repre- an “epidemic” to me.
Further, according to a best-estisent the perspective of the centerright leaning Chattanooga Free Press, mate from the RAND Corporation’s
one of the two papers that merged Drug Policy Research Center, 927
to create the Times Free Press. That people die annually in the U.S. from
free market, limited government out- meth-related causes (everything from
look will always guide the content of overdoses to explosions). That’s about
the Free Press opinion page and be the same number of Americans who
reflected in the page’s unsigned edi- die every year in boating accidents.
Again, hardly an “epidemic.”
torials.
The best way to address the meth
The unsigned editorials featured
on this page are always written by problem is the best way to address all
me or, on occasion, a guest editorial drugs usage: End the government’s
writer. The Free Press page may also expensive, dangerous war on drugs.
occasionally publish editorial opinions Legalizing drugs and making them
from other publications that reflect the as safe as possible, and then providFree Press’ ideology. In such instances, ing resources to help people who are
that newspapers’ name follows the addicted to get well, are much better solutions than pushing misguided
editorial.
policies that actually make drug use
•••
Drew, it seems like you are negative more dangerous.
It’s important to realize that, no matabout Chattanooga. I challenge you to
write about what you like about the ter what, some people will use drugs.
The government won’t change that, but
city.
they can (and do) waste a lot of money
I accept that challenge. You already and trample a lot of liberties trying.
•••
may have noticed that I’ve recently
Why do you write about federallypointed out several charities, public
officials and businesses that deserve subsidized museums, fairs and studies
that cost taxpayers a couple hundred
praise and support.
Clearly, the editorial section should thousand dollars? That is a drop in the
be a cheerleader for the commu- $3.8 trillion federal budget.
nity — and, increasingly, the page
Every dollar that the government
will highlight the successes of our
spends is a dollar that is taken from
region.
That said, I believe strongly that the pockets of taxpayers.
Before spending our tax dollars (or
it is the role of a good opinion page
to expose examples of corruption, borrowing money or printing it), lawcronyism, wasted tax dollars, dishon- makers and bureaucrats should ask: Is
esty and abuse of power. Performing this program or project constitutional,
that public service and working to is it necessary and is it something I’d
ensure that Times Free Press readers spend my own money to support? If
aren’t being taken advantage of by the the answer to any of those three quespeople entrusted to serve them is the tions is “no,” the program or project
most valuable use of time and ink I shouldn’t be funded — no matter how
large or small it is.
can imagine.
COMMENTARY
Armed mom protects
By Paul Jacob
“Gun violence” is supposed to be bad. Right?
Not long after the New
Year’s Day, a woman in
Loganville, Ga., was working
in the upstairs office of her
home when she spied someone lurking outside.
The suspicious man, Paul
Slater, was about to break
into her home with a crowbar. Fortunately, before he
could do that, the woman
hid herself and her 9-year-old
twins in an attic crawlspace.
Unfortunately, Slater found
out where they were hiding.
Fortunately, the woman had a
gun; as soon as the intruder
menacingly presented himself, she shot him.
Alas, after shooting six
■ “What if there had
been multiple attackers?
Then that 30-round
clip suddenly seems
appropriate.”
times and hitting Slater five,
the woman ran out of bullets. But she had the presence
of mind to tell the would-be
assailant that she would fire
again if he moved. Then she
took the kids to a neighbor.
The thug tried to escape in
his car, but was too seriously
injured to get far.
“My wife is a hero,” her
husband told WSB-TV. “She
protected her kids. She did
what she was supposed to
do as a responsible, prepared
gun owner.”
Responding to the fact
that the invader was only
partly subdued before the
gun owner ran out of bullets, Glenn Reynolds (“InstaPundit”) says: “See, this is
where one of those ‘assault
weapons’ might have come
in handy.”
An InstaPundit reader
expands upon the point:
“What if there had been multiple attackers? Then that 30round clip suddenly seems
appropriate.”
Indeed. And disarming the
just sure seems like a poor
way to reduce gun violence.
Paul Jacob is president of
Citizens in Charge, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group working
to protect and expand voter
initiative rights.
COMMENTARY
Guns without roses
WA S H I N G TO N —
Unlike many who recently
have joined the debate about
gun rights,
I h ave a
long history with
guns, which
I p ro ffe r
only in the
interest of
pre-empting the
Kathleen
“elitist, libParker
eral, swine,
prostitute, blahblahblah”
charge.
I grew up in a home with
guns, lots of them, and was
taught early how to shoot,
care for firearms and treat
them respectfully. My
father’s rules were simple:
Never point a gun at someone unless you intend to
shoot them; if you intend to
shoot, aim to kill.
Dear ol’ dad was a lawand-order guy — a lawyer,
judge and World War II veteran who did everything by
the book — except when it
came to guns. Most memorable among his many lectures
was a confidence: “There is
only one law in the land that
I would break,” he told me.
“I will never register my
guns.”
I suppose if he hadn’t also
opposed bumper stickers, he
might have attached the one
about “cold dead fingers” to
his fender. He also might
have liked a slogan I read
recently: “With guns, we are
citizens; without them, we
are subjects.”
By today’s standards my
father would be considered
a gun nut, but his sentiments
were understandable in the
context of his time. Like others of his generation, he had
witnessed Germany’s disarming of its citizenry and
the consequences thereafter.
Thus, the slippery slope of
which gun rights advocates
speak is not without precedent or reason.
But the history of gun
control laws is not without
■ Having to stop one’s
rampage to reload rather
breaks the spell, or so one
would imagine.
contradictions and ironies
that belie the current insistence that guns-without-controls is the ipso facto of originalist America. In fact, the
federal government of our
Founders made gun ownership mandatory for white
males, while denying others
— slaves and later freedmen
— the privilege.
Today, the most vociferous defenders of gun rights
tend to be white, rural males
who oppose any regulation.
But theirs was once the
ardently held position of
radical African-Americans.
Notably, in the 1960s, Black
Panthers Bobby Seale and
Huey Newton toted guns
wherever they went to
make a point: Blacks needed
guns to protect themselves
in a country that wasn’t
quite ready to enforce civil
rights.
In one remarkable incident in May 1967, as recounted in The Atlantic by UCLA
law professor Adam Winkler,
24 men and six women, all
armed, ascended the California Capitol steps, read
a proclamation about gun
rights and proceeded inside
— with their guns, which
was legal at the time.
Needless to say, conservatives, including then-Gov.
Ronald Reagan, were suddenly very, very interested
in gun control. That afternoon, Reagan told reporters
there was “no reason why
on the street today a citizen
should be carrying loaded
weapons.”
The degree of one’s allegiance to principle apparently depends mainly on who is
holding the gun.
While black activists
were adamant about their
right to protect themselves,
the National Rifle Associa-
tion wasn’t much interested
in the constitutional question until the mid-’70s when
an organizational split produced a new leader, Harlon
Carter, who was dedicated
to advocacy and determined
to dig a deep line in the Beltway sand.
The Second Amendment debate about what
the Founders intended was
clarified in 2008 when the
U.S. Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller
determined that the right of
the people to keep and bear
arms included individuals,
not just a “well-regulated
militia.” However, as Winkler pointed out, Justice
Antonin Scalia’s opinion
left wiggle room for exceptions, including prohibitions related to felons and
the mentally ill. Scalia was
not casting doubt, the justice wrote, on “laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial
sale of arms.”
This still leaves open the
loophole of private sales that
do not require background
checks, which President
Obama wants to close. We
will hear more about this in
coming weeks, but the call
meanwhile to ban assault
weapons or limit magazines
in the wake of the horrific
mass murder of children
and others at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Connecticut is hardly draconian.
It won’t solve the problem of
mentally disturbed people
exacting weird justice from
innocents, but it might limit
the toll. Having to stop one’s
rampage to reload rather
breaks the spell, or so one
would imagine.
One also imagines that
the old Reagan would say
there’s no reason a citizen
needs an assault weapon or
a magazine that can destroy
dozens of people in minutes.
He would certainly be correct and, in a sane world,
possibly even electable.
Washington Post Writers Group
Red Envelope Day
By Mike Chambers
In 1979, I was a junior at
the University of Georgia.
My girlfriend was pregnant.
At age 21, with my life
still ahead of me, I made the
decision to influence Susan’s
(not her real name) decision
to get an abortion.
She traveled to Atlanta
and did so.
Six years earlier, Roe vs.
Wade overrode a Texas law
to make access to legalized
abortion the law of the land.
My son or daughter joined
the estimated 56 million
babies who have been cast
aside since by myself and
other Americans as “in the
way,” “inconvenient,” or simply “unwanted.”
Sort of like junk mail.
The White House,
members of Congress, the
Supreme Court, and national
media can expect some junk
mail of their own this month.
“Red Envelope Day” organizers hope to represent those
lives lost to abortion with
a campaign aimed at President Obama, lawmakers and
opinion-shapers in America.
They also hope to raise more
than $1 million for pro-life
causes.
Organizers hope to send
out 1.2 million empty red
envelopes this year, representing the number of
■ I can only say I am
sorry for the past and hope
there will be a future for
those lives potentially on
the way as gifts from God.
unborn aborted in America
each year. The envelope
simply reads: “It is empty
because that life was unable
to offer anything to the
world. Responsibility begins
with conception.”
Participants are urged to
mail their envelopes so they
will arrive in Washington by
Jan. 22, the 40th anniversary
of Roe vs. Wade.
Red Envelope Day is, at the
very least, a creative marketing ploy to raise money for
pro-life efforts. Will it make
any difference? Perhaps not.
President Obama, in past
comments to the pro-choice
crowd, said he did not want
his daughters “burdened”
with a “bad” choice.
According to World Net
Daily, the White House
received millions of empty
red envelopes in 2009. You
probably did not hear the
story, as few in the mainstream media covered it.
White House mail workers
called it a “deluge” with as
many as 2.3 million empty
envelopes received, rivaling
the outpouring of similar
letter campaigns during the
Vietnam War.
But the story was cast
away, deemed unimportant,
not worth notice, as millions
of us have done before with
vastly more important packages. That shouldn’t keep
use from trying again.
I cannot change the decision Susan and I made in
1979. I can never hold that
son or daughter, watch him
or her grow and mature.
I can only say I am sorry
for the past and hope there
will be a future for those
lives potentially on the way
as gifts from God.
My red envelope is in
the mail, but not completely empty. It is full of hope;
hope for the chance at life
for the yet unborn, and hope
that forgiveness begins with
atonement.
Mike Chambers is a former
Chattanooga broadcaster and
journalist, and is currently a
freelance writer and photographer.
Bible Wisdom
For there shall arise false
Christs, and false prophets,
and shall shew great signs
and wonders; insomuch that,
if it were possible, they shall
deceive the very elect. Matthew 24:24.
...
.
C
BUSINESS
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013
timesfreepress.com/business
q
“GRAPH SEARCH”: Facebook unveils new feature, C5
q
DEBT STANDOFF: Fitch warns it may again downgrade U.S. rating, C3
Denso
injecting
130 jobs
in Athens
STOCK
WATCH
DOW
13,534.89
NASDAQ
3,110.78
S&P 500
1,472.34
6-MO
T-BILLS
.12%
30-YR
T-BONDS
3.03%
CRUDE
OIL
$93.28
GOLD
$1,683.40
p
q
p
p
n
q
p
+27.57
-6.72
+1.66
By Mike Pare
Staff Writer
+.01
...
-.86
+14.50
BUSINESS
BRIEFING
Chattanooga
Whiskey gets
Twitter check
Chattanooga Whiskey Co. has been verified
by Twitter with a blue
check mark to verify the
authenticity of the local
company.
Although Chattanooga
Whiskey is still waiting
for legislative approval to
distill its whiskey in Chattanooga, the company is
marketing and selling a
whiskey it contracts to
buy from a distiller in
Indiana.
Chattanooga Whiskey
has garnered more than
18,500 Facebook friends
and has relied upon
social media to promote
its product. Chattanooga
Whiskey is among only a
half dozen local companies and public figures for
whom Twitter has given a
blue check mark to verify
their identity.
VW engine plant
opens in Mexico
Volkswagen opened
an engine plant in Mexico
on Tuesday that will supply engines to both its
production plant nearby
in Puebla and its factory
in Chattanooga.
The engine plant in
Silao in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato is
the Volkswagen Group’s
100th plant worldwide,
according to the company.
The plant is designed
for annual capacity of
330,000 units. Investment
was put at $550 million.
VW will create more than
700 jobs at the plant in
the medium term.
In 2010, Chattanooga had vied for the
engine plant before VW
announced it was putting
it in Silao.
First Things First
wins Claris work
Chattanooga technology company Claris Networks has awarded First
Things First $200,000 in
technology and support
as the winner of Claris’
Cloud Giveaway.
Larry Bodie, CEO of
Claris Networks, said First
Things First will get technology infrastructure and
support from Claris.
“We are thrilled to
partner with First Things
First,” Bodie said. “They
run that organization
with the highest degree of
excellence, and it’s easy to
see how it has influenced
the community profoundly.”
The nonprofit was
chosen for the aid by a
group of local community
volunteers. First Things
First employs 13 people
and works to strengthen
families through education, seminars and collaborative programs.
Staff and Wire Reports
Staff Photo by Mike Pare
Volkswagen rolls out a Passat Performance concept car at the North American International Auto Show
in Detroit. The sportiest of Passats would be made in Chattanooga if officials give the OK.
A lot of flash
VW introduces Passat Performance concept car
By Mike Pare
Staff Writer
ETROIT — The sportiest, and
some might say flashiest, member
of the Volkswagen Passat family
soon could arrive at a nearby dealer with a made-in-Chattanooga badge.
The Passat Performance concept,
boasting a new-to-America turbocharged
engine and more robust styling and driving
features, was rolled out here at the North
American International Auto Show.
Frank Fischer, chief executive for VW’s
Chattanooga operations, said that if the
concept is given approval, assembly will
take place at the automaker’s plant in
Chattanooga.
“Any derivative of the Passat always
will be made in Chattanooga,” he said.
Top VW officials are weighing the
D
reception the Passat earns at the auto
show before giving the sports sedan the
go-ahead, Fischer said.
“We’ll see what the reaction is,” he said.
“A decision will be made later.”
Jonathan Browning, VW Group of
America’s CEO, said the concept produces both better performance and fuel
efficiency than the 170 horsepower, fivecylinder engine.
The Passat Performance power plant
is a 1.8-liter four-cylinder turbocharged
engine that delivers 250 horsepower. This
engine already is available in VWs in the
European and Asian markets, according
to the automaker.
“The engine is built in Mexico,” Browning said.
PASSAT
PERFORMANCE
■ 1.8-liter
turbocharged fourcylinder engine with
250 horsepower
■ Six-speed
automatic
transmission
■ Dual exhaust
■ 19-inch alloy
wheels
■ Bi-xenon headlights
■ LED taillights
■ Carbon-style
detailing inside and
out
Source: Volkswagen
See PASSAT, Page C2
Auto parts supplier
Denso is adding 130 jobs
at its Athens, Tenn., facility
as part of a $1 billion investment in North America.
Denso plans to plow
$50 million into the Athens
facility as it brings production of its gasoline direct
injection system technology to the state, according
to the company.
“It’s a good shot in the
arm,” said Athens City
Manager Mitch Moore
about the project.
The company, that
already employs more than
1,000 in Athens, is expected
to start staffing, training
and tooling at the plant in
June, said Moore. Production is slated to begin in
2014, the company said.
Hugh Cantrell, general
manager of the Denso facility, said the move is to meet
demand amid rising fuel
economy standards.
“As automakers look
to meet upcoming fuel
requirements, Denso will
begin producing its GDI
products in the U.S. to
meet increasing demand
from our North American
customers,” he said in a
statement.
McMinn County Mayor
John Gentry said the
announcement is the result
of building ties locally and
with Denso officials in
Japan.
“Denso is a first-class
manufacturer,” he said in
an email.
Moore said Denso was
hit by the roughest part of
the Great Recession.
See DENSO, Page C2
Wal-Mart offers returning vets a job
By Alana Semuels
Los Angeles Times
The Associated Press
Wal-Mart employees Jon Christians and Lori Harris
take job applications and answer questions during a
job fair in Springfield, Ill.
NEW YORK — Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. has been coming
under a lot of fire lately. Two
of its suppliers were found to
have been making goods in a
factory where 112 people died
in Bangladesh, and employees throughout the country
walked out of the store on
one of the busiest retail days
of the year to protest bad
working conditions.
But the company, never a
crowd favorite at worker-soli-
darity gatherings, may be trying to improve its image.
In a speech to the National
Retail Federation in New York
on Tuesday, Wal-Mart U.S.
Chief Executive Bill Simon
said the company would hire
any returning veteran who
wanted a job.
He also said the company
would buy more products
from the U.S. and help more
employees become full time.
It was the 2012 election and
the gridlock in Congress that
motivated Simon to introduce
these initiatives, he said.
“The election clarified for
me that it’s time for those of
us outside politics to get to
work,” he said.
“I find it fascinating that
during the campaign we all
waited with bated breath
each month for the government to tell us how many
private-sector jobs were
created,” Simon said. “After
all, it’s the private sector that
creates jobs.”
See VETS, Page C2
INVESTMENTREPORT
PERSONALFINANCE
Fighting the flu can help stocks in short term
New mortgage rules
provide haven for banks
Hospitals are swamped with flu patients.
Although the flu normally doesn’t spread across the country until
late January or February, it is already widespread in more than
40 states.
Even so, financial analysts expect health care stocks to
remain largely immune from big share price swings as the need
for medical help rises.
“The current cold, cough and flu season looks to be the most
severe in at least the last decade and continues to intensify,” Credit
Suisse analyst Edward Kelly said in a research note.
Flu season can help drugstore chains like CVS Caremark, Rite Aid
and Walgreen because it brings more patients to stores to fill
prescriptions or pick up disinfectants or over-the-counter remedies. But
the gains can be short-lived.
Kelly said an analysis of the three most severe flu seasons in the last
decade shows that drugstore stocks perform well as flu activity picks up,
but they then give back much of the gain in the following months.
Stocking up?
Flu season may offer only a temporary lift, but here’s a look at
the health of three major drugstore stocks.
CVS Caremark (CVS)
Rite Aid (RAD)
Walgreen (WAG)
Tuesday’s close: $51.79
Tuesday’s close: $1.51
Tuesday’s close: $39.30
52-WEEK RANGE
$41
P/E ratio*:
1-yr. return:
52-WEEK RANGE
52-WEEK RANGE
$52
17
25%
$1
$2
P/E ratio*: Projected losses
1-yr. return:
17%
$29
P/E ratio*:
1-yr. return:
A growing pharmacy benefitsmanagement business and
customer defections from
Walgreen have helped the
second-largest drugstore chain.
The chain recently broke a
string of quarterly losses dating
to 2007. Revenue is rebounding after it closed hundreds of
underperforming stores.
The nation's largest drugstore
chain is still fighting through a
revenue slump sparked by its
since-resolved contract dispute
with Express Scripts.
Source: FactSet
*based on earnings forecast for next 12 months
$39
18
24%
Tom Murphy, Jenni Sohn • AP
In the aftermath of the
At last, after 4,000 years
of banking history, the
subprime mortgage crisis,
government has imposed
regulators felt compelled
standards for safe
to implement new
mortgage lending
rules aimed at avoidpractices in the form
ing a repeat of the
of the Ability-to2008 debacle.
Repay rule.
The rule creates
This new regulaa class of mortgage
tion, promulgated
loans called “qualiby the Consumer
fied mortgages,”
Financial Protection
which meet certain
Chris
Bureau, introduces
Hopkins standards of evalua list of requireation.
ments lenders must satisfy
Mortgage originators
in order to make sensible
must now consider, at a
mortgage loans to consum- minimum, eight specific
ers.
factors before underwritIf they do so, the lending a new home loan. The
ers are sheltered from legal astute reader might guess a
liability if the borrower
few of these qualifying facsubsequently defaults.
tors, but here is a sampling:
Development of the new current income, employrule for mortgage loans
ment status, monthly loan
was stipulated in the Dodd- payment, other debt obligaFrank financial reform
tions, debt-to-income ratio,
legislation. The agency
and, last but not least,
responsible, the CPFC, was credit history.
also an offspring of DoddFrank.
See RULES, Page C2
■ To contact Business • Phone: 423-757-6340 • Fax: 423-668-5085 • Email: business@timesfreepress.com
C2 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • •
Vets
Zaxby’s investigates credit, debit card breach
• Continued from Page C1
Leon Stafford
Wal-Mart said it plans to
hire more than 100,000 veterans in the next five years
as part of a program to offer
a job to “any honorably discharged veteran in his or her
first 12 months off active duty.”
Simon said veterans are often
good employees, and that his
company plans to begin hiring
them after Memorial Day.
“Not every returning veteran wants to work in retail,” he
said. “But every veteran who
does will have a place to go.”
Veterans will be placed in
jobs in stores, clubs, distribution centers and the corporate
office, he said.
“Hiring a veteran can be
one of the best decisions any
of us can make,” he said. “Veterans have a record of performance under pressure. They’re
quick leaders, and they’re team
players.”
Some retail workers questioned whether veterans would
want to work for Wal-Mart.
They include Edgar Lucas,
38, a U.S. Army veteran who
has worked for Wal-Mart and
other retailers in New York.
“If you are looking out for
the veterans, they need something that’s guaranteed 40
hours a week,” he said. “They
need to know their schedules. Everybody knows that
Wal-Mart, they’ll work you 28
hours, make sure that you don’t
get 40.”
Lucas, who lives in the
Bronx, said most retail jobs are
the same. He’s been stringing
together various such jobs, trying to get enough hours, knowing that he won’t get benefits
unless he gets to full time.
During Simon’s speech, a
group of protesters in the hall
unveiled a banner that read,
“NRF: Stop Clocking Out
Workers, It’s Time for Good
Jobs and Just Hours.” They
chanted in the hall until they
were escorted out. About 100
workers from groups also protested outside.
“Workers are going to make
sure that the kind of jobs that
they’ve announced for veterans are the kind of jobs that
workers need,” said Yana Walton, a spokeswoman for Retail
Action Project. “That means
enough hours and living wages
and jobs with benefits.”
Simon defended Wal-Mart
jobs during his speech.
“We’re all tired of retail
jobs being put down, as if
retail workers can’t judge for
themselves what a good job is,”
he said. “Some people say we
don’t offer good jobs. I say this
industry is the greatest engine
of opportunity in the United
States of America.”
Simon pledged to bring
more transparency to the
store’s scheduling system to
allow part-time workers to
choose their hours, and said
Wal-Mart would make internal changes to help part-timers become full time. He didn’t
provide details about how the
company would do that. He did
say, however, that 75 percent of
Wal-Mart’s store management
started as hourly associates.
Simon concluded his speech
by announcing that Wal-Mart
and Sam’s Clubs also will
increase what the companies
buy in the United States, including sporting goods, games and
paper products, which he said
would help boost American
manufacturing. The company
plans to buy an additional $50
billion in U.S. products over
the next 10 years, he said.
“I know according to urban
legend Wal-Mart’s shelves are
filled with foreign products,”
he said. “But the truth may surprise you.”
About two-thirds of the
company’s goods are made,
grown or sourced in the United States, he said. By buying
products made in the U.S.,
Simon said he hoped to nudge
manufacturers to the “tipping
point” where it no longer
made sense to make products
in Asia. Some manufacturers
have told him privately, he
said, that rising labor costs in
Asia and increasing costs of oil
and transportation have made
manufacturing more expensive
overseas than it once was.
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
In what restaurant experts
called an eatery’s worst nightmare, chicken chain Zaxby’s
on Tuesday warned customers that their debit and credit
card information may have
been hacked.
The Athens-based company said malware with suspicious files has been found
on computers in more than
100 stores across the Southeast, including dozens from
metro Atlanta.
The compromise could
allow thieves to access customer’s personal information
and commit fraud, though
Zaxby’s said it had not yet
seen evidence that any data
had been appropriated. The
chain conducted a forensic
investigation and has notified police.
“Zaxby’s Franchising Inc.
takes the security of guest
information very seriously
and is working closely with
the affected store locations
“
Having secure firewalls is vital. Sometimes
restaurants may set up an
unsecured Wi-Fi on their
patio or install a new
DSL line that may unintentionally reconfigure
their firewall and allow
hackers to intrude.
”
— Charles Hoff, food
industry attorney
Chattanooga Times Free Press File Photo
Zaxby’s on Tuesday warned customers that their debit
to provide notice to poten- and credit card information may have been hacked after
tially affected guests,” the malware with suspicious files was found on computers
company said in a release in more than 100 stores across the Southeast.
late Tuesday.
The breach is the kind
of news that restaurateurs
dread, said Bob Wagner,
president of NetFinancials,
which studies the economic
health of Atlanta restaurants.
About 80 percent of a restaurant’s income comes from
return business, and if diners
feel their personal information is not secure, they won’t
return.
“Operators survive on the
goodwill of their customer
base,” Wagner said. “It is
such a cutthroat business
that no operator can stand to
see even 10 percent of their
business go away.”
Zaxby’s is not alone, said
food industry attorney and
Hoff Hospitality head Charles
Hoff. Other hacked victims
include Five Guys Burgers
and Fries, Firehouse Subs
and Subway as well as nonrestaurant retail chains Best
Buy, Hilton and Kroger.
Hackers are targeting the
restaurant industry because
it is perceived to be vulnerable as operators are rarely
provided with information
on how to effectively avoid
or minimize security breaches, Hoff said.
“Having secure firewalls
is vital,” Hoff said. “Sometimes restaurants may set up
an unsecured Wi-Fi on their
patio or install a new DSL
line that may unintentionally
reconfigure their firewall and
allow hackers to intrude.”
Security expert Tom Cross
said the guidelines governing
debit and credit card protection have improved as the
attacks on businesses have
grown. But it’s not always
enough as thieves have also
improved their skills.
“Security is a little bit
harder than just compliance,” said Cross, director of
security research at Atlantabased network security firm
Lancope.
Passat
• Continued from Page C1
The Associated Press
An All Nippon Airways flight sits at Takamatsu airport in Takamatsu, western Japan, after it made an emergency
landing today.
Japanese airlines ground Dreamliners
The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — All Nippon
Airways temporarily grounded its entire fleet of 17 Boeing 787 Dreamliners today
in Japan after smoke was
observed on one of the jets
in flight and the pilot made an
emergency landing, according to Japanese media.
An ANA official said all 787
flights today are canceled.
Japan Airlines spokeswoman Carol Anderson said
that airline also has temporar-
ily grounded its fleet of seven
Dreamliners because of the
ANA incident.
“To ensure safety, JAL
has decided to cancel its
787 operations today, Jan. 16
[Tokyo time],” Anderson said
in an email.
Japanese television station
NHK showed video of the
stricken 787 with its emergency slides deployed.
The plane was carrying
129 passengers and eight crew
members. No one was hurt.
At 8:10 a.m. local time, the
Dreamliner took off from
Yamaguchi in western Japan
headed for Haneda airport
in Tokyo, a 90-minute flight.
The pilot diverted to Takamatsu airport, landing there
at 8:45 a.m.
ANA said the smoke was
in the cockpit and there was a
warning of a battery problem,
according to Japanese media.
The local city fire department
said there was no fire.
Boeing spokeswoman Lori
Inside the car, carbon-like
touches dominate the dashboard.
Two-color leather seats
complement the car’s black
headliner and side pillars. It
also would feature a lowered
sport suspension and electro-mechanical steering to
enhance handling, according
to VW.
While pricing wasn’t
revealed, it likely would be
one of the most expensive
Passats in the sedan’s lineup.
Sales of the beefed-up
Passat are not seen as generating huge numbers, but
it would add to the Passat production level that
hit 152,500 units in 2012,
according to Fischer.
Also at the auto show, the
carmaker showed off sportier versions of its Tiguan
and Touareg sport utility
vehicles.
The Tiguan R-Line and
Touareg R-Line will be
added to the VW line-up for
model year 2014.
Pricing is to be announced
closer to launch.
Contact Mike Pare at
mpare@timesfreepress.com
or 423-757-6318.
Gunter said only that “we are
aware of the event and working with our customer.”
The incident comes just
eight days after a battery fire
broke out on an empty JAL
787 that had just landed at
Logan International Airport
in Boston after a 12-hour
flight from Tokyo.
That followed a series of
lesser electrical problems, • Continued from Page C1
including one that diverted a
United flight out of Houston
But the company also
in December.
was one of the f irst to
recover, he said.
Gentry said manufacturers have managed to
prosper through improved
production methods, innovative eff iciencies and
sal Service Fund, a surcharge on nearly
everyone’s landline and wireless phone competitive product develbill each month. The PSC’s new $5 fee opment.
The Athens facility prowill not reduce the amount consumers pay
duces
oxygen sensors, ignihowever. Rather, it will go to the phone
tion coils, monolithic carriprovider.
A spokesman for Tracfone, a prepaid ers and spark plugs.
Among the plant’s cusphone company, said a monthly charge
poses problems. The company, along with tomers are Toyota, Genother prepaid cell providers, has no sys- eral Motors, Ford, Jaguar,
Honda, Subaru, Nissan,
tem for billing.
“We have no collection method,” said Mitsubishi and Hyundai,
Jose Fuentes, government relations direc- according to the company.
D e n s o p l a n s to a d d
tor for Tracfone, a major Lifeline phone
more than 2,000 jobs in
provider.
The Federal Communications Com- North America as part of
mission expanded Lifeline in 2005 to let its planned expansion.
Denso has more than
mobile phone companies participate.
Many prepaid phone companies created 14,000 employees in the
a business model around receiving the U.S. and more than 120,000
monthly government subsidy. The com- worldwide.
panies use that subsidy to buy bare-bones
Gentry said Denso joins
cellphones and 250 minutes of talk time a other industries such as
month, which they give to qualified con- J.M. Huber, Heil Trailer,
sumers for free.
Creative Foam, Bull ManAtlantan Patricia Stroud, a senior citi- ufacturing, Waupaca and
zen who is blind and receives food stamps, MidLab to have announced
said a mobile phone is an emergency link expansions or new facilities
when she is out of the house. Stroud said in McMinn County over the
Tuesday a $5 monthly fee would have a past two years.
“big impact” on her.
Contact Mike Pare at
“I’m praying that I don’t have to give mpare@timesfreepress.com
[the phone] up,” she said.
or 423-757-6318.
Denso
Georgia to charge for ‘free’ phone program
Kristi Swartz
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Low-income Georgians must start paying a $5 monthly fee to get a cellphone
through a federal program that’s been hit
by accusations of fraud and abuse, state
utility regulators decided Tuesday in a
3-2 vote.
The charge for what has until now been
a free phone is a byproduct of nationwide
debate over the program, called Lifeline.
Staff members at the Georgia Public Service Commission said similar monthly
fees were approved in California and
Indiana.
About 10 percent of Georgians have
phones through Lifeline. Charges could
start this winter, though the PSC said billing details have to be worked out.
The program, designed to make sure
the neediest have access to basic phone
service, has grown quickly in recent years
amid the down economy and heavy marketing by certain cellphone operators.
That has spawned reports of fraud and,
in the view of some critics, turned the
program into an example of the welfare
state run amok.
“The people in the state of Georgia
having to pay for this program are getting ripped off by not only consumers but
even by some of the companies,” said PSC
commissioner Doug Everett, who pushed
for the fee.
Rules
• Continued from Page C1
Furthermore, qualified mortgages
may not include negative amortization, interest-only payments, balloon payments or terms exceeding
30 years, with points and origination
fees not to exceed 3 percent of the
loan.
Satisfying the underwriting standards allows the lender to certify
the loan as a qualified mortgage and
take advantage of a “safe-harbor”
provision that protects the lender
from litigation later on if the borrower cannot make the payments.
The new rule does not prohibit
banks from making mortgage loans
that do not meet the definition of a
qualified mortgage, subject to the
age-old relationship between risk
and return.
Essentially, the Ability-to-Repay
rule defines the boundary between
prime and subprime loans. Subprime
loans may still be underwritten, but
the lender bears the risk in the event
■ Lifeline is funded through the
Universal Service Fund, a surcharge
on nearly everyone’s landline and
wireless phone bill. The $5 fee will
not reduce the amount consumers
pay, however. Rather, it will go to the
phone provider.
In an interview after Tuesday’s meeting, Everett — who as recently as 2009
praised Lifeline as a needed service — said
he does not want the Lifeline program to
go away. But he said he considers cellphones a luxury.
The issue split the all-Republican
PSC.
“If you start to monkey with the program for the appearance of stopping fraud,
then you are beginning to harm somebody
else, and then you may or may not stop
the fraud,” said commissioner Stan Wise,
who joined Chuck Eaton in opposing the
measure.
In addition to Everett, commissioners
Tim Echols and Bubba McDonald voted
for the changes.
The program dates to 1984, when
AT&T was broken up into regional Bell
companies, as a way to protect low-income
consumers.
Lifeline is funded through the Univerof default (see first paragraph; lenders have been in this business since
the advent of commerce).
Perhaps the richest irony attending this government-imposed, rulesbased approach to eliminating risk
is that it ignores one of the most
prominent causes of the original
crisis: government.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
were encouraged (nay mandated)
to expand mortgage lending beyond
any reasonable expectation of repayment.
The mortgage market in the
United States now is so thoroughly
dysfunctional that nearly 90 percent of all home loans are issued or
held by Fannie and Freddie. These
naughty miscreants are now wards
of the taxpayer, to the tune of $150
billion in bailout costs (about equal
to the AIG rescue, all of which has
now been repaid).
In trumpeting this victory for the
common man, the CFPB website
introduces us to Henry from California, who signed a $500,000 mortgage loan on an annual income of
$50,000. Under the new rule, Henry
would be counseled that a monthly
payment exceeding 90 percent of
his take-home pay might be a bit of
a stretch.
Get answers to financial questions
on Wednesdays from our columnists
who work in the financial services
industry. Christopher A. Hopkins
CFA, is a vice president at Barnett &
Co. Submit questions to his attention
by writing to Business Editor Dave
Flessner, Chattanooga Times Free
Press, P.O. Box 1447, Chattanooga,
TN 37401-1447, or by emailing him at
dflessner@timesfreepress.com.
...
. timesfreepress.com
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • C3
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
U.S. retail sales rose 0.5 percent in December
By Martin Crutsinger
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S.
consumers increased their
spending at retail businesses
in December, buying more
autos, furniture and clothing.
Steady job growth and lower
gas prices kept consumers
shopping for the holidays,
despite worries about potentially tax increases.
Retail sales rose 0.5 percent in December from
November, the Commerce
Department said Tuesday.
That’s slightly better than
November’s 0.4 percent
increase and the best showing since September.
Sales of autos and auto
parts rose 1.6 percent to lead
all categories. Car companies closed out their best
sales year since 2007.
Total retail spending was
even stronger when factoring out a steep drop in gas
prices.
And so-called core retail
sales, which exclude gas,
building materials and
autos, rose 0.6 percent after
a 0.5 percent increase in
November. Economists pay
closer attention to core sales
because they strip out the
most volatile categories and
are a better gauge of con-
The Associated Press
A couple descend an escalator while shopping at an H&M store in Atlanta.
sumer spending.
Two straight months of
solid increases in core sales
suggest consumers were
not too worried about tense
negotiations to resolve the
fiscal cliff. Congress and
the White House ultimately reached a deal on Jan. 1
that prevented income taxes
from rising for most house-
holds.
Still, retail sales are likely
to weaken in the first half
of 2013 because lawmakers and President Barack
Obama allowed a two-year
reduction in Social Security payroll taxes to lapse.
Most Americans will start
seeing less money in their
paychecks this month.
A person earning $50,000
a year will see take-home
pay shrink by roughly $1,000
in 2013. That’s likely to slow
consumer spending and
weigh on overall economic
growth.
“Nothing in today’s data
does anything to dispel
the notion that consumer
spending the first half of
2013 should be quite weak,”
said Dan Greenhaus, chief
global strategist at BTIG.
“”The smaller paychecks
will be anything but a welcome development.”
Consumer spending
drives roughly 70 percent
of economic activity.
Even though consumers
kept spending at the end of
the year, most analysts predict overall economic growth
weakened in the OctoberDecember quarter to an
annual rate below 2 percent.
That’s largely because companies built up their stockpiles at a slower pace than
over the summer. Faster
restocking was a key reason the economy grew at an
annual rate of 3.1 percent in
the July-September quarter.
And growth in retail
spending for all of 2012
ended up being less robust
than the previous two years.
Retail sales rose just 5.2
percent last year — slower
than the 7.9 percent growth
in 2011 and the 5.6 percent
growth in 2010.
Earlier this month, major
retailers reported that a lastminute surge in spending
helped salvage the crucial holiday shopping season. Retails
can often make as much as
40 percent of their annual
revenue during the final two
months of the year.
In addition to strong car
sales, the government retail
sales report showed consumers spent 1.4 percent
more at furniture stores,
1.4 percent more at health
and personal care shop, and
1 percent more at specialty
clothing stores.
Sales were flat at general
merchandise stores, a category that department stores
such as Macy’s and big
retailers such as Wal-Mart
and Target. But that followed a 0.8 percent decline
in November.
The economy has shown
some signs of improvement
in recent months.
Job growth has been
steady, although unemployment is still high at 7.8 percent. In December, employers
added 155,000 jobs, roughly
matching the monthly average in 2011 and 2012.
The once-battered housing market is recovering,
which should lead to more
construction jobs in the
coming months. A gauge of
U.S. service firms’ business
activity expanded in December by the most in nearly a
year.
Fitch warns it may downgrade
U.S. over debt standoff
By Pan Pylas
The Associated Press
LONDON — The United States could lose its top
credit rating for the second
time from a leading agency
if there’s a delay in raising
the country’s debt ceiling,
Fitch Ratings warned Tuesday.
Congress has to increase
the country’s debt limit,
which effectively rules how
much debt the U.S. can have,
by the end of February or
face a potential default,
Fitch says.
There are fears that the
debate will descend into
the sort of squabbling and
political brinkmanship that
marked the last effort to
raise the ceiling in the summer of 2011. Outgoing U.S.
Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner warned then that it
had nearly reached a point
where government would be
unable “to meet our commitments securely.”
“The pressure on the U.S.
rating, if anything, is increasing,” David Riley, managing
director of Fitch Ratings’
global sovereigns division
said at a London conference. “We thought the 2011
crisis was a one-off event ....
if we have a repeat we will
place the U.S. rating under
review.”
If that happens, Riley said
there was “a material risk”
of the rating coming down,
The Associated Press
President Barack Obama
gestures as he speaks during the last news conference of his first term in the
East Room of the White
House in Washington.
which could mean the U.S.
would face steeper costs
when it comes to servicing
its debt.
If Fitch does move to
downgrade the US, it will
join Standard & Poor’s,
which was so concerned
by the dysfunctional nature
of the 2011 debate that it
stripped the U.S. of its triple
A rating for the first time in
the country’s history.
Fitch already has a negative outlook on the U.S. as
the country’s debt burden
has risen to around 100
percent of its annual gross
domestic product, and has
said it will make a decision on the rating this year,
regardless of how the debt
ceiling discussions pan out.
The U.S. government
reached its statutory debt
limit of nearly $16.4 trillion at the end of 2012 but
is pursuing some extraordinary measures and can use
some in-house deposits that
should see it through to the
end of February, according
to Fitch.
Another major ratings
agency, Moody’s, also has
a negative view on the U.S.
outlook.
Riley’s comments come
just two weeks after U.S. lawmakers agreed to a budget
deal with the White House
that avoided the so-called
fiscal cliff of automatic tax
increases and spending
cuts that many economists
thought could plunge the
U.S. economy, the world’s
largest, back into recession.
Relief that a deal was cobbled together, albeit at the
final hour, is one of the reasons why sentiment in the
financial markets has been
buoyant in the first trading
days of the new year. Many
stock indexes around the
world are trading at multiyear highs.
“The ‘fiscal cliff ’ bullet was dodged .... [but it’s]
a short-term patch,” said
Riley.
Riley warned that the different arms of the U.S. government still have a number
of issues to address.
Automakers agree to build
Jeeps for China market
By David Runk
The Associated Press
Kia moves into North American
premium market with Cadenza
By David Runk
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Kia is making a move into the North
American premium sedan
market with the 2014 Cadenza, aiming for buyers looking
for a car in the gap between
mainstream and luxury.
The Cadenza was unveiled
Tuesday during press days at
the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
Kia Motors America said the
car, which replaces its Amanti, comes amid interest among
its customers for a sedan with
more upscale amenities and
technology.
“This flagship sedan signals a new era for our brand
and delivers a number of premium features we’ve never
offered before,” said Tom
Loveless, executive vice president for sales at Kia Motors
America. “All that technology is wrapped in simple and
sophisticated design.”
Kia had a little fun during
the unveiling of the Cadenza,
with dancers carrying glowing
computer tablets surrounding
the car. And Peter Schreyer,
who oversees design for Kia
and Hyundai Motor Co.,
appeared via three tablets
showing his face on the head
of a person on stage.
The arm of South Korean
automaker Kia Motors Corp.
describes the Cadenza as
having elements of European design, which help define
the higher-end market, and
it will be offered with Kia’s
most powerful V-6 engine.
Kia in 2009 launched a version of the Cadenza in its
home market.
Kia got its start in the U.S.
as an economy car maker, but
has been moving upscale with
the Optima midsize sedan
and the Sorento crossover.
Last year its U.S. sales jumped
nearly 15 percent thanks to
higher demand for the Optima as well as the compact
Rio.
■ Under the hood:
The Cadenza’s 3.3-liter, V-6
engine is paired with a sixspeed automatic transmission
that includes a manual shift
mode and paddle shifters on
the steering wheel. It produces 293 horsepower and is
designed to run on regular
unleaded gasoline.
■ Inside: The Cadenza is
being offered with features
such as an advanced navigation system, a backup camera
and warning system, as well
as a 550-watt 12-speaker audio
system. One package includes
full-length panoramic sunroof, a 7-inch LCD instrument
cluster and premium leather
seats.
■ Outside: The front of
the Cadenza features what
Kia describes as an aggressive “Tiger Nose” that echoes
the look of some other Kia
vehicles. With a long hood
and a swept-back windshield,
it aims for a smooth look.
■ Price: Will be
announced closer to when it
goes on sale, expected in the
second quarter of 2013.
The time is now…
The Associated Press
Guangzhou Automobile Group Vice President Xiangdong Huang stands next to the automaker’s Trumpchi
GS5 concept, a pure electric vehicle, during the North
American International Auto Show in Detroit.
venture’s next step will be to
build Jeeps in China for the
Chinese market. Jeep already
sells several models in China,
including the Grand Cherokee, Wrangler and Compass,
but they are imported. Jeep
has said volume would be
incremental to start.
“This agreement is another
milestone of our partnership
with Fiat and Chrysler Group,”
Zeng Qinghong, general manager of GAC Group, said in a
statement. “It definitely creates the basis for our JV to
reach very ambitious objectives in Chinese market.”
Chrysler is owned by Italian carmaker Fiat.
Details of which Jeep
model might be built first
or when production might
start weren’t specified. After
GAC Group’s news conference, however, Qinghong told
reporters that the hope is for
production to begin in 2014.
He said increasing demand for
Jeeps is expected.
In Detroit, Guangzhou
showed three vehicles currently built under its Trumpchi brand, but Qinghong said
it has no immediate plans to
sell in the U.S.
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The companies said the
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The Associated Press
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timesfreepress.com ...
C4 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
THE MARKETS
NYSE
NASDAQ
AMEX
1,480
S&P 500
3,160
1,440
Close: 1,472.34
Change: 1.66 (0.1%)
3,100
1,400
MARKET DIARY
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Prev.
1502
1506
130
3138
235
3
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Yest.
1306
1134
136
2576
118
14
Prev.
1147
1282
139
2568
139
9
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Yest.
208
217
40
465
3
3
Prev.
191
240
29
460
14
1
2,034,128,932
977,647,942
69,239,433
3,081,016,307
Name
Express
IFM Inv rs
RuckusW n
DmRsBW
Gensco
RAIT Fin
Aeropostl
PumaBio n
Natuzzi
Quiksilvr
Last
17.40
3.72
24.21
4.29
61.61
6.89
13.25
22.99
2.19
6.17
Chg
+3.34
+.41
+2.50
+.39
+4.84
+.49
+.93
+1.54
+.14
+.39
%Chg
+23.8
+12.4
+11.5
+10.0
+8.5
+7.7
+7.5
+7.2
+6.8
+6.7
LOSERS
Name
ETNxGInet
BiP GCrb
Yelp n
ParagSh rs
Alumina
CSVInvNG
McClatchy
SAP AG
SequansC
RadioShk
MOST
903,971,203
859,366,652
48,385,293
1,811,723,148
Name
FtSecG rsh
EnerNOC
eGainCom
Radcom
BioLineRx
Galectin rs
RadiSys
NetElem n
Big 5Sprt
AsiaPWire
Last
13.00
6.29
20.61
3.63
4.43
18.75
3.16
77.55
2.43
2.20
Chg
-1.69
-.69
-1.36
-.23
-.27
-1.13
-.18
-4.33
-.13
-.11
%Chg
-11.5
-9.9
-6.2
-6.0
-5.7
-5.7
-5.4
-5.3
-5.1
-4.8
Name
MultiFnElc
ColdwCr rs
TTM Tch
FstFnB wt
Gordmans
BodyCentrl
GivenIm
Stereotx rs
WashFd wt
CSP Inc
MOST
Vol (00)
121,750,800
78,989,000
54,874,900
53,345,100
50,819,000
49,854,300
41,361,900
38,327,300
34,881,000
30,890,000
Last
11.55
147.07
14.30
5.62
4.64
44.47
17.13
16.53
6.51
87.77
Chg
+.08
+.10
+.31
-.07
+.02
-.19
+.07
-.42
+.19
+.38
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
42,110,503
21,002,714
6,407,837
69,521,054
3,100
1,400
3,000
1,360
2,900
J
A
S
O
N
D
2,800
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
J
Commodities
Commodity Exchange Unit
Oats
CBOT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Cocoa
ICE 10 metric tons- $ per ton
Coffee
ICE 37,500 lbs.- cents per lb.
Sugar
ICE 112,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Cotton
ICE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Wheat
CBOT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Rough rice
CBOT 2,000 CWT- dollars per CWT
Heating oil
NYMX 42,000 gal, cents per gal
Light sweet crude
NYMX 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl.
Gas blend
NYMX 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon
Natural gas
NYMX 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu
GAINERS
Last
2.33
15.76
5.83
3.00
3.35
2.45
3.74
3.39
14.70
3.95
Chg
+.68
+3.20
+1.15
+.40
+.43
+.31
+.44
+.39
+1.67
+.41
%Chg
+41.2
+25.5
+24.6
+15.4
+14.7
+14.5
+13.3
+12.9
+12.8
+11.7
LOSERS
ACTIVE
Name
BkofAm
S&P500ETF
FordM
SprintNex
NokiaCp
iShEMkts
SPDR Fncl
HewlettP
BostonSci
iShR2K
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
GAINERS
GAINERS
HIGH
Dow Industrials
13543.76
Dow Transportation 5645.75
Dow Utilities
459.41
NYSE Composite
8736.98
Amex Market Value 2406.08
Nasdaq Composite 3112.29
S&P 500
1473.31
S&P MidCap
1064.80
Wilshire 5000
15552.62
Russell 2000
884.84
VOLUME
VOLUME
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
10 DAYS
3,200
1,440
1,320
VOLUME
Stock market indexes
Close: 3,110.78
Change: -6.72 (-0.2%)
3,040
10 DAYS
1,480
MARKET DIARY
MARKET DIARY
Yest.
1738
1288
121
3147
188
5
Nasdaq composite
Name
Servotr
ASpecRlty
MastchH s
UraniumEn
TravelCtrs
ImmunoCll
BioTime
GldFld
AlmadnM g
Lannett
Last
8.60
2.99
6.40
2.55
5.91
2.13
4.99
2.18
3.14
5.85
Chg
+.61
+.18
+.35
+.14
+.32
+.09
+.20
+.08
+.11
+.20
%Chg
+7.6
+6.3
+5.8
+5.8
+5.7
+4.4
+4.2
+3.8
+3.6
+3.5
CATTLE
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Feb 13
130.35 130.90
Apr 13
134.70 134.87
Jun 13
129.55 130.02
Monsales 69553
Monopen int 325163 off-4,109.00
CORN
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 13
723.25 734.50
May 13
722.25 733.75
Jul 13
713.25 724.50
Sep 13
608.25 616.75
Monsales 312838
Monopen int 1184440 off-1,637.00
FEEDER CATTLE
50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Jan 13
149.57 149.57
Mar 13
151.42 151.57
Apr 13
153.15 153.20
Monsales 9256
Monopen int 31807 up+225.00
HOGS-Lean
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Feb 13
85.27
85.65
Apr 13
87.72
87.95
May 13
Jun 13
96.65
96.95
Monsales 64506
Monopen int 249000 off-870.00
LOSERS
Last
16.42
3.87
7.42
4.50
11.66
8.30
16.10
2.34
3.27
6.06
Chg
-4.87
-1.13
-1.73
-1.00
-2.32
-1.41
-2.10
-.27
-.36
-.59
%Chg
-22.9
-22.6
-18.9
-18.2
-16.6
-14.5
-11.5
-10.3
-9.9
-8.9
Name
MexcoEn
FAB Univ
Reeds
PowrREIT
RevettMin
Barnwell
PacBkrM g
MGTCap rs
MeetMe
FullHseR
MOST
ACTIVE
Name
Vol (00)
Facebook n 168411000
Dell Inc
143131000
RschMotn
57875100
Microsoft
46997400
SiriusXM
39000900
Intel
32627400
Apple Inc
30292100
Cisco
28508300
ArenaPhm
27577000
PwShs QQQ 26187900
Last
Chg
30.10
-.85
13.17 +.88
14.48
-.47
27.21 +.32
3.14
-.01
21.88
-.12
485.92 -15.83
20.98 +.01
10.81 +.61
66.63
-.33
Last
5.51
3.61
5.69
10.21
2.52
3.17
5.01
3.41
3.19
3.22
Chg
-.49
-.27
-.40
-.59
-.14
-.17
-.24
-.15
-.14
-.13
%Chg
-8.2
-7.0
-6.6
-5.5
-5.3
-5.1
-4.6
-4.2
-4.2
-3.9
ACTIVE
Name
Vol (00)
Last
NA Pall g
4072800
1.73
Aurizon g
2149600
4.69
NwGold g
2035300 10.95
CheniereEn
2011900 20.26
UraniumEn
1605900
2.55
PlatGpMet
1489200
1.13
Rentech
1472500
3.05
Neuralstem
1461800
1.34
Vringo
1427900
3.28
GoldStr g
1323400
1.74
Chg
+.10
+.11
+.21
+.08
+.14
+.17
-.02
+.05
-.06
+.03
129.85
134.02
129.02
130.42
134.42
129.35
722
721
711.50
606.25
730.50 +6.50
730.75 +7.75
721
+7
614
+4
148.17
150.32
152.30
148.32 -1.13
150.37 -1.05
152.30 -1.00
85.00
87.42
96.50
85.25
87.60
94.80
96.60
+.07
-.33
-.30
+.03
-.25
-.25
Month Open Int.
Mar 13
8125
Mar 13
81628
Mar 13
91816
Mar 13
1124
Mar 13
118718
Mar 13
240263
Mar 13
13027
Feb 13
67020
Feb 13
132785
Feb 13
73152
Feb 13
133572
Vol.
1084
13600
19270
117
12420
168547
746
54806
239429
60218
160377
SOYBEAN MEAL
100 tons- dollars per ton
Mar 13
415.90 423.80
May 13
410.50 417.30
Jul 13
406.10 413.20
Aug 13
395.40 401.80
Sep 13
381.00 384.40
Oct 13
365.70 370.60
Monsales 99718
Monopen int 243966 up+4,680.00
SOYBEAN OIL
60,000 lbs- cents per lb
Mar 13
50.50
51.25
May 13
50.89
51.59
Jul 13
51.20
51.84
Aug 13
51.16
51.58
Sep 13
51.03
51.24
Oct 13
50.33
50.54
Monsales 129958
Monopen int 318156 up+855.00
SOYBEANS
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 13
1415.50 1436.25
May 13
1404
1422.50
Jul 13
1397.25 1417
Aug 13
1373.75 1386.75
Sep 13
1323
1335
Nov 13
1284.50 1304.25
Monsales 230161
Monopen int 538131 off-679.00
Settle Chg.
356.50 +2.50
2270
+3
152.50
-.80
21.52
-.11
76.21 +.69
782.75 +15.75
15.060
301.13 -5.12
93.28
-.86
2.7066 -.0475
3.455 +.082
411.30
405.30
401.40
391.90
377.40
361.50
411.90
406.70
402.60
392.40
377.90
362.40
-5.60
-5.10
-4.80
-3.70
-3.60
-3.50
50.37
50.71
51.00
50.88
50.53
49.98
50.87
51.22
51.48
51.34
51.00
50.29
+.42
+.40
+.35
+.32
+.28
+.25
1408
1395.75
1390.50
1363.25
1317.25
1279.25
1413.50
1399.75
1392.75
1365.25
1319.25
1283.25
NAME
YTD
LAST
CHG NAME
YTD LAST
Clorox
+4.6 76.61
A-B-C
CloudPeak
-4.6 18.45
AAR
+3.4 19.31 +.46 Coach
+10.6 61.41
ABB Ltd
+1.2 21.03 -.15 CocaCola s
+3.0 37.32
AES Corp
+2.8 11.00 -.03 CocaCE
+6.6 33.81
AFLAC
-0.2 53.03 +.08
-1.3 24.29
AGCO
+4.6 51.40 +.40 Coeur
+3.1 107.74
AGL Res
+1.5 40.57 +.32 ColgPal
CmtyBkSy
+2.7
28.11
AK Steel
-0.4 4.58 +.12
+6.8 15.71
AT&T Inc
+0.1 33.76 -.26 CompDivHd
-2.6 14.72
AU Optron
-8.7 4.11 -.14 ComstkRs
+5.3 31.07
AbtLab s
+5.4 33.02 -.34 ConAgra
s
+1.8 59.03
AbbVie n
+1.3 34.60 +.51 ConocPhil
ConsolEngy
-4.7 30.60
Accenture
+5.6 70.25 +.39 ConEd
-0.4 55.34
Actuant
+3.1 28.77 +.07 ConstellA
+2.9
36.41
AdamsEx
+4.5 11.07 +.01
Cnvrgys
+3.5
16.98
AdvAuto
+1.8 73.64 +1.06
12.62
AMD
+11.7 2.68 +.04 Corning
+4.1 36.91
Aegon
+3.9 6.69 -.07 CorrectnCp
+3.4 47.85
Aeropostl
+1.8 13.25 +.93 Crane
+19.9 19.90
Agilent
+5.6 43.24 -.30 CSVelIVSt
Agnico g
-2.7 51.03 +.32 CSVS2xVx rs -32.9 6.27
CrosTim
+10.3
29.70
AirProd
+4.4 87.70 -.29
+1.1 6.30
AlcatelLuc
+19.4 1.66 -.03 Cryolife
Culp Inc
+8.5 16.29
Alcoa
+2.8 8.92
+3.2 111.82
AlliBGlbHi
+4.7 16.38 +.06 Cummins
+7.9 74.25
AlliBInco
+1.4 8.21 +.02 Cytec
AlliBern
+14.2 19.90 -.09
D-E-F
AlliantEgy
+4.3 45.81
+4.3 6.77
Allstate
+6.8 42.91 -.02 DCT Indl
+6.6 21.08
AlphaNRs
-4.6 9.29 +.11 DR Horton
+2.1 61.33
AlpGPPrp
+3.4 7.53 -.06 DTE
DanaHldg
+1.7 15.87
AlpAlerMLP
+5.0 16.75 +.02
+7.3 59.99
Altria
+4.3 32.78 -.21 Danaher
+0.6 45.33
AMCOL
+8.9 33.41 +.13 Darden
+3.8 89.73
Ameren
+3.2 31.69 +.22 Deere
Delhaize
+6.2
43.07
AMovilL
+6.7 24.68 +.07
+0.1 38.29
AEagleOut
+0.3 20.58 +.94 DelphiAuto
+14.8 13.63
AEP
+1.1 43.16 -.08 DeltaAir
+9.6 17.76
AmExp
+6.1 60.76 -.45 DenburyR
+5.1 71.44
AmIntlGrp
-1.3 34.84 -.21 DiaOffs
Dillards
-2.5 81.69
Amerigas
+1.6 39.37 +.53
+14.1 136.83
Ametek s
+2.6 38.53 -.07 DrxFnBull
DirSCBear
-12.1
11.87
Anadarko
+5.1 78.10 +.23
-13.2 13.11
Annaly
+4.5 14.67 -.03 DirFnBear
-5.9 10.32
AquaAm
+5.2 26.74 +.13 DirDGldBll
+12.5 71.93
Arbitron
+0.2 46.78 -.02 DirxSCBull
+2.0 39.34
ArcelorMit
-1.8 17.15 +.17 Discover
Disney
+2.6 51.09
ArchCoal
-4.9 6.96 +.15
+4.1 14.08
ArchDan
+3.8 28.42 -.14 Div&Inc rs
+1.2 44.64
ArlingAst
+8.3 22.50 -.19 DollarGen
+1.4 52.53
ArmourRsd
+6.0 6.86 -.01 DomRescs
+45.4 4.29
AstraZen
+3.8 49.08 +.31 DmRsBW
Dover
+1.4 66.61
AtlPwr g
+10.1 12.59
+5.4 34.09
AtlasPpln
+3.9 32.81 +.18 DowChm
DuPont
+2.8
46.25
ATMOS
+2.7 36.07 +.32
+3.5 66.05
AuRico g
+1.1 8.27 +.23 DukeEn rs
DukeRlty
+6.8
14.82
AutoZone
-1.0 350.90 +5.91
+3.9 9.81
Avon
+11.8 16.06 +.67 DynexCap
-3.9 24.32
B&G Foods +10.8 31.38 -.05 EMC Cp
+3.1 70.18
BB&T Cp
+4.9 30.32 +.06 EastChem
+2.6 55.59
BHP BillLt
-2.0 76.83 -.12 Eaton
EdwLfSci
-0.1 90.07
BHPBil plc
-5.1 66.77 -.15
-1.5 10.06
BP PLC
+6.7 44.44 +.10 Elan
EldorGld
g
+1.9
13.12
BP Pru
+10.4 75.70 +.71
+3.9 55.01
BabCPtInv
+2.3 14.23 -.12 EmersonEl
+7.5 30.00
BakrHu
+3.3 42.19 +.18 EnbrdgEPt
-1.6 19.44
BcoBrad pf
+5.8 18.38 -.27 EnCana g
+8.7 49.03
BcoSantSA
+4.8 8.56 -.09 Energen
+6.6 85.27
BcoSBrasil
+4.9 7.64 -.06 Energizer
+9.2 46.88
BkofAm
-0.5 11.55 +.08 EngyTsfr
+3.3 13.29
BkNYMel
+4.2 26.78 +.06 Enerpls g
+3.0 18.77
Barclay
+10.1 19.07 -.15 Enersis
+0.9 15.61
BariPVix rs
-18.1 26.04 +.01 Ennis Inc
-0.6 63.35
Bard
+4.4 102.00 -.68 Entergy
+8.5 54.35
BarrickG
-1.2 34.59 +.41 EntPrPt
+8.5 2.93
Baxter
+0.6 67.04 -.99 EnzoBio
-4.8 2.99
Beam Inc
+0.2 61.22 +.33 EqualEn g
+5.4 39.34
BectDck
+5.8 82.70 +.40 EscoTech
-2.0 12.42
BerkHa A +6.81 43205.00 +205.00 ExcelTrst
ExcoRes
-1.5 6.67
BerkH B
+6.3 95.36
29.75
BestBuy
+21.7 14.42 -.06 Exelon
+15.3 17.40
Blackstone
+8.2 16.87 -.03 Express
+3.4 89.53
BlockHR
+3.8 19.28 -.13 ExxonMbl
-1.3 33.75
Boeing
+2.1 76.94 +.39 FBL Fn
+7.4 46.00
Boise Inc
+0.3 7.97 -.05 FMC Tech
-9.2 57.55
BostonSci
+13.6 6.51 +.19 FamilyDlr
+7.6 98.67
Braskem
+2.2 13.64 +.07 FedExCp
+7.8 18.17
Brinker
+5.6 32.72 -.38 Ferrellgs
+5.6 36.76
BrMySq
+6.4 34.30 +.08 FidNatInfo
+1.5 10.06
BrwnBrn
+4.4 26.58 +.19 FstHorizon
-4.5 39.87
CBL Asc
+0.2 21.25 +.35 FirstEngy
+6.6 62.59
CBRE GRE
+2.1 9.05 -.04 Fluor
+10.4 14.30
CBS B
+0.1 38.10 -.11 FordM
+7.2 37.85
CGG Verit
-9.1 27.73 -.33 ForestLab
+6.1 31.00
CLECO
+3.6 41.47 -.09 FBHmSec
+4.5 7.38
CNOOC
-5.4 208.12 -2.32 FrkUnv
+1.2 34.61
CSX
+5.3 20.78 +.13 FMCG
-3.1 33.22
CVS Care
+7.1 51.79 -.10 FresenM s
+4.9 3.42
Calpine
+3.4 18.75 +.25 Frontline
+5.8 36.85
Cameron
+4.7 59.10 +1.66 FullerHB
-7.6 21.18
CdnNRs gs
+2.5 29.58 -.15 Fusion-io
CapOne
+6.5 61.70 +.42
G-H-I
CapsteadM
+5.1 12.06 +.03
+5.4 5.88
Carnival
+2.4 37.65 +.28 GabelliET
+3.7 8.94
Caterpillar
+6.8 95.67 +1.04 GabHlthW
+8.1 6.66
CedarF
+10.4 36.94 +.29 GabUtil
+8.8 5.06
Cemex
+4.3 10.29 -.10 Gafisa SA
-7.7 23.16
CenterPnt
+4.2 20.06 +.18 GameStop
+4.6 32.46
CntryLink
+1.7 39.79 -.28 Gap
+5.0 31.93
ChesEng
+4.5 17.37 +.43 GnCable
+1.9 70.58
Chevron
+4.9 113.44 +.59 GenDynam
+1.0 21.20
ChicB&I
+4.0 48.20 +.41 GenElec
-2.7 19.31
Chicos
-2.1 18.07 +.60 GenGrPrp
+1.0 40.82
Chimera
+7.7 2.81 +.08 GenMills
+6.1 30.60
ChinaUni
+3.0 16.78 -.40 GenMotors
+12.0 61.61
Chubb
+3.8 78.15 +.18 Gensco
+3.2 65.64
Cigna
+4.5 55.87 +.19 GenuPrt
+8.3 8.13
CinciBell
-1.5 5.40 +.03 Genworth
+1.1 43.94
Citigroup
+7.6 42.57 +.35 GlaxoSKln
-2.4 12.19
ClearEnFd
+8.3 24.95 +.06 GoldFLtd
CliffsNRs
-4.6 36.80 +.66 Goldcrp g
+2.1 37.48
CHG
+.01
-.15
+.40
+.33
+.17
-.21
-.19
+.22
+.22
+.07
+.04
+.56
+.69
-.40
+1.08
+.17
+.12
-.21
-.01
-.01
-.04
+.87
+.03
-.36
+.27
-.15
+.04
+.19
+.02
+.17
+.40
+.69
-.13
+.04
+.67
+.19
+.88
+.06
+2.19
+1.53
-.18
-.13
+.21
+.95
-.39
+.50
-.01
+1.62
+.14
+.39
+.01
-.19
-.02
+.66
+.19
-.06
+.11
-.32
+.26
-1.33
-.11
+.09
-.31
+.08
+.08
+.22
+1.47
+.52
+.16
+.07
-.02
+.14
-.07
+.01
+.48
-.03
+.19
+.33
+3.34
-.05
-.30
+1.88
+.94
+.25
-.21
-.43
+.10
+.38
+.52
+.31
+.26
+.06
-.11
+.33
-.07
+.50
+.38
-.00
+.14
+.15
+1.07
+.23
+.23
+.08
+.19
-.11
+.27
+4.84
+.34
+.12
-.32
+.05
+.50
NAME
NextEraEn
NiSource
NikeB s
NokiaCp
NordicAm
Nordstrm
NorflkSo
NthnTEn n
NorthropG
Novartis
NovoNord
Nucor
NustarEn
OGE Engy
OfficeDpt
OfficeMax
Olin
OshkoshCp
NAME
YTD LAST
GoldmanS
+6.3 135.59
GreenbCos +10.0 17.79
HCA Hldg
+16.0 34.99
HalconR rs
+18.9 8.23
Hallibrtn
+4.3 36.18
Hanesbrds
+4.9 37.58
HarleyD
+5.1 51.33
HarrisTtr
-3.9 37.06
HartfdFn
+6.5 23.89
HatterasF
+6.2 26.34
HawaiiEl
+3.1 25.92
HltMgmt
+2.6 9.56
HeclaM
-0.7 5.79
Heinz
+2.7 59.21
HelixEn
+4.2 21.51
Herbalife
+40.2 46.19
Hershey
+5.5 76.19
Hertz
+7.4 17.48
Hess
+7.0 56.67
HewlettP
+16.0 16.53
HollyEnr
+8.2 71.17
HollyFront
-0.4 46.36
HomeDp
+3.4 63.95
Honda
+3.2 38.13
HonwllIntl
+5.4 66.88
HostHotls
+7.1 16.78
HovnanE
-10.1 6.29
HugotnR
+16.1 8.49
Humana
+4.3 71.58
Huntsmn
+9.7 17.45
IFM Inv rs
+103.3 3.72
INGPrRTr
+3.4 6.42
iShGold
+0.3 16.32
iShBraz
+1.0 56.50
iSh HK
+2.5 19.91
iShJapn
+1.6 9.91
iSh Kor
-1.3 62.54
iSMalas
+1.3 15.33
iSTaiwn
-0.9 13.50
iShSilver
+3.4 30.36
iShChina25
+2.1 41.28
iSCorSP500
+3.3 147.80
iShCorTBd
-0.1 110.98
iShEMkts
+0.3 44.47
iShiBxB
-0.2 120.76
iShSPLatA
+3.2 45.23
iShB20 T
-0.9 120.07
iS Eafe
+2.0 58.02
CHG
-.54
+.49
+1.14
+.24
+.27
+.58
+1.04
+.63
+.07
-.15
+.11
+.34
-.11
+.31
+.79
+2.11
-.36
-.10
+.25
-.42
+.42
+.54
+.47
-.35
+.12
+.14
-.02
+.24
+1.34
+.20
+.41
+.06
+.10
-.18
+.01
-.03
-.44
+.07
-.08
+.32
-.03
+.06
+.03
-.19
-.10
-.12
+.55
-.09
NAME
iSR1KV
iShR2K
iSSPMatl
iShREst
iShDJHm
iStar
Imation
Infosys
IBM
IntlGame
IntPap
Interpublic
ItauUnibH
YTD LAST
+3.8 75.61
+4.1 87.77
+1.0 63.07
+3.4 66.90
+5.1 22.24
+7.2 8.74
-16.1 3.92
+20.6 51.00
+0.5 192.50
+7.1 15.17
+2.4 40.80
+6.5 11.74
+5.0 17.27
CHG
+.19
+.38
+.02
+.31
+.18
+.04
-.93
-.12
+.28
-.03
-.14
J-K-L
JPMorgCh
Jabil
JacobsEng
JanusCap
JohnJn
JohnsnCtl
JnprNtwk
KB Home
KKR
KC Southn
KA MLP
Kellogg
KeyEngy
Keycorp
KindME
KindMorg
KindMM
Kinross g
KnghtCap
KodiakO g
Kohls
KrispKrm
Kroger
LabCp
LVSands
LeggPlat
LennarA
LillyEli
Limited
LincNat
LockhdM
Lowes
+6.1
+2.4
+7.0
+12.8
+3.2
+3.7
+6.8
+1.6
+9.1
+4.1
+9.9
+2.3
+6.5
+6.5
+9.9
+4.3
+7.0
-0.3
+5.1
+4.6
-0.5
+22.0
+0.3
+0.4
+14.0
+3.6
+5.2
+8.0
-1.3
+5.6
+1.9
+1.2
46.35 +.47
19.75 +.21
45.55 +.63
9.61 -.15
72.37 -.19
31.82 +.09
21.01 +.19
16.05 -.06
16.62 +.34
86.90 +1.21
32.39 -.21
57.12 -.26
7.40 +.10
8.97 +.10
87.69 +.08
36.84 -.10
80.72 +.34
9.69 +.25
3.69 +.11
9.26 +.16
42.75 +.76
11.44 -.38
26.11 +.25
87.00 +.21
52.61 +.44
28.19 +.14
40.68 -.34
53.29 +.49
46.43 +.93
27.36 -.21
94.02 +.11
35.93 +.55
NAME
YTD
LAST
CHG
M-N-O
MBIA
MEMC
MFA Fncl
MGF
MGIC
MGM Rsts
Macerich
Macys
Manitowoc
Manulife g
MarathnO
MarathPet
MktVGold
MV OilSv s
MktVRus
MarkWest
MStewrt
Masco
MasterCrd
McDnlds
MeadJohn
MeadWvco
Medtrnic
Merck
MetLife
MetroPCS
MKors
MidAApt
MitsuUFJ
Modine
Mohawk
Molycorp
Monsanto
MorgStan
MurphO
NCR Corp
NRG Egy
Nabors
NBGre pfA
NatFuGas
NtHlthInv
NOilVarco
NatResPtrs
Newcastle
NewmtM
Nexen g
+5.7
+19.3
+9.1
-1.0
+4.1
+13.0
+0.1
-2.8
+2.9
+5.6
+4.1
+2.0
-1.7
+5.3
+3.7
+12.7
+5.3
+6.4
+3.7
+5.1
+2.7
+7.6
+4.7
+10.2
-3.6
+6.4
+2.1
+0.4
+7.3
+4.1
-6.4
+7.6
+6.9
+3.7
+7.9
+1.9
+2.4
+14.2
-1.7
+7.9
+2.8
+13.5
+12.6
-2.7
8.30 +.19
3.83 +.13
8.85 +.17
6.78
2.77 -.10
13.15 +.40
58.37 +.35
37.91 +.83
16.14 -.08
14.35 -.20
31.93 -.13
64.26 +1.64
45.59 +.36
40.67 +.37
29.90 -.24
52.88 -.28
2.76 +.05
17.46 -.04
522.80 -.71
91.51 -.02
69.24 -.25
32.72 -.03
44.13 -.09
42.87 -.47
36.29 -.01
9.58 +.07
54.32 -.14
66.13 +.33
5.44 -.01
8.72 +.07
94.16 +.08
8.84 +.06
101.44 +.85
20.43 +.36
61.76 +.42
27.49 +.35
23.42 +.22
14.80 +.30
8.67 +.05
49.84 +.44
60.99 +.30
70.24 -.10
21.05 +.06
9.77 +.02
45.19 -.11
26.93 +.01
YTD
+3.9
+4.1
+4.0
+17.5
+1.9
+3.6
+5.9
+0.1
-0.1
+3.0
+7.3
+6.7
+15.1
+0.7
+18.0
+8.2
+4.7
+10.7
LAST CHG NAME
YTD LAST
+0.9 27.63
71.88 +.19 SpectraEn
25.90 +.02 SpeedM
-2.5 17.39
53.64 +.45 SprintNex
-0.9 5.62
4.64 +.02 SprottGold
+1.1 14.37
8.92 -.13 SP Matls
+4.0 39.06
55.41 +1.58 SP HlthC
+4.7 41.76
65.46 +.59 SP CnSt
+3.6 36.14
25.46 +.07
+4.0 49.35
67.48 +.26 SP Consum
SP
Engy
+3.5 73.95
65.22 -.26
+4.5 17.13
175.08 +1.01 SPDR Fncl
SP
Inds
+3.8 39.35
46.06 +.53
+1.2 29.21
48.88 +.94 SP Tech
+1.5 35.43
56.69 -.21 SP Util
3.87 +.07 StdPac
+6.5 7.83
10.56 +.64 StanBlkDk
+2.9 76.14
22.61 +.05 StarGas
+4.9 4.29
32.83 +.53 StateStr
+8.1 50.80
Statoil
ASA
+2.7
25.72
P-Q-R
-0.5 8.57
PNC
+2.5 59.77 +.32 Sterlite
StillwtrM
+8.8
13.90
PPG
+3.5 140.14 -.89
+8.6 59.56
PPL Corp
+1.0 28.91 -.04 Stryker
+5.1 40.85
PVR Ptrs
+1.3 26.33 +.20 SubPpne
+4.5 34.45
Pandora
+17.6 10.80 -.27 Suncor gs
+17.0 1.79
PeabdyE
-7.1 24.73 +.13 Suntech
+1.9 28.89
Pembina gn
+4.2 29.85 -.01 SunTrst
Pengrth g
4.97 -.02 SupEnrgy
+11.1 23.03
PennWst g
-3.8 10.45
Supvalu
+43.7 3.55
Penney
-5.1 18.71 +.62 Synovus
+4.5 2.56
Penske
+4.9 31.56 +.98 TCW Strat
+7.3 5.75
PepcoHold
-2.1 19.20 +.09 TD Ameritr
+8.2 18.19
PepsiCo
+4.6 71.60 +.31 TECO
+1.4 16.99
PetroArg s
+4.8 4.98 -.07
TJX
s
+4.5
44.35
PetrbrsA
+0.9 19.48 +.10
+4.3 17.89
Petrobras
+1.9 19.84 +.14 TaiwSemi
+7.4 12.17
PetRes
+5.2 25.17 +.09 TalismE g
+3.2 61.09
Pfizer
+6.1 26.62 -.12 Target
+4.7 27.23
PhilipMor
+6.3 88.92 -.15 TeekOffsh
+2.9 73.40
Phillips66 n
-1.6 52.24 +.89 Teleflex
PiedNG
+0.9 31.58 +.06 TenetHlt rs
+9.2 35.47
PiedmOfc
+3.6 18.70 +.20 Tenneco
+3.4 36.30
PimcoStrat
+1.8 11.55 +.14 Teradyn
-1.1 16.70
PitnyBw
+10.0 11.70 -.04 Terex
+2.6 28.85
PlumCrk
+5.9 47.01 +.34 TerraNitro
+15.8 248.00
Polaris
+6.2 89.40 +.72 Tesoro
-1.5 43.40
Polypore
-9.2 42.20 +1.16
+2.4 38.22
Potash
+3.7 42.20 -.25 TevaPhrm
ThomCrk
g
-0.5 4.13
PwshDB
-0.5 27.65 -.12
+4.8 97.29
Primerica
+6.9 32.09 +.14 3M Co
Tiffany
+10.3
63.24
PrUShQQQ
-4.9 28.20 +.29
+2.7 49.13
ProUltSP
+6.3 64.14 +.11 TimeWarn
+9.5 35.39
PrUVxST rs
-34.6 13.67 -.06 TollBros
ProctGam
+2.9 69.88 +.25 Torchmark
+3.7 53.44
ProgsvCp
+7.3 22.65 +.10 Toyota
+3.4 96.43
PrUShSP rs
-6.4 50.67 -.08 TrCda g
+4.2 49.31
PrUShL20 rs +1.7 64.52 -.50 TrnsMont
+7.7 40.90
PUSSP500 rs -9.5 34.17 -.09 Transocn
+20.7 53.89
Prudentl
+7.1 57.14 -.06 TriContl
+3.8 16.66
PSEG
-2.1 29.97 -.04 TrinaSolar
+26.7 5.50
PulseElec
+6.1
.33
+4.0 37.26
PulteGrp
+7.2 19.47 +.37 Trinity
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PMMI
+5.2 8.48 -.03 TurqHillRs
+10.2 12.21
PPrIT
+0.5 5.49 -.02 TwoHrbInv
+4.4 30.53
Qihoo360
+3.8 30.82 -.81 TycoIntl s
+10.8 17.44
QstDiag
+2.7 59.86 +.20 UBS AG
Quiksilvr
+45.2 6.17 +.39 US Airwy
+6.0 14.31
RPM
+7.0 31.42 +.07 USA C n
17.60
RadianGrp
6.11 +.02 USG
+3.0 28.91
RadioShk
+3.8 2.20 -.11 UltraPt g
+4.9 19.02
Ralcorp
+0.3 89.89 +.01 UndArmr s
-2.2 47.45
RJamesFn
+8.4 41.76 +.14 UtdContl
+11.0 25.96
Rayonier
+3.3 53.56 -.03 UtdMicro
+1.5
2.02
RedwdTr
+12.4 18.99 +.16
+7.6 79.33
RegionsFn
+2.2 7.29 +.10 UPS B
+4.2 33.28
RelStlAl
+2.7 63.80 +.22 US Bancrp
+2.4 19.35
ReynAmer
+2.5 42.48 -.22 US NGs rs
+1.9 33.99
RiteAid
+11.0 1.51 +.06 US OilFd
+3.7 24.74
RockTen
+7.4 75.06 +.51 USSteel
+4.8 85.96
RockwlAut
+1.8 85.53 -.19 UtdTech
RockwdH
+3.5 51.21 -.35 UtdhlthGp
-1.1 53.62
RoyalBk g
+3.1 62.18 +.15 UnumGrp
+6.7 22.21
RylCarb
+6.5 36.20 +.24
V-W-X-Y-Z
RoyDShllA
+1.1 69.70 +.04
Vale SA
-3.4 20.25
S-T-U
Vale SA pf
-4.1 19.46
SAP AG
-3.5 77.55 -4.33 ValeroE
+4.9 35.80
SCANA
+1.2 46.21 -.10
+3.8 61.82
SK Tlcm
+7.5 17.01 -.03 VangDivAp
+0.7 44.85
SpdrDJIA
+3.4 135.08 +.19 VangEmg
+2.2 15.20
SpdrGold
+0.3 162.56 +1.02 VectorGp
+3.5 30.42
S&P500ETF
+3.3 147.07 +.10 Vectren
-3.0 41.97
SpdrHome
+4.8 27.87 +.21 VerizonCm
VMware
+3.8 97.71
SpdrLehHY
+1.2 41.21
SpdrRetl
+3.5 64.54 +1.32 VulcanM
+4.5 54.37
SPX Cp
-0.6 69.72 -.10 WGL Hold
-0.8 38.89
SafegdSci
+0.5 14.82 -.18 Wabtec
+2.7 89.93
Safeway
-2.6 17.62 +.20 WalMart
+1.1 68.98
StJoe
+2.0 23.54 +.02 Walgrn
+6.2 39.30
StJude
+6.2 38.39 -.46 WalterEn
+3.9 37.27
Saks
+3.8 10.91 +.31
WREIT
+4.4 27.29
SandRdge
+6.0 6.73 +.07
+3.5 34.91
Sasol
-2.5 42.20 -.91 WsteMInc
WeathfIntl
+5.5 11.81
Schlmbrg
+4.7 72.59 -.18
+4.4 27.95
Schwab
+6.5 15.29 +.02 WeinRlt
+2.7 35.11
SeadrillLtd
+2.3 37.66 -.82 WellsFargo
+2.0 15.42
SempraEn
+2.5 72.70 +.45 WstAsWw
ServiceCp
+4.3 14.41
WstnUnion
+0.6 13.69
Sherwin
+4.7 161.02 -.16 Weyerhsr
+9.9 30.58
ShipFin
+3.8 17.27
Whrlpl
+2.6 104.43
SiderurNac
+4.1 6.14 -.01 WmsCos
+1.7 33.30
Smucker
+2.5 88.36 +.06 WiscEngy
+3.2 38.04
SnapOn
+1.7 80.35 +.63 WT India
+3.3 20.00
SocQ&M
-0.8 57.18 -1.01
+1.6 8.02
SonicAut
+9.2 22.81 +.78 WldW Ent
+7.1 26.85
SonyCp
+0.3 11.23 -.05 XL Grp
+8.8 7.42
SouthnCo
+0.4 42.99 -.06 Xerox
Yamana
g
+0.9
17.37
SthnCopper
+7.0 40.50 +.43
+9.3 20.61
SwstAirl
+8.2 11.08 +.06 Yelp n
YoukuTud
+20.9
22.06
SwstnEngy
-0.7 33.16 +.58
SpecOpps
+4.6 15.70 +.03 YumBrnds
66.37
-.12
+.42
-.12
+.20
+.70
+.30
+.13
+.79
+.66
-.14
+.15
+2.00
+.78
+.14
-.03
+.21
+1.99
-.17
+1.30
-.08
-.37
+.04
+.42
-.04
-.03
-.08
+.58
-.13
+.09
+.23
+.10
-.36
-.19
+.66
-.89
-.03
-.01
+.09
-.19
+.37
-.29
+.36
+.16
+.26
-.03
-.02
+.47
+.22
-.17
+.02
+.22
-.62
+.60
+.50
+.17
+1.13
+.68
+.26
+.57
+.05
+.05
+.31
+.14
+.34
-.02
-.11
-.22
-1.00
-.17
-.02
-.03
-.04
+.41
+.02
+.08
-1.36
-.53
+.22
CHG.%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
+27.57
+39.15
+1.18
+15.65
+4.53
-6.72
+1.66
+5.50
+30.43
+4.50
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
+.20
+.70
+.26
+.18
+.19
-.22
+.11
+.52
+.20
+.51
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
+3.29
+6.27
+1.39
+3.43
+2.01
+3.02
+3.24
+4.33
+3.66
+4.15
Interest rates
Today Previous 1Yr Ago
Argent
Australia
Brazil
Britain
Canada
China
Denmark
Egypt
Euro
Hong Kong
India
Indnsia
Israel
Japan
Kenya
Mexico
N. Zealand
Pakistan
Poland
Russia
Saudi Arab
Singapore
So. Africa
Sweden
Switzerlnd
Taiwan
Venzuel
4.9525
.9466
2.0361
.6226
.9843
6.2183
5.6112
6.5825
.7519
7.7518
54.625
9645.00
3.7285
88.83
86.80
12.6271
1.1915
97.48
3.09
30.3305
3.7503
1.2257
8.8073
6.5009
.9321
28.97
4.2951
4.9525
.9467
2.0320
.6218
.9838
6.2240
5.5785
6.5647
.7475
7.7522
54.515
9635.00
3.7258
89.41
86.75
12.5981
1.1898
97.32
3.07
30.2456
3.7505
1.2261
8.6974
6.4493
.9217
28.99
4.2927
Today
4.3130
.9710
1.7950
.6534
1.0237
6.3159
5.8691
6.0375
.7893
7.7660
51.535
9080.00
3.8425
76.96
87.20
13.6176
1.2620
90.33
3.48
31.8845
3.7503
1.2933
8.1531
6.9994
.9537
29.98
4.2950
Prime Rate
Discount rate
Fed funds
3.25
0.75
.00-.25
Treasuries
3-month T-bill
6-month T-bill
1 year T-bill
1 year T-note
2 year T-note
5 year T-note
10 year T-note
30 year T-bond
0.08
0.12
0.14
0.18
0.25
0.75
1.84
3.03
London Inter-Bank Offered Rate
3-month Libor
0.303
6-month Libor
0.49
Housing
FHLB Cost of Funds
Fixed 30 yr. mortgage
1.000
2.98
Money Market and CDs
Money market avg yld
90 day CD
0.01
0.27
Let us know
your favorite stocks
CHG
-.06
-.18
-.07
+.12
+.04
-.05
+.11
+.36
+.33
+.07
+.11
-.19
+.10
+.21
+.85
-.01
-.21
-.07
+.20
+.69
-.18
+.10
+.04
+.80
+.71
+.02
+.06
+.05
CLOSE
Dollar
-4.50
-5.50
-6
-4.25
-2.50
-3
New York Stock Exchange
LOW
13447.49 13,534.89
5573.55 5,639.64
456.26
459.37
8671.06 8,733.10
2397.09 2,402.92
3093.32 3,110.78
1463.76 1,472.34
1054.22 1,064.65
15444.13 15,543.80
875.42
884.60
If you don’t see your favorite stock or
mutual fund and want it listed
regularly, call us at 757-6340 or
e-mail us at df lessner@timesfreepress.com.
Please list the full name of the stock or mutual fund and provide the stock
symbol or five-letter mutual fund symbol.
NASDAQ - Over The Counter
NAME
YTD
LAST CHG NAME
YTD LAST CHG
Covenant
+1.4 5.61 +.01
CrackerB
+1.4 65.13 +.09
20.45 +.05
CrosstxLP +7.3 15.61 -.03
5.81 +.20
Ctrip.com
+8.4 24.57 +.28
11.57 +.07
CubistPh
+3.7 43.59 -.44
38.15 -.01
20.98 +.26
D-E-F
8.66 -.03 DeckrsOut +1.3 40.81 +2.66
63.11 -1.37 Dell Inc
+29.9 13.17 +.88
34.34 -.34 Dndreon +22.3 6.47 +.06
8.28 -.08 DirecTV
+5.2 52.75 -.60
271.90 -.83 DixieGrp +22.0 4.00
24.69 +.04 DollarTr s
-4.8 38.60 +.56
31.03 -.02 DonlleyRR +0.1 9.00 +.28
13.36 +.12 DynMatl
+11.1 15.44 -.07
12.75 +.06 Dynatrn rs +9.5 3.12 +.12
2.83 +.13 Dynavax
+6.7 3.04 -.16
85.08 -1.84 E-Trade
+9.2 9.77 +.28
42.02 -.22 eBay
+3.0 52.51 -.68
45.08 +.08 ErthLink
-0.3 6.44 -.08
20.36 +1.04 Ebix Inc
+2.9 16.58 -.24
8.77 -.14 EchelonC
-0.4 2.44
485.92-15.83 ElectArts
+0.6 14.61 +.18
11.77 +.02 EnerNOC +34.1 15.76 +3.20
2.67 +.16 Ericsson
+0.6 10.16 -.20
10.81 +.61 ExpdIntl
+8.1 42.74 +.04
17.68 -.23 ExpScripts +0.2 54.10 -.59
20.26 +.28 EZchip
+3.6 34.27 -.74
40.53 -1.87 Facebook n +13.1 30.10 -.85
16.56 +1.22 FifthThird
+1.4 15.41 +.06
16.67 +.25 Finisar
-6.2 15.28 +.30
34.12 +.08 FtSecG rsh +4.5 2.33 +.68
6.70 -.27 FstSolar
+2.5 31.62 +.41
59.14 -.27 Fiserv
+1.8 80.47 -2.43
33.87 -.70 Fortinet
-4.4 20.09 +.65
21.00 -.24 FosterWhl +0.7 24.50 +.04
50.06 -.03 FrankElec +4.9 65.06 +.35
111.66 -.98 FrontierCm +3.0 4.41 +.02
12.98 +.30 FultonFncl +7.4 10.32 +.03
6.82 +.21
G-H-I
55.80 +.07
43.22 +.14 GT AdvTc +5.3 3.19 +.08
14.95 +.20 Garmin
-1.8 40.03 +.12
34.19 -.43 Gentex
+0.1 18.86 +.30
5.71 +.12 Gibraltar
-3.9 15.32 +.27
23.62 +.06 GileadSci
+5.3 77.36 -.41
13.89 -.13 Goodyear
+1.4 14.01 +.07
12.71 +.01 Google
+2.5 724.93 +1.68
20.86 +.75 GreenMtC
-4.8 39.36 +.02
99.39 +1.72 Groupon
+7.6 5.23 -.04
9.35 +.30 GulfportE
+5.9 40.46 +.77
48.29 +.14 Hasbro
+3.6 37.21 +.65
14.69 +.09 HercOffsh +3.1 6.36 +.02
27.95 -.67 HudsCity
+5.4 8.57 +.03
20.98 +.01 HuntBncsh +3.9 6.64 +.05
69.72 -.99 Intel
+6.1 21.88 -.12
13.99 -.12 Inteliquent +13.6 2.92 +.04
3.18
InterMune +3.6 10.04 +.05
3.75 -.05 IntervestB +2.6 3.99 +.03
66.15 +.06 IntSurg
+2.7 503.59 -9.13
16.14 +.27 Isis
+34.9 14.08 +.39
39.20 +.28 Ixia
+22.1 20.74 +1.50
37.71 +.31
J-K-L
4.34
31.82 -.06 JDS Uniph -1.0 13.36 +.18
A-B-C
ATMI Inc
AcadiaPh
ActivsBliz
AdobeSy
Adtran
Agilysys
AllnceRes
AlteraCp lf
Amarin
Amazon
AMovilA
ACapAgy
AmCapLtd
ARltyCT n
AmSupr
Amgen
AnalogDev
Andrsons
ApolloGrp
ApolloInv
Apple Inc
ApldMatl
ArQule
ArenaPhm
AresCap
AriadP
ArmHld
Arris
AscenaRt s
Astec
Atmel
AutoData
AvagoTch
AvisBudg
B/E Aero
Baidu
BassettF
Bazaarvc n
BedBath
BobEvans
BoltTech
Broadcom
BrcdeCm
CA Inc
Cadence
CalaCvHi
Carrizo
Celgene
Celsion
ChkPoint
CienaCorp
Cirrus
Cisco
CitrixSys
CleanEngy
Clearwire
CobraEl
CocaBtl
Colmbus
Comcast
Comc spcl
Comverse
Copart s
-2.1
+24.9
+8.9
+1.2
+7.4
+3.5
+8.7
-0.1
+2.3
+8.4
+6.7
+7.4
+11.1
+10.5
+8.0
-1.3
-0.1
+5.1
-2.7
+4.9
-8.7
+2.9
-4.3
+19.8
+1.0
+5.6
+7.1
+10.8
-9.7
+2.3
+2.3
+3.9
+7.0
+6.0
+1.3
+11.3
+4.1
-27.1
-0.2
+7.5
+4.8
+3.0
+7.1
+7.5
+2.8
+4.6
-0.3
+26.7
+14.2
+1.4
-6.4
-3.5
+6.8
+6.2
+12.4
+10.0
-1.1
-0.5
-2.3
+4.9
+5.0
+13.0
+7.9
NAME
JetBlue
JoesJean h
Kirklands
KraftFGp n
LSI Corp
LeapWirlss
LegacyRes
LibtyIntA
LifeTech
LimeEn hlf
LinearTch
LinnEngy
lululemn gs
YTD
+4.0
+9.0
-0.7
+2.7
+1.7
-7.0
+7.1
+6.9
+10.5
+13.8
+3.6
+5.2
-8.9
LAST
5.95
1.09
10.52
46.71
7.19
6.19
25.49
21.03
54.16
.66
35.55
37.06
69.47
M-N-O
MELA Sci
MannKd
Manntch rs
MarvellT
MaximIntg
MediCo
MelcoCrwn
Microchp
MicronT
Microsoft
MdsxWatr
Mondelez
Mylan
NIC Inc
NII Hldg
NektarTh
NetApp
Netflix
NewsCpA
NewsCpB
Nvidia
OReillyAu
OnSmcnd
OptCable
Oracle
Orexigen
OtterTail
+18.4
+13.0
+11.7
+19.3
-0.2
+24.8
+17.6
+1.3
+19.9
+1.9
-0.8
+8.9
+1.9
+0.8
-14.6
+27.3
-0.2
+9.8
+6.0
+4.8
-2.3
+0.3
+7.8
+7.0
+4.1
+25.9
+3.8
CHG
+.05
-.06
-.01
-.14
-.02
-.55
+.03
-.02
+.27
-.11
-.24
-.39
-2.83
NAME
YTD
LAST CHG
S-T-U
SBA Com
SLM Cp
SanDisk
Santarus
SeagateT
SearsHldgs
SeattGen
Sequenom
SigaTech h
SigmaAld
SilvStd g
SiriusXM
SkywksSol
SmithWes
SnydLance
SonicCorp
Splunk n
Staples
Starbucks
Starz A
StlDynam
SteinMrt lf
Stericycle
SunHydrl
Suprtex
SusqBnc
Symantec
TTM Tch
Tellabs
TexInst
TibcoSft
TractSupp
Unilife
UtdCmBks
USecBc AL
UrbanOut
-1.3
+1.2
+8.1
+14.0
+13.3
+6.9
+26.7
-6.8
+13.7
+3.8
-10.3
+8.7
+1.0
-0.1
+6.4
+6.6
+15.3
+8.4
+1.6
+20.8
+10.1
+5.8
+1.0
+2.8
+1.7
+5.5
+10.8
-19.3
-2.6
+4.5
+2.0
+4.7
-0.4
+5.0
-2.1
+7.0
70.09 -.44
17.33 -.03
47.03 +.08
12.52 +1.24
34.46 +.49
44.22 -.38
29.36 +1.72
4.39 -.04
2.98 +.13
76.39 -.08
13.36 -.15
3.14 -.01
20.50 -.51
8.43 +.20
25.66 +.40
11.10 +.15
33.46 +2.16
12.36 +.20
54.48 -.19
16.05 +.46
15.12 +.39
7.98 -.01
94.20 -.26
26.80 +.10
17.84 +.39
11.06 +.05
20.85 +.94
7.42 -1.73
2.22 -.01
32.28 -.06
22.41 -.36
92.54 +.87
2.26 -.04
9.91 -.05
5.25 +.09
42.10 -.15
2.12 +.10
2.61 +.12
6.28 -.27
8.66 -.08
29.33 +.18
29.92 +.78
19.81 +.64
33.02 -.09
7.60
27.21 +.32
19.41 +.06
27.71 +.23
27.98 +.44
16.47 +.03
6.09 -.26
9.43 +.69
33.48 +.24
101.69 -1.76
27.04 +.24
27.50 +.12
11.98 -.22
89.72 +1.17
7.60 -.06
3.99 +.02
34.70 -.26
V-W-X-Y-Z
6.61 +.32
+3.6 21.80 -.05
25.96 +.02 VCA Ant
Verisign
+1.4 39.36 +.98
P-Q-R
VertxPh
+12.4 47.08 -.26
PDL Bio
+0.4 7.07 -.35 ViacomB
+9.6 57.82 +.06
PacSunwr +19.5 1.90 +.03 VirgnMda h +3.0 37.87 +.28
PanASlv
+0.5 18.83 -.37 ViroPhrm +15.8 26.36 +1.94
PaneraBrd +3.4 164.21 +.78 Vivus
+8.9 14.61 +.66
PeregrinP +64.4 2.17 +.08 Vodafone
+3.9 26.17 -.10
Polycom
+10.0 11.51 +.03
WarnerCh +12.4 13.53 +.40
Power-One +7.1 4.40 -.01
PwShs QQQ +2.3 66.63 -.33 Wendys Co +4.3 4.90 +.05
+5.5 44.84 +.14
priceline
+6.9 663.35 +.43 WDigital
PrUPQQQ s +6.5 55.16 -.83 Windstrm +17.4 9.72 -.28
Wynn
+10.1
123.80 +1.00
ProgrsSoft +11.1 23.32 +.09
-0.4 35.72 -.12
ProspctCap +2.8 11.17 -.01 Xilinx
Qlogic
+10.4 10.74 +.56 YRC Wwde -0.9 6.69 +.06
-1.9 19.52 +.09
Qualcom
+4.2 64.44 +.20 Yahoo
QualitySys +6.0 18.41 +.21 ZaZaEngy +1.5 2.08 -.05
ZebraT
+4.7
41.14 +.16
RF Inds
+26.8 5.34 +.15
RF MicD
+7.8 4.83 -.07 Zix Corp +15.4 3.22 +.01
+12.8 1.50 +.02
RschMotn +22.0 14.48 -.47 Zogenix
+6.8 8.28 -.05
RiverbedT
-1.1 19.50 -.59 Zoltek
RosttaG rs +3.9 4.81
Zynga
+9.7 2.59 -.03
Stocks of Local Interest
NAME
AGL Resources
AT&T Inc
Astec Inds
BB&T Corp
Bank of America
CBL & Associates
CBL & Assoc pfD
Cigna Corp
Cintas Corp
Coca Btl Cns
CocaCola Co
Coca-Cola Ent
Comcast Corp A
Comcl Metals
ConAgra Foods
Convergys Corp
Corrections Corp
Covenant Transp
Cracker Barrel
Darden Rest
Dean Foods Corp
Dillards Inc
Dixie Group Inc
DuPont
Fst Horizon Natl
First Security Grp
Intel Corp
Johnson & Johnson
La-Z-Boy Inc
Medtronic Inc
Microsoft Corp
Miller Inds
TICKER
GAS
T
ASTE
BBT
BAC
CBL
CBLpD
CI
CTAS
COKE
KO
CCE
CMCSA
CMC
CAG
CVG
CXW
CVTI
CBRL
DRI
DF
DDS
DXYN
DD
FHN
FSGI
INTC
JNJ
LZB
MDT
MSFT
MLR
52LO
RANGE
36.59
29.02
26.09
26.58
6.44
15.67
24.42
39.01
35.41
56.51
33.52
25.74
25.31
11.30
23.64
12.13
22.38
2.92
51.13
44.12
10.50
43.70
2.95
41.67
7.44
1.30
19.23
61.71
10.95
35.67
26.26
13.55
7
5
6
5
9
8
6
0
7
7
5
0
0
9
0
0
0
9
8
1
9
9
6
3
8
5
3
0
7
0
2
5
52HI CLOSE
CHG %CHG
42.34
38.58
40.68
34.37
12.20
23.00
26.00
55.75
45.60
70.93
41.25
33.86
38.93
16.32
31.12
17.50
37.91
6.00
69.30
57.93
19.17
89.98
4.79
57.50
10.99
3.67
29.27
72.79
17.13
44.79
32.95
17.80
+.32 +0.8%
-.26 -0.8%
+.08 +0.2%
+.06 +0.2%
+.08 +0.7%
+.35 +1.7%
-.02 -0.1%
+.19 +0.3%
+.07 +0.2%
+.06 +0.1%
+.33 +0.9%
+.17 +0.5%
+.28 +0.7%
-.11 -0.7%
+.04 +0.1%
+.17 +1.0%
-.21 -0.6%
+.01 +0.2%
+.09 +0.1%
+.69 +1.5%
+.09 +0.5%
+2.19 +2.8%
...
...%
-.02
...%
+.10 +1.0%
+.68 +41.2%
-.12 -0.5%
-.19 -0.3%
+.01 +0.1%
-.09 -0.2%
+.32 +1.2%
+.06 +0.4%
40.57
33.76
34.12
30.32
11.55
21.25
25.25
55.87
42.32
66.15
37.32
33.81
39.20
15.58
31.07
16.98
36.91
5.61
65.13
45.33
17.84
81.69
4.00
46.25
10.06
2.33
21.88
72.37
15.22
44.13
27.21
15.56
WK MO QTR
s
t
t
r
t
s
s
s
t
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
r
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
t
s
s
t
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
YTD
CHG
+1.5%
+0.1%
+2.3%
+4.9%
-0.5%
+0.2%
+0.8%
+4.5%
+3.5%
-0.5%
+3.0%
+6.6%
+4.9%
+4.8%
+5.3%
+3.5%
+4.1%
+1.4%
+1.4%
+0.6%
+8.1%
-2.5%
+22.0%
+2.8%
+1.5%
+4.5%
+6.1%
+3.2%
+7.6%
+7.6%
+1.9%
+2.0%
1YR
VOL
CHG (Thou) P/E
+1.8%
+19.0%
+0.9%
+14.1%
+74.1%
+39.3%
...%
+22.2%
+14.8%
+15.7%
+13.5%
+34.0%
+55.9%
+22.3%
+19.2%
+35.2%
+68.1%
+79.5%
+26.0%
+4.5%
+62.8%
+87.8%
+24.2%
-0.9%
+15.2%
-53.0%
-9.0%
+14.9%
+19.4%
+17.1%
-1.9%
+2.8%
434
23905
46
2172
121751
1924
19
1739
541
7
12469
1319
12333
1327
4497
447
573
9
151
1441
2034
396
12
3541
2248
29
32627
7425
158
3720
46997
7
21
44
21
12
30
29
11
18
20
20
15
21
12
20
18
24
33
15
13
25
13
dd
14
dd
dd
10
24
18
13
15
14
9
DIV
1.84
1.80f
1.00e
0.80
0.04
0.88
1.84
0.04
0.64f
1.00
1.02
0.64
0.65
0.48
1.00
0.20
0.80
...
2.00
2.00
...
0.20a
...
1.72
0.04
...
0.90
2.44
0.16
1.04
0.92
0.52
The symbol above illustrates a stock’s
price in relation to its low and high
closing prices during the past 52
weeks.
NAME
Mohawk Inds
Mueller Water Pdts
Natl Hlth Inv
Ntl Hlthcare Cp
Norfolk Sthn
Panera Bread Co
Raymond James Fncl
Regions Fncl
Reliance Steel Alu
Rock Tenn
Ruby Tuesday
Sanofi
Sonic Corp
Suntrust Bks
Unum Group
Vodafone Group
Vulcan Matl
WalMart Strs
Whirlpool
TICKER
52LO
RANGE
MHK
MWA
NHI
NHC
NSC
PNRA
RJF
RF
RS
RKT
RT
SNY
SONC
STI
UNM
VOD
VMC
WMT
WHR
59.69
2.66
45.00
40.75
56.05
135.40
30.99
4.75
44.81
49.24
4.98
33.03
6.65
19.81
18.28
24.95
32.31
57.18
49.78
0
0
0
0
5
8
0
9
0
0
7
0
0
9
7
3
0
6
0
A Fresh Take
On News
52HI CLOSE
95.61
5.94
60.90
49.68
78.22
175.26
41.79
7.73
65.70
76.18
9.39
49.28
11.35
30.79
24.81
30.07
54.74
77.60
107.94
94.16
5.99
60.99
49.20
65.46
164.21
41.76
7.29
63.80
75.06
7.91
47.90
11.10
28.89
22.21
26.17
54.37
68.98
104.43
CHG %CHG
+.08
+.14
+.30
+.51
+.59
+.78
+.14
+.10
+.22
+.51
+.02
-.79
+.15
+.80
-.03
-.10
+.50
+.68
-1.00
+0.1%
+2.4%
+0.5%
+1.0%
+0.9%
+0.5%
+0.3%
+1.4%
+0.3%
+0.7%
+0.3%
-1.6%
+1.4%
+2.8%
-0.1%
-0.4%
+0.9%
+1.0%
-0.9%
WK MO QTR
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
t
s
s
r
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
YTD
CHG
+4.1%
+6.8%
+7.9%
+4.6%
+5.9%
+3.4%
+8.4%
+2.2%
+2.7%
+7.4%
+0.6%
+1.1%
+6.6%
+1.9%
+6.7%
+3.9%
+4.5%
+1.1%
+2.6%
1YR
VOL
CHG (Thou) P/E
+50.5%
+116.8%
+41.2%
+20.1%
-12.7%
+11.5%
+30.1%
+50.9%
+20.0%
+16.9%
+11.9%
+42.6%
+63.2%
+36.0%
+2.1%
+3.3%
+32.6%
+17.4%
+111.1%
562
1061
96
6
2283
185
379
18945
435
901
568
1931
337
5865
991
7167
422
6081
705
29
dd
21
14
12
30
19
cc
12
22
cc
18
9
6
dd
14
17
DIV
...
0.07
2.68a
1.20a
2.00
...
0.56f
0.04
1.00
0.90
...
1.76e
...
0.20
0.52
1.54e
0.04
1.59
2.00
... timesfreepress.com
.
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • C5
Mutual Funds
12-MO
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
AcadEm n 19.49 -.11 +19.0 Columbia Class C:
Acorn t
27.34 +.13 +16.8
Alger Funds A:
SmCapGr 8.08 +.06 +14.2 AcornInt t 40.26 -.07 +20.5
Columbia Class Z:
Alger Funds B:
31.63 +.15 +18.0
SmCapGr 7.07 +.05 +13.4 Acorn Z
AcornIntZ 41.63 -.07 +21.7
AllianceBern A:
Copley
n
53.80
+.05 NA
DiscValA 17.82 +.09 +18.8
Credit Suisse Comm:
AllianceBern B:
ComRet
t
8.07
+.01 -1.2
SMCpVlB t 17.05 +.08 +18.7
DFA Funds:
Allianz Admin MMS:
MCapVal p 19.37 +.07 +16.5 IntlCorEq n10.97 -.02 +20.6
USCorEq1 n 12.82 +.04 +17.8
Allianz Funds B:
MCapValB 16.85 +.06 +15.5 USCorEq2 n 12.65 +.05 +18.6
DWS
Invest A:
Amer Century A:
14.93 -.07 +12.9
SCapVal p 8.74 +.03 +16.6 TechA
DWS
Invest C:
Amer Century Adv:
EqIncA p
8.05 +.01 +12.6 DreHiRC 35.78 -.02 +11.1
HeritageA p 22.29 +.06 +14.7 DWS Invest S:
ValueA p
6.62 +.02 +16.3 CoreEqtyS 19.09 +.07 +16.6
Gold&Prc 13.59 +.11 -13.6
Amer Century Inv:
EmgMkI
8.87 -.06 +21.5 LgCpFoGr 33.40 +.02 +13.0
EqInc
8.05 +.01 +12.9 LifeCmpRet 11.87 +.01 +9.5
GlGold
17.82 +.13 -13.3 SmCpVlS r 20.35 +.09 +18.1
GrowthI
27.63 +.02 +13.9 Davis Funds A:
InfAdjBd 13.15 +.02 +5.7 NYVen A 36.21 +.02 +13.8
30.00 +.18 +18.5
SelectI
44.83 -.05 +14.7 RlEstA
SGov
9.71 ... +0.2 Davis Funds Y:
SmCpVal
8.78 +.03 +16.8 NYVenY 36.59 +.02 +14.1
SmallCo
9.07 +.06 +14.4 Delaware Invest A:
Ultra
26.81 -.04 +14.3 Diver Inc p 9.35 ... +6.4
ValueInv
6.62 +.01 +16.4 Delaware Invest B:
Veedot
7.12 +.02 +12.7 USGrB p 15.81 +.03 +18.8
American Funds A:
Dimensional Fds:
AmcpA p 22.37 +.02 +15.2 EmMCrEq n20.75 -.08 +17.7
AMutlA p 29.09 +.02 +13.6 EmMktV 30.63 -.10 +16.7
BalA p
20.94 +.04 +14.8 IntSmVa n 16.62 -.04 +24.0
BondA p 12.93 ... +5.4 USLgVa n 23.86 +.10 +22.2
CapIBA p 53.54 -.04 +13.8 US SmVa 27.19 +.12 +21.7
CapWGA p 38.12 -.04 +20.3 IntlSmCo n 16.40 -.04 +19.9
CapWA p 21.17 ... +6.9 Fixd n
10.33 ... +0.8
EupacA p 42.01 -.05 +19.9 IntVa n
17.18 -.05 +19.9
FdInvA p 42.14 +.05 +17.6 Glb5FxInc n 11.14 +.01 +4.3
GwthA p 35.49 +.01 +20.3 Dodge&Cox:
HI TrA p
11.48 ... +14.3 Balanced 80.58 +.12 +18.5
IncoA p
18.40 ... +13.3 Income
13.88 ... +7.1
IntBdA p 13.74 ... +2.4 IntlStk
35.70 -.06 +23.8
ICAA p
31.15 -.02 +16.3 Stock
127.07 +.20 +22.7
NEcoA p 29.43 ... +24.4 DoubleLine Funds:
N PerA p 32.16 +.01 +21.6 TRBd I
... NA
NwWrldA 55.16 -.12 +18.7 TRBd N p 11.40
11.39 ... NA
SmCpA p 40.98 -.03 +20.7
Dreyfus:
TxExA p 13.24 +.01 +7.7
WshA p
32.11 +.04 +13.8 AMTMuBdZ 14.41 +.02 +6.7
Aprec
45.22 +.03 +12.7
Ariel Investments:
34.02 +.02 +18.1
Apprec
43.62 +.27 +21.1 Discp
Dreyf
10.16 +.02 +18.5
Ariel
53.87 +.26 +20.1 GrInc
16.40 +.02 +18.1
Artisan Funds:
MunBd r 11.98 +.01 +6.1
Intl
25.20 -.05 NA OppMCVal A 33.41 +.28 +20.2
IntlVal r
31.12 -.03 +25.0 Dupree Mutual:
MidCap
39.11 -.02 +17.7 TNTF
11.85 +.01 +5.2
MidCapVal 21.63 +.06 +13.9
Eaton Vance A:
Ave Maria Funds:
TMG1.1
27.77 +.03 +16.4
Group p
24.75 +.05 +15.1
RisingDiv 13.93 +.07 +15.0 Eaton Vance I:
FltgRt
9.17 +.01 +8.0
Baron Funds:
Asset
50.97 +.16 +17.2 FAM Funds:
EqtyInc n20.86 +.03 +13.7
BlackRock A:
EqtyDiv
20.46 +.04 +13.5 FMI Funds:
FlexEqA 12.06 +.03 +9.4 LgCap p n17.69 +.03 +15.3
GlAlA r
20.12 +.01 +9.9 FPA Funds:
Capit
43.22 +.28 +11.3
BlackRock B&C:
GlAlC t
18.73 +.01 +9.1 NewInco 10.59 ... +2.2
HlScOpC 30.76 +.10 +20.1 FPACres 28.81 +.04 +11.8
Fairholme 31.48 +.02 +28.4
BlackRock Instl:
EquityDv 20.50 +.04 +13.8 Federated Instl:
5.19 ... +16.7
GlbAlloc r 20.21 +.01 +10.2 KaufmnR
TotRetBd 11.42 +.01 +6.1
Brandywine Fds:
BlueFd n25.57 +.13 +6.7 Fidelity Advisor A:
NwInsgh p 23.39 -.02 +16.9
Bridgeway Funds:
12.72 ... +10.6
AggInv1
38.29 +.22 +23.1 StrInA
Fidelity
Advisor I:
CGM Funds:
Focus
n31.81 +.31 +17.6 NwInsgtI n23.67 -.02 +17.2
Mutl n
30.17 +.25 +17.8 Fidelity Freedom:
FF2010 n14.33 +.01 +10.5
Century Funds:
ShsTrInst 18.52 +.01 +14.1 FF2015 n 11.99 +.01 +10.7
FF2015K 13.15 ... +10.8
ChamplSC p 14.15 +.05 +12.8 FF2020 n 14.55 +.01 +11.9
Cohen & Steers:
FF2020K 13.61 ... +11.9
RltyShrs 66.27 +.35 +18.1 FF2025 n 12.19 +.01 +13.3
Columbia Class A:
FF2025K 13.85 +.01 +13.4
HiYldBd
3.00 ... +15.9 FF2030 n 14.53 +.01 +13.7
TxEA p
14.39 +.02 +7.7 FF2030K 14.01 +.01 +13.9
SelComm A 42.32 +.03 +6.9 FF2035 n 12.11 +.01 +14.8
Gold
Date
NAME
NAV
FF2035K 14.20
FF2040 n 8.45
FF2040K 14.25
Fidelity Invest:
AllSectEq 12.40
AMgr50 n 16.72
AMg85 n 14.54
AMgr20 r n 13.22
Balanc n 20.59
BalancedK 20.58
BlueChGr n 50.43
Canada n 54.79
CapAp n 30.31
CpInc r n
9.62
Contra n 79.78
ContraK
79.72
DivIntl n
30.52
DivrsIntK r 30.47
DivGth n 30.89
EmergAs r n 30.39
EmrMk n 23.36
Eq Inc n 48.67
ECapAp 19.54
Fifty r n
21.00
FltRateHi r n 9.97
FrInOne n 29.99
GNMA n 11.72
GroCo n 96.11
GroInc n 21.95
GrowthCoK 96.00
GrStrat r n 21.45
HighInc r n 9.42
IntGov n 10.85
IntlDisc n 33.62
IntlSCOp r n 11.44
InvGrBd n 11.57
InvGB n
7.99
LargCap n 21.21
LatAm
47.35
LevCoStk n 33.60
LowP r n 40.80
LowPriK r 40.77
Magelln n 75.83
MegaCpStk n12.28
MtgSec n 11.33
12-MO
CHG %RTN
+.01 +14.9
... +14.8
+.01 +15.0
+.01
+.01
+.01
+.01
+.01
+.01
-.01
+.11
-.01
...
-.07
-.07
-.04
-.04
+.04
-.08
-.11
+.09
-.03
+.04
...
+.02
-.01
-.12
+.05
-.13
+.08
-.01
+.01
-.10
-.02
+.01
+.01
+.06
-.08
+.16
+.15
+.15
+.09
+.02
-.01
+17.7
+11.4
+16.2
+6.6
+13.1
+13.2
+17.7
+9.7
+21.5
+16.1
+17.3
+17.4
+20.0
+20.2
+17.9
+18.4
+11.7
+18.9
+28.5
+18.1
+6.6
+16.0
+2.3
+17.1
+20.1
+17.2
+9.8
+14.5
+1.9
+23.4
+23.3
+4.8
+5.6
+21.0
+1.7
+26.8
+19.2
+19.3
+18.4
+20.0
+3.5
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
MuniInc n 13.65 +.01 +6.9
NwMkt r n 17.81 +.01 +20.7
NwMill n 31.42 +.12 +17.0
OTC n
61.57 -.16 +9.9
Puritn n
19.83 +.02 +13.9
RealEInc r 11.59 +.02 +19.2
SCmdtyStrt n 8.86 +.02 -1.0
SCmdtyStrF n 8.89 +.02 -0.8
SrsIntGrw 12.14 +.01 +20.7
SrsIntVal
9.58 -.03 +23.1
SrInvGrdF 11.57 ... +4.9
StIntMu n 10.87 ... +2.2
STBF n
8.60 ... +2.1
StkSlcACap n29.24 +.05 +18.0
StratInc n 11.40 ... +10.9
TotalBd n 10.95 +.01 +6.1
USBI n
11.86 ... +3.4
Value n
79.48 +.37 +22.7
Fidelity Selects:
Air
n43.05 +.09 +22.7
Biotch n 118.69 +.19 +35.8
Brokr n
53.18 -.03 +26.0
DfAer n
89.91 +.27 +13.5
Electr n
47.25 -.47 +1.0
Enrgy n
52.66 +.20 +6.3
EngSv n 69.71 +.73 +6.1
Gold r n
36.70 +.33 -17.8
MedDl n 58.91 +.18 +7.5
MdEqSys n 29.33 ... +18.7
Fidelity Spartan:
500IdxInv n52.15 +.06 +16.7
500Idx I
52.16 +.06 +16.8
IntlInxInv n 35.06 -.07 +20.8
Fidelity Spart Adv:
ExMktAd r n41.78 +.21 +19.1
500IdxAdv n 52.16 +.06 +16.8
TotMktAd r n 42.69 +.08 +17.2
First Eagle:
GlblA
49.41 +.12 +12.9
OverseasA 22.23 +.03 +14.4
Frank/Temp Frnk A:
DynTchA 34.37 -.07 +17.3
FedTFA p 12.84 +.02 +7.5
GrwthA p 52.03 -.01 +13.5
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
HYTFA p 11.02 +.01 +9.4
IncomA p
2.28 ... +15.1
RisDvA p 39.07 +.09 +12.6
SmCpGrA p 13.01 +.08 +13.4
SmCpVl p 47.99 +.25 +18.1
USGovA p 6.78 ... +0.9
UtilsA p
13.83 +.04 +9.9
Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv:
GlbBdAdv x n13.42 -.06 +15.4
IncmeAd
2.26 ... +14.9
Frank/Temp Frnk C:
HiIncC t
2.12 ... +14.9
IncomC t
2.30 ... +14.4
Frank/Temp Temp A:
GlBd A px 13.46 -.07 +15.2
GlbOpA p 19.35 -.05 +24.4
GrwthA p 20.23 -.06 +25.2
WorldA p 16.40 -.04 +22.4
Frank/Temp Tmp B&C:
GlBdC px 13.49 -.06 +14.6
GAMCO Funds:
GlTelAAA 20.74 -.07 +12.6
GE Instl Funds:
US Eq
13.17 ... +16.8
GMO Trust III:
Quality
23.04 -.01 +18.7
GMO Trust IV:
IntlIntrVl
21.58 -.08 +18.8
GMO Trust VI:
EmgMkts r 11.90 -.04 +13.7
Gabelli Funds:
Asset
53.74 +.14 +17.2
EqInc p
23.60 +.07 +15.3
Goldman Sachs A:
TechTollkp 14.08 -.05 +19.8
Goldman Sachs B:
GrOppt
20.68 +.08 +18.5
MidCVB p 39.01 +.24 +17.7
SCapB p 37.55 +.17 +16.7
Goldman Sachs Inst:
HiYield
7.39 ... +16.1
Harbor Funds:
Bond
12.49 +.01 +8.2
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
CapApInst 43.89 -.05 +15.9
CmdtRRtn I 7.17 +.02 +5.2
Intl r
62.98 -.27 +19.6
Hartford Fds A:
CpAppA p 35.69 +.10 +19.0
Hlthcare p 21.41 +.09 +21.9
Hartford Fds B:
GlbGrB p n14.79 -.03 +20.1
MidCpB t n 16.82 +.08 +18.4
Hartford Fds C:
Hlthcare t 19.21 +.07 +21.0
HiYieldC tx 7.65 -.01 +12.5
Hartford HLS IA :
CapApp
44.96 +.13 +17.6
Heartland Fds:
ValPlusInv p 30.75 +.15 +12.4
ING Funds Cl C:
EmgCntC
... ... 0.0
IVA Funds:
Wldwide I r 16.31 +.02 +9.0
Invesco Funds A:
CmstkA
18.53 +.06 +19.3
EqIncA
9.45 +.02 +13.8
HYMuA
10.18 +.01 +12.3
SmCpEq p 13.79 +.10 +15.3
Invesco Funds B:
EqWtdB
35.16 +.14 +16.8
PacGrB
20.69 -.04 +13.6
Ivy Funds:
AssetSC t 25.94 ... +17.4
AssetStA p 26.60 ... +18.2
AssetStrI r 26.80 ... +18.6
EurOpB p 23.00 -.13 +18.4
JPMorgan A Class:
CoreBd A 12.06 +.01 +4.4
JPMorgan R Cl:
CoreBond n12.07 +.01 +4.8
JPMorgan Sel Cls:
CoreBd n12.05 +.01 +4.5
HighYld n 8.24 -.01 +14.9
ShtDurBd n 11.00 ... +1.6
USLCCrPls n22.96 ... +17.3
Janus T Shrs:
Contrarn T 15.78 +.05 +25.3
EnterprT 68.52 +.13 +18.5
GlLifeSciT r 31.77 +.11 +25.5
GlbSel T 10.41 +.02 +2.4
GlTechT r 19.28 -.12 +18.2
Grw&IncT 35.24 +.02 +16.7
Janus T
32.74 +.04 +17.7
OvrseasT r 35.60 -.10 +9.8
PrkMCVal T 22.11 +.11 +11.5
Twenty T 63.86 -.08 +20.4
John Hancock A:
FnIndA p 12.70 +.04 +32.1
TFBd A
10.56 +.01 +7.1
John Hancock B:
FnIndB p 11.80 +.04 +31.3
John Hancock Cl 1:
LSBalanc 13.84 +.01 +14.4
LSGrwth 13.85 +.01 +15.9
Kinetics Funds:
Medical n19.06 +.05 +13.9
Lazard Instl:
EmgMktI 19.72 -.14 +18.6
Legg Mason A:
CBAAppr 16.20 +.01 +16.5
Legg Mason O:
CBAEquity 14.00 +.01 +15.7
Longleaf Partners:
Partners 27.88 +.24 +20.9
Loomis Sayles:
LSBondI 15.38 -.01 +15.5
StrInc C
15.89 -.01 +13.4
LSBondR 15.32 -.01 +15.2
StrIncA
15.80 -.01 +14.3
Loomis Sayles Inv:
InvGrBdY 12.74 ... +12.2
Lord Abbett A:
AffilA p
12.54 +.04 +16.1
BdDebA p 8.24 ... +13.2
ShDurIncA p 4.66 ... +6.4
Lord Abbett C:
ShDurIncC t 4.69 ... +5.6
Lord Abbett F:
ShtDurInco 4.65 ... +6.2
MFS Funds A:
UtilA
19.03 +.04 +16.0
ValueA
26.45 +.04 +18.1
MFS Funds B:
MCapB
n9.30 +.05 +16.0
NewDB
19.35 +.11 +21.2
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
RschB n 27.59 +.04 +17.6
GlGrB n
27.12 -.04 +19.0
MFS Funds C:
TotRC
n15.69 +.03 +11.5
UtilC n
18.96 +.04 +15.2
MFS Funds I:
ValueI
26.57 +.04 +18.4
Managers Funds:
Yacktman p n19.91 +.07 +13.9
YacktFoc n 21.35 +.09 +13.1
Manning&Napier Fds:
WldOppA 7.91 -.02 +19.6
Marsico Funds:
Grow p
20.93 +.03 +12.1
Matthews Asian:
AsiaDvInv r 14.78 +.02 +22.8
Meridian Funds:
Growth
41.14 +.07 +12.9
Value
34.17 +.12 +18.3
Metro West Fds:
TotRetBd 10.92 +.01 +10.9
TotRtBdI 10.92 +.01 +11.2
MorganStanley Inst:
EmMktI
26.37 -.15 +19.0
Muhlenk n 54.91 +.29 +15.5
Munder Funds:
Idx500A p 18.04 +.02 +15.9
Munder Funds B:
GwthOppB 26.03 +.06 +11.7
Mutual Series:
BeacnZ
13.88 +.01 +19.0
EuropZ
21.67 -.06 +19.8
GblDiscA 29.25 +.04 +15.9
GlbDiscZ 29.64 +.04 +16.2
SharesZ 23.28 +.05 +17.4
Needham Funds:
Growth p n34.49 +.02 +9.5
Neuberger&Berm Fds:
GenesInst 50.46 +.17 +12.4
Nicholas Group:
Nicholas n50.61 +.19 +20.3
Nch II I n 22.37 +.10 +16.4
Northern Funds:
HiYFxInc
7.62 -.01 +15.1
IncEq
13.58 +.03 +12.6
LCGr
25.18 -.03 +14.9
SmCapVl 17.01 +.07 +14.7
Technly
16.75 -.03 +13.6
Nuveen Cl A:
LrgCpV p 22.04 +.07 +15.9
TNMBA p 12.26 +.01 +7.6
Nuveen Cl C:
HYMuBd t 17.32 +.02 +18.0
TNMuBd t 12.24 +.01 +7.0
Oak Assoc Fds:
BlkOkEm
2.89 -.01 +8.2
LivOakHlt 14.90 +.01 +16.4
RedOakT 10.80 +.01 +13.2
Oakmark Funds I:
EqtyInc r 29.21 +.08 +10.8
GlobalI
24.50 +.05 +22.1
Intl I r
21.87 +.08 +33.1
Oakmark 50.35 +.15 +21.3
Select
32.52 +.15 +23.0
Old Westbury Fds:
GlobOpp
7.70 ... +15.3
GlbSMdCap 15.10 +.02 +18.6
Oppenheimer A:
DvMktA p 36.06 -.11 +20.4
Disc p
61.28 +.49 +18.6
GlobA p
66.59 -.17 +23.8
GblStrIncA 4.39 ... +13.7
IntBdA p
6.61 ... +11.3
Oppenheimer B:
DiscB t
50.04 +.39 +17.6
Oppenheimer C&M:
DevMktC t 34.57 -.10 +19.5
GlOppC
28.59 +.29 +11.8
Oppenheimer Y:
DevMktY 35.64 -.10 +20.8
IntlBdY
6.61 ... +11.6
PIMCO Admin PIMS:
TotRtAd
11.25 +.01 +9.0
PIMCO Instl PIMS:
AlAsetAut r 11.17 ... +16.7
AllAsset
12.73 ... +15.2
ComodRR 6.70 +.03 +5.5
DivInc
12.30 ... +14.6
EmgMkCur 10.62 -.02 +8.6
EmMkBd 12.50 +.01 +16.9
HiYld
9.73 -.01 +14.6
InvGrCp
11.17 +.01 +14.6
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
LowDu
10.51 +.01 +5.4
RealRtnI 12.26 +.03 +8.2
ShortT
9.88 ... +3.0
TotRt
11.25 +.01 +9.2
PIMCO Funds A:
RealRtA p 12.26 +.03 +7.7
TotRtA
11.25 +.01 +8.8
PIMCO Funds B:
RealRtB t 12.26 +.03 +6.9
PIMCO Funds C:
AllAsset t 12.63 ... +13.8
ComRR p 6.40 +.02 +4.1
TotRtC t
11.25 +.01 +8.0
PIMCO Funds D:
TRtn p
11.25 +.01 +8.9
PIMCO Funds P:
AstAllAuthP 11.17 ... +16.6
TotRtnP
11.25 +.01 +9.1
Parnassus Funds:
EqtyInco n30.31 +.05 +18.6
Perm Port Funds:
Permannt 49.34 +.16 +6.2
Pioneer Funds A:
AMTFrMu p 14.67 +.02 +11.2
Pioneer Funds C:
HiYldC t
10.73 ... +13.3
Price Funds Adv:
R2030A p n19.28 +.01 +16.6
Price Funds:
BlChip
n47.30 -.04 +18.8
CapApp n 22.77 +.02 +14.7
EmMktB n 14.20 +.01 +19.4
EmMktS n 34.30 -.17 +16.3
EqInc n
27.40 +.08 +17.8
EqIndex n 39.67 +.05 +16.5
FinSvcs n 15.61 +.05 +26.5
Growth n 38.91 -.03 +18.6
Gr&In n
23.33 +.04 +15.9
HlthSci n 43.87 +.16 +32.3
HiYield n
7.07 ... +15.4
InstlCpG 19.54 -.02 +18.1
IntlBond n 10.06 ... +6.0
IntDis n
47.31 -.14 +27.1
Intl G&I
13.26 -.02 +17.7
IntlStk n
14.70 -.01 +18.5
LatAm n 38.75 -.24 +5.8
MidCap n 58.36 +.19 +14.2
MCapVal n 24.92 +.12 +20.9
N Asia n 17.02 -.01 +21.5
New Era n 43.17 +.23 +4.4
N Horiz n 34.65 +.11 +17.0
N Inc n
9.84 ... +5.5
OverS SF n 8.68 -.03 +20.6
RealEst n 21.58 +.13 +18.8
R2015 n 13.12 ... +13.9
R2020 n 18.26 ... +15.0
R2025 n 13.43 +.01 +16.0
R2030 n 19.41 +.01 +16.9
R2035 n 13.74 +.01 +17.4
R2040 n 19.62 +.01 +17.6
SciTec n 28.25 +.04 +4.2
ShtBd n
4.85 ... +2.6
SmCpStk n 35.37 +.22 +18.3
SmCapVal n 40.75 +.21 +18.5
SpecGr n 19.99 +.01 +18.2
SpecIn n 13.07 +.01 +9.9
Strat Inco n 11.94 ... +10.4
SuMuInc n 12.10 +.01 +8.5
Value n
27.46 +.08 +19.9
Primecap Odyssey :
AggGr r n20.58 +.19 +23.6
Prudential Fds A:
NatResA 46.35 +.36 -3.2
Putnam Funds A:
AmGvA p 9.12 ... NA
AABalA p 12.22 +.02 NA
DvrInA px 7.82 -.04 +13.6
IntlGrth p 16.30 +.02 +21.1
Putnam Funds B:
GlNtRs t 18.24 +.06 +3.6
GlblUtilB 10.44 +.06 +8.1
Putnam Funds M:
MultiCpGr 52.66 +.10 +15.4
Royce Funds:
PennMuI r 11.93 +.04 +14.9
TotRetI r 14.15 +.04 +16.5
VlPlSvc
14.24 +.06 +13.0
Rydex Investor:
InvNasdInvs 9.14 +.05 -16.8
SEI Asset Alloc:
DvrAgStkA 11.06 ... 0.0
ModGroA 10.64 ... 0.0
Low
100 troy oz.- dollars per troy oz.
Jan 13
1684.30 1671.60
Feb 13
1684.90 1666.20
Mar 13
1685.30 1669.20
Apr 13
1687.20 1669.60
Jun 13
1689.20 1672.60
Aug 13
1690.90 1678.40
Oct 13
1691.80 1689.00
Dec 13
1694.40 1677.50
Feb 14
1695.70 1686.70
Apr 14
Jun 14
1700.20 1698.50
Aug 14
1702.60 1692.20
Oct 14
Dec 14
Jun 15
Dec 15
1726.10 1712.30
Jun 16
Dec 16
1747.00 1746.50
Jun 17
Dec 17
Jun 18
Dec 18
Est. sales:Mon’s sales: 161039
Close
Change
1683.40
1683.90
1684.90
1686.20
1688.20
1690.00
1691.80
1693.70
1695.70
1697.90
1700.20
1702.60
1705.20
1707.80
1716.60
1726.10
1736.20
1747.00
1760.60
1776.80
1797.90
1822.70
+14.50
+14.50
+14.50
+14.60
+14.50
+14.50
+14.50
+14.50
+14.50
+14.50
+14.40
+14.30
+14.30
+14.30
+14.10
+13.80
+13.60
+13.40
+13.40
+13.40
+13.40
+13.40
High
Low
Mon’s open int: 440838
5,000 troy oz.- cents per troy oz.
Jan 13
3149.8 3095.0
Feb 13
3158.0 3096.5
Mar 13
3161.5 3096.5
May 13
3161.5 3110.5
Jul 13
3163.9 3112.0
Sep 13
3168.2 3160.0
Dec 13
3179.0 3117.0
Jan 14
Mar 14
3178.7 3138.0
May 14
Jul 14
Sep 14
Dec 14
3187.1 3159.0
Jul 15
Dec 15
3186.0 3160.0
Jul 16
Dec 16
Jul 17
Dec 17
Est. sales:Mon’s sales: 46910
Close
Change
3149.8
3150.0
3152.9
3158.8
3163.9
3168.2
3174.0
3175.5
3178.7
3180.8
3182.9
3184.6
3187.1
3186.9
3186.0
3186.5
3186.2
3183.0
3176.0
+41.8
+41.8
+41.9
+42.0
+42.1
+42.2
+42.4
+42.5
+42.7
+42.9
+43.0
+43.1
+43.5
+44.5
+45.1
+45.5
+45.5
+45.5
+45.5
Georgia Poultry
The Georgia f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers
and fryers for this week’s trading is 99.00 cents.
The final weighted average was 98.89 cents
f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market tone for
next week’s trading is firm to steady and the live
supply is adequate for a good to normal demand.
Average weights are mostly desirable with a
steady price trend. Estimated slaughter Tuesday
was 4,662,200 head. Estimated slaughter Jan. 8
was 4,669,900 head.
The f.o.b. dock confirmed final weighted average prices on parts were: Line run tenders
$1.9050; Skinless boneless breasts $1.66; Whole
breasts $1.0250; Boneless skinless thigh meat
$1.3650; Thighs 73.00 cents; Drumsticks 73.00
cents; Leg quarters 53.50; Wings $1.9450.
Coolers inventories and supplies on all parts
are balanced; with a demand ranging good to
balanced.
Source: Georgia Department of Agriculture
Tennessee Livestock
Reported auctions Monday at Unionville.
Cattle receipts: 692.
Trends: Compared to last week: Slaughter
cows 1.00 to 2.00 lower. Bulls 4.00 higher.
Steers/bulls under 500 lbs 14.00 to 17.00 lower,
over 500 lbs 5.00 to 10.00 lower. Heifers under
500 lbs 6.00 to 15.00 lower, over 500 lbs steady
to 6.00 lower. Slaughter Cows Boners 80-85
pct lean 71.00-78.00; Slaughter Cows Lean 8590 pct lean 62.00-69.00; Slaughter Bulls 11002200 lbs 91.00-98.00, Low dressing 73.00-83.00.
Feeder Steers Medium and Large 1-2: 300-400
lbs 165.00-187.50; 400-500 lbs 155.00-168.00;
500-600 lbs 137.00-159.00; 600-700 lbs 128.00148.00 700-800 lbs 127.00-137.50. Feeder Bulls
Medium and Large 1-2: 400-500 lbs 157.50175.00; 500-600 lbs 134.00-154.00; 600-700
lbs 122.00-138.00; 700-800 lbs 110.00-119.00.
Feeder Heifers Medium and Large 1-2: 300-400
lbs 142.50-158.00; 400-500 lbs 130.00-153.00;
500-600 lbs 125.00-138.00; 600-700 lbs 124.00136.00 700-800 lbs 108.00-133.00.
Source: Tennessee Department of AgricultureUSDA Market News, Nashville
The Associated Press
MENLO PARK, Calif.
— Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a new search
feature Tuesday in the company’s first staged event at its
Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters since its May initial public
offering.
Called “graph search,” the
new service lets users search
their social connections for
information about people,
interests, photos and places.
It’ll help users who want to
scroll through all the photos
their friends took in Paris or
k`d\j]i\\gi\jj%Zfd
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
SEI Portfolios:
DvrAggGrA 10.77 ... 0.0
Schwab Funds:
1000Inv r 39.80 +.07 +16.7
S&P Sel 22.92 +.02 +16.7
Schwartz Funds:
CathVal p 18.45 +.11 +14.2
Scout Funds:
Intl
33.70 -.19 +20.6
Sequoia 173.37 +.38 +16.7
St FarmAssoc:
Balan
57.21 +.08 +7.6
TCW Funds:
EmMktIn
9.45 ... +23.1
TotRetBdI 10.35 +.01 +13.1
TIAA-CREF Funds:
EqIdxInst 11.18 +.02 +17.2
Templeton Instit:
ForEqS
20.09 -.14 +21.8
Thornburg Fds:
IntValA p 28.23 -.01 +17.1
IntValue I 28.89 -.01 +17.5
Thrivent Fds A:
SmCpStk 15.19 +.08 +10.7
Tocqueville Fds:
Delafield n31.52 +.09 +17.4
Gold t n
63.81 +.34 -13.5
Tweedy Browne:
GblValue 23.79 +.03 +21.0
UBS Funds Cl A:
GlobAllo t 9.81 -.01 +13.1
UBS Funds Cl C:
GlobAllo n9.61 -.01 +12.2
USAA Group:
EmgMkt
17.81 -.10 +9.1
GrTxStr
14.88 +.02 +11.3
Grwth
17.62 +.02 +19.3
Intl
26.38 -.10 +23.3
PrecMM 26.77 +.29 -16.3
SmCpStk 15.56 +.08 +15.1
TxEIt
13.80 +.01 +6.2
TxELT
14.04 +.02 +8.4
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
TxESh
10.83 ... +2.2
Value Line Fd:
PremGro n29.89 +.08 +18.6
Vanguard Admiral:
BalAdml n24.26 +.04 +11.8
CAITAdm n 11.80 +.01 +5.4
CpOpAdl n 80.67 +.17 +19.0
EMAdmr r n 37.26 -.15 +15.8
Energy n 114.45 +.53 +5.0
EqInAdm n n52.30 +.09 +15.6
ExtdAdm n 47.94 +.25 +19.5
500Adml n 135.71 +.15 +16.8
GNMA Ad n 10.88 ... +1.8
GrwAdm n 37.74 ... +17.3
HlthCr n
62.98 +.15 +18.4
HiYldCp n 6.15 ... +14.3
InfProAd n 28.48 +.05 +5.9
ITBdAdml n 11.93 +.01 +6.4
IntGrAdm n 63.11 -.06 +20.8
ITAdml n 14.45 +.01 +4.8
ITGrAdm n 10.31 ... +8.5
LtdTrAd n 11.16 ... +1.7
LTGrAdml n 10.83 +.02 +10.7
LT Adml n 11.88 +.01 +6.9
MCpAdml n 106.08 +.50 +16.8
MuHYAdm n 11.35 +.01 +8.1
PrmCap r n 74.79 +.01 +16.2
ReitAdm r n 95.95 +.53 +20.2
STsyAdml n 10.74 +.01 +0.7
ShtTrAd n 15.92 ... +1.0
STIGrAd n 10.84 ... +4.4
SmCAdm n 40.39 +.22 +19.5
TtlBAdml n 11.06 ... +3.6
TStkAdm n 36.91 +.07 +17.2
WellslAdm n 59.11 +.05 +10.7
WelltnAdm n 60.00 +.10 +13.5
Windsor n 53.10 +.22 +21.1
WdsrIIAd n 53.86 +.11 +17.5
Vanguard Fds:
DivrEq
n23.90 +.05 +17.9
CapValue n 11.57 +.07 +20.8
CapOpp n 34.93 +.07 +18.9
Convrt n 13.04 +.03 +14.5
DivdGro n 17.23 +.05 +12.8
Energy n 60.97 +.28 +5.0
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
EqInc n
24.95 +.04 +15.6
Explr n
82.97 +.37 +16.3
GNMA n 10.88 ... +1.7
GroInc n 31.29 +.03 +17.9
HYCorp n 6.15 ... +14.2
HlthCre n 149.28 +.34 +18.4
InflaPro n 14.50 +.03 +5.9
IntlExplr n 15.15 -.03 +19.2
IntlGr n
19.84 -.02 +20.6
IntlVal n
31.91 -.12 +21.5
ITIGrade n 10.31 ... +8.4
LifeCon n 17.17 ... +9.3
LifeGro n 23.88 +.01 +14.9
LifeInc n 14.29 +.01 +6.4
LifeMod n 20.94 +.01 +12.1
LTTsry n 12.90 +.04 +2.3
Morg n
20.54 +.01 +14.7
MuInt n
14.45 +.01 +4.7
PrecMtls r n 16.01 -.01 -18.5
PrmcpCor n 15.46 +.02 +16.2
Prmcp r n 72.10 +.01 +16.0
SelValu r n 21.77 +.07 +15.4
STAR n
21.24 +.01 +13.9
STIGrade n 10.84 ... +4.3
StratEq n 22.33 +.12 +19.5
TgtRetInc n 12.30 +.01 +8.2
TgRe2010 n 24.44 +.01 +10.1
TgtRe2015 n 13.61 +.01 +11.6
TgRe2020 n 24.30 +.01 +12.6
TgtRe2025 n 13.89 +.01 +13.7
TgRe2030 n 23.95 +.01 +14.7
TgtRe2035 n 14.47 +.01 +15.8
TgtRe2040 n 23.84 +.02 +16.2
TgtRe2045 n 14.96 +.01 +16.2
USGro n 22.07 +.02 +19.4
Wellsly n 24.40 +.02 +10.6
Welltn n
34.74 +.06 +13.4
Wndsr n 15.74 +.06 +21.0
WndsII n 30.35 +.06 +17.4
Vanguard Idx Fds:
ExtMkt I n118.29 +.60 +19.5
MidCpIstPl n115.56 +.55 +16.8
TotIntAdm r n25.63 -.05 +19.0
TotIntlInst r n102.48 -.20 +19.1
TotIntlIP r n 102.49 -.21 +19.1
12-MO
NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
500 n
135.71 +.15 +16.6
Balanced n 24.26 +.04 +11.7
DevMkt n
9.99 -.02 +21.0
EMkt n
28.37 -.11 +15.7
Europe n 26.70 -.10 +24.2
Extend n 47.93 +.24 +19.3
REIT r n 22.49 +.13 +20.1
STBnd n 10.63 +.01 +1.8
TotBnd n 11.06 ... +3.5
TotlIntl n 15.32 -.03 +18.9
TotStk n
36.90 +.07 +17.1
Vanguard Instl Fds:
BalInst
n24.26 +.04 +11.8
DevMkInst n 9.91 -.02 +21.2
ExtIn n
47.93 +.24 +19.5
GrwthIst n 37.74 ... +17.3
InfProInst n 11.60 +.02 +6.0
InstIdx n 134.84 +.16 +16.8
InsPl n
134.84 +.15 +16.8
InsTStPlus n 33.42 +.06 +17.3
MidCpIst n 23.43 +.11 +16.8
SCInst n 40.39 +.23 +19.5
TBIst n
11.06 ... +3.6
TSInst n 36.92 +.07 +17.2
Vanguard Signal:
500Sgl n112.10 +.12 +16.8
MidCpIdx n 33.47 +.15 +16.8
STBdIdx n 10.63 +.01 +1.9
TotBdSgl n 11.06 ... +3.6
TotStkSgl n 35.63 +.07 +17.3
Virtus Funds I:
EmMktI
10.38 -.04 +18.6
Wasatch:
IncEqty
14.86 +.05 +12.4
SmCapV
4.12 +.02 +17.4
UltraGr
20.46 +.01 +13.8
Western Asset:
CorePlus I 11.68 ... +7.9
graph search will be made
available to users very slowly,
beginning Tuesday. Though
the company has focused on
refining its mobile product for
much of last year, the search
feature will be available only
on Facebook’s website for
now.
Zuckerberg hinted last fall
that a search feature was in
the works in his first post-IPO
public interview.
Facebook’s stock slid 50
cents to $30.45 following the
announcement. It’s still down
nearly 20 percent from its IPO
price of $38.
WASHINGTON — U.S.
home prices in November
extended their steady recovery from the housing bust, rising 7.4 percent compared with
a year ago. It was the biggest
1
year-over-year increase in 6 ⁄2
years.
CoreLogic, a private data
provider, said Tuesday that
prices also rose 0.3 percent in
November from October. The
month-to-month figures are
not seasonally adjusted. CoreLogic compiles its indexes by
tracking sales of the same
homes over time, using data
on sales in all 50 states.
The gains in home prices
have been widespread across
most of the country. And CoreLogic forecasts that prices will
increase 6 percent this year.
Prices in November were
higher than in November
2011 in all but six states. And
only 13 of 100 large cities that
CoreLogic studies reported
year-over-year price declines.
That was down from 20 cities
in October.
The sharpest increases
were in Arizona, Nevada and
Idaho. North Dakota and California rounded out the top
five.
Steady price increases
are helping fuel the housing
recovery. They’re encouraging
some people to sell homes and
enticing would-be buyers to
purchase homes before they
get more expensive. Rising
prices also reduce the number of homeowners who owe
more on their mortgages than
their homes are worth.
“All signals currently point
to a progressive stabilization
of the housing market and the
positive trend in home price
appreciation to continue into
2013,” said Anand Nallathambi,
CEO of CoreLogic.
Despite the gains, home
prices nationwide are still
nearly 27 percent lower than
in April 2006, when prices
peaked during the housing
bubble.
Some of the biggest gains
have been in states that were
hurt the worst. Prices in one
of them, Arizona, have jumped
nearly 21 percent in the past
year, the most of any state.
But prices in that state are
still nearly 40 percent below
their peak.
And prices in Nevada have
risen 14.2 percent in the past
year but remain 53 percent
below peak levels.
The states where prices
continue to fall include Delaware, where they are 4.9 percent below a year ago, and Illinois, down 2.2 percent. Connecticut, New Jersey, Rhode
Island and Pennsylvania are
also reporting declines.
Leslie Morgan
Case Electric, 8697 Cherlee Drive,
Ooltewah, Greg Case
Legends Barber Parlor, 15011⁄2
Tunnel Blvd., Chattanooga, Shelby
Patton
MOB Sales, 4700 Ringgold Road,
Apartment 178, East Ridge, Ashley
Chiasson
Mountain City Services LLC, 4108
B. Cresthaven Drive, Chattanooga,
Stephen Smith
RAC Acceptance East LLC, 5856
Brainerd Road, Chattanooga, Mark
Speese
RAC Acceptance East LLC, 5090
South Terrace, Chattanooga, Mark
Speese
RAC Acceptance East LLC, 2132
Gunbarrel Road, Chattanooga, Mark
Speese
Ridge Cuts Barbar Shop, 3339
Ringgold Road, East Ridge, Marc
McNabb
Tumbleweeds Handcraft, 4221
Michigan Ave., Chattanooga,
Rebecca L. Skeels
Artistic Xpression Clothing Co.,
704 McGowan Road, Chattanooga,
Terrance Milligan
Black Diamond Construction,
6024 Arlena Circle, Chattanooga,
Rodriquez Lewis
DJ Media and Designz, 5712
Brainerd Road, Chattanooga,
Donnye Collins Jr.
Edenfare Distribution Inc., 5201
Ooltewah-Ringgold Road, Suite 109,
Ooltewah, Kelly Coffin
James Glass, 2211 E. Main St.,
Chattanooga, Stephen Patterson
Julie Thomas, 6343 East Brainerd
Road, Chattanooga, Julie Thomas
Nail Lounge, 4011 Brainerd Road,
Suite 127, Chattanooga, Faith M.
Fuenes
Victoria Love Diener, 1308
Frederick Drive, Chattanooga,
Victoria L. and Nathan Diener
Danielle Brown, 9080 Dark Pond
Lane, Harrison, Danielle C. Brown
John Phillip Abston, 835 Runyan
Drive, Chattanooga, John Phillip
Abston
Karen Smith, 1414 Jenkins Road,
Apartment 121, Chattanooga, Karen
Smith
Liberty Brick, 660 Wilshire Way,
Chattanooga, Carson Combs
Nicky Shell & Brad Smith, 812
Snow St., Chattanooga, Nicky Shell
Steam Logistics LLC, 1110 Market
St., Suite 316A, Chattanooga, Barry
Large
Superior Remodeling & Restoration
LLC, various locations, Chattanooga,
Dwight Niswonger
Venus Mathews, 1020 W. 37th St.,
B301, Chattanooga, Venus Mathews
The Associated Press
Facebook unveils new
social search feature
By Barbara Ortutay
is more than just one story.
By Christopher S.
Rugaber
Facebook
CEO Mark
Zuckerberg
speaks about
Facebook
Graph Search
at Facebook
headquarters
in Menlo Park,
Calif.
Silver
Date
Breaking news
November year-over-year
U.S. home prices up sharply
The Associataed
Press
High
GET MORE
search for the favorite TV
shows of all their friends who
happen to be doctors.
Until now, Facebook
users were unable to search
for friends who live in a
certain town or like a particular movie. With the new
feature, people can search
for friends who, say, live in
Boston who also like “Zero
Dark Thirty.”
Zuckerberg says the search
feature is “privacy aware,”
which means users can search
only for content that has been
shared with them.
Facebook is stressing that
BUSINESSLICENSES
New business licenses provided by
the Hamilton County Clerk for Jan.
7-11:
CDK Promotional Products, 1984
Paris Metz Road, Chattanooga,
Christopher Anderson
First Quality Home Improvements,
7155 Tanager Court, East Ridge,
Marion Campbell III
Jollay Masonry Inc., 935 Kilmer St.,
Chattanooga, David L. Jollay
M&M Produce, 9408 Lee Highway,
Ooltewah, Jeremy Morrow
Melissa Subway LLC, 2333
McCallie Ave., Chattanooga, Elvira
Chapman
Noble Success LLC, 5600 Brainerd
Road, Chattanooga, Dr. David Banks
QQ Gift Shop, 6025 East Brainerd
Road, Suite 100, Chattanooga, Ivy
Zhang
Service King Paint and Body
LLC, 6030 Shallowford Road,
Chattanooga, Michael Devendorf
Simply Elegant, 1639 Mossy
Oaks Drive, Chattanooga, Sharika
Peterson
Total Home Construction, 914
Brynwood Terrace, Chattanooga,
Charles F. Broadrick
DT’s Private Lounge, 3224 Wilcox
Blvd., Chattanooga, Dana Y. Tuggle
Higher Ground Rainwater Systems
Corp., 103 Culver St., Chattanooga,
Ben Saylor
HSH Electric, 1814 Clear Brook
Court, Chattanooga, Aleksandr
Lyasmeuskiy
Shallowford Detail and Wheels,
629 Shallowford Road, Chattanooga,
Cody Dennis
Antrix Enterprise LLC, 2121
Morris Hill Road, East Ridge, Audy
McCathern
Care Assist Private Care Inc., 4600
Hixson Pike, Suite 201, Hixson,
C6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
CHANNEL 3
7-DAY
FORECAST
THURSDAY
17
FRIDAY
Showers
Showers
Sun Returns
Pleasant
Sunny, Cooler
Sunny ,Colder
Sunny, Cold
High: 50; Low: 38
High: 46; Low: 29
High: 57; Low: 31
High: 56; Low: 31
High: 52; Low: 29
High: 46; Low: 25
High: 34; Low: 22
TODAY
16
18
SATURDAY
19
SUNDAY
20
MONDAY
21
TUESDAY
22
This forecast
prepared by
Chief Meteorologist
Paul Barys
Local
Cookeville
47/31
Nashville
45/29
40
Murfreesboro
46/30
Shelbyville
46/30
24
TN
Monteagle
46/34
65
Bridgeport
52/32
Huntsville
47/32
Scottsboro
52/32
Guntersville
48/30
59
Dayton
50/36
High Temperature. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Low Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Record High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 in 1928
Record Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 in 1927
75
Athens
65/44
Dalton
51/35
LaFayette
50/35
at Chattanooga through 4 p.m. Yesterday.
Knoxville
49/34
Chattanooga
Cleveland
50/38
49/36
Fort
Payne
51/30
TEMPERATURE
75
Crossville
46/31
PRECIPITATION
NC
Murphy
50/34
Blue
Ridge
53/35
Atlanta
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
56/35/ra 45/28/ra
65/44/ra 47/34/ra
75/51/sh 59/39/ra
48/38/ra 45/30/rs
47/32/ra 47/24/rs
76/57/s
65/43/ra
74/53/sh 58/38/ra
67/46/ra 51/36/ra
79/60/s
78/53/pc
67/49/sh 56/39/sh
60/43/ra 51/34/ra
47/32/ra 40/27/ra
79/59/pc 75/50/sh
City
Key West
Knoxville
Memphis
Miami
Mobile
Montgomery
Myrtle Beach
Nashville
Orlando
Panama City
Pensacola
Savannah
Tallahassee
Today
Hi/Lo/F
80/73/s
49/34/ra
44/30/s
81/69/pc
52/41/sh
54/44/ra
71/56/mc
45/29/cl
81/61/s
70/53/sh
63/45/sh
76/57/pc
75/57/sh
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
81/69/s
46/27/ra
48/28/s
81/65/pc
54/34/sh
48/33/sh
62/41/ra
46/27/pc
80/53/pc
57/44/sh
54/37/sh
68/45/ra
59/44/sh
Today
Hi/Lo
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
City
Today
Hi/Lo
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
47/32
40/27/ra
Las Vegas
53/37
58/38/s
67/44
73/47/s
44/30
48/28/s
Sunny
61/44
52/35/ra
Rain
Los Angeles
Sunny
Chicago
38/24
28/23/s
Sunny
Memphis
Sunny
Cincinnati
39/28
39/24/pc
Mostly cloudy
Dallas
53/33/s
Sunny
Nashville
New York
52/19
49/21/s
34/24
29/19/s
Sunny
Orlando
Partly cloudy
Ft. Lauderdale
82/68
81/64/pc
Tampa
New
2/10
Lake
Apalachia
Blue Ridge
Center Hill
Chatuge
Cherokee
Chickamauga
Douglas
Fontana
Fort Loudoun
Great Falls
Guntersville
Hiwassee
Melton Hill
Nickajack
Normandy
Norris
Ocoee No. 1
Tellico
Tims Ford
Watts Bar
Weiss
Wheeler
Norm
1280’
1691’
692.2’
1928’
1075’
682.5’
1002’
1710’
813’
800’
595’
1526’
795’
634’
880’
1020’
830.76’
815’
886.8’
741’
564’
556’
Curr
1278.5’
1673.7’
625.3’
1918.5’
1045.6’
679.0’
957.2’
1659.5’
810.6’
798.4’
595.3’
1488.7’
794.6’
634.4’
866.6’
999.1’
828.4’
810.6’
879.5'
737.4’
559.3’
552.7’
Chng
-0.8’
+1.2’
+1.2’
+0.3’
+1.3’
+1.2’
+3.6’
+5.7’
+1.8’
+5.4’
+1.6’
+5.2’
+0.3’
+0.8’
+0.7’
+0.8’
+5.6’
+1.8’
+1.1’
+0.9’
+1.1’
+0.1’
Pollen
43/26/s
Today . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Low
Tomorrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Low
Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Low
81/61
80/53/pc
40/27
35/21/pc
79/49/pc
WEATHER UPDATES 24/7
k`d\j]i\\gi\jj%Zfd
SPONSORED BY:
LINDA BROCK
45/37
46/32/s
Sunny
45/33
57/38/s
Rain
Washington
Rain
110s
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s
L
National Extremes
42/35
79/64
The Northeast will see partly cloudy to cloudy skies and scattered rain and snow, with the highest
temperature of 43º in Germantown, Md. The Southeast will experience scattered showers, with the
highest temperature of 83º in Ft. Myers, Fla. The central United States will see partly cloudy to cloudy
skies and scattered showers and snow, with the highest temperature of 60º in Boothville, La. In
the Northwest, there will be mostly clear to partly cloudy skies and isolated snow, with the highest
temperature of 52º in Colville, Wash. The Southwest will see mostly clear skies, with the highest
temperature of 71º in Fullerton, Calif.
LAKE LEVELS
Rain/snow
Partly cloudy
Houston
Pittsburgh
Last
2/3
46/27/pc
Sunny
Detroit
Full
1/26
45/29
Rain
Denver
Tomorrow
PREDOMINANT POLLEN. . . . .None
FORECAST
Cloudy
50/33
Tomorrow
Atlanta
60/41
First
1/18
Rain
Charlotte
Today
Moonrise. . . . 10:39 a.m. . . . . 11:11 a.m.
Moonset . . . . 11:29 p.m. . . . . . Next Day
Airports
City
SUN
Today
Southeast
City
Asheville
Athens, GA
Augusta, GA
Birmingham
Bristol
Charleston, SC
Columbia, SC
Columbus, GA
Daytona Bch.
Destin
Greenville, SC
Huntsville
Jacksonville
0.99"
6.23"
2.35"
6.23"
2.35"
MOON
GA
75
AL
Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . . .
Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Normal Year to Date. . . . . . . . . . . .
Sunrise . . . . . . 7:48 a.m. . . . . . 7:48 a.m.
Sunset . . . . . . 5:54 p.m. . . . . . 5:55 p.m.
Calhoun
52/35
Rome
53/36
National
High: 84° in Punta Gorda, Fla.
Low: -32° in Craig, Colo.
City
Albany
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlantic City
Austin
Baltimore
Baton Rouge
Billings
Boston
Buffalo
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Dayton
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Fargo
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
35/26/sn 31/12/s
40/14/s
47/19/s
18/7/mc
16/0/pc
46/35/ra
45/30/s
51/28/s
57/30/s
46/38/ra
48/35/s
45/34/sh 51/32/mc
43/18/s
43/24/s
36/30/rs
39/15/s
37/25/s
25/17/sn
45/37/ra
46/32/s
61/44/ra
52/35/ra
38/24/s
28/23/s
39/28/mc 39/24/pc
41/29/pc 33/25/mc
50/33/s
53/33/s
37/26/s
36/22/s
49/23/s
49/25/s
45/23/s
36/22/s
34/24/pc 29/19/s
43/24/s
50/28/s
-7/-19/mc -13/-33/mc
14/-7/sn
14/5/mc
The Associated Press
helped protect much of the
crop.
Crop damage estimates
weren’t yet available, growers said, because for some
varieties damage isn’t visible for days or weeks. Initial reports indicated up to 6
percent of the state’s orange
crop was damaged and up
to 9 percent of the mandarin
crop, Story said.
Despite damage, Story
said, plenty of good citrus is
left on trees.
“The fact is, we have a lot
of good quality fruit to sell,”
Story said.
Wind machines and irrigation would run in groves
for least two more nights, he
said, though sleepless farmers were looking forward to
warmer weather.
“They’ve been working
the night shift and the day
shift,” he said.
California’s strawberry
growers also were using
wind machines, sprinklers
and helicopters, said Carolyn O’Donnell with the state
Strawberry Commission. In
Oxnard and Santa Maria,
growers who lacked frost
protection saw damage to
flowers and fruit in their
early berry varieties.
In urban centers, it was
39 degrees in downtown Los
Angeles early Tuesday, while
San Francisco had 37 and San
Diego, 36. In Oakland, black
ice caused several crashes.
Some Lake Tahoe casinos
City
Athens
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Frankfurt
Hong Kong
t
LindaBrockHomes.com
The Associated Press
waters inside a reef. The animal was weak with numerous cuts and abrasions and
perhaps even a shark bite.
Authorities said a decision was made to euthanize
the baby whale because it
was likely just a few days
old and would not have been
able to survive without its
mother.
City
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Portland, OR
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Richmond
Sacramento
St. Louis
Santa Fe
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Seattle
Topeka
Tucson
Tulsa
Washington
Wichita
Wilmington, DE
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
40/27/rs
35/21/mc
34/26/sn 32/3/sn
40/31/mc 44/33/s
36/30/rs
40/13/s
63/45/ra
51/37/ra
45/24/s
46/24/s
39/16/s
39/18/s
50/40/ra
51/31/s
54/34/s
57/32/s
42/30/s
36/24/s
34/13/s
39/16/s
21/9/pc
25/11/mc
53/31/s
59/32/s
64/47/s
69/49/s
58/44/s
58/46/s
60/42/s
62/46/s
39/27/s
39/28/pc
47/26/s
45/26/s
56/37/s
65/40/s
46/26/s
45/26/s
45/37/ra
46/32/s
51/26/s
49/28/s
44/31/ra
45/29/s
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
62/46/sh 61/47/cl
30/12/s
34/13/s
24/23/mc 30/23/cl
92/70/s
87/69/pc
72/54/mc 72/52/pc
25/23/mc 29/21/cl
67/58/s
66/54/s
City
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
New Delhi
Paris
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
58/45/pc 60/45/mc
36/24/pc 33/26/mc
76/43/s
70/40/s
31/20/pc 20/-2/pc
17/16/sn 18/13/sn
68/50/s
71/50/sh
31/23/mc 31/25/s
City
Port-au-Prince
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
93/71/pc 91/73/pc
91/76/t
83/76/t
47/40/ra
47/36/ra
32/16/s
27/14/s
84/66/pc 85/67/s
40/29/pc 45/27/s
36/24/pc 24/20/sn
Weather (Wx)FOFORXG\ÁÁXUULHVSFSDUWO\FORXG\PFPRVWO\FORXG\UDUDLQ
UVUDLQVQRZVVXQQ\VKVKRZHUVVQVQRZWWKXQGHUVWRUPVZZLQG\
Volunteers try
to rescue turtles
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Pfilipa Kientz, co-manager of Green Acres Nursery
and Supply, removes a frost cloth from citrus plants on
display, after nighttime temperatures plunged below the
freezing point in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday.
on the California-Nevada
border were cleaning up
after below-zero temperatures caused water damage.
The temperature dropped
to minus 11 on Monday at
South Lake Tahoe, but was
expected to warm slightly by
Tuesday.
Pipes burst at Harrah’s
casino and sent thousands
of gallons into the main, 18story tower and a high-roller
gambling area, said TahoeDouglas Fire Marshal Eric
Geuvin. Flooding temporarily
Stranded baby humpback dies
A baby humpback whale
that was found floundering
in shallow waters off Hawaii’s
Kawaikui Beach Park died
after becoming separated
from its mother.
When the whale was spotted by a fisherman on Monday afternoon, it was thrashing around in very shallow
Today
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
33/23/sn 28/18/sn
56/40/ra
48/35/ra
30/16/s
33/23/s
77/64/s
77/65/s
45/33/ra
57/38/s
37/26/s
34/21/s
45/28/s
42/29/s
55/36/s
59/38/s
46/23/s
42/25/s
46/29/s
50/27/s
67/44/s
73/47/s
41/28/s
41/26/s
70/46/ra
52/37/ra
34/16/mc 24/17/s
31/7/sn
17/18/s
51/40/sh 50/39/mc
42/35/ra
43/26/s
56/42/ra
51/35/mc
48/30/s
48/30/s
45/22/s
40/24/s
37/23/s
30/21/s
44/32/ra
45/28/s
61/40/s
70/43/s
International
Western cold
begins to ease
FRESNO, Calif. — The
freeze gripping the West
appeared on the verge of
easing Tuesday, but farmers
who spent millions to protect crops were still assessing
damage, some produce prices
climbed, and businesses and
residents dealt with burst
pipes.
The National Weather Service predicted another frosty
night, but said temperatures
would begin to warm as high
pressure moved east.
For a fifth night, temperatures in the San Joaquin Valley, California’s agricultural
heart, dipped below freezing, though they were a few
degrees warmer than previous nights, said Paul Story of
Exeter-based California Citrus Mutual, an association of
citrus growers.
Growers, who have about
$1.5 billion worth of citrus
fruit on the trees, used wind
machines to keep warmer
air closer to the ground and
irrigation to raise temperatures.
Citrus growers statewide
spent more than $23 million
over five nights to save their
crops, the association estimated.
But in some areas, that
wasn’t enough.
“We definitely had some
damage, but it’s hard to tell
how much,” Story said, adding that the fruit’s maturity and high sugar content
City
Grand Rapids
Greensboro, NC
Helena
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Lincoln
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Macon
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
New Orleans
New York City
Norfolk
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Peoria
Philadelphia
Phoenix
4600 Hixson Pike
Suite 201
Hixson, TN 37343
423-875-4254
www.careassist.net
disabled elevators, damaged
slot machines and caused an
evacuation.
Two sprinkler heads
broke at Harvey’s casino,
and another broken pipe sent
water into the loading dock
at the Horizon casino. At the
MontBleu, an antifreeze system meant to prevent pipe
breakage froze, he said.
Sparks, Nev., declared a
state of emergency Monday,
mostly to free up money to
repair a pair of 7-foot diameter sewer lines that broke.
Housekeeping
Meal Preparation
Companion Care
Personal Care
CareAssist is a locally-owned state
licensed agency which provides
affordable non-medical care options
for seniors who desire to remain
independently in their own homes.
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“Assistance HOW You Need It”
34327025
RALEIGH, N.C. — Slogging through muck and venturing out on kayaks, volunteers along North Carolina’s
seashore are rescuing sea
turtles that become stunned
when the water turns cold
and get stuck in coastal
sounds, unable to save themselves.
The sea turtles — typically green, Kemp’s Ridley and
the occasional loggerhead
— tend to be juveniles who
get so busy gorging themselves on the near-shore
goodies that they don’t get
around to moving out to the
warmer Gulf stream before
a cold spell hits.
“This is really one of
the absolute hot spots on
the planet for cold stunning in almost any year,”
said Liz Browning Fox of
Buxton on Hatteras Island,
who rescues cold-stunned
turtles that beach themselves or get stuck along
the edge of the Pamlico
Sound. “We have a huge
sound system in North
Carolina, and it’s like a
feasting table for several
species ... Juvenile sea turtles feast on this delightful
table. Like teenagers, they
stay at the table as long as
you’ll let them.”
Because they’re coldblooded, turtles’ body temperatures match their environment. When the water
temperature drops below
50 degrees, they become
too lethargic to move into
warmer water. Since the
first cold-stunned turtle of
the winter was found, Dec.
23, 2012, along Cape Lookout, rescuers have taken in
72 live turtles and found
six others dead, said Matthew Godfrey, the state sea
turtle biologist in Beaufort.
The vast majority of the
rescued turtles survived,
he said.
Some years, as many as
150 cold-stunned turtles
have been found in North
Carolina, he said.
Most of the turtles this
year are being found along
Hatteras and Ocracoke
islands, said Karen Clark,
program coordinator at
the Outer Banks Center for
Wildlife Education and an
adviser to the Network for
Endangered Sea Turtles on
the Outer Banks.
On Hatteras Island, one
volunteer goes out each
morning and checks the
water temperature. When
it’s below 50 degrees, a core
group of about 10 volunteers
is alerted to search for coldstunned turtles.
Fox dons knee boots while
others wear hip waders that
allow them to go into deeper water. Fox’s brother, Lou
Browning, brings turtles in
on his kayak, sometimes cradling them on his lap. The
volunteers carry these heavy
turtles long distances to get
them to a car. A 25-pound
turtle weighs a lot after a
half-mile walk through muck,
Fox said.
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SPORTS
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013
timesfreepress.com/sports
PREP BASKETBALL: Worthington shot wins for Bledsoe County at Signal, D4
q
q
PREP FOOTBALL: Sequatchie County hires Colquette as coach, D3
Bears catch fire, defeat rival Raiders 59-44
By Gene Henley
Staff Writer
CLEVELAND, Tenn. — Having watched his team play out of
control and score only three points
in the first quarter Tuesday against
rival Cleveland, Bradley Central
basketball coach Kent Smith looked
at his players and made a simple
request:
Try playing my way.
The Bears did plenty of scoring
the rest of the way. They had 56
points in the final three quarters,
including a second half in which
they had 11 assists on 15 made baskets. Three players scored in double figures as they won 59-44 at the
Raider Dome.
Bradley (10-8, 5-2) outscored
the Blue Raiders 16-3 in the final
6:11 of the District 5-AAA game by
sharing the basketball and finding
open players.
The final 24 minutes kind of surprised both Smith and his team.
“I thought we were going to
have a low-scoring game in the
30s,” Bradley post Matthew Whitmire said. “I thought both teams
would have low scores and it would
come down to the wire. I’m glad we
pushed the lead out; we knocked
down shots, kept our composure
and didn’t back down.”
Smith had his team running a
lot of Flex offense predicated on
passing, screening and cutting for
open layups. He urged the Bears to
run the offense for as long as possible — “a minute, a minute and 30
seconds or a minute and 40 if we
had to.”
Bradley finished with 15 assists
to only nine turnovers. Logan Cox
scored 15 points — 13 in the first half
when the Bears were barely hanging on. Bryce Copeland finished
with 12 points and nine rebounds,
while Whitmire had 11 points and
five assists.
Smith praised the play of Dan-
Finley
revenue
declines
iel Clark and Baylor Terrell off the
bench.
After a first quarter in which
Cleveland led 7-3, the Bears led
20-19 at halftime behind Cox’s
shooting. The lead stretched to
six in the third quarter, but a 3pointer by the hosts’ Kendrick
Thompson cut the margin to 43-41
with 6:14 left. The Bears’ execution improved down the stretch,
See BEARS, Page D4
Lance’s
sitdown
lengthy
■ Lower UTC football
Interview with Winfrey
to be two-night show
attendance in 2012
cost the stadium almost
$20,000 in concessions
and parking income.
By Jim Vertuno
and Jim Litke
The Associated Press
By David Paschall
Staff Writer
Lower attendance at
University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga football games
this past season resulted
in a loss of nearly $20,000
in concessions and parking revenue, according to
Finley Stadium executive
director Merrill Eckstein.
Concessions were off
more than $14,000 compared to the 2011 season,
Eckstein said, with parking off $5,500. The Stadium
Corp. absorbed a loss of
more than $4,000 out of the
total drop in concessions.
The Mocs averaged
more than 10,400 fans during the 2009 to ’11 seasons
but averaged only 9,521 in
2012. The decline was a
surprise considering Appalachian State and Georgia
Southerrn, the two biggest
draws in the Southern Conference, each played at Finley Stadium.
Appalachian State
helped provide a healthy
crowd of 13,726 on Sept. 22,
according to UTC figures,
but a triple-overtime loss
to Georgia Southern on
Oct. 27 took place before
only 8,908.
“The one that was surprising and disappointing to us was the Georgia
Southern game,” Eckstein
said. “At that point in time,
we were still in contention
for the league title. We
had a disappointing result
against Appalachian State,
when they ran away with it
in the fourth quarter, but I
would have expected much
better for Georgia Southern.
“Other games were a
little less, but that’s the
only one I would put in
the disappointing category
because it was surprisingly less than we expected,
and I really don’t have an
answer for that.”
UTC’s games against
Appalachian State and
Georgia Southern had a
combined attendance of
22,634, but the combined
attendance of those two
games in 2010 was 32,649.
The Mocs defeated GSU
35-27 in 2010 before 17,414
fans, the second-largest
crowd for a Mocs game in
Finley Stadium history.
Eckstein said he and FinSee STADIUM, Page D5
FILLING FINLEY
The average home
attendance for UTC
football games the past
five seasons:
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
5,748*
10,503
12,699**
10,436
9,521
The Associated Press
Kentucky’s Alex Poythress (22) shoots between Tennessee’s Josh Richardson, left, and Yemi Makanjuola
during the first half of Tuesday’s SEC game at Rupp Arena. Kentucky made a late surge to win 75-65.
Vols 0-3 in SEC
Mays, Wiltjer shine in 75-65 Kentucky win
By Patrick Brown
Staff Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Again Tennessee entered the stretch of an SEC
road basketball game with a chance
to win.
Again the Volunteers were unable
to finish the drill.
This time Kentucky’s Julius Mays
and Kyle Wiltjer delivered the daggers to orange-clad hearts and sent
Tennessee to a familiar ending at
Rupp Arena in the Wildcats’ 75-65
win Tuesday night that gave the Vols
their first 0-3 league start in 15 seasons.
“Kind of like that last three
games, it’s just been key plays down
the stretch that we have to make in
order to win, and we haven’t done
that,” Jordan McRae said after he
again led Tennessee in scoring with
23 points. “There’s not a particular
reason. We definitely went into the
game knowing we could win, and
like I said, down the stretch our team
has to make key stops and better
decisions.”
After turnovers doomed the Vols
at Alabama on Saturday, defense was
their downfall Tuesday. Kentucky
made its last eight shots after freshman Derek Reese’s 3-pointer put the
Vols up 54-53 with 7:19 remaining.
See UT, Page D5
Despite win, this UK team not like Cal’s top Cats
whomped on people.”
LEXINGTON, Ky. — In
After a long pause for
many years, with many
impact, he wryly added,
Kentucky basketball teams,
“This ain’t one of them.”
a 75-65 victory over TennesHis grammar aside, the
see would have been reapoint was obvious. The
sonable cause for the winonly resemblance between
ning coach to be happy.
this team and last year’s
And UK boss John Calinational champs is that the
pari was happy after Tuesuniforms remain the same
day’s win by that score. At
Mark
understated classics they’ve
least he was happier than
Wiedmer
been the past two years and
had he lost.
Commentary
sophomore forward Kyle
“The last seven or eight
Wiltjer (17 points, five rebounds,
years,” he began, “I’ve coached
two assists and two blocks) can
teams that have absolutely
still play a little.
Otherwise, both the Wildcats
and Vols are worrisome works in
progress, unable or unwilling to
follow their coaches’ seemingly
sound advice.
“Guess what?” Cal asked rhetorically after watching his Kitty Kats
improve to 11-5 overall and 2-1 in a
laughably lackluster Southeastern
Conference.
Countered UT coach Cuonzo
Martin after watching his Vols fall
See WIEDMER, Page D5
* record low
** record high
■ To contact Sports • Phone: 423-757-6273 • Fax: 423-668-5049 • Email: sports@timesfreepress.com
A U S T I N , Te x a s
— Lance Armstrong confessed to doping during an
interview with Oprah Winfrey taped Monday, just a
couple of hours after a
wrenching apology to staff
at the Livestrong charity
he founded but has been
forced to surrender.
The day ended with
1
2 ⁄2 hours of questions
from Winfrey at a downtown Austin hotel, where
she said the world’s most
famous cyclist was “forthcoming” as she asked him
in detail about doping allegations that followed him
throughout his seven Tour
de France victories.
Speaking on “CBS
This Morning,” Winfrey
said Tuesday she had not
planned to address Armstrong’s confession before
the interview aired on her
OWN network but “by the
time I left Austin and landed in Chicago, you all had
already confirmed it.”
The session was to
be shown Thursday, but
Winfrey said it will run in
two parts over two nights.
She would not characterize whether Armstrong
seemed contrite but said
he seemed ready for the
interview.
“I would say that he
met the moment,” she
said. “I don’t think ‘emotional’ begins to describe
the intensity or the difficulty he experienced in
talking about some of these
things.”
The confession was
a stunning reversal for a
proud athlete and celebrity
who sought lavish praise in
the court of public opinion and used courtrooms
to punish his critics.
For more than a decade,
Armstrong dared anybody
who challenged his version
of events to prove it. Finally, he told the tale himself
after promising over the
weekend to answer Winfrey’s questions “directly,
honestly and candidly.”
The cyclist was
stripped of his Tour titles,
lost most of his endorsements and was forced to
leave Livestrong last year
after the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency issued a 1,000-page
report that accused him of
masterminding a long-running doping scheme.
The International
Cycling Union, or UCI,
issued a statement Tuesday saying it was aware of
the reports that Armstrong
had confessed to Winfrey.
The governing body for the
sport urged Armstrong to
tell his story to an independent commission it has
set up to examine claims
it covered up suspicious
samples from the cyclist,
accepted financial donations from him and helped
him avoid detection in doping tests.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
PAGE2BITS
THE ODDS
Glantz-Culver Line
NFL Playoffs
Sunday
FAVORITE OPEN TODAY O/U UNDERDOG
San Francisco 3 4 (49) at Atlanta
1
at New England 9 9 (51 ⁄2 ) Baltimore
NCAA Basketball
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
at La Salle 5 Dayton
Temple 41⁄2 at George Washington
at Maryland 2 NC State
at Butler 10 Richmond
Pittsburgh 5 at Villanova
at Georgetown 7 Providence
Miami 7 at Boston College
Michigan St. 111⁄2 at Penn St.
Memphis 191⁄2 at Rice
at East Carolina 7 Houston
at Georgia St. 4 William & Mary
at UNC Wilmington 31⁄2 Old Dominion
at Northeastern 13 Hofstra
at Delaware 11 Towson
1
at Akron 19 ⁄2 Ball St.
at W. Michigan 2 Toledo
at Miami (Ohio) 31⁄2 Bowling Green
at Buffalo 1 Kent St.
at Indiana St. 12 Missouri St.
at Ohio 21 N. Illinois
at Charlotte 14 Fordham
1
at St. Bonaventure 1 ⁄2 Xavier
at Oklahoma 17 Texas Tech
Southern Miss. 2 at SMU
at Wichita St. 10 Illinois St.
at Drake 11⁄2 Evansville
at Boise St. 1 New Mexico
at LSU 11 South Carolina
1
at Missouri 14 ⁄2 Georgia
at Ill.-Chicago 21⁄2 Loyola of Chicago
at Arkansas 10 Auburn
1
UTEP 1 ⁄2 at Tulsa
Alabama 31⁄2 at Mississippi St.
at Colorado St. 11 Air Force
at Iowa St. 10 West Virginia
Kansas St. 10 at TCU
at Nebraska Pk Purdue
at Marquette 91⁄2 Seton Hall
at Washington St. 61⁄2 Utah
1
Wyoming 3 ⁄2 at Fresno St.
at San Diego St. 41⁄2 UNLV
at San Diego 7 Loyola Marymount
1
at BYU 4 ⁄2 Saint Mary’s (Cal)
at Washington 3 Colorado
Wofford 11⁄2 at UNC Greensboro
NBA
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
Indiana 3 at Orlando
Chicago 21⁄2 at Toronto
at Atlanta 31⁄2 Brooklyn
1
at Boston 7 ⁄2 New Orleans
at Oklahoma City 7 Denver
1
at Dallas 4 ⁄2 Houston
at San Antonio 6 Memphis
at Portland 8 Cleveland
at Sacramento 5 Washington
Miami 3 at Golden State
FOOTBALL
NFL Playoffs
Wild-card Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 5
Houston 19, Cincinnati 13
Green Bay 24, Minnesota 10
Sunday, Jan. 6
Baltimore 24, Indianapolis 9
Seattle 24, Washington 14
Divisional Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 12
Baltimore 38, Denver 35, 2OT
San Francisco 45, Green Bay 31
Sunday, Jan. 13
Atlanta 30, Seattle 28
New England 41, Houston 28
Conference Championships
Sunday, Jan. 20
San Francisco at Atlanta, 3 p.m. (FOX)
Baltimore at New England, 6:30 p.m. (CBS)
Pro Bowl
Sunday, Jan. 27
At Honolulu
AFC vs. NFC, 7 p.m. (NBC)
Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 3
At New Orleans
AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6 p.m. (CBS)
HOCKEY
2013 NHL Schedule
All Times Eastern
Saturday, Jan. 19
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 3 p.m.
Ottawa at Winnipeg, 3 p.m.
Chicago at Los Angeles, 3 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Boston, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Montreal, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Washington at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Carolina at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Columbus at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Colorado at Minnesota, 9 p.m.
Anaheim at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
SCHEDULES
Area Colleges
All Times Eastern
Wednesday, Jan. 16
BASKETBALL
Bryan (w-m) at Reinhardt, 5:30
Tenn. Wesleyan (w-m) at Montreat, 5:30
Chattanooga State (w-m) at Roane State, 6
Covenant (m) at Maryville, 8
Thursday, Jan. 17
BASKETBALL
Emmanuel at Lee (w-m), 6
High Schools
Wednesday, Jan. 16
WRESTLING
Baylor, Rockmart at Sonoraville, 5
Alcoa, Central at Notre Dame, 6
Thursday, Jan. 17
BASKETBALL
South Pittsburg at Van Buren, 7, 8:30
Woodville, Ala. at Richard Hardy, 7, 8:30
Scenic City Showcase at East Hamilton
Middle School Gym
Lancaster girls vs. Faith Baptist, 5
Lancaster boys vs. Faith Baptist, 6:30
Hamilton Heights girls vs. Central Park, 8
High School Gym
Hamilton Heights boys vs. Central Park, 5
East Hamilton girls vs. The Rock, 6:30
East Hamilton boys vs. The Rock, 8
WRESTLING
Boyd-Buchanan, Tyner, Whitwell at Hixson, 6
East Hamilton, East Ridge at Chattanooga
Christian, 6
Ooltewah at Central, 6
Cleveland at Walker Valley, 7
Soddy-Daisy at Bradley Central, 7
SPORTSONAIR
WEDNESDAY TELEVISION
■ Auto Racing
Dakar Rally: Stage 11 in Argentina, NBCSN, delay, 2 a.m.
■ Basketball
NCAA: North Carolina State at Maryland, ESPN2, 7 p.m.
NCAA: Miami at Boston College, FoxSS, 7 p.m.
NCAA: Memphis at Rice, CSS, 7 p.m.
NCAA: Michigan State at Penn State, Big Ten Net, 7 p.m.
NCAA: Pittsburgh at Villanova, ESPNU, 7 p.m.
NCAA: Alabama at Mississippi State, CSS, 9 p.m.
NCAA: West Virginia at Iowa State, ESPN2, 9 p.m.
NCAA: Purdue at Nebraska, Big Ten Net, 9 p.m.
NCAA: Kansas State at Texas Christian, ESPNU, 9 p.m.
NCAA: Saint Mary’s at Brigham Young, ESPNU, 11 p.m.
NBA: Brooklyn at Atlanta, SSouth, 7:30 p.m.
NBA: Houston at Dallas, ESPN, 8 p.m.
NBA: Miami at Golden State, ESPN, 10:30 p.m.
■ Tennis
Australian Open: Second round, ESPN2, delay, 2 p.m.
Australian Open: Second round, ESPN2, 11 p.m. & 3 a.m.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
USA Today/ESPN Women’s
Top 25 Poll
Men’s Scores
The top 25 teams in the USA Today-ESPN
Women’s college basketball poll, with first-place
votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 14,
total points based on 25 points for a first-place
vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and
last week’s ranking:
Record Pts Pvs
1. Baylor (25)
14-1 767
1
2. UConn (3)
14-1 731
2
3. Notre Dame (1)
14-1 722
3
4. Duke (2)
15-0 686
5
5. Kentucky
16-1 631
6
6. Stanford
14-2 628
4
7. California
13-2 604
7
8. Penn State
13-2 546
8
9. Tennessee
13-3 526
9
10. Maryland
13-3 485
10
11. Purdue
14-2 449
11
12. Georgia
15-2 431
12
13. Louisville
14-3 366
13
14. Oklahoma
14-2 355
14
15. UCLA
13-2 328
15
16. Oklahoma State
13-2 277
18
17. Dayton
13-1 265
17
18. South Carolina
14-3 262
16
19. North Carolina
17-1 259
20
20. Texas A&M
13-5 182
21
21. Kansas
11-4 102
19
22. Iowa State
12-2
89
24
23. Syracuse
14-1
83
—
24. Florida State
13-3
81
22
25. Colorado
13-2
67
—
Others receiving votes: Nebraska 52, Michigan 27, UTEP 22, DePaul 15, Vanderbilt 13,
Villanova 11, Miami 6, Iowa 5, Florida 1, St.
John’s 1.
SEC Women’s Standings
Conference
All
W L PCT W L
Kentucky
4 0 1.000 16 1
Tennessee
4 0 1.000 13 3
Georgia
3 1 .750 15 2
Vanderbilt
3 1 .750 13 4
Texas A&M
3 1 .750 13 5
South Carolina
2 2 .500 14 3
Auburn
2 2 .500 13 4
Florida
2 2 .500 13 5
LSU
2 2 .500 11 6
Arkansas
1 3 .250 13 4
Missouri
1 3 .250 12 6
Alabama
1 3 .250 11 6
Mississippi St.
0 4 .000 8 9
Mississippi
0 4 .000 7 10
———
Tuesday’s Game
No games scheduled
Thursday’s Games
LSU at South Carolina 7 p.m.
Mississippi St. at Kentucky 7 p.m.
Georgia at Arkansas 8 p.m.
Tennessee at Auburn 9 p.m.
PCT
.941
.813
.882
.765
.722
.824
.765
.722
.647
.765
.667
.647
.471
.412
ACC Standings
Conference All
W L PCT W L
NC State
3 0 1.000 14 2
Miami
3 0 1.000 12 3
Duke
2 1 .667 15 1
Florida St.
2 1 .667 10 6
Clemson
2 2 .500 10 6
Wake Forest
2 2 .500 9 7
Maryland
1 2 .333 13 3
North Carolina
1 2 .333 11 5
Virginia
1 2 .333 11 5
Virginia Tech
1 2 .333 10 6
Boston College
1 2 .333 9 7
Georgia Tech
0 3 .000 10 5
———
Tuesday’s Games
Clemson 60, Wake Forest 44
Wednesday’s Games
NC State at Maryland, 7 p.m.
Miami at Boston College, 7 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Georgia Tech at Duke, 9 p.m.
PCT
.875
.800
.938
.625
.625
.563
.813
.688
.688
.625
.563
.667
SEC Standings
Conference All
W L PCT W L
3 0 1.000 14 2
2 0 1.000 12 2
2 0 1.000 12 3
2 0 1.000 8 7
2 0 1.000 7 7
2 1 .667 11 5
1 1 .500 12 3
1 1 .500 10 5
1 1 .500 9 6
0 2 .000 9 4
0 2 .000 10 5
0 3 .000 8 7
0 3 .000 6 9
0 2 .000 6 9
———
Tuesday’s Games
Kentucky 75, Tennessee 65
Mississippi 89, Vanderbilt 79 OT
Wednesday’s Games
Georgia at Missouri, 8 p.m.
Auburn at Arkansas, 8 p.m.
South Carolina at LSU, 8 p.m.
Alabama at Mississippi St., 9 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Florida at Texas A&M, 7 p.m.
Mississippi
Florida
Texas A&M
Auburn
Mississippi St.
Kentucky
Missouri
Arkansas
Alabama
LSU
South Carolina
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
Georgia
TENNESSEE LOTTERY
CONTACT
SPORTS
EAST
Bentley 74, American International 55
Brown 53, NJIT 51
Delaware 76, Northeastern 51
E. Mennonite 93, Randolph-Macon 68
Franklin & Marshall 50, Washington (Md.) 49
Goldey Beacom 47, Chestnut Hill 41
Ithaca 55, Elmira 29
Marquette 56, Seton Hall 53
Regis 71, Daniel Webster 38
SOUTH
Berea 71, Asbury 68
Davidson 87, Furman 46
Ohio Christian 76, Kentucky Christian 59
South Florida 77, Cincinnati 44
Spalding 82, Greenville 47
MIDWEST
Augustana (SD) 73, Wayne (Neb.) 50
Bemidji St. 58, Minn.-Crookston 48
Finlandia 67, Northland 53
Iowa St. 82, Oklahoma 61
Lake Forest 80, Carroll (Wis.) 77, OT
Mary 70, Minot St. 58
Minn. Duluth 57, St. Cloud St. 50
Northern St. (SD) 68, Minn. St. (Moorhead) 55
Notre Dame 79, Georgetown 64
Ripon 56, Lawrence 38
SW Minnesota St. 66, Sioux Falls 52
St. Norbert 60, Beloit 59
William Woods 59, Williams Baptist 48
Winona St. 70, Upper Iowa 61
SOUTHWEST
Abilene Christian 76, Incarnate Word 65
CS Bakersfield 88, Houston Baptist 75
Howard Payne 106, Sul Ross St. 53
Area College Summaries
Women’s Game
GEORGIA NORTHWESTERN 82,
WEST GEORGIA TECH 78
West Georgia Tech (5-13, 1-1 region)
Marshall 9, Hollins 4, S. Penneman 23, Mann
8, Camp, Romick, Forte 13, J. Penneman 2,
Williams 6, Conner 13.
Georgia Northwestern (9-8, 3-0)
Parks 8, Jones 10, Cole 7, Nichelson 13, Smith
8, Price 9, Mostella 10, Person 17.
Halftime: West Georgia Tech, 45-34.
Men’s Game
WEST GEORGIA TECH 88,
GEORGIA NORTHWESTERN 73
West Georgia Tech
Hennings 15, Wynn 4, Jones 2, Monk 7, Austin
20, Chaney 19, Walker 2, Perry 2, Moten 7,
Weeks 4.
Georgia Northwestern
Cotton 5, Ivester 1, Lemus 19, Todd 9, Miller 10,
Reynolds 6, Olsen 16, Johnson 7.
Halftime: West Georgia Tech, 46-42.
MIDDLE SCHOOL
GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
Eighth Grade
St Jude 26 (Genna Howard 14), Chattanooga
Christian 23
GIRLS’ SWIMMING
GPS 220 (Lee Schemel 2 individual 1sts, 2
relay 1sts), Baylor 92 (Elliott Brakebill 1st 200
IM, relay 1st)
BOYS’ SWIMMING
McCallie 205 (Dmitri Kerns 2 individual 1sts, 2
relay 1sts), Baylor 92 (Peter Lochmaier 2 ind.
1sts, relay 1st)
Tuesday’s winning numbers:
Cash 3 Midday: 6-8-7
Cash 4 Midday: 5-9-8-7
Georgia FIVE Midday: 8-7-8-5-1
Cash 3 Evening: 7-8-4
Cash 4 Evening: not available
Georgia FIVE Evening: 1-4-8-4-0
Fantasy 5: not available
Monday’s winning numbers:
Cash 3 Midday: 2-0-2
Lucky Sum: 4
Cash 4 Midday: 5-6-9-6
Lucky Sum: 26
Cash 3 Evening: 9-6-8
Lucky Sum: 23
Cash 4 Evening: 8-9-5-7
Lucky Sum: 29
Tennessee Cash: 05-06-13-25-29 (2)
facebook.com/timesfreepress
Women’s Scores
GEORGIA LOTTERY
Tuesday’s winning numbers:
Cash 3 Midday: 6-3-6
Lucky Sum: 15
Cash 4 Midday: 0-4-8-4
Lucky Sum: 16
Cash 3 Evening: 2-1-3
Lucky Sum: 6
Cash 4 Evening: 4-6-6-1
Lucky Sum: 17
Join us on
PCT
.875
.857
.800
.533
.500
.688
.800
.667
.600
.692
.667
.533
.400
.400
EAST
Bentley 65, American International 57
Bloomfield 69, Dominican (NY) 68
Chestnut Hill 105, Goldey Beacom 99
Curry 73, W. New England 54
Elmira 72, Ithaca 66
Middlebury 54, Castleton St. 38
Regis 67, Daniel Webster 52
St. John’s 67, Notre Dame 63
Stony Brook 75, Boston U. 48
SOUTH
Berea 69, Asbury 66
Bethel (Tenn.) 82, Life 70
Clemson 60, Wake Forest 44
George Mason 68, James Madison 57
Kentucky 75, Tennessee 65
Martin Methodist 65, Trevecca Nazarene 56
Mississippi 89, Vanderbilt 79, OT
Spalding 76, Greenville 58
Va. Wesleyan 60, E. Mennonite 55
MIDWEST
Aurora 71, Wis. Lutheran 59
Benedictine (Ill.) 78, Concordia (Ill.) 47
Bradley 69, S. Illinois 66
Cincinnati 75, DePaul 70
Creighton 79, N. Iowa 68
Dominican (Ill.) 65, Rockford 62
E. Michigan 58, Cent. Michigan 52
Lakeland 73, Edgewood 56
Park 72, Harris-Stowe 61
St. Norbert 66, Beloit 56
Taylor 68, Spring Arbor 58
William Woods 103, Williams Baptist 55
Wisconsin 64, Indiana 59
SOUTHWEST
Abilene Christian 93, Incarnate Word 76
Sul Ross St. 86, Howard Payne 76
Monday’s winning numbers:
Cash 3 Midday: 5-6-6
Cash 4 Midday: 2-1-0-3
Georgia FIVE Midday: 9-5-3-7-0
Cash 3 Evening: 6-4-7
Cash 4 Evening: 6-5-3-8
Georgia FIVE Evening: 8-3-8-8-5
Fantasy 5: 01-05-07-10-32
Decades of Dollars: 02-06-11-13-43-47
LOOK DAILY FOR ‘5 AT 10’
Sports Editor Jay Greeson provides
a morning look at sports developments Monday
through Friday at www.timesfreepress.com.
BOWLING
TRANSACTIONS
League Scores
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS — Named Eric Ciano strength
and conditioning coach, Donnie Henderson
defensive backs coach, Chuck Driesbach
linebackers coach, Tyrone Wheatley running
backs coach, Jim O’Neil linebackers coach,
Greg Adkins tight ends coach, Anthony Weaver
defensive line coach, Brian Fleury defensive
quality control coach, Samson Brown assistant
defensive backs coach and Jason Rebrovich
defensive quality control coach.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed WR Kris Adams
and CB Antonio Dennard to reserve/future
contracts.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Signed T Allen
Barbre.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Named Mike
McCoy coach.
Canadian Football League
CALGARY STAMPEDERS — Signed LB Karl
McCartney to a contract extension.
EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Released WR
Glenn MacKay.
HAMILTON TIGER-CATS — Re-signed C Marwan Hage. Released QB Quinton Porter.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
MINNESOTA WILD — Signed RW Nick Palmieri
to a one-year, two-way contract.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Claimed F Richard
Clune off waivers from Los Angeles.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Loaned D Cameron Schilling to Hershey (AHL).
American Hockey League
AHL — Suspended Grand Rapids LW Trevor
Parkes one game.
ALBANY RIVER RATS — Returned RW Bryan
Haczyk and C Kelly Zajac to Trenton (ECHL).
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
PHILADELPHIA UNION — Loaned D Carlos
Valdes to Independiente Santa Fe (Colombia).
TORONTO FC — Signed M Julio Cesar.
COLLEGE
ECAC — Named Steve Bamford commissioner.
Promoted Ben Layton to assistant commissioner for programs and services.
NEW JERSEY CITY — Named Maurice Washington men’s assistant volleyball coach.
OREGON STATE—Promoted assistant head
football coach Jay Locey to chief of staff and
graduate assistant Trent Bray to linebackers
coach.
PENN STATE — Named Ed Franks director of
sports camps.
RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE — Named Greg
O’Connor assistant athletic director for development.
SPRING HILL — Named Eric Sajowitz men’s
and women’s tennis coach.
HOLIDAY BOWL BRAINERD
Cracker Mixed
Men: Ted Richardson Sr. 683, Travis Staten 656,
George Henry 646, Jason Samples 638, Wayne
Gilbert 634, James Lacey 616, Dustin Bowman
614, Luther Queen 613. Women: Ashley Adams
575, Beverly Reynolds 520, Bonnie Spurlock
517, Laura Smith 494, Heather Templeton 486,
Lillie Lacey 467, Carrie Lacey 452, Amanda
Zirk 433.
Classics Mixed
Men: Brian Williams 567, Gilbert Aikens 554,
W.C. Sherrill 536, Ron Coyne 536, Ray Bramlett 513, Charlie Shidler 509. Women: Cecilia
Loscalzo 570, Mary Wade 523, Lois Eskew 487,
Aileen Wilson 473, Shirley Shidler 470, Vickie
Fox 450, Dawn Brown 449.
HOLIDAY BOWL HIXSON
Sunday Night Roundup
Men: Greg Kerby 706, John O’Malley Sr. 663,
David O’Malley Jr. 650, Doug Barber 616, Ken
Kapelinski 609. Women: Heather Carnes 516,
Robin O’Malley 503, Catt Kerby 466, Carolyn
O’Malley 393.
Southern Belles
Helen High 483, Doris Brymer 460, Pat Williams
457, Terry Chase 452, Joy Clifford 448.
Bowlerettes
Debbie Moore 535, Lynn Huenink 486, Lucy
Davis 468, Joyce Ashley 467, Robert Ann
Lewis 466, Etta Putnam 462, Barbara Elrod
461, Marilyn Cowden 460, Shirley Duncan 458,
Doris Brymer 456.
Hits & Misses
Men: Greg Heckman 716 (299), Derold Millsaps
716, Brian Birch 656, Bradley Pettit 649, Kevin
Joyner 630, Steven Hall 603. Women: Kelly
Sheets 549, Sherry Day 536, Carmen McCoy
525, Georgia Rawiszer 523.
High School
Division II-AA Middle/East roll-offs
GPS 20, DONELSON CHRISTIAN 7
Game 1: Girls Preparatoy School, 5-3
Highlights: GPS — Sara Griffith 235, Madi Stanley 205, Corey Swafford 159, Sydney Leech
158, Katy Richardson 158. DCA — Candy Moss
177, Valerie Henry 173, Emory Fox 144.
Game 2: Girls Preparatory School, 7-1
Highlights: GPS — Griffith 235, Leech 197,
Stanley 191, Richardson 184, Swafford 157,
Taylor Reid 153. DCA — Henry 280, Fox 162,
Julia Summers 135, Ginh Wong 135.
Game 3: Girls Preparatory School, 5-3
Highlights: GPS — Griffith 214, Stanley 183,
Leech 178, Swafford 156, Richardson 132. DCA
— Moss 213, Henry 172 Fox 166, Wong 164.
Total pins (3 pts.): GPS, 3,091-2,723.
GPS 20, FATHER RYAN 7
Game 1: Girls Preparatory School, 5-3
Highlights: GPS — Sara Griffith 203, Madi
Stanley 171, Sydney Leech 153, Corey Swafford 150, Katy Richardson 145. FR — Jennifer
Holt 164, Lacey Dumas 158, Emily Kerinuk 156,
Joy Eatherly 141.
Game 2: Girls Preparatory School, 5-3
Highlights: GPS — Stanley 192, Richardson
168, Swafford 159, Leech 152, Griffith 148. FR
— Dumas 234, Holt 176, Catie Boleber 143,
Kerinuk 135.
Game 3: Girls Preparatory School, 7-1
Highlights: GPS — Griffith 192, Stanley 157,
Leech 155, Richardson 149, Swafford 133. FR
— Holt 172, Boleber 147.
Total pins (3 pts.): GPS, 2,752-2,597.
TENNIS
Australian Open Results
Wednesday
At Melbourne Park; Melbourne, Australia
Purse: $31.608 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Second Round
Nicolas Almagro (10), Spain, def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2.
Sam Querrey (20), United States, def. Brian
Baker, United States, 6-7 (2), 1-1, retired.
Kei Nishikori (16), Japan, def. Carlos Berlocq,
Argentina, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 6-1.
Women
Second Round
Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. IrinaCamelia Begu, Romania, 6-3, 6-3.
Angelique Kerber (5), Germany, def. Lucie
Hradecka, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-1.
Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, def. Klara Zakopalova (23), Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-0.
Valeria Savinykh, Russia, def. Dominika Cibulkova (15), Slovakia, 7-6 (6), 6-4.
Doubles
Men
First Round
Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and JeanJulien Rojer (6), Netherlands, def. David Goffin, Belgium, and Simon Stadler, Germany,
6-3, 6-1.
Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini, Italy, def.
Johan Brunstrom, Sweden, and Frederik
Nielsen, Denmark, 6-3, 6-3.
Women
First Round
Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, and Arantxa Parra
Santonja, Spain, def. Lara Arruabarrena-Vecino
and Lourdes Dominguez Lino, Spain, 4-6, 63, 6-2.
Silvia Soler-Espinosa and Carla Suarez
Navarro, Spain, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands,
United States, and Sania Mirza (10), India,
7-6 (4), 6-3.
Jill Craybas, United States, and Chanelle
Scheepers, South Africa, def. Rika Fujiwara,
Japan, and Mervana Jugic-Salkic, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6-1, 6-4.
Maria Kirilenko, Russia, and Lisa Raymond (3),
United States, def. Alicja Rosolska, Poland, and
Tamarine Tanasugarn, Thailand, 6-2, 1-6, 6-4.
Darija Jurak, Croatia, and Katalin Marosi,
Hungary, def Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, and
Shahar Peer, Israel, 6-0, 6-3.
Melinda Czink, Hungary, and Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, def. Simona Halep, Romania, and
Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, 4-6, 6-2, 7-6 (2).
Mandy Minella, Luxembourg, and Megan
Moulton-Levy, United States, def. Petra Martic,
Croatia, and Kristina Mladenovic, France, 2-6,
6-4, 7-6 (8).
TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday’s Moves
BASEBALL
American League
DETROIT TIGERS — Named Jamie Garcia
pitching coach and Gerald Perry hitting coach
of Erie (EL).
TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with
RHP Kyle McClellan on a minor league contract.
National League
WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to
terms with LHP Fernando Abad, LHP Bill Bray,
LHP Brandon Mann, RHP Ross Ohlendorf and
INF Will Rhymes on minor league contracts.
American Association
WICHITA WINGNUTS — Released OF Mike
Conroy.
Frontier League
GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Traded INF Jerod
Yakubik, INF Nate Wilder and RHP Brett
Zawacki to Joliet for RHP Rey Cotilla and future
considerations. Released INF Richie Jiminez.
JOLIET SLAMMERS — Signed RHP Chase
Doremus to a contract extension. Placed RHP
Brian Smith on the retired list.
LAKE ERIE CRUSHERS — Signed RHP Alex
Kaminsky to a contract extension.
NORMAL CORNBELTERS — Signed SS Patrick McKenna and OF Matt Wright.
RIVER CITY RASCALS — Signed RHP Dyllon
Nuernberg.
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA Box Scores
HORNETS 111, 76ERS 99
NEW ORLEANS (111)
Aminu 2-4 1-2 5, Davis 4-6 2-3 10, Lopez 4-9
0-0 8, Vasquez 10-18 0-1 23, Gordon 7-13 3-4
19, Henry 4-7 2-2 11, Mason 3-4 0-0 7, Anderson 5-11 2-2 14, Smith 3-7 0-0 6, Rivers 0-1 1-2
1, Roberts 2-3 2-2 7. Totals 44-83 13-18 111.
PHILADELPHIA (99)
Turner 5-12 3-4 14, T.Young 6-18 0-1 12, Allen
4-5 0-0 8, Holiday 10-17 5-5 29, Richardson
2-5 0-0 5, Hawes 2-6 0-0 5, Ivey 1-1 0-0 3,
Wilkins 1-3 0-0 2, Wright 2-6 2-2 7, Brown
0-0 0-0 0, N.Young 6-9 0-1 14. Totals 39-82
10-13 99.
New Orleans
35 18 33 25 — 111
Philadelphia
28 19 21 31 — 99
3-Point Goals—New Orleans 10-18 (Vasquez
3-4, Gordon 2-3, Anderson 2-6, Mason 1-1,
Roberts 1-2, Henry 1-2), Philadelphia 11-21
(Holiday 4-5, N.Young 2-4, Ivey 1-1, Hawes
1-2, Turner 1-2, Richardson 1-3, Wright 1-4).
Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New Orleans
54 (Anderson 9), Philadelphia 36 (Turner
7). Assists—New Orleans 22 (Vasquez 9),
Philadelphia 28 (Holiday 11). Total Fouls—
New Orleans 18, Philadelphia 21. A—17,304
(20,328).
PACERS 103, BOBCATS 76
INDIANA (103)
George 7-16 0-2 16, West 6-13 3-4 15, Hibbert
5-11 8-8 18, Hill 6-11 2-2 16, Stephenson 3-6
0-1 7, T.Hansbrough 2-5 5-5 9, Green 1-7 1-2 3,
Mahinmi 0-2 4-4 4, Augustin 2-4 0-0 6, Johnson
1-4 0-0 2, Pendergraph 2-6 0-0 4, McGuire 0-0
0-0 0, B.Hansbrough 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 36-87
23-28 103.
CHARLOTTE (76)
Kidd-Gilchrist 1-5 2-3 4, Warrick 2-4 0-0 4,
Biyombo 2-6 1-2 5, Walker 6-9 0-0 13, Henderson 3-10 8-12 15, Haywood 1-3 0-0 2,
Adrien 1-3 2-2 4, Taylor 1-6 2-2 5, Gordon 3-9
1-1 7, Sessions 3-10 7-8 13, Diop 0-1 0-0 0,
Thomas 0-2 0-0 0, Williams 2-4 0-0 4. Totals
25-72 23-30 76.
Indiana
27 23 33 20 — 103
Charlotte
20 20 17 19 — 76
3-Point Goals—Indiana 8-22 (Augustin 2-3,
Hill 2-4, George 2-7, B.Hansbrough 1-1,
Stephenson 1-3, Green 0-4), Charlotte 3-9
(Henderson 1-1, Walker 1-1, Taylor 1-4, Sessions 0-1, Williams 0-2). Fouled Out—None.
Rebounds—Indiana 69 (George 10), Charlotte
41 (Biyombo, Adrien 6). Assists—Indiana 25
(Stephenson 6), Charlotte 13 (Henderson 3).
Total Fouls—Indiana 24, Charlotte 23. Technicals—George, Indiana defensive three second.
A—12,996 (19,077).
NETS 113, RAPTORS 106
TORONTO (106)
Fields 4-6 0-0 8, Davis 6-10 0-0 12, Gray 2-5
2-2 6, Calderon 6-11 0-0 15, DeRozan 5-15 2-2
12, A.Johnson 6-7 3-6 15, Anderson 0-4 2-3 2,
Lowry 5-7 7-7 21, Ross 2-9 0-0 4, Acy 2-2 2-2 6,
Lucas 2-6 1-1 5. Totals 40-82 19-23 106.
BROOKLYN (113)
Bogans 3-5 0-0 7, Evans 1-3 0-0 2, Lopez 6-12
10-10 22, Williams 6-13 8-8 21, J.Johnson 9-18
1-1 21, Blatche 7-10 0-0 14, Stackhouse 0-1
0-0 0, Humphries 0-1 0-0 0, Brooks 3-5 1-3 7,
Watson 2-5 4-4 9, Teletovic 3-8 1-2 10, James
0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-81 25-28 113.
Toronto
27 23 26 30 — 106
Brooklyn
27 27 29 30 — 113
3-Point Goals—Toronto 7-13 (Lowry 4-5, Calderon 3-4, Anderson 0-1, Ross 0-3), Brooklyn
8-21 (Teletovic 3-6, J.Johnson 2-5, Watson 1-1,
Bogans 1-3, Williams 1-5, Stackhouse 0-1).
Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Toronto 50
(Fields 11), Brooklyn 40 (Lopez 9). Assists—
Toronto 21 (Calderon, Fields 5), Brooklyn 22
(Williams 7). Total Fouls—Toronto 21, Brooklyn
21. A—16,236 (17,732).
CLIPPERS 117, ROCKETS 109
L.A. CLIPPERS (117)
Butler 0-1 1-1 1, Griffin 7-13 5-5 19, Jordan 4-6
1-2 9, Bledsoe 7-12 4-4 19, Green 5-6 3-3 15,
Barnes 6-14 3-4 18, Odom 1-4 0-0 2, Crawford
11-20 3-3 30, Hill 1-2 2-4 4, Turiaf 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 42-78 22-26 117.
HOUSTON (109)
Parsons 7-10 1-2 17, Patterson 2-5 0-0 5, Asik
3-6 1-3 7, Lin 5-11 1-2 12, Harden 8-20 5-6 23,
Morris 4-9 1-4 12, Smith 3-3 0-0 6, Douglas 3-6
0-2 7, Delfino 5-10 4-4 16, Motiejunas 0-1 1-2 1,
Anderson 0-0 0-0 0, Beverley 1-1 0-0 3, Aldrich
0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-82 14-25 109.
L.A. Clippers
28 30 32 27 — 117
Houston
29 30 18 32 — 109
3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 11-19 (Crawford
5-7, Barnes 3-6, Green 2-3, Bledsoe 1-1, Butler
0-1, Odom 0-1), Houston 13-37 (Morris 3-6,
Parsons 2-4, Delfino 2-7, Harden 2-9, Beverley
1-1, Douglas 1-2, Patterson 1-3, Lin 1-4, Motiejunas 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A.
Clippers 44 (Odom 11), Houston 48 (Asik 9).
Assists—L.A. Clippers 21 (Griffin 8), Houston
25 (Lin 10). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 21, Houston 23. Technicals—L.A. Clippers Coach Del
Negro, Griffin, Odom, L.A. Clippers defensive
three second, Houston defensive three second.
A—16,823 (18,023).
AROUNDTHEREGION
Brandon
Bruce
Steven
Byrd
Tyler
Crawford
Ronald
England
Darius
Stocks
Bang
Thaphina
Temple brings in
host of wrestlers
First-year Tennessee Temple University wrestling coach Dale Enloe has loaded up going
into serious NCWA competition this semester,
including bringing in two promising 125-pounders
known better by nicknames: Steven “Peanut”
Byrd from Cleveland County in North Carolina and Sutthiphong “Bang” Thaphina from
Plano, Texas, and Frisco Liberty High School.
Thaphina joins fellow Liberty alumnus Tyler
Crawford, a 157-pounder who’s been at Temple
since the beginning of the school year. Enloe has
been a high school coach in North Carolina the
last four years, and two guys from Hunter Huss
High in Gastonia who knew him also are new
enrollees: 2011 Huss graduate Darius Stocks at
133 and 2012 grad Brandon Bruce at 157. Both
were state qualifiers. “Brandon is great on his
feet, great on takedowns, fast and great in the
top position,” Enloe said. “And Stocks is great allaround. He doesn’t really have a weak point. He
just needed an opportunity.” Byrd is a 2011 grad
of King’s Mountain High and also a state qualifier.
Out much longer from high school is Ronald
England, a powerfully built 235-pounder who
graduated from Rhea County in 2009 and played
football there, wrestling only as a freshman.
BASKETBALL
■ Hollie German and Jamorris Gaines from
Lee University were the Southern States Athletic
Conference basketball players of the week. German, a former Polk County High School star,
scored 22 points in a victory at Southern Wesleyan and then had 32 points and 11 of the Lady
Flames’ final 12 in a 72-69 win over Coastal
Georgia. She leads the SSAC with 20.7 points a
game. In his third and fourth games of the season,
junior transfer Gaines had 28 points and seven
rebounds in a win over SWU and 20 points in
the Flames’ defeat of Coastal Georgia. He was
18-of-26 from the field and 6-of-9 on 3-pointers in
the two games. The nationally sixth-ranked Lee
teams, each with only one loss, host Emmanuel in
an SSAC doubleheader Thursday with free Mayfield ice cream being served, the 350-member Lee
University Festival Choir (which will take part in
the Presidential Inauguration next week) singing the national anthem before the men’s game
and the renowned Gym Masters performing at
halftime of the SSAC East first-place showdown.
Emmanuel’s Lions are 13-2 and ranked 18th in
NAIA Division I.
■ Going cold in the second half Tuesday
evening at Morristown, the Cleveland State’s
men’s basketball team lost 62-53 to Walters State.
Walters’ nationally eighth-ranked Lady Senators
(15-1, 8-0) won the first game of the TCCAA
doubleheader 81-57 with Donessa Shular scoring 28 points. Jara Gasper led the Lady Cougars
(11-6, 4-4) with 14 points and Mercedes Owens
hit three 3-point shots. Ralph Eason, Filipe
Goncalves and Trey Suttles scored 13, 12 and
11 points to lead the Cougars (10-5, 5-3), who
led 52-47 but shot only 19 percent in the second
half and were outrebounded 51-34 for the game.
Leland Robinson and Elgrin Wilson led Walters (9-9) with 16 points each.
■ The Georgia Northwestern Lady Bobcats
rose to 3-0 in TCCAA Region XVII by rallying
from a 21-point deficit in the final 13 minutes Tuesday to beat visiting Middle Georgia Tech 82-78
at Rome. Odessa Person had 17 points and 21
rebounds for the Lady Cats (9-8), while Alyssa
Nichelson scored 13 points and Alana Jones and
Terika Mostella added 10 apiece. Emily Cole hit
the tying basket with 1:40 to play and then made
the go-ahead 3-pointer from a Kiarra Parks pass.
The GNTC men lost 88-73 despite 19 points and
5-of-8 3-point shooting from Fernando Lemus
Jr., 16 points from Richard Olsen and 10 points
and nine rebounds from Alex Miller.
Staff Reports
MARKTRAIL
MEGA MILLIONS
Tuesday’s winning numbers:
Mega Millions: 1-6-12-19-41
Mega Ball: 14
Megaplier: 4
Mega Jackpot: $62 million
■ SPORTS EDITOR
Jay Greeson (423) 757-6273
jgreeson@timesfreepress.com
■ DEPUTY SPORTS EDITOR
Ron Bush (423) 757-6291
rbush@timesfreepress.com
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Jim Tanner (423) 757-6478
jtanner@timesfreepress.com
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Ward Gossett (423) 757-6288
wgossett@timesfreepress.com
by phone: (423) 757-6364 or 1-800-733-2637 • by fax: (423) 668-5049 • by e-mail: sports@timesfreepress.com
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Stephen Hargis (423) 757-6293
shargis@timesfreepress.com
...
. timesfreepress.com
• • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • D3
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
Sequatchie County hires veteran coach Colquette
By Stephen Hargis
Staff Writer
As he read through the
resumes of more than 40
applicants
for his vacant
head football
coaching job,
one name
stood out to
S e q u atc h i e
County High
School principal Tommy
Layne.
Tommy
L a y n e
Layne
didn’t even
have to read the impressive
list of accomplishments of
Ken Colquette. He knew them
well already. Colquette, one of
the area’s prep football coach-
■ The four-time state
champion at Marion County
returns to heading a football
program at age 65.
ing legends, agreed Tuesday
to come out of retirement
and take over the Indians
program.
“Ken’s coaching ability is
beyond question,” Layne said.
“Anyone who has spent any
time at all in this area knows
about his knowledge of the
game and his success, so all of
that really just made him stand
out among a really good group
of coaches who had applied.
“His age or the fact that he
hasn’t been a head coach for
a few years was not a concern
at all. He’s got a lot of energy
to get back into it, he’s excited
and so are we.”
Colquette, 65, was at the
school Tuesday afternoon
to introduce himself to the
faculty and team members.
He had hip-replacement
surgery in late December
but is ahead of schedule in
his recovery and will begin
installing his offensive and
defensive sets this spring
with assistants Sam Montgomery and Curt Jones, two
former head coaches.
“I’m a football coach. It’s all
I’ve ever done,” said Colquette,
who was a defensive assistant
at Ooltewah last season. “I
got bored being retired and
wanted to get back into it, and
once I was around the kids
at Ooltewah last year, I got
excited about it again. When
this chance came about, it
was a good fit because I know
Tommy and I know Sam and a
lot of the folks at Sequatchie,
and it’s close to home so there
were just a lot of reasons that
seemed to add up.
“I don’t know any of the
players, so that’s the first thing
to do. I may be the offensive
coordinator, but we’ll have to
see where we are as a staff and
then see what kind of offense
fits the talent we have and then
start settling all that other stuff
before spring practice.”
Colquette was first a successful head coach at Bridge-
port (Ala.) before taking over
at Marion County in 1980 and
guiding that program to unparalleled success. The Warriors
won four state championships,
were state runners-up twice
and had just one losing season in his term. During one
stretch in the mid-1990s, they
went 56-1.
After resigning from Marion in 1996, Colquette coached
at Vidalia (Ga.) and Grundy
County before ending his head
coaching career with a 249-81
overall record. He also worked
as an assistant at Soddy-Daisy
and Marion County and was
an assistant at Ooltewah last
season.
Colquette replaces Chad
Barger, who resigned shortly
after last season’s 2-8 finish,
the first losing record in Barger’s five-year tenure. Barger,
who compiled a 29-26 overall record with the Indians,
brought stability to a program
that had had four coaches in
six years and had gone 1-19
the two seasons before he
took over.
He guided the Indians to a
6-5 record in his first season,
the first winning record for
the program in eight years,
and led them to consecutive
winning seasons for the first
time in 13 years. They reached
the second round of the Class
3A playoffs two years ago.
Contact Stephen Hargis at
shargis@timesfreepress.com or
423-757-6293.
NBA
BREAKDOWN
EASTERN
CONFERENCE
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L Pct GB
Southwest Division W
New York
Brooklyn
Boston
Philadelphia
Toronto
24
23
20
16
14
13
15
17
23
24
San Antonio
Memphis
Houston
Dallas
New Orleans
.649 —
.605 11⁄2
.541
4
.410
9
1
.368 10 ⁄2
29
24
21
16
12
Southeast Division W
L Pct GB
Northwest Division W
Miami
Atlanta
Orlando
Charlotte
Washington
12
16
24
29
28
Oklahoma City
Denver
Portland
Utah
Minnesota
24
21
13
9
7
.667 —
.568 31⁄2
.351 111⁄2
.237 16
.200 161⁄2
30
24
20
21
16
L Pct GB
11
12
18
23
26
.725 —
.667 3
.538 71⁄2
.410 121⁄2
.316 16
L Pct GB
8
16
18
19
19
.789 —
.600 7
.526 10
.525 10
.457 121⁄2
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Pacific Division
W
L Pct GB
Indiana
Chicago
Milwaukee
Detroit
Cleveland
24
21
19
14
9
15
15
17
24
31
L.A. Clippers
Golden State
L.A. Lakers
Sacramento
Phoenix
30
23
16
14
13
9
13
21
24
27
.615 —
.583 11⁄2
.528 31⁄2
.368 91⁄2
.225 151⁄2
.769 —
.639 51⁄2
.432 13
.368 151⁄2
.325 171⁄2
TUESDAY’S RESULTS
Chargers hire McCoy
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Mike
McCoy’s interview with San
Diego went so well that both
sides felt he was a perfect
fit to become the Chargers’
new coach.
McCoy had one thing to
do, though, before accepting
the Chargers’ offer, so it was
a good thing Chargers president Dean Spanos’ private
plane was at his disposal.
“There was no doubt in
my mind when I got back on
that plane to go back home,”
said McCoy, the former Denver Broncos offensive coordinator who was introduced
Tuesday as Chargers’ new
coach. “They wanted to
keep me here last night. But
I said, ‘I’ve got to talk to my
wife about this before. If I
made the decision without
talking to my wife, I might
get in a little trouble.”’
So McCoy flew back to
Denver to talk it over with
wife Kellie. McCoy, his wife
and their two children were
back on the same plane
Tuesday morning, flying
back to San Diego to take
the job.
“Without a doubt we knew
this was the place we wanted to be,” said McCoy, who
signed a four-year contract.
McCoy replaces Norv
Turner, who was fired along
with general manager A.J.
Smith after the Chargers
finished 7-9 and missed the
playoffs for the third straight
season.
The move comes three
days after the top-seeded
Broncos were eliminated
from the playoffs in a double-overtime home loss to
the Baltimore Ravens.
Gettleman takes helm
At Charlotte, N.C., Panthers owner Jerry Richardson is confident new general
manager Dave Gettleman
and coach Ron Rivera are
the right men to “fix things”
in Carolina.
The Panthers haven’t
been to the postseason
since 2008 and haven’t won
a playoff game since 2005.
Richardson said he’s counting on both to change that
trend soon.
“I think his experience
will not only benefit the
organization, but will be terrific for Ron at this time of
his career,” Richardson said.
Richardson introduced
Gettleman at a news conference Tuesday, saying he
likes that his new GM comes
from a winning organization
like the New York Giants.
Gettleman has been to six
Super Bowls with Buffalo,
Denver and the Giants and
has won three championships.
Eagles could make him an
offer that changes those
plans.
The 46-year-old Bradley
has emerged as a favorite
among fans based mainly on
an old video clip in which
he rips into the Seahawks’
defense during a game,
screaming “Do your job!”
Bradley back in Philly
Green Bay, Wis., Packers
quarterback Aaron Rodgers
said injuries to “multiple
lower extremities” will keep
him out of the Pro Bowl later
this month.
Rodgers was to be the
NFC’s starting quarterback.
But the reigning NFL MVP
said on his weekly radio show
on Milwaukee’s ESPN 540
AM on Tuesday that he didn’t
pass his year-end physical. He
wouldn’t get into specifics,
though he did say injury to
his right ankle that landed
him on the injury report several times in the second half
of the season “has definitely
been a problem.”
“I’m sorry to the fans,
the Green Bay fans that are
going to be out there,” Rodgers said.
At Philadelphia, they’re
all aboard the Gus Bus in
Philly.
Seahawks defensive coordinator Gus Bradley arrived
in Philadelphia on Tuesday
for his second interview
with the Eagles, suggesting
the nearly three-week search
to replace Andy Reid could
be nearing an end.
Bradley first met with the
Eagles in Atlanta on Saturday, a day before Seattle
lost to the Falcons in a NFC
divisional playoff game. He’s
the first of the 11 known
candidates interviewed by
Philadelphia to get a second
meeting. He’s also expected
to interview with Jacksonville this week, though the
QB to skip Pro Bowl
Radwanska advances to 3rd round at Aussie Open
By John Pye
The Associated Press
MELBOURNE, Australia — Agnieszka Radwanska extended the best winning streak of the year to 11
matches as she rolled into
the third round of the Australian Open with a 6-3, 6-3
win over Romania’s IrinaCamelia Begu early today.
The No. 4-ranked Radwanska won leadup tournaments this month at Auckland and Sydney and is
unbeaten this year.
“I can play even better,”
said Radwanska, who lost
the Wimbledon final to
Serena Williams last year. “I
didn’t really expect I could
win that many matches in
a row, and hopefully I can
keep going.”
Her last two trips to the
Australian Open have ended
in quarterfinal losses to the
The Associated Press
Brian Baker of the U.S. hits a forehand return to Sam
Querrey during their second round match at the Australian Open in Melbourne, Australia, today. Baker later
left the game with an injury.
eventual champion — Kim
Clijsters in 2011 and Victoria
Azarenka last year.
With top-ranked Azarenka and Williams on the
other half of the draw, Radwanska’s main obstacles to
reaching the final are 2011
French Open champion Li
Na, who beat Olga Goortsova of Belarus 6-2, 7-5 to
reach the third round, and
potential semifinal rivals
Maria Sharapova or No. 5
Angelique Kerber of Germany.
Kerber advanced today
with a 6-3, 6-1 win over
Lucie Hradecka and No. 2ranked Sharapova, the reigning French Open champion,
was scheduled to play later
this morning against Japan’s
Misaki Doi.
Williams hurt her ankle
in her opening victory Tuesday, causing speculation that
her bid for a third consecutive major title Open could
be in jeorpardy. She has
only lost one match since
her first-round exit at the
French Open last year.
In other women’s secondround matches today, No. 18
Julia Gorges beat Romina
Oprandi 6-3, 6-2; Russian
qualifier Valeria Savinykh
upset No. 15 Dominika
Cibulkova 7-6 (6), 6-4; and
Kirsten Flipkens of Belgium
ousted No. 23 Klara Zakopalova 6-1, 6-0.
TODAY’S GAMES
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
Chicago at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Indiana at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Brooklyn at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Houston at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Denver at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.
New Orleans at Boston, 8 p.m.
Memphis at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Portland, 10 p.m.
Washington at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Miami at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
MONDAY’S RESULTS
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
Washington 120, Orlando 91
Boston 100, Charlotte 89
Chicago 97, Atlanta 58
L.A. Clippers 99, Memphis 73
Dallas 113, Minnesota 98
Oklahoma City 102, Phoenix 90
Utah 104, Miami 97
SPORTSBRIEFS
NHL returns, but TV
viewers may take a while
NEW YORK — Hockey
fans will click their bitterness or forgiveness over the
NHL lockout by whether
they tune into the games on
TV. Then again, if the shortened season ends with, say,
a Rangers-Red Wings final,
even the most aggrieved of
them might have a hard time
staying away. Television
viewership bounced back
— eventually — after the
last lockout, one that wiped
out an entire season. So
there’s certainly precedent
that the sport’s ratings can
weather the lost games and
perceived greed of a work
stoppage. “Hope the passion
for hockey bubbles back
to the surface very quickly,” NBC Sports executive
producer Sam Flood said
Tuesday. “The hockey fan
is a passionate group, and
we’re cautiously optimistic
they’ll come back. It won’t
be instant. You’ve got to
regain the trust, regain the
passion.”
NCAA
■ I N D I A NA P O L I S
— The NCAA will open
its annual convention this
week with a host of reform
measures on the agenda,
part of President Mark
Emmert’s push to address
several years of high-profile
scandals. It may turn out
that attorneys will have a
lot of say in what the NCAA
does in coming years — perhaps as much as any athletic
director or school president:
The NCAA is facing more
than a half-dozen lawsuits in
what could signal a new era
of legal complications for
the largest governing body
in collegiate sports. “It’s a
much more litigious period
than we’ve seen in the past,
and sports in general have
become more litigious. Athletes are more willing to do
it now, and that’s something
we haven’t seen in the past,”
said Michael McCann,
director of the Sports Law
Institute and a professor
at Vermont Law School.
“I think the NCAA will be
dealing with litigation for
years to come.”
NBA
■ LeBron James i s
closing in on history. The
Miami Heat forward is 18
points away from becoming
the 38th player in NBA history to score 20,000 points,
with his next chance coming today when the reigning league champions visit
the Golden State Warriors.
The three-time MVP will
become the youngest to
score 20,000 points. He
will be 28 years, 17 days
old on Wednesday. According to STATS LLC, Kobe
Bryant was the youngest
to score that many, doing
so at the age of 29 years,
122 days. And only Bryant,
Wilt Chamberlain and
Michael Jordan scored
20,000 points before turning 30. It would seem likely that James reaches the
milestone in tonight’s game.
He’s scored more than 18
points in 74 of his last 75
contests.
Wire Reports
SUN SPA
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Rossville, GA / Chattanooga
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The Associated Press
Mike McCoy speaks on a headset during a news conference after being named coach of the San Diego Chargers on Tuesday in San Diego.
■ INDIANA 103, CHARLOTTE 76
Roy Hibbert had 18 points and seven
rebounds.
■ NEW ORLEANS 111, PHILADELPHIA 99
Greivis Vasquez scored 23 points and
Eric Gordon added 19.
■ BROOKLYN 113, TORONTO 106
Brook Lopez had 22 points and nine
rebounds, Joe Johnson and Deron Williams each scored 21 points.
■ L.A. CLIPPERS 117, HOUSTON 109
Jamal Crawford scored a season-high
30 points, including 12 straight.
■ DENVER 115, PORTLAND 111, OT
Wilson Chandler hit a tiebreaking 3pointer with 14.9 seconds remaining in
overtime and Denver beat Portland for its
season-best sixth consecutive victory.
■ MILWAUKEE AT L.A. LAKERS, LATE
706-866-0111
D4 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
HERITAGE 82, RIDGELAND 47
Ridgeland
13 8 13 13 — 47
Heritage
15 20 21 26 — 82
Ridgeland (47) — Phillips 6, Sizemore 4, Johnson,
Destiny Irvin 20, Hodges, Miller, Widener, Tiffany
Wimpey 10, K. Wimpey 3, Gravitt, Byrd 4.
Heritage (82) — Nadeja 3, Grant 5, Hixon, Alex
Belk 20, Jada Hubbard 17, Mullinax 2, April Evans
17, Roeder 2, Williams 3, Hayley McKinney 10,
Buckner 3.
3-point goals: Ridgeland 5 (Irvin 5); Heritage 13
(Evans 5, Belk 3, McKinney 2, Williams, Grant,
Nadeja). Records: Heritage 14-5, 1-3 7-AAAA.
Staff Photo by Connor Choate
Baylor 132-pound wrestler Nick Standefer attempts to pin Soddy-Daisy’s Coner
Stiles during their match Tuesday evening. Standefer ended up pinning Stiles and
Baylor won the dual 35-33.
Baylor edges Trojans
By Ward Gossett
Staff Writer
What Baylor called a
needed shot in the arm, host
Soddy-Daisy referred to as a
kick in the pants.
In a battle of two weakened state wrestling giants,
the visiting Red Raiders
pulled out a 35-33 victory
Tuesday.
Wrestling with seven starters out of the lineup, Baylor
got initial points in many of
the individual matches, won
the close matches and racked
up bonus points in four of
their eight wins against the
Trojans, who were missing
four starters.
“I told the kid to wrestle
as hard as we could and that
if we did that we could win
the dual,” Red Raiders coach
Ben Nelson said.
Michael Murphy (106),
Nick Standefer (132), Brandon Brunner (138) and Ryan
Parker (170) were responsible
for the bonus points. Parker
earned a technical fall; the
other three got pins.
“After we didn’t get bonus
points from [Brandon] Popp
and [Emory] Norred, the
guys pulled together,” Nelson
said. “Everyone fought.”
Popp and Norred were
among the night’s victors,
Popp getting his team a 3-0
advantage and a lead it would
never relinquish. It was a 32 decision over Branndon
Hunt, one of the handful of
Bearettes
rise to 17-1
CLEVELAND,
Tenn. — The Bradley
Central girls’ basketball
team improved to 17-1
for the season with a
56-21 District 5-AAA win
Tuesday against crosstown rival Cleveland.
The Lady Raiders
were without their top
four scorers for a violation of team rules, and
the Bearettes took full
advantage, leading all
the way.
Rebecca Reuter led
the Bearettes with 16
points, while Kayla
Withrow added 12. Anna
Ginestri had eight points
to lead the Lady Raiders
(12-5, 5-2).
—Gene Henley
Bears
• Continued from Page D1
while the Raiders struggled
to find quality shots and
started bickering among
themselves.
Guard C.J. Bryant led
Cleveland with 19 points,
while Thompson added 10.
“Our defense was good all
night,” Smith said. “Cleveland is going to make oneon-one shots because they’re
so athletic, but a lot of times
it’s an all-or-nothing shot so
we’re going to take advantage
of that.
“I didn’t think there was
any way 60 points was reachable after that first quarter,
but we took good shots and
it was a good complete victory.”
Contact Gene Henley at
ghenley@timesfreepress.com
or 423-757-6311. Follow him on
Twitter at twitter.com/genehenleytfp.
ONLINE
Read Ward Gossett’s
wrestling blog “The
Takedown” at www.
timesfreepress.com
close ones the Red Raiders
pulled out.
Parker followed Popp with
his technical fall that boosted
Baylor to an 8-0 advantage
before Garrett Alexander
pulled the Trojans within a
pair at 8-6.
However, the Red Raiders
responded with a backbreaking four straight wins —
decisions from Emory Norred (195), Jon Schmissrauter
(220) and Will Thomas (285)
before Murphy’s pin boosted
the lead to 23-6.
“The effort was there in
every match, and effort is
one of those things you can’t
coach,” Nelson said. “It gave
us a quality win over a tough
opponent, and it’s huge for
our morale.”
The coach pointed to the
heavyweight match — Thomas’ 5-3 win over fellow firstyear wrestler Cody Grant
— as a turning point.
“He’s a buddy of Brunner’s
and he wanted to wrestle to
help him get ready for football. He’s becoming an asset,”
Nelson said.
The Red Raiders tiptoed
around any emotional lifts
they might give the Trojans,
giving up forfeits at 120 to
two-time state champion
Jacob Stevens and at 126 to
sophomore sensation Tucker Russo. But they bumped
Standefer up a weight class
to 132 and Brunner to 138 and
got pins from each.
By the time the Trojans
got to their middle-of-thelineup stoppers — Gage
Richmond (145) and Turbo
Smith (152) — the match was
out of reach.
“I hope it’s a wakeup call.
I think it needed to happen,”
Trojans coach Jim Higgins
said. “Wrestling tells on you
and exposes your weaknesses. We had guys out of
the lineup, but so did they.
We had guys sick, but so did
they.”
Missing four regular
starters wasn’t the issue or
an excuse, Higgins emphasized.
“It was about pride, who
wants it worst, and I can’t
say the 14 that were out
there or were supposed to
be out there want it,” Higgins said. “Our problem
stems from complacency
in the practice room and
a lack of interest in what I
thought we had been working toward. I have not seen
what the coach of a quality
wrestling program should
be seeing.”
Contact Ward Gossett at
wgossett@timesfreepress.com
or 423-886-4765.
Worthington
wins for Bledsoe
By Kelley Smiddie
Staff Writer
Signal Mountain didn’t
seem to mind trying to
defend Bledsoe County’s
Jamal Worthington one-onone throughout the second
half of Tuesday’s District
7-AA boys’ high school
basketball game at Signal
Mountain. But in the end,
the Eagles were unable to
defend him one-on-five.
Worthington grabbed
B.J. Wilkerson’s shot out of
the air about the time the
clock ticked from 10 to nine
seconds in the fourth quarter of a tie game. Then the
senior drove the length of
the court and scored with
three seconds to play, lifting the Warriors past Signal
Mountain 58-56.
Coming into the game,
Bledsoe County (14-5, 6-1)
and Signal (11-9, 4-2) were
tied atop the district standings along with Sequatchie
County, which lost at Chattanooga Christian.
“We knew this was a big
ballgame for us,” Bledsoe
coach Mark Cagle said.
“Notre Dame, I feel, is a
sleeper team. Sequatchie
County has been playing
really good lately. Signal
could very well win out in
the district, too. We know
this is a big win.”
Worthington led Bledsoe
with 24 points.
“I almost called a timeout,” Cagle said. “But he’s a
senior that’s started for four
years. He knows what to do
in that situation.”
Signal Mountain looked
to clog Worthington’s driving lanes in the first half.
But the Warriors made six
3-point field goals against
the Eagles’ defense and took
a 36-26 lead at halftime.
“He’s a fantastic ballplayer, and they’ve got some
shooters on the wings,” Signal coach Steven Redman
said. “Everybody in the gym
knows what they’re going
to do. The second half they
pretty much went four low
and let him go one-on-one
and kick it or shoot it.”
The Warriors were ahead
— as much as 15 points —
from the time Taylor Warden made a steal and layup
to start the scoring in the
second quarter until Wilkerson made a 3-point shot
from the right wing with
1:37 remaining that made
it 56-56. When his team
got the ball back after two
missed free throws at the
1:20 mark, Redman called a
timeout with 1:05 to go.
“We wanted to run it
down and take the last shot,”
Redman said. “I didn’t want
to make it obvious. We got
B.J. one-on-one. We just got
it a little too early.”
Cagle had his team sitting
back in a zone until he recognized the Eagles had no
intention of attacking. Eventually he ordered his team
to come out of the zone and
match up man-to-man to
force the action around the
30-second mark, which ultimately led to Wilkerson’s
drive and miss.
Wilkerson led the Eagles
with 22 points. He nearly
made a fifth 3-point shot
when his 70-footer at the
buzzer hit the backboard
right beside the rim.
Warden gave Worthington support with 12 points
— all in the first half. Blake
McCloud’s 11 points were all
in the first three quarters.
Lannom Sewell worked
the pivot for 10 points and
10 rebounds for Signal. Jack
Teter also scored 10 points.
Contact Kelley Smiddie
at ksmiddie@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6653.
GORDON LEE 80, CHRISTIAN HERITAGE 34
Gordon Lee
21 25 21 13 — 80
Christian Heritage
2
8 17 7 — 34
Gordon Lee (80) — Katherine Chambers 15, Katelyn
Lee 13, Kassidy Blevins 10, Barger 8, Kimbrell 5,
McEhlaney 5, Clayton 5, Holland 4, Weldon 3, Pettigrew 3, Holcomb 2, Bohannon 2, Thomas 2, M.
Lee 2, Sallee 1.
Christian Heritage (34) — Massengale 9, Tipton 9,
Leonard 5, Poag 3, McDonald 3, Greene 2, McKinney 2, Jones.
3-point goals: Gordon Lee 6 (Chambers 3, Blevins,
Kimbrell, Weldon); Christian Heritage 5 (Tipton 3,
Leonard, Poag). Other highlights: Blevins 7 a (GL).
Records: Gordon Lee 13-4, 4-1 6-A; Christian Heritage 5-12, 2-2.
CHATTANOOGA CHRISTIAN 48,
SEQUATCHIE COUNTY 45
Sequatchie County 13 15 6 11 — 45
Chattanooga Christian 13 4
9 22 — 48
Sequatchie County (45) — Frederick 18, K. Key 14,
Smith 11, Adams, M. Key, Davenport, Hobbs.
CCS (48) — Joanna Smith 25, Hughes 6, Sabourin 9,
Loyal 4, Dirkse 4, Delashmitt, Davis, Balch, Click.
3-point goals: Sequatchie 3 (K. Key 3); CCS 1 (Sabourin). Records: CCS 10-9, 2-3 7-AA.
BRADLEY CENTRAL 56, CLEVELAND 21
Bradley Central
16 20 17 3 — 56
Cleveland
6
7
6 2 — 21
Bradley Central (56) — Taylor Withrow 12, Carroll 3,
Donaldson 8, Whitted 5, Copeland 9, Thompson 3,
Rebecca Reuter 16, Hill, Davis, Stallings, Delane,
Pippenger.
Cleveland (21) — Ginestri 8, Scoggins 7, Saliba 2,
McClendon 4, Ware, Geren, Crump, Walkup, Phillips.
3-point goals: Bradley 8 (Withrow 4, Donaldson 2,
Carroll, Thompson); Cleveland none. Records: Bradley
17-1, 7-0 5-AAA; Cleveland 12-5, 5-2.
MEIGS COUNTY 94, SILVERDALE BAPTIST 43
Silverdale
7
9
9 18 — 43
Meigs County
23 32 30 9 — 94
Silverdale Baptist (43) — Alosi 3, Mariah Massengill
16, Lewis 7, Chambers 9, Woodard 8, Smith, Redmond 2, Pike, Sims 2, Skelton 5.
Meigs County (94) — Hampton 9, Emileigh Swafford
25, Taylor Boggess 17, Davis 6, Brandi Kilpatrick 16,
Woods 8, Dawson 4, Lewis 5, Layman 4, Perkinson,
Holmes, Patterson.
3-point goals: Silverdale 3 (Lewis, Woodard, Massengill); Meigs 7 (Swafford 3, Hampton, Boggess, Lewis,
Layman). Record: Meigs County 17-4.
SALE CREEK 39, GRACE ACADEMY 36
Grace Academy
10 9 10 7 — 36
Sale Creek
7 15 8 9 — 39
Grace Academy (36) — Sierra Nunley 12, Claire
McMasters 10, Mouw 5, Bonner 6, Compton 3,
Goodman.
Sale Creek (39) — Erin Hill 14, Wolff 9, Crowder 9,
Hodge 3, Storey 4, Price, Welch, Hixson.
3-point goals: Grace 4 (Nunley 2, Compton, Mouw);
Sale Creek 4 (Wolff 3, Hill). Other highlights: Hill 12 r;
Wolff 2 late-game 3s (SC). Record: Sale Creek 9-4.
BRAINERD 47, CENTRAL 37
Central
5 15 8 9 — 37
Brainerd
12 14 6 15 — 47
Central (37) — India Corley 11, S. Jones 1, Rogers 9,
Davis 4, Powell 2, Sylman 8, Mitchell 2, McReynolds.
Brainerd (47) — Anisha Douglas 11, Jamelia Rowland
10, Jamee Ward 17, Walker 7, Ellis 2, Robinson,
Woods.
3-point goals: Central 4 (Rogers 3, Corley); Brainerd 2
(Douglas, Ward). Other highlights: Rowland 11 r; Jakira Walker 4 b (B). Records: Brainerd 9-9, 6-3 6-AA.
HAMILTON HEIGHTS 70,
CHATTANOOGA PATRIOTS 23
Hamilton Heights
18 21 12 19 — 70
Patriots
0 11 7 5 — 23
Hamilton Heights (70) — Augusta Kieviskate 20, Teodora Zagorac 14, Ima Akpan 12, Nwosu 2, Madzarevic
8, Savickaite 6, Savic 6, Nichols 2, Paulauskaite.
Chattanooga Patriots (23) — Kathryn Broadwell 10,
R. Hill 8, Contorino 5, Bontekoe, Mitchell, S. Hill,
Denton, Mulroney.
3-point goals: Hamilton Heights 6 (Kieviskate 4,
Zagorac 2); Patriots 4 (Broadwell 2, R. Hill 2). Record:
Hamilton Heights 14-3.
HOWARD 60, RED BANK 29
Red Bank
8
4 12 5 — 29
Howard
15 18 14 13 — 60
Red Bank (29) — Babb 7, Russell 3, Usher 2, Jones,
Jasmine Simpson 11, Hughes 4, Maddox 2.
Howard (60) — Jeshayla King 11, Deronisha Smartt
18, Tyreshia Rollins 10, Robinson 6, Davis 6, Fitch 2.
3-point goals: Red Bank 2 (Babb, Russell); Howard 1
(King). Records: Howard 8-2, 8-0 6-AA.
WALKER VALLEY 54, RHEA COUNTY 51
Walker Valley
8 14 13 19 — 54
Rhea
12 13 16 10 — 51
Walker Valley (54) — Victoria Jones 10, Percy 2,
Peyton Davis 12, Macon 4, Griffith 7, Alomar 7, W.
Watson 12, Pitner, Beavers, Mowery.
Rhea County (51) — Revis 3, Loden 4, Miles 2, Wallis
9, Thurman 3, Julie Brown 13, Thompson 5, Amber
Levi 12, Freeman, Purser.
3-point goals: Walker Valley 12 (Davis 4, Watson 3,
Jones 2, Griffith 2, Alomar); Rhea 7 (Levi 3, Thompson, Brown, Wallis, Revis). Records: Rhea County
14-6, 3-4 5-AAA.
EAST HAMILTON 57, TYNER 47
Tyner
14 9
8 16 — 47
East Hamilton
14 15 21 7 — 57
Tyner (47) — D. Parks 14, Smith 9, McElvain 7, Speight 6, Montgomery 6, Turner 3, Garth 2, Hudgins.
East Hamilton (57) — Jessica Caudle 14, Juliette
Harp 10, Lexi Zackery 13, K. Caudle 7, Moon 6,
Woods 5, McCullum 2, Giles, Petitt, Montgomery.
3-point goals: Tyner 4 (Parks 2, McElvain, Montgomery); East Hamilton 5 (J. Caudle 3, K. Caudle,
Zackery). Records: East Hamilton 11-6, 6-0 6-AA;
Tyner 4-11, 2-5.
CALHOUN 65, ARMUCHEE 42
Armurchee
8 16 8 10 — 42
Calhoun
13 14 24 14 — 65
Armurchee (42) — Burnette 2, Jess Ann Nix 12,
Shore 9, Boozer 4, Mary Bess Skinner 10, Hammond
5, Chapman, Tibbetts.
Calhoun (65) — M. Palmer 6, Roe 7, Carney 1,
Wright 3, Bree Walraven 11, Wade 3, Taylor Palmer
12, Parker 8, Davis 2, Carly Curtis 10, McDaniel,
Carpenter, Greeson, Walker, Carter.
3-point goals: Armuchee 5 (Nicks 3, Skinner 2);
Calhoun 6 (Walraven 3, Roe, Curtis, Parker). Records:
Calhoun 14-1, 6-0 7-AA.
LAKEVIEW-FORT OGLETHORPE 63,
ADAIRSVILLE 33
Adairsville
10 3 11 9 — 33
Lakeview-F.O.
15 15 17 16 — 63
Adairsville (33) — Davis 4, Howren 3, Roberson 3,
Kuhrt 5, Collum 8, King 5, Hice 5, Weeks, Adams,
Cole, Bramblett.
LFO (63) — Aubrey Clemons 20, Courtney Crawford
19, Swint 2, Mabry 6, Lewis 4, Franklin 4, Grubb 2,
Harris 4, Nabors 2, Johnson, Oliver, Silmon, Shelly.
3-point goals: Adairsville 3 (King, Roberson, Davis);
LFO 4 (Clemons 3, Crawford). Records: LFO 7-9,
4-3 5-AAA.
NOTRE DAME 51, GRUNDY COUNTY 39
Notre Dame
12 5 20 14 — 51
Grundy
8 11 5 15 — 39
Notre Dame (51) — Morgan Cantrell 13, D. Lundquist
2, Gadd 8, Higgins 2, Bouchard 1, Gaines 9, Keonna
Beaman 16, Ripper, S. Lundquist.
Grundy (39) — Sartain 2, Kristen Hill 12, Arbuckle 2,
Burrows 3, Eads 2, Rogers 7, Mikayla Williams 11,
Nance, Seals.
3-point goals: Notre Dame 5 (Gaines 3, Cantrell 2);
Grundy County 5 (Williams 3, Rogers, Burrows).
Records: Notre Dame 14-4, 5-0 7-AA; Grundy County
5-17, 4-4.
The Night’s Stars
■ Sara Griffith, GPS: She bowled a 684 series as the
Bruisers beat Donelson Christian Academy 20-7 and had
games of 203 and 192 in a 20-7 win over Father Ryan as
the 2012 Division II state champions sealed their return to
the state tournament.
■ Sam Welsh, Gordon Lee: He hit five 3-pointers in a 26point night as the Trojans escaped Christian Heritage with a
63-60 basketball win.
■ Joanna Smith, Chattanooga Christian: She led the
Lady Chargers to a 48-45 comeback win over Sequatchie
County with 25 points.
■ D’Mondta Smith, Hixson: He had 27 points and a
career-high 26 rebounds in a 59-50 loss to East Ridge.
■ Tyler Lowery and Cody Knox, East Hamilton: Lowery
hit the game-winning three-point play and Knox scored a
game-high 27 points in a double-overtime 71-69 win over
Tyner.
VAN BUREN 64, ARTS & SCIENCES 37
Van Buren
16 14 20 14 — 64
CSAS
5 12 7 9 — 37
Van Buren (64) — Lakelyn Bouldin 21, Carly Cole
11, Grissom 9, H. Christian 2, Hitchcock 6, Evans 2,
McCoy 6, S. Christian 2, Hankins 5.
Arts & Sciences (37) — Samantha Massett 12, K. Billen 9, Little 2, McElvain 2, Mitchell 3, Montgomery 1,
R. Billen 2, Smith 6, Ealey, Kinnard, Lee, Patmon.
3-point goals: Van Buren 4 (Cole 3, Grissom); CSAS
1 (Massett).
HIXSON 53, EAST RIDGE 32
Hixson
6 21 12 14 _ 53
East Ridge
6 10 5 11 _ 32
Hixson (53) — T.T. Staton 15, Marissa Hill 12, Taylor
6, Ty Harmon 14, Gates 2, Massengale 2, McClellan
2, Nelson, Johnson, Raber.
East Ridge (32) — Aisha Taylor 10, Brittany Hubbard
11, McKibben 5, Lawrence 2, Tate 2, Epps 2, Finley,
Moon, Norwood, Davoren.
3-point goals Hixson 3 (Harmon 3); East Ridge 2
(Taylor 2). Other highlights: Staton 11 r; Taylor 8 a (H).
Records: Hixson 8-8, 4-3 6-AA.
BLEDSOE COUNTY 58, SIGNAL MOUNTAIN 43
Bledsoe
14 12 20 12 — 58
Signal Mountain
8
9 17 9 — 43
Bledsoe County (58) — Lequire 9, Gilbert 5, Smith 6,
Hannah, Morris, Anna Peters 15, Catherine Dairs 13,
Briley Stults 10, Frechette, Cunningham, Walker.
Signal Mountain (43) — Peterson, Allen, Aryn Sanders
18, Whitmire 6, Anna Althaus 11, Bledsoe, Northrup,
Leun, Heisser, McGowan 8, Feldhoff.
3-point goals: Bledsoe County 4 (Stults 2, Gilbert,
Dairs); Signal Mountain 2 (Sanders, Althaus). Records:
Signal Mountain 6-13, 0-6 7-AA.
BOYS’ BASKETBALL
RINGGOLD 63, SONORAVILLE 52
Sonoraville
14 9 10 19 — 52
Ringgold
15 17 15 16 — 63
Sonoraville (52) — Murray 11, Dickey 11, Baker,
Nguyen 2, Johnson 4, Slaton 4, Selman 7, Wilson,
Cheeks 13.
Ringgold (63) — Joey Roach 5, J.T. Roach 2, Sholl 5,
Lovain 6, Zach Dean 13, Sosebee 1, Tyler Adams 17,
Brown 2, Dakota Baer 13.
3-point goals: Sonoraville 2 (Dickey 2); Ringgold 5
(Dean 2, Jo. Roach, Lovain, Adams). Records: Ringgold 8-9, 4-3 5-AAA.
HAMILTON HEIGHTS 58,
CHATTANOOGA PATRIOTS 52
Hamilton Heights
15 17 16 10 — 58
Chattanooga
16 12 5 19 — 52
Hamilton Heights (58) — Mandic 8, Osemwegie,
Ahmed Haji 13, Johnoy Mongero 11, Carson Reno
10, Jovanovic, Balogun 2, Rokas Paulauskas 11,
Vaituas 3.
Chattanooga (52) — Birkhead 4, Porter, Fears 5,
Aaron Ambrosetti 13, Donovan Jones 19, Kindiger
2, Howard 9.
3-point goals: Hamilton Heights 9 (Haji 3, Reno
3, Montero, Vaituas); Chattanooga 7 (Ambrosetti 3,
Jones 2, Fears, Birkhead).
Other highlights: Paulauskas 17 r (HH). Records:
Hamilton Heights 8-6.
OOLTEWAH 60, McMINN COUNTY 52
McMinn County
12 10 13 19 — 52
Ooltewah
8 16 19 17 — 60
McMinn County (52) — Quentin Versa 11, Ty Jones
12, Bo Marshall 11, Austin Hayes 10, Martin 2,
Simpson 4, Edgemon.
Ooltewah (60) — Antonio Jackson 19, Robinson 9,
Ware 2, Maston 2, Presley 6, Fritz 7, Boyd 4, Tucker
Bass 12, King 2.
3-point goals: McMinn County 5 (Marshall 3, Hayes 2);
Ooltewah 9 (Bass 4, Presley 2, Fritz, Robinson, Jackson). Other highlights: Bass 4 3-pointers in 4th period
(O). Records: Ooltewah 13-4, 6-0 5-AAA.
NOTRE DAME 83, GRUNDY COUNTY 49
Notre Dame
29 16 19 19 — 83
Grundy County
9 14 18 8 — 49
Notre Dame (83) — Kareem Orr 24, Stedmon Ford 25,
Green 9, Byrd 8, Davenport 3, Flemister 3, Harris 7,
Mink 4, Darras, Davis.
Grundy County (49) — Austin Cooper 13, Holland 2,
Smart 4, T. Hampton 8, J. Campbell 4, Bramhall 4,
D. Hampton 2, Miller 8, Rheal 4, Dickerson, Meeks,
Rankin.
3-point goals: Notre Dame 9 (5 Ford, 4 Orr); Grundy
County none. Records: Notre Dame 12-7, 2-2 7-AA;
Grundy County 4-12, 1-4.
EAST RIDGE 59, HIXSON 50
Hixson
9 15 10 16 — 50
East Ridge
20 12 17 10 — 59
Hixson (50) — Nelson 3, D’Mondta Smith 27, Hayes 3,
Diaz 4, Murphy 1, Abbott 8, Novene 4, Alameda.
East Ridge (59) — Kolbe King 18, Derrick Davidson
12, Eddie Hitchcock 15, Jones 8, J. Johnson 6, Tillery,
Davis, Talley, Hendrix, Millener.
3-point goals: Hixson 3 (Abbott 2, Hayes); East Ridge
8 (King 3, Hitchcock 3, Davidson, Johnson). Other
highlights: Smith career-high 26 r (H), Records: East
Ridge 8-10, 4-4 6-AA; Hixson 7-12, 1-6.
HERITAGE 56, RIDGELAND 52
Ridgeland
14 12 10 16 — 52
Heritage
13 6 15 22 — 56
Ridgeland (52) — Smith 8, Gannon Harris 24, Fortson 2, McLin 5, Jackson 6, Nicholas 4, Rutledge
3, Bolton.
Heritage (56) — Gaines 6, Cameron Sherlin 18,
Hamilton 6, Carter 2, Cody Sanders 15, Buchanan,
Gibson 4, Smith 5, Meroney.
3-point goals: Ridgeland 5 (Harris 2, Jackson 2, Rutledge); Heritage 3 (Sherlin 2, Smith). Other highlights:
Sherlin 9 4th-qtr. pts; Sanders 11 r (H). Records:
Heritage 8-9, 2-2 7-AAAA.
WALKER VALLEY 61, RHEA COUNTY 54
Walker Valley
11 17 13 20 — 61
Rhea County
12 9 14 19 — 54
Walker Valley (61) — Tucker Godfrey 12, Harwood 6,
Caio Hysinger 15, Melton 3, Cartwright 8, Lukas 7,
Jackson Brownfield 10.
Rhea County (54) — G. Hill 2, Jalen Smith 29, D. Patterson 5, Hall 3, Nick McWherter 13, Jenkins 2.
3-point goals: Walker Valley 5 (Hysinger 2, Godfrey,
Melton, Cartrwright); Rhea County 1 (Smith).
GORDON LEE 63, CHRISTIAN HERITAGE 60
Gordon Lee
11 15 25 12 — 63
Christian Heritage
10 16 20 14 — 60
Gordon Lee (63) — Brooks 9, Cody Wilson 13, Royal
1, Norton, Wright 3, McCallister 1, L. O’Neal 4, Armour
3, C. O’Neal 3, Sam Welsh 26.
Christian Heritage (60) — Jackson 2, Will Patterson
16, Crawford 2, Michael McKinney 16, Carver 2,
McEntyre 2, Tidwell 4, Cameron Locke 11, Townsend
5.
3-point goals: Gordon Lee 9 (Welsh 5, Brooks, Wilson,
Wright, L. O’Neal); Christian Heritage 9 (Patterson 4,
Locke 3, Townsend, Tidwell). Records: Gordon Lee
8-9, 3-2 6-A.
BRADLEY CENTRAL 59, CLEVELAND 44
Bradley Central
3 17 19 20 — 59
Cleveland
7 12 16 9 — 44
Bradley Central (59) — Clark 6, Bryce Copeland 12,
Logan Cox 15, Bentley 8, Terrell 3, Cain 4, Matthew
Whitmire 11.
Cleveland (44) — C.J. Bryant 19, Ware 2, Kendrick
Thompson 10, Beaty, Scott 5, Brown, Little, Johnson
6, Jones 2.
3-point goals: Bradley 5 (Cox 3, Bentley, Terrell);
Cleveland 6 (Bryant 3, Thompson 2, Scott). Other
highlights: Bryce Copeland 9 r, 3 a; Whitmire 5 a, 2 b;
Cox 4 a (BC); Jahmal Johnson 8 r; D.J. Jones 6 r, 6
a; Bryant, Kendrick Thompson each 5 r (C). Records:
Bradley 10-8, 5-2 5-AAA; Cleveland 11-7, 4-2.
ADAIRSVILLE 57,
LAKEVIEW-FORT OGLETHORPE 48
Adairsville
18 13 6 20 — 57
Lakeview-F.O.
9 11 13 15 — 48
Adairsville (57) — Tyler Washington 13, Print 3,
Greenfield 9, Davis 6, Kyle Adams 10, Moore, Childers
6, Pitt 2, Frazier 8.
Lakeview-Fort Oglethorpe (48) — Alec Rattanaxay
10, Daniel Parrish 18, Shutters, Paige 3, Crawford
3, O’Connell, Keefe, Evans 8, Oliver, Ja. Evatt, Je.
Evatt, Britt 6.
3-point goals: Adairsville 3 (Adams 3); LFO 5 (Parris 4,
Crawford). Other highlights: Oliver 7 r; Evans 7 r (LFO).
Record: Lakeview-Fort Oglethorpe 5-9.
HOWARD 79, RED BANK 44
Red Bank
8 16 12 8 — 44
Howard
36 12 23 8 — 79
Red Bank (44) — Davis 2, Fred Matthews 17, Hudson 2, McConnell 3, Kobe Suttles 12, Beavers 8,
Sigmund, Archer.
Howard (79) — Smith 8, Cameron 8, Chris Walton
10, Xavier Harris 10, Brandon Walters 23, McCallie
8, Young 4, Jarrett 4, Wynn 2, Norwood 2, Brummett,
Brown, Byrd.
3-point goals: Red Bank 6 (Matthews 4, Suttles 2);
Howard 3 (Walton 2, Cameron). Record: Howard
14-3.
BRAINERD 71, CENTRAL 49
Central
15 9 13 12 — 49
Brainerd
21 18 22 10 — 71
Central (49) — David Holley 13, Dewaun Swafford 11,
Cobb 7, Te. Tiller 4, Tramel 4, Stewart 5, Hill 3, Morgan
2, Tr. Tiller, Lewis, Montgomery, Smith.
Brainerd (71) — Orlando Moore 24, Jay Besley 16,
Marques Tipton 13, Cooper 7, Glenn 4, Deme. Otis 2,
Dema. Otis 2, Stubbs 2, Bass 1, Swopshire.
3-point goals: Central 7 (Swafford 3, Holley 2, Cobb,
Hill); Brainerd 5 (Besley 4, Tipton). Other highlights:
Besley 11 a (B). Records: Brainerd 11-8, 6-3 6-AA.
MEIGS COUNTY 66, SILVERDALE BAPTIST 55
Silverdale
7 26 9 13 — 55
Meigs County
17 18 20 11 — 66
Silverdale Baptist Academy (55) — Delaschmitt 4,
Strawn 9, Keylon, Boggess, Spencer Mossburg 15,
Clements 7, Dye 5, John Hall 12.
Meigs County (66) — DeAndre Clark 13, Baker 8, Levi
Woods 21, Letner 2, Spradling 9, Rayl 2, Skidmore,
Sherman 4, Powers 6.
3-point goals: Silverdale 6 (Strawn 2, Mossburg 2,
Dye, Hall); Meigs 3 (Spradling 2, Woods). Records:
Meigs County 9-12.
VAN BUREN 63, ARTS & SCIENCES 55
Van Buren
14 8 16 25 — 63
CSAS
10 16 17 12 — 55
Van Buren (63) — Tyler Turner 30, Garin Delon 14,
Shockley 3, Walling 7, LeFevre 3, Hale, Roberts.
Arts & Sciences (55) — Hamilton 3, Moorer 6, Chaison Gordon 21, Houston 3, Brown 6, Davenport 4,
Nick Moore 12, Carter, O’Hara, Woods.
3-point goals: Van Buren 4 (Shockley 3, Walling);
CSAS 4 (Gordon 2, Brown 2). Records: Van Buren
County 6-11, 5-1 6-A; Arts & Sciences 8-8, 3-1.
CHATTANOOGA CHRISTIAN 38,
SEQUATCHIE COUNTY 29
Sequatchie
3 12 3 11 — 29
CCS
8 10 5 15 — 38
Sequatchie (29) — Tucker 8, Chandler 4, Austin
McGowan 12, Dempsey 5, Hobbs, Grant, Turner,
Harmon.
Chattanooga Christian (38) — Jones 2, Card 2,
Aldridge 2, Josh Fikkert 10, Tucker Youngblood 10,
Clark Marshall 12, Moore, Matthews, Conraddy.
3-point goals: Sequatchie 6 (McGowan 3, Tucker
2, Chandler); CCS (none). Records: Chattanooga
Christian 7-14, 2-4 7-AA.
EAST HAMILTON 71, TYNER 69 (2 OT)
Tyner
6 10 19 14 11 9 — 69
East Hamilton
13 7 13 16 11 11 — 71
Tyner (69) — Sadik Spence 12, Jemicah Bowman 18,
Alex Watson 13, Watson 6, Bridgeman 8, Jones 3,
Hardwick 6, L Rollins 3, Waller, D. Rollins.
East Hamilton (71) — Tyler Lowery 11, Dominic Powell
11, Bunton 4, Herndon 3, Cody Knox 27, Dennis 4,
Ladarius Watkins 11.
3-point goals: Tyner 2 (Bowman); East Hamilton 3
(Lowery, Herndon, Knox). Other highlights: Lowery
4 s, game-winning putback with 0:03 remaining in
second overtime to win; Powell 7 a; Watkins 13 r (EH).
Records: East Hamilton 12-3, 5-1 6-AA.
BLEDSOE COUNTY 58, SIGNAL MOUNTAIN 56
Bledsoe
17 19 14 8 — 58
Signal Mountain
18 8 16 14 — 56
Bledsoe County (58) — Jamal Worthington 24, Campbell 4, Hale 5, Blake McCloud 11, Frechette 2, Cagle,
Boynton, Taylor Warden 12.
Signal Mountain (56) — Reese, Challener 8, Jack
Teter 10, B.J. Wilkerson 22, Lannom Sewell 10, Guiterrez, Hensley 2, Hodge 4, Moon.
3-point goals: Bledsoe County 8 (McCloud 3,
Worthington 2, Warden 2, Hale); Signal Mountain 5
(Wilkerson 2, Teter). Other highlights: Worthington
game-winning FG with 0:03 left, 3 b (BC); Sewell 10
r, Wilkerson 8 r (SM). Records: Bledsoe County 14-5,
6-1 7-AA; Signal Mountain 11-9, 4-2.
WRESTLING
BAYLOR 35, SODDY-DAISY 33
(Meet started at 160 pounds)
106 — Michael Murphy (B) pinned Jacob McClure,
1:34; 113 — Chase Payne (SD) dec. Jack Reynolds,
7-3; 120 — Jacob Stevens (SD) won by forfeit; 126
— Tucker Russo (SD) won by forfeit; 132 — Nick
Standefer (B) pinned Coner Stiles, 1:47; 138 — Brandon Brunner (B) pinned Austin Williamson, 1:40; 145
— Gage Richmond (SD) pinned Turner Troxel, 0:33;
152 — Turbo Smith (SD) pinned Aldon Garron, 1:47;
160 — Bryson Popp (B) dec. Branndon Hunt, 3-2; 170
— Ryan Parker (B) tech. fall over Hunter Maynor, 5:50;
182 — Garrett Alexander (SD) pinned Winston Cooper, 1:31; 195 — Emory Norred (B) dec. Tyler Hixson,
10-3; 220 — Jon Schmissrauter (B) dec. Luke Reno,
6-3; 285 — Will Thomas (B) dec. Cody Grant, 5-3.
Records: Baylor 14-3; Soddy-Daisy 15-3.
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Summitt
fundraiser
announced
COLLEGE BASKETBALL REPORT
MEN’S TOP 25
The Associated Press
KNOXVILLE — Pat
Summitt says she is “honored” that the Southeastern
Conference is holding a “We
Back Pat” week for the second straight year to support
her foundation and fight
Alzheimer’s disease.
The former Tennessee coach spoke at a news
conference Tuesday at the
Women’s Basketball Hall of
Fame announcing fundraising events in conjunction
with “We Back Pat” week.
She didn’t take questions.
At every SEC women’s
basketball game this week,
players are wearing “We
Back Pat” T-shirts during
pregame warmups.
Last year’s “We Back
Pat” week funded separate
$28,000 grants to the University of Tennessee’s Cole
Neuroscience Center and
Alzheimer’s Tennessee. Fans
can donate $10 to the foundation by texting the word
“COACH” to the number
50555. The foundation is selling “We Back Pat” T-shirts,
wristbands and other items
at www.patsummitt.org.
Auburn shows
signs of progress
in 3-game streak
The Associated Press
AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn
has shown signs of life in a
season that began with more
struggles.
The Tigers have won three
straight games and six of eight
since a 2-5 start.
They’ve also opened 2-0 in
the Southeastern Conference
for the first time since since
Cliff Ellis’ team that won two
games in the 2003 NCAA
tournament.
Center Rob Chubb says
the Tigers “all of a sudden
started pulling in the same
direction.”
It might have started with
a two-point loss to No. 23 Illinois in Chicago.
Since then, Auburn has
beaten Florida State, LSU
and won at South Carolina
— teams with a combined 2915 record.
UT
• Continued from Page D1
Mays and Wiltjer inflicted the most significant damage.
A graduate student who
played at North Carolina
State for two years and averaged 14 points per game at
Wright State last season,
Mays sank two 3-pointers
from nearly identical spots
on the left wing near Kentucky’s bench to give the
Wildcats (11-5, 2-1) a 64-58
lead.
Wiltjer took it from there,
as the lone leftover from last
year’s national championship team made two awkward shots and split a pair
of free throws to push the
lead to seven.
Freshman Nerlens Noel’s
dunk with 58 seconds left
was the finishing touch,
though Tennessee added to
its late-game misery when
Josh Richardson badly
missed two free throws
after a flagrant foul and Trae
Golden’s layup spun out.
“They did a good job of
making plays,” Vols coach
Cuonzo Martin said. “I
thought our guys put ourselves in position and just
didn’t capitalize. I thought
we were aggressive.”
Wiedmer
• Continued from Page D1
The Associated Press
Mississippi guard Marshall Henderson, left, drives past Vanderbilt guard Kevin
Bright on Tuesday in Nashville.
1. Louisville
vs. No. 6 Syracuse, Saturday
2. Indiana
lost to Wisconsin 64-59
■ Recap:
3. Duke
vs. Georgia Tech, Thursday
4. Kansas
at Texas, Saturday
5. Michigan
at No. 9 Minnesota, Thursday
6. Syracuse
at No. 1 Louisville, Saturday
7. Arizona
at Arizona State, Saturday
8. Gonzaga
at Portland, Thursday
9. Minnesota
vs. No. 5 Michigan, Thursday
10. Florida
at Texas A&M, Thursday
11. Ohio State
at No. 18 Michigan State, Saturday
12. Creighton
beat Northern Iowa 79-68
■ Recap: Doug McDermott scored 21 of his 31 points in the
second half.
13. Butler
vs. Richmond, Today
14. N.C. State
at Maryland, Today
15. San Diego State
vs. UNLV, Today
16. Kansas State
at TCU, Today
17. Missouri
vs. Georgia, Today
18. Michigan State
at Penn State, Today
19. New Mexico
at Boise State, Today
20. Notre Dame
lost to St. John’s 67-63
■ Recap: JaKarr Sampson scored 14 of his 17 points in the first
half, and and St. John’s handed Notre Dame its second straight loss.
21. Oregon
at Southern Cal, Thursday
22. VCU
vs. Saint Joseph’s, Thursday
23. Illinois
vs. Northwestern, Thursday
24. UCLA
vs. Oregon State, Thursday
25. Marquette
vs. Seton Hall, Today
Ole Miss rallies in OT
By Teresa M. Walker
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — Marshall
Henderson’s desperation
heave beat the buzzer to force
overtime, and Nick Williams’
jumper put the Mississippi
Rebels ahead to stay in rallying to beat Vanderbilt 89-79
Tuesday night for their sixth
straight win.
The Rebels (14-2, 3-0)
extended the Southeastern
Conference’s longest winning
streak by winning in Memorial Gym for the first time since
2001, and they had to do it by
rallying from 13 points with
8:39 left.
Kevin Bright hit the
Commodores’ 17th 3, giving
Vandy a 78-75 lead with 3.2
seconds left in regulation.
Henderson flung the ball at
the basket from about 35 feet
away, and he ran around the
court celebrating. Williams
hit his jumper with 4:34 left
in overtime, and the Rebels
outscored Vanderbilt 11-1 in
overtime to snap the Commodores’ five-game winning
streak in this series.
Vanderbilt (6-9, 0-3) set a
Memorial Gym record hitting 17 3-pointers but couldn’t
overcome poor free throw
shooting (10 of 23).
Henderson finished with
a game-high 26 points for the
MISSISSIPPI 89,
VANDERBILT 79, OT
MISSISSIPPI (14-2)
Buckner 6-9 2-2 14, Holloway 4-8 4-7 12,
White 4-5 0-1 9, Henderson 7-17 8-10 26,
Summers 5-10 4-5 14, Newby 0-0 0-0 0,
Millinghaus 2-5 0-0 4, Perez 1-1 0-0 3,
Williams 3-7 0-0 6, Jones 0-0 1-2 1. Totals
32-62 19-27 89.
VANDERBILT (6-9)
Odom 3-6 0-2 9, Jeter 4-8 3-7 13, Moats
1-4 0-3 2, Johnson 6-14 2-2 19, Parker 5-9
4-7 16, Fuller 1-6 0-0 3, Bright 4-9 0-0 12,
Siakam 0-0 0-0 0, Henderson 2-2 1-2 5.
Totals 26-58 10-23 79.
——
Halftime—Vanderbilt 41-40. End Of Regulation—Tied 78. 3-Point Goals—Mississippi
6-18 (Henderson 4-11, Perez 1-1, White 1-1,
Millinghaus 0-1, Williams 0-2, Summers 0-2),
Vanderbilt 17-40 (Johnson 5-11, Bright 4-7,
Odom 3-6, Parker 2-3, Jeter 2-6, Fuller 1-5,
Moats 0-2). Fouled Out—Odom. Rebounds—
Mississippi 38 (Buckner 11), Vanderbilt 35
(Moats 8). Assists—Mississippi 9 (Holloway,
Summers 3), Vanderbilt 20 (Johnson 8). Total
Fouls—Mississippi 16, Vanderbilt 18. Technical—Vanderbilt Bench. A—8,851.
Rebels who are 3-0 in league
play for the first time since
2005-06 and now have their
best start since opening the
2007-08 season 15-1. Jarvis
Summers added 14 points,
and Reginald Buckner posted a double-double with 14
points and 11 rebounds.
The Rebels improved to 647 against Vandy in Nashville
by finishing the game on a 3512 run including overtime.
Vanderbilt had its chances
to close out the game in regulation, but the Commodores
lost their third straight and
fifth in six games by missing
five straight free throws when
they had a chance to protect
the lead.
They managed only three
3-pointers in the final 5 minutes of regulation, topping
the 16 3-pointers Vanderbilt
had against South Carolina
in 1994 and against Arkansas
in 1994. They just missed the
team record of 18 made 3s set
Jan. 18, 2005, at Tennessee. Six
different Commodores hit at
least a 3-pointer apiece.
Kedren Johnson led Vandy
with 19 points, including 5 of
11 beyond the arc. Dai-Jon
Parker, in his first career start,
added 16, Sheldon Jeter had 13
and Bright finished with 12.
With the Commodores
shooting away from outside,
the Rebels dominated inside
the paint outscoring Vandy
44-16 down low. They needed
every bit.
Ole Miss came in fourth in
the SEC and 34th nationally
holding opponents to 38.2
percent shooting and 10th in
holding them to 26 percent
from 3-point range. The Rebels just couldn’t stop Vanderbilt no matter how far out the
Commodores shot.
The teams finished with
11 lead changes and five ties.
Vanderbilt had its biggest
lead at 67-54 on a layup by
Josh Henderson before going
cold.
The Associated Press
St. John’s Chris Obekpa (12) fights for a rebound
against Notre Dame’s Cameron Biedscheid (1)
on Tuesday. St. John’s won 67-63.
WOMEN’S TOP 25
1. Baylor
at Kansas State, Today
2. Notre Dame
beat Georgetown 79-64
■ Recap: Kayla McBride scored 17 points, and Skylar Diggins had
15 points and nine assists.
3. UConn
beat No. 15 Louisville 72-58
■ Recap: Stefanie Dolson and Bria Hartley each scored 16 points
to lead Connecticut.
4. Duke
vs. Virginia Tech, Today
5. Kentucky
vs. Mississippi State, Thursday
6. Stanford
vs. No. 14 UCLA, Friday
7. California
vs. Southern Cal, Thursday
8. Penn State
vs. Wisconsin, Thursday
9. Tennessee
at Auburn, Thursday
10. Maryland
vs. N.C. State, Thursday
11. North Carolina
vs. Virginia, Thursday
12. Purdue
vs. Minnesota, Thursday
13. Georgia
at Arkansas, Thursday
14. UCLA
at No. 6 Stanford, Friday
15. Louisville
lost to No. 3 UConn 72-58
16. Oklahoma
lost to No. 24 Iowa State 82-61
■ Recap: Hallie Christofferson scored 24 points, and Nikki Moody
had 20 points and 13 assists.
17. Oklahoma State
vs. No. 24 Iowa State, Sunday
18. Dayton
vs. La Salle, Today
19. South Carolina
vs. LSU, Thursday
20. Texas A&M
at No. 13 Georgia, Sunday
21. Colorado
vs. Arizona State, Friday
22. Florida State
at Boston College, Thursday
23. Kansas
at Texas Tech, Saturday
24. Iowa State
beat No. 16 Oklahoma 82-61
25. Michigan
at Northwestern, Thursday
Despite last season’s 25point loss — and it wasn’t
that close — the Vols hardly
seemed fazed by the aura of
Rupp. Tennessee jumped to
a 15-12 lead and responded
to Kentucky’s 8-0 spurt by
regaining a lead late in the
first half. Though they shot
56 percent, the Vols made
zero trips to the free-throw
line and turned the ball over
nine times before halftime.
When Kentucky pushed
its lead back to eight in the
second half, McRae pulled
his team back into the game
with three jumpers and finished 8-of-18 shooting and
6-of-8 on free throws.
“Offensively I like what
I’ve gotten from him,” Mar-
tin said. “I didn’t think he
did a very good job defending. They did a good job of
attacking him.
“I think that’s the next
phase for him. We talk about
it a lot, and he understands
that. He’s taking pride in
defending, but I think that’s
the next step for him.”
Though he scored just
two points, Yemi Makanjuola
may have been Tennessee’s
impact player. The backup
sophomore center from
Nigeria fouled out with 6:47
remaining, and the Wildcats
didn’t miss a shot after that
point.
“We were rolling with
him because he was playing
so well,” Martin said. “Once
he went out of the game,
we couldn’t get a consistent
stop. We were riding with
him down the stretch until
he fouled out because of
how he was playing and how
he was competing.”
Added McRae: “When
he’s not in the game, it’s
tough.”
Tough would describe the
nights of struggling forward
Jarnell Stokes, who managed
just four points and five
rebounds in 15 foul-plagued
minutes, and Golden, the
mercurial point guard who
committed five turnovers to
go with his seven points, four
rebounds and six assists.
Wiltjer, a 6-foot-8 forward with a smooth jump
shot, made two 3s in the
first half to set the tone for
his 17-point night, but Noel
affected the game much
like eventual top NBA draft
pick Anthony Davis did for
Kentucky last year with 12
points, nine rebounds, four
steals and six blocks.
The hole for the Vols,
who entered the week 99th
in the NCAA’s official RPI, is
now bigger.
“You’ve got to just get
over the hump,” Martin
said. “As long as the effort
is there, then you’re fine. If
you’re lacking the effort and
lacking the focus, then you
have a major issue.
“One thing about these
guys is they continue to
bring their hard hat to work
every day, so things will definitely turn around.”
Contact Patrick Brown at
pbrown@timesfreepress.com
or 901-581-7288. Follow him
on Twitter at twitter.com/
patrickbrowntfp.
with 13:44 to go, the Vols
actually took the lead at 5453 with 7:19 remaining.
Of course, from that point
on it was almost all Kentucky, Big Blue outscoring
Big Orange 22-11 down the
stretch.
The surprise for UT
fans might be who Martin
believed was the key to this
loss. Not because of how
Yemi Makanjuola played,
but because of how the Vols
failed to play after he fouled
out with 6:47 to go in a tie
game.
“He has a tremendous
presence around the rim,
even though he is not the
shot blocker of [UK’s Nerlens] Noel,” Martin said. “He
is a physical guy and under-
stands his assignments and
knows where he needs to
be.”
Added UT guard Jordan
McRae, who led the Vols
with 23, his fourth straight
game as leading scorer:
“Yemi is like a defensive
whiz. He knows where
everybody is supposed to
be at all times.”
It’s who Martin didn’t
mention for fouling out that
says the most about the Vols’
issues these days.
Though he played five
minutes past Makanjuola
before being flagged for his
fifth and final personal of the
night, Jarnell Stokes scored
just four points and pulled
in just five rebounds, hardly
numbers one might expect
from a preseason All-SEC
pick and a Wooden Award
candidate at season’s dawn.
Yhe 6-foot-8, 270-pound
sophomore has totaled 10
points and 12 rebounds in his
last two games combined,
and as long as that continues, the Vols will have a hard
time winning any games,
much less one at the home
of the defending national
champs.
As for Kentucky, their
freshmen — save Noel,
whose 12 points, nine
rebounds, six blocks and
four steals scream NBA lottery pick — are finally playing like freshmen.
That’s a good thing for
the rest of the league but
a bad thing in the Big Blue
Nation, where Cal entered
this season with a remarkable 102-14 record after three
years on the job, a national
title, a second Final Four
appearance and two SEC
tourney crowns.
“I love this team,” Cal
said. “But we are going to
be in dogfights. We go to
Auburn [on Saturday], and
it’s going to be an absolute
war for us to go down there
and try to steal one.”
When Calipari is talking
about trying to steal one at
Auburn, you know the Vols
aren’t the only SEC team
struggling to meet expectations at the moment.
Contact Mark Wiedmer at
mwiedmer@timesfreepress.
com
KENTUCKY 75,
TENNESSEE 65
TENNESSEE (8-7)
Stokes 2-5 0-0 4, Hall 3-7 0-0 6, Richardson
3-7 0-2 6, McBee 1-2 0-0 3, McRae 8-18 6-8
23, Makanjuola 1-1 0-0 2, Reese 3-6 2-2 9,
Moore 1-1 2-2 5, Golden 3-7 1-3 7, Edwards
0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-54 11-17 65.
KENTUCKY (11-5)
Noel 5-7 2-5 12, Cauley-Stein 3-5 1-3 7,
Poythress 3-5 2-2 10, Goodwin 2-10 4-6 8,
Harrow 3-9 6-9 12, Polson 0-0 0-0 0, Wiltjer
6-10 3-4 17, Mays 3-5 1-2 9. Totals 25-51
19-31 75.
——
Halftime—Kentucky 34-31. 3-Point Goals—
Tennessee 4-12 (Moore 1-1, McBee 1-2,
Reese 1-2, McRae 1-4, Richardson 0-1, Hall
0-1, Golden 0-1), Kentucky 6-15 (Poythress
2-2, Mays 2-3, Wiltjer 2-6, Goodwin 0-1, Harrow 0-3). Fouled Out—Goodwin, Makanjuola,
Stokes. Rebounds—Tennessee 30 (Stokes
5), Kentucky 34 (Noel 9). Assists—Tennessee 11 (Golden 6), Kentucky 13 (Harrow 4).
Total Fouls—Tennessee 25, Kentucky 17.
A—24,033.
The Associated Press
Tennessee coach Cuonzo Martin urges his team on
during the second half of the Vols’ game against Kentucky at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky., on Tuesday.
Kentucky won 75-65.
Stadium
• Continued from Page D1
ley Stadium full-time director
of operations Jeff Clark are
doing “a much better job of
watching our expenses.” The
electric bill at the 20,668-seat
facility is down $6,700 from
this time last year, according to Eckstein, and security
costs are nearly $5,000 lower,
offsetting the losses the Stadium Corp. endured from
concessions and parking.
There have been two
major enhancements to the
stadium since the Mocs
wrapped up their third 6-5
season in four years with a
24-17 win over Elon on Nov.
17. A new roof above the skyboxes was installed at a cost
of $44,000, and repairs under
the artificial turf on the south
side of the field have been
made for $41,000.
Those costs were paid
out of the Friends of Finley
campaign.
“We’ve reached a point
where we have financial
stability out here,” Eckstein
said, “and I’m confident of
the financial stability of the
stadium and its ability to
continue to operate without
monstrous subsidies.”
Changes on the horizon
include replacing the lamps
and lighting and replacing
the turf. Eckstein said the
lamp repairs will need to be
done within the next two
years and the field within
the next four to seven.
Contact David Paschall at
dpaschall@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6524.
• New & Used Camper Tops
• Step Bars
• Truck Accessories
Rossville 706-861-9317
E. Brainerd 423-531-2677
www.bossvan.com
35264158
to 8-7 overall and 0-3 in
league play: “I thought our
guys put us in position; we
just didn’t capitalize.”
Oddly, both men were
right.
Given Saturday’s shocking 83-71 home loss to Texas
A&M, UK certainly looked
better than it had in either
of its first two SEC contests.
The Wildcats outrebounded the physical Vols 34-30.
Shooting a wretched 65 percent from the foul line, UK
hit three of its final four free
throws against UT.
Conversely, down 47-39
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • D5
D6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Tampa ’backer picks UTC
INSIDE THE SOCON
By John Frierson
Staff Writer
Appalachian State Athletics
Mike Neal is back at point guard for Appalachian State, which plays Thursday at
UTC.
The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s
recent run of All-Southern
Conference and All-America
linebackers helped the Mocs
land a commitment from a
two-star prospect.
Linebacker Terrance Jenkins, from Plant High School
in Tampa, Fla., committed
to UTC on Monday after
taking his official visit last
weekend.
“That was a big part of
me making my decision,” he
said of the postseason honors earned by recent players, including rising senior
Wes Dothard, a two-time
All-SoCon pick and 2011 AllAmerican. “I saw that they
have productive linebackers, and for them to play at
that level they have to have
a good coach.”
Mocs defensive coordinator Adam Fuller also coaches the linebackers, and he
handles UTC’s recruiting in
Florida. UTC returns seniors
Dothard and Gunner Miller,
but the Mocs have to find
started a game or received
significant playing time at
the position.
In 12 games for the Pan■ Hunter Townson,
thers in 2012, Jenkins had
OL, Ider (Ala.) High
116 tackles, including 20 in
School*
one game, and six sacks. He
■ Alejandro Bennifield,
said one reason he chose the
QB, Lovejoy (Ga.) High
Mocs over Florida Atlantic,
School
a Football Bowl Subdivision
■ Logan Teichmann,
program, is because football
OL, Brentwood High
seemed to matter more at
School
UTC.
■ Jacob Revis, OL,
“FAU is [an FBS] school,
Rhea County High
but I’d rather go to a smallSchool
er school where football is
■ D.J. Prather, DL,
important,” he said. “Before
Gordon Central (Ga.)
I visited UTC I was still
High School
wide open. But once I got
■ Derrick Craine, RB,
Union Grove (Ga.)
there I started hanging out
High School
with some of the players,
■ Channing Smith, OL,
the coaches, and I just knew
Marshall University*
that’s where I would end up
■ Malcolm Colvin, TE,
going.”
Peach County (Ga.)
Jenkins is UTC’s ninth
High School
commitment in what the
■ Terrance Jenkins
Mocs hope will be a signing
LB, Plant (Fla.) High
class of 16. National signing
School
day is Feb. 6.
* already enrolled
Contact John Frierson at
jfrierson@timesfreepress.
a third starter. Of the line- com or 423-757-6268. Follow
backers on the roster, only him on Twitter at twitter.
Dothard and Miller have com/mocsbeatCTFP.
UTC 2013
COMMITMENTS
TALKING POINT Nationals, Soriano agree to deal
The Associated Press
ASU’s Trice, UTC’s White share moves
Staff Writer
Wing players Jamaal Trice
of Appalachian State and Ronrico White of the University
of Tennessee at Chattanooga
will have something interesting to talk about Thursday
when Trice’s Mountaineers
play in McKenzie Arena.
They can talk about playing point guard.
The two spent the first
part of the season playing the
point out of necessity. ASU
point guard Mike Neal was
out due to academic suspension, and UTC senior point
Dontay Hampton was out
with a knee injury.
Neal and Hampton have
returned, letting Trice and
White return to their natural
positions.
It’s worked well for both
Southern Conference teams.
ASU (7-8, 3-1) has won six
of its seven games with Neal
DEEP THREE
1. RIVALRY TO
CONTINUE
College of Charleston
coach Doug Wojcik
will have about half
of his schedule full
with Colonial Athletic
Association games
next season. He will
play a handful of
Southern Conference
schools as well. The
most important will
be continuing the
crosstown rivalry
between the Cougars
and The Citadel. Wojcik
said the once-a-year
matchup will be at The
Citadel next season.
2. BULLDOGS
CLOSE TO TREAT
The Citadel played
arguably its three best
games of the season
in the past week
— but lost them all. The
Bulldogs led UTC by
10 in the second half
Thursday. They trailed
Samford by one midway
through the second half
Saturday. And they were
tied against Charleston
with 45 seconds to go.
“The last three games,
we have seen quite a
bit of improvement,”
coach Chuck Driesell
said.
3. WILDCATS
LEADS THE NATION
Davidson is No. 1 in the
country in converting
from the free-throw line.
The Wildcats have made
80.2 percent of their
foul shots this season.
Iona, Lehigh and South
Dakota were tied for
second at 78.3 percent
heading into Tuesday’s
games. Davidson coach
Bob McKillop said his
players shoot 10 oneand-bonus situations
before and after practice
for a total of 40 potential
free throws. “It gives
our guys a perspective
of the value of focusing
on each shot,” McKillop
said.
— David Uchiyama
in the lineup. The only loss
was at South Carolina. The
Mocs (7-10, 2-2) have won
four of six games since White
moved back to the wing.
“In college basketball, it
starts with the point guard,”
Mountaineers coach Jason
Capel said. “That’s the head
of the snake, the point of
attack. Having Michael back
allows us to do different
things offensively.”
And they’ve been successful since Neal saw the
pain and losses he caused
his squad by slacking on his
studies.
“I apologized to the entire
team, the coaching staff, the
managers and said I was sorry
and would never let it happen
again,” Neal said. “I didn’t see
that academics were important. It hurt me bad. We started off with a rough season,
and there were a lot of situations where I knew I could
have helped my team.
“I know it was tough on
Jamaal. I think that’s why we
got off to a bad start.”
Furman coach Jeff Jackson
also has had to shift his rotation and force players to play
out of position just to survive
a practice or a game. Paladins
point guard Jordan Loyd
went down with an injury
in the first game of the season. Furman’s two Division I
wins are over Presbyterian in
December and over Wofford
on Monday with true freshman Stephen Croone playing
at the point.
“We’ve had to move people up, down and all around,”
Jackson said. “That’s a challenge. It’s very disruptive.
Like in football, you lose your
quarterback and it’s disruptive. In basketball, if you lose
your point guard, it’s the same
thing.”
A one-time All-Star,
Soriano had 42 saves and
a 2.26 ERA for the AL East
champion New York Yankees last year while filling in
for injured closer Mariano
Rivera, who plans to return
from a knee injury in 2013.
Soriano decided in October to decline a $14 million
option for 2013, taking a $1.5
million buyout from the
Yankees and entering free
agency instead.
133 file for arbitration
At New York, San Francisco catcher Buster Posey,
Atlanta outfielder Jason
Heyward and Boston outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury are
among 133 players who have
filed for salary arbitration.
Chicago Cubs pitcher
Matt Garza and Giants outfielder Hunter Pence also
are among those who filed
Tuesday.
Six extra players filed
because of a change to baseball’s labor contract: Washington reliever Drew Storen,
San Diego shortstop Everth
Cabrera, Toronto catcher
Josh Thole, Tampa Bay outfielder Sam Fuld, Colorado
outfielder Tyler Colvin and
Arizona third baseman Chris
Johnson.
Suzuki fired up
At Tokyo, Ichiro Suzuki
is looking forward to starting the baseball season the
way he ended last season: as
a member of the New York
Yankees.
The Yankees and Suzuki
finalized a $13 million, twoyear contract in December
that kept the 10-time AllStar in the Bronx after he
was obtained in a trade with
Seattle last July.
“Signing with the Yankees has given me a new
sense of determination,” the
39-year-old outfielder said
Tuesday after a workout
in Kobe. “This is a unique
team, a team that can have
a player like Alex Rodriguez
as a pinch hitter is special
and to be part of that is
exciting.”
SOCON
STANDINGS
MEN’S BASKETBALL
NORTH DIVISION
W. Carolina
Appalachian State
Samford
Elon
UTC
UNCG
SOCON
4-1
.800
3-1
.750
3-1
.750
2-2
.500
2-2
.500
1-3
.250
OVERALL
7-10
.412
7-8
.467
5-12
.294
9-7
.562
7-10
.412
3-12
.200
SOCON
4-1
.800
4-1
.800
1-3
.250
1-3
.250
1-3
.250
0-5
.000
OVERALL
12-5
.688
9-7
.562
7-10
.412
7-10
.412
4-11
.267
3-12
.200
SOUTH DIVISION
College of Charleston
Davidson
Georgia Southern
Wofford
Furman
The Citadel
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Davidson
UTC
Elon
Samford
App State
College of Charleston
W. Carolina
Furman
Ga. Southern
Wofford
UNCG
SOCON
5-0
1.000
5-1
.833
5-1
.833
5-1
.833
4-1
.800
3-3
.500
2-3
.400
2-4
.333
1-6
.143
0-6
.000
0-6
.000
MEN’S STAT LEADERS
OVERALL
8-7
.533
12-3
.800
8-7
.533
8-7
.533
10-3
.769
7-8
.467
4-10
.286
6-9
.400
2-14
.125
5-9
.357
3-12
.200
WOMEN’S STAT LEADERS
POINTS AVERAGE
1. Trevis Simpson, UNCG
2. Trey Sumler, WCU
3. Derrell Armstrong, UNCG
4. Karl Cochran, Wofford
5. Jay Canty, ASU
18.3
17.8
16.9
16.3
15.3
POINTS AVERAGE
1. Anna Freeman, ASU
2. Ashlen Dewart, UTC
3. Ali Ford, Elon
4. Lucy Mason, UNCG
5. S. Aleksandravicius, Dav
17.7
16.7
16.3
15.1
14.9
REBOUNDS AVERAGE
1. Adjehi Baru, CofC
2. Mike Groselle, Cit
3. Eric Ferguson
4. Lee Skinner, Wof
5. Tim Williams, Sam
9.2
7.7
7.6
7.4
7.2
REBOUNDS AVERAGE
1. S. Alexandravicious, Dav
2. Daniella Motley, Wofford
3. Kelsey Evans, Elon
4. Anna Freeman, ASU
5. Latisha Harris, CofC
10.3
10.1
9.8
8.8
8.8
ASSISTS AVERAGE
1. Marshall Harris III, Cit
2. Stephen Croone, Fur
3. Andrew Lawrence, CofC
4. Raijon Kelly, Sam
5. Trey Sumler, WCU
4.9
4.5
4.1
3.7
3.6
ASSISTS AVERAGE
1. Jill Brown, CofC
2. Barbara Sitton, Dav
3. Anna Freeman, ASU
4. Ali Ford, Elon
5. Rachel Brittenham, Wof
6.9
4.4
4.3
4.1
3.8
35216400
By David Uchiyama
WA S H I N G TO N —
Reliever Rafael Soriano and
the Washington Nationals
reached agreement pending a physical on a $28
million, two-year contract
that includes $14 million in
deferred money, a person
familiar with the negotiations told The Associated
Press on Tuesday.
Speaking to the AP on
condition of anonymity
because the deal was not
yet official, the person said
Soriano’s contract contains
a $14 million option for 2015
that would become guaranteed if he reaches 120 games
finished over 2013 and 2014
combined.
Soriano, who turned 33
in December, would join
a Nationals bullpen that
already includes Drew Storen and Tyler Clippard. Both
of those right-handers closed
games for the NL East champions last season.
The Soriano-Nationals negotiations were first
reported by Yahoo Sports.
...
.
E
LIFE &taste
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013
timesfreepress.com/life
FARE EXCHANGE: Readers seek recipes for onions, smoothies, E6
q
q
REUBEN LIGHT: Sub salmon for a lighter take on the popular sandwich, E6
Pillsbury
Bake-Off
gets a
facelift
Sixty-four years after
bakers competed in the
first Pillsbury BakeOff, it’s getting another
facelift, and everyone
in America is invited to
take part in determining
who will be chosen as the
finalists to vie for more
than $1 million in cash,
trips and prizes in Las
Vegas in November.
But that’s not all. The
entry procedure is also
being redesigned to
give creative home
cooks a
better
chance of
winning.
Instead
Anne
of a sole
Patterson
category,
Braly
there will
Side Orders
be three
recipe categories, all with
ingredient limits and separate entry periods.
“We know consumers
crave recipes that are delicious, yet easy to make, so
adding an ingredient limit
allows us to provide inspiration for even the busiest
families and novice cooks,”
Jann Atkins, Bake-Off
kitchens manager noted in
a news release. “And with
voters selecting all 100
finalists, we hope to rally
excitement and friendly
competition across the
country as people choose
their favorites.”
Here are some of the
rules to follow if you
decide to enter:
■ Submissions must
have no more than seven
ingredients, not including
salt, pepper and water.
■ Recipes can take no
more than 30 minutes to
prepare, not including
baking or cooling time.
■ Recipes must use
two or more ingredients
from a select list of ingredients which can be found
at www.BakeOff.com.
■ Entries must be submitted by the deadlines
established for each category:
1. Amazing Doable
Dinners (such as pizzas,
calzones, sandwiches,
foldovers, casseroles,
chilis and savory pies);
enter through Feb. 7.
2. Simple Sweets and
Starters (such as cookies,
bars, pies, tarts, bite-size
appetizers, tartlets, pinwheels, puffs, bruschetta or
focaccia); entry period runs
from April 4 to May 9.
3. Quick Rise and
Shine Breakfasts (such
as sweet rolls, pull-aparts,
Staff Photos by Jay Bailey
Customer Sharon Hogan discusses new items she would like to see carried at Mimi’s Low Carb Market with co-owner Liz
Crawford. The Hixson grocery store, which specializes in low-carb and gluten-free foods, often stocks special items on request
from customers.
Allergic reaction
Sensitivities to gluten, sugar and other foods
drive commerce, dietary changes
and the traditional medical
model is not [helping].”
Jones says gluten-free and
he inability to find the
low-carb selections have come
proverbial needle in
a long way in the last three or
the haystack drove Jeff
four years.
Crawford into market“There’s been a vast increase
ing the needles himself.
in taste and availability,” he
In his case, the needles are
says. “There’s hardly anything
diabetic foods — low-carb,
you [can’t] find gluten-free. But
low-sugar and gluten-free
50 percent of it, I wouldn’t eat”
products, specifically, that peoand don’t carry it. “There’s still
ple like his mother, newly diagroom for improvement.”
nosed with diabetes, can eat.
Crawford says there is a such
Crawford’s business, Mimi’s
a demand for gluten-free and
Low Carb Market — named
low-carb food, he will open a
after his mother, Louise
deli at Mimi’s at the end of the
— opened in November in
month. The deli will offer tradiHixson. While saying he “stays
tional and gluten-free sandwichaway from trying to diagnose”
Tiana Chambers browses the freezer section for gluten-free
es, he says, and separate prep
at Mimi’s Low Carb Market,
foods at Mimi’s Low Carb Market.
areas to prevent contamination.
Crawford at least wants to offer
Like Crawford, Karen K. Wila wide variety of low-carb foods disease is skyrocketing,” says
NEW WORLD
son’s new business came from
and those free of gluten, a proIndi Maharaj, dietitian at the
Ed Jones, who opened
tein in wheat, barley and rye.
lifestyle center at Erlanger hos- Chattanooga’s Nutrition World a personal experience. After
developing a severe gluten sen“That’s one of the main rea- pital, “and estimates are that as in 1979, says the food sensitivsons for starting the store,” he
many as one in five Americans ity stories he’s been hearing for sitivity in 2006, she began perfecting recipes for gluten-free
says. “We’ve done the research, have an allergic condition.”
the last 10 years are different
breads, cakes, cookies, muffins
made sure the products are good.
The need for low-carb foods than anything he heard in the
and desserts through trial and
The industry has come a long
is also increasing, she says.
late 1970s, 1980s or 1990s.
error. Earlier this month, she
ways in a short period of time.”
“The simple facts are,”
“There are incredible,
opened Crave Cafe & Bakery in
Food allergies and sensitivi- Maharaj says, “that Americans
unusual things you can’t put
Warehouse Row.
ties are on the rise, according
eat way too [many] processed,
finger on,” he says. “They’re
“I was always aware there
to those who deal with them
refined carbohydrates and need creating poor health, people
on a daily basis.
to drastically cut back their
are feeling lousy and life is not
“The occurrence of allergic
consumption.”
See REACTION, Page E4
optimal. People are frustrated,
By Clint Cooper
Staff Writer
T
See BRALY, Page E6
Film explores health, culture of Southern soul food
understand that culturally our
history is rich. This film talks
Consider it good timing that
about the unhealthier aspects of
Byron Hurt’s documentary “Soul soul food.”
Food Junkies” airs in Atlanta
He wanted to start a discusafter the holidays, when many
sion about health and diet with
people pledge to get healthier in the film, which will be shown
the new year.
later this month on GPB.
In his new project, Hurt hurls
Hurt, a former college quarstones at a few of the sacred
terback who spent many sumcows of soul food — fried chick- mers and holidays in Milleden, rich macaroni and cheese,
geville, Ga., where both of his
and collard greens with a dollop parents were born, got the idea
of grease or a slice (or two) of
for the film shortly after his
fatback for seasoning.
father was diagnosed with panWhile tasty, they’re not exact- creatic cancer.
ly at the top of the list of heartHis dad, Jackie Hurt, battled
healthy foods. At least, not the
weight issues for many years,
way they’ve traditionally been
fueled by eating way too much
prepared in many black kitchens. fast food, processed foods and
meals containing lots of satu“I’m not throwing soul food
rated fats. While researching
under the bus,” Hurt says.
pancreatic cancer, Byron Hurt
“That’s not what this film is
discovered that blacks are more
about. I love my culture and I
By Shelia M. Poole
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Contributed Photo by Shawn Escoffery
Documentary filmmaker Byron Hurt’s “Soul Food Junkies” examines
the unhealthier aspects of soul food and the cultural elements that
make it such an integral part of black Southerners’ lives.
■ To contact Life phone: 423-757-6327 • Fax: 423-668-5051 • Email: life@timesfreepress.com
likely to be diagnosed with this
type of cancer than whites, and
very overweight people and
those who don’t get much exercise are at greater risk.
“I started to wonder if his
illness had anything to do with
his diet,” says Hurt, who lives
in New Jersey and now eats a
mostly vegetable-based diet. “He
talked about changing his eating
habits and diet, but it was difficult for him to do.”
In the documentary, which
took three years and roughly
$500,000 to make, Hurt travels to several cities, including
Atlanta, and examines blacks
and the role eating habits play in
their health. In Jackson, Miss., he
attended a tailgate party where
revelers gathered around a huge
See FOOD, Page E6
E2 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Puzzles&Funnies
Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
Universal Uclick
There are excellent
chances for you to be luckier than usual in the year
ahead in terms of achieving
long-held dreams. This is
possible even if the effort
you put forth is only
nominal.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan.
19): It would do
wonders for you to try to
alter your weekday routine
a bit. Plan to do something
fun with the family that you
would usually reserve for
weekends.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20- Feb. 18): Make
a concerted effort
to stay in contact with
family and/or friends who
are extremely important
to your immediate plans.
They’ll be more inclined
to help if you’re in close
proximity
PISCES (Feb. 19March 20):
Don’t hesitate to
think bigger-than-life when
putting together a financial
endeavor. Conditions are
exceptionally good for you
to pull off something on a
grand scale.
Crossword
ACROSS
1 “Now I
understand”
6 Congressional
proceedings airer
11 Much-studied
flavor enhancer
14 Wilt
15 Foodie’s words
for subtle
flavoring
16 Pint filler
17 Deal with, as
a stack of dull
paperwork
19 Rocky
prominence
20 One may be
rolled up
21 Galsworthy’s
“The Forsyte __”
22 One of a
chair pair
24 Investor’s initial
support
28 Very
disagreeable
30 Singer Björk’s
birthplace
31 Cosby’s “I Spy”
co-star
32 Tour de France
stage
33 Create an
incriminating trail
39 Bring up
40 Simple beds
42 Montana
neighbor
45 Defining quality
48 How long to
shop, on a
spree?
50 AM frequency
meas.
51 Bidding site
52 Screwball
behavior
54 Kitty’s love in
“Exodus”
55 Autumn lunar
phenomenon
60 Checker on a
board, say
61 French clerics
62 Duck
63 Tallahassee-toTampa dir.
64 Bank job
65 Flighty
DOWN
1 National econ.
yardstick
2 Fla. NBA team
3 Like overly tight
clothing
4 Cry of pain
5 H.S. exam for
college credit
6 “Wayne’s World”
co-star
7 Did a smith’s
work
8 More, musically
9 Filmmaker Lee
10 Math degree
11 “Hakuna __”:
“The Lion King”
song
12 Maxwell House’s
“Good to the last
drop,” e.g.
13 Spiro’s successor
18 Obedience
school command
21 “Shh!”
22 Preschool song
opener
23 Enlist again
25 Bank lead-in
26 Military sch.
27 Animated
Le Pew
29 In an economical
manner
32 Celebration
before the
celebration?
34 Not (a one)
35 Jackson 5
brother
36 Rebekah’s eldest
37 Goes kaput
38 Make an
engraving
41 “__ who?”
42 First-stringers
43 Some October
babies
44 He replaced Ken
as Barbie’s beau
from 2004 to
2006
45 Actor Borgnine
46 They’re often
stewed
47 Was nasty to
49 Barry and Brubeck
53 Mid 10th-century
year
55 “A likely story!”
56 16th prez
57 Slugger’s stat
58 Gorges
oneself (on)
59 Napoleonic
marshal
■ 1883: The U.S. Civil
Service Commission was
established.
ON THIS DATE
TAURUS (April
20- May 20):
Think positive and
keep the faith, because at
the very times when things
look like they’re going
against you, your associates
are likely to come through.
The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday,
Jan. 16, the 16th day of 2013.
There are 349 days left in
the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
ARIES (March
21- April 19):
What works out
well for you is likely to do
so for those with whom
you’re directly involved.
This is because everyone is
apt to be looking out for one
another’s interests.
GEMINI (May
21- June 20): Even
though it might
look like you’re behaving
extravagantly, what you’re
really doing is trying
your best to make a solid
investment of good will
in your relationships with
others.
Today In History
By Jean O’Conor
c.Tribune Media Services
Stumped? Call
January 16, 2013
1-900-226-4413 99 cents a minute
CANCER (June
21- July 22): This
might be one of
your better days to talk to
influential people about
helping you advance a big
personal ambition.
■ 1547: Ivan IV of Russia
(popularly known as “Ivan
the Terrible”) was crowned
Czar.
■ 1935: Fugitive gangster
Fred Barker and his mother,
Kate “Ma” Barker, were
killed in a shootout with the
FBI at Lake Weir, Fla.
■ 1942: Actress Carole
Lombard, 33, her mother
Elizabeth and 20 other
people were killed when
their plane crashed near Las
Vegas, Nev., while en route
to California from a warbond promotion tour.
■ 1944: Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower took command
of the Allied Expeditionary
Forces in London.
■ 1969: Two manned
Soviet Soyuz spaceships
became the first vehicles to
dock in space and transfer
personnel.
■ 1978: NASA named
35 candidates to fly on the
space shuttle, including Sally
K. Ride, who became America’s first woman in space,
and Guion S. Bluford Jr., who
became America’s first black
astronaut in space.
■ 1987: Hu Yaobang
resigned as head of China’s
Communist Party, declaring
he’d made mistakes in dealing with student turmoil
and intellectual challenges
to the system. Broadway
columnist Earl Wilson died
in Yonkers, N.Y., at age 79.
■ 1991: The White
House announced the start
of Operation Desert Storm
to drive Iraqi forces out of
Kuwait.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Author William Kennedy
is 85. Author-editor Norman
Podhoretz is 83. Opera singer Marilyn Horne is 79. Hall
of Fame auto racer A.J. Foyt
is 78. Singer Barbara Lynn
is 71. Country singer Ronnie
Milsap is 70. Country singer
Jim Stafford is 69. Talk show
host Dr. Laura Schlessinger
is 66. Movie director John
Carpenter is 65. Actressdancer-choreographer Debbie Allen is 63. Singer Sade
is 54. Rock musician Paul
Webb is 51. Rhythm-andblues singer Maxine Jones
is 47. Actor David Chokachi
is 45. Actor Richard T. Jones
is 41. Actress Josie Davis is
40. Model Kate Moss is 39.
Rock musician Nick Valensi
is 32. Actress Yvonne Zima
is 24.
Cryptoquote
Bridge
By Phillip Alder
Universal Uclick
South is in three notrump. West leads the diamond king. What should
declarer do?
South had seven top
tricks: one spade, one
heart, one diamond and
four clubs. He saw that
at least two more tricks
would come from spades.
He played his low diamond
at trick one.
However, East had
played his diamond three.
And West knew that his
partner would have thrown
out the jack or ace if he
had held it. So West shifted
to the heart jack. This time,
East encouraged with his
nine. Declarer ducked, but
West continued with the
heart 10, and East accurately overtook with his queen.
Now South could not
succeed. If he had taken
this trick, crossed to the
dummy with a club, and
tried the spade finesse,
West would have won with
his king and led his last
heart to give the defenders one spade, four hearts
and one diamond. And
if South had ducked the
second heart, East would
have reverted to diamonds,
giving the defense one
spade, two hearts and four
diamonds.
South should have won
the first trick, crossed
to the dummy, and run
the spade queen. Yes, the
finesse would have lost,
but declarer’s diamond
jack-four would have been
a stopper with West on
lead.
LEO (July 23Aug. 22): If you’ve
been restless lately
and have the means to do
something about it, this
might be a good time to
make some travel plans.
VIRGO (Aug.
23- Sept. 22):
This could be
a profitable day in more
ways than one. Although
you might gain financially,
you’ll also learn something
valuable in the process.
Jumble:
Tuesday’s Answer:
CUFFS
THUMP
TICKET
AFFORD
The limo driver had been working for years but he didn’t
have much to — “CHAUFFEUR” IT
Answer to previous Sudoku
For more information about Jumble, visit www.jumble.com on the Web.
LIBRA (Sept. 23Oct. 23): Persons
with whom you’ll
have one-on-one dealings
are likely to treat you in a
more bountiful fashion than
usual.
SCORPIO (Oct.
24- Nov. 22):
Your motives
for helping others will be
honest and sincere, yet
you’ll be the one who stands
to benefit the most from
your actions.
Sudoku
Answer to previous Crossword
Complete the grid so every row, column and 3x3 box
contains every digit from 1 to 9.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec.
21): Although
your rabbit’s foot might
not be working in high-risk
situations, you still could
be very lucky when dealing
with someone with whom
you share emotional bonds.
Call 757-6200
for professional help
or do it Yourself
timesfreepress.com
Answer to previous Word Sleuth
... timesfreepress.com
.
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • E3
E4 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
EXPERTADVICE
Woman in love with gay man
must begin to look elsewhere
DEAR ABBY: “Myles” and I have known each
other for five years, but have grown really close
over the past three. We tell each
other everything, and I have fallen
in love with him.
A few months ago, Myles sent me
a text saying he needed to tell me
a “secret.” He went on to say the
guy he had told me was his brother,
“Jeff,” is really his lover. Needless to
Dear Abby
say, that bombshell floored me.
Written by
We have discussed it in person,
Jeanne Phillips and I have never told him how I
feel. I visit them a couple of times a month and
always go home feeling hurt. I want Myles for
myself, even though I know I can’t have him. I
don’t want to lose him as my friend, but it hurts
seeing him and Jeff together. How do I resolve
this? — GIRL LEFT BEHIND IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR LEFT BEHIND:
Start by being as honest with
Myles as he was with you.
Tell him that over the course
of your friendship you fell in
love with him — and that
you wish you had known he
was gay before you became
so emotionally involved. If
you want romance, you will
have to look for it elsewhere.
In order for you to find it,
I cannot stress strongly
enough that you will need
to feel good about yourself.
Stop torturing yourself by
visiting the two lovebirds
and take a break for a while.
A long while.
c. Universal Press Syndicate
HEALTH
Clear child’s bedroom
of stimuli that disrupt sleep
DEAR DOCTOR K: My 8-year-old has trouble falling asleep. Can you give me some practical suggestions that may help?
DEAR READER: The
pediatricians here at Harvard Medical School
who specialize in
sleep problems have
given me
this advice:
Dr. K
To h e l p
Dr. Anthony
your child
Komaroff
(or anyone
of any age, for that matter)
fall asleep, you must remove
the obstacles that may
impede or disrupt his sleep.
By doing so, you’ll make it
much easier for your child
to settle down and drift off
into a restful slumber.
Here are some suggestions that should help:
■ Stop your child’s caffeine intake at least eight
hours prior to bedtime. Not
a lot of 8-year-olds drink
coffee or tea, but there’s
plenty of caffeine in cola
beverages or in chocolate,
for example.
■ Reduce your child’s
exposure to bright light
for the two hours before
bedtime. Dimmer light
helps the brain prepare
for sleep.
■ Keep your child’s bedroom dark, quiet and at a
comfortable temperature.
■ If your son still uses
a night-light, choose one
with a low-intensity bulb.
■ Reduce the intensity
of your child’s reading lamp
to 40 watts or less.
■ Some parents play
classical music in the background, hoping it will lull
a child to sleep. Bad idea.
Music — particularly great
Reaction
• Continued from Page E1
LIFE
music — is not “white
noise.” The melodies and
rhythms are compelling and
call to you even when you’re
asleep. Even generally soft
music can have sudden loud
moments. And if you let it
stop when the piece ends,
your child may notice the
sudden absence of music
and have trouble falling
back to sleep without it.
■ Remove video games,
media players, cellphones,
computers and TVs from
your child’s bedroom. Pretty obvious advice, I know,
but you’d be surprised how
often it’s not followed.
■ Position your child’s
alarm clock so that it faces
away from the bed. This
can be helpful if your child
stresses out each time he
sees that five more minutes
have passed and he’s still
awake.
■ Insist that your child
do his homework at a desk
(or better yet, outside the
bedroom), not in bed. When
homework is done in bed,
the associated stress doesn’t
go away just because the
books are closed.
Really, it’s the same
advice I give adults with
problems sleeping: Use
the bed for sleeping, not
for reading, watching TV
or playing games. (If you
regularly do these things
in bed and think they help
you fall asleep — and you
don’t have trouble sleeping — please ignore my
advice.)
■ Keep pets out of your
child’s bedroom (and out
of his bed).
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
was a pretty decent-sized
population who needed gluten-free food,” she says. “It’s
nice to have that validated
[by her customer base] and
to know that many [people]
are excited about a glutenfree bakery and restaurant.”
Jones lays the blame for
the burgeoning gluten problem to the now-genetically
modified and hybrid wheat,
to the general overconsumption of wheat-based foods
and to the body’s inability
to digest such foods when
it was set up to eat mostly
meats, vegetables, fruits and
nuts.
“We didn’t use to live off
bread,” he says. “We have an
addiction to it now. We like
it. It’s like overconsuming
anything. Even if it’s healthy
[food], the body starts reacting to it.”
GETTING EDUCATED
Experts say people should
take the time to educate
themselves on celiac disease,
gluten intolerance and gluten
insensitivity.
With celiac disease, says
Dr. Richard Krause of ClinSearch, patients cannot
eat any gluten. Their small
bowel has been damaged,
resulting in poor absorption
of food and symptoms of gas,
bloating, diarrhea, irritability, depression, weight-loss,
fatigue and vitamin deficiencies, he says.
In 2011, Bluff View Art
District hired a chef who
specialized in gluten-free
cooking at Rembrandt’s
Coffee House, using almond
flour in its items. For an item
to be certified as gluten-free,
it must contain less than 10
parts per million of gluten so,
to keep from hurting anyone
with a severe allergy, Bluff
View uses the term “gluten-
SEEKING SIGNATURE DISHES
Do you have a dish that you’re known for? Do
your friends and neighbors ask for that one recipe?
Is there something your family asks you to make
over and over again? Is it a casserole? A cake? A
fantastic salad? A savory soup?
The Times Free Press would like you to share that
dish with our readers and to show you preparing the
dish. If you would like to become a part of this new
feature or if you have someone you’d like to suggest
(with their permission), contact Clint Cooper at 423757-6497 or ccooper@timesfreepress.com.
safe” to describe its offerings.
Bluff View also has a
personal connection to gluten allergies because Director of Operations Michael
Vasta suffers from celiac
disease.
Patients who are gluten intolerant, according to
Maharaj, probably should
move to a gluten-free diet.
But, she says, their doctor
should determine that based
on the severity of the allergy.
Jones says people who
experience a gluten insensitivity, though, don’t need
to immediately drop gluten
from their diet because a
gluten-free diet is difficult
to maintain.
“I have always tried to
teach people to use a certain level of common sense,”
he says. “You’re eating too
much of it. Cut the grains
in half. You’re going to be
better off. [The grains are]
not nutritional to begin
with. Your allergies will
decrease, and your energy
will increase.”
Wilson says she knows of
people who found benefits
from lowering their intake
of gluten.
“Weekend athletes find it
helps them in training,” she
says. “They hear about the
possibility, give it a try and
find they feel better.”
However, Maharaj says if
people are on a gluten-free
diet, they may miss out on
certain vitamins and nutri-
ents. With that in mind, she
says, they should monitor
their levels of iron, calcium,
fiber, thiamin, riboflavin, niacin and folate.
Beyond gluten, peanut and
lactose allergies, even foods
such as orange juice, red
meat and soy are beginning
to cause problems, according
to Jones.
“The immune system is
overwhelmed from too many
areas,” he says. “Something
that used to be friend is now
a foe. But whether it’s the
processing or the body, we
don’t know.”
Contact staff writer
Clint Cooper at ccooper@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6497. Subscribe to my
posts online at Facebook.
com/ClintCooperCTFP.
until the mixture boils
and thickens. Remove
from heat, add the salt
and vanilla and pour over
crackers. Spread in a thin
layer to cover. Bake for
15 minutes. Remove from
oven and sprinkle with
chocolate chips. Let stand
5 minutes, then spread
with a spatula. Sprinkle
with pecans and raisins;
push into the chocolate
lightly with spatula. Place
pan in refrigerator to cool
completely. Break into
pieces and keep in the
fridge.
— Anna Luke of the blog
Gluten Free? Gimme Three
LEMONY QUINOA
1
4
⁄ cup pine nuts
1 cup quinoa
2 cups water
Sea salt to taste
1
⁄4 cup fresh lemon juice
2 stalks celery, chopped
1
⁄4 red onion, chopped
1
⁄4 teaspoon cayenne
pepper
1
⁄2 teaspoon ground
cumin
1 bunch fresh parsley,
chopped
Toast the pine nuts
briefly in a dry skillet over
medium heat. This will
take about 5 minutes, and
CHOCOLATE TOFFEE
stir constantly as they will
CRACKER BARK
burn easily. Set aside to
3
⁄4 package Crunchmaster cool.
In a saucepan, combine
Original Multi-Seed
the quinoa, water and
Crackers
1
salt. Bring to a boil, then
⁄2 cup butter
1
reduce heat to medium
⁄2 cup brown sugar
1
and cook until quinoa
⁄4 tsp. vanilla extract
A few pinches of sea salt is tender and water has
been absorbed, about 10
1 cup chocolate chips
1
minutes. Cool slightly, then
⁄4 cup chopped pecans
1
fluff with a fork. Transfer
⁄4 cup raisins
the quinoa to a serving
Line a rimmed baking
bowl and stir in the pine
sheet with foil. Preheat
nuts, lemon juice, celery,
the oven to 350 degrees.
onion, cayenne pepper,
Line the bottom of the
sheet with crackers, filling cumin and parsley. Adjust
about 2⁄3 of the sheet. In a salt and pepper if needed
saucepan, melt the butter before serving.
— Allrecipes.com
and brown sugar. Cook
Arrange Your Wedding.
Distributed by Universal Uclick
FAITH
Trust in God, not false promises
Q: I got an email the other day saying that I
have inherited some money from someone I never
met, and all I have to do is send them my bank
account number and a processing fee and it will be
mine. My grandson says it’s a scam, but how does
he know? I sure could use the money, and anyway
I want to give more to my church. — Mrs. W.N.
Your desire to give more
to your church is commendable, but don’t let it lead you
astray. Be grateful for the
money God has given you
(even if it isn’t much), and
don’t fall for anything that
might put it at risk. Get-richquick schemes seldom work
out, no matter how tempting they are. Instead, the
Bible says, “he who gathers
money little by little makes
it grow” (Proverbs 13:11).
The most important
thing you can do, however,
is to put your complete
trust in Christ for your
needs. God loves you, and
he can be trusted to supply your needs as you look
to him for wisdom. The
Bible’s promise is true:
“My God will meet all your
needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus”
(Philippians 4:19).
c. Tribune Media Services
2013
February 17 | 1:00pm - 5:30pm
CHATTANO O GA CO N V E N T I O N CE N T E R
tim esfr eep r ess.com /b r id a la ffa ir
Presented by
35240489
A: Your grandson is
almost certainly right, and
I strongly
urge you to
delete this
email and
not reply
to it in any
way.
Billy Graham
Don’t be
fooled by schemes like this
or allow yourself to be misled by their false promises.
Giving personal information
(such as your bank account
or Social Security number)
to an unknown person over
the Internet is an almost
certain recipe for financial
disaster — as countless
people have discovered.
Your money could disappear in an instant with no
possibility of recovery, and
you also might find yourself
fighting a whole series of
other issues brought about
by financial fraud.
... timesfreepress.com
.
Self-parodies and the return of ‘Idol’
OTHER HIGHLIGHTS
Tune In
Tonight
■ The kids each get a day to
themselves on “The Middle” (8
p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
■ Oliver takes a sabbatical
on “Arrow” (8 p.m., CW, TV14).
■ A surprise party for
Manny on “Modern Family”
(9 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
■ Juliette and Rayna share
an arena stage on “Nashville”
(10 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
■ A new inmate upsets
everyone on “American Horror Story: Asylum” (10 p.m., FX,
TV-MA).
By Kevin McDonough
LATE NIGHT
■ Kim Kardashian,
Kourtney Kardashian
and Buddy Guy appear
on “Late Show With
David Letterman”
(11:35 p.m., CBS).
■ Jay Leno welcomes
Mark Wahlberg, Ali
Wentworth and JJAMZ
on “The Tonight Show”
(11:35 p.m., NBC).
■ Ray Romano, Amy
Brenneman and Phillip
Phillips appear on
“Jimmy Kimmel Live”
(11:35 p.m., ABC).
■ Jeremy Renner, Hoda
Kotb and Jessie Ware
visit “Late Night With
Jimmy Fallon” (12:35
a.m., NBC).
■ Craig Ferguson hosts
Don Cheadle and DJ
Qualls on “The Late
Late Show” (12:35
a.m., CBS).
CULT CHOICE
Fresh from “NYPD Blue,”
David Caruso starred
in the 1995 mystery
“Kiss of Death” (8
p.m., Reelz), co-starring
Nicolas Cage, Samuel L.
Jackson and Helen Hunt.
SERIES NOTES
ABC Photo
Charlie McDermott stars
in “The Middle,” which airs
tonight on ABC.
Suddenly, the thrill of
exploration and quick riches
gives way to the dreary
mechanics of ghost hunting.
Luman and Doyle unpack
their expensive equipment
and spew nonsensical jargon. They wear night vision
goggles and appear in
ghostly, green-tinged black
and white. They shout, “Did
you hear that?” quite often,
followed by expressions of
terror and sudden flight.
That noise they heard was
probably the sound of intelligent viewers reaching for
their remotes.
NEW ‘IDOL’ JUDGES
ing a mine. Enter Kristen
Luman, professional paranormal detective, and her
partner, Patrick Doyle. Both
are what the British might
call “ginger.”
EPB
BATTL
LAFAY
CLEVE
RINGD
DALTN
CHATT
It’s getting increasingly
difficult to mine comedy
from cable series, when so
many already seem like parodies. The new series “Ghost
Mine” (10 p.m., Syfy) is a perfect example.
Set in the
TO SEE IT old gold-min“Ghost Mine,” ing communi10 p.m., Syfy, ty of Sumpter,
Ore., “Ghost”
Comcast
channel 52,
follows the
EPBFI chan- e f f o r t s t o
nel 70 in
revive the
Chattanooga. C r e s c e n t
Mine, abandoned more than 80 years
ago. Folks didn’t give up on it
because its precious ore was
exhausted. Its reputation for
supernatural activity made
it too frightening to explore.
The first 20 minutes of
“Ghost Mine” unfold like any
number of gold-mining shows
already on cable. We meet a
gaggle of hardscrabble guys
seemingly allergic to bathing and shaving. They sport
nicknames like Papa Smurf,
Fast Eddie, Greybeard, Dingus and Greenhorn. While
you’d think a task as arduous
as mining would be a young
man’s game, this crew has
the median age of an AARP
convention. They also look
like they were taken from
central casting for an ancient
TV Western. And as such,
they’re not without some
entertainment value. There’s
even a colorful camp cook
like the one who used to be
on “Wagon Train.”
As if scripted, one of
the grizzled guys describes
a long-held superstition
against women, particularly
redheaded women, enter-
6
PM
6:30
New judges Mariah Carey,
Nicki Minaj and Keith Urban
join Ryan Seacrest and Randy
Jackson on a new season of
“American Idol” (8 p.m., Fox,
TV-14).
7
PM
13
12
12
8
4
8
4
12
13
13
4
204 204 10
9
9 13
208
204
9
12
162
156
158
159
18
5
10
10
10
6
6
6
5
201
6
5
164
6
435
225
6
166
11
11
226
26
19
21
48
17
81
61
14
39
95
104
27
20
35
28
29
31
59
58
33
42
179
36
43
22
126
178
244
37
25
70
109
16
103
74
44
53
118
52
7
69
41
15
124
47
83
40
96
24
30
2
2
49
58
52
69
62
68
39
41
65
14
85
34
47
23
31
32
53
43
50
33
30
144
35
60
51
44
107
120
25
66
311
48
55
127
36
64
37
24
63
27
59
26
28
56
49
45
57
11
11
11
11
7
2
49
58
52
69
62
68
39
41
65
14
85
34
47
23
31
32
53
43
50
33
30
144
35
60
51
44
107
101
25
66
311
48
55
127
36
64
37
24
63
27
59
26
28
56
49
45
57
5
29 29
67 67
15 15
2
46
58
52
69
62
68
39
41
65
14
85
34
47
23
31
32
53
43
50
33
30
144
35
60
51
44
107
101
25
66
311
48
55
127
36
64
37
24
63
27
59
26
28
56
49
45
57
226
26
19
21
48
17
45
61
14
39
95
104
27
20
35
28
29
31
59
58
33
42
179
36
43
22
126
178
244
37
25
70
226
26
19
21
48
17
81
61
30
39
95
104
27
20
35
28
29
31
59
58
33
42
179
36
43
22
86
178
244
37
25
70
16
103
78
44
75
118
8
44
47
62
49
71
77
43
40
73
17
18
32
26
55
27
31
25
39
65
34
48
113
36
54
64
68
22
21
52
75
35
67
59
103
37
72
33
121
70
45
50
63
24
60
66
46
74
16
103
78
44
56
85
52
7
69
41
15
34
47
83
40
265
24 23
53 78
2
2
7
69
41
15
34
47
252
40
265
29 24
67 30
15 2
CINEMAX 320 515 520 515 320 15 520
DISN
136 43
43
54
64
57
HBO
302 500 500 500 302 302 500
HBO2
303 501 502 501 303 303 502
HBO FAM
305 503 504 503 305 305 503
SHOWTIME 340 400 400 600 340 14 540
TMC
350 408 406 408 350 62 560
■ A grim discovery on
“NCIS” (8 p.m., CBS, repeat,
TV-PG).
■ Pitiless on “Whitney” (8
p.m., NBC, repeat, TV-14).
■ Awkward news on “Guys
With Kids” (8:30 p.m., NBC,
repeat, TV-PG).
■ A common cold threatens
“The Neighbors” (8:30 p.m.,
ABC, TV-PG).
■ Reid hunts for his girlfriend on “Criminal Minds” (9
p.m., CBS, TV-14).
■ Prep school predators on
“Law & Order: Special Victims
Unit” (9 p.m., NBC, repeat, TV14).
■ An angel in need on
“Supernatural” (9 p.m., CW,
TV-14).
■ An extra mouth to feed
on “Suburgatory” (9:30 p.m.,
ABC, TV-PG).
■ A news anchor expires
during a broadcast on “CSI”
(10 p.m., CBS, TV-14).
■ A fallen comrade on
“Chicago Fire” (10 p.m., NBC,
repeat, TV-14).
Contact Kevin McDonough
at kevin.tvguy@gmail.com.
c. United Feature Syndicate
WEDNESDAY EVENING
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
3.1 NBC
Eyewitness
NBC Nightly
Entertainment Inside Edition
4
3
3
3
4
4
3
WRCB
News
News
Tonight 'TVPG' 'TVPG'
3.2 Antenna 216 148 148 148 216 216 163 Sanford
Sanford
Eyewitness
Maude
9.1 ABC
NewsChannel
ABC
World
Wheel
of
Jeopardy!
10 9
9
9 10 10 9
WTVC
9 at 6
News
Fortune 'TVG' 'TVG'
Night Fighters (1960,War) A man joins the IRA during
9.2 ThisTV 208 174 174 174 208 208 169
12.1 CBS
WDEF
12.2 Bounce
WDEF
18.1 PBS
23.1 TBN
23.2 Church
23.3 JCTV
23.4 Enlace
23.5 Smile
39.1 WYHB
45.1 PBS
WTCI
45.2 Create
53.1 CW
WFLI
53.2 MeTV
WFLI
61.1 FOX
WDSI
61.2 MNT
A&E
AMC
ANPL
BET
BRAVO
CMT
CNBC
CNN
COM
CSPAN
CSPAN2
CSSE
DISC
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FNC
FOOD
FOXSS
FX
GAME
GOLF
HALL
HGTV
HIST
ION
INSP
LIFE
MTV
NBCSN
NGEO
NICK
OWN
SPEED
SPIKE
SPSO
STYLE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TRUTV
TVLAND
UCTV
USA
VH1
WGN
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • E5
Breaking News: news@timesfreepress.com
Seth watch begins for ABC,
Motion Picture Academy
Talk about raising interest
in your Oscar hosting gig! Seth
MacFarlane certainly did
just that with his nominations
announcement performance
last week, didn’t he? In case
anyone missed it, MacFarlane
issued such gems as a Hitler
joke tied in to the Austria-Germany collaboration, “Amour,”
and a comment that directors
sit and watch other people
make movies. And he earned
a fierce collection of responses.
For instance, an Entertainment
Weekly headline asked “Seth
MacFarlane, Oscar nomination presenter: Smug and
condescending?” while Slate
observed that he “managed to
botch his Oscar-hosting gig in
record time.”
Even as that was happening, ABC chieftain Paul Lee
was explaining to press as the
Television Critics Association
conclave in Pasadena why he is
“really bullish” about MacFarlane’s upcoming Oscar emcee
stint.
“I am a huge Seth fan. I think
what Seth brings — first of all,
is a sense of joy,” he declared.
MacFarlane, who is himself
nominated for Best Song honors for”Everybody Needs a
Best Friend” from “Ted,” really
“wants to be there,” he went
on. One would hope.
“And he also has this fantastic combination of — he’s one
of the funniest writers in the
world, but if you watch ‘Family
Guy,’ I mean, who would have
expected, you know, ‘Family
Guy’ would be the heart of
show and dance and variety?
He loves the show, and I think
he’s going to bring a lot of that
energy to it. He’s coming to the
9:30
Marilyn Beck &
Stacy Jenel Smith
Entertainment
Oscars, you know, with a great
sense of respect, but I think
he’s going to bring us a really
contemporary feel.
“Look, you don’t know. You
don’t know until he comes out
there, but I’m sensing he’s going
to have a lot of fun out there,
and I think, with the movies
that are there, I think — I’m
sensing that we are going to
have a good Oscars. I may be
proven wrong, but I’m feeling
good about it and particularly
good about him.”
That remains to be seen, but
Oscar winners (“Chicago”) and
musical producers extraordinaire Neil Meron and Craig
Zadan are certainly a dream
team, particularly in a year
when “Les Miserables” is in
the mix. As Lee acknowledged,
“They love show and tell. They
love variety. And so I think you
are going to see a very entertaining Oscars. I think Seth is
going to be right at the heart
of that.”
To find out more about
Marilyn Beck and Stacy
Jenel Smith and read their
past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.
c. Marilyn Beck, Stacy Jenel Smith
10 PM 10:30 11
PM
11:30
Whitney "Hello Guys With Kids Law & Order: Special Victims Chicago Fire "Pilot" 'TV14'
Eyewitness
(:35)Tonight
Giggles" 'TV14'
Unit "Lesson's Learned" 'TV14'
News
Show (N)
All in Family All in Family Diff'rent Stroke Diff'rent Stroke Diff'rent Stroke Diff'rent Stroke Leave Beaver Leave Beaver
The Middle (N) The Neighbors Modern Family Suburgatory
Nashville "I'm Sorry for You, Newschannel (:35)Jimmy
"Cold War" (N) (N)
(N)
My Friend" 'TVPG' (N)
9 at 11 p.m. Kimmel (N)
Under Fire (1983,Drama) A journalist becomes involved The Patriot (2000,Drama) A pacifist is drawn into the
WWII. Robert Mitchum 'TVPG'
in a revolution. Nick Nolte 'TV14'
American Revolution. Mel Gibson 'TVMA'
News 12 at
CBS Evening Prime News
Andy Griffith NCIS "Recovery" 'TVPG'
Criminal Minds "Zugzwang"
CSI: Crime Scene "Dead Air"
News 12
(:35)David
6:00 p.m.
News
Show 'TVPG'
'TV14' (N)
'TV14' (N)
Nightside
Letterman (N)
B. Smith With B. Smith With WDEF Prime The Insider
Money Train (1995,Action) Two cops plan to rob the
Bounce Beats 'TV14'
The Salon ('05,Com/Dra)
Style 'TVG'
Style 'TVG'
News
'TVPG'
subway's money train. Woody Harrelson 'TVMA'
Vivica A. Fox 'TV14'
PBS NewsHour
Lawmakers
Future Files
Nature
Nova "Ice Age Death Trap"
Life on Fire (N)
Battle Castle 'TVPG'
(5:00)Praise the Lord 'TVG'
Billy Graham Crusade 'TVG'
BehindScenes Turning Point Joseph Prince End of the Age Megiddo "The March to Armageddon" 'TVPG'
Power Point
Jewish Jesus Billy Graham Classics 'TVG'
Behind Scenes Change
Harvest.
Answers
From His Heart Benny Hinn
Change
Discover-Truth
Skit Guys
Revolution TV Music Videos 'TVG'
HotOffPress
Revolutionary TV One Life
Music Videos 'TVG'
Campus Church 'TVG'
Club 700 Hoy Discipulado
Hupomone
Tiempo
Joyce Meyer Vida de Fe
Aqui Entre Nos
Cambian
Hacerlo
Discipulado
Tiempo
B. Adventures Paws, Tales
Come on Over Vipo
iShine KNECT Science Stuff Animal Atlas Big Garage
Little Women Puppets
Storykeepers Jon Singh
Real Green
INN News
Business TV
Talk.Picture
The Last Word (2011,Romance) Ewan McGregor 'TVMA'
Sailing
Golf LPGA European Tour 'TVG'
BBC World
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Nature "Cracking the Koala
Nova "Ice Age Death Trap"
Life on Fire "The Surprise
Bluegrass
BBC World
News
Business 'TVG'
Code" 'TVG'
'TVG'
Salmon" 'TVG' (N)
Under 'TVPG' News
Ask-Old House Martha
Mexico/Plate Baking Julia Lidia's Italy
Cook's Country Mexican Table Martha
Ask-Old House Steves' Europe Equitrekking Lidia's Italy
Extra 'TVPG' Access
Seinfeld "The The Simpsons Arrow "Burned" 'TV14' (N)
Supernatural "Torn and Frayed" How I Met
The Office
Loves Ray "The Rick Davis
Hollywood
Bris" 'TVPG'
'TV14' (N)
Your Mother "Niagara"
Contractor"
Gold
The Rifleman The Rifleman M*A*S*H "Mail M*A*S*H
Bewitched
I Dream of
The Mary Tyler The Bob
The Odd
The Dick Van Twilight Zone Perry Mason
Call, Again"
"Love Is Blind" Jeannie
Moore Show Newhart Show Couple
Dyke Show
"Execution"
Rules of
Two and a Half The Big Bang The Big Bang American Idol Everyone’s favorite singing competition returns. Fox61 First at Seinfeld "The Inside
How I Met
Engagement Men
Theory
Theory
(SP) 'TV14' (N)
Ten
Andrea Doria" Chattanooga Your Mother
We the People We the People The People's Court 'TVPG'
Basketball NCAA Georgia vs. Missouri 'TVG' (L)
Numb3rs
Numb3r "Identity Crisis" 'TVPG'
The First 48 "Underworld"
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Ship Wars (N) Ship Wars (N) Barter Kings (N)
Barter Kings
CSI: Miami "Cheating Death"
CSI: Miami "Gone Baby Gone" The Karate Kid ('84,Dra) A teenager is taught karate for self-defense. Ralph Macchio 'TVPG' The Karate Kid Part II 'TVPG'
Gator Boys "Alligator Face-Off" Swamp Wars
Swamp Wars
Gator Boys
Gator Boys "Love at First Bite" Swamp Wars
106 & Park: BET's Top 10 Live 'TVPG' (N)
RealHusband Wayans
Coach Carter Basketball players must improve their grades to play. 'TVPG'
Vanderpump Rules
Beverly Hills
Housewives Atlanta
T. Chef "Battle Before The War" Top Chef "Restaurant Wars" (N) (:15)Watch (N) (:45)Top Chef
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Ext. Makeover: Home
Big Food (N)
Ext. Makeover: Home 'TVPG'
Mad Money 'TVPG'
The Kudlow Report
One Nation, Overweight
American Greed: The Fugitives American Greed: Scam
Mad Money 'TVPG'
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight 'TVG'
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
(4:00)The Situation Room 'TVG' OutFront
South Park
Tosh.O
Colbert Report Daily Show
Workaholics Workaholics South Park
South Park
Work (N)
Kroll Show (N) Daily Show (N) Colbert (N)
(5:00)U.S. House of Representatives 'TVG'
Key Capitol Hill Hearings
Tonight From Washington 'TVG'
Capital News Today 'TVG'
(5:00)U.S. Senate 'TVG'
Dawg Report SEC Tonight
Basketball NCAA Memphis vs. Rice 'TVG' (L)
Basketball NCAA Alabama vs Mississippi State 'TVG'
Hoops Weekly SEC Tonight
Amish Mafia
Amish Mafia "Fall From Grace" Amish Mafia: The Devil's Cut Amish Mafia (N)
Moonshiners
Amish Mafia "The Reckoning"
Fashion Police 'TV14'
E! News 'TVG'
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Soup
Love You
Chelsea Lately E! News
SportsCenter 'TVG'
SportsC. (N) NBA Countdwn Basketball NBA Houston Rockets vs. Dallas Mavericks 'TVG' (L)
Basketball NBA Miami vs Golden State 'TVG'
SportsNation 'TVG'
Basketball NCAA North Carolina State vs. Maryland 'TVG' (L)
Basketball NCAA West Virginia vs. Iowa State 'TVG' (L)
Tennis ITF Australian Open
Remember the Titans (2000,Drama) Denzel Washington 'TVPG'
Remember the Titans (2000,Drama) Denzel Washington 'TVPG'
The 700 Club 'TVPG'
Special Report With Bret Baier FOX Report
The O'Reilly Factor 'TVG'
Hannity
On the Record
The O'Reilly Factor 'TVG'
Diners
Diners
Restaurant "Secret Garden"
Restaurant "Dodge City" 'TVG' Restaurant: Impossible (N)
Bobby's Dinner Battle (N)
Restaurant "Michele's" 'TVG'
ACC All-Access Game Time
Basketball NCAA Miami vs. Boston College 'TVG' (L)
Mixed Martial Arts '12 Best of PRIDE Fighting Championships Poker WPT World Finals 'TVPG'
Two and Half Two and Half The A-Team (2010,Action) Four war veterans are framed for a crime. Liam Neeson 'TV14'
Amer. Horror: Asylum (N)
A Horror: Asylum "Continuum"
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Golf Central
European (N) School (N)
Golf Academy On the Range (N)
Feherty "Bill Clinton" 'TV14'
Golf Central
Golf EPGA Abu Dhabi Championship 'TVG' (L)
Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Brady Bunch Happy Days
Happy Days
Happy Days
Happy Days
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Buying and Selling
Buying and Selling
Cousins Call Cousins Call Property Brothers
House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Renovation
American Pickers
Guide to Presidents
Guide to Presidents
Guide to Presidents "Assume the Position 17-89-18-25"
Ax Men "Flipping Logzilla"
(5:00) Delta Force Commando (1987,Action) Bo Svenson 'TV14' WWE Main Event
The Juror (1996,Thriller) Demi Moore 'TVMA'
Blood Work
Happy Days
Happy Days
Dr. Quinn M.D.. "Point Blank" The Waltons "The System"
The Waltons "The Spoilers"
Matlock "The Captain" 'TVPG' Matlock "The Vendetta" 'TVPG'
Wife Swap
Wife Swap "Schults/ Smith"
Wife Swap
Wife Swap "Browne/ Robinson" Double Divas Double Divas Project Runway: All Stars
Buckwild
Snooki and JWoww
Catfish "Jasmine and Mike"
Catfish "Tyler and Amanda"
Washington Heights
Washington Heights
NBC Sports Talk
Hockey NCAA Cold War on Ice 'TVG'
Star Spangled Sundays
NFL Turning Point
NFL Turning Point
Hell on the Highway
Border Wars
Border Wars
Border Wars (N)
Hell on the Highway
Border Wars "24-Hour Watch"
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Drake & Josh Drake & Josh Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
The Nanny
The Nanny
Friends
(:35)Friends
Who Marry
Who Marry
Who Marry
Who Marry
48 Hours: Hard "Into Thin Air" 48 Hours: Hard "Puppet Master" 48 Hours: Hard Evidence
48 Hours: Hard "Into Thin Air"
Race Hub
Pinks!
Barrett Jackson Automobile Auction Live coverage of this world-famous classic car auction. 'TVG' (L)
Movie
Kick-Ass (2010,Action) Aaron Johnson 'TVMA'
Walking Tall ('04) Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson 'TV14'
Bellator 360 "The Lightweights"
Classics NCAA Md./UNC
Pre-game
Basketball NBA Brooklyn Nets vs. Atlanta Hawks Site: Philips Arena 'TVG' (L)
Post-game
Israeli Bas.
Fight Sports: In 60 'TVG'
Big Rich Texas
Big Rich Texas
Big Rich Texas
Big Rich (N)
Big Rich At.
Big Rich Texas
Big Rich Texas
Ghost Hunters
Ghost Hunters
Ghost Hunters
Ghost Hunters (N)
Ghost Mine (N)
Ghost Hunters
King of Queens Seinf. 1/2
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan 'TV14' (N)
(5:30) Cromwell (1970,History) Richard Harris 'TVPG'
A Man's Castle
(:15) Suez (1938,Adventure) Leon Ames
Kentucky 'TVG'
Long Island
Long Island
Toddlers & Tiaras
Here Comes Honey Boo Boo
Toddlers & Tiaras (N)
Cheer Perfection (N)
Toddlers & Tiaras
Castle "Love Me Dead" 'TVPG' Castle "One Man's Treasure"
Castle "The Dead Pool" 'TVPG' Castle "To Love and Die in L.A." Castle "Pretty Dead" 'TVPG'
CSI: NY "The Cost of Living"
Regular Show NinjaGo
NinjaGo
Chima (N)
Chima (N)
Johnny Test
King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
Bizarre Foods "Chile" 'TVPG'
Man v. Food Man v. Food Baggage
Baggage
Baggage (N) Baggage
Fast Foods "USA" 'TVPG' (N)
Food Paradise (N)
Cops
Cops
World's Dumbest...
Full Throttle Saloon 'TV14'
Full Throttle Saloon 'TV14' (N) Black Gold 'TVPG' (N)
Full Throttle Saloon
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Cosby Show
Cosby Show
Cosby Show
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hot/ Cleve. (N) Divorced (N) Hot/ Cleve.
HappilyDiv.
Cowboy Church 'TVG'
Bluegrass
Changed Lives Walker County 'TVG'
Night Talk 'TVG'
Rick Davis Talking Gold 'TVG'
NCIS "Identity Crisis" 'TV14'
NCIS "Leap of Faith" 'TV14'
NCIS "Dead Air" 'TV14'
NCIS "Baltimore" 'TV14'
NCIS "Swan Song" 'TV14'
NCIS "Pyramid" 'TV14'
Love and Hip-Hop
Black Ink Crew "Oh S--t!"
Mob Wives "Mob Knives"
Mob Wives "Bad Boys" 'TV14' Making Mr. Right (N)
Rock Star 'TVMA'
Old Christine Old Christine Funniest Home Videos 'TVPG' Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos 'TVPG'
PREMIUM CHANNELS
(5:05) Asylum A Thousand Words A literary agent finds a
Banshee 'TVMA'
Final Destination 5 Survivors flee from
(:35) Kingpin A former bowling champ
Blackout
strange tree in his yard. Eddie Murphy 'TVPG'
Death as it stalks them. 'TVMA'
mentors an Amish protégé. 'TV14'
Good Luck
Jessie "Evil
Good Luck Charlie "Special
Good Luck
Lemonade Mouth (2011,Children) Five students with a passion Good Luck
Austin and Ally Jessie "Evil
Charlie
Times Two"
Delivery" 'TVG'
Charlie
Charlie
Times Two"
for music find each other. Bridgit Mendler 'TVG'
(4:30) Big Hanna (2011,Action) A young assassin is sent on a mission The Three Stooges ('12) Moe, Larry and Curly The Dilemma (2010,Comedy/Drama) A man catches his
Miracle 'TVPG' across Europe. Saoirse Ronan 'TV14'
try to save their orphanage. Sean Hayes 'TVPG' best friend's wife with another man. Vince Vaugn 'TV14'
(5:45) Die Hard: With a Vengeance (1995,Action) A mad The Union (2007,Documentary) A look at 'the
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island Men
(:15) Something Borrowed
bomber holds New York City hostage. Bruce Willis 'TVM'
union' of growing marijuana in Canada. 'TV14' travel to a mythical island. 'TVPG'
('11) Ginnifer Goodwin 'TVPG'
(5:25) Problem Child 2
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl A young (:45) A Kid in King Arthur's Court A boy
(:15) The Art of Getting By A popular girl
(:40)
('91,Com) John Ritter 'TV14'
girl grows up in the Great Depression. 'TVG'
protects King Arthur's kingdom. 'TVPG'
befriends a fatalistic teen. 'TV14'
Caddyshack II
Anthony Clark "Ambiguous"
United States "Bush and
Shameless "El Gran Canon"
Inside the NFL 'TVPG'
Californication House of Lies Inside the NFL 'TVPG'
'TVMA'
Obama - Age of Terror" 'TV14' 'TVMA'
"Stochasticity"
(5:10) Heart of (:35) Hurt A widowed family is forced to move
(:15) Burke and Hare (2010,Comedy) Grave robbers provide
I Don't Know How She Does It A female
Fright
Stone 'TV14' into a salvage yard. Melora Walters 'TVMA'
cadavers for med school. Bill Bailey 'TVMA'
executive is the breadwinner for her family.
Night 'TVMA'
E6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Seeking onions, nitrate-free meats
1 tablespoon plus 1
teaspoon kosher salt
1
16-ounce
package
By Jane Henegar
elbow macaroni
2 pounds ground beef
TO REACH US
1 large onion, chopped
2 (8-ounce) cans tomato
Fare Exchange is a longtime meeting place for people
sauce
who love to cook and love to eat. We welcome both
1
⁄8 teaspoon freshly
your recipes and your requests. Be sure to include
ground black pepper
precise instructions for every recipe you send.
■ Mailing address: Jane Henegar, 913 Mount Olive
1 cup (8 ounces) ricotta
Road, Lookout Mountain, GA 30750.
cheese
1
■ E-mail: janehenegar@gmail.com.
⁄4 cup (2 ounces) sour
■ Fax: 423-668-5092.
cream
1
⁄3 cup chopped green
bell pepper
1
nitrates, sugars, etc. The rea⁄3 cup chopped scallions
bread flour to replace
1
son I am reaching out to you
⁄2 cup (2 ounces)
the whole wheat
is to hopefully find providers
shredded cheddar
flour.)
1
of beef, chicken or pork that
⁄4 cup (1 ounce)
2 teaspoons salt
isn’t processed using addishredded mozzarella
Dissolve yeast in luke1
tives. I shop frequently at
⁄4 cup chopped fresh
warm water and honey
[local specialty stores] and
parsley
for about 5 minutes. Place
their meat doesn’t meet the
Preheat the oven to 350
all ingredients in a mixing
above requirements. I believe bowl and knead until it
degrees. Bring a large pot
I need to go to a packing/proof water to a boil. Add 1
loosens from the sides of
cessing plant where meat is
tablespoon of the salt to
the bowl. Place in a large
grain/grass fed. I need meat
the macaroni and cook
oiled
bowl,
cover
and
let
at its purest form.
until tender but still firm to
rise
until
about
double.
Be
“The diet my daughter
sure it is in a warm place. the bite, 7 to 8 minutes.
is on is what people refer to
Drain well.
The length of time can’t
as the ‘ketogenic’ diet used
be
accurately
specified.
If
Heat a large skillet
for many years to control
you push an indention into over medium-high heat.
seizures in children, but
advances in medical research the dough about an inch, it Add the beef and onion
should remain if the dough and cook, stirring, until
now [have made it available
has risen sufficiently. It
to patients with Alzheimer’s,
the beef is well browned.
isn’t unusual for the entire Carefully drain the fat from
Parkinson’s and other] neurological disorders. They are
process to take a number
the skillet and stir in the
finding a strong correlation
of hours. Remove and
tomato sauce, the remainbetween additives and neuro- shape into loaves, rolls or
ing 1 teaspoon of salt, and
logical issues.”
buns.
pepper. Bring to a simBake at 375 degrees
mer over a low heat while
■ ■ ■
until browned.
preparing the remaining
To make 2 to 3 dozen
ingredients.
Yeast of the Ridge saw
rolls: Bake approximately
the request for whole wheat
Combine the ricotta,
12 or 13 minutes.
bread. Many cooks have
sour cream, bell pepper
To make bread:
chosen to mix whole wheat
and scallions in a medium
Because all ovens are
and white flour for a lighter
bowl. Spread half of the
product, so white whole
different, there isn’t a per- pasta into the bottom of a
wheat sounds like an appeal- fect method of predicting
9-by-13-inch baking dish.
ing hybrid. If you can add
exactly how long it will
Top with the ricotta mixto the white whole wheat
take for your bread to be
conversation, please do. This perfectly done. If the bread ture, then the remaining
is a versatile recipe, useful for looks browned on the top, pasta. Pour the meat mixture over the top. Sprinkle
bread or rolls. Next week we
tip it out of the pan and tap with the cheddar and mozwill print some research she
on the bottom. It should
zarella. Bake the casserole
found on the now-available
sound hollow and the loaf until the cheese is melted
white whole wheat flour.
should be light in weight. If and lightly browned, about
not, return it to the oven to 20 minutes. Sprinkle with
WHOLE WHEAT
cook a bit more.
the parsley before serving.
BREAD OR ROLLS
If you cut into the cas■ ■ ■
serole when it comes right
2 tablespoons yeast
Euela Laubenheim found out of the oven, the pieces
2 cups (16 ounces)
this
recipe in answer to a
will be runny and won’t
lukewarm water
1
request.
hold together. By allowing
⁄4 cup honey (2 ounces)
3
casseroles to sit for a bit
⁄4 cup olive oil (6
DAVID VENABLE’S
and reabsorb some of the
ounces)
melted cheeses and liquid
2 fresh eggs
CHEESY
ingredients, the food will
6 cups whole wheat flour
CHEESEBURGER
hold together for easier
(For a lighter bread,
serving.
use 1 cup or more of
CASSEROLE
Fare Exchange
are considered obese, the
CDC says, while 69 percent
of Alabamians are overweight
and 32 percent are obese.
“It’s not just what we eat,
but how much we eat, how
we prepare it and the lack
of exercise,” says Dr. Harry
Strothers, the chairman of
family medicine at the More-
house School of Medicine in
Atlanta. “That combination
is what’s deadly.”
Experts advise people to
use low-fat milk instead of
whole milk, bake chicken
instead of frying it, follow a
diet rich in fruits and vegetables, and keep an eye on
portion size.
The Rev. Shanan Jones,
the assistant pastor of community affairs and public
relations at Ebenezer Baptist
Church in Atlanta, would
like to see more churches
saving the body as well as
the soul.
“Many of the funerals that
we’ve conducted were unnecessary,” says Jones, who has
lost 125 pounds through diet
changes and exercise. “We’re
eating ourselves into the
grave, and that’s something
that the faith community
and the African-American
community at least have to
wrestle with.”
Hurt couldn’t ag ree
more.
“I wanted to make this
film to honor my father (who
died in 2007 from the pancreatic cancer), and I wanted
his life and his memory to
potentially have an impact
on millions of people,” Hurt
says. “I hope people are
inspired by his story and
consider having conversations with family members
who need that extra push to
change their diet, to exercise
on a regular basis.”
Georgia who enter. We have
so many creative cooks.
As for the voting periods,
they are:
■ Doable Dinners from
March 14-March 28.
■ Simple Sweets and
Starters takes place June 13June 27.
■ Quick Rise-and-Shine
Breakfasts between July 4
and Aug. 8.
At the 45th bake-off, held
in March 2012 in Orlando,
Fla., Christina Verrelli of
Devon, Pa., won the $1 million
grand prize for her Pumpkin
Ravioli with Salted Caramel
Whipped Cream recipe.
The dessert wraps Pillsbury Crescent Recipe Creations refrigerated seamless
dough around a sweet pumpkin and cream cheese filling.
Sprinkled with cinnamon and
pecans, drizzled with caramel
sauce, and served with caramel
whipped cream, the decadent
recipe gives you an idea of
what it takes to be a winner.
While the ingredient-limit
rule was not in place at the
time of this entry, it’s still
a fairly easy recipe to prepare. To find it, visit www.
Pillsbury.com and search for
Pumpkin Ravioli with Salted
Caramel Whipped Cream.
You can take a look at other
past winners there, as well.
Good luck!
Email Anne Braly at
abraly@timesfreepress.com.
Food
• Continued from Page E1
pot filled with corn, pigs’ ears
and feet and turkey neck, fare
that would make any doctor
cringe.
But it also tackles other
issues such as fast foods,
processed foods and food
deserts, neighborhoods
where residents have few, if
any, options for healthy fare
such as fresh fruits and vegetables.
He hopes the film and
his father’s story will inspire
others to eat healthier.
Studies have shown that
obesity is a major risk factor for high blood pressure,
diabetes, heart disease and
some cancers. And Southerners know how to pack on the
pounds.
In Tennessee, 67 percent
of adults are overweight and
about 31 percent are obese,
according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 65 percent
of Georgia adults are overweight and about 30 percent
Braly
• Continued from Page E1
pastries, breakfast breads,
egg dishes and breakfast
sandwiches); entry period
runs from July 4 to Aug. 8.
You still have plenty of
time to hone your recipes for
the latter two categories, and
I’d love to see someone from
our area as a finalist. So mark
these voting times on your calendar because I’m sure there
will be people from Southeast Tennessee and/or North
Contributed Photo by Byron Hurt
“Soul Food Junkies” filmmaker Byron Hurt with his
mother, Frances Hurt, and sister, Taundra Hurt. They
are holding photos of Byron and Taundra’s father,
Jackie Hurt, who died of pancreatic cancer after battling
weight issues for year.
BAR STOOLS
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• Pub Tables
• Dinette Sets
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1426 S. Moore Rd.
AnkarsBilliards.com
423-894-0978
The Associated Press
Substituting salmon for corned beef in a Reuben sandwich retains a flavor punch but doesn’t sit as heavy on
the stomach.
Reuben lite
Sub salmon for a lighter take
on the popular sandwich
By Sara Moulton
The Associated Press
mayonnaise
2 tablespoons chili
sauce (the kind
served with shrimp
cocktail)
2 tablespoons finely
chopped dill pickle
1 teaspoon lemon juice
Kosher salt and ground
black pepper
8 slices rye bread
4 ounces thinly sliced
Gruyere, fontina or
Swiss cheese
4 ounces thinly sliced
smoked salmon
141⁄2-ounce can
sauerkraut, drained,
rinsed and gently
squeezed to remove
excess liquid
2 tablespoons extravirgin olive oil
In a small bowl, combine the mayonnaise,
chili sauce, pickle and
lemon juice. Season with
salt and pepper to taste.
Spread one side of each
slice of bread with some
of the dressing. Arrange
half of the cheese on 4
of the slices. Divide the
salmon, sauerkraut and
remaining cheese among
the cheese-topped slices
of bread and top each
with one of the remaining
bread slices, spread side
down.
In a large skillet over
medium, heat the oil until
hot. Add the sandwiches
and something heavy
(such as a cast iron skillet,
flat saucepan lid, or heatsafe plate and a weight
such as a can of food)
to firmly press the sandwiches down. Cook for 6
minutes per side, or until
golden and the cheese
has melted. Cut each
sandwich in half and serve
right away.
Allow me to confess right
at the start — this is not your
grandfather’s Reuben sandwich.
The legendary Reuben
of yore was built on corned
beef, but I swap that out in
favor of smoked salmon. And
while I hold fast to the classic version’s melted cheese,
I lose the untoasted rye
bread in favor of a grilled
panini. Unorthodox? Guilty
as charged. Scrumptious anyway? See for yourself.
Of course, the idea to
begin with was — somehow
— to lighten up the Reuben, a
sandwich that explodes with
flavor as you eat it, but then
sits in your gut like a rock for
days afterward.
S m o ke d sa l m o n h a s
nowhere near the fat content
of corned beef, but — given
its high level of omega-3 fatty
acids — it’s plenty rich for
fish. Indeed, it’s rich enough
to cry out for some kind of
acid for balance, just like
corned beef. Happily, sauerkraut does the trick for both
of them.
As for the Reuben’s standard Thousand Island dressing, I slimmed it down and
spiced it up by using low-fat
mayo and chili sauce (instead
of the more traditional
ketchup), then combined it
all with chopped dill pickle
and a squeeze of lemon. Likewise, when it came time to
cook this assemblage, I used
extra-virgin olive oil instead
of butter.
But why panini? I just happen to think that a pressed
sandwich, especially one
with cheese, always tastes
better than a non-pressed
one, probably because of the
former’s crispy crust. Unfortunately, I don’t own a panini machine. It would be yet
another piece of equipment
Start to finish: 30 minvying for a patch of the limited real estate in my kitchen. utes (15 minutes active).
Servings: 4.
Fortunately, I invented my
own. I just put my layered
sandwich in a skillet, top it
with a plate or lid, and top
that with a heavyweight can
of tomatoes. Voila, panini!
Honeybell
SMOKED SALMON
REUBEN PANINI
1
Oranges
Arriving Soon
10 lb. Bag
Idaho
Potatoes
1
⁄4 cup low-fat
$ 99
www.carmike.com
EAST RIDGE 18
(423) 855-9652
I-24 at Moore Road
(Exit 184)
Showtimes for Wednesday, January 16, 2013
IMAX – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
3D - PG-13•DLP 12:10 3:50 7:35
Gangster Squad - R•DLP 11:00 1:45 (4:30)
7:15 10:00
Zero Dark Thirty - R•DLP 12:15 1:30 (4:00)
(5:00) 7:30 8:30
A Haunted House - R•DLP 10:30 11:20 12:40
1:40 3:00 (4:05) (5:20) 6:25 7:40 8:45 10:05
Texas Chainsaw 3D - R•DLP 12:05 2:30 4:55
7:20 9:45
Texas Chainsaw 2D - R•DLP 11:15 1:50 (4:15)
6:40 9:05
Django Unchained - R•DLP 10:55 11:55 2:35
3:35 6:15 7:25 10:10
Parental Guidance - PG•DLP 11:10 1:55
(4:25) 6:55 9:25
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey 2D PG-13•DLP 12:20 (4:10) 7:50
Lincoln - PG-13•DLP 11:05 2:25 5:45 9:10
Jack Reacher - PG-13•DLP 10:25 1:35 (4:40)
7:45 10:50
Les Miserables - PG-13•DLP 10:30 2:00
(5:30) 9:00
This Is 40 - R•DLP 10:15 1:20 (4:45) 7:55 10:55
Promised Land - R•DLP 2:05 8:00
Guilt Trip - PG-13•DLP 11:25 (4:50) 10:40
Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 - PG13•DLP 2:10 8:05
Cirque Du Soleil: Worlds Away 3D - PG•DLP
11:35 5:05 10:20
( ) = Bargain Matinee Showtimes
ALL DIGITAL PROJECTION 35307429
Tangerines
Turnip, Collard,
Mustard,
and Kale
49¢
LB
Sweet
Potatoes
5 $1 33¢
FOR
LB
Tomatoes
99¢
LB
Blueberries
2
CUPS
FOR
Cabbage
39¢
LB
Apples
Selected
Varieties
1 99¢
$
LB
P ices su
Prices
Pri
subj
subject
bjectt to
to cha
change
change.
h nge. A
Acce
Accepting
ccepti
pting
ting EBT
EBT.
624 E. 11th St. • Chattanooga, TN
(423) 267-8802
35295521
Good morning, and welcome to the middle of January.
There are stockpots on
the cooktops, I’ll wager, and
many of you looking for new
ideas or tried and true ones.
Among the things we cooks
are requesting today is this
list: Williamsburg creamed
onions, other recipes for
small whole onions, protein
shakes and smoothies, cooking advice with whole wheat
flour, and where to find
nitrate-free meat locally for a
ketogenic diet.
Lennis DuBan of Ooltewah
read a comment in this
column by Jane Guthrie,
mentioning a holiday dinner perennial at their house:
“Williamsburg Creamed
Onions. It sounds like something good, and I would love
to try it.” Here’s an aside: I
found just such onions at
Whole Foods right before
Christmas and tried the
recipe on their package for
roasted onions. Tossed in salt
and olive oil and roasted in
the oven at 400 degrees, these
onions were delicious and
wholly healthful ... although
Ms. DuBan and I agree that
the sauce for creamed onions
surely is good.
Yeast of the Ridge saw the
request for healthful smoothies and shakes and also the
cover of the most recent Williams-Sonoma catalog. “It was
a photo of smoothies in nine
different colors and renewed
my interest in making them.”
She also called for responses
from bakers who are using
white whole wheat flour.
Cooking Mama has a
heartfelt plea on behalf of her
adult daughter who suffers
from seizures, and I will print
much of her letter because
more than one of you will
be able to help. This letter
reminds me of a favorite
quote by Elizabeth Stone.
“Making the decision to have
a child: It’s momentous. It
is to decide forever to have
your heart go walking around
outside your body.” I can
testify along with Cooking
Mama that the heart stays in
that place when the child is
an adult.
C.M. wrote that “I have an
adult special needs daughter who has seizures. Johns
Hopkins and Vanderbilt have
her on a special therapeutic
diet to help control her daily
seizures. The diet requirements calls for food free of
SECTION
F
Wednesday, January 16, 2012
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All Size Jobs
LOOKOUT AIR SOLUTIONS
$49.99 Seasonal Cleaning
Sales, Service & Installation.
Free Est. 100% financing avail.
423-710-1328
Baileys Heating & Air Svc
& Sales. All makes/models,
senior discounts 423-413-5312
Same Day Heat & Air
All makes & models. $25 service
call. $49.95 seasonal tune-up
Lic. & Ins. Call 423-344-6650
PHILLIPS HEATING & AIR
5 Ton Heat Pump, New $1600.&
2 thru10 Ton. $500.up New units
at factory cost. 423-344-7571
HEATING/AIR CONDITIONING,
electrical, plumbing, repair. Reasonable Rates. 423-596-3142
Jim Swafford 423-842-7266
Carpet Sales/
Installation
BEST PRICE
Installation, Restretch, Repairs.
30 yrs. exp. 423-635-4326
Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers,
Stoves. 822-6003/322-2790
REPAIR HOME icemakers,
refrigerators, freezers & stoves.
7 days. 596-4083/899-9448
Automotive
CLOCK REPAIR
All makes & models. House calls.
Call Joe (423) 855-8890
Insurance
C.P. ELECTRIC
Proctor Insurance-Medicare
Supplements. Whole Life
Insurance. 423-855-4728
REPAIRS TODAY
Bedwell Handyman Services
All home repair - Painting, Press
Wash, Carpentry. 423-432-2405
Lawn Care
Free Estimates
Call: 423-645-4082
Electrical/Swimming Pools.
Lic & Ins. 423-667-1999
Dump Truck
Service
Bulldozer, Top Soil, Sitework,
Driveways, clearing, 20 yrs.
Lic. & Ins. 423-280-6347
Trojans, Viruses, Worms
Holding Your PC Hostage???
Can Fix call 423-463-0872
Concrete Work
Custom Concrete & Masonry
Complete Reliable Work!
Concrete & Demolition.
Dump Truck & Bobcat Service
FAITH-FULL Fences & Decks
All Types. Over 20 Yrs.
Exp. Call Gary 240-0980
Comm. or res. fence & repairs.
Free Est. Call Ron 423-505-6339
GLOBAL FENCE SYSTEMS
Wood, Vinyl, Chain Link
Install & Repair 423-595-3597
Firewood
FIREWOOD
423-421-4895 or 888-615-0705
Large Truck Load $100
423-599-1108
Driveways, slabs, concrete removal
Dump truck & Bobcat Service.
SPECIAL 10X40X4’’ $1299
ALL Concrete - Including
pea gravel / decorative concrete.
Concrete removal. 34 yrs. 825-0017
Decks
CERTIFIED INSTALLATION of
hardwood, tile & carpet. Insured
& references available.
423-718-8669
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Installation, Finish & Refinish.
423-240-9712
TILE, VINYL, HARDWOOD,
LAMINATE - Free estimates.
Senior Disc. 423-645-5740
FAITH-FULL Decks & Fences
All Types. Over 20 Yrs.
Exp. Call Gary 240-0980
423-521-7777
DECK BUILDERS pool/spa
decks, Screened porches,
fences, 30 yrs. professional exp.
Lic./ Ins. Free Est. 629-8055
Bobcat Service
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(706) 965-4999
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cleaning, painting, roof repairs.
20 yrs. Exp. 423-394-1177
Handyman Services
demolition/french drains/dump
truck/retaining walls/driveways/
land clearing. 423-593-7810
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Expedited heavy freight. Local or
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Fill Dirt & Gravel. Prompt &
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DRYWALL HANGING,
FINISHING, TEXTURED
CEILING & REPAIRS.
Free Estimates. 423-876-4445
Lot Clearing, footings, road
building, septic systems, topsoil,
and fill dirt. 605-5374.
Property Cleanup, Overgrowth
Removal, etc. 423-834-1103
AFFORDABLE PRICES
Decks, Screened porches, Additions Remodeling, Roofing. Over
40 yrs. experience 423-280-5045
Leaf Work, Trim Shrubs, Cut
Trees, Clearing, Plant, Mulch &
Hauling. Christian Man. 413-1251
CEILINGS SPRAYED 1 Day
Service.Hang & Finish Drywall
30 yrs. Exp. Ins. 423-304-2650
% ANDY OnCall %
Est. 1993 Small jobs,
Home repairs & Maintenance
PLicensed & Fully InsuredP
Free Estimates! 423-624-9800
EXPERT HANDYMAN
1 call...ANY project. 20 years
experience. Senior discounts.
TENNESSEE ROOFING
GAF Master Ellite Applicators
Full Insured/ Warrantied
All types roofs
Metal, Shingle & Flat
Residential & Commercial
FREE Estimates! 842-8826
Plumbing
BATES ROOFING, 20 yrs exp.
Shingle/rubber roofs. Repairs.
Labor guaranteed. 423-309-5521
ABSOLUTE PLUMBING
Master Plumber. Sewer Jetting.
Great Rates. Bonded,
Lic & Ins. Matthew 423-509-4523
A-1 ROOFING
H & H Inc. Lic., Bonded & Ins.
24 yrs. exp. BBB Rating A+
Call: (423) 954-3002
All types brick, block, stone &
stucco. Concrete & remove old
concrete & repair chimney top.
Garner Masonry
698-6080 / 645-1846
RANSOM RENOVATION
Residential & Commercial,
Decks, hardwood floors,
interior trim, tile showers,
plumbing, electrical, roofing,
masonry, painting. 595-3595
TONEY MASONRY-Chimneys,
Repair, Retainer Walls, Block
Brick & Carpentry. 423-580-3611
TL Hood Construction - Lic/Ins.
25 yrs exp. Remodeling & new
home. Work guar. 423-619-1339
Moving & Hauling
HAULING brush, trash, furniture, etc. Cleaning of attics,
garages, etc. 423-899-4850
Moving & Storage
Mike Delashmitt Const. We do it
all. Roofing, siding, windows & additions
Lic/Bonded/Ins 423-875-3024
Jerry’s Home Repair
Carpentry, Ele., Plumbing
Wood & Tile Floors, Kit. & Bath
repairs. No job too small. 39+ yrs
exp. Call Jerry @ 423-883-4351
Local moves starting at $79.
Experienced Movers 423-825-2167
BETTER HOMES
Painting
Kit/Bath Remodels/Designs
Large or Small, I do it all!
Lic. Contractor 320-4897
Leaks repaired H Drains
Cleaned H Fixtures installed
Senior Disc Josh 423-598-1466
DALE’S PLUMBING
House Cleaning
BI-WEEKLY $70*
Residential - Insured
MR. FIX-IT
Call J&R Construction
Roofing Repairs
TIM-BERS Tree Service
& Stump Grinding. Ins. Free est.
70’ bucket truck. 423-605-4158
423-593-7124
Trimming, Topping Removal.
Insured. Free Estimates.
ROOF REPAIR OR
REPLACEMENT
Chris Rollins, Owner
A+ PLUMBING
Residential Repair, Drain
Replacement & Drain Cleaning
Insurance claims & storm repair
Free estimates. 423-645-5740
Roofing
Toppers Roofing & Repairs
SCENIC CITY
All roofs & repairs . Serving
Tn. & Ga. area for over 27 yrs.
320-9491, 886-2569
Call us first! Discount Coupon
with this ad. We do all roofs &
leak repairs. 40 yrs exp. Super
low rates. 423-355-6214
FAVORS PAINTING PLUS
Interior & Exterior, Lic./Ins.
Satisfaction Guar. 423-902-6954
LEAK REPAIR &
SMALL ROOF JOBS
423-903-4701
423-834-6297
WATKINS TREE SERVICE
Multiple trees, small or
large jobs. Fully equipped.
Insured. 423-260-0770
A CHRISTIAN CO - Kelley
Tree Service-Ins. Free
Estimates. 423-544-2602
Sheetrock
HC - MOBILE TREE SERVICEH
Stump grinding. Firewood
Free Est. Ins.423-309-6148
HANGING & FINISHING
& REPAIRS - Up to 60 mi.
Ceiling Spray, Popcorn,
Knock Down & Slick.
Free Estimates
Treebusters Tree Service
Fully insured, 26 yrs. exp., 80’
bucket truck. 423-503-0949
423-876-4445
CEILINGS REPAIRED
NORRIS TREE SERVICE,
Inc. Tree work, stump removal
Licensed, insured. 892-7950
Northside Tree Service
Textured, Finishing, 30 yrs.
Clay Simmons. 842-7786
Top trim removed. Insured.
Since 1978. 877-0717/843-9020
Stump Removal
Wilson Tree Co. Oolt., TN.
Economy slow, bids are low.
Work Comp./Liab. 423-284-9872
AAA STUMP GRINDING
PROFESSIONAL PAINTING
Int from $95. Repair, power
wash, deck stain. Credit cards
accept. David 423-227-0176
ROLLINS TREE SERVICE
Licensed & Insured. 25 yrs.
experience. 423-605-4485
Best Price - Just Call
423-825-CALL / 825-2255
EXPERT ROOFING
Jack up & Replace floor joists
Free Estimates! Ron 304-7765
Licensed and Insured
423-499-0134
MASTER PLUMBER
Lic. & bonded. $25 service call
applied to repairs. 421-5380
AFFORDABLE CLEANING
Fully insured.
House Leveling
423-505-8071
Mid-South Roofing & Repairs
30 yrs. experience.
Licensed, Bonded, Insured.
Int/Ext. Decks, Fences, Comm.
Lic/Ins. Free Est. 423-698-1831
423-505-8071
Trimming, Topping & Removal.
Free Estimates. Fully insured.
Senior Citizen & Military Discount
Pay by the job. Not the hour.
24hr. Call 314-4789
JOLLY PAINTING
Cleaner Corners
423-635-1235
ABC-12TREE
Trimming, Topping, Removals,
Stump grinding, Debris Cleanup.
Lic/Ins. Discount Prices Guar.
Call Today! Cut Today!
Firewood $100 lg. truck load.
Delivery. 423-599-1108
Affordable Roofing
HRepairs & RoofingH
423-499-9301
All Plumbing & Gas
HOODMOVING.COM
Abbott Painting & Pres-Wash
Lowest Prices All Work Guaranteed
Int/Ext paint & restorations. Press
wash, low temp. paint/ wash,
carpentry. Ins. 423-314-6970
Honest, Quality & Professional
Tree Care for over 30 years.
Free Estimates/Fully Insured
ISA-Certified Arborist SO-6099-A
423/421-0479 - 706/965-9945
H No Job Too Big or Small H
AFFORDABLE ROOFING &
LEAK REPAIRS. Over 41 yrs.
Senior, Church & Vet Discounts.
Don Grant Co., Old Graysville
Mill. Free Estimates.
423-894-3781/ 706-937-6187
J. R.’S HOME REPAIR. All
remodeling, additions, decks, etc
Free estimates. 870-2391
RON RABY’S TREE SERVICE
TRIPLE CROWN
TREE SERVICE
Quality home repairs low rates.
Master Plumber. 423-785-7430
HANDYMAN CONNECTION
Licensed H Bonded H Insured
All work guaranteed.
Tree Service
423-355-3777
Marvin Jenkins & Son Plumbing
423-645-5740
Residential/Commercial Repairs
TN Licensed & Insured/Free Est
423-637-9994, 423-554-3760
Roofing
Excellent Painter & Wallpaper
Hanger. Great work & Great
Rates. Call Cathie 423-304-3355
Masonry
423-834-1593
Drainage Work, Land Clearing.
Lic./Ins. 25 yrs. 423-421-0664
DRIVEWAYS, DEMOLITION ,
PROFESSIONAL PAINTING
Int from $95. Repair, power
wash, deck stain. Credit cards
accept. David 423-227-0176
TNT LAWNCARE
Flooring
Gutter Work
Will pay cash in 30 minutes.
Fall Cleanup, Leaf Removal, Aeration,
Fertilization, Overseeding & Mulch
“Tried the rest, now try the best”
423-344-7446/423-635-0057
HENSHALL CONCRETE
423.421.8785 or 423.421.9466
JUNK CARS, TRUCKS
BUSES, MOTOR HOMES
Home Improvement
Remodeling
Painting
Painting/Wallpaper
5 Star Lawn Services
Chattanooga’s Premier Lawncare Service
THE FENCEMAN
www.alguireconstruction.com
COMPLETE CONCRETE
Buying Junk Cars & Trucks
Pay Top Dollar - Running or not
423-580-1611 Ken
STEVES’ HANDYMAN SERVICE
Low price leader
423-304-0218 / 821-0423
Fencing
Computer Repair
Call Joe at: 423-635-5680
423-394-5878
WE BUY CARS & TRUCKS
Pay Top Dollar
Running or Not
423-394-5878
Handyman Services
ONE STOP SHOP-No Middle
Man. Expert Service. Insured.
Great Prices. 423-883-7039
GRAVEL, FILL DIRT,
Clock Repairs
Appliance Repairs
A-1 SERVICE-Central Heat,
Electrical
Top Soil
MACHINE CLEANED
TOPSOIL
423-605-5374
Finest of all Topsoil
706-861-6404, 423-593-2191
Vinyl Siding
Quality work + quality material
= Coffey Construction Co. 20
yrs. experience. 877-7147.
Waterproofing
We Fix Water Problems
Wet basements/drainage/crawl
spaces. Lic./Ins. 423-421-0664
Over 63,000 people are searching
cars.timesfreepress.com every month to find their next vehicle.
Search New and Used. Research and get the facts.
F2 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
timesfreepress.com
Wilkins Research Job Fair
MEDICAL
LAB TECHOLOGIST
OR LAB TECHNICIAN
Wilkins Research Services is hosting a Job Fair at the
Chattanooga Career Center! We are a family owned and
operated business that has been in the Chattanooga area over 40
years. Our job is to find answers that lead to solutions! Come
be a part of a rapidly growing industry!
Vice President of Adult Education
Full Time – Floyd County Campus
CONSTRUCTION
Heavy Equipment Operator Company seeking experienced
Heavy Equipment Operator.
Part-Time to Full Time.
Qualified applicants please call
423-443-4118 or email resume to
george3683@gmail.com.
Application Process: All application packets MUST be completed via the GNTC Online Job Center at
http://www.gntc.edu/about /employment.phpwww.GNTC.edu. We do not accept resumes, transcripts,
etc. in any other format except through the Online Job Center. As a part of the application process,
interested candidates will also be required to upload documents such as a resume, work reference
contact information, and transcripts if applicable. Pursuant to college policy, a thorough background
investigation, including a criminal history records check, shall be conducted on all candidates prior to
being hired for any position with our college. No phone calls or emails please.
EVERLASTING LIFE GARDEN
Side by side, $2,000.00 each.
Call 842-0196 or 842-2678
FOUND- Black & White Spaniel
Mix Waconda Bay Area..
423-227-3553 / 423-265-9771
FOREST HILLS
(6) Adjoining Lots,
Prime Location, Lot #73 in
Section K, $6600 423-903-3397
GREENWOOD, Crestlawn Area,
Beautiful location. Lot #16
4 spaces for price of 1
$2500. 423-842-4995
Hamilton Memorial Gardens
Garden of Apostles
Lot #75B, Spaces 3&4
Valued @ $6990. Sale for $4000.
931-456-0294/ 931-261-0225
NURSING/
ELDERLY CARE
HAMILTON Memorial Gardens,
4 plots, side by side. will divide.
$1750 ea. 843-3000. 313-0583.
PLUMBING BUSINESS
I have spent over $70k for advertising for this business during
6 years. I am moving & must
sell!! $72,000. 423-715-5375
LAKEWOOD MEMORY EASTShallowford, 4 Lots, Garden of
Everlasting Life $4500
706-375-4277
LAKEWOOD Memory Gardens
East, Garden of the
Good Shepherd.
4 lots. $1325 each.
Side by Side. Will divide.
Call 423-356-8442.
Lakewood Memory Gardens
South. Garden of Devotion.
(4 Lots) $1600/ea. 423-400-7680
ACCOUNTING/
BOOKKEEPING
Bookkeeper Needed for
growing company. FT.
Start $10 hr.
423-762-7878 Leave msg.
34920336
DOMESTIC HELP
N. GA couple looking for house
sitter. Must like dogs. Able to
run errands. House cleaning a
plus. Serious inquiries only.
Background check required.
Email name and phone
number to: th5beatle@aol.com
EMPLOYMENT INFO
HIGH PAYING POSTAL JOBS!
Newspaper Carriers Wanted
Ooltewah, East Brainerd,
Collegedale, Apison area
Be done with work before
most people start their day.
Home delivery routes
available.
Earn $600 to $800/month
Earning potential varies by
route size and area
Be your own boss! Grow your
own business through sales
contests and satisfied
customers
Perfect opportunity for
everyone! Seniors, homemakers, students and people
with "regular" jobs
35319901
Qualifications:
Must be able to work 7 days
a week, approximately
3 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Must be at least 18 years old
Must have a valid driver's
license and proof of vehicle
liability insurance
Must have reliable
transportation
Must provide a trained
substitute if you're unable to
report to work
Find out why more and more
families and adults agree that
delivering the Chattanooga
Times Free Press suits their
extra income needs.
Don’t pay for information about
jobs with the Postal Service or
federal government. Call the
Federal Trade Commission
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP, or
visit www.ftc.gov to learn
more. A public service announcement from the Chattanooga Times/Free Press and
the FTC.
Len Helton 635-8947 or
helton9338@epbf.com
TAX MANAGER/PREPARERS
needed for local tax resolution
firm. Exp. req. Year round position. Send resume to:
taxql@yahoo.com
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
Are You Up For
The
Challenge...
…Of earning $390 weekly,
working 25 hours per week?
…Of beating our top sales
rep, who earned an avg. of
$1,000 per week last month?
…Of being "the best"?
You will be knocking on the
doors of local residents
presenting the benefits of
Times Free Press home
delivery.
Applicants must:
Work M-F, 3:30p-8:30p.
Communicate clearly.
Like working outdoors.
Meet & talk with new people.
Submit to and pass a
pre-employment drug screen.
If you are not afraid of a
CHALLENGE, want a
GREAT
part-time income, & are OPEN
to learn from the experience
of others, call Justin
Goodrich at 423-757-6587 or
apply in person in HR,
Monday-Thursday,
9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Chattanooga Times
Free Press
400 E. 11th St.
Chattanooga, TN 37403
An equal opportunity
Employer
COMPUTER
PERSONNEL
Part Time /
Network Technician
Must have experience with
networking, troubleshooting,
setting up new network users.
Needs to either be familiar with
or be able to learn Windows
Server products/Active
Directory. Must be able to work
Monday - Thursday. 20 hrs.
per week $9.00/hr. Apply in
person at: 9231 Lee Highway,
Ooltewah, TN 37363 or email
keithheming@thesamaritan
center.net
CLERICAL/
SECRETARIAL
TAX DATA ENTRY Temp. thru 4/15/13. Apply at
1939 Dayton Blvd
Mon Jan. 21st thru Wed.
Jan. 23rd 10am-4pm
CONSTRUCTION
NOW HIRING
Crane Operators
Experienced
Lattice Boom &
Friction Cranes
Britton Bridge
10639 Hwy 41
Guild, TN
423-531-4467
Drug screening &
E-Verify required.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
Minorities & females are
encouraged to apply
EQUIPMENT OPERATOR
Primarily for track hoe & skid
steer. Exp. & knowledge of
layout, elevations, grades,
& equip. maint. Drug & background check req. Send resume: info@wilsonbuilds.com
or fax to 423-745-0622
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
DIESEL MECHANIC
NEEDED. Also run heavy
equipment. 2nd shift.
Call: 423-266-7402 for info
DIESEL TRUCK/TRAILER
MECHANIC - Experience
preferred. Competitive wages.
Clean driving record.
Call 423-619-4638.
Driver Position Open
Aaa Taxi Service
Call: 423-593-1255
DRIVERS NEEDED
Must have neat appearance,
min. Class F endorsement,
1 yr. driving experience,
be able to drive a manual
transmission & able to drive
up to 18’ box truck. Must be
at least 21 yrs. of age.
Must have copy of
drivers license & MVR.
Apply at Dixie Produce
803 E. 12th St.
No Phone Calls Please!
ELECTRONIC FIRE ALARM
SYSTEMS INSTALLER
Leading Life Safety Company in
need of Electronic Fire Alarm
systems Installer. Must be able
to install, program, & service ,
both conventional & addressable
Fire Alarm systems & other related building system products at
customer site. Minimum of 5
years experience. Should possess ability to read, interpret
blueprints, diagrams, submittals,
specification, software/systems
programs, schematics & operational product manuals. Apply at:
http://www.simplexgrinnell.
com/ENUS/Careers
FLOWER DESIGNER
PART TIME - Must have
experience w/ fresh flowers.
Call 423/991-9611 or fax:
423-624-3515
ENGINEERINGCHEMISTS
HOUSEKEEPER
Process /
Project Engineer
Apply in person at:
NHC, Rossville
1425 McFarland Ave.,
Rossville, GA. EOE
Immediate opening at our
Dalton, GA facility for
experienced Process/Project
Engineer to provide
engineering support services.
Troubleshoot problems and
production process in all
areas of the facility. Must
possess BS in Chemical
Engineering and 1-5 years
experience in process and/or
project engineering,
Applications accepted on line
only: www.harcros.com
Select Job Opportunities at our
Dalton, GA location.
EOE M/F/D/V
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
Call or email today!
Scott Shadrick 595-6916
or ssrolltide14@gmail.com
Start earning great money
today!
DRY CLEANER & LAUNDRY
FOR SALE! Brainerd, Full
running plant. 423-313-1955
RESIDENTIAL FRAMING
CARPENTERS WANTED.
Experienced. Call David
after 6pm at 423-667-2635
GOVERNMENT
WILDLIFE JOBS!!
COMPASSIONATE CNA avail.
for in home care. Call for list of
services provided. 424-9087
BUSINESS
FOR SALE
INSTALLER - Dependable w/
Strong Work Ethic. Professional demeanor suitable to
work in high end homes and
construction sites. Willing to
learn & train others. Optimistic
outlook on your job and life in
general. Good communication,
Math skills, fractions, etc., with
ability to read & use a tape
measure. Valid drivers license.
Drug Free. 423-645-4973
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
ACCOUNTING/
BOOKKEEPING
Please apply in person at
1067 Battlefield Parkway
Ft Oglethorpe, GA 30742.
706-861-5154
REGISTERED NURSE
and GI TECHNICIAN
for busy GI lab. Day shift
hours with call/ weekends/
holiday shifts rotating.
Experience preferred.
Great benefit pkg., great
team! Fax resume to Plaza
Center 423-778-3025
RN CIRCULATOR
for busy surgery center.
Monday thru Friday day shift
with flexible hours. No call
and no weekends. Great
benefit package, great team!
Exp. preferred. Fax resume
Plaza Center 423-778-3025
6 Temporary Farm
Workers Needed.
Employer: Judy Cooper –
Soddy-Daisy, TN. Perform
all duties of Vegetable
Production, including
greenhouse care, setting,
fertilizing, plowing, weeding,
spraying, irrigating,
harvesting, & packaging; and
general farm maintenance.
Employment Dates:
03/01/2013 – 11/15/2013.
$9.80 Hourly Wage Rate.
Piece Rate may be offered.
Worker guaranteed 3/4 of
contract hours. Tools
provided at no cost. Free
housing provided to
non- commuting workers.
Transportation &
subsistence reimbursed when
50% of contract is met.
Random drug testing may be
done after hire at the
employer’s expense.
Contact the Tennessee State
Workforce Agency at
615-253-6706 and reference
job order TN5024009.
Cashier’s / Sorter’s
Must be dependable and hard
working. Hours Sunday
12-5pm Monday - Thursday
8am - 5pm. $8/hr. Apply in
person at 9231 Lee Hwy.
Ooltewah, TN 37363
Cleaning Concepts hiring full
time Maids cleaning
clients homes. Experienced
only apply at: 875 Intermont
Rd., Chatt. 423-521-7852
COMMERCIAL CLEANING
COMPANY seeking Full time
first shift, part time evening for
Chattanooga based cleaning
company. Must have a clear
criminal background, be able
to pass a drug screen and
have personal transportation.
Apply in person at: 921 E.
Main St. Chatt., TN 37408
CUSTOMER
SERVICE / INSIDE
SALE PERSON
Needed for local chemical
company. Working well with
others & customers is a
must. Good communication,
organization & computer
skills needed. Experience in
cGMP environment a plus.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Send resume w/
salary history to:
Chattem Chemicals, Inc.
3708 St. Elmo Ave.
Chattanooga, TN 37409.
Fax to: 423-822-6482
or email to: cindy.cox@
chattemchemicals.com
1st shift weekends
& some weekdays.
Experience preferred.
HUMAN RESOURCES
PROFESSIONAL
Responsible for administering
human resources activities
such as: company policies,
employee benefit programs,
plant safety & hiring.
Bachelor's & three years'
experience as a human
resources generalist is
required. Experience with
insurance benefits plans,
401(k), workmen's'
compensation, OSHA
& employee selection
preferred. We offer a
competitive salary & a
comprehensive benefit
package. For immediate
consideration, please send
your resume including salary
requirements to:
Chattanooga Publishing,
P.O. Box 1447,
Advertiser 35317034
Chattanooga, TN 37401-1447
35320004
* Eligibility begins after probationary period
** Conviction is not necessarily an absolute
barrier to employment
*** Requirement by Chattanooga Career Center
Application Deadline: Position opened until filled.
LOST & FOUND
Heritage Healthcare of
Fort Oglethorpe
Now hiring a receptionist.
Additional positions may be
available!
Preferred Qualifications: Master’s degree in Education or in a related field whose background/
work experience includes knowledge of adult learning techniques and a background in the delivery of
educational services to an adult population. Prior experience supervising employees at multiple and/or
remote locations.
CEMETERY LOTS
RECEPTIONIST
REGISTERED DIETICIAN:
Part-time position available.
We offer great compensation,
flexible hours, and a positive
environment 8-15 hours per
week. Would consider one
day per week. For more
information call 421-6436, if no
answer please leave a
message.
Required Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree in education, business administration, or a closely
related field and three years of teaching or instructional delivery experience in an educational or related
setting which must have included responsibility for curriculum design, development, and assessment,
as well as the application of effective instructional delivery and student assessment techniques/
methods. Three years of supervisory experience. Experience in financial management to include budget
development and oversight responsibilities and contracts administration.
Apply In Person
between 7 AM & 3 PM at:
Metro Boiler Tube
122 Rollins Ind. Blvd.
Ringgold, GA
706-965-9909
or E-mail qualifications to:
safety@metroboilertube.com
Drug Testing Is Required
PHYSICAL THERAPY TECH
for outpatient physical therapy
in Chatt. Must be experienced. High school diploma
required. Exercise Science
helpful. Salary based on experienced. part time position
with growth to full time.
Please fax resume to:
423 -877-5611
Qualifications:
~6 months of customer service experience (preferably in a call
center environment)
~Excellent reading skills, verbal communication skills,and
telephone etiquette
~Basic Computer skills
~High School Diploma or equivalent
~Criminal Background check required**
~Must bring 2 forms of id***
Skills required for a successful Adult Education SDA program administrator includes the
following:
• Leadership Experience (Direct Supervision, Identification of Talent, Delegation)
• Budgeting (creating and managing)
• Data Analysis for Program Improvement
• Building Partnerships/Collaboration
• Strategic Planning
• Grant Management
• Grant Writing Experience/Grant Procurement
TIG WELDERS (X-RAY QUALITY)
Must pass 6G weld test Friday, Saturday, Sunday shift
6:00 am to 6:30 pm
QUALITY CONTROL INSPECTOR
Weekday shift Mon-Thur 6:00 am to 4:30 pm
Experience in blue print reading , Tig and Mig
Welding inspection preferred.
All Pay Based On Experience and Ability
Paid Vacation, 401K, Health, Dental, Vision,
Insurance available
EEO/AAP Employer
When: Thursday, January 24th, 2013 from 9am-4pm
Where: Career Center, Eastgate Town Center
5600 Brainerd Rd Suite A-5,
Chattanooga, TN 37411
Full time Vice President of Adult Education located on the Floyd County Campus. The Vice President
administers adult education programs and instructional services for Georgia citizens in a designated
Service Delivery Area (SDA) as determined by awarded grant application. Plans and organizes the
SDA work to meet the Technical College System of Georgia Office of Adult Education federal National
Reporting System (NRS) goals and other specific directed activity. Prepares the program specifications
and budget for the SDA. Oversees the administration of assessment and student placement tests for
Adult Education students. Represents the SDA at various internal and external meetings. Maintain or
oversees the maintenance of student records. Hires and supervises subordinate employees. Promotes
the Adult Education Program to public and private organizations throughout the SDA.
METRO BOILER TUBE COMPANY INC.
HAS OPENINGS FOR THE
FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
Apply in person:
Highlands Medical Center
380 Woods Cove Rd.
Scottsboro, AL 35768
FAX: (256) 218-3656
Email: kgraham@jchca.org
Or call (256) 218-3815
Currently looking to hire 40+ Second Shift Telephone
Interviewers. Full-Time and Part-Time positions available.
Flexible work environment – perfect for students and retirees.
Full-time employees qualify for benefits* - Health Insurance,
Dental Insurance, Life Insurance, and Holiday pay.
Georgia Northwestern Technical College is seeking
qualified applicants for the following position:
A Unit of the Technical College System of Georgia
Equal Opportunity Employer - Georgia Northwestern Technical College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, national or ethnic origin,
gender, religion, disability, age political affiliation or belief, veteran status, or citizenship status (except in those special circumstances permitted or
mandated by law). Any violation or questions should be directed to Peggy Cordell, Director of Human Resources, Office A113, One Maurice Culberson
Drive, Rome, GA 30161, at 706-295-6959; Sonya Richards, Special Populations Coordinator and Title IX Coordinator, Office I105, One Maurice
Culberson Drive, Rome, GA 30161 at 706-295-6932; Sheila Parker, ADA/Section 504 Coordinator and Disability Services Coordinator, Office B115, One
Maurice Culberson Drive, Rome, GA 30161 at 706-295-6517. Telephone numbers are accessible to persons who are deaf or hard of hearing through the
Georgia Relay by dialing 711 or 1-800-255-0056 from a TTY/TDD.
PT position.
AMT or ASCP license
required. Must have AAS or
BS degree.
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
TECHNICIAN - Leading Life
Safety Company in need of
qualified technician to service
expanding customer base. Must
be able to Inspect, Service, and
Repair existing Fire Extinguisher,
Kitchen Hood, E-Light, and
Pre-Engineered gas systems,
while growing existing customer
base through new sales and upsell of additional product lines.
Industry experience a plus.
Apply at:
http://www.simplexgrinnell.
com/ENUS/Careers
Walter Jackson Chevrolet
seeking ASE & GM
CERTIFIED
TECHNICIAN
Great pay and benefits.
Apply in person at:
5340 Alabama Hwy. Ringgold,
GA . See Dwayne Holmes
WAREHOUSE WORKERS
NEEDED AM & PM. Must
have RF & WMS exp. & be
order-picker certified. Apply
online at www.hwas.com.
Drug free workplace, EOE.
STARS new wage begin at
$7.50; Go to $8.25 in
6 months. Now hiring
Personal Assistants.
Call: 447-2590 x. 7 for job
and interview details.
INSURANCE
Licensed Insurance Agent
needed for CSR position in the
Cleveland area. Resumes
accepted by email at:
wilsok14@yahoo.com
or call: 423-472-0419 to
request an interview by
appointment only.
LEGAL PERSONNEL
LEGAL ASSISTANT
Downtown Chattanooga law
firm seeks legal assistant
with two or more years
experience. Please fax
resumes to
(423)756-9943.
MEDICAL
Cherokee Health Systems is
opening a new facility in Chatt.
and currently looking for LPN,
MA, and Phlebotomists. To
download the required application for these or other
openings, visit our web site at
www.cherokeehealth.com.
Fax: 865-934-6783. Email:
employment@cherokeehealth.
com. EOE.
Heritage Healthcare
of Ft. Oglethorpe
Now Hiring
C.N.A for weekend
7am - 7pm & 7pm - 7am
Please apply in person at
1067 Battlefield Pkwy
NUKE POWER TRAINEE
Learn nuclear reactors. Top
pay. Sign-on bonus $11k.
Medical/dental, 30 days off/yr,
Must relocate. H S grads to
age 24. Call Mon-Fri
800-284-6289
PART TIME SALES
CLERK/CASHIER
needed for cosmetic department.
References required.
Call 423-629-1434.
PM Alarms is accepting
applications for security
monitoring center
DISPATCHER/
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Position is 3rd shift
12am-8am, Wednesday
night-Sunday night, every
weekends/holidays. Also, be
flexible to work other shifts as
needed. PM Alarms is a 365
day, 24-hour operation.
Must pass security
background check and
drug testing. Exceptional
telephone customer service
skills, ability to multi-task,
fast thinker, loud clear phone
voice, detailed data entry,
ability to troubleshoot.
Apply in person
Monday-Friday 9:00am-3pm
at 2109 Hickory Valley Road,
Chattanooga, TN.
NO PHONE CALLS.
ROUTE SALES
Friendly, Outgoing display
marketing Rep needed to
service schools. Will need a
van or truck & trailer-some
lifting required Fax or email
resume to Chuck Simpson
bookdeals2@msn.com
Fax: 478-875-1241
SERVICE ADVISOR
for Automotive Dealership.
Experience Required. Pay
depends on Qualifications.
Call Steve 423-337-3241
Are you
interested
in pursuing a
career in the
medical field?
See the Educational
classification for
more information.
MANAGEMENT
OPERATIONS
MANAGER
FT/PT Professional,
motivated and experienced.
Great opportunity.
CBS Mgmt.,
423-698-1100
Retail Produce
Manager
Strong retail produce
management exp. required.
Must be extremely motivated & a self starter. All
responses must include
a complete history of work
and pay and a min. of 5
references. Send resume to:
Chattanooga Publishing
Company, PO Box 1447,
Advertiser 35317185
Chatt., TN 37401-1447
MOTEL/HOTEL
Accepting applications for:
* Assistant General Mgr.
* Housekeeping
Supervisors
* Front Desk Staff
* Breakfast Attendants
Hotel experience required.
Apply in person at Hampton
Inn Ooltewah, I-75 exit 11
No phone calls please.
PROFESSIONALS
Behavioral Health Agency
seeking professional to fill a
Part-Time Community Support position in Walker / Dade
/ Chattooga counties.
Bachelor's degree in Psychology, Social Work, Education
or related field preferred.
Flexible schedule and competitive salary. Please e-mail
resume to fcf@optilink.us
GOOSE POND COLONY
SCOTTSBORO, AL
GOLF PROFESSIONAL
Goose Pond Colony is accepting
applications until January 18,
2013 for Golf Professional. This
position is responsible for the Pro
Shop operations at both Goose
Pond Colony and Plantation
courses and prefers a PGA
Class A membership. The complete job description is available
on Goose Pond web site:
www.goosepond.org/careers.
Applicants are requested to send
their resume to Goose Pond
Colony, 417 Ed Hembree Dr,
Scottsboro; AL 35769;
Attn: Lyle Sosebee.
Ft. Oglethorpe GA, 30742
706-861-5154
MACHINE OPERATORS
Corrugated box company is
now accepting applications
for Machine Operators. First
and third shift positions
available. Apply in person at:
290 Rollins Industrial Blvd.
Ringgold, GA
ULTRASOUND TECH
NEEDED for busy outpatient
imaging center. PRN. Must be
ARDMS registered.
Fax resumes to: 423-553-1251
CNA’s / Caregivers $$$
Apply Tues & Thurs
at 10 am OR 2 pm. Amara
Home Care 423-756-2411
FRONT OFFICE
RECEPTIONIST
Experienced full-time
receptionist needed for a busy
family practice office,
offering competitive wages
and benefits. Please
send resumes to:
resume@cim.md
The Health Center at
Standifer Place seeking:
DIETARY AIDES
& COOKS
$ Sign-On Bonus $
Apply online at:
www.standiferplace.org
True North Custom Media is
looking for a CFO in
Chattanooga.
Visit www.truenorthcustom.com
to learn about True North.
To review job description and
apply online,
visit www.warrenwhitney.com
or send resume to
pshelley@warrenwhitney.com
SALES AGENTS
AUTO SALES-If you are in
the top 10% with your
present employer we want to
talk to you! Our volume has
tripled & we need sales professionals with a strong
sales/satisfaction background to join our team. Call
423-855-4981 and ask for
Greg or Ron for a confidential interview.
The Health Center at
Standifer Place seeking:
Head Nurse RN applicants with strong
mgmt and clinical skills are
urged to apply. Long Term
Care exp. with MDS and
Care Plan knowledge a
plus. The qualified applicant will be offered a competitive salary, benefit pkg.
LPN’s & CNA’s Multiple shifts available.
Attractive SIGN ON BONUS
if application received
no later than Jan. 23rd.
Apply on-line at:
www.standiferplace.org
HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS - Part-time. Sign-on bonus up to $20k. Great pay &
benefits. Prior military req.
Elite medical training, travel,
retirement. Call Mon-Fri
800-284-6289.
LPN’s
PT/ FT, $15 per hour.
ANS 423-267-6006
NP, PA or MD
Adult primary care office looking
for PT medical provider to join
practice. Call Carol
at: 423-870-1999
Be a part of our
Kiosk Sales
Team
Outside Sales
Our Top Sales Representatives average over $450.00
per week!!
You Can Too!
Evening part time hours are
available; up to 25 hours per
week. Applicants must:
Have excellent
communication skills.
A dependable vehicle
with a good driving
record and insurance.
Be willing to learn a
proven sales method.
Apply in person Monday Thursday between 9:00 a.m.
and 3:00 p.m. at:
400 E 11th Street
Chattanooga TN. 37403
Or call Noah Cusick at:
423-757-6650 for more
information
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • F3
timesfreepress.com
Monty Jim Meddick
35284680
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
SALES AGENTS
ANTIQUES
Antique Brass Lamp Stand$150obo
423-266-6155
Our sales executives are
enthusiastic, experienced in
media sales, self-directed,
savvy and effective
communicators who provide
advertising solutions to
clients, with a proven ability to
develop new business while
nurturing existing clients.
Selected candidate will be
polished, confident, quick
thinking and persistent.
This position requires you to
be responsible for
conducting sales
presentations to decision
makers utilizing specific
product and market
knowledge. Successful
candidates will be verbally
articulate and personable
with good marketing and
organizational skills.
A minimum of three years
experience in media sales is
required.
Retail Account Executives
entirely commission-based
with a bi-weekly draw, and
expected earnings of $50k+.
In addition, we offer a
comprehensive benefits
package which includes
hospitalization, prescription
drug, vision and dental
coverage, 401(k) with
company match, profits
sharing plan and tuition
reimbursement.
ANTIQUE STOVE/ HEATER
from early 1900’s Southern RR
Caboose $650. 423-344-7079
COAL BUCKET, Brass Large for
fireplace hearth w/ Floral arrangement. $75. 706-820-2200
DESK Hepplewhite Solid Mahogany from New England w/
shelf $800.obo 423-400-7376
Dresser Antique Walnut Vanity 3
Mirrors Very Nice $245
423-877-2503
Michelob ClockAntique, Rotate 2ft tall, $250
423-653-1531
Various Antique Items- Iron Bed,
Vanity, Cedar Shifaro $750obo
will sep, 423-266-6155
APPLIANCES
A C Dryers, Washers, Stoves,
Fridges, $75/up. Can deliver.
Guaranteed. Also we buy non
working applcs. 423-760-0123
AIR CONDITIONERS for sale!
Dryer/Washer $199. & up will
separ.Also avail. Stoves & Refrigerators. Guaranteed! 706-866-3347
FRIDGE, Freezer, Washer Dryer
$800. for all will separate.
423-634-7023
FRIDGE- GE Double Door, Ice
Maker In Door, White or Black
$275 423-622-0868
FRIDGE Kenmore Side by Side
w/ Ice maker White
$275. 423-504-2137
Hot Point Fridge- Side by Side,
White, 22 cubic ft. exc cond.
$350, 423-894-5422
KENMORE DRYER - beige, excellent condition, $85.
423-899-9877.
KENMORE FRIGIDAIRE, gold,
excellent condition, $110.
423-899-9877
RANGE, Electric, Roper, looks
good, works well, $100.
Call 423-240-8864.
Refridgerator WhirlpoolAlmond. warranty. $185.
423-504-2137
Refridgerator Whirlpool- Almond warranty $150.
423-504-2137
REFRIGERATOR Rental grade
30 DAY WARRANTY
$135. 423-582-8025
REFRIGERATOR, Kenmore,
works perfect, can deliver.
$125. Call 423-635-4237.
SKILLED TRADES
REFRIGERATOR, Kenmore,
works good, $75. Call
423-658-9659/305-4091.
Mechanical/Millwright
Stove- White Smooth Surface
Electric Whirlpool, $350
423-298-3085
2 years driving
experience, clean MVR
& background a must.
Benefits from day 1.
Call 865-560-8800 for
application.
DRIVERS Truckload carrier,
Dry out, Refrigerated back. SE to
NW and West Coast. Paid
same day upon trip
completion. Avg. $900-$1100
each/round. 35 New 2013
Cascadia's with Refrigerators
just added. Larry
706-259-1835; 156 Valley
Point Dr. Dalton, GA 30721
Needed: OTR DRIVERS w/
min. 2 yrs. exp. Apply in
person: Ash Transport, LLC
86 E. 28th St. Chattanooga, TN
or call: 423-870-9681
Rosedale Transport, Inc.
NOW HIRING!
SOLO & TEAMS
COMPANY DRIVERS &
OWNER OPS
REGIONAL RUNS
ASSIGNED TRUCKS
PULL 53' FT DRY VAN
48’ FT FLATBED
GREAT HOME TIME
EXCELLENT PAY
& BENEFITS
CALL
800-221-3919
OR VISIT US ONLINE
WWW.ROSEDALE.CA
STUDENTS WELCOME!!
4 Units of CPE required
Must be Board certified
or eligible for board certification
Health care chaplain experience preferred
Apply online at
www.memorial.org
EOE/DFW/Title VII/Section 504
35284678
CLOTHING
WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE
Washer, Dryer, Fridge, Stoves
Cash Reward! 423-580-2031
WASHER / DRYER - Kenmore, Heavy Duty, like new
with warranty. Will sacrifice
$325. 423-421-1615
WASHER & DRYER Whirlpool
Matching set White warranty
$250. 423-504-2137
MENS SUIT sz 42
real nice $85
423-855-0889
SHIRT Chiliwear Brand w/ Old
Miss Rebel logo Sz lg. $30.
Call 423-240-2068
SUIT, Men’s 46 reg.
Ralph Lauren Black $95.
Call 423-847-7675.
BedRoom Suite- Beautiful wood,
6 psc queen or full, must see,
E. Ridge $600obo, 423-320-5644
SWEATER COAT, Street length
Size Med. Black & White
$45. 423-847-7675
BRASS FLOOR LAMP.
7 ft. tall, $20. Call
423-867-5532.
CHAIR White Living Room
Nice, $75
423-903-5638
COINS-JEWELRY
CHEST OF DRAWERS,
Solid wood, $85. Call
423-580-9483.
PEARLS Authentic, in folding
case, 14K Clasp, like new.
$100. 706-935-2360.
RING, 14K Gold pair shaped
Amethysts surround w/18 diamonds. $2200. 304-8808.
RING- Ladies’, Wedding, sz 6
1/4 Ct Diamond, w/ 6 small
Diamonds $500 423-488-2641
WATCHES, 3 men wrist all for
$45. or will sep. Real nice.
423-894-2213
COLLECTIBLES
Avon Bottle
New still in box $5 great
selection, 423-479-2060
Barbie Collectables
$10
423-479-2060
BARBIE - Princess 2000 Edition,
mint cond. seal never broken.
$55/Firm 706-935-2360
BASEBALL CARD Mickey
Mantle Autographed 1966
Sealed $200. 706-259-3979
W A S H E R / D R Y E R , Kenmore
stackable, like new w/warr.
Can del. $250 423-635-4237.
CHERISHED TEDDY
Jack & Jill $10.
Call 423-486-7397.
Water Heater, Electric, Whirlpool, new, LowBoy, 28gal.
$225 228-3157/ 465-3172.
CIVIL WAR Books, 29 Vol. of
Timelife Mint cond. Complete
set, $300. 423-240-0865 9-6.
BABY ITEMS
COLA Cans, 7 bottles, Most
unopened,commemorative,’93
Coke Bear $20 706-935-2360
white baby cradle$20,obo
423-479-2060
BICYCLES
3 Wheel bicycle- comm.grd 26’’
tires, like new, new price $869
sell for $395, 423-238-4729
Bicycle Ladies Cruiser Red
Very Good Cond w/ good Tires
$35, 423-396-9151
Boys 20’’ Next Mountain Bike
$45
423-344-5268
Girls 20’’ Bike$40
423-344-5268
Old Manuel Bike- Good Shape
$100
423-875-9911
SCHWINN 28’’ ladies Trailway
21 speed, aluminum, Call
Steve at 423-321-2617.
BUILDING
MATERIAL
Aluminum Awning, 9X44, Very
Good Shape, Asking $1000,
Call 423-762-0295
Antique Beaten Copper Pot7 quart, $200obo
423-266-6555
CASEMENT WINDOWS New
36X60” Double pane. cost
$1000 take $375. 877-4179
KITCHEN SINK with faucet ,
good condition, $45.
423-892-2192
DIECAST CARS, Old Tucker
cars, all in orig. box, $150
neg. will sep . 423-883-5009.
FBI WANTED POSTER
JAMES EARL RAY $150.
706-259-3979
LP COLLECTION -Various
genres, 75 in all, $50.00
423-240-2068
LPs, 6 Record Set, Eddie Arnold,
Mint Cond, $20
423-240-2068
COMPUTERS
LAPTOP, Dell Latitude
Microsoft Wind XP Version
$125 cash. 423-855-0889.
Monitor 17" Dell. Flat Screen.
$40. Great shape. Call
423-355-0311
Monitor 17" Dell. Flat Screen.
$40. Great shape. Call
423-355-0311
Computer Desk
Asking $50
423-386-5100
Contemporary Conference
Table- w/ 5 chairs chrome with
arms $400 423-667-55443
COUCH, Floral Section
2 piece $199.
Call 423-802-1081
John Deere 5103, 06-with 400
hours. Like new,with newer 6 ft
landpride mower. $13,950.
423-593-6351
WANTED: SMALL GARDEN
TRACTOR 423-364-2334
FLEA MARKETS
=@I<NFF;&=L<C
WINDOWS,
Tinted Glass
Thermo Pane, several sizes,
3/4” thick. $750. 423-822-8283
FIREWOOD- Split Hardwood.
WHILE IT LASTS!
$45.00/rick. 423-313-2323
TABLE TOP CHEST,
19” tall, 30”x50” $60.
423-488-2641
THEODORE ALEXANDER
Pieces. Ladies desk & Captains box, $600. 423-280-7886
WARDROBE CABINET,
Broyhill . $125.
423-775-8880. 596-2951.
FURNACES/
FIREPLACES
ELEC. HEATERS, (3) 220’s,
3-4KW, $195 for all or can
separate. Call 423-883-5009.
Fireplace Mantle- from 1920
home, needs refinishing, solid
wood, $175, 423-240-0153
Firewood
4 Bundles,
$100 423-386-5100
Free Fire Wood- Ready to Split,
Dead Oak,
706-820-2286
Free Firewood! Already
Seasoned. Come & Get It
423-790-5587
GAS LOGS, 39000 BTU,
32X24, Natural.
$125. 423-517-8651
INFRARED HEATER, As seen
on TV In sealed box Never
used. New $275. Now $200.
423-479-3863.
COUCH Really nice.
Different colors. $100.
423-580-9483
GIVEAWAYS
Desk CHAIR- fabric seat and
back, light wood trim on
casters, $50 423-344-8794
FREE FIREWOOD, 2 trees
Pecan & maple You cut & haul
Ringgold area 706-891-9165
DESK- Solid Mahogany,
8’ long, 28” Wide,
$125. 423-488-2641
FREE HORSE MANURE
Dining Room Table (6) Chairs,
China Cabinet Moving, Must
sell. $275. 423-227-0080.
Dining RoomTable w/ Leaf 6 padded matching chairs, very nice
dark wood, $150 423-396-9151
DINING SET, Danish Walnut
Broyhill Table w/ 6 chairs &
China $400. 667-5443
DINING TABLE Beveled
glass top Seats 6 Table only
$75. CASH 423.875.2108
Free loading. Great for gardens.
E. Brainerd 423-280-3716
MOBILE HOME- 2br, 1bth,
Needs Repair. Must Move.
FREE 423-313-0649
GUNS
AIMPOINT,
M2 used, great
shape, GG&G, mount, spare
batt. comp. $450. 635-4342.
END TABLES, with drawers,
real nice cond. 2/$80.
423-775-8880. 596-2951.
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
$175. Call 423-775-8880.
or 596-2951.
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER,
Solid Oak, $175,
Call 423-802-1081
Entertainment Center
Holds TV $50
Call 423-386-5100
FILE CABINET
Large w/ 2 drawers $65.
423-903-5638
HUTCH, Oak 6X6 Holds up to
60” TV Lights Doors & shelves
$500. 423-994-2358.
Kitchen Table- w/Leaf, 4 Upholstery Chairs That Swivel and
Rock $225 899-2498
Alhambra Shrine Gun Show
Feb 9 & 10. 100 tables $45 ea.
Reserve. 322-0855/892-0223.
A m m o 2 2 3 -R e m N e w P M C
FMJ-BT case of 1000. Brass
case and reloadable. $1000.00
AMMO .22LR VIPER 100
BOXES OF 50 $400.00 (423)
463-0443
AMMO, Private collector
7.62x39mm,box of 20, $10.
Call 423-875-6403.
AR-15 By LWRC. Very best AR
Today. Gas piston 16" brl. NIB
with Eotech sight & tac light
with laser. 3800.00.
423-284-4203
AR15 / M4 Andil arms,
16” barrell 2 30 rd mags
Flat top $1500. 635-4342.
AR15 Sabre Defense 556, Red
Dot Sight, 1000Rd, 22 Cal
Conversion, $2600 949-4280
BUSHMASTER, AR-15, 223
w/ Lots of extras $2500.
call or text 423-827-6449
LIVING RM SET- Couch, Love
Seat, Chair, Ottoman Black w/
Tables&Lamps $600 423-314-2642
ENCORE BARREL 45-70
Brass & dies. $225
423-775-8061
MATTRESS A1 Queen Pillowtop
Set. NEW in plastic. Coil matt.
$149. Can deliver. 423-400-6233
GLOCK 26 9mm Subcompact
Pistol(2) 10 rd clips 31/2” Barrel NIB $559. 706-820-9454
MATTRESS A 3-Piece Brand New
KING PILLOWTOP. Sacrifice
$189. 423-400-6233. Can deliver
GSG-5- 22 lrg rd Mag
$100
423-544-4564
HC MAGAZINES RUGER P89
9 m m 4 $ 1 2 0 . 0 0
(423)463-0443
Henrey Survival Rifle 22lr auto.
Like new with box & paper
work. $200.00 284-4203
Jap WWII Arisaka Rifle 7.7 Cal,
$395
423-344-7079
Lee Enfield .303 Hunting Rifle 7
round mag. w/ scope $250
or best offer 423-310-6835
MATTRESS A + Mattress Sets
all sizes. Can deliver $100 &
Up!!. Nice sets. 304-5807
MATTRESS & BOX SPRINGS
king Very nice! $100
Call 423-580-9483
OAK DESK
GOOD CONDITION.
$35. 423-315-9510
OFFICE CHAIR- $75.
Green, new condition,
423-893-1889
OTTOMAN - Contemporary
style, microfiber, like new,
$75 423-892-4261
Oval Coffee Table & (2) End
Tables Solid wood . Medium
Brown. $150, 423-894-7091
MUZZLE LOADERS (2) Thompson Center New Englander
50cal w/scopes $350. 240-5599
O l y m p i a 22 cal target pistol
w/weights. Wood grips, two
mags, NIB $325. 304-8228.
RUSSIAN SKS Premium cond.
Bayonet, 4 30 round mags,
100s of rounds, $1500.
Call 423-355-3777.
Recliner,
Beige $225.
Call 423-893-1889.
SKS MAGAZINES: 6 Brand new
steel 30 round mags. $300.00
Call 423-645-1814
SMITH & WESSON, Mod. 63.
Stainless, 4 inch .22LR, like
new , $465. 423-870-1010.
Side Board- Old, Great Cond,
Designs in Wood E.Rigde
$350 obo 423-320-5644
Springfield xdm 5.25 Dual Tone,
Standard Acces. Incl, +2
Mags, $685 firm, 762-0872
S&W M&P 40 Pro
All Acces Incl
$585 firm 423-762-0872
BLAZER, Mens,
size 42, $30. Call
423-903-5638.
FURNITURE
SOFA, Custom Made, purple,
6.5 ft. long, cost $2500 asking
$350 obo Call 423-304-8808.
COAT, Suede, 3/4 length,
multi colored, $45. Call
423-870-3929.
Antique Cabinet- 2 pull down
draws 44 inches tall, great
cond, $75, 423-892-4261
SOFA, Custom Made, purple,
6.5 ft. long, cost $2500 asking
$350 obo Call 423-304-8808.
FUR COAT, Ladies Fall
Like new, Medium. $250.
Call 423-870-3929.
BED Headboard, bookcase, style
expandable, rocking chair,
lamps, sac. $100. 227-0080.
SOFA & LOVESEAT, Nice,
Off white, Loose pillows,
$350. Call 423-645-1479.
GUNS
WALTHER G22 Bullpup Rifle,
like new w/case, 2 clips, Barska sight, $325. 423-580-7404
Wanted;Rusted,broken or unwanted firearms.Top prices
paid better than pawn shop
and we come to you call
423-883-6392. Please leave
message
SHOOTING
SUPPLIES
Ammo- 1,000 round of 308
$750/obo
423-775-8061
AMMO- .357 Sig Lawman, TMJ,
125 grain, $25 50 rounds .
423-635-4342.
HANDGUN CARRY PERMITCLASSES $50.
Immediate opening, over 300
guns in stock. Fugate’s Firearms. 423-336-2675.
S&W M&P.40 S&W (3) 15 rd
clips,3 b-straps,Tritium Night
Sights NIB $589 706-820-9454
Tapco (5) 30 rd AR15 Mag$150obo
423-544-4564
LONG TERM CARE
PHARMACY MANAGER
Full-time PHARMACY MANAGER to work at
our Cleveland, TN facility. An enhanced salary,
full benefits, pleasant work environment and a
flexible work schedule that creates an excellent
work opportunity. Must be able to execute day to
day operations in the pharmacy as they pertain
to workflow, production quotas, and deadlines.
Ensure that the pharmacy is in compliance with
all local, state and federal rules and regulations
regarding the practice of pharmacy. Qualified
candidate must have a pharmacy degree, and
licensed in the state of Tennessee.
Pharmacist license must be in good standing.
Must possess management and people skills.
Previous long-term care pharmacy or hospital
experience preferred
But not required.
NEW HEATING & AIR
Below Wholesale Prices.
423-595-6700
HOBBIES/TOYS
If interested, please email resume to:
Pharmacy Recruiting - Omnicare, Inc.
brian.steenhoek@omnicare.com
EOE
HOBBY HORSE
Childs Spring $60.
423-899-3530
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
LAWN/GARDEN
EQUIPMENT
BED PADS, Waterproof
Depends 42 pieces $8.00
423-336-1249
DOGHOUSE, Med New all
wood, shingle roof, gable roof
new, $45. Call 423-653-5097.
BEDSIDE COMODE
Nice! $25
423-899-3355.
DOGHOUSE, Med New all
wood, shingle roof, gable roof
new, $45. Call 423-653-5097.
JOHN DEERE 720 2011 27hp,
62’’ shaft drive cut,differential
lock, 2 yr fact warr, Low hrs. Like
new $7,500. 423-949-6231
ADULT DVD’s XXX- New!
5 for $20 / will separate.
423-645-2295
Electric Hospital Bed- Good
Cond, Clean, $400
423-842-9890
End Table- Dark Finished,
Purchased at Bombay, exc cond
$30, 423-344-8794
Electric Power Chair Lift for
Auto- Used 2x, $1000
423-785-7339
MOWER, LESCO COMMERICAL 60” ZERO TURN
$2500. Call 423-488-3309
POWER Wheelchair Hydraulic
lift, Stair lift, Electrical bed/
massager. $1500. 875-4342
PRESSURE WASHER New
Troy Built Briggs&Stratton
2700PSI $225. 423-875-9911
MACHINERY &
TOOLS
Craftman Steel Compound
Miter Saw- 10’’, $75
423-894-6080
FRAMING NAILER, Ridgid,
Model R350RHA, Round head
Like new $110. 423-894-6080
GENERATOR - 5kw, used less
than 20 hrs., $450.
706-638-4779
Heavy Steel Table SawDelta, 10’’, $150
423-894-6080
Kolbalt Ball Bearing Equipped
Tool Chest w/ 13 Drawers, Top
Lid Storage, w/ Bottom Drawer
Storage. Loaded w/ all Sizes of
Screwdrivers, Wrenches, Drill
Bits, Sockets To Much Too List
$1000 10in Craftsman Table
Saw, 10 In Miter Saw w/Table
Laser Cuts w/ Attachments.
Good Cond $75/Each 842-5297
OXYGEN & ASCETYLENE
Torch, Brand New, 3-Tips,
$100 423-774-0493
Portable Metal Cutting Band
Saw, Milwaukee, Deep Cut
$175, 423-238-4729
RADIAL ARM SAW-Rigid,
10” Like new, very little use,
$300. Call 423-243-8300
Railroad JackSuper Heavy Duty $175
706-657-3987
MISCELLANEOUS
ELECTRIC HOSPITAL BED
w/ tempur-med mattress, $200,
Call 423-544-6050
LAWN MOWER MOTORS,
(7) 5-15 hp. $150 for all.
Call 423-883-5009.
ROSSI- Combo 22/410 Youth
Model, $175obo
423-544-4564
PERSIAN RUGS - (2), wool,
3x5 & 5x7, $600 for both,
423-280-7886.
SECTIONAL COUCH, Teouf
Lounger, w/ ottoman. Red Excel. cond. $1100. 423-596-3240
35284679
HEATING/AIR
CONDITIONING
D I N I N G T A B L E , 6 chairs, 2
captains chairs, 5 yrs. old,
perfect cond. $300. 238-9457.
MATTRESS AAA NEW QUEEN
ORTHOPEDIC Set. $139.
Never opened. 423-400-6233
I-24 FLEA MARKET
Sat & Sun Exit 134 on I-24.
Monteagle Tn. 931-235-6354
CLOTHING
CHINA CABINET, Solid
maple wood, $175.
Call 423-893-1889.
DELL P-4 Desk Top. Complete,
XP Pro, Internet Ready. 30 day
Warranty! $100. 423-473-2767
Great New York Flea Market
Move-in special (new vendors only)
Call 706-858-0188
POLE BARN - 24x36, 10’ ceiling,
6x6 treated posts,Wood trusses.
Metal roof. Installed. $4000.
Other sizes avail. 423-595-2079
Cedar Wardrobe 34X60
$250
423-667-5443
WESTERN BOOTS, Dingo,
soft leather, size 8, $30.
Call 423-870-3929.
CHERISHED TEDDY
Robbie & Rachel $10.
Call 423-486-7397.
PACK N PLAY- Graco, neutral
colors, has bassinet, and
travel case, great condition.
$100 423-593-0575
BEDROOM- A Queen/Full.
Very nice 5 piece set. NEW!
Still in boxes. Sacrifice. $399.
423-400-6233 Can Deliver.
BEDROOM-A Ralph Lauren-like
6 piece Cherry Sleigh set. Brand
new in box. List $2500. Must sell
$895. 423-400-6233. Can deliver
Ugg Boots- Ultimate Tall Braid,
womens size 7, $110
480-205-7932
FURNITURE
SOFA/ RECLINER Lazy Boy
All Leather , Brown, 3 Cushion
2 yrs old. $1450. 423-305-0897
SHOES, Mens, size 10 By Bass
& Nunn Bush, 2 pair $40 cash
only. Call 706-937-3085.
WASHER & DRYER, Whirlpool,
works perfect. Can guarantee.
Will del. $195/both. 635-4237.
ANTIQUES
35268713
FURNITURE
JACKET, Ladies Gray
Leather, size 10, $40.
Call 423-870-3929.
Ge Profile Dishwasher White
$300
423-298-3085
Class A Driver
Needed ASAP
10 hours per week
DRYER Whirlpool
warranty $95.
423-504-2137
OUTSIDE SALES
Sunny 92.3, HITS 96, Fox
Sports and WUUQ have
a rare opening for an
outside sales person.
If you're a good listener,
have good verbal and written
communications skills,
are creative and enjoy the
satisfaction of helping others,
we'd like to talk with you.
The person we're looking
for has outside sales experience, a sense of urgency
and a burning desire to get
ahead. This could be the
career change you've been
looking for. Send your
resume and a cover letter to
Jeff Fontana via E-Mail:
JFontana@WDEFRadio.com
WDEF is an equal
opportunity employer.
TRUCKING
OPPORTUNITIES
(Memorial Hospital and Memorial Hospital Hixson)
Dryer, Kenmore Elite Electric .
Heavy Duty, King Capacity.
$75 Cash only. 423-316-7581.
GE Ex-large washer & Hotpoint
XL dryer Great condition $150
for both 861-4913
Experienced in setting
equipment, rigging in large
existing production
facility in Rutherford County .
Installs & change outs. Must
have valid DL & work OT.
Background & drug screen
req’d. Top pay & benefits.
Fax resume to 615-360-1250
or call 877-685-8936.
WEEKENDS -
DRYER, Electric, Frigidaire large
capacity, works well. $65.
Call 423-240-8864.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
SALES Exp. furniture
salesperson. Apply in person:
Scotts Furniture Company
1650 S. Lee Hwy., Cleveland.
HOME HEALTH - 10 hours per week
DISHWASHER- Whirlpool, white,
5 Wash cycles $35.
423-544-0485
Qualified candidates are
encouraged to send their
resume with cover letter to:
Retail Advertising Director
Chattanooga Times Free
Press
400 E. 11th Street
Chattanooga, TN 37403
(E-mail tward@
timesfreepress.com)
Chaplain – Part Time
35311903
The Chattanooga Times Free
Press, the areas number one
source for news and
information has an immediate
opening for a business-tobusiness sales professional
in the Retail Advertising
Department.
Antique RefrigeratorWestinghouse, 1948 Ice Cold
$130 706-861-4007
35317222
Outside Sales Retail
Account Executive
Opportunity
TRI WALKER, Chrome Folds up
Rubber tires & brakes w/ baskets $65. Call 423-899-3355
WHEELCHAIR, Like New!
For smaller person. Asking $75
Call 423-875-9911
WHEELCHAIR
Brand new! $100.
423-544-6050
FIREPLACE SCREEN, Decorative Bronze Wrought iron Free
standing $60. 344-8794.
FIREPLACE TOOL SET W/
Stand Fancy New in box. 5
piece $49. Call 423-240-0153.
FIREPLACE TOOL SET, 3 piece
Brass w/ stand. Beautiful.
$45. 706-820-2200
FOX COLLAR, 6’ 4” includes
Gold walking coat.
$300.obo 423-400-7376
GO-CART millenium racing,
complete & more! very nice!
$1100.423-488-2727/ 847-8899
MISCELLANEOUS
HITCH RECEIVER
Ford Escort
$75.obo 706-861-4525
AREA RUG 9’x9’
Excellent condi. $95.
Call 423-892-4261.
HUGE Aloe Vera Plant,
$35.
423-244-6388
AT&T ANSWERING MACHINE,
$10.
Call 423-877-3313.
Hydraulic Table Lift on Wheels
like new $100
423-344-7079
BEDSPREAD ENSEMBLE
King size $50. cash
423.875.2108
IBM Selectric Type-Writer
$15
423-629-0149
Ben Hampton Artist Proofs,
All Proofs Signed & Numbered,
Many Professionally Framed,
Call for info 770-744-8721
JETTED SPA TUB, White
Complete $475.
423-443-5646
CALCULATOR, Texas Instrument, Business II Plus, $10.
Cash only. 706-937-3085.
CALCULATOR Texas Instruments TI-86, Exc.Cond. $75/
offer 423-304-3094/ 847-8899
KEROSENE HEATER,
Omni 230 Almost new.
$55. 423-870-3685
LADDER, Extends to 30 ft.
Heavy duty. $80.
423-870-3685
China- 12 Place Setting Forest
Glenn BY Nikko All Pieces
$250 423-298-3085
Ladders (4) Various Sizes $179
w/sep
423-356-8806
China- NoritakeService for 8 ,
pattern flourish, plus serving
pieces $530. 423-304-8808
LAMP W/ Shade. Marble &
Brass. 36in Tall. Asking $12
Call 423-842-7837
Conveyer Roller. 10 X 18,
Good Shape, Asking $50
423-774-0493
Laundry Tub Sink. 16in. Deep.
Like New! Asking $69
423-356-8806
COOLER, Rubbermade, 15x29,
80gott, $20 cash only.
Call 706-937-3085.
Military Relics. German, Japanese & American World War
I&II Pay top prices. 842-6020
DISHES. Pfaltzgraft Yorktown.
64 Piece. Nice! $95
423-877-4179
Mirror Pictures & Lamp
$50
227-0080
F4 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
MISCELLANEOUS
MOP BUCKET, Rubbermaid
Commerical style, w/ wringer
on casters $45. 892-4261
TV/RADIO/STEREO
EQUIPMENT
Cellphones- 1 cricket, 1 staight
talk, 1 boost mobile, $ 225 obo
will sep 423-320-8382
PHONE V-TECH Portable
$10.
Call 423-877-3313.
IPHONE 3GS, AT&T, 8gb, good
cond. Comes with case & arm
band, $100. 423-994-9447.
Pictures (2) 26inX32in Lighthouse Theme, Cherry Wood
Frame $20 423-629-0149
TV Magnavox 20” screen
w/remote control Very nice $60.
Cash Only 423-855-0889
Pier 1 ARM CHAIR Azteca
Design, Orig $250, Now $120
Great Cond. 267-377-6450
TV’s - (3) 20’’,
like new $300 for all or will sep.
42 3-320-8382
Portable Building- brand new
10x20 paid 4700$ asking
2000$ OBO. (423)-531-0074
WANTED TO BUY
Prince Ben Hampton Blue Ridge
Professionally Framed, $85
706-866-1149
PRINTS, COURIER/IVES
(4) for $30, Un-Framed,
All Seasons, 423-899-8342
CASH 4 Diabetic Test Strips
$10 for 50ct, $20 for 100ct
Call Daniel: 423-401-8118
PROPANE Low pressior
Regulator, brand new, $50.
Call 423-774-0493.
Queen Size Bed Very Great
Cond Matt, Box Spring Frame.
$99 423-356-8806
Lionel & American Flyer
Toy Trains & Real Saxophones
& Trumpets 423-716-1677
QUILTING PATTERN BOOKS &
Magazines Too many to list.
$100. 423-827-6551
PETS
Ray Ban SunglassesLike New, $30
423-486-7397
ROOF MOUNT BASKET YAKIMA
40X42 w/ mounting bracket
$400obo706-861-4525
Austrian Shepard -AKC, Blue &
Red Merles, Red and Black
Tri’s, $400. 931-273-0626
Ryobi Cordless Drill- 18 volt,
3 1/8’’, New, needs batt, $10
423-653-5097
SEWING MACHINE, Portable,
Euro pro w/ attachments.
$65. 423-827-6551
SEWING MACHINE, Brother
personal Quilting/ Embroidery
Used twice $275. 827-6551
SHEET SET, Queen
size, like new, $15.
Call 423-892-4261.
Shoes 8.5 Med Black
Donald Pliner High Heals
Gorgeous $10 423-899-8342
Stove Electric WhirlpoolPerfect Cond, $65
423-899-8342
BORDER COLLIE Pups, ABCA
Excel.stock dogs & pets $250/$350
931-939-2426/ 931-607-2426
BOXERS (2)- 1 male, 1 female,
special Price $100 each,
423-987-8539
SUPPORT BELT For back.
New never used. $20.
Call 423-877-3313.
TN Sign24x30, $75
706-965-3252
TOOL & SOCKET SET
75 Piece , $32 New!,
423-842-7837
TRAMPOLINE
Only 1 yr old $200.
423-485-3103
VASES 3 Antique Etched Glass
Sterling silver foot Great for
Valen. Day $75. 423-994-7546
WALL MIRROR, Large,
Ornate Gold frame, $45.
Call 423-892-4261.
CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES -Tiny,
designer pups, raised in home.
$250-$500 423-413-2410
CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES
Toys size. UTD shots & wormed
$100 & up 423-227-6788
Wall Picture (4) in frame of
variety new, $40 will sep
423-842-7837
WATER DISPENSER, hot and
cold, uses 5 gallon bottles,
$50. Call 423-822-8283.
WILDLIFE Floral arrangement
for top of kitchen cabinets
Awesome! $15. 706-820-2200
CHIHUAHUA Small 1 males,
1 female 7 weeks old, 1st shots,
wormed $200 423-994-8950
CHIHUAHUAS, Appleheads,
Tiny Toys, $250 & up Cash
Call: 423-949-2215
MUSIC LESSONS
****PIANO TEACHER. Caring,
nurturing, patient, fun loving
teacher who loves sharing the
gift of music with all ages.
Exp. Teacher Appointment St.
Louis Institute Of Music.
30+ Yrs. Exp. Ooltewah/
Collegedale. Call 423-710-3868.
Doberman Pinscher. AKC,
Champ Line, Blk/Rst & Fawn,
M/F, Ready to play at new home!
Parents on site.Very Loyal!
423.582.2414 $450+
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
(2) PA Speakers w/ Tri Pod
Stands, $250
770-735-2546
GUITAR- 1997 Gretsch Model
G6120, Pristine Cond, $3000
423-309-0469
GUITAR Fender Stratocaster
Like new w/ case.
$700. 423-320-2818
GUITAR, Fender Acoustic
Plays & sounds great. $70.
423-987-3260.
Renaissance Lute 8 Course w/
Case, Exc Cond, $700
423-745-9119
VIOLIN
1 quarter violin, $75
423-704-7872
ENGLISH MASTIFF Pups
AKC Fawn & Brindle. Males &
Females. Ready for New Year.
We don’t ship! $600.423-315-6209
FREE- 2 Yr Old Spaded Cat,
Needs Loving Home
706-952-1253
FREE-Lab White, female, 3 yrs.
old. To good home with large
yard. Call 706-270-2697.
FREE: LHASA APSO
Grown Male, Full blooded,
423-775-4016
FREE- Weimaraner, female 4
years old. House trained. To
good home. 706-270-2697.
FREE: WEIMARANER /
AMERICAN BULLDOG MIX 1
Fe/2males 423-834-6953
WURLITZER SPINET PIANO
w/bench. Very nice. Dark
wood. $850. 423-899-3530.
PHOTO EQUIPMENT
Chromakey Blue/Grn Backdrop.
Bl 10x12, 5x7; Grn 5x7.
$100.00
German Shepherd Puppies.
Black. AKC Reg. Working
Bloodlines, $700 423-664-2060
Chromakey Digital Muslin
Screens. Blue 10x12, 5x7. Grn
5x7. 653-4167. $100.
POOLS/SPAS
SPA Dynasty 6 Person
New cover. $2900.obo
423-309-4973/ 423-892-8445
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPSFull Blooded, 4 Mo Old Solid
Black, 3(M), 3(F), Parents On
Site, Wormed & All Shots, No
Papers $250 423-285-0011
423-653-6348
JACK RUSSELL-RAT TERRIER
Designer puppies. Miniature size.
$100. 423-227-6788
LOST DOG: "Bandito" black and
white 5yr old male neutered
mixed breed. Large, with short
hair and curled tail. Reward
offered. If found, please call
Meredith 803-530-2671
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Equipment in very good shape!
423-309-2502 or 423-413-1281
SEWING
MACHINES
SHIH TZU PUPPIES- AKC,
Beautiful colors, Taking deposits.
$400. & up 423-775-4016
Singer sewing machine asking
$150.00 or m.a.o. phone
1-931-505-1003
SPORTS
EQUIPMENT
AB MACHINE,
New condition. $75. Call
706-270-2697.
TEA CUP YORKIE Pups.
CKC.reg, 9wks, Parents 2 lbs
very small, $625 423-260-2659.
BOW FLEX Extreme &
Treadmill $500. will separate
423-987-3260.
EXERCISE MACHINE VQ ACTIONCARE SHORT STROKE
BIKE WITH RESISTANCE
CHAIR - PICTURE AVAILABLE NEW PRICE $500+
$250.00 (423) 463-0443
billc740@yahoo.com
FISHING REEL
SHIMATIO $10.00 cash only
706-937-3085
Ironman ATIS 1000 Inversion
Therapy Table new 150.00
obo Dave 423-875-6904
Mike's Golf Shop - We pay
$CASH$ for golf equipment!
Facing 153 near Lee Hwy
423-558-0372
POOL TABLE, Slate, Brunswick, 4-1/2x9, ball return. Pd
$3400, now $1000. 877-4011.
Selecttec 552 Dumbells Bowflex
w/stand 135.00 value free
875-6904 Dave 250.00 firm
WEIMARANER PUPPIESAKC, Pedigree, Beautiful, Silver.
dilbeckweims.com
$600 706-270-2181
WEIMARANER PUPS. AKC, vet
chckd, tails & dewclaws $400.
706-866-9939/423-385-4573.
YORKIE-POO PUPPIES
Non shedding. Sweet & adorable
$200. & up 423-227-6788
PET SUPPLIES
FISH TANK, 125 gal.
with supplies. asking $225.
423-443-5646
Snow Ski- Rosignol, 2pr Scott
Poles, 1-40’’, 1-44’’, boots,
$239, 423-240-0153
LIVESTOCK
TREADMILL,
$30.
423-544-0485
Hay: Reduced Price
In barn $25; In field $15. Big rolls
Call Bobby 423-595-7555
Tread Mill -Proform 590T, ipod
deck, fan, new $700, Moving
$250, 404-904-6909
HORSE, Kid Friendly, 14 Yr old,
Gelding, $1500 well broke,
706-639-7812
TREADMILL, Sears Proform
Series 585, good cond. $300
obo. 423-843-1790 aft. 5pm.
FEED/SEED/
PLANTS
Vibra Trim Exercise MachineNew VT400, cost $1400,
Moving $700, 404-904-6909
Weight Bench w/ Bar & Assorted
Weights $50/obo
423-843-2173
WEIGHT SET- Olympic weights,
with dumbbells. Bar & bench
inc. 320lbs. $375. 892-1863
HAY- 4x5 Round Bails, Good
Hay, Outside $20 Out of Barn
$30 Lots & Lots 423-658-7489
423-240-3181
timesfreepress.com
LEGAL NOTICES
CAR SALE
1998 Nissan Altima (Brown)Vin 1NADLO1D5WC216952
1990 Mazda Miata (Red)Vin JM1NA3518L0129789
2002 Dodge Intripid (Blue)Vin 2B3HD46R92H237073
Above vehicles will be sold at
auction on January 31, 2013.
Owners upon payment of all
charges can reclaim up to time
of auction. Failure to excercise
this right shall be deemed a
waiver of all right, title and interest and Consent of sale.
Collegedale Exxon,
9416 Apison Pike, Collegedale, Tennessee 423-396-3863
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE
WHEREAS, Shallowford
Holdings, LLC, by a Deed of
Trust, Assignment of Rents
and Leases, Security Agreement, and Financing Statement dated October 19, 2006,
of record as Instrument No.
2006102000106 in Book GI
8121, page 666 Register's Office for Hamilton County, Tennessee ("Deed of Trust"), conveyed to Sam J. McAllester, III,
Trustee, the hereinafter described real property to secure
the payment of certain indebtedness, etc., ("Indebtedness")
as described in said Deed of
Trust; and
WHEREAS, default in indebtedness secured by said
Deed of Trust has been made;
and
WHEREAS, Capital Bank,
N.A., successor by merger to
GreenBank, a Tennessee
chartered commercial bank,
formerly Middle Tennessee
Bank & Trust, the owner and
holder of said Indebtedness
has demanded that the real
property be advertised and
sold in satisfaction of said Indebtedness and the cost of the
foreclosure, in accordance with
the terms and provisions of the
loan documents and Deed of
Trust.
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the
Trustee or a designated agent
for the Trustee, pursuant to the
power, duty and authority
vested in and imposed upon
the Trustee in said Deed of
Trust and applicable law, will
on Wednesday, January 30,
2013 at 10:30 o'clock a.m.,
prevailing time, at the front
door of the Hamilton County
Courthouse, Courthouse Annex, Chattanooga, Hamilton
County, Tennessee 37102, offer for sale to the highest and
best bidder for cash and free
from all rights and equity of redemption, statutory right of redemption or otherwise, homestead, dower, elective share
and all other rights and exemptions of every kind as waived in
said Deed of Trust, certain real
property situated in Hamilton
County, Tennessee, described
as follows:
Legal Description Reference:
The real property is described
in the Deed of Trust of record
in Instrument No.
2006102000106 in Book GI
8121, page 666, Register's Office for Hamilton County, Tennessee the real property described in the deed of record in
Book GI 8121, page 663,
Register's Office for Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
Street Address: The street
address of the property is believed to be 2100 Chapman
Road, Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, but
such address is not part of the
legal description of the property. In the event of any discrepancy, the legal description
herein shall control.
Map/Parcel Number: 138JA-8.01
Land lying and being in the
City of Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee also
being Lot No. 1, a resubdivision of Tract D, Shallowford
Industrial Park East found of
record in Plat Book 37, Page
248, in the Register's Office
of Hamilton County, and being more particularly described as follows:
Beginning at a found ⁄" steel
rebar in the Western line of
New Chapman Road (30'
from center line), said rebar
being the Northeastern
corner of Lot 3, Resubdivision of Lot #2, Shallowford
Industrial Park East found of
record in Plat Book 42, Page
61, in the aforesaid
Register's Office, said corner
also being the Southeastern
corner of the property
described herein; run thence
S 89°57'06" W along the
Northern line of the aforesaid
Lot 3, a distance of 349.96'
to a placed ⁄" steel rebar
having a yellow plastic cap
labeled "Niles Surveying" in
a Northeastern right-of-way
line of Tennessee Highway
153 along the North-bound
on-ramp of said highway
from Shallowford Road;
thence North 30°52'07" W
along said line of Highway
358.51' (plat of record cites:
N 30°53'15" W, 358.35') to a
found 5/8" steel rebar having
a yellow plastic cap inscribed
"Betts Surveying,
Chattanooga" in said line of
highway where said rightof-way line is intersected by
a Southern line of that
property conveyed to
Standefer Investment Company and found of record in
Deed Book 2651, page 261
in the aforesaid Register's
Office; thence North
73°45'20" E along said
Southern line 364.89' (plat of
record cites: N 73°45'34"
East 364.96') to a found 5/8"
"Bett's" rebar as
aforedescribed in the
aforementioned East line of
New Chapman Road (30'
from centerline); thence S
00° W along said line of
Chapman road 408.17' to the
point of beginning containing
3.96 acres all as shown on a
survey drawing entitled
"ALTA/ACSM Land Title
Survey, Lot 1, Shallowford
Industrial Park East …"
prepared by C. Barton
Crattie, LS 1742 and having
Niles Surveying Co., Inc.
Drawing No. FF 38-143.
Being the same property
conveyed to Shallowford
Holdings, LLC, by Special
Warranty Deed of record in
Book 8121, page 663,
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
THIS PROPERTY IS SOLD
AS IS, WHERE IS AND WITH
ALL FAULTS, AND WITHOUT
ANY REPRESENTATIONS OR
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND
WHATSOEVER, WHETHER
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.
WITHOUT LIMITING THE
F O R E G O I N G , T H E
PROPERTY IS TO BE SOLD
WITHOUT ANY IMPLIED
W A R R A N T I E S O F
MERCHANTABILITY,
CONDITION, OR FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR USE OR
PURPOSE.
Other interested parties:
Eastman Construction
Company.
As to all or any part of the
Property, the right is reserved
to (i) delay, continue or adjourn
the sale to another time certain
or to another day and time
certain, without further
publication and in accordance
with law, upon announcement
of said delay, continuance or
adjournment on the day and
time and place of sale set forth
above or any subsequent
delayed, continued or
adjourned day and time and
place of sale; (ii) sell at the
time fixed by this Notice or the
date and time of the last delay,
continuance or adjournment or
to give new notice of sale; (iii)
sell in such lots, parcels,
segments, or separate estates
LEGAL NOTICES
g
as Trustee may choose; (iv)
sell any part and delay,
continue, adjourn, cancel, or
postpone the sale of any part
of the Property; (v) sell in
whole and then sell in parts
and consummate the sale in
whichever manner produces
the highest sale price; and/or
(vi) to sell to the next highest
bidder in the event any high
bidder does not comply with
the terms of the sale.
Trustee will make no
covenant of seisin,
marketability of title or warranty
of title, express or implied, and
will sell and convey the subject
real property by Trustee's
Quitclaim Deed as Trustee
only.
This sale is subject to all
matters shown on any
applicable recorded Plat or
Plan; any unpaid taxes and
assessments (plus penalties,
interest, and costs) which exist
as a lien against said property;
any restrictive covenants,
easements or setback lines
that may be applicable; any
rights of redemption, equity,
statutory or otherwise, not
otherwise waived in the Deed
of Trust, including rights of
redemption of any
governmental agency, state or
federal; and any and all prior
deeds of trust, liens, dues,
assessments, encumbrances,
defects, adverse claims and
other matters that may take
priority over the Deed of Trust
upon which this foreclosure
sale is conducted or are not
extinguished by this
Foreclosure Sale. This sale is
also subject to any matter that
an inspection and accurate
survey of the property might
disclose.
THIS 7th day of January,
2013.
/s/ Sam J. McAllester, III
Sam J. McAllester, III, Trustee
BONE MCALLESTER
NORTON PLLC
511 Union Street, Suite 1600
Nashville, Tennessee 37219
615-238-6300
INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids in duplicate will be
received by the Purchasing
Department G13 City Hall,
Chattanooga Tennessee
37402 until January 29, 2013
2:00 PM.
At that time Bids will be accepted for:
Fleet Services- Police Interceptor Additional Lighting
The City of Chattanooga at it
discretion, may not open a
single proposal. The City of
Chattanooga reserves the right
to reject any and/or all proposals received, waive any informalities in the proposal, and to
accept any proposal, which in
its opinion may be for the best
interest of the city.
The City of Chattanooga will be
non-discriminatory in the purchase of all goods and services on the basis of race,
color or natural origin
City of Chattanooga
Jonathan Woodard
Buyer
INVITATION TO BID
SCBA CYLINDERS
Sealed bids will be received by
the City of Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee at the City Hall at 9835
Dayton Pike until 10:00 a.m. on
January 31, 2013, at which
time they will be publicly
opened and read aloud for the
purchase of Sixty - 30 Min.
4500 PSI SCBA Cylinders
"Composite" Aluminum, Carbon Fiber, Encased with Fiberglass Over Wrap (includes installing current valves with new
O-rings). To obtain additional
bid information please call
423-332-5323. The City reserves the right to waive any
informalities and to reject any
and all bids.
Bids should be mailed to the
City of Soddy-Daisy in an envelope marked "Cylinders"
and must be in the hands of
the City Manager by the date
and time specified above.
Hardie Stulce
City Manager
INVITATION FOR BIDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the City of Collegedale will
receive sealed bids for four
Dodge Charger Pursuit Vehicles at City Hall, 4910 Swinyar Drive, PO Box 1880, Collegedale, TN 37315 until 12:00
p.m. Monday January 21,
2013. Please visit the city website for bid details and specifications. The City has the right
to refuse any and all bids.
MEETING NOTICE
The Board of Sign Appeals
meeting will be held on Monday, January 28, 2013, at 5:00
p.m., in the Development Resource Center Building, Conference Room 1-A, at 1250
Market Street.
13-BS-00001 – 850 Market
Street – Sign Setback Variance
If you have any questions regarding this meeting, please
call Dottie Burns at (423)
643-5883.
NOTICE OF MEETING OF
THE BEER BOARD FOR
THE TOWN OF LOOKOUT
MOUNTAIN, TENNESSEE
The Town of Lookout Mountain Beer Board will meet on
Tuesday, January 22, 2013 at
5:00p.m. in the Commission
Room of the Lookout Mountain
Town Hall to consider the application of Eric Wood for the
issuance of a license to sell alcohol for consumption on
premise in the Town’s commercial District at 820 Scenic
Highway, 37350.
Notice of Sale
THIS IS A NOTICE TO LEGALLY SATISFY REQUIREMENTS OF GEORGIA LAW
CONCERNING OWNER LIEN
FOR RENT PAST DUE TO
BEST PUBLIC STORAGE
LOCATED AT 1307 CROSS
STREET, ROSSVILLE, GA
30741
BEST PUBLIC STORAGE
(10:00 AM) JANUARY 30TH
2013
C-32 ELLIS
D-07 MULLINS
D-18 VAUGHN
E-13 THOMAS
F-04 WILSON
F-18 HUNTER
G-05 HANNAH
G-14 SHELNUTT
H-03 GREGORY
H-08 MYERS
I-10 DALYMPLE
I-12 DOBBS
I-18 MUIR
I-19 PEWITT
Notice of Sale
THIS IS A NOTICE TO LEGALLY SATISFY REQUIREMENTS OF GEORGIA LAW
CONCERNING OWNER LIEN
FOR RENT PAST DUE TO
DIRECT CONNECTION MINI
STORAGE LOCATED AT
6827 DIRECT CONNECTION
Dr, ROSSVILLE, GA 30741
DIRECT CONNECTION MINI
STORAGE (11:00 AM) January 30TH 2013
# 232 PHILIPS
# 243 PHILIPS
# 227 MAHAN
#239 PRINCE
Notice of Sale
THIS IS A NOTICE TO LEGALLY SATISFY REQUIREMENTS OF GEORGIA LAW
LEGAL NOTICES
CONCERNING OWNER LIEN
FOR RENT PAST DUE TO MY
PLACE MINI STORAGE LOCATED AT 60 ACORN LANE,
FORT OGLETHORPE, GA
30742
MY PLACE MINI STORAGE
(11:30 AM) JANUARY 30TH
2013
# 6 ARP
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE’S SALE
WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of
the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated
July 23, 2007, executed by
KYLE ROUSSEAU AND
NANCY ROUSSEAU, HUSBAND AND WIFE, conveying
certain real property therein
described to MILLIGANREYNOLDS GUARANTY
TITLE AGENCY, INC. as same
appears of record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, on July 24, 2007, as
I n s t r u m e n t N o .
2007072400184, in Book GI
8415, at Page 187; and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to BANK OF AMERICA,
N.A., who is now the owner of
said debt; and
WHEREAS, Notice of the
Right to Foreclose ("Notice")
was given in compliance with
Tennessee law by the mailing
a copy of the Notice to the parties at least sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication of
the Substitute Trustee's Sale.
WHEREAS, the undersigned,
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A., having been appointed by
as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable, and
that the undersigned, RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A., as
Substitute Trustee or its duly
appointed agent, by virtue of
the power, duty and authority
vested and imposed upon said
Substitute Trustee will, on
January 23, 2013, 2:00 PM at
the Hamilton County courthouse door where the foreclosure sales are customarily held
On the front steps of the West
Side Entrance of the Hamilton
County Courthouse, 615 Walnut St., Chattanooga, TN, proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash the following described
property situated in Hamilton
County, Tennessee, to wit:
IN THE CITY OF
C H A T T A N O O G A ,
HAMILTON COUNTY, TENNESSEE:
LOTS TWO (2) AND THREE
(3), MOUNTAIN VIEW
TRACE, AS SHOWN BY
PLAT OF RECORD IN PLAT
BOOK 49, PAGE 261, IN
THE REGISTER'S OFFICE
OF HAMILTON COUNTY,
TENNESSEE.
REFERENCE IS MADE FOR
PRIOR TITLE TO DEED OF
RECORD IN BOOK 4456,
PAGE 176, IN THE REGISTER'S OFFICE OF
HAMILTON COUNTY,
TENNESSEE.
COMMONLY KNOWN AS:
4139 AND 4141 MOUNTAIN
V I E W
A V E . ,
CHATTANOOGA, TN 37415.
SUBJECT TO ALL
EASEMENTS AND
STIPULATIONS SHOWN
ON SAID PLAT.
S U B J E C T T O
RESTRICTIONS AS SET
O U T
I N
T H A T
INSTRUMENT RECORDED
IN BOOK 885, PAGE 398, IN
THE REGISTER'S OFFICE
OF HAMILTON COUNTY,
TENNESSEE, BUT
O M I T T I N G A N Y
COVENANT OR RESTRICTION BASED ON RACE,
COLOR, RELIGION, SEX,
HANDICAP, FAMILIAL
STATUS OR NATIONAL
ORIGIN UNLESS AND
ONLY TO THE EXTENT
THAT SAID COVENANT (A)
IS EXEMPT UNDER
CHAPTER 42, SECTION
3607 OF THE UNITED
STATE CODE OR (B)
RELATES TO HANDICAP
B U T D O E S N O T
DISCRIMINATE AGAINST
HANDICAPPED PERSONS.
PARCEL 108 E C 001.01
PROPERTY ADDRESS: The
street address of the property
i s b e l i e v e d t o b e 4139
MOUNTAIN VIEW AVENUE,
CHATTANOOGA, TN 37415.
In the event of any
discrepancy between this
street address and the legal
description of the property, the
legal description shall control.
CURRENT OWNER(S):
KYLE ROUSSEAU AKA KYLE
JEFFREY ROUSSEAU AND
NANCY ROUSSEAU
OTHER INTERESTED
PARTIES: 1). PORTFOLIO
RECOVERY ASSOCIATES,
LLC, AS ASSIGNEE OF GE
MONEY BANK
T h e s a l e o f t h e
above-described property shall
be subject to all matters shown
on any recorded plat; any
unpaid taxes; any restrictive
covenants, easements or
set-back lines that may be
applicable; any prior liens or
encumbrances as well as any
priority created by a fixture
filing; and to any matter that an
accurate survey of the
premises might disclose.
This property is being sold
with the express reservation
that it is subject to confirmation
by the lender or Substitute
Trustee. This sale may be
rescinded at any time. 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.
All right and equity of
redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and
dower are expressly waived in
said Deed of Trust, and the title
is believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The Property is sold as is,
w h e r e i s , w i t h o u t
representations or warranties
of any kind, including fitness for
a particular use or purpose.
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A. IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A., Substitute Trustee 2380
Performance Dr,
TX2-984-0407 Richardson, TX
75082 Tel: (800) 281-8219
Fax: (866) 681-5002 Registered Agent: CT Corporation
System 800 South Gay Street,
Suite 2021 Knoxville, TN
37929 Tel: (865) 342-3522
TS#:11-0053297
FEI#1006.141000
Publication Dates: January 2,
9, 16, 2013
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE'S SALE
WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of
the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated
December 13, 2006, executed
by LINDA D NAPIER, conveying certain real property therein
described to WARRANTY
TITLE INSURANCE as same
appears of record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, on December 28,
2006, as Instrument No.
2006122800040, in Book GI
8193, at Page 961; and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to U.S. BANK, NA-
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
g
TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS
SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO
BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. AS
SUCCESSOR TO LASALLE
BANK, N.A. AS TRUSTEE
FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE
MERRILL LYNCH FIRST
FRANKLIN MORTGAGE
LOAN TRUST, MORTGAGE
LOAN ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES
2007-FF2, who is now the
owner of said debt; and
WHEREAS, Notice of the
Right to Foreclose ("Notice")
was given in compliance with
Tennessee law by the mailing
a copy of the Notice to the parties at least sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication of
the Substitute Trustee's Sale.
WHEREAS, the undersigned, RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A., having been appointed by as Substitute
Trustee by instrument filed for
record in the Register's Office
of Hamilton County, Tennessee .
NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
entire indebtedness has been
declared due and payable, and
that the undersigned, RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A., as
Substitute Trustee or its duly
appointed agent, by virtue of
the power, duty and authority
vested and imposed upon said
Substitute Trustee will, on
January 30, 2013, 2:00 PM at
the Hamilton County courthouse door where the foreclosure sales are customarily held
On the front steps of the West
Side Entrance of the Hamilton
County Courthouse, 615 Walnut St., Chattanooga, TN, proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash, the following described
property situated in Hamilton
County, Tennessee, to wit:
REAL ESTATE LOCATED IN
HAMILTON COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND BEING
KNOWN AS LOT 11, T.C.
SHERRILL'S ADDITION TO
CRESTWOOD HEIGHTS AS
SHOWN BY PLAT OF
RECORD IN PLAT BOOK
21, PAGE 82, IN THE
REGISTER'S OFFICE OF
HAMILTON COUNTY, TENNESSEE. PARCEL # 168K
M 017
PROPERTY ADDRESS: The
street address of the property
i s b e l i e v e d t o b e 3621
C H E R O K E E A V E ,
CHATTANOOGA, TN 37412.
In the event of any discrepancy
between this street address
and the legal description of the
property, the legal description
shall control.
CURRENT OWNER(S):
LINDA D. NAPIER AKA LINDA
ROSE AKA LINDA D ROSE
OTHER INTERESTED
PARTIES: 1. STATE OF
TENNESSEE 2. CITY OF
EAST RIDGE
The sale of the
above-described property shall
be subject to all matters shown
on any recorded plat; any
unpaid taxes; any restrictive
covenants, easements or
set-back lines that may be
applicable; any prior liens or
encumbrances as well as any
priority created by a fixture
filing; and to any matter that an
accurate survey of the
premises might disclose.
This property is being sold
with the express reservation
that it is subject to confirmation
by the lender or Substitute
Trustee. This sale may be
rescinded at any time. 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. All right and equity of
redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and
dower are expressly waived in
said Deed of Trust, and the title
is believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The Property is sold as is,
w h e r e i s , w i t h o u t
representations or warranties
of any kind, including fitness for
a particular use or purpose. In
addition this sale shall be
subject to the right of
redemption by the
TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT
O F L A B O R , T A X
ENFORCEMENT DIVISION,
pursuant to T.C.A.. 67-11433C(1) by reason of the
following tax lien(s) of record
against State of Tennessee in
the amount of $14,092.68
recorded in Instrument Number
2000061600107 as Book
GI5618 at Page 87. Notice of
the sale has been given to the
State of Tennessee in
accordance with T.C.A.67-11433b(1).
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A. IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
y
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
to wit:
DESCRIBED LAND
SITUATED IN THE CITY OF
C H A T T A N O O G A ,
HAMILTON COUNTY,
TENNESSEE BEING LOT
NUMBER TWENTYSEVEN (27) AND THE
EAST SIX AND 5/10 (6.5)
FEET OF LOT TWENTYSIX (26), BLOCK FIVE (5),
FIRST UNIT, BATTERY
HEIGHTS, AS SHOWN BY
PLAT RECORDED IN PLAT
BOOK 11, PAGE 46, IN THE
REGISTER'S OFFICE OF
HAMILTON COUNTY,
TENNESSEE. SAID LOT
AND PART OF LOT OF
FAIRVIEW DRIVE AND
EXTENDING BACK
SOUTHWARDLY OF
UNIFORM WIDTH, A
DISTANCE ON ONE
HUNDRED EIGHTY-EIGHT
(188) FEET TO THE NORTH
LINE OF AN ALLEY.
PARCEL NUMBER:
128O-B-036
PROPERTY ADDRESS: The
street address of the property
i s b e l i e v e d t o b e 2802
FAIRVIEW DRIVE,
CHATTANOOGA, TN 37406.
In the event of any discrepancy
between this street address
and the legal description of the
property, the legal description
shall control.
CURRENT OWNER(S):
JOHNNY R DONALDSON
AKA JOHNNIE ROBERT
DONALDSON AKA JOHNNY
ROBERT DONALDSON
OTHER INTERESTED
PARTIES:
The sale of the abovedescribed property shall be
subject to all matters shown on
any recorded plat; any unpaid
taxes; any restrictive
covenants, easements or
set-back lines that may be
applicable; any prior liens or
encumbrances as well as any
priority created by a fixture
filing; and to any matter that an
accurate survey of the
premises might disclose.
This property is being sold
with the express reservation
that it is subject to confirmation
by the lender or Substitute
Trustee. This sale may be
rescinded at any time. 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.
All right and equity of
redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and
dower are expressly waived in
said Deed of Trust, and the title
is believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The Property is sold as is,
w h e r e i s , w i t h o u t
representations or warranties
of any kind, including fitness for
a particular use or purpose.
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A. IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A., Substitute Trustee 2380
Performance Dr,
TX2-984-0407 Richardson, TX
75082 Tel: (800) 281-8219
Fax: (866) 681-5002
Registered Agent: CT Corporation System 800 South Gay
Street, Suite 2021 Knoxville,
TN 37929 Tel: (865) 342-3522
TS#:11-0130032
FEI#1006.172838
Publication Dates: January 9,
16, 23, 2013
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE’S SALE
WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of
the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated
August 6, 2003, executed by
JOHNNY R DONALDSON, AN
UNMARRIED MAN AKA
JOHNNIE ROBERT DONALDSON, conveying certain real
property therein described to
ARNOLD M WEISS as same
appears of record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, on August 14, 2003,
as Instrument No.
2003081400107, in Book GI
6809, at Page 312; and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to THE BANK OF NEW
YORK MELLON FKA THE
BANK OF NEW YORK, AS
TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF
CWABS, INC., ASSETBACKED CERTIFICATES,
SERIES 2003-5, who is now
the owner of said debt; and
WHEREAS, Notice of the Right
to Foreclose ("Notice") was
given in compliance with Tennessee law by the mailing a
copy of the Notice to the parties at least sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication of
the Substitute Trustee's Sale.
WHEREAS, the undersigned,
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A., having been appointed by
as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee .
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable, and
that the undersigned, RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A., as
Substitute Trustee or its duly
appointed agent, by virtue of
the power, duty and authority
vested and imposed upon said
Substitute Trustee will, on
January 23, 2013, 2:00 PM at
the Hamilton County courthouse door where the foreclosure sales are customarily held
On the front steps of
he West Side Entrance of the
Hamilton County Courthouse,
615 Walnut St., Chattanooga,
TN, proceed to sell at public
outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash, the following
described property situated in
RECONTRUST COMPANY,
N.A., Substitute Trustee 2380
Performance Dr,
TX2-984-0407 Richardson, TX
75082 Tel: (800) 281-8219
Fax: (866) 681-5002
Registered Agent: CT Corporation System 800 South Gay
Street, Suite 2021 Knoxville,
TN 37929 Tel: (865) 342-3522
TS#: 11-0073025 FEI #
1006.172613
Publication Dates: January 2,
9, 16, 2013
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE
Default having been made in
the terms, conditions, and
payments provided for in that
certain Deed of Trust dated
July 29, 2011, of record in
Book GI 9447, Page 595, and
GI 9505, Page 718 Register’s
Office for Hamilton County,
Tennessee, from BATTERY
PLACE CONDOMINIUMS,
LLC, a Tennessee Limited Liability Company (”Borrower") to
Douglas R. Johnson
(”Trustee") securing the indebtedness therein described,
which indebtedness is now due
and unpaid, and has been declared in default by the lawful
owner and holder thereof; and
WHEREAS, Notice of the
right to Foreclose (”Notice")
was not necessary as this
property is not an owneroccupied residence pursuant to
' 35-5-101; and
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Douglas R. Johnson, Trustee, pursuant to said Deed of Trust,
having been requested by First
Volunteer Bank, the owner and
holder of said indebtedness so
to do, and by virtue of the authority and power vested in me
by said Deed of Trust will, on
January 24, 2013 at 1:30
p.m., at the west door of the
Hamilton County Courthouse in
Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tennessee (”ROHC"), sell at
public outcry to the highest
bidder for cash (or credit upon
the indebtedness secured if the
lawful owner and holder thereof
is the successful purchaser),
free from the equity of redemption, the statutory right of redemption, homestead, dower,
elective share, and all other
exemptions of Borrower of every kind, all of which have been
expressly waived by Borrower,
the following-described property located in Hamilton
County, Tennessee:
This property is commonly
known as: 737 BATTERY
PLACE UNIT 101, Chattanooga, TN 37403 Parcel
135M-M-007 C101; 737 BATTERY PLACE UNIT 105,
Chattanooga, TN 37403 Parcel No. 135M-M-007 C105;
110 DOUGLAS STREET,
UNIT 103, Chattanooga, TN
37403 Parcel No. 136P-A-006
C103; 1 1 0 D O U G L A S
STREET, UNIT 104, Chattanooga, TN 37403 Parcel No.
136P-A-006 C104; 110 DOUGLAS STREET, UNIT 203,
Chattanooga, TN 37403 Parcel No. 136P-A-006 C203; and
110 DOUGLAS STREET,
UNIT 204, Chattanooga, TN
37403 Parcel No. 136P-A-006
C204
The legal descriptions are
contained in Book GI 9447,
Page 595, ROHC
The Property is also encumbered by a lien held by Angela
Carter, Kevin Whitmore, J.
Bartlett Quinn and Jan H.
Quinn by Memorandum Opinion dated January 6, 2012 entered by the Chancery Court
for Hamilton County Tennessee and recorded at Book GI
9582, Page 675, said
Register’s Office. Notice has
been sent to all interested parties.
This sale is subject to a
Master Deed at GI 8521, Page
17, and GI 8029, Page 161,
ROHC liens, easements, encumbrances, , plats, property
taxes, rights of redemption of
taxing entities and other matters which are prior in right to
the lien of the aforesaid Deed
of Trust.
Dated: December 31, 2012
Douglas R. Johnson, Trustee
Post Office Box 2188
Chattanooga, TN 37409
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION GATHERED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE
Default having been made in
the terms, conditions, and
payments provided for in that
certain Deed of Trust dated
LEGAL NOTICES
November 8, 2004, of record in
Book GI 7343, page 769,
Register's Office for Hamilton
County, Tennessee ("ROHC"),
from TANYA MARIE FLORES
("Deed of Trust") to Douglas R.
Johnson ("Trustee"), securing
the indebtedness therein described, which indebtedness is
now due and unpaid, and has
been declared in default by the
lawful owner and holder
thereof; and
WHEREAS, an Agreed Order Lifting Stay was entered in
U.S.B.C., ED Tenn, Case No.
12-15276 on December 20,
2012; and
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Douglas R. Johnson, Trustee, pursuant to said Deed of Trust,
having been requested by First
Volunteer Bank, the owner and
holder of said indebtedness so
to do, and by virtue of the authority and power vested in me
by said Deed of Trust will, on
January 31, 2013 at 12:30
p.m, at public auction at the
West door of the County
Courthouse, Chattanooga,
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
sell at public outcry to the
highest bidder for cash (or
credit upon the indebtedness
secured if the lawful owner and
holder thereof is the successful purchaser), free from the
equity of redemption, the
statutory right of redemption,
homestead, dower, elective
share, and all other exemptions of Borrower of every kind,
all of which have been expressly waived by Borrower,
the following-described property, located in Hamilton
County, Tennessee:
This property is commonly
known as: 5410 High Street,
Ooltewah, TN 37363. Tax
Map/Parcel 132P-E-017
The legal description is contained in Book 7343, Page
769 ROHC.
Notice of the Trustee’s foreclosure sale has been provided to interested parties.
This property may be encumbered by a Deed of Trust
at Book 7862, Page 710 and
Book 7863, Page 210 and
Book 3095, Page 686 which
appears to have expired.
This sale is subject to liens,
easements, encumbrances,
property taxes, rights of redemption of taxing entities and
other matters which are prior in
right to the lien of the aforesaid Deed of Trust.
Dated: January 7, 2013
Douglas R. Johnson, Trustee
Post Office Box 2188
Chattanooga, TN 37409
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION GATHERED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE
PUBLIC AUCTION
On Jan. 19, 2013 at 10 am,
ArkCare Storage at 7327 Hixson Pike, Hixson, TN. 37343
will sell at auction the contents
of the following rental units to
satisfy non-payment of rent,
late fees, and related expenses. The terms of the sales
are cash only upon the closing
of the sale. Please contact
ArkCare Storage at
(423)843-2660 for any additional information. This notice
is in accordance with T.C.A.
66-31-105.
19 Marcia Holloway
22 Marcia Holloway
214 Hennesha Reed
233 Bobby Eustice
883 Bobby Eustice
853 Sandy Perkey
855 Sandy Perkey
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S
SALE
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on
May 13, 2011, by Dewey T.
Daniel, to Preferred Title Insurance Agency, Inc., Trustee, as
same appears of record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee under
Record Book GI 9401, Pages
425, et seq., Register's Office
of Hamilton County, Tennessee ("Deed of Trust"); and
W H E R E A S , William
Jonathan Flowers and wife,
Mary Jane Flowers, the current owner and holder of said
Deed of Trust, (the "Owner and
Holder"), appointed the undersigned, J. Harvey Cameron, as
Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in Record
Book GI 9831, Page 464, in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee, with all the
rights, powers and privileges of
the original Trustee named in
said Deed of Trust; and
WHEREAS, notice of the
right to foreclose as required
by T.C.A. Section 35-5-117,
was provided to Dewey T.
Daniel on December 3, 2012.
NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
entire indebtedness has been
declared due and payable as
provided in said Deed of Trust
by the Owner and Holder, and
that the undersigned J. Harvey
Cameron, Substitute Trustee,
or his duly appointed attorneys
or agents, by virtue of the
power and authority vested in
him, will on February 6, 2013,
commencing at 10:00 A.M.
E a s t e r n T i m e at the front
steps of the Main entrance of
the Hamilton County Courthouse, Chattanooga, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public
outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash, the following
described property situated in
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
to wit:
Beginning at a point on the
East line of Colony Circle, at
a rebar set at the Northwest
corner of Lot Three (3), The
Colony Subdivision, as
shown by plat of record in
Plat Book 28, Page 114, in
said Register's Office; thence
along the North line of said
Lot Three (3) South 79 deg.
52 min. 00 sec. East 141.10
feet to a paint on concrete at
the Northeast corner of said
Lot Three (3); thence along
the East line of said Lot
Three (3), South 11 deg. 32
min. 55 sec. West, 153.80
feet to a pipe found; thence
continuing South 36 deg. 44
min. 57 sec. West along the
Southeast lines of Lots 4,
4-A, 5, 6 and 7, of said The
Colony Subdivision, 641.45
feet to a pipe found at the
Southernmost corner of Lot
Seven (7); thence South 56
deg. 42 min. 58 sec. East,
along the North property line
of Paul Smith as described
by deed of record in Book
7997, Page 427, in said
Register's Office, 628.38 feet
to a pipe found at the
Southwest corner of Lot 42,
Pine Hill Subdivision, Unit 2,
as shown by plat of record in
Plat Book 26, Page 10 in
said Register's Office; thence
North 11 deg. 36 min. 43
sec. East, along the West
lines of Lot 42, 41 and 43, of
said subdivision, 340.75 feet
to an iron rod found at the
Southwest corner of the
Dewey Daniel property as
described in Book 9151,
Page 488, in said Register's
Office; thence continuing
North 08 deg. 43 min. 36
sec. East, along the said
Dewey Daniel property,
625.16 feet to a rebar set in
the West line of Lot 22,
Ivanwood Acres, Unit 2, as
shown by plat of record in
Plat Book 33, Page 13, in
said Register's Office; said
rebar being also at the
Southeast corner of Lot 15,
The Colony, as shown by
plat of record in Plat Book
88, Page 115, in said
Register's Office; thence
along the South line of said
• • • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • F5
timesfreepress.com
J. Harvey Cameron, Esquire
J. Harvey Cameron, P.C.
Post Office Box 759
28 Courthouse Square,
Ste. 100
Jasper, TN 37347
423-942-9975
Publication Dates: January 9,
16, 23, 30, 2013
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured by a Deed of Trust executed on September 14,
2004, by Daniel A. Carmon
and Marsha A. Carmon to
Northgate Title Escrow, Inc.,
Trustee, for the benefit of
American Home Mortgage
Company and appearing of
record in Register’s Office of
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
in Book GI 7275, Page 873;
and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to PNC Bank, National
Association and
WHEREAS, PNC Bank, National Association, as the
holder of the Note for which
debt is owed, (“Note Holder”),
appointed the undersigned,
Nationwide Trustee Services,
Inc., as Substitute Trustee by
instrument filed or to be filed
for record in the Register’s Office of Hamilton County, Tennessee, with all the rights,
powers and privileges of the
original Trustee named in said
Deed of Trust; and
WHEREAS, pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-5-117,
not less than sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication required by § 35-5-101, the notice of the right to foreclose
was properly sent, if so required; and
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by
the Note Holder, and that the
undersigned, Nationwide
Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or its duly appointed attorneys or agents, by
virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on Thursday, January 31, 2013, commencing at 11:00 am at the
Main Door (Walnut Street side)
of the Hamilton County Courthouse location in Tennessee,
proceed to sell at public outcry
to the highest and best bidder
or cash, the following
described property situated in
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
to wit:
Lot Thirteen (13), Quail Rise
Subdivision, as shown by
plat recorded in Plat Book
71, Page 2, in the Register's
Office of Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
Being the same land described in a deed to James
Harrell and wife, Barbara
Harrell by deed dated July
28, 2003 and found of record
in Book 6790, Page 44, in
the Register's Office of
Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
Subject to any governmental
zoning and subdivision
ordinances or regulations in
effect thereon.
Subject to restrictions, easements, requirements, etc., as
shown, described or noted
on Plat recorded in Plat Book
71, Page 2, in the Register's
Office of Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
Subject to Conditions and
easements of record in Book
2116, Page 186, in the
Register’s Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
Subject to Fifteen (15) foot
power and communication
easement as shown,
described or noted and
recorded plat.
Subject to Twenty-five (25)
foot power and telephone
easement a shown,
described or noted on Plats
recorded in Plat Book 49,
Page 214 and Plat Book 59,
Page 262, said Register’s
Office. Subject to easement
as set out in instrument
recorded in Book 5219, Page
125, in the Register’s Office
of Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 7736
Lynnle Way, Hixson, TN
37343
CURRENT OWNER(S): Daniel
A. Carmon and Marsha A.
Carmon
The sale of the
above-described property shall
be subject to all matters shown
on any recorded plan; any
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured by a Deed of Trust executed on February 18, 2003,
by Oseas M. Maldonado and
Victoria A. Maldonado to
Jeanine B. Saylor, Trustee, for
the benefit of 1st Trust Bank
For Savings and appearing of
record in Register’s Office of
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
in Book GI6560, Page 782;
and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to Bank of America,
N.A., successor by merger to
BAC Home Loans Servicing,
LP FKA Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing LP and
WHEREAS, Bank of
America, N.A., successor by
merger to BAC Home Loans
Servicing, LP FKA Countrywide Home Loans Servicing
LP, as the holder of the Note
for which debt is owed, (“Note
Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee
Services, Inc., as Substitute
Trustee by instrument filed or
to be filed for record in the
Register’s Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee, with all
the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee
named in said Deed of Trust;
and
WHEREAS, pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-5-117,
not less than sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication required by § 35-5-101, the notice of the right to foreclose
was properly sent, if so required; and
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable as
provided in said Deed of Trust
by the Note Holder, and that
the undersigned, Nationwide
Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or its duly appointed attorneys
r agents, by virtue of the power
and authority vested in it, will
o n Thursday, February 7,
2013, commencing at 11:00
am at the Main Door (Walnut
Street side) of the Hamilton
County Courthouse location in
Tennessee, proceed to sell at
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder for cash, the
following described property
situated in Hamilton County,
Tennessee, to wit:
Land in Hamilton County,
Tennessee, being the West
119.2 feet of Lot 177, on the
plan of North Chattanooga
Land Company’s Addition, of
record in Plat Book 1, Page
28, Register’s Office for said
County, to which plan
reference is hereby made for
a more complete description.
Being the same property
conveyed to Oseas M.
Maldonado and wife, Victoria A. Maldonado by deed
from Mark W. Stewart of
record in Book 6560, Page
780, Register’s Office for
Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
Subject to all easements,
restrictive, covenants and
conditions, and other matters
of record, including all items
set out on any applicable plat
of record.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 722
Merriam St, Chattanooga, TN
37405
CURRENT OWNER(S): Oseas
M. Maldonado and Victoria A.
Maldonado
T h e s a l e o f t h e
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.
Substitute Trustee will only
convey any interest he/she
may have in the property at the
time of sale.
Property is sold “as is, where
is.”
SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: Beneficial
Tennessee Inc.
For every lien or claim of lien
of the state identified above,
please be advised notice
required by § 67-1-1433 (b)(1)
was timely given and that any
sale of the property herein
referenced will be subject to
the right of the state to redeem the land as provided for
in § 67-1-1433(c)(1).
All right and equity of
redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and
dower are expressly waived in
said Deed of Trust, and the
title is believed to be good, but
the undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The right is reserved to
adjourn the day of the sale to
another day, time, and place
certain without further
publication, upon
announcement at the time and
place for the sale set forth
above.
NATIONWIDE TRUSTEE
SERVICES, INC. 400
Northridge Road Suite 700MC- 7 Sandy Springs, Georgia
30350 404-417-4040 File No.:
1585512 Web Site:
www.JFLegal.com
Insertion Dates: January 16,
23, 30, 2013
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
NATIONWIDE TRUSTEE
SERVICES, INC. 400
Northridge Road Suite 700MC- 7 Sandy Springs, Georgia
30350 404-417-4040 File No.:
1231612 Web Site:
www.JFLegal.com
Publication Dates: January 9,
16, 23, 2013
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S
SALE
Default having been made in
the payment of the debts and
obligations secured to be paid
by a certain Deed of Trust executed April 13, 2009 by
James Benjamin Smith and
Judy M. Smith, husband and
wife to Robert Wilson, as
Trustee, as same appears of
record in the office of the Register of Hamilton County, Tennessee, in Book GI 8907, Page
934, and the undersigned
having been appointed Substitute Trustee by instrument
recorded in the said Register's
Office, and the owner of the
debt secured, Bank of America,
N.A., having requested the undersigned to advertise and sell
the property described in and
conveyed by said Deed of
Trust, all of said indebtedness
having matured by default in
the payment of a part thereof,
at the option of the owner, this
is to give notice that the undersigned will, on Thursday, February 14, 2013 commencing
at 01:00 PM, at the West Front
Door of the Courthouse, Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tennessee proceed to sell at
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder for cash, the following described property, to
wit:
Situated in County of Hamilton, State of Tennessee.
Situated in the Third Civil
District of Hamilton County,
Tennessee, without the corporate limits of any municipality and being more particularly described as follows:
BEGINNNG at a point in the
eastern line of Old Dayton
Pike, the Southwest corner
of the property conveyed to
South Central Bell Telephone Company, by deed
recorded in Book 2095, page
99, in the Register's Office
for Hamilton County, Tennessee; thence along the
southern line of said property, South sixty-eight (68)
degrees eleven (11) minutes
East, a distance of one hundred twenty nine and 1/10
(129.1) feet, more or less, to
the Western line of the property conveyed to Lomet's
Flowers, Inc., by deed recorded in Book 2038, page
411, in the said Register's
Office; thence along the
western line of the said
property in a southwestwardly direction, to a point in
Bank of America/James Smith
FARMS - FARM
LAND
SWEETWATER, TN- 52 Acres,
Exit 60, Surrounded by almost
a mile of 4 board fencing.
Absolutely breath taking
Mtn. Views. Over looking
Sweetwater Equestrian
Center. Possible Development
or Estate. $265,000/obo, Will
Finance. Chad 865-250-9415
HOUSES FOR SALE
Dtwn, St. Elmo, Highland Park,
Avondale, Missionary Ridge
WATERFRONT
HOMES
APTS-RENTUNFURNISHED
Centre - A L - W a t e r f r o n t Condo 1 bedroom, 1 bath,
Call for photos and details.
$79,900 706-264-4305
- HIXSON / RIDGESIDE APTS Large 1 BR Available!
Water Furnished!
Call today for your custom quote
423-842-8280
Rock Spring Ga- New 2,100
sq ft house with 135 feet
waterfronted on Ginger Lake.
Excellent fishing and boating.
$198,000. Other waterfront
building lots with sewer,
$40,000 each. 423-240-0089
Marina Pointe
Hixson- $0 moves you in!!
1, 2, & 3 bdrm
luxury apartments
Reduced rates starting at
$809. Call now for January
2013 Move-in Special Offer
423-933-2535
LOTS & ACREAGE
N. Chatt - River Hills Manor
Franklin Co, TN- 102 Acres w/
Cabin, Metal Roof, Hardwood
Floors, 2 Storage Units,
Sinking Cove Area, $144,750
Call 423-432-8747
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Retired/Senior Citizens! Taking
applications for new manufactured homes set-up in an established community for
Senior/Retirees 423-332-1580
4 SALE BY OWNER- 4 bedroom Double Wide. Owner will
Finance with Down payment.
423-843-4919
98 Fleetwood 28x74 3/3 in
good condition. Must see!
$19915 cash. 423-903-9444.
IF YOU OWN LAND- and your
on SSI, Disability, or Limited
Income, you can buy a home
today. 423-843-2111
REAL ESTATE
WANTED
H ANY HOUSE! H
Any Condition!
OFFICE FOR LEASE
Bonny Oaks Industrial Park.
3200 SF Class A office space w/
warehouse. Front door parking
899-7024
HOUSES FOR SALE
Brainerd, East Brainerd
E. BRAINERD, Rosemere,
4br, 3473 sq ft, Glass sunroom,
$299,500. 423-710-1555
E. BRAINERD
CENTRAL OFFICE PARK
Lee Hwy. 640 - 1280 sq. ft.
6172 Airways Blvd.
250 to 382 Sq. Ft.
6400 E. Brainerd Rd. 1910SF
All spaces convenient to I-75,
Hwy 153, Lee Hwy & Airport
Call Today: Mark Siniard
CONTINENTAL PROPERTIES
423-893-0761
E. RIDGE - Office Space
Near I-75, $225 to $800/mo. Call
423-605-9580 or 423-899-0843
For Lease / Sale :
300 to 4500 sq.ft. Lee
Hwy/Shallowford/Northgate
areas. Anchor Trust 899-4737
Lookout Valley:
Office Space for lease.
Various sizes. 423-894-0324
WAREHOUSE
FOR LEASE
Lookout MTN
Custom on lake
Gated Community. 4 BR/ 3BA
$399,900 423-280-9036
HOUSES FOR SALE
N. Hamilton Cty., Soddy-Daisy,
Bakewell, Sale Creek, Middle Valley
Costco exit on I-75 Up to 12000
sq. ft. with office/loading dock.
Chris 423-645-8067
www.carltonpropertiesllc.com
Manufacturing / Warehouse
Space for lease. Loading dock
doors, high ceiling, sprinkler
system. Great location in
Hamilton County. 50,000 sq ft.
$3900, 40,000 sq ft. $3500,
30,000 sq ft - $2900, 20,000 sq ft
- $2200.00. Call: 423-443-4118
or cell: 423-718-2838.
APTS-RENTFURNISHED
Eastgate - Small 1 BR, 1 person,
$140 wk, $280 Dep. 1yr lease.
Utilities Incl. No Pets 886-6857
9638 Shooting Star Cir.
4 BR, 2.5 BA office & playroom.
2450 sqft. $258,500.00
www.crownconst.net
Jonathan Jones 706-463-2975
9640 Shooting Star Cir. 4 BD, 3
BA, office, bsmt storage area &
huge patio w/mtn views 2475 sqft
$265,000, www.crownconst.net
Jonathan Jones 706-463-2975
HOUSES FOR SALE
Ooltewah
No Bank Qualifying
Ooltewah-Large 4BR/3Ba, 2 Car
Garage, In Exclusive Beautiful
Flagstone Subdivision,
Owner Financing, $230,000
Call 423-394-0557
HOUSES FOR SALE
Bradley County/
Cleveland
E.RIDGE- 1BR, utilities & cable
pd. No smokers, no pets.
$150 wk. + dep. Call: 760-0323
E. Ridge/Ringgold: Efficiency;
pets OK, Wi-Fi. TV; Cloud
Springs Rd./I-75. $125wk.
706-891-1824
www.underourroof.net
Ft. Oglethorpe- Furnished
Studio Apts. Water, garbage,
electric paid. No Smoking. 6
or 12 month lease. Must
qualify. Ground Level.
706-861-0455.
Lakeshore II Apartments.
SIGNAL MTN. Luxurious
mountain living. 2 BR.
Includes utilities. 423-240-7126
APTS-RENTUNFURNISHED
E Brainerd- 2 BD, 2 BA garden
apt, appl, hkps, ctr h/a, new
carpet, security door, front
door parking. $565/$400.
624-6746 #722
Brainerd: Montview & Rosemont Apts. 1 & 2 BR, On Bus
Line, Quiet Community,
Section 8 Okay, $300 Deposit,
No Pets (423) 629-1557
BRAINERD
RUSTIC VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
1, 2, Bedrooms & Efficiencies
Cleveland- 11.5 Acres. 2 yr old
premium manufactured home.
3 bd, 2 baths, den, 1560 sq.ft.
Porches. 24x40 garage. 24x22
carport. 1/2 in pasture,1/2 in
mature woods. 20 minutes to
downtown Cleveland.$ 199,900.
Bring Offer 423-790-7202
HOUSES FOR SALE
Sequatchie County
Near Hamilton Place
Eastgate
Newly Redecorated Available
Call
423-894-0324
Brainerd. Seniors 62 or older.
Rent based on income.
Ground level. Taking
applications for studio, 1 & 2
BR apartments.
Call 423-622-5761
Equal Housing Opportunity
LEWIS CHAPEL, 3br 2bath
1300+-sq ft, 10+- acres, 2 miles
to Hwy111, $169.k 423-309-9795
CONDOS TOWNHOUSES
E Brainerd- 2 & 3 BR. 1,740sf
nicely appointed. From
$164,900. 423-320-4600
DOWNTOWN - Historical Ft.
Wood Large luxury 1 or 2BR,
swimming pool, indoor secured parking, water furnished
991-9398
DOWNTOWN
SECTION 8
Efficiencies & 1 Bedrooms
All Utilities Paid
62 Years or Older
Medicare & Social Security
Assistance Available
Internet Accessible
Laundry on site
Jaycee Towers 266-8740
Equal Housing Opportunity
E Ridge- 2 BR, unfurnished
apartment. 3730 Fountain
Ave. $250/dep, $565/month.
Call 423-987-5574
Lookout Mtn., repo 3 BR, 2K sq.
ft., on golf course! Furnished.
Sold $499K,$159,900 304-4041
Ft. Oglethorpe- Now accepting small pets. 1 & 2BR Apts.
Ground Level. Water and
Garbage paid. No Smoking.
Quiet Community.
706-861-0455.
Lakeshore II Apartments.
FT. OGLETHORPE
Efficiencies $325/355 Washer/
Dryer Great for Seniors.
706-861-1666 or 706-956-8864
ROSSVILLE $105,000
Dogwood Place Townhomes,
3 BR/ 2 bath, 1Car garage,
1Level, End unit, All appliances
Plus washer & dryer.
Move in ready! 423-290-1851
Red Bank: $425 Nice 1 bedroom, Heat and air, water, no
pets, Lease 595-7800
RED BANK- Affordable Living, 1,
2 & 3 BR Apts., Water Included, No Pets
(423) 875-0445
RED BANK- Extra large
1 BR, No pets $440 mo/ $250
dep. 423-580-1492
Ft. Oglethorpe -Special. 1 & 2
BR Starting $385. Water incl.
Pool. 706-861-1666
FT. OGLETHORPE 1br, utilities
paid. $126 weekly/$305 mo.
No Pets. 706-861-1666
All real estate advertised herein is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to
advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of
race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national
origin, or 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. All persons are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal
opportunity basis.
Ringgold- 1 & 2 BR. From
$525/mo. Appliances, nicely
decorated, pool, some with
fireplaces, good schools.
423-320-4600
Ringgold. 2 BR, 1 Bath, 5 miles
from E. Ridge. Back in Woods.
Hardwood Floors, C/H/A. $475
mo. + Dep. Call 423-322-9414.
OOLTEWAH 3 BR 2 Bath On
1/2 acre $49,900. For appointment. 423-238-6338/ 503-3445
316-3800
E. Lake repo - Large 4 BR w/
garage. $5K down. $499/mo.
Bad credit ok. 423-304-4041
RIVERHILLSMANOR-CHA.com
RED BANK - 1 or 2 bedrooms,
heat/air,10 min to town, quiet,
water included 991-9398
MOBILE HOMES
I BUY
HOUSES
CA$H!
E. LAKE repo 3 BR fenced, $5K
down, $399/mo. Bad credit ok.
We finance. 423-304-4041
Free Utilities!
1 Bedroom and Studio
Furnished or Unfurnished
We welcome Seniors!
2627 Hixson Pike
423-756-3797
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE:
Ringgold, 2BR/1BA, Water &
Garbage Furnished, $475/Month
423-716-8977 or 423-344-7532
RINGGOLD - Just renovated. 2
BR, 1 1/2 bath. No pets. $625
mo. $625 dep. Boynton School
District. 865-458-2168 or
706-313-4061.
Ringgold- Luxury
Apartments ! 2 BR, washer
/dryer/water/ garbage pick up
furnished $600 per mo. $250
dep. 706-937-3100
Rossville- Remodeled 1BR
Water & power furnished.
$550/month 706-858-0140
Signal View Condominiums
Immediate availability for
spacious 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms
condos. Free water. 10 minutes
from downtown. Ask About
Our Great Move In Specials on
Select Units 423-870-1176
33412315
Publication Dates: January 16,
23, 30, 2013
AREA
1 2
AREA
Publication Dates: January 9,
16, 23, 2013
ARNOLD M. WEISS,
Substitute Trustee
Weiss Spicer Cash PLLC
208 Adams Avenue
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
901 526 8296
File # 1701-098541-FC
AREA
1 4
AREA
J. Harvey Cameron,
Substitute Trustee
NATIONWIDE TRUSTEE
SERVICES, INC. 400
Northridge Road Suite 700MC- 7 Sandy Springs, Georgia
30350 404-417-4040 File No.:
1710412 Web Site:
www.JFLegal.com
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured by a Deed of Trust executed on October 3, 2008, by
Joshua L Weaver to Larry A.
Weissman, Trustee, for the
benefit of Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems, Inc., as
sole nominee for Suntrust
Mortgage, Inc. and appearing
of record in Register’s Office of
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
in Book GI 8776, Page 158;
and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Mortgage,
Inc. and
WHEREAS, SunTrust Mortgage, Inc., as the holder of the
Note for which debt is owed,
(“Note Holder”), appointed the
undersigned, Nationwide
Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument
filed or to be filed for record in
the Register’s Office of Hamilton County, Tennessee, with all
the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee
named in said Deed of Trust;
and
WHEREAS, pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-5-117,
not less than sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication required by § 35-5-101, the notice of the right to foreclose
was properly sent, if so required; and
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by
the Note Holder, and that the
undersigned, Nationwide
Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or its duly appointed attorneys or agents, by
virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on Thursday, January 31, 2013, commencing at 11:00 am at the
Main Door (Walnut Street side)
of the Hamilton County Courthouse location in Tennessee,
proceed to sell at public outcry
to the highest and best bidder
for cash, the following described property situated in
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
to wit:
LOCATED IN THE CITY OF
CHATTANOOGA, HAMILTON
COUNTY, TENNESSEE:
The West thirty-two (32) feet
of Lot Forty-seven (47),
McCallie’s New Addition to
Chattanooga, as per plat
now found of record in Plat
Book 1, page 34, in the
Register’s Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee and
fronting 32 feet on the South
side of East Eighth Street
and running back, Southwardly of uniform width 117
feet. For prior title and last
instrument of record affecting title to the above described property, see deed
recorded in Book 8699, Page
942, in the said Register’s
Office.
SUBJECT TO any governmental zoning and subdivision ordinances and regulations in effect thereon.
SUBJECT TO Grant of
Easement recorded in Book
7894, Page 885, said
Register’s Office.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1150
E 8th Street, Chattanooga,
TN 37403
CURRENT OWNER(S):
Joshua L Weaver
The sale of the abovedescribed property shall be
subject to all matters shown on
any recorded plan; any unpaid
taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back
lines that may be applicable;
any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and
any matter that an accurate
survey of the premises might
disclose.
Substitute Trustee will only
convey any interest he/she
may have in the property at the
time of sale.
Property is sold “as is, where
is.”
SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: Chattanooga Neiborhood Enterprise, Inc.
For every lien or claim of lien
of the state identified above,
please be advised notice required by § 67-1-1433 (b)(1)
was timely given and that any
sale of the property herein referenced will be subject to the
right of the state to redeem the
land as provided for in §
67-1-1433(c)(1).
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower
are expressly waived in said
Deed of Trust, and the title is
believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee.
The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place
certain without further publication, upon announcement at
the time and place for the sale
set forth above.
y
the northern line of Card
Road; thence along the
northern line of Card Road,
in a northwestwardly direction, to a point at its intersection with the eastern line of
Old Dayton Pike; thence
along the Eastern line of the
Old Dayton Pike, North
twenty-three (23) degrees
Fifteen (15) minutes East,
one hundred forty (140) feet,
more or less, to the point of
BEGINNING.
This property is subject to all
applicable easements, permissive use agreements and
restrictions of record in the
Hamilton County register's
office. Also conveyed are all
rights in easements and
permissive use agreements
of record.
Notice of the Right to Foreclose has been given in compliance with T.C.A. § 35-5-117.
Tax Parcel ID: 057F-A-017
Property Address: 10350
Walden Street, Soddy Daisy,
TN.
All right and equity of redemption, homestead and
dower waived in said Deed of
Trust, and the title is believed
to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only
as Substitute Trustee.
AREA 13
y
y
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.
Substitute Trustee will only
convey any interest he/she
may have in the property at the
time of sale.
Property is sold “as is, where
is.”
S U B O R D I N A T E
LIENHOLDERS: MORTGAGE
ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS
INC AS SOLE NOMINEE FOR
G M A C M O R T G A G E
CORPORATION DBA
DITECH.COM; TARGET
NATIONAL BANK/TARGET
VISA; DISCOVER BANK;
CITIBANK SOUTH DAKOTA,
N.A.
For every lien or claim of lien
of the state identified above,
please be advised notice
required by § 67-1-1433 (b)(1)
was timely given and that any
sale of the property herein
referenced will be subject to
the right of the state to redeem
the land as provided for in §
67-1-1433(c)(1).
All right and equity of
redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and
dower are expressly waived in
said Deed of Trust, and the title
is believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The right is reserved to
adjourn the day of the sale to
another day, time, and place
certain without further
p u b l i c a t i o n , u p o n
announcement at the time and
place for the sale set forth
above.
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 16
g
Lot 15, North 73 deg. 04 min.
33 sec. West 282.86 feet to
a rebar found; thence continuing North 79 deg. 56 min.
41 sec. West 141.17 feet to
the East line of Colony
Circle; thence South 08 deg.
03 min. 08 sec. West along
said East line of Colony
Circle, 24.60 feet to the Point
of Beginning, according to
survey prepared by Dock
Smith, TRLS#566, dated
April 29, 2011, whose address is 384 Evergreen
Road, Dayton, TN 37321
TOGETHER with all the
improvements now or
hereafter erected on the
property, and all easements,
rights, appurtenances, rents
(subject however to the
rights and authorities given
herein to Lender to collect
and apply such rents),
royalties, mineral, oil and gas
rights and profits, water,
water rights and water stock
and all fixtures now or
hereafter attached to the
property, all of which including replacements and
additions thereto, shall be
deemed in be and remain a
part of the property covered
by this Deed of Trust; and all
of the foregoing, together
with said property (or the
leasehold estate if this Deed
of Trust is on a leasehold)
are herein referred to as the
"Property".
SUBJECT TO any governmental zoning and subdivision ordinances or regulations in effect thereon.
PRIOR AND LAST DEED
REFERENCE: Book GI
9401, Pages 422, et seq., in
the Register's Office of Hamilton County, Tennessee.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 166
Colony Circle, Chattanooga,
Tennessee.
Map 090E; Group B; Parcel
008.01
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 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
p u b l i c a t i o n , u p o n
announcement at the time and
place for the sale set forth
above.
THIS LAW FIRM IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A
DEBT. ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 22
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 28
LEGAL NOTICES
HOUSES-RENT
-UNFURNISHED
DFKFI:P:C<J
J:FFK<IJ
E.Chatt- 3 BR/1 Bath,
Oversized Rooms, Laundry,
Central A/H, Porch, 1911 E. 13th
St., $600mo/ $400dep
(423) 875-0445
HONDA GL1500 ‘99,
48k, Loaded, White,
$7900. 423-867-4142
E. Chatt- 3 BR/1 Bath, Laundry,
Central A/H, 2012 Ruby St.,
Section 8 Okay, $600mo/
$400dep (423) 875-0445
E. Chatt- 3 BR, 2 Bath,
All Electric, Central Air/Heat,
Section 8 Okay. 2000 E. 26th
St., $650mo/ $450dep.
(423) 875-0445
FT. OGLETHORPE - 3BR, 2 BA,
All appliances, patio, 2 car garage. $1300 mo., $650 dep.
No pets. 423-855-8938
Harrison- 9018 Waconda Shore
Dr. 3 BR, Basement. $850
Continental Properties.
423-893-0761
HIGHLAND PLAZA
Deluxe remodeled 3 Bedroom,
3 Bath, den, office. All granite/
tile/hardwood. No pets. $1600
Owner/Agent. 593-6012
Hixson- 3 BR/1 Bath Home,
Fence, Garage, Central A/H,
6576 Esquire Ln., $800mo/
$500dep. (423) 875-0445
Waterford Place Apartments
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
Available for move-in NOW!
OPEN SATURDAYS
894-0404
CONDO-TOWNHOUSE-RENT
Chattanooga- 3Br, 2Ba, Nice,
Appls Incld, , No Carpet, Close
to stores, Frwy & Dwntwn
Condo has swimming pool,
workout facility & park,
$950mo, Call 423-991-6614
Chattanooga Downtown3BR/ 2BA. 1363 sq Ft.
$1,500/mo $500/dep. 1 yr
lease. W/D connection.
Security entrance.
706-866-1489
Chattanooga Downtown2 BR/2BA, 1210 sq ft.
$1,400/month, $500/dep. 1 yr
lease. W/D connection, security entrance. 706-866-1489
E Brainerd- 2 & 3 BR. 1,740sf
only 2 years old. $1,175/month
& up. 423-320-4600
HIXSON/NEAR TARGET. 1200
sq.ft. 2BR, 1.5Bath, Wood/ Tile
floor. $700.mo. 423-255-6350
DUPLEXES
FOR RENT
Highland Pk: 1 bd, 1 ba ground
level, appl, convenient to bus
line $295/300 624.6746 #711
BONNY OAKS 7502 Austin Dr.
2BR, $550/mo. 3428 Vinewood
near Battery Heights Apts. 2BR,
1.5 bath, $550. 423-314-5171
Brainerd: 2 B R , 1 B A , n e w l y
decorated with good appliances. Section 8 accepted.
$675/month. 423-320-4600
Hwy 153/Shallowford 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Private! Full
unfinished basement, 2 car
garage, deck. $845 month
423-855-7596 ext 101
McDonald- 3BR/ 2.5BA.
1/3 acre lot, master on main, appliances, 6.5 years old.
$1,275/mo. 423-320-4600
Rent or Buy! All areas! 3-4 BR
homes starting at $800 per mo.
Low Down pmnt. CHA & New
Appliances. 800-624-0661
Stevens Realty Owner/Agent
RINGGOLD-Country Setting
3br/ 2bath 2 car garage, Lg. yard
Private, Won’t last @ $1100.
mo $850.dep 423-400-0519
SODDY DAISY 6yr. old,
4 BR, 2 1/2 Bath Available now
1725 Magnum Ln.
On cul-de-sac. View by appt.
$1250. mo. 973-907-7987
MOBILE HOMESRENT
Affordable Housing in N GA- 2 &
3 BR, 2 BA. Starting @ $525.
Clean & quiet community.
423-316-0670/423-760-4819
E. RIDGE/N.GA - $99 move-in
2 & 3 BR’s for $75.00 per week
& up! 894-0039 or 355-1104
RINGGOLD- 3BR/2Ba, C/H/A,
No Pets, $100per wk/$200dep
706-965-5565
RINGGOLD - Single wide 2br
1bath C/H/A Private fenced yard
$500./$400.423-400-0519
ROSSVILLE / FO- 2 bd/2 bath,
private lot, no pets $500/mo.
$300/dep. 423-774-0493
ROSSVILLE / FO- 2 bd/1 bath,
private lot, no pets $400/mo.
$300/dep. 423-774-0493
SIGNAL MTN. Rd. 1 & 2 bedroom, utilities paid, Call
267-3783, 1-4, Mon.-Fri.
E. RIDGE- 2BR, 1.5 Ba, W/D,
Attached Garage, $650mo
Call 423-605-6038
ROOMS FOR RENT
E. Ridge: 4 BR, 3 BA, garage,
1700-2200 s.f. garbage pd,
no pets $1195. mo/dep 622-7019
E. Ridge: LG 2 BR, 1.5 BA, attic,
dining room, garbage pd, no
pets. $825 mo/dep 622-7019
Ft Oglethorpe- Park Forest Dr.
2BR/ 1BA. $575 mo. No Pets!
Continental Properties
423-893-0761
SIGNAL MTN. RD. $120 week,
$20 Dep. Free HBO & cable,
267-3783
SODDY NICE HOME , Roommate wanted. Utilities paid.
$300.mo. No dep. 423-315-9704
TUNNEL HILL,Ga. 2 BR Full
bath. High speed internet, 2 private ponds, Paved driveway,
$400. mo. 706-935-4067
AIRCRAFT
MIDDLE VALLEY.
2br, 1bth storage, lease, depo,
no pets, $650 mo. 423-843-1217
Red Bank- $650 2BR, 2 story.
Fireplace, new carpet.
No Pets! Lease.
595-7800 or 877-0068
AIRPLANE PROPELLER
Wooden 1940’s Never used
$575. 423-238-4729.
HOUSES-RENT
-UNFURNISHED
E. Brainerd: 3 bd, 2 ba spacious home, appl, hkps, ctr
h/a, patio, wooded area
electricity included.
$895/500 624.6746 #739
Brainerd- 3bd, 2ba, New hardwood floors,carpeting &tile.
Re-modeled kitchen w/new
oven,micro & dishwasher.
$975 month. 423-593-7788
East Brainerd/Brainerd - 2 BR,
Very Large Lot, 2 Storage
Buildings, Dishwasher, Hardwoods, Porch. $665/month
423-855-7596 ext 102
BEECH BARON 1/4 Share.
Garmin Glass Panel, Many upgrades. $25,000. 423-667-2669
POWER BOATS
E. Brainerd 5 acre estate home,
9000 sf, 4 bed, 4 baths. Gated
entry, pool, yard maintained.
No pets. $2500/mo. Shown by
appointment. 706/866-1489,
423/593-2188
Highland Park- Inv. Prop . 3BR.
6 minutes from UTC. New AC,
carpet, painted. 423-756-2400
CHROME straight pipes, VanceHines fits Honda 750 Shadow
New $300. 423-479-5887
MOTORCYCLE JACK,
Craftsman, like new, $75.
Call 423-240-8864.
MOTOR HOMES
MATTRESS For Motor home,
Queen size New condition.
$150. 423-479-5887
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
CAMPERS WANTED: WE BUY
Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels,
Motor Homes & Pop-up Campers.
Will pay cash!! 423-504-8036
CAMPER TOP, GM truck
Nice glass $150.
Call 706-657-3987.
PROWLER LYNX, 24’ TT Fully
self contained, Real nice clean
camper $3800obo. 423-595-8758
BUSES
CHEVY ‘89, Church bus, 36
Passenger runs good, good
condition $5,000 309-9930
REPAIRS/PARTS/
ACCESSORIES
CHEVY 1955 Bumpers,
Front & Rear, $135
Call 423-899-8568.
Dump Bed 10' Electric
/Hydraulic $1250.
David 423-902-7369
Ford Tail Gate- White, Excellent
Cond, fits ‘98-’08, full size,
$150/obo 706-483-3717
JEEP SOFT TOP WRANGLER
Unlimited , Brand new still in
box, black fits 4 dr Jeep
2011-2013.$995423-316-9992
JEEP WHEELS WRANGLER
Factory w/ Goodyear Wrangler
SR-A 255/75/17. Brand new.
$995. 423-316-9992
JUMP SEATSFor Land Rover, $200.
Call 423-822-8283.
O W N E R S M A N U A L for 2002
Chevy Ext. cab, 1500 Series,
$20. Call 423-653-1531.
TIRES, General M&S Size
P245-75-R16 1/2 tread $100.
423-658-6580/ 834-6364
TIRES- Set of 4 195/65/14.
80% Tread, $175. Call
423-650-6450.
Tires set of 4 Bridgestone LT
245/70/16 Good Tread Left,
$150. 423-650-6450
TIRES/wheels (4) Jeep Wrangler new, 30x9.50R-15LT,
$600. 423-400-2472.
TOYO TIRES- 205/60/R16,
around 1k miles, $375obo
423-779-2605
Truck Ladder Rack Adjustable
Fits All Trucks Good Shape
$50 423-718-4347
WHEELS - ‘79 Camaro
Orig. Rally $100
Call 423-320-9699
WE BUY JUNK CARS
PAY TOP DOLLAR
423-394-5878
BASS BOAT, 150 Mercury
Drive on trailer. Trolling motor &
depth finder. $2500. 304-8887
BOAT- Sport, Fiberglass Bottom,
19.5 ft Long, 150HP Motor. w/
Trailer $3,500 423-876-9661
PONTOON JC 24ft. 70hp
Evinrude, New Trailer, New
upholstery $3250. 304-8887
MARINE PARTS &
ACCESSORIES
BOAT TRAILER,
$1000.OBO
Call 423-485-3103.
OUTBOARD MOTOR, Evinrude,
7.5hp, Fresh water use only,
$995. 423-645-8008
E. BRAINERD- 3Br, 2Bth
Attractive house in accessible
area 1 mile from I-75 & Hamilton
Place Mall. Many amenities incl
fireplace, screened porch,
2-car garage. $1295/month.
423-227-1508.
MOTORCYCLE
ACCESSORIES
AUTOS/TRUCKS
WANTED
RINGGOLD, Near Graysville
Elem. 2br, 1bath, $110. wk. +
Dep. & lease. 423-653-8222
SIGNAL MTN. Renovated! Acres
of wood & quite! On site manager, Thrasher Elem. 2br 1bath
$675.mo. Pet ok 423-802-4915
WE BUY MOTORCYCLES
Top $ for used Harley Davidson
& all other brands. Must have
clean title Craig@ 423-280-3556
DODGE Camper Van ‘87, 360
V-8, 57k, must see to appreciate. $6500. 706-866-9493.
E. Brainerd: 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 1760
S.F. 2 years old $1195/mo.
423-320-4600
www.underourroof.net
E. RIDGE - 2 BR, 2 bath, $620
mo., $300 dep. References
Required. 423-667-1297
Suzuki Blvd. ‘06 C50T, 800cc,
fully dressed, chrome, 8,000 mi.
Mint cond. $4800, 653-1531
GOLF CART, Alterain 4 seater
with dump bed, $4000. Call
706-639-7812.
AARON’S JUNK CARS,
TRUCKS, BUSES &
MOTOR HOMES. Will pay
cash in 30 min 423-521-7777
Buying Junk Cars & Trucks
Pay Top Dollar - Running or not
423-580-1611 Ken
ABOVE ALL WE BUY JUNK,
WRECKED & Unwanted Vehicles
423-315-3249 423-595-9545
I BUY JUNK CARS - running
or not. I pay top dollar.
Start at $300 & up.
Dennis 595-1132/ 843-4972.
DFKFI:P:C<J
J:FFK<IJ
CLASSIC
SPECIALTY AUTOS
GO-CART millenium racing,
complete & more! very nice!
$1100 423-488-2727 /847-8899
FORD ‘40 Pick Up, Built Merc
Flathead, Black, A beauty,
$27,500. 423-238-8581.
Honda CB200 Series, ‘75,
Excellent condition! 1500 orig.
mil, $4000/neg. 423-584-1810.
Ford Fairlane 1967- 2 Much
2 List, $2500
423-775-8061
F6 • Wednesday, January 16, 2013 • • •
timesfreepress.com
SPORT UTILITY
FORD ESCORT 2 door, needs
transmission, good radio, cold
air, $1500, 309-9930.
Honda Accord ‘97 LX,
Sun roof, Good Running Cond.,
$2300 423-314-5171
Kia Sorento 2WD EX ‘04,
#302975 $8,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
cars.timesfreepress.com
Economy
Honda
$4,391
Ford Taurus ‘02, Local Trade, Full Power
Acc., Illuminated Entry, Remote Keyless Entry #T2A140141+TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Economy
Honda
$6,950
Chevy Colorado ‘05, 4 Cyl, Automatic, CD,
Local Trade #P4487 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Rick
Davis
Supercars
$8,593
Honda Accord ‘06, Upgrade AM/FM/6CD
Audio System, Multi-Function Steering Wheel,
Full Pwr Acc #T6A116500 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$6,950
Chevy Corvette ‘86, V8, Auto, Leather, Alloys, All Power, CD #P8471 +TTL & $49 Doc
Fee 423-490-7654
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$12,950
$10,950
Rick
Davis
Supercars
Economy
Honda
$7,022
Rick
Davis
Supercars
$7,950
$12,950
Ford Expedition ‘07, V8, Auto, AC, Alloys, All
Power, CD, Rearview Camera, Keyless Entry,
Local Trade #P8485 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
CAPITAL
TOYOTA
PRE-OWNED
OUTLET
Ford F-150 ‘06, V8, Automatic, 4x4, Alloys,
All Power, CD, Local Trade, AC #P85762
+TTL & $49 Doc Fee 423-490-7654
$13,950
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Rick
Davis
Supercars
Rick
Davis
SuperCars
Mercedes, SL 500, 2000 model,
93K miles, new tires, hard and
soft top, excellent condition.
$14,700. Call 423-240-2514
Volvo XC90 AWD ‘06, #245575
$11,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
$6,950
4 X 4 SPORT
UTILITY
Nissan Quest ‘06, 6 Cyl, Auto, AC, Alloys, All
Power, CD, Keyless Entry, One Owner
#P7012 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee 423-490-7654
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GS
‘02, #047994 $6,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
M U S T A N G , ‘ 9 7, V 6 , n e w
paint, black, runs & drives
great, $4000. 706-483-3717.
Saturn Vue AWD ‘06, 74K Miles, Leather,
Sunroof, Alloys #895135 +TTL & $349 Doc
Fee 423-648-4314
Economy
Honda
Jeep Compass ‘07, 4 Cyl, Auto, Leather, Alloys, Sunroof, One Owner, All Book & Service Records #P8377 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Rick
Davis
Supercars
$8,950
Lexus ES 300 ‘00, 1 Owner, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys #5076020 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
TRUCKS
Chevrolet Blazer 4x4 LS 4
Door ‘03, AUTO, 87K MILES, V6
$7,900 - $177.81 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Nissan 350Z ‘07, #553322
$16,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
$12,950
Chevy Silverado 1500 4x4 ‘08,
#215457 $19,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford Ranger 4x4 SuperCab
XLT ‘04, AUTO, 6 CYL
$11,800 - $261.29 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Jeep Wrangler 4x4 ‘05,
#383932 $12,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Toyota Camry SE ‘08,
1 Owner, 67K Miles +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Nissan Pathfinder 4WD SE ‘05,
#700738 $10,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Economy
Honda
$8,892
Toyota Camry ‘06, Local Trade, AM/FM/CD
Stereo, Full Power Accessories, Tilt Steering
Wheel, #T6U684909 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Chevy Silverado 1500 2WD LS
‘05, #132526 $10,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
GMC Yukon 1500 4x4 Z71 ‘07,
#155608 $19,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Jeep Grand Cherokee 4x4
Overland ‘04, LEATHER, SUNROOF, V8, HEATED SEATS
$11,800 - $261.29 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Nissan Pathfinder 2WD ‘08,
#608460 $12,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
$11,950
Toyota Highlander Limited V6 ‘02, Leather,
Alloys, 5 Passenger #0049215 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 423-648-4314
Chevy SSR 2WD ‘05, #116440
$23,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$5,543
$5,950
4 X 4 TRUCKS
$7,391
Economy
Honda
Kia Sedona ‘05, 7 Passenger, Keyless Entry,
AM/FM/CD Stereo, Full Power Accessories,
Cruise Control #T56741288 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
4 X 4 TRUCKS
Scion TC ‘07, Local Trade, Power Sunroof,
Pioneer AM/FM/CD Stereo, Full Pwr Accessories #T70197896 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
$8,950
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
CLASSIC
SPECIALTY AUTOS
$12,950
$15,950
Jeep Commander Limited 4x4 ‘06, 1
Owner, 94K Miles, Leather, Sunroof, Tow Pkg
#C288356 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Ford Focus SE Wagon ‘01, 82K Miles,
Alloys #295583 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
MAZDA MIATA MX5 ‘06- 37k
miles, Auto, Leather, Maroon
Convertable$15,900 842-2610
Mercury Grand Marquis LS Limited ‘03, 1
Owner, 42K Miles, Leather, 6 Passenger
#685321 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
Infiniti I 35 `02, 1 Owner, Sunroof, Leather,
Alloys #007685 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
Rick
Davis
Super
Cars
Ford F150 Roush Pkg ‘06, V8, Auto, AC, Alloys, All Power, Disc Changer, Keyless Entry,
One Owner #P8641 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Nissan Xterra 2WD V6 ‘03,
AUTO, 86K MILES, $9,800 $218.48 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$10,950
Rick
Davis
Supercars
$13,950
INFINITI G35 ‘05, 4 dr sedan
74k, 1 owner, Pearl, $13,000.
Call 423-488-0444
$21,950
Mercedes Benz SL500 ‘04, V8, Auto,
Leather, AC, Alloys, Heated Seats, Disc
Changer,Keyless Entry #P5000 +TTL & $49
Doc Fee 423-490-7654
Hyundai Sonata ‘07, 6 Cyl, Auto, Leather,
AC, Alloys, CD #P7141 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Ford Crown Victoria ‘03, V8, Auto, Leather,
AC, Alloys, CD, One Owner, 73K #P0665
+TTL & $49 Doc Fee 423-490-7654
Rick
Davis
Super
Cars
Nissan Pathfinder 2WD ‘06,
THIRD ROW SEAT, 88K MILES,
V6 AUTO $13,800 - $304.10
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Rick
Davis
SuperCars
$7,950
Chrysler PT Cruiser ‘03, Power Moon Roof,
Leather, Power Driver's Seat, AM/FM/CD Stereo, Cruiser Control #T3T519675 +TTL & Doc
Fee 800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Rick
Davis
SuperCars
$8,950
Lincoln LS ’02, 1 Owner, 82K Miles, Leather,
Sunroof, Alloys #682947 +TTL & $349 Doc
Fee 423-648-4314
$12,950
$8,950
$5,591
HONDA EX 2002., silver 4dr,
178,000 mi. Great shape.
$5500obo. 423-544-7563.
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Honda Odyssey ‘03, Leather, Rear Air, Full
Pwr Acc, Second Row Captain's Chairs, Dual
Side Sliding Doors #T3B112886 +TTL & Doc
Fee 800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Chevy Impala ‘67, V8, Automatic, AC, Teal,
Sharp #P8367 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee
423-490-7654
Economy
Honda
$10,950
Honda Odyssey EX-L w/DVD ‘05, Leather,
Sunroof, 8 Passenger #033118 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 423-648-4314
Chevy Equinox LT ‘06, 1 Owner, 98K Miles,
Sunroof #204666 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
Kia Sorento 2WD LX ‘07,
AUTO 63K MILES $11,800 $261.29 MO. W.A.C. C&C Motors 423-499-9799
Lexus RX300 ‘01, Power Seat, Alloys
#096194 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
423-648-4314
Economy
Honda
$7,950
Rick
Davis
Super
Cars
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$4,594
Ford Ranger ‘99, Local Trade-In, XLT Trim
Package, 3.0-Liter V6 with Manual Transmission #TXPA99404 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Rick
Davis
SuperCars
Cadillac DeVille ‘05, V8, Auto, Leather, AC,
Alloys, All Power, Disc Changer, Heated
Seats, Keyless Entry, One Owner, 83K
#P85764 +TTL & $49 Doc Fee 423-490-7654
HONDA CR-Z Hybrid 2011,
1 owner, 19,000 miles. Red, May
trade$13,900. 423-877-4179.
Economy
Honda
$7,483
Acura MDX ‘03, 7 Passenger, Rear Air,
Leather, Driver Memory Settings, AM/FM/6CD
Audio #T3H544179 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
HONDA CIVIC EXL ‘12- 4dr, blk,
grey leather int, 2700 mi,
List @$24k, asking $20k
Call 423-842-2643
GMC Sierra 1500 4x4 Crew Cab
‘05, Z71 PKG V8 AUTO
$18,900 C&C Motors
423-499-9799
$10,950
Mercury Grand Marquis LS ‘03,
38K Miles, LEATHER, V8, AUTO
$9,900 - $220.62 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Pontiac G6 V6 ‘08, #255441
$10,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Toyota Matrix ‘03, 1 Owner, 65K Miles, Automatic, 5 Passenger #152876 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 423-648-4314
Economy
Honda
Chevy Suburban 1500 4x4 LT
‘06, #123870 $11,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Nissan Frontier 4x4 Crew Cab
XE ‘04, 6 CYL 5 SPEED
MANUAL $11,800 - $$261.29
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
$4,391
Volvo S40 ‘00, Pwr Sunroof, Leather, Dual
Zone Automatic Climate Control, Full Pwr
Acc, #TYF509804 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
TRUCKS
TRUCKS
Nissan Quest 2WD 3.5 SL ‘07,
#142249 $11,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Pontiac Firebird Trans Am ‘00,
6 SPEED, T-TOPS, LORENZO
WHEELS $8,900 - $199.21 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
SPORT UTILITY
Chevy Tahoe 1500 4x4 LTZ ‘07,
#155054 $21,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Nissan Xterra 2WD ‘04,
#604427 $7,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
FORD BUSINESS COUPE ‘52Light Green, New Eng., 95% Restored $28,500/obo 423-886-2481
K5 Blazer Cheyenne, ‘78
350 V8, 4 Spd, $5,500,
706-398-2893 423-413-9847
Chevrolet Colorado 2WD Reg
Cab ‘06, AUTO 45K MILES 4
CYL CAMPER SHELL
$10,900 - $242.03 MO. W.A.C.
C&C Motors 423-499-9799
Ford F-250 2WD ‘07, #A41459
$10,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford Ranger 2WD Reg Cab ‘01,
AUTO, 6 CYL, 75K MILES
$8,900 - $199.21 MO. W.A.C.
C & C MOTORS 423-499-9799
Dodge Dakota SLT 4x4 ‘04,
#751944 $6,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Chevrolet Silverado 1500 2WD
Reg Cab ‘07, AUTO 76K MILES
V8 $13,900 - $306.24 MO.
W.A.C. C&C Motors
423-499-9799
Ford F-250 4x4 ‘04, #D49616
$15,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford Mustang ‘04, #180748
$6,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford E-350 Econoline 350
Conversion Van ‘06, DIESEL
V8 REAR AIR POWER HEELCHAIR LIFT $12,900 - $284.84
MO. W.A.C. C&C Motors
423-499-9799
Dodge Ram 1500 2WD Reg
Cab ‘04, HEMI, V8, AUTO,
RUMBLE BEE PKG $11,800 $261.29 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Ford Explorer Sport Trac 2WD
XLS ‘05, AUTO, 6 CYL
$9,800 - $218.48 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
GMC Cobra Conversion VAN
‘95, Leather, captains, rear AC
$3900 obo 423-255-4746
HANDICAP VAN w/ Wheel
Chair Lift, ‘90 Chevy Mark III
38k miles, $4200. 423-875-4342
Honda Odyssey ‘97, Clean
good running vehicle, w/ good
tires. Call for info 505-9559
Ford F150 2WD Reg Cab XL
‘03, AUTO, 6 CYL, SPORT PKG
$7,900 - $177.81 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
MONTANA VAN 1999, 93,000
miles, new tires, & battery.
$2800. Call 423-304-4144.
Chevy Silverado ‘92- 1 owner,
garage kept, 51k miles, $8000
Call 423-463-2401
GMC Sonoma 4x4 SLS ‘04,
#118964 $9,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
GMC Sierra 1500 2WD Crew
Cab SLT ‘05, LEATHER, AUTO,
V8, CAMPERSHELL $15,900 $349.05 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Dodge Ram 1500 2WD ‘02,
#120360 $7,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Dakota 4x4 Quad Cab
SLT ‘05, V8 AUTO $12,900 $284.84 MO. W.A.C. C & C
Mortors 423-499-9799
Ford F-150 4X4 Styleside ‘00,
#B31433 $6,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Audi TT 1.8T quattro Roadster
w/ 225hp ‘03, 6 SPEED
LEATHER 18" WHEELS
HEATED SEATS $11,900 $263.43 MO. W.A.C. C & C Motors 423-499-9799
Chevrolet Suburban 2WD 1500
LT ‘03, THIRD SEAT, REAR AIR
LEATHER $10,800-$239.89 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
FORD F250 ‘04, 4X4 Super
duty, Extended Cab, $5500
or trade for Tacoma 488-3309
Dodge Ram 1500 2WD Club
Cab ‘97, AUTO, 83K MILES, V8
$7,800 - $175.67 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
‘06 Toyota Scion, XV exc. cond.
garage kept. 111K, $6850
423-463-2401
Saturn SL2 ‘02, SUNROOF,
75K MILES, AUTO $6,900 $156.40 MO. W.A.C. C & C Motors 423-499-9799
TOYOTA 4-Runner 1996, 222k,
new brakes, rotors, shocks.
$3600. 423-710-1961.
TOYOTA PRIUS ‘10 White
GPS & Blue Tooth. Lease
/Payoff $19,950. 706-861-4525
CHEVY AVALANCHE LTZ,
2007, black, low miles w/warr.
$26,000obo. 423-802-9797.
BMW X5 3.0i ‘03, Leather,
#V81317 $8,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
GMC Envoy 2WD SLE ‘02,
AUTO 72K MILES 6 CYL
$10,900 - $242.03 MO. W.A.C.
C & C Motors 423-499-9799
Volkswagen Beetle S ‘06,
#422610 $8,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
VOLKSWAGEN JETTA ‘00 TDI
Sedan, Silver,
$4500obo , 423-802-9797
BMW Z3 1.9 Roadster ‘97,
LEATHER 4 CYL 5 SPEED
MANUAL $7,900 - $177.81 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
GMC Sierra 1500 4x4 Ext Cab
SLT ‘00, LEATHER, AUTO, V8 ,
HEATED SEATS $11,800 $261.29 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
HONDA CRV EX ‘11, 4dr
Low miles Take over payments
of $383.37 or $16,387,
706-965-7213/ 423-653-2222
Ford F250 4x4 Crew Cab XLT
‘04, DIESEL, V8, AUTO,
LEATHER $17,800 - $389.73
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Ford F150 2WD Reg Cab XL
‘08, AUTO, 6 CYL $9,800 $218.48 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Ford F250 2WD SuperCab XLT
‘04, DIESEL, AUTO, 66K MILES
$13,900-$306.24 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
2005 Dodge Sprinter 3500 158
Inch ‘05, MERCEDES DIESEL
AUTO $14,800 - $325.51 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
GMC Sierra K2500 4x4 ‘03,
#251840 $13,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Dodge Ram 1500 2WD
‘04, #111125 $8,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
4 X 4 TRUCKS
Dodge Ram 1500 2WD Reg
Cab ST ‘08, AUTO 6 CYL 71K
MILES $11,900 - $263.43 MO.
W.A.C. C&C Motors
423-499-9799
Toyota Sienna XLE ‘98228k mi, $2300 obo,
423-842-8173
TRUCKS
GMC Sierra 4X4 1/2 Ton SLE
‘89, #503535 $5,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Ram 1500 2WD Quad
Cab ‘05, 20" WHEELS HEMI V8
NAV LEATHER $12,900 $284.84 MO. W.A.C. C&C Motors 423-499-9799
K I A S E D O N I A , ‘ 0 5, g o o d
condition, 125k, $4750 or best
offer. 423-718-2242.
Nissan Quest ‘06, REAR AIR
THIRD ROW SEAT 72K MILES
$9,800 - $218.48 MO. W.A.C.
C&C Motors 423-499-9799
Saab 9-3 Aero ‘07, #002684
$10,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Cherokee Sport 4Dr, 1999, A/c,
Cd, 90k Miles $3300
423-838-2440
VANS
Dodge Ram ‘99, 15 passenger,
school or church, new engine
at Maxie, $5000,309-9930
TOYOTA 4RUNNER ‘95
4X4 Auto, Real nice! $1,850.
706-820-0536
B M W ‘ 0 4- x3, 1 owner, Good
Shape 103k Miles, $7950
423-902-8590
MUSTANG Convertible ‘1992Never Wrecked, Top good
Cond. $1500./obo 400-7376
Astro Van ‘93- Runs Great 117k
Miles $2500 Ask For Mike
706-858-1244
2004 Volvo XC90 2WD 2.5T
5-Passenger ‘04, LEATHER
71K MILES AUTO $10,900 $242.03 MO. W.A.C. C & C Motors 423-499-9799
Volvo V70 T5 ‘01, #059914
$5,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Buick Rendezvous AWD CXL
‘04, #530588 $7,800 NU 2 U
Cars 643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Volvo S40 ‘09 4 Door Auto.
47K Miles. Excellent Cond.
$12,500 423-295-5393
VW BUG CABRIOLET ‘67,
Yellow, $8000.obo
423-479-6965 after 5pm
HONDA ODYSSEY ‘95
Runs good. New tires.
$1800.obo call 593-2549
VW Convertible Beetle’0353k miles, new tires, roof, valve
body, & $7400, 404-904-6909
Chevrolet Silverado 1500 4x4
Reg Cab ‘04, AUTO, 6 CYL, 93K
MILES $9,900 - $220.62 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Cadillac Escalade 2WD ‘05,
#195095 $10,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford F350 4x4 Crew Cab DRW
Super Duty ‘04, DIESEL, 83K
MILES, PTO POWER 9FT
DUMP BED $18,900
423-499-9799
HUMMER H3 ‘08, NAV
LEATHER HEATED SEATS
$19,900 C&C Motors
423-499-9799
Cadillac STS ‘03- Dark Blue,
117k mi, Good Cond, $6000,
Call 423-400-2766
TRAILERS
GMC SIERRA 2500 2001, Ext
cab, dsl., with 6 horse trailer,
$22,000obo 423-802-9797.
HORSE TRAILER- Gooseneck 4
horse slant, new tires $3500
706-639-7812
Ford F-150 2WD Styleside ‘09,
#A25163 $9,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 ww.nu2ucars.biz
Ford Ranger XLT ‘09- Fully
Loaded, Warr, 35k miles,
$11,200, 423-227-2666
Chevrolet Silverado 1500 HD
4X4 ‘01, CREW CAB LS, AUTO,
V8 $11,800 - $261.29 MO.
W.A.C. 423-499-9799
FORD F250, 2003. 70,000
miles, silver, manual 6 spd
shift, $6500. 240-0865 9-6.
Nissan ‘90 87K actual miles
1-owner, great shape, $3800
423-332-4851 / 423-285-7107
Dodge Ram 2010- 4X4 Nice
Truck $24,900
423-779-2605
Ford F350 4x4 SuperCab Lariat
‘04, FX4, DIESEL, 6 SPEED,
LEATHER $13,900 - $306.24
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Jeep Patriot 2WD Sport ‘08,
SUNROOF AUTO 4 CYL
$10,900 - $242.03 MO. W.A.C.
C&C Motors 423-499-9799
Chevy S10 2WD ‘03, #220752
$6,800 NU 2 U Cars 643-0003
ww.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Stratus ‘05- Runs and
Drives good 202k mi, $2000
423-650-6450
UTILITY TRAILER 5X8 Metal
floor w/ tailgate Excel. condi
$550. 423-260-7336.
Utility Trailer- 6x10, heavy built,
really nice, $800/obo
706-483-3717.