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congratulations - Creative Circle Media Solutions
F R I D AY
SEPtEMBER 18, 2015
161st YEAR • No. 121
CLEVELAND, tN 24 PAGES • 50¢
Education leaders give status update
Group tells ministers
how to help schools
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
The Cleveland Bradley Ministerial Association
recently invited leaders from local private and
public schools to share what’s going on in education and how ministers can help.
A forum of four local leaders spoke to the group
Wednesday: Dr. Bill Balzano, president of
Tennessee Christian Preparatory School; Dr.
Linda Cash, director of Bradley County Schools;
Dr. Jeff Elliott, supervisor of curriculum and
instruction for Cleveland City Schools; and
Ramona Kim, principal of United Christian
Academy.
Cash began the forum by sharing what Bradley
County Schools sees as its biggest priority right
now — literacy.
State test results show only 50 percent of students are “proficient” in reading by the end of the
Coming Sunday
Home improvement
Coming on Sunday is the
annual Fall Home Improvement
section. There are plenty of tips
on remodeling, decorating and
do-it-yourself projects showcased.
Check your Sunday edition.
Inside Today
Dr. Jeff Elliott
Dr. Linda Cash
See UPDATE, Page 6
Dr. Bill Balzano
Ramona King
TDOT
grant
to aid
safety
‘Celebration
of Life’ set
Sunday for
Karen Brown
Event is in Lee
Chapel, 2 p.m.
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Lady Raiders get
the volleyball win
The Cleveland Lady Raiders
and Bradley Central Bearettes
battled it out for five games on
the volleyball court before CHS
pulled off the district win. The
Walker Valley Lady Mustangs had
no trouble with GPS, sweeping
the Lady Bruisers. On the links,
Walker Valley galloped away with
the boys’ region title. CHS, BCHS
and WVHS were all in action at
the Cleveland Classic soccer
tournament. See Sports, Pages
13-15.
Forecast
Today should be sunny, with a
high near 85. Tonight’s forecast
calls for mostly clear skies, with a
low around 61. Saturday should be
sunny, with a high near 84.
Saturday night looks to be partly
cloudy, with a low around 64.
Index
Church........................................8-9
Classified................................22-24
Comics.........................................19
Editorials......................................18
Horoscope....................................19
Movies..........................................20
Obituaries.......................................2
Stocks............................................4
Sports......................................13-15
TV Schedule...........................20-21
Weather........................................11
Around Town
Dan Brewster “still waiting for
Elvis” ... Herb Harper describing
the view from his front yard of the
“eight-plane formation” of the
U.S. Navy Aerial Demonstration
Team ... Sue Fair enjoying a
classic singing performance ...
Gina Dodd wearing a big smile.
6 89076 75112 4
“A Celebration of Life” for
Karen Brown, who served as
executive secretary in the
College of Education at Lee
University, will be held at the
school Sunday afternoon.
The special remembrance will
be held in the chapel on the Lee
campus at 2 p.m.
Brown was killed in a traffic
accident in the Florida panhandle on Friday,
Sept. 11. She
was in Florida
on a vacation
trip with friends.
A second person
— Glenda Morris
of Moultrie, Ga.
— was killed in
the two-vehicle
accident which
Brown
occurred
in
Blountstown,
Fla.
Former Life Care Centers of
America associate Meesh Kidd,
who worked at Life Care as training manager from 2001 to earlier
this month, is Morris’ daughter.
Kidd was injured in the accident,
and all three were in the same
vehicle when it crashed.
The Lee University campus
See BROWN, Page 7
Law enforcement
will get $178,000
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner photo, JoYANNA LoVE
Banner Staff Writer
tHIS BUILDING at the Old Woolen Mill is set to be the future home of the Cleveland Arts Center.
Four Bradley County law
enforcement agencies will share
more than $178,000 in a grant
designed to promote safety on
the state’s roadways.
Tennessee Department of
T ransportation
Commissioner
John
Schroer
“Initially, we are going to focus primarily on
and Governor’s
By JOYANNA LOVE
incubation, so we are going to have low-cost
Highway Safety
Banner Senior Staff Writer
studio rental, professional development for
Office Director
Finding renewed purpose in an old buildartists, helping them to be able to market
Kendell
Poole
ing, while providing a place for local profestheir work (and) network,” artist Jamie Barks
announced this
sional artists is at the heart of The Cleveland
said. “Right now there is no place for a lowweek
the
Arts Center at the Mill project.
cost studio.”
Tennessee agenA group of creative and art-minded people
Barks said the large metal frame windows
cies that will
in Cleveland are laying groundwork for the
Schroer
in the building “make it great for artists
receive
grant
arts center to be located in the flat iron build- because of all the natural light.”
awards totaling
ing of the Old Woolen Mill.
The commons area will provide a space for
$17.8 million to support highway
A preliminary sketch for the project shows
live model sketching.
traffic safety efforts.
approximately eight individual artist studios,
“It’s a great way for artists to collaborate,”
There are multiple elements
a common area and a larger anchor artist
that contribute to a safe roadway
space.
See ARTS, Page 6
system, including an accurate
traffic safety data collection and
analysis system, well-trained
and well-equipped law enforcement personnel, and effective
emergency medical and trauma
systems, officials said. A major
part of roadway safety is educating motorists about laws and
good driving behaviors.
The 10th Judicial District
Saturday.
Attorney General’s office will
Brian Gallaher, the 14-year
receive the bulk of the funds
veteran director of the OMS
being released.
Band, lost his life in a tragic acciThat office will use $133,851
dent which killed six people and
for
DUI abatement and prosecuinjured six others June 25.
tion
enhancement.
Gallaher was an avid runner
The Bradley County Sheriff’s
and had been training to particiBanner photo, BRIAN GRAVES Office will receive $35,020 to use
pate in the Air Force Marathon
RoBERt GREEN, director of the area Fellowship of Christian for its “Operation Safe Streets”
scheduled to be held Saturday in
Arts coming to the mill
Center to open in old downtown factory
Runners to finish
the race for Brian
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
“We are going to finish this
race for Brian.”
That was the message from 15
runners and a middle school student body Friday morning as
Ocoee Middle School bonded with
16 runners who will carry their
late band director’s name across
a marathon finish line on
See RACE, Page 7
Athletes, addresses students at Ocoee Middle School while accomSee TDOT, Page 6
panied by other friends and colleagues of the late Brian Gallaher.
‘Fields of Faith’
at BCHS slated
to host Eslinger
CPD set to host
recruitment event
at Service Center
By ALLEN MINCEY
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Banner Staff Writer
Do you want to learn more about police
work? Maybe you are interested in a career
in law enforcement, and possible employment
with the Cleveland Police Department. Then
a special event set for Tuesday is just for
you.
Hundreds of students from local schools will
merge together on Wednesday during the Fields
of Faith event at Bradley Central High School’s
Bear Stadium.
The event is in conjunction with the Ocoee
Region Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Last
See CPD, Page 7
Heath Eslinger
See ESLINGER, Page 6
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
U.S. Congressman and U.S.
Sen. Bill Brock.
Along with his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Nina Mantooth Lillard; son,
Dwight Lillard; a daughter-in-law,
Janice Lillard; and a stepson,
Allen Hicks Ellis.
He leaves behind to cherish
his memory his wife, Judy Ellis
Lillard; son, Wendale Lillard of
Benton;
daughters:
Karen
(Glenn) Kennedy of Hixson, and
Kathy (Tony) Triplett of Powder
Springs, Ga.; daughter-in-law,
Carolyn Lillard, of Oldfort;
stepchildren: Denise McCormick,
Jackie Lindner, Jeff and Rodney
Hicks; grandchildren: Jeff Lillard,
Jeni Lawson, Aimee Lillard, Erin
Kennedy, Matthew Kennedy,
James Triplett, Justin Triplett,
John L. Godfrey Jr.
Daniel Pankey, and Lyndsey
John L. Godfrey, Jr., 60, of Sandridge; stepgrandchildren:
Cleveland,
passed
away Chassie Hooker, Kelly Reich,
Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, at Zac Hicks, Rusty Davis, Amanda
Skyridge Medical Center in LaRue, Christina Hicks, Dustin
Cleveland.
Hicks and Cody McCormick;
He loved his children, lived for great-grandchildren: Haylee and
his grandchildren and loved Ethan Volker, Eli Brown, Jacob
Tennessee football.
Lawson, Lacy and Tessa
He was preceded in death by Lawson, Callie Pankey, and
his parents J.L. and Willie Hill Bailey Sandridge; and stepgreatF. Blanche Easterly
grandchildren: Lorien Reich,
F. Blanche Easterly, 88, of Godfrey.
He is survived by his beloved Dalton Reich, Cathern Reich,
Cleveland,
passed
away
Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, at a wife of 41 years, Sherri Parker and Peyton Hooker.
Godfrey; daughters: Carrie
A celebration of life memorial
Chattanooga hospital.
She was born Dec. 23, 1926, (Adam) Byrum of Cleveland, service is planned for 5:30 p.m.
in Blount County to the late Fred Christy (Michael) Thompson of on Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015, at
Benton,
and Leslie (Josh) the Mountain View Baptist
and Ruth Hembree Dixon.
She had spent the majority of Waldroup of Dalton, Ga.; grand- Church in Polk County.
The family will receive friends
her life in Bradley County. During children: Matt (Kourtney) Byrum
World War II, She worked on and Cameron Byrum, Michael from 4 p.m. until the 5:30 p.m.
warplanes as a “Rosie Riveter” in and Josh Thompson and Eli service time.
In lieu of flowers, please make
Phoenix, Ariz., before returning Waldroup; great-grandchildren:
to Cleveland to marry and raise a McKinleigh and Abigail Byrum; memorial donations to the Mason
family. She was retired from brothers: James and Joe or your favorite charity.
Godfrey, both of Cleveland; sisYou are encouraged to share a
Duracell.
Roberta
Bandy
of memory of Ralph and/or your
She was a member of ters:
Ridgeview Baptist Church and Cleveland, and Sara Northern of personal condolences with his
served as a Sunday school Jefferson City; father and moth- family by visiting his memorial
teacher for more than 50 years at er-in-law, James and Blanche web page and guestbook at
special nieces and www.companionfunerals.com.
various churches. She enjoyed Parker;
Companion Funeral Home and
gardening, taking walks in the nephew: Amy Danley, Josh and
woods and spending time with Marcie Parker; and several other the Cody family are honored to
nieces and nephews.
assist the Lillard family with his
family and friends.
The funeral will be held at 8 arrangements.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her p.m. today, Sept. 18, 2015, at
husband, Joe C. Easterly; sis- Higgins Funeral Home with the
ters: Juanita Dixon, Louise Davis Rev. Pete Morgan officiating.
Interment will be 11 a.m.
and Maxine Lowery; and brothers: Jay, Bud, Hank, Eugene, Saturday in Zion Baptist Church
Cemetery. A white dove release
and Dave Dixon.
She is survived by children: ceremony will conclude the servJoe Easterly and wife, Violet, of ice.
The family will receive friends William Link
Old Fort, Don Easterly and wife,
Gail, of Fort Myers, Fla., Judy from 5 to 8 tonight at the funeral
William Link, of Cleveland,
Thurman and husband, Will, of home.
died Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015, in
Serving as pallbearers will be a local health care facility.
Cleveland, Freda Horner and
husband, Dan, of Cleveland, and Adam Byrum, Matt Byrum,
Survivors and arrangements
Thompson,
Josh will be announced by Companion
Shannon Harris and husband, Michael
Randy, of Tunnel Hill, Ga.; grand- Waldroup, Jimmy Parker and Funeral Home.
children: Billy Easterly, Tony Josh Parker. Honarary pallbearEasterly, Allen Easterly, Lisa Hall, ers are Arnold Wallace, Pat
Holly Brooks, Josh Calfee, Jesse O’Rourke, Cameron Byrum, Josh
Harris, and Joey Harris and Thompson, Michael Thompson,
Regina Williams; sister, Susie Eli Waldroup.
We invite you to send a mesPyle of Heiskell; brother, Ben
Dixon and wife, Alene, of Clinton; sage of condolence and view the
sisters-in-law: Barbara Dixon and Godfrey family guestbook at
Shirley Dixon, both of Knoxville; www.higginsfuneral.com.
12 great-grandchildren: four
great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces, nephews, and other
extended family members and
oodles of friends.
A Celebration of Life and
Homegoing service will be held
at 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 20, 2015,
at Ridgeview Baptist Church with Timothy D. Johnson
Brother Ken Purdie and Brother
Timothy Dewayne Johnson,
Van Smith officiating.
52, of Decatur, died Wednesday
Interment will follow in Moore’s morning, Sept.16, 2015.
Chapel Cemetery with grandchilSurvivors and arrangements
dren serving as pallbearers and will be announced by Companion
honorary pallbearers. A white Funeral Home.
dove release will conclude the
service.
The family will receive friends
from 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday at the
church.
In lieu of flowers the family
would like to encourage you to
make a donation to the
Alzheimer’s Association, 207 N.
Boone Street #1500, Johnson
Elizabeth ‘Beth’ Marsteller
City, TN 37604 or at www.alz.org.
Elizabeth
“Beth”
Farnum
We invite you to visit the guestMarsteller, 54, of Cleveland,
book of Blanche Easterly and
passed away Tuesday, Sept. 16,
send a message of comfort to
2015, in a Chattanooga hospital.
www.grissomserenity.com
She was born in Fayetteville,
Grissom-Serenity
Funeral
N.C., on March 25, 1961.
Home and Cremation Services of
She was employed at the
Cleveland is in charge of
South Cleveland Walmart Vision
arrangements.
Center as a licensed optician for
the last 16 years.
She was a devout Christian,
giving of her services and possessions to those she met who
were in need.
She was preceded in death by
her mother, Edna Earl Farnum.
Survivors include her father,
Albert D. Farnum of Spring Hill,
Fla.; two brothers: David E.
Watson and Albert “Doug”
Farnum Jr., both of North
and a sister, Charlotte
Ralph Emerson Lillard Carolina;
Nelson, also of North Carolina.
Ralph Emerson Lillard, 83, a
A memorial service will be held
resident of Cleveland, passed at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 20,
away on Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, at the T.L. Lowery Center
2015.
to celebrate the beautiful life of
He was born on July of 1932 to Beth Marsteller.
the late Carl Emerson and Helen
We invite you to send a mesHoward Lillard of Polk County.
sage of condolence and view the
He retired from the DuPont Marsteller family guestbook at
Company in Chattanooga where www.fikefh.com.
he worked for 32 years. He
Fike-Randolph & Son Funeral
became a mason and served as Home is in charge of the arrangeworship master in 1958, and as ments.
secretary for 25 years. He joined
the Eastern Star and served as
worthy patron and as secretary
for 10 years. He became a
Scottish Rite Mason and served
as secretary and treasurer of the
Polk County Scottish Rite Club.
He became a 32nd degree
Jack F. Findley
Jack F. Findley, 78, of Mason in 1967, and served a
Cleveland and formally of Dalton, degree master for the 4th Degree James Lee Morgan
James Lee Morgan, 58, of
passed away Wednesday, Sept. for many years. He was sponsor16, 2015, at the University of ing Chapter Dad for Chilhowee Crossville and formerly of
Athens, passed away Tuesday,
Tennessee Medical Center in Order of DeMolay in 1971.
He served as chairman of the Sept. 15, 2015, at his home.
Knoxville.
Born April 9, 1957, in
He was preceded in death by Polk County Republican Primary
his parents, Frank and Rochelle Election Board, and also as a Madisonville, to the late Reed
Findley;
daughter,
Teresa member and secretary of the and Etta Sue Worley Morgan, he
County
Election had lived a majority of his life in
Findley; and three brothers: Joe, Polk
Commission. He was Polk McMinn County and spent the
Junior and Roger Findley.
He is survived by his children County campaign manager for last 20 years in Crossville.
OBITUARIES
To submit an obituary,
have the funeral home or
cremation society in
charge of arrangements email the information to
obituaries@clevelandbanner.com and fax to 423614-6529, attention Obits.
Ignacia Asterio
Ignacia Asterio,
62,
of
Cleveland died Thursday, Sept.
17, 2015, at her home.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home.
Paul ‘Tim’ Baugh
Paul “Tim” Baugh, 72, a resident of Cleveland, went to be
with the Lord, Tuesday, Sept.
15, 2015, in a Chattanooga hospital.
He loved his family and his
church, Solid Rock Baptist
Church, where he was a member.
He enjoyed fishing and gardening. He was self-employed
most of his life as a car dealer
and the owner of Tim Baugh
Trucking.
He was preceded in death by
his mother, Bessie Woods and
father, Bud Goode; son, Arlen
Lee Baugh; granddaughter,
Davonna Leighann Cheek and
brothers: Conway Baugh, Tony
Baugh and Doyle “D.D.” Baugh.
He is survived by his wife of
47 years, Linda Seaton Baugh;
children: Karen Appling and her
companion, Jeff Jenkins, Jeff
Baugh and wife, Jessica; four
cherished grandsons: Cody
Vaughn Appling, Tanner Seaton
Appling, David Tyler Baugh of
Maine and Timothy “Gage”
Baugh; sister, Addie Baugh and
sister-in-law, Darlene Moore
Baugh; and several nieces,
nephews and numerous dear
friends.
The funeral will be held at 8
p.m. today, Sept. 18, 2015, in
the chapel of Ralph Buckner
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Dennis Leamon and the Rev.
Scott Leamon officiating.
A graveside service will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept.
19, 2015, in Sunset Memorial
Gardens.
The family will receive friends
from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the
funeral home prior to the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Baugh family guestbook at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
Levon L. Canada
Levon L. Canada, 77, of
Athens, passed away at 10 a.m.
Thursday, Sept.17, 2015, at his
home. A member of Flintstone
Baptist Church in Flintstone, Ga.
Survivors include his wife,
Kathern Morgan Canada; daughter and son-in-law, Lynn and
Terry Peeler of Sevierville; son
and daughter-in-law, Austin and
Donna Canada of Athens; grandchildren: Chad Canada, Amanda
Canada,
Michelle
Canada,
Kenny
Canada,
Stephanie
Newman, Casey Brock, Amy
Grobleski and Jennifer Machelz
Lavieri; great-grandchildren: Tim
Newman, Katie Newman, Ted
Newman and Camry Canada;
sisters and brothers-in-law:
Joyce and Larry Howard, Ellen
and Howard Songer, all of
Flintstone, Ga. and several
nieces and nephew.
He was preceded in death by a
son, Steve Arnold Canada and
parents, Luther Arnold and Ruby
Lee Canada.
The funeral will be held at 2:30
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 20, 2015, at
Biereley-Hale Funeral Home In
Madisonville.
Interment will be in Eleazar
Cemetery.
The family will receive friends
from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Sunday at
funeral home in Madisonville.
www.clevelandbanner.com
and spouses: Russell and Marie
Findley of Dalton, Ga., Keith and
Angel Findley Jasper, and
Michelle Eggleston of Dalton;
several grandchildren, nieces
and nephews; and special friend,
Barbara Rogers of Cleveland.
The family will receive friends
Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015, 2 to 4
p.m. at Pine Grove Baptist
Church Fellowship Hall.
In lieu of flowers make donations may be made to Pine Grove
Baptist Church Youth, 4004
Airport Road, Dalton, GA 30721
Arrangements made with
integrity by Shawn Chapman
Funeral Home, Crematory and
Monuments.
www.shawnchapmanfh.com
(USPS 117-700)
Periodical Postage Paid at Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Post Office
POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600
Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600)
in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday
and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
Phone (423) 472-5041.
Stephen L. Crass
Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin
herein. All rights of all other material herein are as reserved. ©2014 Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
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Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041
He was a member in good
standing at Cumberland View
Baptist Church in Crossville and
was a good friend and neighbor
to all who knew him.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by his
wife, Tina Morgan; granddaughter, Jasmine Sierra Michelle
Morgan; brothers: John, Timmy
and Bennie Morgan; and sisters:
Loretta Hardy and Bernice
Garrahart.
He is survived by children:
George Morgan of Crossville and
Surlina Eaton of Athens; grandson, Sebastian James Reed
Morgan of Crossville; sister,
Norma Johnson and husband,
Claude, of Sweetwater; several
nieces, nephews and other
extended family members and
numerous friends.
A Celebration of Life and
Home going for James Lee
Morgan will be held at 3 p.m.
today, Sept. 18, 2015, from the
chapel of Serenity Funeral Home
of Etowah with Brother Marty
Davenport officiating.
Interment will follow in the
Hiwassee Church of God
Cemetery in Madisonville with
George
Morgan,
Jimmy
Townsend, Delmer Sylvester,
Danny Nunes, Jacob Morgan,
and Claude Johnson serving as
pallbearers.
A white dove
release ceremony will conclude
the services.
The family will receive friends
from 1 to 3 p.m. today at the
funeral home prior to the service.
We invite you to visit the
guestbook of James Morgan and
send a message of comfort to
www.serenityfunerals.com.
Ruthie Faye Owens
Ruthie Faye Owens, 77, of
Cleveland, died Thursday, Sept.
17, 2015, in a local hospital.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home
and Crematory.
Dorothy Jean Robbins
Dorothy Jean Robbins, 68, of
Cleveland, passed away on
Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, in a
local hospital.
She was born on Aug. 30,
1947, to the late Tommy and
Freeman Roberts
She was an avid reader and
loved spending time with her
family.
In addition to her mother and
father, she was preceded in
death by her husband of 42
years, Freddy Robbins; two
sons: Teddy and Eddy Robbins;
one sister, Mae.
She leaves behind to cherish
her memory two sons: Freddy
Paul Robbins and Matthew Troy
Robbins and a very special
granddaughter, Alaina Robbins.
The funeral will be held at 1
p.m. today Sept, 18, 2015, at
Companion Funeral Home, 2419
Georgetown
Road
N.W.,
Cleveland, TN 37311.
The family received friends
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the
service at the funeral home.
Interment will follow the serv-
ice
at
Hillcrest
Memorial
Gardens.
You are invited to share a personal memory of Dorothy or your
condolences with her family at
her online memorial located at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Drucilla Schnebel
Drucilla “Tootie” Schnebel,
64, of Cleveland, passed away
on Thursday, Sep. 17, 2015,
surrounded by her loved ones
at her home.
She was a 1969 graduate of
Charleston High School where
she played basketball. She
retired from M&M Mars after 12
years of service.
She was a charter member of
Prospect Church of God where
she was music director for more
than 20 years. She participated
in the Senior Olympics.
She was preceded in death
by her father, Fred Geren; and
grandparents, Jim and Velma
Geren and John and Granny
Ethel Lewis.
Survivors include her husband of 23 years, Kurt
Schnebel of Cleveland; mother,
Cora Lee Geren of Cleveland;
daughter, Vanessa R. Short and
husband, Jason, of Cleveland;
stepchildren:
Joseph
W.
Schnebel of Virginia Beach, Va.
and Kimberly D. Schnebel of
Cleveland; three grandchildren:
Addison Short, Connor Short
and Alyssa Hagler, all of
Cleveland; siblings: Danny
Geren and Deborah Duggan
and husband, John, all of
Cleveland; David Geren and
wife, Carolyn, Dennis Geren
and wife, Linda, and Donna
Geren, all of Charleston; fatherin-law
and
mother-in-law,
Robert
“Bob”
and
Alice
Schnebel of Cleveland; and
several nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be conducted
at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 20,
2015, in the chapel of FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home
with Pastor Timothy Gann officiating.
Interment will follow in Fort
Hill Cemetery with Jimmy
Cooke, Jason Short, Johnny
Duggan, Harrison Price, Joseph
Schnebel and Andrew Cranfield
serving as pallbearers. Jason
Duggan will serve as an honorary pallbearer. A white dove
release ceremony will conclude
the service.
Her family will receive friends
from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the
funeral home.
The family requests that
memorials be made to the
American Cancer Society, 6221
Shallowford
Road,
Chattanooga, TN 37421.
A special appreciation for the
love and care our family
received from Melgenia West
and hospice caretaker, Laura
Baker.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Schnebel family guestbook
at www.fikefh.com.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—3
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Call 423-716-8372
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
Lifestyles@clevelandbanner.com
RAW ART DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Email: daniell@rawartdance.net
www.rawartdance.net
*With registration. Offer expires 9/22/15
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK
NY Fashion Week: Earthy elegance at Kors, Kanye West returns
NEW YORK (AP) — The
Associated Press is all over New
York Fashion Week, from the
runways to celebrities as eight
days of spring previews entered
their seventh day Wednesday.
———
EARTHY ELEGANCE AT
MICHAEL KORS
Elegance, the Michael Kors
way for spring, doesn’t mean kid
gloves, boning and tight dresses.
The designer had a more
“earthy elegance” on his mind for
the feminine Michael Kors
Collection — a more creative,
artistic energy like Georgia
O’Keeffe and Elsa Peretti, the
Italian model turned jewelry
designer.
He sewed fluttery petaled flowers on dresses and offered sheer
kicky pleats on dresses in classic
red, blue, black and white. Wide
black leather belts and grommets
along skirts and hems provided
strength.
“I wanted to have that balance
of the two things, think about
things that were in fact very soft
and romantic and feminine, but
take them down-to-earth and
make them work in a modern
way,” Kors said in an interview.
“It’s all about things that move
with the wind, and juxtapose all
of that with sort of borrowed
from the boys kind of tailoring
that feels easy.”
Hence his ruffles, slits and
slashes to catch the breeze.
It hasn’t been an easy year for
the lovable Kors. His competition
is amped up, discounting is deep
and his stock was down. How is
he holding up?
“I’m an optimistic guy, you
know? I think that’s how I
approach fashion. I still believe
that when people put the right
thing on it changes them,” Kors
said. “It changes your spirit, it
AP photo
THE MICHAEL KORS Spring 2016 collection is modeled during
Fashion Week in New York, Wednesday.
changes your step. I’ve seen a
woman try on a dress and suddenly stand up straight.”
He acknowledges fashion is
fast and furious now and customers are shopping lots of different ways.
“I think we’re all adjusting to
the fact that it is a new world,”
Kors said.
Among his front row guests
were Naomi Watts and Olivia
Wilde. And Kendall Jenner was
among his walkers.
“I always love the drama in the
front row in the shows and seeing how they’re presenting their
new ideas. It’s fun,” Watts said.
Wilde grabbed one of the looks
bound for the runway to wear
herself, a loose red dress that
sparkled and was outfitted with a
white Peter Pan collar. It’s just
the thing for a working mom, she
said. She gave birth to her first
child, Otis, in April.
“I find that I like to look put
together but I need to be able to
move around and function and I
can’t be kind of squeezing into
something that’s not going to
work, you know, running on cobblestones and jumping into the
subway,” she said.
“So I feel like his looks are
always keeping women in mind
— working women in mind, professional women who are powerful and sexy,” Wilde added.
Sitting in the front row, Wilde
said, is always fun, but a little
stressful.
“I just focus the whole time on
not tripping the models,” she
said. “Don’t trip them! Don’t trip
them! You know, it’s a lot like sitting courtside at a basketball
game, you just can’t believe how
tall they are.”
—Leanne Italie and Nicole
Evatt
———
KANYE RETURNS TO
FASHION WEEK
Kanye West’s presentation
united Vogue editor Anna
Wintour, Lorde and Kim
Kardashian — holding baby
North West — in the front row.
West’s Yeezy Season 2 collection was launched in four sets:
First a woman entered the stage
wearing tan, and yelled, “First
row, fall in. Second row, fall in.”
Others models followed, sporting
the same color and blond ponytails.
The clothes ranged from loose
jackets to high-waisted pants to
tank tops. The leader wore a
hoodie. Kim Kardashian and
North West matched the models
with their own tan ensembles.
The next set, which also featured a model yelling orders, featured army green, followed by
deeper brown and then black.
Most of the pants on the men
were loose. There were tighter
items on the women, including
leggings and bathing suits. And
some of the models wore baseball
caps that covered their eyes.
Kourtney
and
Khloe
Kardashian, Courtney Love,
Common, Michael Strahan, Seth
Meyers and former Vogue editorat-large Andre Leon Talley
watched from the front row while
Jaden Smith, R&B singer Miguel
and rapper Pusha T watched
from the second row.
Pastor Harvey Anders and
The Congregation of
Zion Hill
The Church of God
193 Tillie Road NE
Invite You
September 21-September 27
To These Special Services
7:00 P.M. Nightly | 6:00 P.M. Sunday
Special Guest
Evangelist Earl Little
From
Rockingham, NC
For More Information
Call: 423-457-9259
Hints from Heloise
How is this economical?
Dear Heloise: I purchased a
new “ECONOMICAL” TOP-LOAD
WASHER (Heloise here: high-efficiency washer). It’s supposed to
use less water and electricity,
thereby saving resources. I discovered the rinse cycle uses 1/3
of the water. This is entirely inadequate for removing dirt and soap
residue. Now I must run each
load through another cycle with
no soap to get the clothes clean.
OK, how is this economical? —
Rabelle K., Pearland, Texas
Indeed it does save energy
costs and water. High-efficiency
machines are way different from
the regular ones most of us
used. They use less water, detergent and energy.
It’s very important to use the
right detergent, meaning a “highefficiency” (HE) detergent, not a
regular one. Do follow the recommendations for the correct
amount to use. Most of us tend
to just “free pour” rather than
measure. Too much is not better.
If you still have residue on
clothing, it’s probably because
you are using too much detergent. Make sure you are using
only an HE detergent. A little
goes a long way!
Do your clothes come out
clean, without a residue? Since
the HE detergent does not make
many suds, it doesn’t take as
much water to rinse away dirt
and suds. So if you’re rinsing
clothes a second time just
because you feel you need to,
you really don’t.
Try this: Do one load your
way and one the regular way.
Same? Probably so. — Hugs,
Heloise
SEND A GREAT HINT TO:
Heloise
P.O. Box 795000
San Antonio, TX 78279-5000
Fax: 1-210-HELOISE
Email: Heloise@Heloise.com
© 2015 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
PLAN NOW INSTEAD OF THE COURT DECIDING LATER
WILLS DO NOT AVOID PROBATE
We will explain how to transfer your HOME
to your family without probate fees!!!
PLAN TO ATTEND ONE OF THESE FREE SEMINARS
CHATTANOOGA
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Mon., Sept. 21st ~ 10:30 to 11:45 am
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Mon., Sept. 21st ~ 1 to 2:15 pm
HIXSON
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Tues., Sept. 22nd ~ 1 to 2:15 pm
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1453 N. Mack Smith Road
Tues., Sept. 22nd ~ 6:30 to 7:45 pm
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Hilton Garden Inn
311 Chestnut Street
Wed., Sept. 23rd ~ 10 to 11:15 am
WHY IT’S RISKY TO USE NON-ATTORNEY, DO-IT-YOURSELF OR INTERNET TRUSTS
EVERY HOMEOWNER - SINGLE OR MARRIED - SHOULD ATTEND THIS SEMINAR
x Keep your affairs private and out of the courts
x Danger of Joint Tenancy
x How to reduce or eliminate estate taxes
STAFFED EVERY SATURDAY BY A HIGHLY TRAINED ORTHOPAEDIC PHYSICIAN
x Guardianship issues for your children
x What happens without a Living Trust
x Provisions for your grandchildren
RESERVE YOUR SEAT TODAY
FREE
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FREE
MARRIED COUPLES ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND TOGETHER
Presented by:
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Representing AmeriEstate Legal Plan, Inc
All new clients are provided with consultations by an independent qualified attorney who will help you determine the best plan for your family.
sportmed.com
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Bring this flyer and receive
$300 off your Living Trust package at the Seminar.
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Lee’s Fall Convocation begins Sunday
Lee University students, faculty, and staff will soon come
together for a time of spiritual
reflection during this year’s
Convocation.
The six services will take place
over a period of four days. Lee
President Paul Conn will open
Convocation this Sunday.
“Convocation week at Lee
University is always a very special time for our community,”
said Dr. Jimmy Harper, campus
pastor at Lee.
“It’s important for us to take
time away from the regular rou-
tine to really work on our relationship with God, and
Convocation gives us the opportunity to do just that — to grow
in relationship with God.”
Dr. Josh Rice will return to
the Conn Center stage to speak
on Monday night. Rice currently
serves as the pastor of leadership and community development at Mount Paran North
Church of God in Marietta, Ga.
Rice earned his doctorate in
New Testament studies from the
Lutheran School of Theology, his
master of divinity from
Pleasant Grove Baptist
to begin revival Sunday
The Pleasant Grove Baptist
Church fall revival will begin
Sunday at 6 p.m.
Associate Pastor Edward S.
Robinson Jr. will bring the message.
From
Monday
through
Wednesday, at 7 nightly, the Rev.
Dr. Mitchell M. Walker Sr. will be
the evangelist.
Walker is the former pastor of St.
James Cumberland Presbyterian
Church of America.
The public is invited to these
special revival services.
Pleasant Grove Baptist is located
at Inman and East Street. The Rev.
Edward S. Robinson Sr. is pastor.
CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Sunday services will be held at
2 p.m. at the Mountain Assembly
of God, in the Old Blue Springs
Baptist Church building on Blue
Springs Church Road. There will
and an auction on Saturday
beginning at 10 a.m.
———
Homecoming will be held at
Charleston First Baptist Church,
338 Market St., Sunday with special speaker Kenny Isbill. There
will be lunch following the morning service.
———
Jimmy Needham will be at
Candies Creek Baptist Church,
294 Old Eureka Road in
Charleston, Sunday at 6 p.m. The
special guest will be Kevin Jones.
There is no admission charge.
Bring a canned good for The
Caring Place.
———
Lebanon
Valley
Baptist
Church, 632 Lebanon Valley
Church Road S.W., will have
homecoming Sunday, beginning
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
Laurence Armstrong, Anthony
Walker, Adam Gage, Marsha
Hudson, Randy L Hampton,
Dustin Whaley, Jeremy Jarvis
and C.J. Davis, who are celebrating birthdays today ... Gabriel
“Gabe” Scott Hutto, who is celebrating his ninth birthday today
... Rachel Fox Thompson, who
will turn 38 Saturday ... Cory
Fox, who will turn 25 Saturday ...
Tonya King, Taylor Burns, Jason
Nicholson, Gilbert Arms, Matt
Bradford, Tyler Marcrom, Colby
Dills and Amy Posey, who will celebrate birthdays Saturday.
at 10:45 a.m. with lunch following the morning service.
———
Community Chapel Church of
God, 1807 Blythe Ave., will have
revival services beginning Sunday
at 6 p.m. and weeknights at 7.
The evangelist will be Southern
Gospel artist John Lanier, formerly of Naomi and the Segos and
the tenor singer for Tony Gore
and Majesty.
———
Pastor and family appreciation
day will be held Sunday at
Southview Baptist Church, for
the Rev. Rob Works. Trinity Trio
will be singing. Lunch will be
served after the morning service.
Sunday school will begin at 9:45
a.m. and worship at 10:30 a.m.
———
Revival services will begin at
God’s House of Prayer, 1215
Spring Place Road, Saturday at 7
p.m. There will be different
preacher and singers each night.
———
The Seekers will sing at Dalton
Pike
Dalton
Church
in
Homecoming service Sunday,
beginning at 10:30 a.m.
———
Mount Zion New Covenant
Church of God will have
Homecoming Sunday with tag
team preaching. There will be no
evening service.
———
Revival services will be held at
The Church of God, Zion Hill, 193
Tillie Road N.E., Monday through
Sept. 27 at 7 nightly, and 6 p.m.
on Sunday. Evangelist Earl Little,
from Rockingham, N.C., is guest.
———
Shane Calhoun will speak at
Unity Church of God Sunday at 6
p.m.
———
The Heartstrings will sing at
Temple Baptist Church Sunday
at 11 a.m.
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
5,000
Close: 4,893.95
Change: 4.71 (0.1%)
4,820
10 DAYS
Union Grove Church of Christ,
4889 Bates Pike S.E., will have a
clothing giveaway Saturday, from
9 a.m. to noon.
———
Trinity United Methodist
Church, 731 First St. N.E., will
have a fish fry and bake sale,
Saturday beginning at 11 a.m.
DA: Man killed uncle during
shootout over prized gamecock
DECATUR (AP) — Police say
an injured central Tennessee
man has killed his uncle in a
shootout over a prized fighting
rooster.
District Attorney Russell
Johnson’s office said in a news
release Thursday that the body
of 52-year-old Timothy D.
Johnson was found outside a
Decatur mobile home early
Wednesday morning.
The dead man’s nephew, 27year-old Larry E. Johnson Jr.,
was also shot. He is being treated in an intensive care unit.
Larry Johnson told investigators his uncle had confronted
him, accusing him of stealing the
gamecock. The nephew says
Timothy Johnson drew a gun,
and as the two fought for the
weapon, the gun went off, striking the younger man in the
chest. Larry Johnson says he
fired back with his own gun,
killing his uncle.
Officials haven’t determined
whether Larry Johnson will be
charged.
Christian conservatives rally
for religious awakening
NASHVILLE (AP) — Hundreds
of people cheered the husband of
Following the debut last year of
Let’s
Move!
Day
—
Cleveland/Bradley County is
gearing up for more activities to
help kids experience a healthier
life.
The free event will be held from
2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at Tinsley
Park.
Participants must register by 3
p.m. to enter the gift drawings.
The event is part of a national
initiative coordinated by the
Seventh-day Adventist Church in
partnership with the nation’s
Let’s Move! campaign, aimed at
curbing childhood obesity.
“Bradley County, the state of
Tennessee and our nation have a
high rate of child obesity, so this
is an important and exciting
event for kids in Bradley County,”
said Coach E.W. Dempsey.
This year, the Bowman Hills
and Ladd Springs Adventist
(AP) — These lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 8-1-5, Lucky
Sum: 14
Cash 3 Midday: 0-6-0, Lucky
Sum: 6
Cash 3 Morning: 5-1-0
Cash 4 Evening: 9-5-9-4,
Lucky Sum: 27
Cash 4 Midday: 8-7-8-0, Lucky
Sum: 23
Cash 4 Morning: 9-1-0-9
Georgia
All or Nothing Day: 01-03-0508-13-14-15-16-17-18-19-21
All or Nothing Evening: 02-0910-11-12-14-16-17-18-19-21-22
All or Nothing Morning: 02-0507-10-11-12-14-17-19-20-22-24
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Dow Jones industrials
16,960
Close: 16,674.74
Change: -65.21 (-0.4%)
16,480
16,000
10 DAYS
M
A
M
J
J
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
Name
18,351.36 15,370.33 Dow Industrials
9,310.22 7,452.70 Dow Transportation
657.17
539.96 Dow Utilities
11,254.87 9,509.59 NYSE Composite
5,231.94 4,116.60 Nasdaq Composite
947.85
809.57 S&P 100
2,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500
1,551.28 1,269.45 S&P MidCap
22,537.15 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000
1,296.00 1,040.47 Russell 2000
Last
16,674.74
8,215.44
567.72
10,215.54
4,893.95
875.52
1,990.20
1,436.18
21,007.72
1,180.69
Net
Chg
%Chg
-65.21
-.39
+32.07
+.39
+7.60 +1.36
-21.18
-.21
+4.71
+.10
-2.95
-.34
-5.11
-.26
-1.14
-.08
-25.53
-.12
+5.49
+.47
A
S
YTD
%Chg
-6.44
-10.11
-8.15
-5.75
+3.33
-3.62
-3.34
-1.12
-3.06
-1.99
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Can-Fite
3.28 +1.60 +95.2
AeriePhm 30.08 +12.08 +67.1
HTG Mol n 11.29 +2.64 +30.5
Shopify n 35.55 +6.64 +23.0
TG Thera 14.37 +2.65 +22.6
IntraCellu 58.62 +9.83 +20.1
AntheraP h 9.48 +1.50 +18.8
ReadgIntB 15.50 +2.42 +18.5
Sequenom 2.44 +.37 +17.9
MexcoEn
2.43 +.36 +17.4
Nivalis n 18.01 +2.39 +15.3
Medgen wt 3.85 +.48 +14.2
CoLucidP n 7.93 +.97 +13.9
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
AlliHlthC 12.78 -4.15 -24.5
ARC Grp
2.55 -.69 -21.3
MagHR pfD 15.85 -3.05 -16.1
OneGpHosp 3.80 -.71 -15.7
S&WSeed 4.45 -.82 -15.6
PrSUlshJrM 21.76 -3.85 -15.0
CatalystBio 7.77 -1.29 -14.2
MagHR pfC 11.05 -1.77 -13.8
Clarcor
48.39 -7.25 -13.0
DxHmbBear40.53 -5.84 -12.6
SunTr wtB 3.80 -.50 -11.6
DirGMBear 8.03 -1.00 -11.1
ComstkRs 2.43 -.30 -11.0
12-mo
%Chg
-3.42
-5.31
+2.70
-7.33
+6.54
-2.34
-1.05
+.60
-1.16
+1.85
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
BkofAm
1153964 15.86 -.47
CblvsnNY 881459 32.51 +3.97
RiteAid
832028 7.66 -.93
Apple Inc 626041 113.92 -2.49
GenElec
474318 25.35 -.35
FrptMcM
473537 12.05 +.21
AT&T Inc 373501 32.78 -.16
FordM
366628 14.60 -.04
Oracle
361243 36.74 -1.53
RegionsFn 351120 9.29 -.28
Petrobras 349071 4.83 -.10
VerizonCm 301213 45.23 -.96
Microsoft 293953 44.25 -.05
churches are partnering with Lee
University’s Athletics department
and other area organizations to
put on the event. Coaches, fitness
instructors, athletes and other
volunteers will interact with participants in a variety of activities
and encourage them to adopt a
healthy lifestyle that promotes
obesity prevention.
“Our student athletes are committed to show kids how healthy
living can be rewarding and fun,”
said Coach Bryce Reading of the
AcroForce Gymnastics Team.
Other partners and sponsors
include Cleveland City Schools,
Bradley County Schools, the
Cleveland
Family
YMCA,
Cleveland Parks and Recreation,
Carolina Ocoee, and a number of
other local businesses and organizations.
Children will complete a series
of activities set up along the
15,200
Name
AT&T Inc
Apple Inc
BB&T Cp
BkofAm
B iPVixST
CblvsnNY
CocaCola
CocaCE
CmtyHlt
CSVelIVST
DxGldBull
DukeEngy
Eaton
FstHorizon
FordM
FrptMcM
GenElec
HomeDp
iShJapan
iShEMkts
iShR2K
M
A
M
1.88
2.08
1.08
.20
...
.60
1.32
1.12
...
...
...
3.30
2.20
.24
.60
.20
.92
2.36
.13
.84
1.66
5.7
1.8
3.0
1.3
...
1.8
3.4
2.3
...
...
...
4.7
4.0
1.7
4.1
1.7
3.6
2.0
1.1
2.4
1.4
33
13
13
17
...
37
23
19
17
...
...
17
12
18
16
...
...
23
...
...
...
J
J
A
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
32.78
113.92
36.16
15.86
21.97
32.51
39.38
49.05
51.05
29.44
3.36
69.91
55.05
14.52
14.60
12.05
25.35
117.91
11.89
34.47
117.34
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.16
-2.4
-2.49 +3.2
-.92
-7.0
-.47 -11.3
-.12 -30.3
+3.97 +57.5
+.23
-6.7
-.41 +10.9
+.84
-5.3
+.06
-5.5
+.27 -69.9
+.73 -16.3
-1.49 -19.0
-.28 +6.9
-.04
-5.8
+.21 -48.4
-.35
+.3
+.09 +12.3
-.01 +5.8
-.08 -12.3
+.40
-1.9
versities, prisons, armories or
parks. Haslam said his aim is
simply to find ways to save
money, and that criticism of his
administration exploring outsourcing is misplaced.
“Everybody thinks, well,
Haslam has some bias toward
privatizing. I really don’t,” he
said. “My only bias is how are we
going to run this the very best we
can for the very lowest amount of
money.”
In some recent instances, the
state has moved to take over
some areas that had previously
been outsourced, Haslam said.
For example, the Transportation
Department recently moved
some engineering functions back
in house, and the Tourism
Department has stopped outsourcing some marketing activities.
A team of seven staffers and
contractors are working on outsourcing scenarios in an office of
Haslam’s administration called
Strategies for Efficiency in Real
Estate Management. They carry
titles like director of facilities
management outsourcing and
director for alternative workplace
solutions.
But the existence of that office
doesn’t mean the plans will necessarily move forward, Haslam
said.
All or Nothing Night: 02-03-0406-07-08-11-12-13-16-18-19
Cash 3 Evening: 8-6-2
Cash 3 Midday: 9-8-2
(Cash 4 Evening: 0-5-9-4
Cash 4 Midday: 1-6-6-1
Fantasy 5: 04-08-11-19-27
Georgia FIVE Evening: 0-8-5-8-3
Georgia FIVE Midday: 3-8-1-1-1
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 04-06-1328-31-32
walking trail at Tinsley Park that
will focus on fitness and nutrition.
Activities will include a bikepowered smoothie maker, soccer,
gymnastics, an obstacle course,
fly fishing, martial arts, relays,
volleyball and other sports.
There will also be a farmer’s
market offering fresh local produce. Free prize packs will be
given to each child who registers
by 3 p.m., as long as supplies
last. Participants who register by
3 p.m. will also be eligible to enter
the gift drawings.
Activity partners include
AcroForce Gymnastics from
Collegedale Academy, Carolina
Ocoee Rafting, Cleveland Family
YMCA, Lee University, General
Nutrition
Center,
GeorgiaCumberland Conference of
Seventh-day
Adventists,
Howard’s Martial Arts, Scott’s
Bikes, 7 Bridges/Running,
Tennessee Valley Trikes, TigerRock Martial Arts, Walgreens,
Workout 24/7 Anytime, and others. Financial and in-kind sponsors include Apple Valley
Orchards, Bi-Lo, Bowman Hills
Seventh-day Adventist Church,
CVS, CHI Memorial Convenient
Care, Cleveland Skate Place,
Georgia-Cumberland Conference
of Seventh-day Adventists, Great
Clips, Ladd Springs Seventh-day
Adventist Church, Leisure Time
Bowling, Walmart, White Wing
Christian Bookstore, and other
anonymous donors.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Last
Name
16,000
4,600
NASHVILLE
(AP)
—
Republican Gov. Bill Haslam
insisted Thursday that he has no
“bias” toward privatizing state
government activities.
Haslam told reporters that any
decision is still months away on
whether to proceed with outsourcing building management
at the state’s colleges and uni-
Name
Div Yld PE Last
Kroger s
.42
Lowes
1.12
MktVGold .12
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
Oracle
.60
PaneraBrd ...
Petrobras
...
PwShs QQQ1.50
RegionsFn .24
RiteAid
...
S&P500ETF4.03
Scotts
1.88
SouthnCo 2.17
SPDR Fncl .43
SunTrst
.96
Target
2.24
UtdCmBks .24
VangEmg 1.10
WalMart 1.96
Whrlpl
3.60
1.1
1.6
.8
2.9
4.4
1.6
...
...
1.1
2.6
...
2.0
3.0
5.0
1.9
2.5
2.9
1.2
3.1
3.0
2.1
20
24
...
14
15
17
30
...
...
13
21
...
22
18
...
11
...
17
...
13
20
Pvs Wk
37.50
70.48
14.27
81.11
18.36
36.74
185.28
4.83
107.13
9.29
7.66
199.73
61.91
43.48
23.22
39.05
78.01
19.92
35.22
64.47
168.46
S
YTD
Chg %Chg
+.32 +16.8
+.41 +2.4
+.38 -22.4
-.58 -26.0
-.49 -19.4
-1.53 -18.3
+1.53 +6.0
-.10 -33.8
+.04 +3.8
-.28 -12.0
-.93 +1.9
-.45
-2.8
-.41
-.7
+.57 -11.5
-.33
-6.1
-1.01
-6.8
-.49 +2.8
-.50 +5.2
... -12.0
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Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.
lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at
least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt =
Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge,
or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s
net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.3907
1.5488
1.3174
.8868
120.68
16.5685
.9710
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
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American Funds AmBalA m
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Dodge & Cox Stock
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Fidelity ContraK
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IH
WS
LB
LG
MA
LB
WS
LV
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LV
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LG
MV
LB
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IB
FB
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SH
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MI
LG
CS
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CI
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31,733
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44.03
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13.57
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101.18
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49.02
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11.51
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10.74
14.97
50.37
50.34
65.58
63.02
-3.2 +0.8/B
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MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW, Suite 1
472-6814
5.75
5.75
5.75
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NL
250
250
250
250
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CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.3778
1.5609
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Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1117.30 $1109.50
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16,800
4,800
Haslam: No ‘bias’ toward
outsourcing management
LOTTERY NUMBERS
17,600
5,000
Kentucky clerk Kim Davis during
a rally of Christian conservatives
Thursday outside the Tennessee
Capitol.
The celebration of Constitution
Day was sponsored by the
Tennessee Pastors Network and
also drew Rafael Cruz, a pastor
and the father of U.S. Sen. Ted
Cruz, the Texas Republican and
presidential candidate.
Speaking of the U.S. Supreme
Court’s recent decision effectively
legalizing same-sex marriage,
Cruz said, “The devil overplayed
his hand.”
He said the country needs to
elect a constitutional conservative as president, and suggested
that Christian conservatives will
be roused to action by the ruling.
“We’ve been silent too long,” he
said.
“Religious persecution ends in
January 2017,” he said.
Adventist churches partner with
Lee, schools for Let’s Move Day
18,400
5,200
4,400
I SEE BY THE
BANNER
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
DAILY DOW JONES
4,640
5,400
Columbia Theological Seminary,
and his bachelor’s degree from
Lee.
On Tuesday, Dr. Mark
Williams, general overseer of the
Church of God, will share the
message. Williams completed his
master of divinity from the
Church of God Theological
Seminary and earned his bachelor’s at Lee University (1986). He
was also awarded an honorary
doctor of divinity degree from
Lee in 2010.
Williams has been a consistent and persuasive advocate for
higher education in the church,
and particularly for the strategic
role Lee plays in offering spiritual and intellectual leadership
within the Church of God.
He also delivered Lee’s 2010
May commencement address.
Wednesday’s service will feature Jason Browning, a Lee
alum and associate pastor at
Westmore Church of God in
Cleveland. Browning has been in
ministry since 2001, and has
been with Westmore since 2007.
Recent
Lee
grad
and
“American Idol” runner-up Clark
Beckham will be featured in
Tuesday morning’s service.
Weeknight convocation services begin at 7:30 p.m. in the
Conn Center with overflow in the
Dixon Center. Each service will
host live worship led by Lee’s
Chapel Praise Band.
Morning services begin at
10:40
on
Tuesday
and
Thursday, and will also be held
in the Conn Center, with overflow in the Dixon Center.
Lee encourages all students
and guests to come out and participate in this semester’s
Convocation. For those unable
to attend, all services will be
available for live stream viewing
a
t
http://leeuniversity.edu/video.
For more information, contact the Campus Ministry office
at 423-614-8420.
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
112 Stuart Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—5
Earth’s record streak of record heat keeps on sizzling
WASHINGTON (AP) — Earth’s
record-breaking heat is sounding
an awful lot like a broken record.
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric
Administration
announced Thursday that
August, this past summer and
the first eight months of 2015 all
smashed global records for heat.
That’s the fifth straight record
hot season in a row and the
fourth consecutive record hot
month. Meteorologists say 2015
is a near certainty to eclipse
2014 as the hottest year on
record. This year, six of the eight
months have been record breaking, with only April and January
failing to set new records.
Since 2000, Earth has broken
monthly heat records 30 times
and seasonal heat records 11
times. The last time a monthly
cold record was broken was in
1916. Records go back to 1880.
“For scientists, these are just a
few more data points in an
increasingly long list of broken
records (that) is due to warming
temperatures,” Texas Tech climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe
said in an email. “As individuals,
though, this is yet another
reminder of the impact our
unprecedented and inadvertent
experiment — an experiment
that began with the Industrial
Revolution — is having on our
planet today.”
Scientists blame a combination of human-caused climate
change and natural El Nino, a
warming of the equatorial Pacific
Ocean that changes weather
worldwide.
Global warming is like the
steady climbing of stairs and
then El Nino “is like standing on
your tippy toes” while climbing
those stairs, said Deke Arndt,
global monitoring chief for
NOAA’s National Centers for
Environmental Information.
August’s global temperature
average was 61.7 degrees, breaking the previous record, set last
year, by a sixth of a degree. The
summer average temperature
broke the previous record from
last year by a fifth of a degree.
Those are “relatively large jumps
over the last record” in the world
of climate monitoring, Arndt
said.
NOAA calculates that there is
What the Federal Reserve wants to see before raising rates
WASHINGTON (AP) — So what
will it take for the Federal Reserve
to finally raise interest rates?
The U.S. economy is now in its
seventh straight year of expansion. It’s growing at a steady if
unexciting 2.2 percent annual
rate. Unemployment has sunk
from a 10 percent peak to a reassuring 5.1 percent. Auto and
home sales have accelerated.
Yet on Thursday, Fed officials
declined to lift rates from record
lows.
The decision left some Fed
watchers mystified over what the
central bank needs to see to begin
phasing out a policy it launched
in 2008 to help save a collapsing
economy. Many consumers and
businesses wouldn’t even likely
feel the consequences of a single
rate hike, at least not immediately. And Yellen has stressed that
the Fed’s rate increases would be
modest and gradual.
At a news conference, Yellen
declined to spell out what exactly
would give the Fed enough confidence to raise the federal funds
rate — the interest that banks
charge each other — from nearzero.
“I can’t give you a recipe for
exactly what we’re looking to see,”
she said.
What she does see now are too
many lingering risks.
Inflation is still undershooting
the 2 percent target that the Fed
regards as consistent with stable
growth. Financial markets have
AP Photo
federAl reserve Chair Janet Yellen answers questions during a news conference in Washington, Thursday. The Federal
Reserve is keeping U.S. interest rates at record lows in the face of
threats from a weak global economy, persistently low inflation, and
unstable financial markets.
turned stormy as doubts have
spread about whether Chinese
officials can sustain decent
growth in the world’s secondlargest economy.
Emerging markets from Brazil
to Malaysia are struggling.
Europe is straining to avoid stagnation. And falling oil prices have
pulled Canada — the largest U.S.
trading partner — into recession.
The doubts remain so severe
that the Fed appears to consider
even a mild rate hike — one that
many economists say will barely
affect most Americans — a step
too far.
Yellen signaled some concern
Thursday about China’s slowdown and volatile financial markets. But many economists say
the Fed is paying particular atten-
Marines seek to close combat jobs to women
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Marine Corps is expected to ask
that women not be allowed to
compete for several front-line
combat jobs, inflaming tensions
between Navy and Marine leaders, U.S. officials say.
The tentative decision has
ignited a debate over whether
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus can
veto any Marine Corps proposal
to prohibit women from serving in
certain infantry and reconnaissance positions. And it puts Gen.
Joseph Dunford, the Marine
Corps commandant who takes
over soon as chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, at odds with
the other three military services,
who are expected to open all of
their combat jobs to women.
No final decisions have been
made or forwarded to Pentagon
leaders, but officials say Defense
Secretary Ash Carter is aware of
the dispute and intends to review
the Marine plan. The Marine
Corps is part of the Navy, so
Mabus is secretary of both services.
The ongoing divide has put
Dunford in the spotlight as he
prepares to start his new job next
week. And it puts him in a somewhat awkward position of eventually having to review and pass
judgment — as chairman — on a
waiver request that he submitted
himself while serving as Marine
commandant.
The debate includes jabs at
Mabus for his public criticism of
the Marine plan that triggered a
AP Photo
In thIs July 9 fIle Photo,
then-Marine Corps Commandant
Gen. Joseph Dunford, Jr., testifies during his Senate Armed
Services Committee confirmation
hearing to become the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on
Capitol Hill in Washington.
call for his resignation from a
member of Congress.
Officials say the Army, Navy
and Air Force are expected to
allow women to serve in all combat jobs and will not ask Carter
for any exceptions. They say that
Special Operations Command is
also likely to allow women to
compete for the most demanding
military commando jobs —
including the Navy SEALs —
though with the knowledge that it
may be years before women even
try to enter those fields.
The officials spoke on condition
of anonymity because they
weren’t authorized to discuss the
matter publicly.
Mabus on Monday made his
position clear.
“I’m not going to ask for an
exemption for the Marines, and
it’s not going to make them any
less fighting effective,” he said,
adding that the Navy SEALs also
will not seek any waivers. “I think
they will be a stronger force
because a more diverse force is a
stronger force. And it will not
make them any less lethal.”
Mabus’ comments angered
Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif.,
who has asked Carter in a letter
to demand Mabus’ resignation
because he “openly disrespected
the Marine Corps as an institution, and he insulted the competency of Marines by disregarding
their professional judgment, their
combat experience and their
quality of leadership.”
Hunter, who served as a
Marine in Iraq and Afghanistan,
said Mabus’ comments raise
questions about whether he can
be objective and continue to lead
the Marine Corps. And he said
Mabus should have no role in any
decisions about women in the
Marine Corps.
Under the current plan, the
service chiefs will present their
plans to the service secretaries,
who will then forward recommendations to Carter. He will make
the final decisions by the end of
the year.
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tion to three key gauges in weighing whether to raise rates. They
say the Fed needs to see:
— A STABLE DOLLAR
The dollar has risen 14.8 percent against a basket of currencies in the past year. This has
hurt U.S. manufacturers by causing their American-made goods to
become more expensive abroad. It
also reduces inflationary pressures because foreign-made
goods become cheaper. A stronger
dollar can put inflation further
below the Fed’s target rate.
— STEADY OIL PRICES
A barrel of oil has more than
halved in value to $44.07 over the
past 12 months. That decline has
suppressed inflation. The Fed
forecasts that its preferred inflation measure will be just 0.4 percent this year — a fraction of its 2
percent objective. Fed officials
may be reluctant to act until they
believe that oil prices have bottomed.
— AN EVEN STRONGER JOB
MARKET
Over the past year, employers
have added 2.9 million jobs, and
the unemployment rate has
dropped a full percentage point to
5.1 percent. The Fed considers
that level consistent with a “balanced” economy. But the hiring
has yet to spur faster wage
growth — a trend that would
improve people’s well-being and,
Yellen stressed, help inflation
reach the Fed’s objective.
The Fed doesn’t want to
assume that all three of these
economic measures will naturally
improve. So on Thursday, it said
essentially that it needs more
time before finalizing a decision.
But even by the time of the
Fed’s October or December meeting, the direction of the world
economy might remain hazy.
China might be unable to show
within a few months that it can
manage a transition to slower
growth now that its years of 10
percent annual gains are over.
Europe might face continued softness.
“It might not be definitive,” said
Scott Anderson, chief economist
at Bank of the West. “We might
have another nail-biter come the
December meeting.”
a 97 percent chance that 2015
will break 2014’s hottest year
mark, but that was before
August was factored in. August
makes that even more likely,
Arndt said.
With the El Nino, NOAA forecasts an unusually warm fall for
the eastern, western and northern parts of the nation, as well as
Alaska, with New Mexico and
half of Texas forecast to be cooler
than normal. The southern twothirds of the nation, and parts of
Alaska, should be wetter than
normal this fall, with New
England and the Pacific
Northwest forecast to be on the
dry side, NOAA forecast.
107 KEITH STREET
KEITH STREET PLAZA
(423) 339-9527
MONDAY-SATURDAY 10-6
USED • BOOKS
• CDs • ETC.
BUY *SELL *TRADE
Hopewell Baptist Church
HOMECOMING 2015 CELEBRATION
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Celebration Service 10:45 AM
Musical Guest:
Lee University Symphonic Band
Monday-Wednesday,
September 21-23, 2015
Revival Services 6:30 PM
Guest Speaker: Phil Taylor
188 Old Georgetown Road NW
Cleveland, TN 37312
423-479-3763
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Arts
From Page 1
Barks said.
Corey Divel, the city’s senior
planner, said the idea for an
arts center grew out of renovation designs for the entire Old
Woolen Mill site developed by
the University of Tennessee
Smart Communities Initiative
students.
“The UT students were
instrumental. They used an
entire semester of their activity
to focus on the building,” artist
Joe McCullough of Theme
Fusion said.
He said the students offered
starting points “for all the different directions we could go
in.”
“So we took what we liked
and what we thought we could
afford in year one,” McCullough
said. “And we are launching
this as our first step.”
Applying for a National
Endowment for the Arts “Our
Town” grant from the organization was discussed. The
Cleveland
City
Council
approved applying for the grant
during a voting session
Monday.
City Manager Janice Casteel
referred to the arts center “as a
catalyst for the redevelopment
of this historic landmark in our
downtown area.”
The Arts Center will be applying for a $25,000 grant with a
required local match of the
same amount.
In the meantime, Barks has
begun a GoFundMe page for
donations to cover initial startup costs. The page has already
raised $1,100. Donations can
be
made
at
http://www.gofundme.com/CA
Cstartup.
“This is just our startup capital to file our paperwork with
the IRS to get our incorporation
covered, and some of the initial
costs that it takes for setting up
a nonprofit,” Barks said.
The current fundraising goal
does not include the cost for
transforming the space.
Cost estimates to secure this
phase are uncertain at this
point. Work has begun on
preparing the building for renovation. A workday was held
Saturday to remove brush and
debris from around the building.
Larger dreams to expand into
the ground floor of the building
are also being discussed.
Dr. Ron Coleman, owner of
the Old Woolen Mill, is partnering with the Arts Center group
as it gets established.
Coleman said he wanted to be
a part of the project as a way to
provide opportunities for local
artists to pursue developing
their skills and becoming professionals.
“I see it as something that will
be very beneficial for here at the
mill. Working with artistic people is fun,” Coleman said.
He said artistic people often
challenge people to embrace
new ideas.
“I can just close my eyes and
see what it is going to look like,
and it just looks so beautiful,”
Coleman said.
An outside patio overlooking
the pond is also being planned.
McCullough has committed to
being the CAC’s first “anchor
tenant” with his studio’s move
to the site.
“I’m hopeful that there is a
momentum
behind
that,”
McCullough said.
He said he hopes other artists
will see he has been able to set
up a studio at the location, and
will join the effort.
“There is also a lot of value
added to being here, the networking and the opportunity to
be a part of the group,”
McCullough said, explaining
members will get discounts on
classes and workshops.
Barks will also have a studio
on site.
The Arts Center group wants
to keep local artists local, rather
than having them feel like they
need to move to Chattanooga or
some other city to be successful.
“We are trying to work with
the existing nonprofit agencies
that are already connected and
working with the arts in
Cleveland,” he said.
Barks said he also hopes to
build a good partnership with
the artists who are already
working in Cleveland.
In addition to helping artists,
Barks said the project hopes to
promote “arts awareness in
Cleveland, to help people understand the value of original art.”
“We did a needs assessment
survey this summer and we got
really, really good feedback from
a lot of people in the community
that Cleveland was really in a
position that this was something that would not only be
beneficial, but was also desired
in the community,” Barks said.
“There were artists looking to
connect, looking for resources,
wanting to stay in this area.
This downtown is a great place
to make an artistic hub.”
Various art groups that
already have a presence in
Cleveland have also expressed
interest in having an arts center.
———
Online:
www.clevelandartscenter.org
public and private organizations.”
“Tennessee’s decline in traffic
fatalities has occurred because
of the dedication and commitment from our partners across
the state,” Poole added. “They
are coming up with ideas and
programs that are creative,
innovative, and solid. They are
the foundation for the culture of
safety on our roads, and I am
ecstatic that we are able to support their endeavors.”
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration provides
the funding to GHSO. The
grants, totaling 437 for the
2015-16 funding cycle, were
awarded to 376 agencies that
successfully applied for funding
based on a defined problem and
statistical need.
Each year, GHSO accepts
applications from agencies
across the state for available
highway safety funds.
Applications are reviewed and
scored by GHSO and external
highway safety advocates. The
agencies that meet funding criteria received awards.
“Initially, we are
going to focus primarily
on incubation, so we are
going to have low-cost
studio rental,
professional
development for artists,
helping them to be able
to market their work
(and) network. Right
now there is no place for
a low-cost studio.”
— Jamie Barks
TDOT
From Page 1
program.
Both the Cleveland and
Charleston police departments
will receive $5,000 to use for
“high visibility” enforcement.
“These grants help fund a
variety of enforcement, legal,
and educational initiatives
across the state,” Schroer said.
“All of these efforts, from DUI
prosecution, to speed enforcement, to child passenger safety
training, support the mission of
saving lives and reducing
injuries on our roads through
partnership with numerous
A PRELIMINARY CONCEPT has been drawn for the Cleveland Arts Center.
Contributed photo
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
THIS BUILDING at the Old Woolen Mill is set to be the future home of the Cleveland Arts Center.
Eslinger
From Page 1
year, some 2,000 students and
supporters attended the event at
Walker Valley High School, and
organizers are hoping for that
many or more at the coming
event, which will be the fourth
such event for the Ocoee Region
FCA.
Heath Eslinger, UTC wrestling
coach and former BCHS standout,
will be the guest speaker. The
event, which begins at 6:30 p.m.,
will also include testimony from
students across the region.
The program will be preceded
by a tailgate-type event which
begins at 5:30 p.m. at the stadium.
Robert Green, FCA Area director for the Ocoee Region, said that
more than just students will
attend and are being invited.
“It’s really a family event, and
we are encouraging churches on
that day to suspend their normal
Wednesday services and join us,”
he said. “We had probably 35 participating churches last year.”
Green said the event is geared
and mostly led by high school stu-
dents, but others are welcome.
“The event is multifaceted in
many ways but it is mostly a gathering spot that brings a diverse
group in from churches all over
the community to students all
over the community,” he said.
Eslinger will focus on how
everyone can be “uncommon” in
their own way while also working
with others. Green said that it is
inspired by former football coach
Tony Dungy’s best seller
“Uncommon,” and “just what it
means to live an uncommon life.”
Green said there will be music,
bands, testimonials, worship and
a chance for everyone to “converge
on the field and pray for schools,
our administration, our nation.”
“It’s one day, one message, one
stand ... that is basically the tag
line for it,” Green noted.
Fields of Faith is being held
Wednesday, to coincide with the
national “See You at the Pole”
event where schools have a special prayer, for those wishing to
participate, at the flagpole.
“We thought, let’s pull them
together. See You at the Pole in the
morning, Fields of Faith in the
evening,” he said.
Green said Eslinger is the perfect person to speak to these students. “He’s been a student at
Bradley, a coach at Cleveland
(High School), a youth pastor at
First Baptist Church, and now he
is at a Division I school as a coach
and he is a speaker all across the
country,” Green said. “FCA is
using him to promote ‘threedimension coaching’ which is
learning to coach the heart behind
the jersey.
“He is talking to coaches and
pointing out what it means to
become more transformational
than transactional,” Green continued. “His platform is growing
every year.”
To find out more about the
upcoming event, go to the Ocoee
Region FCA’s website at
www.ocoeefca.org, or email
Green at rgreen@fca.org. More
information about Fields of Faith
is
available
at
www.FieldsofFaith.com.
Update
From Page 1
third grade.
“Fifty percent is not OK,” Cash said.
“But we have to own it.”
She added literacy scores have been
“flat” across the board.
The school system has been working
to target its youngest students with an
initiative called Read 20, the idea being
that a successful student will read or
have something read to them for at
least 20 minutes a day outside of
school.
She noted reading is important for all
grades — but especially the youngest
ones.
After third grade, the instruction
shifts from teaching students how to
read for the first time, and the goal is
for them to already be using those
reading skills to learn.
“It’s also been said there’s a correlation between literacy rates and prison
populations,” Cash said. “That’s a scary
thought.”
Other areas of focus include raising
ACT scores and character education.
She said church and community
members can help students by
encouraging reading, whether that
means making sure a student has a
book to read or reading it with him or
her.
Local public schools are also about
to begin a new character education initiative with the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes called “The Uncommon
Project,” a project inspired by the book
“Uncommon” by famed football coach
Tony Dungy.
Cash stressed the importance of students learning how to lead positive lives
and relate to each other well in addition to them learning academic skills.
“What I need from the community is
to support that,” Cash said. “We’re all
in this together.”
Kim then shared some information
about United Christian Academy, a private school for students in pre-kindergarten through the eighth grade.
She said the school has been work-
ing to establish an atmosphere of academic achievement since it opened in
2003.
However, she said the school’s focus
lately has been on adding more opportunities for students outside of academics. Recent extracurricular additions
have included more dance and music
classes.
“A student with no connections does
not excel,” Kim said.
As the school only teaches through
the eighth grade, she added a big focus
is making sure students are ready to
move to their new schools.
While both private and public
schools were represented, she noted
their missions are similar.
“We all share the common goal of
developing each student’s potential,”
Kim said.
Elliott said one of Cleveland’s priorities right now is a “one-to-one initiative” to get more technological devices
into the hands of students.
He said the current goal is to have
enough electronics for all students to
use within two years from now.
“When the students exit [high
school], they need to have that be a
natural part of their learning,” Elliott
said.
He also noted that, like Bradley
County Schools, Cleveland City Schools
is focusing its attention on early reading and math.
Elliott said Cleveland High School,
the city system’s only high school, is
also working to improve its 86 percent
graduation rate and ACT scores.
“We have a lot of challenges before
us,” Elliott said.
He also took that opportunity to
thank local church leaders for their
service to local schools.
Elliott told how one group of church
ladies has been treating teachers to
lunch at their schools. Other churches
have asked to walk the halls after
school to pray over the classrooms. A
group of church volunteers also assist-
“What I need from the
community is to support that.
We’re all in this together.”
— Dr. Linda Cash
ed with the landscaping for the system’s new alternative school, the F.I.
Denning Center of Technology and
Careers.
“You have no idea what those acts of
love mean,” Elliott said.
He also emphasized the importance
of church leaders encouraging students
to learn, as the reading and reasoning
skills that help students learn more
about subjects like math also help students learn more about their personal
faiths.
Balzano said Tennessee Christian
Preparatory School is dedicated to
preparing students in pre-kindergarten
through the 12th grade for college and
their future careers.
Explaining that many Cleveland parents send their kids to private schools
in Chattanooga, Balzano said TCPS’
goal is to become “the finest private
school in Tennessee” so local students
will have the “finest” school opportunity
where they live.
In addition to teaching traditional
school subjects, Balzano noted TCPS
has the “advantage” of being able to
begin every class with prayer and make
Bible studies a part of the students’
required curricula.
One of the school’s current priorities
is to get its own campus and move
away from the one it is currently just
leasing.
Showing the association members
some architectural drawings of the
future building and football stadium,
Balzano said the hope is it will have a
“halo effect” on the school, allowing the
quality of the campus to match the
quality of the education.
He added TCPS also appreciates the
community’s support.
In a time set aside for questions, one
association member asked the school
leaders about the religion of Islam
being taught in schools, calling it “a
harmful virus.” She specifically referenced information about Islam allegedly
taught in seventh-grade history in
Tennessee public schools.
Balzano was the first to respond.
Though there may be information
about something in a textbook, he said
one must actually look at an individual
teacher’s syllabus and curriculum map
to see what will be covered and when.
Though TCPS is a Christian school,
he noted junior and senior students are
taught some passages from Islam’s governing book, the Quran, in their Bible
classes. Balzano said students must
know what other religions believe in
order to effectively defend their
Christian faith.
Elliott said Cleveland’s schools do
not push one religion over the others,
and all classes are being taught in
accordance with state standards which
dictate students learn about religions
to help them understand history.
Cleveland City Schools has also seen
a continually increasing population of
students learning English as a second
language, and he said schools are seeing more students from families practicing different religions.
Elliott said students learning more
about other religions can help them
better relate to other people.
He added churches have the most
important roles to play in making sure
Christian students are knowledgeable
about their faith.
Cash said textbooks which may feature information about Islam are “just
a tool” teachers can use. They have to
follow the standards that tell them to
teach about various faiths, but they
can use a variety of resources.
Because teachers have to cover so
much in a school year, she noted
teachers are “not going into a tremendous amount of depth” when talking
about religion.
“Nothing is taught in isolation,” Cash
said, adding that no one religion is
taught without the others.
Another association member asked
about the schools’ thoughts on encouraging students to attend college, noting
some might benefit more from simply
learning a good job trade.
While Balzano had already referred
to TCPS as a “college prep school,” the
leaders of the local public schools said
students are taught college is just one
option for them.
Cash said Bradley County schools
educate students on the multiple pathways available to them. Students are
encouraged to pursue postsecondary
educations, but that can include discussions of technical career training
rather than of the traditional university
experience.
She said the important thing is to get
students thinking about what they will
do in the future.
“We don’t want kids leaving our high
schools and not having a path to follow,” Cash said.
Elliott echoed the sentiment, saying
Cleveland schools try to encourage students to find which options are best for
them.
Both emphasized the fact their high
schools offer career and technical education programs designed to allow students to gain experience in certain
career trades — even before they leave
high school.
Larry Cockerham, the association’s
president, thanked the school leaders
for what they shared.
He also urged church leaders to pray
for local students and teachers, saying
churches “owe it to them” because
churches and schools serve the same
students.
The Cleveland Bradley Ministerial
Association is a local group of Christian
ministry leaders that meets monthly.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—7
State department cites local
businesses in civil violations
Race
From Page 1
Dayton, Ohio.
His friends and fellow runners
decided if Gallaher could not be
there, they would carry his name
and spirit along the path for
which he had prepared.
The student body of Ocoee
Middle, as well as the band
Gallaher once led, provided a pep
rally for those runners.
Dressed in bright yellow Tshirts with the slogan “Band
Together 4 Brian,” the runners
made their way through a formation made by the band onto the
gymnasium floor.
Principal Ron Spangler said
Gallaher’s spirit is still very
much alive at Ocoee Middle.
“We are Ocoee Strong,”
Spangler said. “We miss Mr.
Gallaher very much. He was special to our program and special to
our school. We still see him walking the hallways. We see him a
part of our lives, our band and
our students.”
He said the school “rallies
together and are strong” for
Gallaher’s family.
Spangler said the student body
has helped to support the men
and women who will travel to
Ohio for the marathon.
“We are sending our thoughts
and prayers with this group,”
Spangler said.
Robert Green, area director of
the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes, is one of the runners
and spoke for the group.
“We are so excited to be part of
an opportunity to honor one of
our great friends,” Green said.
He recognized the Gallaher
family members in attendance at
the rally, including Gallaher’s inlaws Mike and Denise Watkins;
parents, Sharon and Terry
Gallaher; and wife, Jaclyn.
They were also donning the
yellow T-shirts.
Green said the group has been
working hard preparing for the
marathon.
“But, if we have to crawl across
the finish line, we are going to
make it,” he said.
He asked the students to begin
their prayers for the group at
7:30 Saturday morning when the
marathon begins.
Green said it was Gallaher who
got him to become a runner and
Special to the Banner
Banner photo, BRIAN GRAVES
ThE fAmIly of Brian Gallaher attended the rally for runners who
will participate Saturday in the Air Force Marathon, for which the late
band director had been training. From left are Gallaher’s in-laws Mike
and Denise Watkins; parents, Sharon and Terry Gallaher; and wife,
Jaclyn.
talked of how the word “b-a-n-d”
defined his life.
“If you knew Brian, the ‘b’ in
band stood for ‘Braves.’ He loved
the Atlanta Braves. There wasn’t
a run I participated in with him
where he didn’t talk about the
Braves,” he recalled.
Green said Gallaher was
“brave himself.”
“He had a bucket list of things
he wanted to do and he didn’t
wait until he was 40, 50, 60, 70
or 80 to do those things. That
‘Braves spirit’ of his helped him
accomplish so many different
things in life, and I want that
legacy to be left in your hearts —
to be brave and do things in your
heart, and not wait until you’re
30 or 40 or 50.”
Green said the ‘a’ would stand
for “affirming.”
“He told me when I started
running I could run 10 miles,
easily,” Green said. “I said it wasn’t possible, and I remember he
would tell me to keep on going.”
He said carrying Gallaher’s
legacy means to “build one
another up.”
Green said the ‘n’ would represent “notorious about food, family and faith.”
“He loved food and every run
would bring a story about something he had eaten the night
before,” he said.
“Mr. Gallaher was notorious
about faith. He knew there was
more to life than what you see,”
Green said. “He knew there was a
Heaven and Jesus Christ was his
Lord and Saviour. He knew that
beyond this life, there is another
life.”
Green said there was also a
“notorious love for his family.”
“Every single run there was a
story coming out from him about
his family — his love for his wife
and the stuff they would do,” he
said.
The ‘d’ represents being a
“dad.”
“He was a tremendous dad,”
Green said. “Young men, be a
great dad one day. Brian talked
about his children incessantly.
“Today, we leave here and are
headed to Dayton, Ohio to run in
the Air Force Marathon and to
finish this race for him,” Green
said. “We are here for the entire
community of Ocoee Middle
School to honor a man who lived
life well.”
The runners were sent off with
a rousing number from the OMS
Band and a shout from the student body: “Band together for
Brian!”
Local participants making the
journey for the marathon include
Cameron Fisher, Matt Ryerson,
Jim Bilbo, Matt Carlson, Chris
Conine, Cason Conn, Yuri Davis,
Corey Divel, Bill Estes, Robert
Green, Shane Griffith, Duane
Goff, Shane Hooker, Derrick
Marr, Michelle Mazzolini and
Jared Wielfaert.
Also traveling to Ohio are
members of Gallaher’s family, as
well as several family members of
the runners.
Brown
From Page 1
was shocked in learning of the
accident, as were many at Life
Care Centers of America’s corporate office in Cleveland, where
Brown worked prior to her
employment at the school.
“She was not just a colleague
known for her excellence and
superb grasp of her work, but a
beloved friend and mentor to
countless staff, students and
faculty in the College of
Education,” said Lee University
President Dr. Paul Conn. “To
say that she will be deeply
missed is an understatement.”
LCCA President Beecher
Hunter said that Brown worked
“She had a perspective that was inspirational and
encouraging. She was quiet, but engaging ... and her
investment in others is something that I know they will
continue to carry with them. The world
needs more Karen Browns.”
— Beecher Hunter
at the corporate office from
2004 to 2011. “Karen was the
kind of person that everyone
would love to have as an
employee,” he said.
He added that she was much
more than that. “She had a per-
CPD
From Page 1
The CPD will be hosting a
CPD Career Showcase at the
Police Service Center on Church
Street that evening, from 6:30 to
7:30.
Interim Police Chief Mark
Gibson will address those in
attendance at 6:45 p.m.
Members representing the
SWAT team, K-9 police dog
team, Honor Guard and Bomb
Squad will be featured, as will
School Resource officers.
A variety of topics will be dis-
cussed, including the application process, qualifications, job
duties and hiring timeline for the
Cleveland Police Department.
CPD officers will also discuss
the advanced educational and
specialized training opportunities the city of Cleveland provides for its officers.
Specialized units will also be
featured at the showcase.
For more information on the
career showcase, contact the
CPD.
spective that was inspirational
and encouraging. She was quiet,
but engaging ... and her investment in others is something
that I know they will continue to
carry with them.
“The world needs more Karen
Browns,” Hunter said.
Dr. Bill Estes, dean of the
Helen DeVos College of
Education at Lee University,
said that Brown worked as the
department’s executive secretary
for several years, first with Dr.
Debbie Murray and then with
him. He called her a “professional’s professional,” and noted
how well thought of, respected
and loved she was by the school
staff and administration.
Brown, 57, was a U.S. Army
veteran, and a graduate of
Bradley Central High School.
Lee University noted that
Brown’s family requests that, in
lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to any local Girl
Scout troop.
Tennessee’s Department of
Commerce and Insurance has
released results of findings
across the state in August,
which included a $5,000 civil
penalty against Cleveland’s
Sunset Memorial Gardens on
North Lee Highway.
The violation was determined
in random inspections conducted by the state department.
Sunset Memorial Gardens,
owned by Cecil Lawrence Inc. of
Douglasville, Ga., was charged
with multiple mausoleum violations, which included pungent
overwhelming odors, carpet
stains on floor area, roof leaking
Tax breaks
move ahead
in U.S. House
WASHINGTON (AP) — House
Republicans are advancing legislation to make permanent a series
of five temporary tax breaks for
restaurants, multinational corporations and other businesses.
The bills would add a total of
$412 billion to the budget deficit
over the next decade. Democrats
opposed the bills, complaining
that Republicans are willing to
rack up debt to pay for tax cuts,
but not to pay for important programs.
Republicans counter that the
tax breaks, which expired in
January, are longstanding provisions routinely renewed every
year or two — with bipartisan
support. They say making them
permanent would add certainty to
the tax code while being honest
about the long-term cost.
The House Ways and Means
Committee vote along party lines
to approve the bills Thursday,
with Republicans in favor and
Democrats opposed.
with stains and cracks on ceiling, mold on floor area, electric
lift used for entombments left
sideways blocking access to the
walkway, flowers and debris on
the floor, a missing crypt plate,
and failure to remediate the
odor for a period of three years.
The cemetery must now repair
and renovate the mausoleum.
Compliance
requirements
include, but are not limited to,
removal of an electric lift, proper
air conditioning and ventilation,
and action to retain the services
of an expert (within 30 days) to
provide a report regarding reasonable necessary repairs,
proper sealing of all crypts, the
prevention of offensive odors
and timely completion of all
repairs required by the expert’s
report.
Additional actions in August
by the Department of Commerce
and
Insurance
involved
Southeast Tennessee individuals and/or businesses.
Accountant
Hiram
H.
Hollifield of Cleveland was fined
$1,000 for failure to respond to
a CPE audit.
Can-It Recycling of Cleveland
faces a $3,250 civil penalty in
the scrap metal category for
unlicensed conduct.
Wann Funeral Home and
Cremation
Center
in
Chattanooga received a $1,000
civil penalty in burial services.
The firm sold pre-need funeral
contracts without being registered as a pre-need seller, failed
to file an annual report, and
failed to complete a change of
ownership application by submitting an audit from a certified
public accountant.
Eugene Lennox Whiting of
Athens was fined $250 for failure to provide a statement in
the inspection report to identify
the presence or absence of
smoke detectors.
Among barbers and cosmetologists, Deez Barber Salon and
Shop in Chattanooga was fined
$100 for unlicensed activity.
DON’S
FENCE CO.
Since 1961
ALL TYPES
OF FENCING
479-6212
& 336-1501
Live! Saturdays at
10:00 a.m.
woopfm.com
OLD TOWN
CLEVELAND
Hosted by Ron and Debbie Moore
September 19:
Bill Talley
Tune in to 99.9 FM or
www.WOOPFM.com
First Baptist Church
338 Market Street
Charleston, TN
Sunday, September 20th
10:45 Worship Service
9:45 Sunday School
Special Speaker
Lunch Provided
Rev. Kenny Isbill
After Service
Everyone Welcome
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
ChurCh
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614--6529
Religion e-mail:
mary.matthews@clevelandbanner.com
gwen.swiger@clevelandbanner.com
The last days of summer ...
Jeremiah 8:20 (KJV): “The
harvest is past, the summer is
ended, and we are not saved.”
Last winter, several plans
were laid for projects at my
house for “when warm weather
gets here” — plant flowers, do
some landscaping, wash the
house, paint the deck, wash
the windows ....
Spring has come and gone;
and now so has summer.
Tuesday is the first day of fall.
So how did I spend my summer? Obviously, it was not
completing jobs on the list. My
son did take care of some landscaping one day. My only contribution was potting a few
flowers and “Hey, that looks
great.”
I must be a procrastinator.
But I hope not about spiritual
things — that’s most important
in life.
Paul ran into a procrastinators when, as a prisoner, he
journeyed from priest to king to
ruler to king.
As he stood accused before
Felix, (Acts 24:25 KJV) Paul
appealed to his knowledge of
the Jews’ religion and the
prophecies. Felix was so troubled, he trembled. “And as he
Lifelines
reasoned of righteousness,
temperance, and judgment to
come, Felix trembled, and
answered, Go thy way for this
time; when I have a convenient
season, I will call for thee.”
At last Paul stood before
King Agrippa and told his story
of how he had persecuted the
Christians and how he had met
Christ and was converted. He
told the king about his vision
and referred him to the
Scriptures, then asked, “King
Agrippa, believest thou the
prophets? I know that thou
believest” (Acts 26:27 KJV).
Then Agrippa said to Paul,
“Almost thou persuadest me to
be a Christian.”
They had good intentions, it
seems — much like my good
intentions to attend the tasks
around my house this summer.
Almost, but not ...
The prophet Jeremiah
(Jeremiah 8:20) was told by
God to talk to Jerusalem — to a
people who were constantly
backsliding. Yet they searched
for peace “but no good came.
They looked for a time of
health, and “behold trouble!”
instead ... “When I would comfort myself against sorrow, my
Bettie
Marlowe
Church of God of Prophecy joins
PCCNA Prayer Commission
McKinley named
prayer coordinator
resource prayer initiative leaders
at all levels of ministry.
“In our initial meeting, I was
pleased to share with our fellow
heart is faint in me.”
PCCNA organizations the recogniUntil finally, a tragic realizaSpecial to the Banner
tion, advancement, and priority of
tion: “The harvest is past, the
“In August 2015 the Pentecostal prayer as a core value of the
summer is ended, and we are
Charismatic Churches of North Church of God of Prophecy,” said
not saved.”
America announced the
McKinley.
It was a desperate cry. The
approval and formation of
“We continue to live in
prophet had given them the
a Prayer Commission.
a desperate time and this
Word of the Lord: “they hold
The Commission’s purCommission believes that
fast deceit, they refuse to
pose is to encourage intenour only hope is for a
return ... I hearkened and
tional prayer leadership in
Great Awakening. I
heard, but they spake not
member
organizations
believe our participation
aright: no man repented him of
toward the goal of building
in
the
Prayer
his wickedness, saying, What
houses of prayer for the
Commission will assist
have I done?” And God asked,
McKinley
nations
with
Great
us in being intentional in
“How do ye say, We are wise,
Awakening impact in view.
developing and mobilizing
and the law of the Lord is with
Additionally, the vision of the a culture of prayer in our moveus?”
PCCNA Prayer Commission is to ment.”
I have heard many say in
inspire and encourage denominaIn a letter to members, PCCNA
reply to an invitation to listen
tional prayer coordinators in their President Dr. Jeff Farmer stated,
and come to God — “I’m going
mission to bring prayer to the “The modern Pentecostal moveto one day.” or “I think I’m OK.”
heart of the denominational mis- ment was birthed and sustained
King Agrippa and Felix postsion and to undergird the prayer in the womb of a deep dependponed their decision — the
movement across the denomina- ence on prayer. These are pertime was not right for them.
tional continuum.
ilous times! We dare not default
And Israel felt they didn’t have
As participants in the Prayer to programs alone to accomplish
to repent. People today employ
Commission, Church of God of our mission. Pentecostal/charisthe same reasoning.
Prophecy General Overseer Sam matic movements and churches
But now the harvest is past,
Clements has selected Shaun need a fresh baptism of prayer
the summer is ended ...
McKinley, media and special proj- dependence on the power of the
ects coordinator for the Church of Holy Spirit. Revival in the Church
God of Prophecy International and spiritual awakening in North
Offices, to serve as the prayer America is our only hope.”
coordinator and church’s repreThe stated values of the PCCNA
The devotions are held at Ricky Moore on Tuesday, and sentative on the Commission.
Prayer Commission are:
Garden Plaza, located at 3500 Clyne Buxton on Thursday.
McKinley will work with intern We value unified prayer.
Keith St.
The public is invited to start national, national, regional, and
n We value prayer that is transThe speakers for this week are the day with a devotion.
state offices to connect and formational, worshipful at its
Moore and Buxton to speak at HHE devotions
His Hands Extended is a nondenominational devotional held
on Tuesday and Thursday mornings from 7 to 7:30.
REVIVAL/GOSPEL MEETINGS
Appointed in Concert
heart, and missional at its edge.
n We value biblical, Scripturebased prayer that moves us to
incarnate Christ and empowers
us to proclaim Him with
Pentecostal power.
n We value prayer in our
homes-the family altar, daily and
personal prayer, prayer between
couples, blessings over children,
prayer integrated into the fabric of
daily life.
n We value corporate prayer
through congregational prayer
gatherings.
n We value intercession and
intercessors, and urge pastors
and congregations to identify
them, train and direct them, team
them together, debrief them, and
honor their commitment to
prayer.
n We value prayer evangelism
and believe that a praying intercessor is behind each soul saved,
if none other than Christ himself.
We value the church as a cultural
change agent, and believe that the
penetrating intensity of the
church as “light” and its potency
as “salt” is a result of time spent
with God.
n We value praying in the Spirit,
by and with the anointing and
enabling of the Spirit.
n We value holiness and believe
that the great evidence of time in
the presence of God is transformation into His likeness.
———
www.cogop.org
SOULS OUTREACH
CHURCH
E AST S IDE CHURCH OF C HRIST
WWW.EASTSIDECOC.ORG
252 WILDWOOD AVENUE (AT THE CORNER OF 4TH AND WILDWOOD)
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ALAN HIGHERS
Editor of the Spiritual Sword
Retired judge of Tennessee
Court of Appeals
H OmeCOmING
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Sunday through Wednesday
Sunday at 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
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SERVICES are SUNDAY,
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COVENANT BAPTIST CHURCH
PASTOR: GARY HIGGINS
Everyone is invited! Come join us! 472-0901
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—9
The Church of God Assembly had miracles, worship and more
Special to the Banner
The Church of God, with
Alexander Jackson Sr. as general
overseer, has concluded its historical 110th General Assembly.
The Pre-Assembly rally, moderated by Cleveland Pastor Cary
W. Ryan, was held Sept. 1.
Esteban Rivas Zamora, national
overseer of Nicaragua, spoke
about the importance of receiving
the promise written in God’s
Word during his spirit-filled message.
On Wednesday morning the
Assembly Tabernacle was dedicated.
Honerkamp to speak
at Living Word Church
Living Word Church will world impact, a church
have a special guest
spokesman noted.
speaker Sunday.
Honerkamp has a
Pastor
Nick
passion to see the
Honerkamp will be
church impact the
speaking during the
community by part10:30 a.m. service.
nering with other
He has been the
churches and commusenior pastor of New
nity leaders.
Covenant
Church
Honerkamp and his
since 2004.
wife, Tina, live in
With Honerkamp's
Western
North
energy,
prayerful Honerkamp Carolina. They have
leadership and contatwo sons: Caleb and
gious humor, the church is Hayden.
quickly growing into a regionLiving Word Church is
al resource center with a located at 930 25th St.
Scott to speak in services
Sunday at Pine Hill COG
Bishop Bobby Scott Sr. will be now serving as state evangelists
the guest speaker Sunday, at the for Tennessee.
Pine Hill Church of God.
The Pine Hill Church is located
He will be speaking in the at 1484 Old Alabama Road, three
10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m.
miles
south
of
services, according to
McDonald.
From
Pastor David Beatty.
Highway 11 South, turn
Scott, who has pasleft on Old Chattanooga
tored in Tennessee for 32
Pike, then right on Old
years, has served on the
Alabama Road. The
Tennessee State Council,
church is three miles on
Youth and CE Board, and
the right.
as evangelism and home
For further informamissions director for eight
tion, call 472-8103.
years.
Beatty extends a corScott
He has also served as
dial invitation to everyadministrative bishop in
one to join us for these
Iowa and Nebraska and in services “at the little church out
Northern New England.
in the country with a big welcome
Scott and his wife, Rose, are for one and all.”
Highers to lead East Side
COC gospel meetings
The East Side church of Christ According to a recent survey, it is
announces its upcoming “Fall the second most widely read pubRevival/Gospel Meeting” begin- lication among churches of
ning this Sunday, Sept. 20, Christ. Highers engaged in seven
through Wednesday, Sept.23, debates as well, from 1967 to
with Alan Highers as the guest 1988.
Highers is a retired judge of
speaker.
“We eagerly welcome brother the Tennessee Court of Appeals,
Western Section. He was
Highers back with us,”
appointed to the court by
stated Jeff Archey, East
then
Gov.
Lamar
Side preacher. “He was
Alexander and served for
our guest speaker for our
32 years upon his retire100th anniversary in
ment on Aug. 31, 2014.
2013, and our folks dearHe also served as presily loved him. He was
dent and an executive
available to join us for
committee member of the
this series of meetings
Tennessee
Judicial
that we are thankful to
Highers
Conference.
announce and invite
“Needless to say, brother
each and every one to come to.”
Meeting times are 9:30 a.m. for Highers is well loved, well
the Sunday Bible school hour, respected and his experiences in
10:30 a.m. for the Sunday wor- preaching and serving in our
ship hour; 6 p.m. Sunday and judicial system grant him a perMonday through Friday at 7 spective and observation like
none other,” said Archey.
nightly.
“He is the kind of man and
“Edify,
Evangelize
and
Analyze” is the theme for the kind of preacher who you can
meeting as various subjects will walk away [from] saying it was
be presented in cooperation with good to hear him, as he points us
toward the Ultimate Judge and
this theme.
Planned lessons in light of the His Word. If you have never
theme are, “A Survey of Church attended a service of the church
History,” “A Portrait of Christ of Christ, this would be a wonfrom the Scriptures,” “The derful time to come and be our
Church of Christ Is Different,” guest. We welcome all as guests,
“The Hardest Command in the hope to know you as friends and
Bible,” “Obedience to the Gospel” eventually, call you family.”
East Side church of Christ is
and “Dangers Facing the
located at 252 Wildwood Ave,,
Church.”
Along with his preaching and S.E., just behind the Jim Rush
lectureship work, for the past 25 Funeral Home.
years Highers has served as ediCall 472-0901 for more infortor of The Spiritual Sword. mation.
Jackson noted this was the
third tabernacle in the history of
the church, which meant the
church was walking in accordance to prophecy.
Cleveland
Mayor
Tom
Rowland, Bradley County Mayor
D. Gary Davis and Sheriff Eric
Watson greeted the delegates.
During the message given by
Gerardo Monroy of Tennessee,
the Holy Ghost moved with a
message and interpretation
focusing on the work of the
church and that God would help
it grow.
With the sounding of the gavel,
the 110th Assembly opened at
10:22 a.m., with Jackson presenting the assembly theme —
“Receive the Promise.”
Wednesday afternoon’s session
began with worship in song by
Jocelyn Jackson and a special
time of remembrance for those
ministers who received their
reward this past year. The message “But Let Patience Have Her
Perfect Work” was brought by
Ralph L. Lester.
At 3:05 p.m., the trumpet
sounded a call to the nations for
the annual reports from around
the world.
Benigo Torrez, national overseer of Bolivia, reported growth
and more than 400 at their
National Convention.
Jose L. Castellanos, regional
overseer from the West Region,
noted they had grown strong in
California. The region presented
a plaque in honor of the new
Assembly Tabernacle.
Cary W. Ryan, national overseer of Canada’s National
Convention, said “brethren there
were faithful in the work of the
church.”
Reports also were given of the
church growth in the Democratic
Republic of the congo under
National Overseer Shamba
Mbambi and of the potential in
the Dominican Republic by
national overseer Vicente Vilorio.
Wednesday night service began
with the annual world Language
Department program, directed by
general coordinator Jose L.
Castellanos from California.
Testimonies of healing and other
miracles were presented.
Thursday morning began with
more progress reports from
Kenya, Dubai UAE, and Tanzania
by National Overseer Justol
Ngurukire of Kenya. Ngurukire
spoke of the dangers the church
faces in Africa due to terrorism
and of a church member who was
lost in a recent massacre in
Kenya.
Reports were also given from
Mexico, and the Northeast Region
of the United States.
Thursday afternoon began
with the annual financial Report
given by the general accountant,
Jessie Vee Cordeau.
More reports were given for the
countries of Nicaragua, El
Salvador,
Guatemala
and
Honduras as well as Peru and
Chile.
A report was sent by Fred
Kavuma concerning the orphanage in Uganda and the work of the
church in Burundi and Rwanda.
Reports were given by the
Southeast and North Central
Regions of the United States.
Thursday night began with the
public relations program directed
by H.L. and Sue Cannon of
Cleveland. Time was to recognize
those who had been members of
the church for 30 plus years.
Ralph L. Lester has been a
member of the Church for more
than 70 years.
Following was the Evangelism
Program, directed by Joel E.
Stewart, general coordinator.
Friday morning the Annual
Women’s Missionary Band breakfast and fellowship was held,
under direction of Shilia T. Hale,
Women’s Missionary Band general coordinator.
Friday’s morning session
began with the annual address
given
by General Overseer
Jackson.
Shiloh Baptist Church
in Ocoee, TN will have
Movie Night
September 20th
featuring
“Do You Believe?”
Everything will be
FREE, including movie,
food, and snacks.
Event starts at 6:30 pm in
Family Life Center.
For more info call church
office 338-4292.
He spoke of the growth of the
church and of reaching new
areas for the gospel.
He said the church was walking in accordance to the will of
God and this was evident in the
giving of the new tabernacle.
Jackson also noted, “It was
now time for the Church and its
membership to do all that they
can, and see how God will fulfill
his promise.”
He challenged The Church of
God to stop crying, “come, but to
go. He will not come until we go!
Church of God, we can, receive
the Promise, but not until after ye
have done the will of God. For us
to receive every promise in the
blessed old Book, we must have
unwavering faith.”
Friday afternoon Brandon
Hale and Juan Bonilla spoke
briefly about the new design of
the General Church websites in
both English and Spanish. Plans
were presented to have a multilanguage platform for all nations
to see the progress of the Church
online.
Following was the report of the
Church of Prophecy Marker
Association by general coordinator Donald L. Brown of II.
Brown spoke about the new
tabernacle and donated the original flags which flew over the second tabernacle of the church on
Keith Street.
James E. O’Quinn spoke about
the tabernacle in the history of
Israel and of the church; pointing
to the first tabernacle of the
church on Central Avenue in
Cleveland
under
General
Overseer M.A. Tomlinson and
now of the third tabernacle on
Runway Drive.
This was followed by a message
by Marshall Lackey.
During the Friday night session, the call was made as the
Parade of Nations began with 20
countries being represented.
Cary W. Ryan of Tennessee,
general world missions coordinator, gave a welcome to the country of Nigeria which was organized this past year.
Saturday morning began with
the Assembly Band Movement
program by Mandy Slack, general
coordinator.
This was followed by the
Annual Praise Service directed by
Edna Wamsley from Tennessee,
during which many testified of
healings, salvation and restoration.
Saturday afternoon was followed by an ordination service
and the annual Bible Training
Institute program by O’Quinn.
Saturday night began with the
Victory Leaders Band program
directed by Jill Ryan, general
coordinator.
The last day of the Assembly
began Sunday morning with the
Sunday School Department program directed by Juan N. Bonilla
general coordinator.
This was followed by a report
from Eva Jackson, General
Sunday School Literature editor.
She noted the Sunday School
literature was printed and translated in various languages. This
session ended with a program by
the Children’s Assembly directed
by Jessie Vee Cordeau of
Tennessee.
The last session of the
Assembly took place at 1:30 p.m.
with a program lead by Shilia T.
Hale of Tennessee, general
women’s Missionary Band coordinator.
Reports from the assembly
committees were presented.
Jackson made new Assembly
appointments. As the gavel
sounded, the 110th General
Assembly of The Church of God
came to a close.
Information in this article was
provided by Juan N. Bonilla.
7 pm Nightly
FOR PEOPLE OF ALL FAITHS
Old Time Holy Ghost Tent
Revival
Shine
Rain or
JOIN US EVERY NIGHT UNDER THE BIG TENT
September 21st-25th
Monday & Tuesday: Ronald Reagan
Wednesday: Mike Whitmire
Thursday: Bobby Scott
Friday: Tim Hill
APD 40 BESIDE HI-TECH
CONVENIENCE STORE
(ACROSS FROM BI-LO)
SPONSORED BY ALL NATIONS CHURCH OF GOD
CHURCH DIRECTORY
Serving Cleveland for
over 175 years
Farmland Community Church
Meeting at the Cleveland Family YMCA
Sanctuary - Traditional Worship - 8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Fellowship Hall - Informal Worship - 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Nursery available for all worship services
Randy Martin, Senior Pastor Skip White, Associate Pastor
155 Central Ave., NW
423-476-5586
http://www.bsumc.org
220 Urbane Road NE
Sunday Morning Worship Service 10 AM
Office Phone: 473-9891
“Come See The Difference”
REV. CHIP HAMMONDS
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH United Christian Church
3425 Ocoee St. N 476-4504
www.ClevelandUMC.com
Pastor: Rev. Tim Bracken
Sunday Worship....8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School..............................9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Night Together...........5:30 p.m.
(Supper Reservations Required) - (Nursery Provided)
OPEN HEARTS, OPEN MINDS, OPEN DOORS...
The People of The United Methodist Church
Wesley Memorial United
Methodist Church
3405 Peerless Road NW
Cleveland, TN 37312 • 472-9578
www.wesleymemorialchurch.com
Email: office@wesleymemorialchurch.com
Rev. Ramon Torres
Sunday Worship – 8:30, 11:00, 6:00
Where Everybody is Somebody, & Jesus Christ is Lord
First Lutheran Church
“Building on His Promise”
“Scripture-Based”
8:15 & 10:45 Service
9:30 Sunday School
Reverend Robert Seaton, Pastor
-C)NTIRE3TREET.%s#LEVELAND4.
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Pastors Charles & Margie Poteat
2200 Peerless Rd
Cleveland, TN
423.479.4277
A Full-Gospel Fellowship
Everyone Welcome
Service Times: Sunday 11 AM & 6 PM, Wed. 7 PM
´ of Lisieux
St. Thérese
Catholic Church
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday 6 p.m. (Vigil)
Sunday: 8 a.m. (Spanish), 9:30 a.m., 12 p.m.
1st & 3rd Sunday, 3 p.m. (Latin)
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday: 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday: 5:30 p.m.
SACRAMENT OF PENANCE
Saturday 4:45-5:45 p.m.
900 CLINGAN RIDGE DR. NW • 476-8123
sttheresecatholicchurch.org
ATTEND A
CHURCH OF
YOUR CHOICE
THIS WEEKEND
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Bergdahl’s attorneys to present case at hearing
AP Photo/robert F. Bukaty
A reFereNCe to New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady
is seen on the notes of Republican presidential candidate Donald
Trump as he tucks his papers into his jacket as he arrives at a town
hall event Thursday in Rochester, N.H.
A kinder and gentler
Trump emerges — briefly
— from GOP debate
ROCHESTER, N.H. (AP) —
Donald Trump, humble?
The billionaire GOP front-runner joked at the end of the second
debate of the Republican presidential primaries that “Humble”
ought to be his Secret Service
code name, drawing chuckles
from the audience and his rivals
alike.
But the joke also came at the
end of a debate in which Trump’s
trademark bombast — still present, to be sure — was leavened
with a more conciliatory tone and
honest-to-goodness compliments
for his rivals that continued for
nearly 24 hours.
“I think everybody really did
well. There was nobody that did
poorly,” Trump said on CNN after
stepping off the stage at the
Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library. “I was very impressed.”
There was more. On Thursday
morning, the camera-loving former reality TV star told MSNBC
that he felt he’d actually received
too much air time. “It was a little
bit unfair to a lot of other people,
frankly,” he said. “A lot of them
are friends of mine and they got
no air time last night.”
Trump’s morning after couldn’t
have been more different from his
first debate, where he walked off
the stage in a huff and launched
a full-out verbal and Twitter
assault against debate moderator
and Fox News host Megyn Kelly,
whose questions he deemed
unfair. The spat culminated in
him saying Kelly that had “blood
coming out of her eyes, blood
coming out of her wherever.”
The kinder, gentler Trump is
an unusual turn for a man whose
larger-than-life bluster and
refusal to play by the usual rules
of politics catapulted him to the
top of summertime polls.
He still got in plenty of his signature barbs on Wednesday
night, especially early in the
debate. Of Kentucky Sen. Rand
Paul, he said, “I never attacked
him on his look, and believe me,
there’s plenty of subject matter
right there.”
Yet Trump appeared to mellow
as the debate entered its third
hour. At times, he seemed to disappear from the stage as his
rivals debated the intricacies of
foreign policy, which, by his own
admission, is not his strongest
suit.
By the end of the marathon
session, he and former Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush, who had verbally
attacked each other endlessly for
weeks, were acting like old pals,
with Trump patting Bush on the
back and offering him a low-five
after Bush said his own code
name should be “Eveready.”
“It’s very high energy, Donald,”
Bush deadpanned, a reference to
Trump’s constant taunts that
he’s a “low-energy guy.”
Was this a sign that Trump had
simply grown bored during a
debate that went on far longer
than anyone expected? Or was
the more conciliatory, less combative tone a sign that Trump is
easing into his front-runner role
and modulating his temper
accordingly?
Trump in the past has boasted
about being a counter-puncher,
writing in his books that one of
his governing philosophies is to
hit back — and hard — if anyone
goes after him. He was provoked
often during the debate, but he
demonstrated more restraint,
refusing to swat back or doing so
less vigorously.
Roger Stone, a close Trump
friend who previously worked for
his campaign and remains a loyal
supporter, said he believes the
change in tone was strategic and
part of Trump’s evolution as a
candidate.
“Look, I think it has dawned on
him that he could be the nominee,” Stone said. “What started as
an exploration — not a lark, but
an exploration — has become
viable. And it’s not lost on him
that if he were the nominee, he
would need the support of all
these other candidates. And you
can’t win that by constantly
attacking everybody.”
Stone said it made particular
sense for Trump to play nice with
former Hewlett-Packard CEO
Carly Fiorina and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, two fellow
political outsiders. Trump may
have to win over their supporters,
Stone argued, if he wants to
expand his base and win the
nomination.
Trump campaign manager
Corey Lewandowski declined to
discuss internal debate strategy,
but pushed back against the idea
that Trump’s approach had
changed.
“I think what a lot of people
anticipated was an individual on
stage who was going to go after
people. But that’s not what he
does,” said Lewandowski, who
noted that Trump’s humor stood
out.
“He has a side to him that a lot
of people, maybe they don’t see,”
he said.
Still, Trump’s sojourn in
kinder pastures had evaporated
by Thursday night, when he set
foot in a sweaty gymnasium in
Rochester, New Hampshire, for a
town hall event. Soon he was
back to bashing his opponents
as “so-called candidates.” He
also went after Fiorina’s corporate record after a questioner
mentioned her tenure at Lucent
Technologies.
“Everyone’s saying she made
a good speech yesterday. I don’t
know, I don’t get it,” said
Trump, later adding: “She did a
terrible job at Lucent, she did a
terrible, terrible, terrible job at
Hewlett-Packard. ... I just don’t
see how she can get over that
hurdle.”
As for Bush, Trump noted,
“There are other guys that are
actually ahead of him in the polls,
by a lot. ... I don’t think he’s doing
to do too well in New Hampshire
or Iowa or anywhere else.”
Before the event, Stone said
he’d learned years ago never to
try to predict Trump.
“I mean, Trump’s style is not
fundamentally going to change,”
he said. “He is what he is.”
North Carolina moves to put Billy
Graham statue in U.S. Capitol
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North
Carolina proposal to eventually
place a statue of the Rev. Billy
Graham inside the U.S. Capitol,
replacing that of a former politician with ties last century to the
white supremacist movement,
won final approval from the state’s
lawmakers Thursday.
The North Carolina Senate
voted unanimously to pass a
measure asking a congressional
committee to approve Graham’s
likeness as a state contribution to
the Capitol. The bill, approved by
House counterparts in April, now
heads to Gov. Pat McCrory.
Now 96, the evangelist Graham
grew up in Charlotte and lives in
Montreat,
North
Carolina.
Graham has routinely been near
the top of the nation’s mostadmired lists, counseling U.S.
presidents and becoming the leading face of the evangelical movement during the second half of the
20th century.
Congressional guidelines state
that a person’s statue can only be
installed posthumously. Each
state is allowed to contribute two
statues, many of which sit within
Statuary Hall. Federal law also
allows states to request changes.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Bowe
Bergdahl’s attorneys will present
evidence Friday during the second day of a hearing to determine
whether the Army sergeant
should face a military trial for
leaving his post in Afghanistan,
although they aren’t saying if
Bergdahl himself will be called as
a witness.
The Article 32 hearing for
Bergdahl, who is charged with
desertion and misbehavior before
the enemy, is taking place at Fort
Sam Houston in San Antonio,
where he has been stationed
since returning to the U.S. last
year.
Officials say the Taliban captured Bergdahl after he left his
post in 2009, and he remained a
prisoner for five years before
being released in exchange for five
Taliban commanders being held
at the U.S. detention center in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The
prisoner swap was sharply criticized by many Republicans and
some Democrats, who said it was
politically motivated and counter
to the U.S. policy against negotiating with terrorists.
“It’s our turn at bat,”
Bergdahl’s lead attorney, Eugene
Fidell, said Thursday, shortly
after prosecutors had finished
presenting their case.
Fidell declined to discuss his
strategy or to say whether
Bergdahl’s mental health history,
including being diagnosed with a
“severe mental defect,” would play
a role in his defense.
Fidell said he would call four
witnesses, though he declined to
say if Bergdahl would be among
them. He also repeated his call for
the military to make public
AP Photo
Army SGt. Bowe BerGdAhl, left, defense counsel Lt. Col.
Franklin D. Rosenblatt, center, and lead defense counsel Eugene
Fidell sit during a preliminary hearing to determine if Sgt. Bergdahl
will be court martialed. Bergdahl, who left his post in Afghanistan and
was held by the Taliban for five years, is charged with desertion and
misbehavior before the enemy.
Bergdahl’s interview with military
investigators after his return to
the U.S., saying it would help tell
Bergdahl’s side of the story and
also counteract the negative publicity Bergdahl has faced since his
return.
Prosecutors on Thursday didn’t
mention the criticism that has
surrounded Bergdahl since his
return but focused on trying to
substantiate the misbehavior
charge. That charge, which carries a possible life sentence,
would require them to prove that
Bergdahl’s actions put other soldiers in harm’s way. If convicted,
Bergdahl also could be dishonorably discharged, reduced in rank
and made to forfeit all pay.
The prosecution’s three witnesses
—
commanders
Bergdahl’s platoon, company and
battalion — testified Thursday
that his disappearance from his
post in Afghanistan put a strain
on their forces and put his fellow
soldiers in danger.
Capt. John Billings, who led
Bergdahl’s platoon, described the
45-day search for the Idaho
native as grueling, saying soldiers
got little food or sleep and
endured temperatures in the
high-90s.
“Physically, mentally, I was
defeated,” Billings said, adding
that he felt like he had “failed” his
men.
His company commander, Maj.
Silvino Silvino, said some of the
thousands of soldiers who took
part in the search were angry
about it because they felt
Bergdahl had deserted. Military
prosecutor Maj. Margaret Kurz
said Thursday that Bergdahl had
actually been planning for weeks
to abandon the post.
Finally, Bergdahl’s battalion
commander, Col. Clinton Baker,
said that although no soldiers
died as part of the search, there
was a spike in improvised explosive device attacks because soldiers were going to places they
ordinarily would have avoided.
Under questioning by one of
Bergdahl’s attorneys, Lt. Col.
Franklin Rosenblatt, Billings said
he wasn’t aware of Bergdahl’s
mental health history, including
his psychological discharge from
the U.S. Coast Guard and that an
Army psychiatric board had concluded that Bergdahl possessed a
“severe mental defect.” Silvino
also told Rosenblatt he didn’t
know about Bergdahl’s mental
health issues.
Billings and Silvino said
Bergdahl had been a model soldier.
Bergdahl, wearing his blue and
black dress uniform, spent much
of Thursday’s hearing taking
notes and conferring with his
attorneys.
The Article 32 hearing will result
in a report that will be forwarded to
Gen. Robert Abrams, the commanding general of U.S. Army
Forces Command. Abrams will
decide whether the case should be
referred to a court-martial or be
resolved in another manner.
Novel plan to curb drug costs seeks candidates’ attention
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Consumer-friendly ratings of the
benefits of new drugs. Limits on
what patients pay. Requiring drug
companies to disclose how much
they actually spend on research.
With the public concerned
about the high cost of new medications, these are some of the proposals from a policy center often
aligned with the Obama administration.
The multi-step plan from the
Center for American Progress
aims to get the attention of the
2016 Democratic presidential
candidates. Hillary Rodham
Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders are both on record advocating action against overpriced
medications. A copy of the 45page plan was provided to The
Associated Press ahead of its
release Friday.
In a break from standard liberal
solutions, the proposal refrains
from urging that the government
be empowered to negotiate drug
prices for Medicare patients. By
law, Medicare’s prescription drug
program can’t do that now. Topher
Spiro, the center’s health policy
expert, said he hopes the new
emphasis on paying for value and
consumer education will attract at
least some Republican support.
“We’ve been talking about
Medicare negotiation ... for many,
many years and gotten nowhere,”
said Spiro. “We wanted to change
the dynamic.” While some of the
proposals require legislation, others could be green-lighted by the
administration.
The pharmaceutical industry is
likely to object. It argues that drug
spending as a share of the nation’s
health care tab remains stable,
and medications are cost effective
because they prevent complications that land patients in the hospital.
But insurers, employers, and
state and federal policymakers
may be interested in the new proposals, nevertheless. A poll this
summer found that 72 percent of
Americans think the cost of prescription drugs is unreasonable.
The outcry gained momentum
after the introduction last year of a
$1,000-a-pill cure for hepatitis C.
Among the center’s recommendations:
—Requiring drug companies to
disclose how much they spend on
research and development, production, and sales and marketing.
If a manufacturer fails to meet a
threshold for research spending, it
could be required to make payments to a new fund to support
the National Institutes of Health.
Taxpayer-funded NIH research
provides the springboard for some
new drugs.
—Commissioning an independent research organization to evaluate new drugs for effectiveness. In
a strategy similar to safety testing
of cars, patients and doctors
would get easy-to-understand star
ratings of whether a new drug provides no added benefit, minor
added benefits or significant
added benefits when compared to
existing medications. The ratings
would be included in advertising
and would become the basis for
pricing recommendations from the
independent evaluator.
—If a new drug is priced more
than 20 percent above the recommended price, and if the manufacturer relied on taxpayer-funded
research to develop it, the government would be allowed to license
that medication’s patent to generic
competitors. The center claims a
1980 federal law known as BayhDole provides this authority.
—Protecting people covered
through employer plans and other
private insurance by capping cost
sharing for drugs at $3,250 annually and setting monthly limits as
well.
—Granting exemptions from
antitrust laws so insurers and
pharmacy benefit managers could
band together to negotiate prices
for the highest cost drugs with
manufacturers.
—Changing Medicare’s payment policy for medications
administered in a doctor’s office,
including many cancer drugs.
Physicians currently get an added
administrative fee of 6 percent of
the drug’s price. Critics say that
creates financial incentives to prescribe the most expensive medica-
AP Photo
IN thIS JUNe 14, 2011 file photo, various prescription drugs are
seen on the automated pharmacy assembly line at Medco Health
Solutions in Willingboro, N.J. Consumer ratings for new drugs.
Lower limits on what patients pay. A new path to generic competition
for some costly medications. With rising public concern about drug
costs, those ideas are on a new list of policy recommendations
aimed at the Democratic presidential candidates.
tion.
“High prices can be appropriate for certain truly innovative,
life-saving drugs,” says the center’s proposal. “In those cases,
the challenge ... is to find a way to
pay for these products without
passing along too much of the
burden to patients. Successful
long-term reforms must also
lower overall costs instead of simply shifting them.”
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NATIONAL BRIEFS
Military operations begin at
expanded bomber training area
PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — The first
military flying operations will take
to the air Friday at an enormous
bomber training area over the
northern Plains that was
approved this spring after years of
consideration.
The expansion of the Powder
River Training Complex over the
Dakotas, Montana and Wyoming
roughly quadruples the training
airspace to span nearly 35,000
square miles, making it the largest
over the continental U.S. Flight
operations can start now that the
Federal Aviation Administration
has finalized mapping work on the
expanded airspace, a spokeswoman for the 28th Bomb Wing at
Ellsworth Air Force Base said in
an email.
The airspace will be used by B1 bombers from Ellsworth in
South Dakota and B-52 bombers
from Minot Air Force Base in
North Dakota. The U.S. Air Force
says the expansion will significantly boost training opportunities for Ellsworth and Minot aircrews.
“It’ll be the first flights in the
newly charted airspace, which
again, is something that we think
has very positive, beneficial
national security implications for
our ability to train air crews,” said
South Dakota U.S. Sen. John
Thune, who began pushing for the
expansion nearly a decade ago.
“At the same time, it’s saving
money.”
The expansion is expected to
save Ellsworth up to $23 million a
year in fuel costs by reducing the
number of training flights to other
states.
Man returns stolen phone 4 days
later with note of apology
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A man
who stole a cellphone from a New
Jersey business has returned it
four days later with a letter of
apology.
Surveillance video captured the
man taking the phone from
Butch’s Welding in Trenton on
Sept. 11. And the security system
also recorded a man tossing the
phone back over the company’s
fence Tuesday along with a handwritten note.
The note said: “I’m the one who
took your phone. I’m in a desperate situation. I’m sorry I hurt you.
I’m not that type but a situation
can lead some to do dumb things.”
The daughter of the shop’s
owner tells NJ.com that they are
hoping it’s a lesson learned.
But police are pursuing the
case and hope the man turns
himself in.
Man faces 18 years in death solved
by Scrooge McDuck jewelry
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A
Connecticut man is facing 18
years in prison for his role in a
killing that police solved by tracking a gold chain and medallion
featuring the Disney character
Scrooge McDuck.
The Hartford Courant reports
24-year-old Hartford resident
Lorenza Christian pleaded guilty
Thursday under the Alford doctrine to robbery and conspiracy to
commit robbery.
Under the plea, Christian is not
admitting guilt but acknowledges
the state probably has enough evidence to convict him.
Police charged Christian and
another man in the killing of 25year-old Miguel Rodriguez, who
was shot on July 13, 2013.
Police found that his medallion
of Scrooge McDuck had been sold
to a shop within 30 minutes of the
shooting.
Christian is scheduled to be
sentenced Feb. 5.
Murder suspect, trial witness
mistakenly put in same cell
LIMA, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio
sheriff says a guard mistakenly
put a murder suspect in a holding
cell with another inmate who was
about to testify against him, and a
fight ensued.
The Lima News reports that the
men weren’t handcuffed when the
guard put them together in a cell
during a break in the trial this
week. Sheriff Sam Crish says an
investigation will be conducted on
how that happened.
Crish says authorities broke up
the altercation within two minutes. He says the men suffered
only minor injuries.
The holding cell was out of public view, but the sheriff says the
fight was recorded on video.
The judge later denied a defense
request for a mistrial because of
the fight, and he said the video
can be shown to the jury.
Students unsure of next step
in Confederate flag ban
(AP) — A Virginia student who’s
leading the fight against his high
school’s ban on clothes emblazoned with the Confederate flag
says he’s unsure what the students’ next step will be.
Houston Miller was among
roughly 20 students suspended
from Christiansburg High School
on Thursday after holding a rally
to protest a new policy banning
vehicles with Confederate flag
symbols from the school parking
lot and refusing to take off clothing displaying the symbol.
Miller said Thursday that he
wasn’t going to back down and
had been organizing another rally
for Friday outside the school.
But he later said that some students had received angry messages online about the issue and
were worried about the potential
for violence.
Blazes being tamed but death
toll rises to 5 in California
MIDDLETOWN, Calif. (AP) —
The death toll is now five from a
pair of the most destructive wildfires in recent years in California.
The two major blazes, which
together have destroyed more
than 800 homes, have been significantly diminished in cooler, wetter weather, and firefighters were
working to extend fire lines before
an expected hot weekend arrives.
Two more bodies were found in
the burned ruins of homes,
authorities said Thursday. They
were presumed to be Bruce Beven
Burns and former San Jose
Mercury News police reporter
Leonard Neft, though official identifications have yet to be made,
the Lake County Sheriff’s
Department said.
Shirley Burns said her 65-yearold brother-in-law might have
been sleeping in his trailer and
didn’t realize the fire was speeding
toward him on Saturday.
“It came in very fast, it was a
monster,” she said from her home
in Lodi.
She recalled Burns as a laidback guy who sold items at a
Clear Lake flea market and lived
in a trailer at the family’s metal
recycling yard.
“He reminded me of a big Teddy
bear,” Shirley Burns said. “He was
a real kind and gentle person. He
had a beard and looked like a
mountain man.”
On Sunday another woman,
72-year-old Barbara McWilliams,
was found dead in the same area
near Middletown about 100 miles
north of San Francisco.
Two other bodies were found
inside homes destroyed in a separate wildfire about 170 miles away
in the Sierra Nevada foothills,
Calaveras County coroner Kevin
Raggio said.
Police: Qatari sheikh linked to
speeding car likely left U.S.
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) —
A Middle Eastern sheikh who
allegedly said he owned a Ferrari
caught on film speeding through a
Beverly Hills neighborhood apparently has raced out of town, police
said Thursday.
Khalid bin Hamad Al Thani of
Qatar has left the country and the
cars are gone, authorities said at a
news conference.
Al Thani owns a drag-racing
team and is a member of the ruling family of oil- and gas-rich
Qatar. An aficionado of fast cars,
Al Thani routinely has been photographed racing cars on racetracks, including a Formula 1
racer.
The state-run Qatar News
Agency did not immediately report
on the incident Friday, the start of
the
country’s
weekend.
Authorities in Qatar and at the
Qatari Embassy in Washington
could not be immediately reached
for comment.
The bright yellow, 12-cylinder
LaFerrari, which can sell for
around $1.4 million new, was
spotted along with a white
Porsche zooming down narrow
streets and blowing through stop
signs on Saturday evening until
they finally pulled into a driveway,
the Ferrari’s engine smoking.
Officers answering reports of
reckless driving found both cars
parked in a driveway. A man told
the officers that the cars belonged
to him and denied speeding or
driving recklessly, police said.
The man claimed to have diplomatic immunity, but that is
unlikely, Lt. Lincoln Hoshino said.
Seattle Aquarium trains otter
to use inhaler for asthma
SEATTLE (AP) — The Seattle
Aquarium has diagnosed a sea
otter with asthma and is training
the animal to use an inhaler.
KING-TV reports Dr. Lesanna
Lahner diagnosed the otter,
named Mishka, after she was having trouble breathing when smoke
from wildfires was in the Seattle
area.
Mishka’s trainer uses food to
teach the 1-year-old to push her
nose on the inhaler and take a
deep breath. The medication in
the otter’s inhaler is exactly the
same as what humans use.
Lahner says reduced genetic
diversity could have contributed
to Mishka’s diagnosis. Sea otters
Students urged to ‘make their
voices heard’ for civil rights
went extinct in Washington and
40 years ago, Alaskan sea otters
MURFREESBORO (AP) — Two
were brought south and reintroleading figures of the American
duced to the coast.
civil rights movement urged uniAudio released of pilot’s
versity students Thursday to
pre-flight routine before crash
“make their voices heard” on
ATLANTA (AP) — A North issues of justice and equality, 50
Carolina pilot’s conversation with years after the Voting Rights Act
a control tower was calm before was signed into law.
the airplane slammed into a metro
The Rev. James Lawson and
Atlanta freeway, killing all four the Rev. C.T. Vivian spoke at
onboard.
Middle
Tennessee
State
The
Federal
Aviation University about the challenges
Administration released the five- that remain a half-century after
minute audio Thursday of pilot the landmark legislation was
Greg Byrd III’s pre-flight routine signed in 1965.
before he said he was struggling to
“What we’re talking about is
gain altitude and crashed May 8. how you make it possible that
The fiery crash came about two your voice is really heard,” said
minutes after departure from Vivian, told an audience in a
DeKalb Peachtree Airport shortly packed auditorium, still speakafter 10 a.m.
ing with the fiery passion he was
“I’m having some trouble climb- known for during the civil rights
movement. “This is what made
ing here,” Byrd said.
Shortly afterward, Byrd tells the the movement; our voice was
control tower that the plane is really heard. But it didn’t happen
going down. Someone from the by accident, we made certain it
control tower asks Byrd to repeat was heard.”
Lawson said the movement five
himself.
After a pause, Byrd responds decades ago had cohesiveness
saying “We’re going to be down and strove to speak with one
voice. He and Vivian encouraged
here in the intersection.”
There was no more communication heard between Byrd and the
tower. About a minute later, the
tower responded to someone confirming the crash saying “Yes, he
just crashed.”
Byrd, 53, of Asheville, North
Carolina, his sons Christopher
Byrd, 27, and Phillip Byrd, 26,
and Christopher’s fiancee, Jackie
Kulzer, 27, of metro Atlanta, all
died in the crash.
Scars across the pavement of
four lanes of busy Interstate 285
were found by investigators. They
ended at a concrete highway
divider, where the wreckage of the
Piper PA-32 was found. The plane
had stopped at the airport just
north of Atlanta and was heading
to a graduation ceremony in
Oxford, Mississippi, when it
crashed, authorities have said.
the students to do likewise.
“The 21st century needs similar campaigns to correct the horrible things that are happening to
fellow Americans across our
land,” Lawson said.
Mia Griggs, a 20-year-old public relations major at MTSU, said
it was inspiring “to actually hear
them, those who were pivotal in
the struggle for voting rights.”
Griggs, who registered to vote at
a booth outside the auditorium,
added, “It makes you want to be
active. We can all preach it, but
who’s going to do the actions?”
Vivian and Lawson were
friends and confidants of the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. and led
demonstrations that helped
make the Voting Rights Act a
reality.
Vivian, who staged his first sitin demonstrations in the 1940s,
met King soon after the budding
civil rights leader’s victory in the
1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Vivian’s assault during a voting
rights demonstration in Selma,
Alabama, in 1965 spurred support for the voting rights legisla-
tion that was signed the following
August.
Vivian told The Associated
Press in an interview that an
ongoing battle by a group of
Tennessee college students illustrates that the fight is far from
over. The students want a federal
court to require the state to
accept their school identification
cards as valid voter identification.
The out-of-state students at
Fisk University and Tennessee
State University say in a lawsuit
that they can’t vote in Tennessee
because of voter ID legislation
passed in 2011. Tennessee won’t
accept identification cards from
other states, nor will it accept
student identification cards from
Tennessee colleges and universities.
Vivian, 91, said he’s encouraged by their determination,
despite the persistent challenges.
“It lets me know that we will
eventually overcome,” Vivian
said. “And that ... the work we’ve
done for this nation is slowly
being fulfilled.”
2 more charged in shooting
of Arkansas grandparents
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) —
Arkansas prosecutors charged
two more teenagers late Thursday
in connection with the shooting
deaths of one of their friend’s
grandparents.
Faulkner County prosecutors
filed adult first-degree murder
charges against Conner Atchley
and Anastasia Roberts, who are
both 17. Investigators allege that
the teens were both present when
Robert and Patricia Cogdell were
fatally shot in their Conway home
in July.
Prosecutors have already
charged 14-year-old Justin
Staton, whom the couple raised as
their grandson, and his friend, 18year-old Hunter Drexler, with capital murder. Investigators allege
they robbed and shot the couple,
then dumped their bodies in a
wooded area behind their home.
Prosecutors also filed hindering
apprehension charges against
Staton’s mother, Michelle Staton,
on Thursday.
Prosecuting Attorney Cody
Hiland said the investigation is
ongoing. He said he could not discuss the facts of the case and
referred reporters to the affidavits
filed late Thursday in Faulkner
County Circuit Court.
He said Atchley, Roberts and
Michelle Staton were in police
custody and would be served the
paperwork from the charges.
No attorneys were listed for
Atchley, Roberts or Michelle
Staton. A phone call to the
Arkansas
Public
Defender
Commission was not returned late
Thursday. Attorneys from the
commission are representing
Justin Staton and Drexler.
Court documents say Justin
Staton told officers that he complained to Drexler about his
grandparents and that his
friend suggested that he shoot
them. Atchley, who was present
during the attack, told officers
the plan had been conceived
while he, Justin Staton and
Drexler were in juvenile detention together, according to the
documents.
Providence councilors approve
limits on student housing
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) —
College students in Providence
have fewer housing options following City Council approval of an
ordinance limiting how many students may live in an off-campus
single-family home.
WPRI-TV reports that the city
council backed the local law
Thursday night in an 11-3 vote.
Councilwoman Jo-Ann Ryan
says she introduced the legislation to curb student partying in
the two neighborhoods surrounding Providence College and Rhode
Island College.
She says residents also are concerned that single-family homes
are being purchased and then
rented to college students.
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Another food fight? Congress mulls school meal standards
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Congress is deciding whether it
wants another pitched battle
with first lady Michelle Obama
and the administration over
school lunches that put more
whole grains in kids’ meals and
cut salty foods.
Last year, school food rules
pitted Mrs. Obama against
Republicans seeking full exemptions for some schools. The first
lady declared that she’d fight “to
the bitter end” to make sure kids
have good nutrition.
Lawmakers are now hoping to
find bipartisan compromise on
the rules and also dollars for the
nation’s child nutrition programs
before the law expires Sept. 30.
So far, however, negotiations
have failed to produce a bill in
either the House or the Senate.
Lawmakers may not seek an
immediate extension if the law
expires. The school foods rules
won’t change unless Congress
takes action, and the Agriculture
Department says other programs
would continue to operate as
long as Congress passes a budget this fall.
The school foods rules phased
in since 2012 set fat, calorie,
sugar, grain and sodium limits
on foods in the lunch line and
beyond. Schools have long been
required to follow government
nutrition rules if they accept federal reimbursements for free and
reduced-price meals for lowincome students, but the new
standards are stricter.
While many schools have had
success putting the rules in
place, many Republicans say the
standards have posed too many
challenges for school nutrition
officials who must balance serving healthy foods with keeping
participation up in their programs.
The
School
Nutrition
Association, a group of school
nutrition directors, has pushed
Congress to ease the whole grain
and sodium standards and eliminate the stipulation that all children buying a full lunch take a
fruit or vegetable. They are also
seeking a higher federal reimbursement rate.
Democrats, including Mrs.
Obama, would like to leave the
standards alone and argue that
they are working.
Beyond school lunch, child
nutrition programs expiring at
the end of the month include the
Agriculture
Department’s
Women, Infants and Children
program for new and expecting
mothers and their children, summer feeding programs and other
government institutional food
aid.
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan.,
chairman of the Senate
Agriculture Committee, is negotiating with the panel’s top
Democrat, Debbie Stabenow of
Michigan, to get a bipartisan bill.
He said this week that changes
to the sodium standards are a
priority.
The 2012 standards Soalready
lowered salt levels in school
meals, with even lower sodium
levels set to start in two years.
Some schools have said they will
have to take many popular items
off their menus if the 2017 levels
go into effect.
Jessica Shelly, food service
director at Cincinnati’s urban
public schools, says the new
standards would mean she
couldn’t serve soy sauce or hot
sauce with some items, condiments that have helped her get
kids to eat healthier foods like
greens.
“We need to take care of that,”
Roberts said of the upcoming
sodium rules. “You are serving
kids food that some people would
like to mandate that they eat, but
they are simply not eating it.”
After a GOP bid to let some
schools have a one-year exemption from the standards failed
last year, Congress passed legislation that would allow schools to
temporarily request waivers from
some of the whole grain requirements and put off the 2017 sodium standards until further study
proved those reductions are
needed. The Senate bill could
make those changes permanent.
Stabenow seems unwilling to
go along with that, saying
Congress has already compromised. She says she wants to
“depoliticize” school meals.
Rep. John Kline, R-Minn.,
chairman
of
the
House
Education
and
Workforce
Committee, is also negotiating a
bill and has signaled he wants
changes. But that panel has not
given a timeline for any action.
Democrats are hoping time is
on their side as students, school
officials and food companies
AP Photo
in this file Photo, fruit and vegetables are served during lunch at the Patrick Henry Elementary
School in Alexandria, Va. Congress will have to decide soon whether it wants another food fight with first
lady Michelle Obama and the administration over what’s served in the school lunch line. School food
rules pitted Republicans seeking full exemptions for some schools against Obama in 2014, with the first
lady declaring she’d fight “to the bitter end” to make sure kids have good nutrition.
have now had three years to
adjust to the healthier food standards. The administration has
been working with schools to
make sure they can put the rules
in place successfully.
“That message is beginning to
penetrate
and
resonate,”
Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack said in an interview. “It’s
a different climate.”
Mrs. Obama has continued to
champion the standards’ success, but she has tempered her
tone somewhat as Congress
works on the issue.
“We all need to work together
on this issue, because we know
that issues like child nutrition,
it’s not about politics,” she said
at an event this week. “This is
about giving our children a fair
U.S., Cuba to resume
mail service this year;
other steps are near
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
United States and Cuba should
be able to transform their new
diplomatic relationship into a
deeper commercial partnership
before the end of the year, with
direct postal service to begin and
an agreement on regularly scheduled commercial flights between
the two countries, an American
official said.
Washington also plans to publish new regulations soon making
it easier for U.S. citizens to visit
the island and do business with
its growing ranks of independent
entrepreneurs.
The official, who is familiar
with the diplomacy, described
significant progress in U.S.Cuban discussions since the former Cold War foes reopened
embassies in their respective
countries in July. At a meeting in
Havana last week, delegations
from each side established a plan
to settle a half-century of economic and legal disputes within
the next 15 months.
While difficult questions related to human rights and compensation claims won’t be
resolved immediately, the official said first steps toward a
broader normalization of ties
would come quickly.
First, the Obama administration intends to move on its own
in the coming days by releasing
a new set of rules designed to
loosen the U.S. economic
embargo on Cuba, said the official, who wasn’t authorized to
publicly lay out the process and
demanded anonymity.
The goal is to pick up where
President Barack Obama left off
in January, when he eased economic restrictions on Cuba in
potentially the most dramatic
manner since relations between
the countries broke down after
Fidel Castro’s revolution in 1959
and the subsequent Bay of Pigs
invasion and Cuban missile crisis. The action sought to cut red
tape for U.S. travel to Cuba, permit American companies to
export telephones, computers
and Internet technology, and
allow U.S. firms to send supplies to private Cuban enterprises.
But efforts to expand busi-
ness, tourism and other
exchanges have run into an
overlapping thicket of U.S. laws
and hindrances, not to mention
an uneven response from
Cuba’s political leaders, the U.S.
official said.
Many U.S. travelers still need
to go on supervised group trips.
Routine airline service hasn’t
satisfied various federal conditions. Cruise ships and ferries
are still trying to finalize regular
maritime routes with Cuban
authorities. Credit card and
other companies still can’t
transfer payments to Cuba.
Telecommunications companies
haven’t been able to set up shop
and get equipment to the island
90 miles south of Florida. And
Cuba’s government isn’t even
running its Internet connections
anywhere near capacity levels.
The new U.S. rules should
help cut through some of these
bureaucratic hurdles, the official said, though he declined to
describe all the legal changes in
concrete terms. Only Congress
can end the embargo, and much
of the foreseen expansion of
U.S.-Cuban economic ties rests
on the cooperation of the
island’s communist government.
The U.S.-Cuban political
track moved ahead Thursday as
new ambassador Jose Ramon
Cabanas Rodriguez presented
his credentials to Obama at a
White House ceremony. The pair
briefly spoke, according to a
Cuban embassy statement.
Meanwhile, Verizon joined
online home renter Airbnb as
the second major U.S. company
to begin operations in Cuba
since the declaration of détente.
American travelers can buy
pay-as-you-go plans that cost
$2.99 per minute for voice calls
and $2.05 per megabyte of data.
The costs are high, but similar
to those offered by non-U.S.
companies for voice calls in
Cuba and cheaper than average
for data roaming.
When Obama laid out his
vision of improved relations
eight months ago, he said his
objectives were twofold: ease
economic hardship in Cuba and
spur its development of a private
market outside of state control.
McCain: U.S.
should ignore
China’s claims
in S. China Sea
AP Photo
President BArAck Obama poses for a photograph with, from left, Oregon National
Guardsman Alek Skarlatos, Air Force Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone, and Anthony Sadler, in
the Oval Office of the White House in Washington Thursday to honor them for heroically subduing
a gunman on a passenger train in Paris last month.
Obama: Trio who thwarted train
attack are the ‘best of America’
WASHINGTON (AP) — This
time, they suited up.
The three young Americans
who thwarted a gunman on a
Paris-bound passenger train
last month got their moment in
the Oval Office on Thursday —
and they dressed for it.
President Barack Obama
praised
Alek
Skarlatos,
Spencer Stone and Anthony
Sadler for teamwork, courage
and quick-thinking actions
that averted “a real calamity.”
He celebrated them as three
friends who had been headed
for a fun reunion in Paris when
they “ended up engaging a
potential catastrophic situation
and pinning down someone
who clearly was intent on doing
a lot of harm to a lot of people,
inflicting terror on the French
people.”
The three sat attentively on
an Oval Office couch and chair
as Obama praised them as “the
very best of America.”
They previously had been
awarded France’s highest
honor by President Francois
Hollande. They showed up for
that hastily scheduled ceremony at the ornate Elysee Palace
a little underdressed, in polo
shirts and khakis.
This time, Oregon National
Guardsman Skarlatos and
Airman 1st Class Stone were in
military uniform, and Sadler, a
senior at Sacramento State
University, wore a sport coat
and open-collared dress shirt.
“It’s these kinds of young
people who make me extraordinarily optimistic about the
future,” Obama said.
The three last month subdued a man with ties to radical
Islam who boarded the train
with a Kalashnikov rifle, a pistol and a box cutter. A British
businessman and a FrenchAmerican also have been
praised for their efforts to stop
the gunman.
As for what the future holds,
Obama said Stone, whose hand
was injured in the attack, is
“making real progress” and
intends to pursue work in medicine, Sadler is studying sports
medicine and therapy, and
Skarlatos, “as soon as he’s finished on ‘Dancing with the
Stars,’ plans to get into law
enforcement.”
“Whatever they do,” the president added, “they’re going to
do it well.”
After visiting the White
House, the three were off to the
Pentagon to pick up more honors.
Air Force Secretary Deborah
Lee James presented Stone
with the Purple Heart in recognition of the injuries he suffered, and he also received the
Airman’s Medal. Skarlatos was
awarded the Soldier’s Medal,
and Sadler was given the
Secretary of Defense’s Medal of
Valor.
“When some took cover and
ran, when others were unsure
what to do, these three friends
said, ‘Let’s go,’” Defense
Secretary Ash Carter said.
Carter said their rallying cry
recalled the stirring words of
those aboard the hijacked airliner on 9/11 who shouted,
“Let’s roll,” before charging the
cockpit and forcing the plane to
crash in a Pennsylvania field
before it could reach its intended target.
It’s been a head-snapping
month for the three twentysomethings since their quick
actions on the train transformed them into instant
celebrities.
In addition to their official
honors, the three have
appeared in a California
parade, Sadler had a turn on
“The Tonight Show” with
Jimmy Fallon, and Skarlatos is
“DWTS” material on ABC.
U.S. starts carrying out nuke deal as time expires on GOP
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Obama administration began carrying out the Iran nuclear deal
Thursday as time expired on
Republican efforts to derail it,
appointing a senior diplomat to
ensure that Tehran moves further
away from bomb-making capability and outlining a months-long
process before Western nations
will start easing economic sanctions.
Senators failed to reach the 60vote threshold for a measure to
keep all sanctions in place on Iran
until it recognizes Israel and
releases
all
imprisoned
Americans, and then on a resolution expressing disapproval of the
nuclear agreement. Two previous
votes in recent days against the
Iran deal also failed, and
Congress’ 60-day window to prevent President Barack Obama
from implementing the sevennation pact was set to close
Thursday night.
Shortly after the votes, the
State Department named Stephen
Mull as “lead coordinator for Iran
nuclear implementation.” Mull,
who has served as ambassador to
Poland and in other top diplomatic posts, takes on the “crucial”
shot in life.”
As Congress decides what to
do, school officials want a resolution. Sal Valenza, food service
director for West New York, New
Jersey, says he supports most of
the rules but believes the upcoming sodium standards are too
restrictive. Most of all, though,
he wants more certainty as he
plans his schools’ meals.
responsibility of shepherding an
agreement “which will make the
United States, our friends and
allies in the Middle East, and the
entire world safer,” Secretary of
State John Kerry said.
To celebrate another benchmark toward securing his biggest
foreign policy achievement,
President Barack Obama stopped
by the State Department’s headquarters on his way home from a
fundraiser and briefly attended a
reception Kerry held for his Iran
team.
The accord clinched by the
U.S., Britain, China, France,
Germany, Russia and Iran on
July 14 will provide Iran hundreds of billions of dollars in relief
from international sanctions in
exchange for a decade of constraints on the country’s nuclear
program. While the GOP-led
Congress’ objections posed the
last serious threat to the package,
the sides will need months to put
the deal into place.
Washington expects Tehran to
begin on Oct. 18 making major
changes to its main site for
enriching uranium at Nantanz,
its underground nuclear facility
at Fordo and its heavy water reac-
tor at Arak. Uranium can be
enriched as part of fuel production or for nuclear weapons development.
At Nantanz, Iran will have to
uninstall thousands of centrifuges and place them in storage
controlled
by
the
U.N’s
International Atomic Energy
Agency. It must also remove electrical
infrastructure
and
pipework. The entire process
could take months, senior U.S.
officials said. They weren’t
authorized to speak publicly on
the process and demanded
anonymity.
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Republican senators pressed the
Pentagon on Thursday to flex U.S.
military muscle by sailing Navy
ships within 12 miles of artificial
islands Beijing is building to
assert its territorial claims in the
South China Sea.
John McCain, R-Ariz., chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, said the U.S.
needs to go within the 12-mile
limit to make it clear that the U.S.
does not recognize China’s claim
that the islands are its territory.
“This is a dangerous mistake
that grants de facto recognition of
China’s man-made sovereignty
claims,” McCain said at a committee hearing held ahead of the
Chinese president’s visit to the
U.S. on Sept. 25.
While not violating international law, McCain said China sent its
own naval vessels within 12 nautical miles of the Aleutian Islands
as President Barack Obama concluded his recent visit to Alaska.
The U.S. should assert its right of
navigation “just as forcefully,”
McCain said.
U.S. ships haven’t sailed within
the 12-mile boundary since 2012,
said David Shear, assistant secretary of defense for Asian and
Pacific security affairs. Adm.
Harry Harris, Jr., commander of
U.S. Pacific Command, said the
U.S. also has not conducted a
direct fly-over of any of the lands
and territories that China recently has reclaimed.
“I agree that the South China
Sea is no more China’s than the
Gulf of Mexico is Mexico’s,” Harris
said.
Senators peppered Harris and
Shear with questions about
whether the Pentagon has asked
the White House for permission to
sail within 12 miles of the manufactured islands and what the
answer has been.
Asked for his military advice,
Harris finally acknowledged that
“I believe that we should be
allowed to exercise freedom of
navigation and maritime flight in
the South China Sea against
those islands.” Harris said he was
awaiting directions from his
superiors.
Under further questioning,
Shear refused to talk about the
ongoing deliberations between
the Pentagon and the White
House, but he said that exercising freedom of navigation around
the islands is just one option.
“Freedom of navigation alone
won’t stop” the Chinese activities,
he said.
China has reclaimed about
3,000 acres in the South China
Sea, triggering repeated objections from the U.S and allies.
“There should be no mistake:
the United States will fly, sail,
and operate wherever international law allows, as U.S. forces
do all over the world,” Carter
said. “After all, turning an underwater rock into an airfield simply
does not afford the rights of sovereignty or permit restrictions on
international air or maritime
transit.”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015— 13
SportS
FRIDAY
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
Sports@clevelandbanner.com
Lady Mustangs leave a
mark on GPS Bruisers
By RICHARD ROBERTS
Banner Sports Editor
It may not have been the best
match Walker Valley has played
this season, but the Lady
Mustangs still played well
enough to shut out Girls
Preparatory School in consecutive sets Thursday night inside
“The Stable,” by scores of 2521, 25-8 and 25-16.
The non-district win puts
Walker Valley at 16-8 on the
season headed into this weekend’s
tournament
in
Brentwood. The Lady Mustangs
sit in second place in District
5-3A at 7-1 with a moderate
chance of moving into first if
the stars align next week, when
district leader Ooltewah (7-0)
visits “The Stable” in a Pink
Night showdown between the
district’s top two teams.
“At the end we played a little
better than we did at the beginning,” said Lady Mustangs
coach Judy Pruett. “We kind of
had, not a lax week but we
went to East Hamilton without
a good practice after being off
last weekend. We had a little
better practice yesterday.”
Sara Wilson started the night
off for Walker Valley with a run
of four aces including back-to-
back-to-back serves with no
return. Kills by Ashlyn Flock
and an ace by Mikayla
Lumpkin set the Lady
Mustangs up with an 11-3
advantage. Following a crushing kill by Madison Pruett, the
Lady Bruisers rallied back to
cut the Walker Valley lead to
17-14. A kill by Alexan
Crittenden and a block by
Pruett put the Lady Mustangs
back out front by five points at
19-14. A Crittenden shot to the
floor and a block off the hands
of Julia McGuire put the home
team out front 21-16. GPS
outscored Walker Valley 5-4
down the stretch before the
Lady Mustangs closed out the
25-21 win.
Madison Russo’s ace helped
the Lady Mustangs take a 4-2
lead in the second set. After a
side out, Walker Valley pushed
out to a 9-3 lead helped along
by GPS miscues and kills by
Flock and McGuire. An ace by
Pruett capped a five-point run
that put Walker Valley on top
13-4. Crittenden, Wilson and
Flock along with Wilson’s ace
in a nine-point Lady Mustangs
run locked up the 25-8 win.
Crittenden once again got
See LADY MUSTANGS, Page 15
Banner photo, JOE CANNON
THE CLEVELAND HIGH Lady Raiders celebrate after Allison Botts (1) sealed a hard fought five-set District 5-AAA victory over Bradley
Central at Jim Smiddy Arena, Thursday evening.
Lady Raiders rally past Bearettes
By JOE CANNON
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
Photo by PAUL PRUETT
WALKER VALLEY SENIOR Madison Pruett gets a kill
between the outstretched arms of a GPS defender during volleyball action inside “The Stable” Thursday, at WVHS.
In typical archrivalry fashion, Cleveland
High and Bradley Central battled to the final
point in Thursday evening’s District 5-AAA
heated volleyball action at Jim Smiddy Arena.
After the crosstown adversaries split the
first four sets, the tiebreaker was as close as
it could get before the Lady Raiders got backto-back kills from senior Allison Botts to
notch a 15-13 win to claim victory in the battle.
“This was a big win for us. We needed it,”
declared an elated Cleveland coach Trish
Flowers after the 3-2 victory. “We haven’t
played well all week and we were flat again at
times tonight, but to be able to come back
and win anyway let us know when we are able
to play our game, we can stay with anyone.”
“This is the way our district has been this
year,” she added. “It’s still too early to tell who
is going to be where in the top three spots for
the tournament.”
With the 20-25, 25-7, 21-25, 25-19, 15-13
victory, the Lady Raiders are now 17-6 on the
season and 5-3 in district play, while the
Bearettes slip to .500 on the campaign at 9-9,
plus are 2-7 in 5-AAA action.
At 24-6 overall and unbeaten in nine league
matches, Ooltewah holds the top spot in the
district, while Walker Valley is second at 16-8
and 7-1.
Cleveland and Walker Valley, along with
Ooltewah and Soddy-Daisy, are heading to
Middle Tennessee to participate in the
Brentwood Invitational this weekend. “It
should a weekend of some very good competition,” Flowers assessed.
As for Thursday night’s action, Bradley
pulled away from an 9-all tie in the opening
set with a 7-3 run. After the visitors closed the
gap back to a pair, Bearette senior Natalie
Jennings stepped behind the service line to
drill aces sandwiched around a slam by classmate Monica Johnson to push the advantage
to a half dozen.
The teams traded points the rest of the
game before Cleveland was called for “in the
net” on set point to give the hosts a 1-0 lead.
Game 2 was all Lady Raiders as the girls in
Red, White and Blue scored the first half
dozen points and continued to build their lead
throughout to 18-3 and 23-7 before wrapping
up the win with an ace by senior setter Kellee
Geren and a dink by freshman Anna
Renshaw.
After Cleveland scored the opening four
points of the third set and built a 9-3 edge
that grew to a 20-12 deficit, Bradley appeared
to wake up and fought back to score 13 of the
final 14 points to go up 2-1 in the game
count.
“We lost our setter in the third game when
See RALLY, Page 14
Lady Mustangs suffer first District 5-AAA loss
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
The first day of the Cleveland
Classic started off with a bang
Thursday, as all three local teams
found themselves involved in
some heated soccer action.
The day began with two undefeated District 5-AAA teams,
Walker Valley and Soddy-Daisy,
duking it out to see who would
remain perfect in district play.
It took a total of 91 minutes
and 30 seconds before SoddyDaisy emerged as the winner of a
3-2 game.
“The game was back and forth,
and a great game for the spectators, but I felt like we let this one
slip [away],” Lady Mustang coach
Nathan Brown said. “The girls
worked as hard as they could and
brought intensity, but there were
just some things that we didn’t
execute.”
Following Thursday’s match,
Soddy has finished out district
play with a perfect 6-0 record,
while Walker Valley is 4-1 with
their final 5-AAA game coming up
against McMinn County on Sept.
24.
The match started out in the
Lady Mustangs’ favor.
Nine minutes into play, Jade
Mayo was able to give Walker
Valley a 1-0 lead, thanks to a
penalty kick. Just seven minutes
later, Taylor Ellis made it a 2-0
game.
Soddy was unable to answer in
the first half, but saw its offense
spring to life in the second half
thanks to the efforts of Anna
Lanter and Rachel Rasmussen.
“I think it had a lot to do with
the mentality. We scored two
goals and then the mentality was
to almost sit back and not really
attack,” Brown explained. “We
needed to get out of the field, we
needed to possess the ball more
and we needed to possess the ball
in their half a little more, but we
just didn’t do that.”
Lanter
connected
with
Rasmussen in the 58th minute to
cut the Lady Mustang lead to just
one.
A penalty kick in the last seven
minutes of regulation let Lanter
tie the game up at two.
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
WALKER VALLEY’S Kendall Harris (right) works the ball along the side during Thursday’s District 5AAA battle with Soddy-Daisy.
While in stoppage play, a free
kick by Mya Patel and then a shot
by Ellis came close to snagging a
win for Walker Valley, but both
attempts turned out to be a half
foot too high.
Having played 80 minutes and
ending regulation tied at two, the
Lady Mustangs and the Lady
Trojans were forced to settle
things in overtime.
After the first 10 minutes of
overtime went by scoreless, the
two teams got their answer just
90 seconds into the second overtime, when Lanter scored the
game winning golden goal for
Soddy-Daisy.
“Moises (Drummond) is a great
coach and Soddy has done very
well. Anna Lanter is a great, great
player; you have to give her credit
for that,” Brown stated.
The Lady Mustangs are looking
to pick up a pair of victories on
Saturday, when they play
Oakland (3-1-2) at 10 a.m. and
Cookeville (6-2-1) at 3 p.m. on
the lower field of the Greater
Cleveland Soccer Complex.
“I just want some good performances,” Brown stated.
“There’s some things that we’re
going to talk about [today] for
Saturday that we have to work on
— hopefully we’ll execute one
Saturday.”
LADY RAIDERS 2,
BEARETTES 0
A month of improvement time
for both Cleveland and Bradley
Central was evident in Thursday
night’s final match of the
Cleveland Classic.
In their initial, District 5-AAA
game, the Lady Raiders had to
battle back to pick up a 6-5 win
over the Bearettes. A month later,
the two squads played tighter
and cleaner game, with Cleveland
coming away with a 2-0 win.
See DISTRIT 5-AAA, Page 15
Banner file photo, JOE CANNON
WALKER VALLEY senior Katie Medley earned low-medalist
honors at the Region 3-AAA Tournament at Lake Tansi in
Crossville on Thursday, and will be one of three locals participating in the TSSAA Girls’ State Championship later this month.
’Stangs, trio earn
TSSAA state berths
By JOE CANNON
our boys today (Thursday),
but our girls had some problems,” declared veteran coach Bob
Williams, who has
sent either a team or
individual to the
state tournament in
each of his 10 years
as the Walker Valley
link mentor.
“That’s golf. Some
McCracken
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
CROSSVILLE — In a
near repeat of the
2011 Region 3-AAA
Tournament, Walker
Valley galloped away
with the boys’ title and
a TSSAA state berth,
but
the
Lady
Mustangs were edged
by a nose at the wire.
“Everything went right for
See STATE, Page 15
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
ON AIR
Sports on TV
Friday, Sept. 18
AUTO RACING
9:30 a.m.
NBCSN — Formula One, Grand Prix Practice, at Singapore
10 a.m.
FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, practice, at
Joliet, Ill.
12:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Joliet,
Ill.
2 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, practice, at Joliet, Ill.
4:30 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, qualifying, at
Joliet, Ill.
6:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, qualifying, at Joliet,
Ill.
8:30 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, The
American Ethanol 225, at Joliet, Ill.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
7:30 p.m.
ESPNU — Hampton at Howard
8 p.m.
ESPN — Florida State at Boston College
GOLF
2 a.m.
GOLF — Women’s, Solheim Cup, Day 1, match play, at St.
Leon-Rot, Germany
7 a.m.
GOLF — Women’s, Solheim Cup, Day 1, afternoon match
play, at St. Leon-Rot, Germany
12:30 p.m.
GOLF — WEB.com, Small Business Connection
Championship, second-round, at Davidson, N.C.
3 p.m.
GOLF — PGA, BMW Championship, second-round, at Lake
Forest, Ill.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
2 p.m.
MLB — St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
7 p.m.
MLB — N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets or Miami at Washington
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
10 p.m.
NBCSN — World Series of Fighting, lightweight, Justin
Gaethje vs. Luis Palomino
SOCCER
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — Bundesliga, Hoffenheim at Mainz
WNBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
NBA — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal, Washington at New
York
9 p.m.
NBA — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal, Los Angeles at
Minnesota
Saturday, Sept. 19
12 a.m.
GOLF — European Tour, Italian Open, second-round, at
Monza, Italy
2 a.m.
GOLF — Women’s, Solheim Cup, second day, match play,
at St. Leon-Rot, Germany
Saturday, Sept. 19
AUTO RACING
2:45 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, qualifying, at Joliet,
Ill.
4:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Joliet,
Ill.
6 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY SERIES, the Furious 7 300,
at Joliet, Ill.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
12 p.m.
ESPN — Conneticut at Missouri
12 p.m.
ESPNU — South Florida at Maryland
12 p.m.
ABC — Air Force at Michigan State
12 p.m.
FS1 — Tulsa at Oklahoma
3:30 p.m.
CBS — Auburn at LSU
3:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Northern Illinois at Ohio State
3:30 p.m.
ESPNU — Virginia Tech at Purdue
3:30 p.m.
FS1 — Texas SA at Oklahoma State
3:30 p.m.
NBC — Georgia Tech at Notre Dame
4 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Kentucky at Indiana
6 p.m.
ESPN — South Carolina at Georgia
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — Texas Tech at Arkansas
7 p.m.
ESPNU — West Carolina at Tennessee
7:30 p.m.
FOX — California at Texas
8 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Iowa State at Toledo
8:00 p.m.
ABC — Stanford at USC
9:15 p.m.
ESPN — Ole Miss at Alabama
10:30 p.m.
FS1 — BYU at UCLA
GOLF
2 a.m.
GOLF — Women's, Solheim Cup, match play, at St. LeonRot, Germany
12 p.m.
NBC — PGA, BMW Championship, third-round, at Lake
Forest, Ill.
3:30 p.m.
GOLF — PGA, BMW Championship, third-round, at Lake
Forest, Ill.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
12:30 p.m.
FOX — TBA
7 p.m.
FS1 — Kansas City at Detroit
SOCCER
7:30 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Arsenal at Chelsea
9:30 a.m.
FS1 — Budesliga, Bayern Munich at Darmstadt 98
10 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, TBA
12:30 p.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, West Ham at Manchester City
ON TAP
Friday, Sept. 18
FOOTBALL
Lancaster Christian at TCPS, 7:30
Region 1-6A
Bradley Central at Jefferson County, 7:30
Hardin Valley at Dobyns-Bennett, 7:30
Maryville at Science Hill, 7:30
William Blount at Bearden, 7:30
Region 4-5A
Cleveland at McMinn County, 7:30
Rhea County at Ooltewah, 7:30
Soddy-Daisy at White County, 7
Walker Valley has bye
Region 3-2A
Silverdale at Meigs County, 7:30
Boyd Buchanan at Tyner, 7:30
Marion County at Brainerd, 7:30
Bledsoe County at Polk County, 8
SOCCER
Cleveland Classic
At Greater Cleveland Soccer Complex
McMinn Central vs. Cleveland, 4
Dobyns-Bennett vs. Maryville, 5 (lower field)
Cookeville vs. Oakland, 6
Soddy-Daisy vs. Blackman, 8
VOLLEYBALL
Cleveland, Walker Valley at Brentwood Tournament
Saturday, Sept. 19
CROSS COUNTRY
Bradley Central at Hardin Valley Invitational, Knoxville, 9
SOCCER
Oakland City (Ind.) at Lee (M), 7
Cleveland Classic
At Greater Cleveland Soccer Complex
Dobyns-Bennett vs. Cookeville, 8 a.m.
Walker Valley vs. Oakland, 10 a.m.
Soddy-Daisy vs. Maryville, 10 a.m. (lower field)
Blackman vs. Cleveland, 12
Bradley vs. McMinn Central, 3
Cookeville vs. Walker Valley, 3 (lower field)
Dobyns-Bennett vs. Blackman, 5
Oakland vs. Bradley Central, 7
VOLLEYBALL
Cleveland, Walker Valley at Brentwood Tournament
Saturday, Sept. 20
SOCCER
Lee (W) at North Alabama, 1
BASEBALL
National League
East Division
W L Pct GB
New York
83
63 .568 —
Washington
75
71 .514 8
Miami
64
83 .435 19½
Atlanta
57
90 .388 26½
Philadelphia
56
91 .381 27½
Central Division
W L Pct GB
St. Louis
92
54 .630 —
Pittsburgh
87
59 .596 5
Chicago
85
61 .582 7
Milwaukee
62
84 .425 30
Cincinnati
61
84 .421 30½
West Division
W L Pct GB
Los Angeles
84
61 .579 —
San Francisco
77
69 .527 7½
Arizona
69
77 .473 15½
San Diego
69
78 .469 16
Colorado
61
85 .418 23½
Thursday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 9, Pittsburgh 6
Miami 6, Washington 4
Toronto 5, Atlanta 0
St. Louis 6, Milwaukee 3
Friday’s Games
St. Louis (Lynn 11-10) at Chicago Cubs (Haren 9-9), 2:20
Miami (Fernandez 5-0) at Washington (Scherzer 12-11),
7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 12-6) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 3-0), 7:10
Philadelphia (Morgan 5-6) at Atlanta (W.Perez 5-6), 7:35
Cincinnati (Finnegan 0-0) at Milwaukee (Z.Davies 1-1), 8:10
San Diego (Kennedy 8-14) at Colorado (Bettis 7-5), 8:40
Pittsburgh (Locke 8-10) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 17-3),
10:10 p.m.
Arizona (R.De La Rosa 12-8) at San Francisco (Bumgarner
18-7), 10:15 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 10-8) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 8-6),
1:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Wacha 16-5) at Chicago Cubs (Undecided), 1:05
Arizona (Corbin 5-4) at San Francisco (Leake 10-8), 4:05
Miami (Nicolino 3-3) at Washington (Zimmermann 12-8),
4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Jos.Smith 0-2) at Milwaukee (Jungmann 9-6),
7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-3) at Atlanta (Weber 0-1), 7:10 p.m.
San Diego (Erlin 0-0) at Colorado (Flande 3-3), 8:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Liriano 10-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 14-6),
9:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Miami (B.Hand 4-6) at Washington (Strasburg 9-7), 1:35
Philadelphia (Nola 6-2) at Atlanta (Teheran 10-7), 1:35 p.m.
Cincinnati (DeSclafani 9-10) at Milwaukee (A.Pena 1-0),
2:10 p.m.
St. Louis (C.Martinez 13-7) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 10-10),
2:20 p.m.
Arizona (Hellickson 9-9) at San Francisco (T.Hudson 7-8),
4:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (G.Cole 16-8) at L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 9-8),
4:10 p.m.
San Diego (Shields 12-6) at Colorado (J.Gray 0-1), 4:10
N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 4-9) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 12-7),
8:05 p.m.
Oakland (Doubront 3-2) at Houston (Fiers 2-1), 8:10 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 10-8) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 8-6),
1:05 p.m.
Boston (Miley 11-10) at Toronto (Dickey 10-11), 4:07 p.m.
Baltimore (W.Chen 9-7) at Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 10-5),
6:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Volquez 13-8) at Detroit (Boyd 1-5), 7:08 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Rodon 7-6) at Cleveland (Carrasco 1310), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Richards 13-11) at Minnesota (Gibson 10-10),
7:10 p.m.
Oakland (S.Gray 13-7) at Houston (Kazmir 7-10), 7:10 p.m.
Seattle (Nuno 1-2) at Texas (Hamels 3-1), 8:05 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Boston (R.Hill 0-0) at Toronto (Buehrle 14-7), 1:07 p.m.
Kansas City (Medlen 4-1) at Detroit (Simon 13-9), 1:08 p.m.
Baltimore (Gausman 3-6) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 8-8), 1:10
Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 7-12) at Cleveland (Tomlin
5-2), 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 7-9) at Minnesota (Duffey 3-1),
2:10 p.m.
Oakland (Brooks 2-3) at Houston (McHugh 16-7), 2:10 p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 17-9) at Texas (D.Holland 3-2), 3:05
N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 4-9) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 12-7),
8:05 p.m.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W
L
T Pct
N.Y. Jets
1
0
0 1.000
Buffalo
1
0
0 1.000
New England
1
0
0 1.000
Miami
1
0
0 1.000
South
W
L
T Pct
Tennessee
1
0
0 1.000
Jacksonville
0
1
0 .000
Indianapolis
0
1
0 .000
Houston
0
1
0 .000
North
W
L
T Pct
Cincinnati
1
0
0 1.000
Baltimore
0
1
0 .000
Pittsburgh
0
1
0 .000
Cleveland
0
1
0 .000
West
W
L
T Pct
Denver
2
0
0 1.000
San Diego
1
0
0 1.000
Kansas City
1
1
0 .500
Oakland
0
1
0 .000
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W
L
T Pct
Dallas
1
0
0 1.000
Washington
0
1
0 .000
Philadelphia
0
1
0 .000
N.Y. Giants
0
1
0 .000
South
W
L
T Pct
Atlanta
1
0
0 1.000
Carolina
1
0
0 1.000
Tampa Bay
0
1
0 .000
New Orleans
0
1
0 .000
North
W
L
T Pct
Green Bay
1
0
0 1.000
Detroit
0
1
0 .000
Minnesota
0
1
0 .000
Chicago
0
1
0 .000
West
W
L
T Pct
St. Louis
1
0
0 1.000
Arizona
1
0
0 1.000
San Francisco
1
0
0 1.000
Seattle
0
1
0 .000
Thursday’s Game
Denver 31, Kansas City 24
Sunday’s Games
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Houston at Carolina, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Washington, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Miami at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m.
Dallas at Philadelphia, 4:25 p.m.
Seattle at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m.
PF
31
27
28
17
PA
10
14
21
10
PF
42
9
14
20
PA
14
20
27
27
PF
33
13
21
10
PA
13
19
28
31
PF
50
33
51
13
PA
37
28
51
33
PF
27
10
24
26
PA
26
17
26
27
PF
26
20
14
19
PA
24
9
42
31
PF
31
28
3
23
PA
23
33
20
31
PF
34
31
20
31
PA
31
19
3
34
GOLF
American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Toronto
84
62 .575 —
New York
80
65 .552 3½
Baltimore
72
74 .493 12
Tampa Bay
70
76 .479 14
Boston
69
76 .476 14½
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Kansas City
86
60 .589 —
Minnesota
75
71 .514 11
Cleveland
72
73 .497 13½
Chicago
69
76 .476 16½
Detroit
67
78 .462 18½
West Division
W L Pct GB
Texas
79
67 .541 —
Houston
77
70 .524 2½
Los Angeles
74
72 .507 5
Seattle
71
76 .483 8½
Oakland
63
84 .429 16½
Thursday’s Games
Oakland 4, Chicago White Sox 2
Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 3
Kansas City 8, Cleveland 4
Toronto 5, Atlanta 0
Texas 8, Houston 2
L.A. Angels 11, Minnesota 8
Friday’s Games
Boston (Porcello 8-12) at Toronto (Stroman 1-0), 7:07 p.m.
Kansas City (Cueto 2-6) at Detroit (Verlander 3-8), 7:08 p.m.
Baltimore (T.Wilson 2-1) at Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-2), 7:10
Chicago White Sox (Sale 12-9) at Cleveland (Co.Anderson
4-3), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 12-6) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 3-0), 7:10
Seattle (Paxton 3-4) at Texas (Gallardo 12-10), 8:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Heaney 6-3) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 6-9), 8:10
BMW Championship Par Scores
Thursday
At Conway Farms Golf Club
Lake Forest, Ill.
Purse: $8.25 million
Yardage: 7,198; Par 71 (35-36)
Partial First Round
Daniel Berger
29-36—65
Brendon Todd
31-35—66
Scott Piercy
34-33—67
Matt Kuchar
35-32—67
Bill Haas
36-32—68
Zach Johnson
35-33—68
Daniel Summerhays
35-35—70
J.B. Holmes
37-33—70
Jason Bohn
37-34—71
Louis Oosthuizen
36-35—71
Dustin Johnson
33-38—71
Pat Perez
38-34—72
Shawn Stefani
38-34—72
Troy Merritt
38-35—73
Ben Martin
39-34—73
Russell Knox
36-38—74
Brooks Koepka
38-37—75
Jim Furyk
WD
LEADERBOARD
SCORE
1. Jason Day
-10
2. Daniel Berger
-6
3. Justin Thomas
-5
3. Kevin Chappell
-5
3. Brendon Todd
-5
3. Jordan Spieth
-5
7. George McNeill
-4
7. Scott Piercy
-4
7. Matt Kuchar
-4
7. Bubba Watson
-4
7. Kevin Na
-4
12. Hunter Mahan
-3
12. Rory McIlroy
-3
12. Danny Lee
-3
12. Sean O’Hair
-3
12. Bill Haas
-3
12. Keegan Bradley
-3
12. Phil Mickelson
-3
12. Harris English
-3
12. Ryan Palmer
-3
12. Zach Johnson
-3
Note: 52 golfers did not complete the round.
Botts finished with 10 kills, 10
digs and a pair of aces, while
sophomore Emma Flowers helped
out with 15 service points, 11
digs, 11 kills, 11 receptions and
an ace.
Stepping up with big nights
were Renshaw and Moffett.
Renshaw, a freshman outside
hitter, committed no errors while
serving up 17 winners, including
four aces, plus she had seven
digs and a half dozen kills.
Moffett, a junior middle blocker/hitter also had no errors with
half of her touches going to 10
kills, to go along with six digs and
a trio of blocks.
“If we handed out game balls
they would go to Renshaw and
Moffett tonight,” praised Coach
Flowers. “They had some big hits,
but the main thing was the no
errors.”
The Lady Raider coach also
praised Geren, who collected 29
service points, 29 assists, 20
digs, three aces and a pair of
kills. “Kellee has been so steady
for so long she is often overlooked, but she is the glue that
holds us together.”
Cleveland also got another
strong performance from junior
libero Lauren Lee with 34 service receptions, 31 digs and 19
service points, including an
ace.
Regan Fuller added seven digs,
two aces, a pair of helps and a kill
to the winning tally.
Bradley’s strong effort was
paced by Jennings with 17 digs,
13 kills, 11 service receptions,
nine aces, a pair of blocks, plus
she assisted on three other
blocks.
Johnson helped out with a
dozen slams, four blocks, an
assisted block and five digs, while
senior Julia Gaither garnered 18
digs, a dozen receptions and
handed out 10 assists.
Senior defensive specialists
BreeLee Arms had 14 digs and
14 service receptions, while
classmate Gabby Ghassedi
returned 15 serves and dug out
11 shots.
Setter Savannah Carroll handed out 20 helps and had 10 digs,
while Missy Abbott dished out 14
assists before going down midway
through the third set.
Hannah Calfee helped out with
10 digs, eight receptions and four
kills, while Reagan Morrison
added a trio of blocks and three
digs.
“We killed ourselves with six
service errors in the tiebreaker
and we lost by two points,”
bemoaned Coach McElhaney.
“We haven’t been able to keep our
mentality up. We have got to stay
focused and finish. We did the
same thing at Ooltewah
(Tuesday). We had one great set
and beat them 25-14 and then we
lost focus.”
Bradley will host East
Hamilton and Soddy-Daisy in
district action Tuesday and
Thursday of next week.
-6
-5
-4
-4
-3
-3
-1
-1
E
E
E
+1
+1
+2
+2
+3
+4
THRU
17
F
13
16
F
17
12
F
F
13
14
12
12
17
14
F
15
15
14
14
F
Rally
From Page 13
she injured her knee, but the
girls rallied and came back to win
it,” remarked Bearette coach
Christie McElhaney.
The momentum swung back to
the Lady Raiders in the fourth set
as they once again raced out to a
quick 8-4 lead before the hosts
clawed back to make it a onepoint game at 10-9.
A spike by Renshaw and backto-back kills by junior Morgan
Moffett sparked the visitors to a
12-4 run before holding off
another Bradley rally for the 2519 win to even the match at two
sets apiece.
Despite all four of the night’s
wins having come to the team on
the west end of the Smiddy Arena
floor, Cleveland chose the east
side for the tie-breaker and the
decision paid off.
After the lead changed hands
three times in the first seven
points, Bradley went on a 6-2 run
for a three-point advantage. True
to the nature of the battle, the
Lady Raiders charged back to
even the score at 9-all and took a
12-11 edge on an ace by
Renshaw.
Bradley got the serve back on
an unforced error and then went
up 13-12 on an ace by senior
Allison Burger.
After Coach Flowers used her
final timeout a service error gave
the ball back to the visitors setting up Botts’ heroics with a hard
slam and an easy “tip” kill on
match point.
Vols need Reeves-Maybin
to continue his fast start
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Even after
developing into one of the
nation’s most prolific tacklers,
Tennessee linebacker Jalen
Reeves-Maybin isn’t satisfied.
He still sees plenty of room for
improvement.
Rather than dwelling on each
of the 21 tackles he made last
week in a 31-24 overtime loss to
Oklahoma,
Reeves-Maybin
picked apart his performance
and looked for what he could
have done differently.
“I feel like I still left a couple of
plays out there that could have
changed the outcome of the
game,” Reeves-Maybin said.
“Really I just focused on the
plays I missed, to get those corrected.”
That approach has helped
Reeves-Maybin evolve into a rising star.
His 21 tackles against
Oklahoma represented the highest single-game total by a
Football Bowl Subdivision player
so far this season. ReevesMaybin’s 30 tackles this season
rank second among all FBS players, behind only Missouri’s
Kentrell Brothers.
Reeves-Maybin also is tied for
seventh nationally with five tackles for loss. The junior from
Clarksville, Tennessee, has
forced and recovered a fumble as
well.
“He has really worked himself
into what I feel is one of the best
linebackers not only in the SEC,
but in the country,” Tennessee
coach Butch Jones said.
The Volunteers need ReevesMaybin more than ever now.
Tennessee’s defense lost its
emotional leader and one of its
top players last week when
defensive end/linebacker Curt
Maggitt chipped a bone in his
hip. Jones hasn’t pinpointed
exactly how much time Maggitt
would miss but has said “it could
be eight weeks, it could be six
weeks, it could be 10 weeks.”
The loss of Maggitt leaves
Tennessee’s defense needing
someone to fill that leadership
void as it gets ready for SEC competition. Tennessee (1-1) hosts
Football
Championship
Subdivision program Western
Carolina (1-1) on Saturday before
opening SEC play Sept. 26 at
Florida.
“Jalen’s going to have to step
up, just as a lot of other guys will
have to,” defensive coordinator
John Jancek said. “Nobody
expects anything less from us.
We still have a job to do, and it’s
going to be leadership by committee.”
AP photo
TENNESSEE LINEBACKER Jalen Reeves-Maybin pumps up the
fans against Oklahoma in Knoxville. The Volunteers need ReevesMaybin to step up even more as they deal with life without injured
defensive end/linebacker Curt Maggitt.
Reeves-Maybin is ready to do
his part.
“Everyone has to step up and
be more vocal with him out,”
Reeves-Maybin said.
Reeves-Maybin’s emergence
shouldn’t come as much of a surprise.
He collected 101 tackles last
season to tie for the team lead
with A.J. Johnson. When
Johnson was suspended for the
final three games of the 2014
season, Reeves-Maybin picked
up the slack and posted 13 tackles in a TaxSlayer Bowl victory
over Iowa.
Reeves-Maybin spent the summer improving his footwork. He
has studied tapes of such standout NFL linebackers as Luke
Kuechly, Bobby Wagner, Navorro
Bowman and Lavonte David.
He entered this season eager to
take the next step in his development. Although Reeves-Maybin
says he didn’t set any specific
goals, he did talk to his former
teammate about one possible
aim.
“I talk to A.J. a lot, and I was
joking with him about getting
more tackles than him,” ReevesMaybin said.
That’s a tall order.
Even though he missed those
final three games last year due to
a rape investigation that eventually resulted in an indictment,
Johnson posted 425 career tackles. That represents Tennessee’s
second-highest tackle total since
the school started measuring the
statistic in 1970. Johnson, who
is scheduled to go on trial in
June, posted his highest singleseason tackle total in 2012 with
138.
But more performances like
his most recent one just might
put Reeves-Maybin within reach.
“He means everything to our
football team and to our
defense,” Jones said. “I can’t say
enough (about) his development.
He’s one of the guys I greatly
admire and respect just because
of his attitude, his character and
everything that he brings to
Tennessee football.”
Clemson outlasts Louisville in ACC opener
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) —
Deshaun Watson threw two
touchdown passes, Wayne
Gallman ran for 139 yards and
No. 11 Clemson held off
Louisville 20-17 on Thursday
night in the Atlantic Coast
Conference opener for both
schools.
Despite ragged stretches
including two interceptions by
Watson, Clemson (3-0, 1-0 followed up routs of Wofford and
Appalachian State with a solid
conference win. The sophomore
was spot on when needed, finding Hunter Renfrow and Jordan
Leggett wide open down the middle for TD passes of 32 and 25
yards, respectively.
Louisville (0-3, 0-1) started its
third quarterback in three games
with Kyle Bolin, and used freshman Lamar Jackson and sophomore Reggie Bonnafon behind
center in a search for offensive
consistency. The combination
kept the Cardinals within reach
of Clemson long enough to have a
last shot at a win, but Bolin’s
desperation pass was intercepted
by Jadar Johnson in the final
seconds.
The ending left Clemson players and fans relieved and happy
with their second straight escape
over Louisville, which has its first
0-3 start since 1984.
After exiting last year’s victory
over the Cardinals early with a
broken hand, Watson completed
21 of 30 passes for 199 yards.
Gallman rushed 24 times for his
season-high yardage and helped
the Tigers outgain the Cardinals
401-272.
Clemson
also
spoiled
Louisville’s second nationally televised appearance in three
games, one that featured the
presence of former heavyweight
boxing champion Muhammad Ali
in his hometown.
Fans, meanwhile, dressed in
black as part of a promotion that
featured the Cardinals dressed in
all-black helmets and uniforms
AP photo
CLEMSON qUARTERBACK Deshaun Watson throws a pass
under pressure from Louisville's Sheldon Rankins in the first half
Thursday, in Louisville, Ky.
with old English lettering.
Watson eventually settled
down from a slow start that
included James Burgess’ onehanded interception of his firstquarter pass to direct Clemson’s
first touchdown drive early in the
second. He had plenty of time to
find Renfrow for the 36-yard
strike with 13:12 remaining for a
7-0 lead.
Louisville’s only first-half
answer was John Wallace’s 26yard field goal set up by Bolin’s
55-yard pass to Jalen Smith, a
play that comprised nearly half of
its 117 yards in the first 30 minutes. It also summed up the
Cardinals’ offensive struggle
whether Bolin, Jackson or
Bonnafon was on the field.
The Cardinals remained within
reach and got to 20-17 in the
fourth quarter on Traveon
Samuel’s 100-yard kickoff return
touchdown with 9:41 left.
Wallace’s 38-yard attempt sailed
wide left with 2:28 left, but
Louisville still positioned itself to
go for the win before Bolin’s pass
was picked off.
Bolin was 19 of 34 for 238
yards with two interceptions.
Clemson kept the heat on all
three quarterbacks, registering
five sacks.
Greg Huegel had field goals of
36 and 27 yards for Clemson.
Already short-handed with the
absence of several players
including wideout Mike Williams
(neck), the Tigers had right tackles Jake Fruhmorgen and Joe
Gore go to the sidelines with
injuries.
Gore
eventually
returned late in the first quarter,
but Fruhmorgen sat on a trainer’s table with his left leg
wrapped in ice.
Charleston Southern rushes
past East Tennessee State
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) —
Mike Holloway had two of
Charleston Southern’s five rushing touchdowns and the
Buccaneers beat East Tennessee
State 47-7 on Thursday night.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—15
Manning, Broncos complete stunning comeback
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —
Peyton Manning and the Denver
Broncos have beaten the Kansas
City Chiefs every way imaginable
over the years, from playoff
shootouts to defensive tug-ofwars.
Well, not quite every way. Not
until Thursday night.
Denver cornerback Bradley
Roby returned Jamaal Charles’
second fumble 21 yards for a
touchdown with 27 seconds left,
completing a stunning comeback
in the closing minute for a 31-24
victory — the Broncos’ seventh
straight over their AFC West
rivals.
“I’m not quite sure I’d ever
been in one quite like that,”
Manning said. “That was a new
one.”
Manning threw for 256 yards
and three scores, the last to
Emmanuel Sanders with 36 seconds left as the Broncos (2-0)
appeared to force overtime. But
on the next play from scrimmage,
with the Chiefs (1-1) also eyeing
overtime, Charles was stripped
by Brandon Marshall and the
ball bounced right into Roby’s
hands.
The dramatic about-face came
after Knile Davis gave Kansas
City the lead with 2:27 left on an
8-yard run, raising hope among
a sellout crowd that the Chiefs
might finally end some curses.
Instead, Denver won its 13th
straight division road game,
breaking a tie with the San
“Dylan (Lillard) has been a
great leader for our younger
players,” praised
Coach
Williams. “They get out a lot in
the summer and play together.
They are good friends as well as
teammates.”
Walker Valley’s 309 tally held
off Cookeville by a half dozen
strokes, but Cavaliers Will
Brooks and Jared Funderburk
earned individual state berths
with 77s. Bracton Womack of
Warren County and Cumberland
County’s Zach Young both carded a 79s for the other two spots.
Cleveland High sophomore
Drew Linkous just missed out on
a state bid with an 80, while
Raider teammate Cade Caprara
struggled with a 91.
In the girls’ team race, Medley
and Hall tied for the low score
with 6-over 78s, but the Lady
Mustang senior was able to earn
the low medalist award on the
first hole of a playoff.
After shooting even par on the
back nine to begin her round,
Medley stumbled to a 42 on the
front side, while Hall, who finished 14th at the TSSAA
Championship last fall, did the
opposite with a 42 before the
break and rallying with a 36 on
the final nine holes.
“Rheagan played well except
for one bad hole. She quadrupled
17,” explained Cleveland coach
Nick Cantrell. “She did a great
job of putting that hole behind
her and finishing strong with a
36 on the front nine. That
showed a lot of mental toughness. We are excited and looking
forward to going back to the
state tournament.”
While Medley was having one
of her strongest outings of the
season, Walker Valley teammate
Kelsey Cassada had a rare off
day. The junior who also defeated Hall in a playoff for low
medalist honors at last week’s
District 5-AAA Tournament, had
a very uncharacteristic 49 on the
back nine holes before trimming
her score to a 42 on the front
side.
“Things just kept getting worse
for Kelsey and there wasn’t any-
thing she could do about it,”
Coach Williams related. “Even
Whitney (Kincaid), who has been
such a strong third for us had
trouble today, shooting 98. Some
days are just like that.”
With Walker Valley’s 169 leaving the door open, Warren
County was able to slip in to
claim the girls’ region crown with
a 168 as Saylem Powell earned
fourth low-medalist honors with
an 82, while Brynn Craven shot
an 86.
Bradley Central claimed third
place in the region event with a
180. Williams earned a return
trip to the state field with an 4740 — 87, while Blair Terrell shot
93.
Soddy-Daisy’s Jayla Sims is
also going to Manchester after an
80 earned her third low medalist.
State
From Page 13
days everything goes great and
others you can’t seem to get anything to go right,” he added. “It
seems like the Cookeville boys
have had our number for the last
several years, but we were able
to get it done today.”
Four years ago, both Mustang
squads earned a spot in the
Class AAA State Championships,
with the Walker Valley girls earning a runner-up finish, while the
Stallions had to settle for sixth
place.
This time around, the
Mustangs, plus a trio of local
girls — Walker Valley senior Katie
Medley, Cleveland High sophomore Rheagan Hall and Bradley
Central junior Olivia Williams —
will make the trip to WillowBrook
in Manchester Sept. 29-30 to vie
for a state crown.
While Lee University commit
Dylan Lillard has led the
Mustangs all season, it was
sophomore Nick McCracken who
stole the limelight Thursday at
Lake Tansi, firing a 3-over-par
75 to claim low medalist honors.
“I think Nick had been low
medalist in one of our nine-hole
matches this season, but this is
his first time to do it in an 18hole event,” explained Coach
Williams. “He had good year with
a 39 nine-hole average, but for
him to do what he did today was
awesome.”
McCracken fired a 2-over 38
on the front nine and then finished up with the best back nine
among the boys with a 37.
Lillard, who will be returning
to the state tournament for the
second straight year, was just a
stroke behind his young teammate shooting 38 on both sides
of the course for a 4-over 76 and
second low-medalist honors.
Sophomore Cade Puryear had
the lead at the turn after an even
par front nine, but slipped to a
42 on the back for a 78 and the
boys’ fifth best tally.
Classmate Parker Gray rounded out the winning total with an
80, carding a 38 before the turn
and a 42 down the back stretch.
Senior Cory Rollins posted an 87
in support of the Mustang total.
Lady Mustangs
From Page 13
the Lady Mustangs off to a solid
start in the final set with an ace
to set Walker Valley up with a 30 lead. Kills by flock and Pruett
helped build a 7-3 lead. Walker
Valley stayed just ahead of the
battling Bruisers finally pushing
their way to a 15-9 advantage
behind kills from flock and
Pruett. A Russo block and kills
from Pruett and McGuire made it
19-10. GPS picked up three
straight points to cut the Walker
Valley lead to 20-15 before the
Lady Mustangs turned the tables
with consecutive points highlighted by a Kaley Walker ace.
Wilson got a final kill for the Lady
Mustangs before a side out
locked up the 25-16 victory.
“We have to be at the top of our
game tomorrow because we play
some top competition in
Brentwood. It’s going to be a
tough tournament,” said Pruett.
“At the end of the match, I feel
like we played a little bit better.
Hopefully we will be playing pretty good this weekend.”
With less than a month to pre-
District 5-AAA
From Page 13
With district play winding
down in the next week, Cleveland
coach Andy Byrd knows that if
his team faces Bradley a third
time, in the district tournament,
things could get even more interesting.
“The theme is ‘It’s hard to beat
a team twice,’ but the real theme
is it’s hard to beat a team three
times,” Byrd stated. “They’re
great off the bench, Chrissy
(McKinney) has them going and
they’re pumped up.”
The energy brought forth by
her team was one of McKinney’s
favorite aspects of Thursday
evening.
“The girls on our bench were a
part of that. I told them at halftime that the positive energy
coming off the bench was evident
on the field,” the Bearette coach
commented. “I’m really happy
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
CLEVELAND’S JORDAN WAGERS (2) pulls away from Bradley
Central’s Haley Yarber (back) during the final game of the night at the
Cleveland Classic.
Francisco 49ers (1987-90) for
most in NFL history. And for one
night, Manning quieted his growing doubters by improving to 141 in his career against the
Chiefs.
“I’ve been involved in a couple
of pretty crazy games,” he said,
“but nothing quite like this.”
Charles finished with 125 yards
rushing and a touchdown, but he
will only remember his fumbles —
one in the red zone early in the
game, the other deep in his own
territory late in the game.
“I have to be careful with the
ball,” Charles said. “It’s my
fault.”
Alex Smith threw for 191 yards
for Kansas City, but also had two
passes picked off.
“We thought we had it won,”
Davis said. “Unfortunately, they
made the touchdown and it was
our time to overcome and win the
game, and we couldn’t finish. It
was an emotional rollercoaster.”
Manning threw a pick-six of
his own, but he responded when
it mattered the most.
The Broncos took over at their
own 20 after Davis had given
Kansas City the lead, and the
seven-time All-Pro marched
them calmly down field. Manning
found Demaryius Thomas for
three long receptions to get deep
into Chiefs territory, then hit
Sanders with a strike over the
middle on third-and-10 from the
Chiefs 19 for the touchdown that
kept Denver alive.
“That last drive was really
good,” said Manning, who joined
that our team was a part of this,
because I think it was good, positive play and we were competitive. It was a clean game tonight
and I’m proud of both teams.”
Sam DeBien notched the first
goal for the Lady Raiders in the
sixth minute, with a second goal
coming from Michaela Bader in
the 73rd minute.
“Losing on corner kicks is a
sad way to lose — we should be
able to defend those better. The
first one was a surprise to everyone, but that second one, we
should have been first to it,”
McKinney said.
According to Byrd, the Lady
Raiders once again saw improvements and he expects more
improvements throughout the
remainder of the classic.
“Tonight Sam played great,
Rosa (Gallegos) played great up
front and in the back you had the
quiet leader, Marissa Couch. She
is always there, is smart, gets her
head up and is very composed,”
the Cleveland coach said. “I’m
looking forward to getting these
games played and just getting
better. [Yesterday] wasn’t as clean
as I would have liked us to be,
but at the same time we still got
better.”
The Lady Raiders take on
McMinn Central today at 4 p.m.
and then face Blackman on
Saturday at noon.
Bradley has two games on
Saturday, playing McMinn
Central at 3 p.m. and Oakland at
7 p.m.
LADY TROJANS 3, LADY MUSTANGS 2 (OT)
Halftime Score: 2-0 WV. Goals: Anna Lanter 2,
Rachel Rasmussen (SD). Jade Mayo, Taylor Ellis
(WV). Assists: Lanter, Soni Whalen (SD); Mya Patel
(WV). Records: Soddy-Daisy 8-1-1, 6-0 District 5AAA; Walker Valley 7-3-1, 4-1 District 5-AAA
LADY RAIDERS 2, BEARETTES 0
Halftime Score: 1-0 C. Goals: Sam DeBien,
Michaela Bader (C). Records: Bradley Central 2-8;
Cleveland 4-3-1.
pare, Pruett said now is the time
to begin the push to peak during
district tournament time. The
Lady Mustangs travel to Athens
to go against McMinn County on
Tuesday.
“It’s time we start getting there.
We have Ooltewah on Thursday
here. Then we will kind of know
where we stand, at least as far as
Ooltewah goes. Then we will still
have two big games with
Cleveland and Bradley.”
Brett Favre during the game as the
only quarterbacks in NFL history
with at least 70,000 yards passing. “I’m really proud of our young
offensive line — no poise issues,
no communication issues.”
The late-game dramatics transpired after the Chiefs bolted to a
14-0 lead in their home-opener,
energizing a boisterous, red-clad
crowd that had been tailgating
all afternoon.
But like he has so often
against the Chiefs, Manning
answered by leading Denver on
an 80-yard TD march late in the
first half. The capper was a pass
over the middle to Sanders, who
slipped between the safeties and
somersaulted into the end zone
for the 16-yard touchdown
reception.
Two plays later, Aqib Talib
picked off Smith’s throw on a
poorly thrown pass in the flat,
and the Broncos needed just four
plays for Manning to find Virgil
Green with a tying touchdown
toss.
After swapping field goals, the
Chiefs were poised to celebrate
when Davis took a handoff from
Smith as the quarterback fell
down and raced into the end
zone late in the fourth quarter.
Turned out to be not late
enough for Manning and the
Broncos.
“I’ll tell you,” Manning said,
“their defense is so much better
than last year. They’re so stout
against the run. They just make
it hard all night. We just kept
plugging.”
Dylan Lillard
Congratulations to Walker Valley golfer Dylan Lillard for being
selected as the Check Into Cash Player of the Week.
After qualifying for the 2014 TSSAA State Championships, the senior
linkster posted a 35.1 scoring average (in one-hole matches) this season,
plus lead the Mustangs to the District 5-AAA and Region 3-AAA
championships. The Lee University commit fired a 4-under-par 68 to win
low-medalist honors at the district tournament last week at the Bear
Trace Course at Harrison Bay, plus carded a 4-over 76 for second low
medalist at the Lake Tansi in the region event.
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Craftsman-style townhouse to be shown
Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m., during open house
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
If you are looking for the perfect
union of quality and economy in a
residence, look no farther than
this Craftsman-style townhouse
in the Bellingham subdivision in
Northwest Cleveland.
The 1,425-square-foot house,
located at the intersection of
Bellingham Drive and Bell Chase
Way just off Urbane Road, has so
many features you will be hardpressed to decide what might be
your favorite.
From the double-tray ceilings,
to the beautiful crown molding, to
the inset lighting throughout, the
townhouse features quaintness
with beauty to impress everyone.
Entrance to the townhouse
from the front door leads directly
into the living room, which features beautiful wood flooring. A
portion of the staircase that leads
to the upstairs matches that wood
flooring to give the room a wonderful symmetry.
Crown molding enhances the
living room, as well as the entire
townhouse, and a double window
allows for sunlight to brighten the
room. The living room features a
ceiling fan, which includes modern lighting fixture.
From the living room, there is
easy access to the kitchen.
Granite counters are not only
around the appliances and sink,
but also on the island that rests in
the center of the kitchen area.
Stainless steel Whirlpool appliances — a glass-top range, dishwasher and microwave — are situated perfectly in the kitchen, and
the double sink features very nice
fixtures as well as a garbage disposal.
Above the island in the kitchen
are pendant lighting, while the
entire home features inset lighting.
Banner photo, AllEN mINCEY
ThIS
WElComING
ENTRANCE to the Bellingham
subdivision townhouse also features a one-vehicle garage, as
well as a porch area where the
resident can either put chairs to
enjoy the weather or plants that
will enhance the exterior of the
home. This is just one dwelling in
a group of four to be shown
Sunday during an open house.
Banner photo, AllEN mINCEY
ThE STAIRWAY to the second story is unique, as the lower
portion matches the steps to the
wood flooring in the living room
area, while the upper section is
carpeted to match the upstairs
carpet.
The eat-in kitchen area also has
similar double window features,
much like the living room area,
while the rear door that leads from
both the kitchen and dining area
to the patio has a window with
built-in blinds.
A washer and dryer closet has
plenty of cabinets for storing
cleaning products.
The downstairs area also
includes a doorway to the onevehicle garage and a half-bath.
The entire kitchen, washerand-dryer and half-bath area have
beautiful floor tile, and the halfbath includes the same granite
tops as the kitchen.
As you move upstairs, you will
first notice the change from wood
steps mirroring the flooring of the
living room, to carpet that matches the carpeting in both the master bedroom and second bedroom.
A bathroom as you reach the second floor has the same granite
tops and tile floors, and features a
combination bathtub and shower.
The master bedroom has its
own bathroom with a combination
bathtub and shower, single sink
vanity, and plenty of room for furniture. A nice feature of the master bedroom is a large walk-in
closet with shelving and windows.
Both bedrooms have windows
that allow for beautiful sunlight,
as well as nice views of the area.
The exterior of the townhouse
has a concrete patio in the back
where one could place outdoor
furniture, and the area at the
front of the home has a nice area
for chairs or plants.
Small but beautiful landscaping
is featured at the front of the
home, and trees have been planted that will enhance the home
area as they grow.
While being a beautiful home
for a small family, the subdivision
where it is located is in an area
zoned for North Lee Elementary
School, Ocoee Middle School and
See TOWNHOUSE, Page 17
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Banner photo, GWEN SWIGER
CONGRATULATIONS
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Would Like To Send A Special Thanks To
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SOUTHERN STYLE HOMEBUILDERS, LLC
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Banner photo, GWEN SWIGER
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Banner photo, GWEN SWIGER
ThE pANTRY in the eat-in
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space for a large amount of food
items.
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—17
Townhouse
From Page 16
Banner photo, gWEN sWIgEr
Congratulations
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Southern Style Homebuilders, LLC
Thanks for using us!
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A COzY kItCHEN area still
provides room for an island with
granite counters that match the
rest of the kitchen and other
areas of the townhouse. The
kitchen includes stainless steel
Whirlpool appliances and pendant lighting above the island.
Walker Valley High School.
The townhouse is only two minutes away from the Cleveland
Family YMCA and five minutes
away from Cleveland shopping and
dining. There is easy access to
Interstate 75 and Lee Highway,
and the Ocoee River in Polk County
and Cherokee National Forest is
within minutes, as is the historical
area in Charleston.
You will be hard pressed to find
the features of the townhouse at
the asking price of $139,000.
To view the townhouse, travel
east on Stuart Road, then turn
onto Urbane Road and drive a couple of miles to Bellingham Drive.
The townhouse will be among
four in the group featured in an
open house Sunday, from 2 to 4
p.m.
Listing agent for the home is
Cindi Richardson from Keller
Williams.
The townhouses in the
Bellingham subdivision are selling
fast, so go by Sunday and view not
only the townhouse but the beautiful layout of the brand-new subdivision.
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Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
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A LArgE MAstEr bedroom features plenty of space for beautiful
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tHE sECOND BEDrOOM is
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Phone: 423.284.9870
Thanks For Choosing Us!
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
Viewpoint
America urgently needs
an ‘unbalanced budget’
R
ep. Vern Buchanan, RFlorida, wrote in a Fox
News opinion column
dated June 27, 2015, that
America needs a balanced
budget. Interestingly, just
about that time, Greece was
debating yet another round of
austerity-driven cuts in an
effort to placate the EU troika
of lenders.
Austerity measures have not
only failed to bring about
growth in Greece so far, but
have actually been responsible
for contracting the economy by
more than a quarter since
2009. By any definition, this is
worse
than
a
Great
Depression, and it shows no
letup in sight.
The experience in America
— which is more monetarily
sovereign than the EU countries, though this is still a relative term — was different, with
the government practice stimulating the economy instead.
The result is that we climbed
out of the Great Recession and
continue to grow our GDP and
put people back to work, albeit
slowly (Greece has over a 25
percent unemployment rate to
add to its woes).
And this is not the first time.
According to the St. Louis Fed,
every recession going back to
when records started being
kept shows that recessions are
preceded by reductions in government spending and, more
dramatically, are ended by
increases in government liabilities (i.e. spending). This relationship has actually grown
more forceful over time, with
the largest spending-driven
recovery during the 2008-09
crisis.
Interestingly, while we seem
to be sputtering a bit lately, with
just an .8 percent growth in
GDP in 2014, government
spending has dropped way
down again. Perhaps we will
unspend our way to a recession yet again?
Buchanan says that “socalled mandatory spending”
will increase the debt and leave
little room for things he seems
to like better, like so-called
national defense — already the
largest item in the discretionary
budget and almost as large as
the next 10 countries combined
— economic development,
which he doesn’t define, and
peculiarly, veterans’ services,
which is a relatively small part
of the budget and which
Republicans like him have consistently fought against
increasing.
But this is not about prioritizing some parts of the budget
over others. Is it necessary, or
even desirable, to do so?
Consider: one of the biggest
so-called “entitlements” —
which is really an example of
deferred income — is Social
Security. But Social Security is
not even an expense if you
look at what it returns. How can
this be? It is because of something called the Money
Multiplier. That is, in the case of
Social Security, we get back
$1.80 to $2 for every dollar we
spend on it, according to two
independent studies, by the
AARP and the Southern Rural
Development Center.
The
Southern
Rural
Development Center writes:
“Similarly, results of an economic impact analysis of
OASDI payments at 2009 levels … indicated an output multiplier of about 1.8 in the U.S.
economy. As such, every dollar
paid in OASDI generated an
additional 80 cents in the economy. To put it another way, the
$675 billion paid in OASDI
benefits during 2009 translated
into an economic output of
slightly over $1.2 trillion in the
U.S. economy.”
So, this means that there is a
net GAIN for every dollar spent
on Social Security and, though
this is somewhat controversial,
it may be as high as double the
input.
I don’t know what
Buchanan’s position on Social
Security is, but Republicans in
general often look to Social
Security as a place to cut
spending. But these studies
show we would actually lose
national income by cutting
Social Security. Seniors spend
their Social Security check,
stimulating the economy, and
as long as we don’t increase
that to the point where they
start saving it instead, this will
continue to produce a net gain.
Similar savings can be attributed to the next biggest item in
the “mandatory spending” (a
misnomer
too,
since
Republicans keep trying to cut
this) portion of the budget,
Medicare. Medicare is cheaper
than private insurance, including plans under Obamacare.
Medicare for all, with the ability
to negotiate lower drug prices,
would be cheaper still.
But even this is not the big
picture. Consider: the government could simply rip up
money it owes itself. Former
Rep. Ron Paul, and later Rep.
Alan Grayson, supported a bill
a few years ago that would
have wiped $2 trillion in national debt that the government
owed the Federal Reserve.
This was seen as a way of getting back “under” the so-called
debt ceiling, but it is actually
revenue-neutral because the
Fed already returns whatever
money it collects on Treasuries
minus its own expenses.
And Buchanan’s article suffers throughout from the
Loanable Funds Fallacy. LFF
states that there is a finite
amount of money and that if
this is depleted, in the case of
the government, no more
money can be produced
except by raising taxes or borrowing. While this may be true
in the case of the states, it is
not true for the Federal government, which is monetarily sovereign under historical precedent, or the Constitution’s
Coinage Clause (Art. 1, Sec 8,
Clause 5), which allows
Congress to “coin money.”
“Coining money” need not be
potentially inflationary either, if
the money is spent on things
like infrastructure that create
jobs and make commerce
more efficient.
A very old example of this is
the Erie Canal, which lowered
freight prices from $114 a ton
down to $9 a ton. Many of the
infrastructure projects waiting
for funding today (is this what
Buchanan means by “economic development”?) would create similar savings.
The oft-repeated mantra that
government spending is inherently wasteful is a shibboleth.
Wasteful spending is wasteful
whether from the private or
public sector. Effective investments can come from both
places too. And with over 90
percent of corporate profits
going toward stock buybacks
and dividends, perhaps
Buchanan ought to be looking
more closely at his “base” for
the true source of waste.
———
(About the writer: Scott Baker is a professor at the Henry
George School, the state coordinator of the New York Chapter of
The Public Banking Institute and the author of “America Is Not
Broke!” Opinions expressed in guest “Viewpoints” do not necessarily reflect the views of the Cleveland Daily Banner.)
www.clevelandbanner.com
Our digestive system is mad
For reasons why, just watch a little TV
I rarely watch network primetime television anymore.
I don’t like talent shows. I detest reality
shows. So, I’m pretty much out of luck. I do
like two or three comedies during the fall
season, and that’s about it.
We normally watch that streaming video
service whose stock has risen 19 trillion
percent in the past few years. I like it
because we can watch what we want at the
pace we want to watch it.
Best of all, it’s commercial free.
Last night, though, we watched regular
TV.
Regular TV costs $145 a month. So, we
obviously need to watch it every now and
then.
After two or three commercial breaks, I
figured out what is wrong with America.
Sorry, Donald, but you can’t build a wall
around this. This is a twofold problem, and
it is painfully easy to see.
The commercials tell the whole story.
They come in two categories.
Category No. 1, I will call indulgence.
The best indulgence ad is the one where a
115-pound woman wearing a bikini eats a
115-pound hamburger in slow motion. In 30
seconds, she somehow manages to devour
the whole thing before looking into the camera with a come-hither grin.
For what it’s worth, Eve did the same
thing much more effectively in Biblical pro-
StorieS of
a world gone
mad
Barry Currin
portions with an apple, and she didn’t even
pile bacon or onion rings on top of it.
Next are the pizza commercials. Similarly,
they show an array of healthy, vibrant
actors with perfect skin and limitless energy
enjoying the new 20-inch Triple Bypass
Meaty Monster.
In reality, the person at the pizza place
taking the order over the phone should ask
for your health insurance network so they
can print the correct cardiologist’s phone
number on your receipt when you order one.
Now, before you email me a buy-one-getone-free coupon for a pound of kale, the
answer is, yes. I overindulge. Most all of us
do, and that’s what leads us to Category No.
2.
These are the medicine commercials,
which wouldn’t exist if we didn’t feel the
need to throw onion rings and bacon on top
of everything.
When one of these ads is on, I feel like I’m
one of the Joker’s henchmen getting beat up
by Batman in the old ’60s show. Pow! Bang!
Smack! The person doing the talking blurts
out all these grotesque symptoms and prescription drug side effects one after the
other for the full 30 seconds. They always
have to do with the digestive system, which
is not a subject I need to hear about in great
detail.
I’m sitting there in a cold sweat praying it
will soon be over. These are words we didn’t
even say out loud in health class back in
the day.
Thirty years ago, the message “I can’t
believe I ate the whole thing” worked just
fine, and it should work just fine now. We
don’t need to know every little quirky thing
that is going wrong with the actor’s small
intestine on the commercial to spur us to
buy the product.
To avoid this, we could just not eat so
much of the foods that cause these problems in the first place.
Or, maybe we could just learn to eat in
slow motion like the bikini model with the
burger. She seems happy enough.
But, she’s no Eve.
———
(About the writer: Barry Currin runs
BeaverDamUSA.com, a humor, sports and
entertainment website. “Stories of a World
Gone Mad” is published in the Friday edition
of the Cleveland Daily Banner. Email the
writer at currin01@gmail.com.)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, September 18,
the 261st day of 2015. There are
104 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On September 18, 1793,
President George Washington
laid the cornerstone of the U.S.
Capitol.
On this date:
In A.D. 14, the Roman Senate
officially confirmed Tiberius as
the second emperor of the
Roman Empire, succeeding the
late Augustus.
In 1759, the French formally
surrendered Quebec to the
British.
In 1810, Chile made its initial
declaration of independence from
Spain with the forming of a
national junta.
In 1927, the Columbia
Phonograph
Broadcasting
System (later CBS) made its onair debut with a basic network of
16 radio stations.
In 1931, an explosion in the
Chinese city of Mukden damaged
a section of Japanese-owned railway track; Japan, blaming
Chinese nationalists, invaded
Manchuria the next day.
In 1940, Harper and Brothers
published “You Can’t Go Home
Again” by Thomas Wolfe, two
years after the author’s death.
In 1961, United Nations
Secretary-General
Dag
Hammarskjold was killed in a
plane crash in northern
Rhodesia.
In 1965, the situation comedies “I Dream of Jeannie” and
“Get Smart” premiered on NBC.
In 1970, rock star Jimi
Hendrix died in London at age
27.
In 1975, newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst was captured by
the FBI in San Francisco, 19
months after being kidnapped by
the Symbionese Liberation Army.
In 1984, retired U.S. Air Force
Col. Joe Kittinger became the
first person to complete a solo
balloon flight across the Atlantic
Ocean as he landed in Italy, four
days after leaving Maine.
In 1990, the city of Atlanta was
named the site of the 1996
Summer Olympics. The organized crime drama “GoodFellas,”
directed by Martin Scorsese, had
its U.S. premiere in New York.
Ten years ago: Tropical Storm
Rita formed southeast of the
Florida Keys. Millions of Afghans
defied a Taliban boycott call and
militant attacks to vote for a new
parliament. German conservative
challenger Angela Merkel’s bloc
won the most votes in elections,
but fell short of a clear mandate
to govern. “Everybody Loves
Raymond” won the Emmy for
best comedy in its final season;
first-year hit “Lost” was named
best drama.
Five years ago: Despite
Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans voted for a new
parliament in the first election
since a fraud-marred ballot cast
doubt on the legitimacy of the
embattled government. During
his visit to Britain, Pope Benedict
XVI apologized to five people
who’d been molested by priests
as children in his latest effort to
defuse the sex abuse crisis shaking the Roman Catholic Church.
One year ago: In a show of solidarity with Ukraine, President
Barack Obama welcomed the
new president of the embattled
former Soviet republic, Petro
Poroshenko, to the White House.
Congress cleared the way for the
U.S. military to train and equip
Syrian rebels for a war against
Islamic Group militants. Home
Depot said a data breach that
lasted for months at its stores in
the U.S. and Canada had affected 56 million debit and credit
cards. Don Spirit, a convicted
felon living in Bell, Florida, fatally
shot his six grandchildren and
his daughter before killing himself. Voters in Scotland rejected
independence, opting to remain
part of the United Kingdom in a
historic referendum. The Royal
and Ancient Golf Club at St.
Andrews, Scotland, ended years
of male-only exclusivity as its
members voted overwhelmingly
in favor of inviting women to join.
Will Radcliff, 74, who’d built a
multi-billion-dollar global business from flavored, icy Slush
Puppie
drinks,
died
in
Cincinnati.
Today’s Birthdays: Voice
actress June Foray is 98. Singer
Jimmie Rodgers is 82. Actor
Robert Blake is 82. Former Sen.
Robert Bennett, R-Utah, is 82.
Actor Fred Willard is 82. Actor
Eddie Jones is 81. Gospel singer
Bobby Jones is 77. Singer
Frankie Avalon is 75. Actress
Beth Grant is 66. Rock musician
Kerry Livgren is 66. Actress Anna
Deavere Smith is 65. Basketball
Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino is
63. College Football Hall of
Famer and retired NFL player
Billy Sims is 60. Movie director
Mark Romanek is 56. Baseball
Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg is
56. Musician Mark Olson is 54.
Singer Joanne Catherall (Human
League) is 53. Actress Holly
Robinson Peete is 51. Rhythmand-blues singer Ricky Bell (Bell
Biv Devoe and New Edition) is 48.
Actress Aisha Tyler is 45. Former
racing cyclist Lance Armstrong is
44. Opera singer Anna Netrebko
is 44. Actress Jada Pinkett Smith
is 44. Actor James Marsden is
42. Actress Emily Rutherfurd is
41. Actor Travis Schuldt is 41.
Rapper Xzibit is 41. Comedianactor Jason Sudeikis is 40.
Actress Sophina Brown is 39.
Actor Barrett Foa is 38. TV correspondent Sara Haines is 38.
Actress Alison Lohman is 36.
Actors Taylor and Brandon
Porter are 22. Actor C.J. Sanders
is 19.
Dear Annie: If people go in
together to purchase a gift, should
only one of the people receive a
thank-you note?
I recently attended a bridal
shower where four of us pooled our
money to purchase an expensive
gift. At the shower, we were all
asked to address an envelope to
make thank-you notes easier for
the bride-to-be. We all did so, but I
was shocked to find out that the
note was sent only to “Jill,” with the
rest of our names included inside.
Jill phoned the rest of us to let us
know.
Have people really become so
lazy that they can’t write a thank
you to each person who gave a gift?
It wasn’t Jill’s job to inform the rest
of us. Shame on the bride-to-be. —
Proper Thank Yous Please
Dear Proper: The bride may not
have realized that a single gift from
multiple people still requires individual thank-you notes. But yes,
laziness undoubtedly played a part,
considering that the guests had to
pre-address their own envelopes.
Dear Annie: This is for
“Confused Family Member,” whose
niece had a large wedding months
after a civil ceremony.
My daughter also married civilly
two weeks prior to big wedding
bash for legal reasons. Her husband was being deployed within
the month and she needed power
of attorney in order to purchase
their new home and do other
things. We did not announce it, so
as not to confuse anyone. And she
kept her maiden name. She is also
in the service, and it saved a lot of
paperwork. — Tootles
———
(About the writers: Annie’s
Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions to
anniesmailbox@creators.com, or
write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St.,
Hermosa Beach CA 90254. You
can also find Annie on Facebook at
Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To find
out more about Annie’s Mailbox
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and
cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.)
Cleveland Daily Banner
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—19
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
SATURDAY, SEPT. 19, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Kevin Zegers, 31; Alison
Sweeney, 39; Jimmy Fallon, 41; Trisha
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Yearwood, 51.
Happy Birthday: Keep things in perspective. You will be inclined to overreact, overdo and overindulge this year.
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
Discipline will be needed to ensure that
you don't fall behind. Approach everything as a life lesson and you will slowly
but surely gain momentum as well as
expertise. Trust yourself and do everything in your power to be honest with
others and realistic about your goals.
Your numbers are 8, 11, 17, 24, 31, 46,
48.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Get
ready to forge ahead. Bring about the
changes you want to see happen. Don't
sit back when everything depends on
you making the effort to move forward.
Take the initiative and push your way
into the position or lifestyle you want.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be there
for others, but pay more attention to
doing the things that can improve your
own life. A personal relationship will
undergo a shift that can cost you if you
aren't open to trying new things.
Expand your interests.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You will
get your way regarding personal matters. Make home improvements and put
a little romance in your life. It's up to you
to be aggressive and open about what
you want and what you are willing to
settle for.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Reevaluate past events and you will realize what you have to do in order to get
what you want. A move, lifestyle change
or setting aside some space to pursue a
creative dream should be your goal.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll be the
life of the party. Get out and enjoy the
company of others and you will make
interesting connections that will help
you bring about positive changes to
improve your reputation. Romance is
favored.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Problems at home or with an older relative will surface. Do your best to help,
but not at the expense of missing out on
something you've been waiting a long
time to do. Find solutions and call in
favors.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Day trips,
getting together with friends or relatives
and sharing your ideas and plans could
lead to positive changes and options
that come about unexpectedly. Love is
on the rise, so be sure to share experiences with that special someone.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll
be torn between making money and
pleasing the ones you love. Consider
selling off items you don't need or cutting corners to maintain a good standard of living. Where there's a will,
there's a way.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
You will have a tendency to overreact
and be unrealistic regarding your abilities. Take a step back and take a break
from making any important decisions.
Participate in physical activities and
spending time with someone you love.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Keep your opinions to yourself. Don't
lend, donate or take on someone else's
responsibilities. Back away from anyone who is putting pressure on you or
wants an instant response. Take a
moment to sit back and enjoy your
home and privacy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Take
advantage of any opportunity to spend
time alone with the ones you love. A
personal relationship will improve if you
are playful and romantic. An idea you
have will improve your lifestyle and
financial future.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stick
close to home. You can conduct business over the Internet or phone almost
as easily as you can face-to-face.
Problems while traveling or dealing with
authority figures can be expected. Stick
to the rules and avoid unscrupulous
individuals.
Birthday Baby: You are enthusiastic, emotional and outgoing. You are
competitive and progressive.
20—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Review: Chilling Depp, expert ensemble in ‘Black Mass’
By Jocelyn noveck
AP National Writer
Shakespeare had his tortured
Hamlet, his ambitious Macbeth,
his malevolent Iago, his warring
Montagues and Capulets.
But what would the Bard have
done with the tale of James
“Whitey” Bulger, and all the supporting players around him?
There was Whitey himself, at first
a minor criminal who became
one of the most feared crime
bosses in history, ruling his turf
for two decades and evading cap-
ture for nearly two more. There
was his brother, Billy, who grew
up in the same home in the
“Southie” section of Boston but
became one of the state’s most
powerful politicians. There were
the feuding Boston mob and
Bulger’s Winter Hill gang. Then
the FBI agent whose efforts to
gain Bulger’s cooperation led to
his own undoing.
And the FBI itself, which ended
up protecting Bulger for years
and facilitating his murderous
rise.
Yes, Shakespeare would have
had a field day. And so does
Hollywood, namely director Scott
Cooper and a top-flight ensemble
led by Johnny Depp in a performance that reminds us, after
a string of uninspiring movies,
why he’s one of our most compelling actors. Yes, Depp is excellent. But the star attraction
here? That’s the stunning story
itself.
“Black Mass,” with a taut and
effective screenplay by Mark
Mallouk and Jez Butterworth, is
based on the book by Boston
Globe reporters Dick Lehr and
Claire Folger/Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP
IN thIs ImAgE released by Warner Bros. Entertainment, Johnny Depp, left, and Rory Cochrane
appear in a scene from “Black Mass.”
Owner: Bonnie and Clyde museum in peril from leaky roof
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The
owner of the Bonnie and Clyde
Ambush Museum in rural north
Louisiana says a leaky roof may
force him to move elsewhere —
possibly his hometown of
Atlanta.
The building in Gibsland
once housed the cafe where
Clyde Barrow and Bonnie
Parker bought sandwiches
shortly before the ambush that
killed them about 7 miles away.
Harry Carver bought the
exhibits from L.J. Hinton,
whose father took part in the
ambush in Arcadia on May 23,
1934. Exhibits include a shotgun and a strongbox taken
from the “death car,” and news-
paper articles about Bonnie
and Clyde.
Carver said Thursday the
landlord told him he could
patch the roof instead of paying
rent, but the building needs a
new roof.
Landlord James Walker of
Denver couldn’t immediately be
reached for comment.
Gerard O’Neil (they make a brief
appearance here). It begins with
police interviews of Bulger’s aging
henchmen, then quickly flashes
back to 1975. We meet Bulger as
he’s asserting control of the
Winter Hill gang, which is
engaged in a bitter turf war with
the Angiulo family.
Luckily for Bulger, a childhood
friend has arrived back in town
— John Connolly, an ambitious
FBI agent. Connolly (a terrific
Joel Edgerton — and this Aussie
nails the Boston accent, too) figures the way to make headway
quickly is to bring his old pal into
the fold as an informant. He first
goes to Billy, a state senator (a
fine Benedict Cumberbatch), who
coldly rebuffs him. Then he goes
directly to Jimmy. “You know
what I do to rats, John?” Bulger
says at first. Connolly replies: “It
ain’t rattin,’ Jimmy. It’s an
alliance.” When Jimmy agrees,
he rationalizes it thusly: “They
protect us, and we do whatever
the (expletive) we want.”
Which is, basically, what happens, as Connolly’s plan spirals
into a catastrophe for the FBI.
Jimmy provides marginal information at best; meanwhile, he
wreaks havoc with impunity.
Here’s where it’s absolutely chilling to watch Depp. With bad
teeth and a head of dramatically
receding hair, the actor somewhat resembles Jack Nicholson
in “The Departed” but deftly
avoids caricature as he grows
more sinister with every murder.
These include putting a bullet
into the head of an associate who
addresses him inappropriately;
strangling a disloyal henchman
with chains, and choking to
death the young stepdaughter
(Juno Temple) of a colleague (her
last gasps are a sound you won’t
soon forget.) He becomes so menacing, you truly fear for the one
person seemingly unafraid to talk
back to him: the mother of his
young child (an affecting, but
underused Dakota Johnson).
Then there’s a frightening dinner table scene where Bulger
asks for a recipe. Without revealing too much, let’s just say that
his sinister, is-he-kidding-orisn’t-he demeanor immediately
recalls Joe Pesci in “Goodfellas”
in that “I’m funny, how?” scene.
Depp’s Jimmy isn’t manic like
Pesci’s Tommy, but he’s mercurial, and he’s scary.
The supporting cast also
includes Kevin Bacon as a skeptical FBI boss, Peter Sarsgaard as
a jittery gang associate, and an
excellent Julianne Nicholson as
Connolly’s wife.
If you haven’t read the detailed
news accounts of Bulger’s years
on the run and eventual capture,
now’s not the time — in other
words, see the movie first. And
marvel again at how real life really does provide the best material.
“Black Mass,” a Warner Bros.
release, is rated R by the Motion
Picture Association of America
for “brutal violence, language
throughout, some sexual references and brief drug use.”
Running time: 122 minutes.
Three stars out of four.
MPAA definition of R:
Restricted. Under 17 requires
accompanying parent or adult
guardian.
I-75 AT EXIT 20
Fri. Sept. 18 thru Thurs. Sept. 24
FRIDAY ONLY
Maze Runner
4:10-6:00-7:00-9:00-9:45
Captive
5:00-7:30-9:50
Black Mass
4:10-7:00-9:40
ALL OTHER MOVIES SHOW
AFTER 9:00 FRIDAY ONLY.
MON.-THURS.
SAT.-SUN.
Maze Runner Maze Runner
4:10
7:00
1:15-4:10
7:00-9:45
Maze Runner Maze Runner
12:30-3:15
6:00-9:00
6:00
Captive
5:00
7:30
Captive
12:30-2:45
5:00-7:30-9:50
Black Mass Black Mass
4:10
7:00
1:15-4:10
7:00-9:40
The Visit
4:50
7:00
The Visit
12:30-2:40
4:50-7:00-9:30
War Room
War Room
4:15
7:10
1:15-4:15
7:10-9:50
Mission Impossible Mission Impossible
4:00
7:00
1:00-4:00
7:00-9:50
NO SHOWS AFTER 7:30 PM
MONDAY-THURSDAY.
NO SHOWS BEFORE 4 PM
MONDAY-FRIDAY
Friday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WDEF)
Elementary
The search for a missing person has a decidedly personal element for Holmes (Jonny
Lee Miller) in “A Controlled Descent.”
The individual in question is his recovery
sponsor, Alfredo (recurring guest star Ato
Essandoh), and Watson (Lucy Liu) helps
in the probe to find out what happened
to the man. The worry is that if he wasn’t
kidnapped, perhaps he had another major
bout with his own addiction. Aidan Quinn
also stars.
9 p.m. on (WFLI)
Masters of Illusion
The title “Deadly Desires and Non-Sensory
Sensibilities” makes it sound like this new
half-hour might not be all fun and games
— but since entertainment is the goal here,
don’t expect those desires to become overly
lethal over the course of the magic exhibited. Greg Frewin, Michael Turco, Mike
Caveney, Angela Funovits, and Barry and
Stuart are the performers introduced by
host Dean Cain.
9 p.m. on (WDEF)
Hawaii Five-0
In the episode that ended the crime-drama
reboot’s fifth season, “A Make Kaua” (Hawaiian for “Until We Die”), a stolen nuclear
weapon imperils plans for Kono and Adam’s
(Grace Park, Ian Anthony Dale) wedding.
Former cast regular Michelle Borth returns
as Catherine, whose unexpected presence
stuns McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) — but
not to the degree that he and Danny (Scott
Caan) don’t try to locate and get rid of the
bomb. Tia Carrere guest stars.
10 p.m. on (WTCI)
American Masters
Produced in association with the series
“VOCES,” the new episode “Pedro E. Guerrero: A Photographer’s Journey” profiles —
largely in his own words — the cameraman
who collaborated frequently with architect
Frank Lloyd Wright and sculptors Alexander Calder and Louise Nevelson. While he
wasn’t immersed in their specific skills, his
unique take on showcasing their work made
him hugely valuable to their careers and to
their professions in general.
FRIDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
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4:30
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10 p.m. on (SYFY)
Z Nation
Finally reunited after the pandemonium of
the last episode, the band of heroes resumes fighting zombies but are dismayed
to find things complicated by all the bounty
hunters who are eager to collect Citizen
Z’s (DJ Qualls) price on the head of the
slippery Murphy (Keith Allan), who has
managed to escape yet again. Meanwhile,
Vasquez (Matt Cedeno) decides to change
strategy and work with the heroes instead
of against them in the new episode “The
White Light.”
SEPTEMBER 18, 2015
5:30
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
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Corden
bareMinerals
Joan Rivers Classics Collection “Celebrating 25 Years” (N) Vionic With Orthaheel
bareMinerals
Late with Jayne & Pat
Friday Night Beauty “bareMinerals” (N)
Computer Shop
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Silver Star” ’ Blue Bloods ’ Å
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
How I Met
How I Met
O.P.I. Nail
Vbeaute
Margaritaville Collection (N) Margaritaville Collection (N) Beauty Report Series (N)
Beauty Report Series (N)
O.P.I. Nail
Daughter
Daughter
O.P.I. Nail
15 Years of JOY
15 Years of JOY
Kardashian
Kardashian
Total Divas
E! News (N)
Botched “I Love New Work” Botched “The Serial Filler”
The Soup (N) Issues
E! News (N)
The Soup
Issues
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Cheers Å
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Car Match.
Car Match.
American Ninja Warrior ’
Bring It! Å
Bring It! Å
Bring It! Å
Bring It! Å
Bring It! (N) Å
Bring It! (N) Å
(:02) Atlanta Plastic Å
(:02) Atlanta Plastic Å
(12:02) Bring It! Å
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends
Friends
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
›› “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. (DVS)
› “Mr. Deeds” (2002) Adam Sandler, Winona Ryder. (DVS) Cougar Town
Castle “Scared to Death” ’
Castle “The Wild Rover” ’
›› “The Taking of Pelham 123” (2009) Å (DVS)
Cold Justice Å
Cold Justice: Sex Crimes (N) Cold Justice Å
Cold Justice: Sex Crimes
Hawaii Five-0 “Kalele” ’
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
NCIS: Los Angeles ’ Å
Anger
Anger
Two Men
Two Men
›› “Horrible Bosses” (2011, Comedy) Jason Bateman.
› “Identity Thief” (2013, Comedy) Jason Bateman. A victim of identity theft fights back.
› “Identity Thief” (2013, Comedy) Jason Bateman.
NFL Live (N) Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
Countdown College Football Florida State at Boston College. (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
His & Hers Å
Questionable Outside Lines Around/Horn Interruption NFL Live (N) Å
High School Football Archbishop Rummel (La.) at Wayne County (Miss.). (N) (Live)
NFL Live Å
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
MLB Baseball
Cardinals Live! Postgame
UEFA Mag. ACC Access Braves Live! MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! Driven
MLB Baseball
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show Paul Finebaum discusses all things SEC. (N) (Live)
Women’s College Soccer Vanderbilt at Texas A&M. (N)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Inside
SEC Film Rm College Football Å
(3:00) PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Second Round. (N) (Live)
Golf Central (N) (Live)
PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Second Round. From Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Ill.
European PGA Tour Golf
Soccer
NASCAR Racing
America’s Pregame (N) (Live) MLB Whiparound (N) Å
Setup
NASCAR Racing
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
Countdown to Kickoff
FOX Sports
Jimbo Fisher Georgia
Auburn Foot The Season: Georgia Tech C-USA Show. Jimmy Hanlin Swing Clinic Boxing “2012: Allan Green vs. Mikkel Kessler”
3 Wide Life Raceline (N) Auburn Foot GMC Football In Search of Speed Å
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
(5:59) Weather Underground (N)
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money Option Action Mad Money (N)
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed
MSNBC Live (N)
MSNBC Live (N)
MSNBC Live (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show Lockup: Pendleton
Lockup: Pendleton
Lockup: Colorado
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Special Program
CNN Newsroom
CNN Special Report
Nancy Grace
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon Vacation
Vacation
Forensic File Forensic File
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Greta Van Susteren
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor Å
The Kelly File
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens (N) ’ Å
(:03) Ancient Aliens Å
The Knights Templar
(12:01) Ancient Aliens Å
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Six Degr.
(:01) World’s Dumbest...
(12:02) World’s Dumbest...
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “Broken” ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
(:01) Criminal Minds ’
(12:01) Criminal Minds ’
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold: Dredged Bering Sea Gold (N) Å
(:01) Edge of Alaska (N) ’
(:02) Bering Sea Gold Å
(12:03) Edge of Alaska ’
Inside 9/11: War on America Inside 9/11: Zero Hour Terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Explorer “Finding Anastasia” Explorer
400 Million Dollar Emerald Explorer
400 Million Dollar Emerald Explorer
Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Monument
Chopped
Chopped
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Hunters
Hunters Int’l Hunters
Hunters Int’l Tiny House Tiny House
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
(:01) Treehouse Masters ’ (:04) Tanked (N) ’
(:07) Treehouse Masters (N) (12:07) Tanked ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
›› “Burlesque” (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane.
(:15) ››› “Grease” (1978, Musical) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John.
The 700 Club ’ Å
“Another Cinderella Story”
Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Austin & Ally (:20) Bunk’d (5:50) Bunk’d (:20) ›› “16 Wishes” (2010) Debby Ryan.
Jessie (N) ’ Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It Dog
Droid Tales Penn Zero
Jessie Å
Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It Dog
SpongeBob SpongeBob Alvinnn!!! and “The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie” ’
SpongeBob SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Pig Goat Ban. Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
(:36) Friends (12:12) Friends ’ Å
(3:00) “Monsters vs. Aliens” Total Drama Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
Regular Show King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland
Cleveland
Family Guy Family Guy Black Jesus Loiter Squad Pretty Face Aqua Teen
Bonanza
Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Isle Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life ›› “Kindergarten Cop” (1990) Arnold Schwarzenegger. Premiere. Å
Jim Gaffigan King
King
King
King
(:15) ›› “Get Smart” (2008, Comedy) Steve Carell. ‘PG-13’ Å
(:45) › “Coyote Ugly” (2000) Piper Perabo, Adam Garcia. ‘PG-13’ Å
››› “Erin Brockovich” (2000, Drama) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney. ‘R’ Å
Fear the Walking Dead
(:15) ›› “Catlow” (1971) Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna.
››› “The Thomas Crown Affair” (1968) Steve McQueen.
›› “Hold That Ghost” (1941) Bud Abbott.
(:45) ››› “Buck Privates” (1941) Å
(:15) ›› “In the Navy” (1941) Bud Abbott. Premiere.
Little House on the Prairie The Waltons “The Loss”
The Waltons
The Waltons
The Waltons “The Nurse”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Crazy Talk
Crazy Talk
›› “Maid in Manhattan” (2002) Jennifer Lopez.
Sex-City
(:43) Sex and the City Å
Sex-City
(11:50) “Maid in Manhattan”
› “Two Can Play That Game” (2001) Vivica A. Fox.
› “Big Momma’s House 2” (2006) Martin Lawrence.
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence.
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence.
› “Big Momma’s House 2”
(2:30) “The Fifth Element”
››› “Fright Night” (2011, Horror) Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell.
›› “Underworld” (2003, Fantasy) Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman.
Z Nation “White Light” (N)
Continuum “Rush Hour” (N) Z Nation “White Light”
The Road To Dynamite 1 ’ Unrivaled
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Jail ’ Å
South Park Futurama ’ Futurama ’ The Nightly Show
(:16) ›› “Pineapple Express” (2008) Seth Rogen, James Franco. Å
Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Moonbeam
South Park Archer Å
Archer Å
››› “Superbad” (2007)
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl
Teen Mom 2 ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. › “Zookeeper” (2011, Comedy) Kevin James, Voices of Rosario Dawson, Leslie Bibb. ’
(:25) Clerks II
(:15) ››› “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” (1986) Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck. ’ Å
Saturday Night Live in the ’80s: Lost and Found ’ Å
Saturday Night Live in the ’90s: Pop Culture Nation Å
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
Funniest Home Videos
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Reba Å
Reba Å
››› “Friday Night Lights” (2004, Drama) Billy Bob Thornton, Derek Luke.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
New Jack
›› “All About the Benjamins” (2002, Action) Ice Cube, Mike Epps.
The BET Life of “Beyonce”
The BET Life of Å
›› “The Players Club” (1998, Comedy-Drama) LisaRaye, Bernie Mac.
Husbands
The Wendy Williams Show
To Be Announced
Dirty Jobs “Cheese Maker”
Dirty Jobs “Shrimper” Å
Dirty Jobs “Bio-Diesel-Man” Dirty Jobs ’ Å
Dirty Jobs ’ Å
Dirty Jobs ’ Å
U.S. Senate Coverage (N) ’ (Live)
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Catholic
Cross
Grandparents Church Poor EWTN News Serra
Daily Mass - Olam
Life on the Rock (N)
EWTN News Holy Rosary The Church Lord, Mercy Courage.
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Ghost Whisperer ’ Å
Ghost Whisperer ’ Å
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Penn Zero
Gaming Show Kickin’ It
Mighty Med Nintendo World Champion Droid Tales Gravity Falls The 7D
Wander
Wander
Wander
Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Becoming
Lab Rats
Lab Rats vs. Mighty Med
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Chain Rea.
Chain Rea.
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Steampunk’d Å
Family Feud Family Feud
Eat St. Å
Eat St. Å
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra on Top
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra on Top
Kendra
Kendra
Noticiero Con Paola Rojas La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
El Chavo
Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
El Chavo
El Chavo
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Rosa
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Avenida Brasil (N) ’ (SS)
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (N) ’
El Señor de los Cielos (N)
Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Muchacha Italiana Viene
Amores con Trampa (N)
Lo Imperdonable
Yo No Creo en los Hombres Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
NASCAR
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More “Dallas” (N)
NASCAR Racing
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More “Dallas” (N)
World Series of Fighting 23: Gaethje vs. Palomino II (N) ’ (Live)
World Series
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Vegas ER ’ Å
Vegas ER ’ Å
Vegas ER “Desert Rollover” Trauma: Seconds to Live (N) Vegas ER ’ Å
Vegas ER “Desert Rollover”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015—21
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Eyewitness News: Weekend Today (N) ’ Å
Poppy Cat
Tree Fu Tom Ruf-Tweet
Astroblast
LazyTown
Luna!
PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Third Round. From Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Ill. (N)
Football
VeggieTales Dr. Wonder Kids Club
Storykeepers RocKids TV Auto B. Good Paha. Is.
VeggieTales Monster
Mary-Hopkins Lassie Å
Goliath
Ishine Knect Insp. Station Nest Family VeggieTales Heroes & Legends of Bible
The Rick & Bubba Show
Dragon
Pancakes
Real Life 101 Mouse in the Think Big
Real Life 101 Dog Tales
Raceline
Shotgunners Outdoorsman Shooter
Outdoors
Adventures J. Houston
Fishing for
Comp. Angler
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Town
Exped. Wild Rock-Park
ACC Blitz
College Football Northwestern at Duke. From Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, N.C. (N)
Pursuit
Bob Builder Thomas & Fr. Martha Speak Curious
Arthur ’ Å (DVS)
Edison’s Lab Odd Squad This Old H’se Old House
Primal Grill BBQ-Franklin Test Kitchen Cook Country Cooking
Martha Bakes A Chef’s Life A Chef’s Life
(6:30) Movie
Word Alive
Dr. Wonder My Destiny Gospel Bill
Maralee
Donkey Ollie Adventures Ishine Knect Scaly
Kerry Pharr Last Days Si. Guillermo
Lakewood
Cld. Freidzon Cash Luna
Good Morning America (N) Good Morning Chattanooga Jack Hanna Ocean Mys. Sea Rescue Wildlife Docs Outback Adv Born-Explore College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Coll. Football Football
Arthur ’ (EI) Wild Kratts Curious
Sewing
Love Quilting Joy/Painting Gardener
Live Green
American Experience “Walt Disney” The life and legacy of Walt Disney.
American Experience “Walt Disney” Walt Disney’s life and legacy.
Adventures Into the Wild Dog Tales (N) TN Lumber Paid Program No More Den Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Tim McCarver Pregame
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. From Citi Field in Flushing, N.Y. (N)
Lucky Dog
Dr. Chris-Vet Innovation
Recipe
CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å
All In
Gme Chngers Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Sports Spectacular (N)
Col. Football Football
(6:00) Computer Shop
AM Style With Leah Williams
Saturday Morning Q
Computer Shop
WEN by Chaz Dean
Washington Journal Live call-in program with officials. (N) ’ (Live)
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Brand New Electronics
Brand New Electronics
Aetna the
Slinky Fash Slinky Brand Fashions (N) 15 Years of JOY
15 Years of JOY
Aetna the
Kitchen In
Healthy Cooking at Home
15 Years of JOY
I Am Cait
I Am Cait
I Am Cait
E! News Weekend (N)
House of DVF
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
American Ninja Warrior The Kansas City finals course. ’
American Ninja Warrior “Houston Finals” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Cannonball Alley. American Ninja Warrior “Pittsburgh Finals” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior ’
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Little Women: LA Å
“Damaged” (2014) Chris Klein, Merritt Patterson. Å
“The Perfect Student” (2011) Natasha Henstridge. Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Disney Story Disney Cruise Line: Behind Walt Disney World Hotels
Disney Cruise Line
Suddenly Royal ’ Å
Suddenly Royal ’ Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
Married
Married
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
› “Rush Hour 3” (2007) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. (DVS)
›› “Bad Boys II” (2003, Action) Martin Lawrence, Will Smith, Jordi Mollà.
Law & Order “Causa Mortis” Law & Order “I.D.” ’
Law & Order “Good Girl” ’
Law & Order “Survivor” ’
Law & Order “Corruption”
›› “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid. Å (DVS)
›› “The Losers” (2010, Action) Å
Paid Program Paid Program Pastor Chris Paid Program NCIS “Deception” ’ Å
NCIS “Caught on Tape” ’
NCIS “Probie” ’ Å
NCIS “Grace Period” Å
NCIS “Cover Story” Å
NCIS “Ex-File” ’ Å
NCIS A survivalist is wanted.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Anger
Anger
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
›› “The Twilight Saga: New Moon” (2009, Romance) Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson.
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
College GameDay (N) (Live) Å
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
Goal Line
Year of the Quarterback Å
NFL Matchup SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
Football
PowerShares Champions
Destination N.C. State
Inside FB
Duke
ShipShape
Anglers
ACC Gridiron Live ’
ACC Access College Football Central Michigan at Syracuse. From the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. (N) (Live)
College Football From Oct. 4, 2014. Å
SEC Film Rm SEC Inside
SEC Nation (N) (Live)
College Football Nevada at Texas A&M. From Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (N)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
(6:00) Golf Solheim Cup, Day 2. From Heidelberg, Germany. (N) (Live)
European PGA Tour Golf Italian Open, Third Round. From Monza, Italy. (N Same-day Tape)
PGA Golf
Countdown to Kickoff
FOX Sports Live Å
Pregame
Bundesliga Soccer SV Darmstadt 98 vs FC Bayern Munich. College Ftball College Football Tulsa at Oklahoma. (N) (Live) Å
Football
Paid Program US DOCTORS 3B Outdoors Paid Program Hook Future Nuts & Bolts Accept The Top Cooker Georgia Tech ACC Access Jimmy Hanlin Swing Clinic Playing Thro Raceline
Fight Sports: KNOCKOUTS! College Football
AMHQ Weekend (N)
Weekend Recharge (N) (Live)
Prospectors
Prospectors
Prospectors
Prospectors “Night Shift”
Paid Program Paid Program Formula One Racing
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program NASCAR Racing
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program
Weekends With Alex Witt
Up W/Steve Kornacki (N)
Melissa Harris-Perry (N)
Weekends With Alex Witt (N)
Criminal Mindscape
Criminal Mindscape
New Day Saturday (N)
New Day Saturday (N)
Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
New Day Saturday (N)
HLN Weekend Express
New Day Saturday (N)
Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell HLN Weekend Express
Forensic File Forensic File CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
(6:00) FOX and Friends Saturday (N)
Bulls & Bears Business
Forbes/FOX Cashin’ In (N) Bob Massi Is Jour.
America’s News Headquarters (N)
America’s News HQ
Restoration Operation
America Unearthed Å
America Unearthed Å
The Knights Templar
The Knights Templar
America Unearthed Å
America Unearthed Å
America Unearthed Å
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Six Degr.
Six Degr.
Six Degr.
Six Degr.
World’s Dumbest...
Dog the Bounty Hunter ’
Dog the Bounty Hunter ’
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
›› “We Are Marshall” (2006, Drama) Matthew McConaughey, Matthew Fox. ’ Å
Paid Program Paid Program Disney Story Paid Program Rusted Development Å
Rusted Development Å
Rusted Development Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold ’ Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Life Below Zero
Port Protection
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Mysteries at the Hotel Å
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Bourdain: No Reservations Man v. Food Man v. Food Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Best- Made Guy’s, Bite
Brunch at
Southern
Trisha’s Sou. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse The Kitchen “Fast Fixes” (N) Valerie Home Giada in Italy Kids Cook-Off
The Great Food Truck Race Chopped
House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Dogs 101 ’ Å
Dogs 101 ’ Å
To Be Announced
Kevin-Work “Another Cinderella Story” (2008) Selena Gomez.
›› “Legally Blonde” (2001) Reese Witherspoon.
(:45) ›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” (2003) Sally Field
››› “Grease” (1978) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John.
Doc McSt.
Sofia
Never Land Tmrrwland
Droid Tales Jessie Å
Jessie ’
I Didn’t Do It Girl Meets
Dog
Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Gamer’s G. Gamer’s G. Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and “The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie” ’
SpongeBob SpongeBob Pig Goat Ban. Harvey Beaks SpongeBob Rangers
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
Sonic Boom Teen Titans Pokémon: XY Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans ›› “Monsters vs. Aliens” (2009, Comedy) Hugh Laurie
Clarence
Clarence
Gumball
Gumball
(:12) Family Feud ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ (:12) Roseanne ’ Å
Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman (:45) ››› “The Cowboys” (1972, Western) John Wayne, Roscoe Lee Browne. ‘GP’ Å
(:45) ›› “Black Dog” (1998) Patrick Swayze. ‘PG-13’
(:45) › “Coyote Ugly” (2000) Piper Perabo, Adam Garcia. ‘PG-13’ Å
(6:00) “Shipmates Forever” ›› “Jamaica Inn” (1939) Charles Laughton. Å
Batman
“Bulldog Comes Back”
(:45) ›› “Earth vs. the Flying Saucers”
(:15) ››› “Jason and the Argonauts” (1963) Å
“The Prisoner of Zenda”
I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls “Accidentally in Love” (2010, Drama) Jennie Garth.
“Portrait of Love” (2014) Jason Dohring, Bree Williamson.
Paid Program Paid Program Boss Nails
Boss Nails
Boss Nails
A Sister
A Sister
A Sister
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
My Fab 40th
Below Deck
Below Deck “Off the Radar” Below Deck “Pretty Cheeks” Below Deck
Million Dollar LA
Million Dollar LA
Manzo’d With Manzo’d With Watch What Happens: Live
Paid Program Paid Program ›› “30 Days of Night” (2007, Horror) Josh Hartnett, Melissa George.
› “Halloween” (2007, Horror) Malcolm McDowell, Scout Taylor-Compton.
››› “Fright Night” (2011, Horror) Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell.
Underworld
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program ›››› “The Shawshank Redemption” (1994, Drama) Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman. ’ Å
(:33) Cops ’ Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Paid Program Paid Program (:15) South Park Å
South Park South Park South Park (:31) ›› “Waiting...” (2005) Ryan Reynolds, Anna Faris.
(:35) ›› “Austin Powers in Goldmember” (2002) Å
(:35) ›› “Pineapple Express” (2008) Å
Faking It ’
Awkward. ’ Awkward. ’ ›› “She’s Out of My League” (2010) Jay Baruchel, Alice Eve. ’
›› “Kicking & Screaming” (2005, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Robert Duvall, Mike Ditka. ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
(:05) New Girl (:40) New Girl
VH1 Plus Music ’
VH1 Plus Music ’
The 20 (N) ’ (Part 1 of 2)
The 20 (N) ’ (Part 2 of 2)
Saturday Night Live in the ’80s: Lost and Found ’ Å
(:15) Saturday Night Live in the ’90s: Pop Culture Nation Lorne Michaels. Fabulous Life
CMT Music ’
CMT Music ’
Hot 20 Countdown A countdown of the biggest music videos. (N) Å
Cowboys Cheerleaders
Cowboys Cheerleaders
››› “Friday Night Lights” (2004) Billy Bob Thornton.
Inspiration
Inspiration
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Fresh Prince ››› “The Nutty Professor” (1996) Eddie Murphy, Jada Pinkett.
›› “Boomerang” (1992, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Halle Berry.
“The Nutty Professor”
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Book TV ’
Book TV ’
Book TV ’
Book TV ’
St. Michael
Holy Rosary Daily Mass - Olam
Catholic Fam. With Jesus Truth in Heart At Home with Jim and Joy Holy Rosary Daily Mass - Olam
Religious
Many Faces EWTN on Location (N)
Mercy
Pope in Cuba
Elizabeth
Farm Bureau Worship Hour Pastor Chris Criminal Minds: Suspect
Criminal Minds: Suspect
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Legacy” ’ Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Doubt” ’
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Mickey
Penn Zero
Phineas, Ferb Ultimate
Droid Tales Pickle-Peanut Nintendo World Champion Star-Rebels Becoming
Pickle-Peanut Pickle-Peanut Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
The Chase “Fast Moving”
Chain Rea.
Chain Rea.
Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique
Unique
Korean Food Siba’s Table Simply Ba.
Sweet Julia Kelsey’s Ess. Kelsey’s Ess. Brunch at
The Grill Iron Real Girl
Real Girl
Tiffani’s
Tiffani’s
Tia Mowry
Kimberly’s- S.
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
Yoga con Luz Netas Divinas
Mojoe
El Chavo
El Chavo
Chespirito
Chapulín
Chapulín
Chapulín
El Chavo
Pagado
Pagado
Raggs ’
Noodle
Chica
LazyTown ’ Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
Criss Angel SOS: Salva Mi Casa (SS)
››› “Up” (2009, Comedia) Voices of Ed Asner. ’ (SS)
Una Nueva Esperanza (SS)
Pagado
Pagado
Pocoyo (SS) Sesame
Mickey
Mickey
Handy Manny Handy Manny Pagado
Pagado
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
Roxanna
Roxanna
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Premier
English Premier League Soccer Chelsea FC vs Arsenal FC. Goal Zone
English Premier League Soccer Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live)
Premier
English Premier League Soccer
NASCAR Racing
My Addiction My Addiction My Strange Addiction Å
My Strange Addiction Å
Shocking Family Secrets ’ Shocking Family Secrets ’ Son’s Face- Stop Growing Conjoined Twins: Miracle
Transgender Kids ’ Å
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
4:30
5 PM
5:30
SEPTEMBER 19, 2015
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
(3:30) College Football Georgia Tech at Notre Dame. (N) ’ (Live) Å
Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Obstacles include Psycho Chain. Å (DVS)
News
(:29) Saturday Night Live ’ Å
Bless Lord
News
Harvest Crusade with Greg Laurie
Precious Memories
In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour Of Power with Bobby Graham Classic Crusades
› “What Would Jesus Do?” (2010, Drama) The Stranger
Reflections Country
Cheyenne
Music Mix
Adrenalin Rush Wrestling
Around Town
First Baptist Church
Misty- Kr.
Kelly’s Kountr Around Town
Adrenalin Rush Wrestling
Country Music Today
› “Max Payne” (2008, Action) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis.
The Middle
The Middle
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Big Bang
Big Bang
FOX61 First How I Met
Two Men
Two Men
TMZ (N) ’ Å
Antiques Roadshow Å
This Old H’se Old House
Weekend
Rick Steves Father Brown ’ Å
Rosemary and Thyme Å
Keeping Up As Time...
Served?
Detectorists POV “Cutie and the Boxer” (N) ’ Å
Jay Leno
Gospel Music Amer. Gos. Gospel Music Huch
Jewish Jesus Israel News Movie
Kenneth W. Jay Sekulow In Touch W/Charles Stanley Perry Stone Green Room Hillsong TV Joel Osteen
(3:30) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Coll. Football News
Paid Program College Football Stanford at USC. From the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, CA. (N)
News
Wheel
Jeopardy! ’
Hometime
Tennessee
Weekend
Southern
Classic Gospel ’ Å
Wait for God Wait for God Keeping Up Keeping Up As Time...
As Time...
Call the Midwife ’ Å
Scenic City Sun Studio Austin City Limits ’ Å
Raceline
Empire
Friends ’
Friends ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Col. Pregame College Football California at Texas. From Darrell K. Royal - Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin, Texas.
Animation Domination
Seinfeld ’
Elementary
(3:30) College Football Auburn at LSU. From Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, La. (N) Å
Paid Program Paid Program NCIS: New Orleans Å
Criminal Minds “The Hunt”
48 Hours ’ Å
News
Titans All
Paid Program Paid Program
(3:00) WEN by Chaz Dean
Computer Shop
Quacker Factory by Jeanne Bice
Computer Shop
WEN by Chaz Dean Beauty products.
Computer Shop
Cooking With Masterbuilt
Washington This Week ’
Washington Communicat Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
››› “Kill Bill: Vol. 2” (2004, Action) Uma Thurman. Å
15 Years of JOY
Slinky Brand Fashions (N) Slinky Brand Fashions (N) Aetna the
Kitchen In
Healthy Cooking at Home
15 Years of JOY
15 Years of JOY
Innovations on the Go (N)
HP Innovations (N)
Kardashian
›› “Maid in Manhattan” (2002) Jennifer Lopez.
›› “The Proposal” (2009) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. Premiere.
›› “The Proposal” (2009) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds.
›› “Maid in Manhattan”
American Ninja Warrior ’
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Obstacles include Psycho Chain. ’ Å
The Agent
“Nanny Cam” (2014) Laura Allen, India Eisley. Å
“The Bride He Bought Online” (2015) Anne Winters. Å
“Ungodly Acts” (2015) Dominique Swain. Premiere. Å
(:02) Movie
(12:02) “Ungodly Acts” Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Dateline on ID ’ Å
Dateline on ID ’ Å
Dateline on TLC (N) Å
Dateline on TLC (N) Å
Dateline on ID ’ Å
Dateline on TLC ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
America’s Next Weatherman America’s Next Weatherman
(:15) ›› “Men in Black II” (2002) Tommy Lee Jones.
›› “Red” (2010, Action) Bruce Willis. Å (DVS)
›› “The Expendables” (2010, Action) Sylvester Stallone.
(:15) ›› “Men in Black II” (2002) Tommy Lee Jones.
››› “Cliffhanger” (1993)
NCIS “Murder 2.0” ’ Å
NCIS “Collateral Damage”
NCIS Women’s prison riot.
NCIS ’ Å
NCIS “Kill Screen” ’ Å
NCIS “Squall” ’
NCIS “Double Back” ’
NCIS ’ Å (DVS)
Graceland “No Old Tigers”
›› “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” (2010, Romance) Kristen Stewart.
›› “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1” (2011) Kristen Stewart.
›› “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2” (2012) Kristen Stewart.
The Bastard Executioner “Pilot”
Goal Line
College Football Scoreboard (N) Å
College Football South Carolina at Georgia. From Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga. (N)
(:15) College Football Mississippi at Alabama. (N) (Live) Å
(12:15) SportsCenter (N)
College Football Nebraska at Miami or Northern Illinois at Ohio State. (N)
Score
College Football Texas Tech at Arkansas. (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
College Football Final (N)
Bundesliga Soccer F.S.V. Mainz vs TSG 1899 Hoffenheim. Driven
Braves Live! MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! Bull Riding Championship.
College Football
College Football Northwestern State at Mississippi State. (N) (Live)
SEC Now (N) College Football Florida at Kentucky. From Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Ky. (N)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Now
SEC Now
(3:30) PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Third Round. (N) Golf Central (N) (Live)
PGA Tour Golf
PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Third Round. From Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Ill.
(3:30) College Football Texas-San Antonio at Oklahoma State. (N) (Live) Å
MLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers. From Comerica Park in Detroit. (N)
Football
College Football BYU at UCLA. From the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.
(3:00) College Football Louisiana Tech at Kansas State. (N) (Live)
Driven
Driven
College Football Southern Methodist at Texas Christian. (N) (Live)
Driven
College Football
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
American Supernatural
American Supernatural
American Supernatural
Why Planes Crash
Why Planes Crash
Why Planes Crash
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss “Synagro” Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
The Mind of Manson
Confessions of BTK Serial killer Dennis Rader interview.
The Longest Night: Austrian Sex Bunker
Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Special Investigation Lockup Special Investigation
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
Smerconish
CNN Newsroom
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
Forensic File Forensic File
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Smerconish
CNN Newsroom
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
This Is Life With Lisa Ling
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
America’s News HQ
The Five
America’s News HQ
FOX Report (N)
Stossel
Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show
Red Eye With Tom Shillue
Justice With Judge Jeanine
Neanderthal Apocalypse (N) ’ Å
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars The Knights Templar
The Knights Templar
The Knights Templar
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Fameless
Carbonaro
(:01) World’s Dumbest...
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Alias; Duel” ’ The First 48 “Winter Games” The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Bad Medicine” The First 48 ’ Å
To Be Announced
(:02) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:01) The First 48 Å
Yukon Men ’ Å
Yukon Men “Dark Days” ’
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Ice Age: Last of the Giants Stonehenge: Secrets
Ice Age: Last of the Giants Stonehenge: Secrets
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Live Free or Die
Port Protection
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Port Protection
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks
Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures (N) Å
Ghost Adventures Å
The Dead Files Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Guy’s Grocery Games
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Worst Cooks in America
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beachfront Renovation
House Hunters International Hunters
Hunters Int’l Beachfront Renovation
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
(:01) Pit Bulls and Parolees (:02) Pit Bulls and Parolees (:03) Pit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees ’
(2:00) Grease ››› “Pretty Woman” (1990) Richard Gere, Julia Roberts.
›› “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days” (2003) Kate Hudson.
››› “Pitch Perfect” (2012) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson.
›› “Monster-in-Law”
Girl Meets
Best Friends Dog
Dog
Jessie Å
Jessie Å
K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Droid Tales Jessie Å
Jessie Å
Austin & Ally
Thundermans Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Game Shakers “Sky Whale” Henry Danger Henry Danger Game
100 Things
Thundermans Full House
Full House
Friends ’
(:36) Friends (12:12) Friends Å
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Dragon Ball Z King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Dragon Ball Z Akame
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
›› “Kindergarten Cop” (1990, Comedy) Arnold Schwarzenegger. Å
Instant Mom Instant Mom Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
››› “Erin Brockovich” (2000, Drama) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney. ‘R’ Å
›› “The Great Gatsby” (2013, Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio. Premiere. ‘PG-13’
›› “The Great Gatsby” (2013, Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire. ‘PG-13’
“The Prisoner of Zenda”
(:15) ››› “55 Days at Peking” (1963) Charlton Heston, Ava Gardner, David Niven. Å
›››› “The Red Shoes” (1948) Moira Shearer, Anton Walbrook. Å
›› “The Soldier and the Lady” (1937)
››› “I Accuse!” (1958)
“Be My Valentine” (2013) William Baldwin, Natalie Brown.
“Chance at Romance” (2013) Erin Krakow, Ryan McPartlin. Cedar Cove (N) Å
“Lead With Your Heart” (2015) Billy Baldwin. Premiere.
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
›› “Baby Mama” (2008) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
›› “Baby Mama” (2008) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
Sex-City
Sex-City
Happens
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Bravo First Looks
›› “Enough” (2002) Jennifer Lopez, Billy Campbell.
›› “Enough” (2002) Jennifer Lopez, Billy Campbell.
(3:30) ›› “Underworld” (2003, Fantasy) Kate Beckinsale.
›› “Underworld: Evolution” (2006) Kate Beckinsale.
››› “Skyfall” (2012, Action) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem.
›› “Underworld: Rise of the Lycans” (2009) Bill Nighy
Cops ’
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops (N) ’ Cops Å
Bellator MMA Live (N) ’ (Live)
(12:15) Bellator MMA Live ’
(2:35) “Pineapple Express” (:05) ››› “Superbad” (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Michael Cera. Å
(:45) ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd.
“Louis C.K.: Hilarious” Å
Steve Rannazzisi: Breaking The Half Hour The Half Hour
(:15) Ridiculousness ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. (:10) › “Zookeeper” (2011, Comedy) Kevin James, Voices of Rosario Dawson. ’
›› “Bruce Almighty” (2003, Comedy) Jim Carrey. ’
“She’s Out of My League”
Fabulous Life (:40) The Fabulous Life Of... Nicki Minaj. ’ The Fabulous Life Of... ’
››› “Drumline” (2002, Comedy-Drama) Nick Cannon, Zoe Saldana. ’
“Drumline: A New Beat” (2014) Alexandra Shipp, Leonard Roberts. ’
››› “Drumline” (2002) ’
Friday Night › “Fool’s Gold” (2008) Matthew McConaughey, Kate Hudson. Å
›› “The Guardian” (2006, Drama) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, Sela Ward.
CMT Crossroads (N) Å
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
(3:00) ››› “The Nutty Professor” (1996)
“Chocolate City” (2015, Drama) Robert Ri’chard, Vivica A. Fox.
The Start Up (N) Å
›› “Eddie Murphy Raw” (1987, Comedy) Eddie Murphy.
Husbands
Husbands
To Be Announced
Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Race to Escape “Breakout”
Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science
Book TV ’
Booknotes ’
Book TV ’
Book TV ’
After Words ’
Book TV ’
(3:30) Pope Francis In Cuba Bridegrm
Bookmark
Worth Living Heroic Media Mother Angelica Live
Padre Pio - Between Heaven and Earth
Pope Francis In Cuba
Best-Selling Monks: Miracle Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Identity” ’ Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
The Listener “Jericho” ’
The Listener ’ Å
Phineas and Ferb
Gamer’s G. Gamer’s G. Gamer’s G. Becoming
Nintendo World Champion Pickle-Peanut Gravity Falls Ultimate
Ultimate
Star-Rebels Doctor Who “42” ’ Å
Ultimate
Marvel’s Av. Tron
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest Å
Idiotest Å
Chain Rea.
Chain Rea.
Steak Out
Challenge
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Cuz
Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs Unique
Unique
Pizza Mastrs Pizza Mastrs
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order “Skin Deep”
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Volunteers”
Law & Order “Old Friends”
Law & Order “Double Down” Law & Order “Stiff” Å
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “3 Dawg Night”
Papa Francisco
El Chavo
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Familia
Familia Diez La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Amar
Amar
Mojoe
Francisco en América (N)
Noticiero Tel. Videos Asom. Videos Asombrosos (SS)
››› “The Thing” (1951) Margaret Sheridan. ’ (SS)
Fútbol Mexicano Primera División
T. Telemundo Videos Asom. El Incorrecto ’ (SS)
Papa Francisco
P. Luche
Noticiero
Fútbol Mexicano Primera División: Azul vs Pumas
Sábado Gigante ·Hasta Siempre!
P. Luche
Noticiero
Estrellados (N) (SS)
NASCAR
NASCAR Racing
Countdown NASCAR Racing XFINITY Series: Furious 7 300. (N) ’ (Live)
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More “Dallas” Collectible cars go up for auction. (N)
Match of the Day
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Stories: Creepy Crawlies
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Bills hit Planned Parenthood
and some abortion doctors
Bee stings, research
that makes you go
‘huh?’ win Ig Nobels
BOSTON (AP) — A Cornell
University graduate student
who allowed honeybees to sting
him in 25 places and a group of
scientists who concluded it’s
possible for one man to father
888 children are among the
winners of this year’s Ig Nobels,
which honor humorous scientific achievement.
Michael Smith estimates he
was stung about 200 times during his 2012 honeybee study.
His conclusion: The three most
painful places to get stung are
the nostril, the upper lip and
the male sex organ.
“A sting to the nostril is so
painful it’s like a whole body
experience,” he said.
Other winners being honored
Thursday night at the 25th
annual ceremony at Harvard
University include a trio of linguists who discovered that
almost every language in the
world uses the word “huh” for
clarification in a conversation
and researchers who found that
corporate CEOs take less professional risk if directly affected
by natural disasters as children.
Real Nobel laureates hand
out the prizes, and each winner
receives a cash award: a
Zimbabwean 10 trillion-dollar
bill, the equivalent of a couple
of U.S. dollars.
Smith shared the Ig Nobel for
physiology and entomology with
Justin Schmidt, an adjunct
professor at the University of
Arizona who devised a pain
scale for insect stings.
His advice: Do not get stung
by the tarantula hawk, a nasty
looking wasp found in the
Southwestern U.S. with a
stinger about a quarter-inch
long.
“The sting is entirely nontoxic
but hurts like the bejesus,”
Schmidt said.
Mark Dingemanse and two
colleagues at the Max Planck
Institute for Psycholinguistics
in Nijmegen, Netherlands, won
the Ig Nobel for literature for
determining that the word
“huh” is used in languages
around the world, including
some of the most obscure.
“A system for fixing misunderstandings is clearly a crucial
part of language,” he said.
“‘Huh?’ is one element of this
system: It’s the basic error signal people fall back on if all else
fails.”
Elisabeth Oberzaucher and a
colleague at the University of
Vienna in Austria won the
mathematics prize for figuring
out whether it was possible for
Moroccan Emperor Moulay
Ismael to have sired 888 children — and that’s the conservative estimate.
Ismael fathered the children
during a roughly 30-year reign
that ended in 1727. It sounds
exhausting, but the bottom line
is, yes, it is possible to father
AP Photo
While WeArinG a toilet seat on his head, David Hu
accepts the Physics Prize, for his research on the principle that
all mammals empty their bladders of urine in about 21 seconds,
from Dudley Herschbach, right, the 1986 Nobel Laureate in
Chemistry, while being honored during a performance at the Ig
Nobel Prize ceremony at Harvard University, in Cambridge,
Mass., Thursday. The Ig Nobel prize is an award handed out by
the Annals of Improbable Research magazine at Harvard
University for silly sounding scientific discoveries that often have
surprisingly practical applications.
that many children if he had
sex daily. The study found that
it could be done with as few as
65 women, not the 500 in his
harem.
Raghu Rau, professor of
finance at the University of
Cambridge, and his colleagues
won for their study that found
business leaders more directly
affected by natural disasters as
children took less risk during
their careers.
Rau uses Apple as an example. Late CEO Steve Jobs, who
lived through a deadly landslide
near his home in San Francisco
as a child, ran the company
conservatively. His successor,
Tim Cook, witnessed few fatalities despite regular tornadoes
while growing up in Alabama
and has made more risky business decisions.
“Think of yourself as a member of a board of directors:
When you try to hire a CEO, do
you want a risk taker or not?”
Rau said.
As usual, the winners were
thrilled with the honor.
“Sometimes these crazy
things provide a lot of insight,”
said Schmidt, the bug guy.
—Online:Annals of Improbable
Research magazine, http://
www.improbable.com
Ga. church removes 103-year-old woman as member
ELBERTON, Ga. (AP) — A small
church in eastern Georgia is
defending its decision to revoke
the membership of a 103-year-old
member who disagreed with the
pastor.
The Athens Banner-Herald
reports that Union Grove Baptist
Church of Elberton says Genora
H. Biggs was displaying conduct
detrimental to the congregation.
The woman has been a church
member for 92 years but disagreed
with pastor Timothy Mattox about
worship practices that include laying hands on members. Biggs says
such activities aren’t Baptist.
A statement from the Union
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE
WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured by that
certain Real Estate Deed of Trust for Tennessee
executed on December 18, 2003, by Scott D. Baggett, unmarried to Mary Ruth Tackett, Trustee, as
same appears of record in the Register’s Office of
Bradley County, Tennessee in Book 1394, Page
696-702, corrected and re-recorded January 12,
2004 in Book 1399, Page 993-999, (“Deed of
Trust”); and
WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed(s) of
Trust is the United States of America, acting by and
through the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”); and
WHEREAS, USDA, the current owner and holder of
said Deed(s) of Trust appointed Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee,
with all the rights, powers and privileges of the
original Trustee named in said Deed(s) of Trust; and
NOW THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed(s) of Trust by USDA,
and Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee, or duly appointed agent, pursuant to the power, duty, and
authorization in and conferred by said Deed(s) of
Trust, will on Friday, October 9, 2015, commencing
at 10:00 a.m. at the east door of the Bradley
County Courthouse Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed
to sell at public outcry to the highest bidder either
for cash (must be in the form of a cashier’s check)
or 10 per cent of the high bid price as a non-refundable deposit with balance due within ten (10) days
of sale, (and if such balance goes unpaid, USDA will
retain the deposit and re- foreclose) the following
described property lying and being in the First Civil
District in Bradley County, Tennessee to wit:
Lot Thirty-four (34) in American Heritage Hills Subdivision a plat of which is recorded in the Register's
Office for said County in Plat Book 4, page 42.
Map 59-D Parcel C-16 & 17
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 463 Heritage Circle NE,
Cleveland, TN 37323
Being the same property conveyed to Edward Kimery from J. W. Fleenor by deed dated March 9,
1995 in the said Register's Office for Washington
County, at Jonesbourough, TN.
CURRENT OWNERS: Scott D. Baggett
The sale of the above-described property shall be
subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan;
any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or setback lines that may be applicable; any
prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and any matter that an
accurate survey of the premises might disclose.
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES:
Superior Financial, Inc.
Branch Banking & Trust, formerly First Citizen's
Bank
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly
waived in said Deed(s) of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute Trustee.
The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale
to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time
and place for the sale set forth above.
Publication Dates: 9/11/15, 9/18/15 and 9/25/15
Jerry Jolley
Substitute Trustee 103 Cherokee Blvd Suite 2A
Chattanooga,
TN
37405
http//www.resales.usda.gov
September 11, 18, 25, 2015
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Republican leaders hope House
passage of bills targeting Planned
Parenthood and curbing some
abortion procedures will mollify
fractious conservatives demanding a face-off with President
Barack Obama that could trigger
a federal shutdown.
The GOP-run chamber was on
track to approve the two measures Friday, despite White House
veto threats and opposition from
most Democrats. One would block
Planned Parenthood’s federal
funds for a year. The other would
inflict criminal penalties on doctors who don’t try saving infants
born alive during abortions.
The bills were a reaction to
videos
showing
Planned
Parenthood officials casually
describing how they provide
researchers with tissue from
aborted fetuses. The debate also
underscored how the age-old fight
over abortion could affect next
year’s elections because it touches emotional hotspots among
each side’s most loyal partisans
and could be pivotal as each party
tries wooing female voters.
“It’s about preserving a pipeline
of funding to the nation’s largest
abortion provider,” Rep. Martha
Roby, R-Ala., said of Democrats
arguing that Planned Parenthood
provides irreplaceable health
services for women. “We all get
that. So let’s drop the phony
women’s health charade.”
“This bill is spiteful, it’s meanspirited and it is cruel,” Rep. Rosa
DeLauro, D-Conn., said of the
measure
halting
Planned
Parenthood’s funds. “It tells millions of low-income Americans,
‘Forget your health, you can just
die.’ “
The anti-abortion activists who
secretly recorded the videos say
they show that Planned
Parenthood is illegally profiting
from organ sales. The organization says it’s broken no laws and
is being victimized by deceitfully
edited recordings.
The White House, in a statement released Thursday evening,
said Obama called the shutdown
threat “a game of chicken with our
economy that we cannot accept.”
It was unclear if House
approval of the two bills would
help House Speaker John
Boehner solve a political Rubik’s
Cube. The Ohio Republican’s twin
goals: avoiding a shutdown fight
that GOP leaders warn would set
voters against the party, while
simultaneously appeasing conservatives who might try to oust
him for not adequately confronting Obama.
LEGAL PUBLICATION
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
Bradley County Child Nutrition Programs will be accepting sealed bids for Hot Delivery Pizza at the office of:
Bradley County Board of Education
800 South Lee Hwy
Cleveland, TN 37311
Bid documents and specification may be picked up
at Bradley County Board of Education. All sealed
bids must be received by October 1, 2015 10:00
p.m. EST
September 16, 17, 18, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Church members voted in
SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE’S SALE
August to revoke Biggs’ membership, although she’s continued WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured by a
attending services.
Deed of Trust executed on 01/31/07, by Amiee
Gregory aka Aimee Gregory and Arnold Gregory to
LEGAL PUBLICATION
United General Title Insurance Company, Trustee,
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE
for the benefit of Mortgage Electronic Registration
Default having been made in the payment of the Systems, Inc., as nominee for IndyMac Bank,
debts and obligations described in and secured by a FSB.,a Federally Chartered Savings Bank, its succertain Deed of Trust executed by KENT B. COPE- cessors and assigns and appearing of record in RegLAND and KIM COPELAND, Husband and Wife, As ister’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee, in Book
Joint Tenants to Equititle, Inc., Trustee, recorded 1731, Page 785, and WHEREAS, the beneficial inDecember 15, 2008 in Bradley County Register's terest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and
Office at Book 1876, Page 765, Inst#08018524, and assigned to Federal National Mortgage Association
the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust is ("Fannie Mae"), a corporation organized and existowned by CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES, ing under the laws of the United States of America
LLC, and the undersigned having been appointed and WHEREAS, Federal National Mortgage AssociaSuccessor Trustee by instrument recorded in said tion ("Fannie Mae"), a corporation organized and exRegister’s Office, this is notice that the under- isting under the laws of the United States of Amersigned will on November 11, 2015 at 1:00 PM local ica, as the holder of the Note for which debt is
time, at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, owed, (“Note Holder”), appointed the undersigned,
Tennessee will proceed to sell at public outcry to Priority Trustee Services of TN, LLC, as Substitute
the highest and best bidder for cash the following Trustee by instrument filed or to be filed for record
property located in Bradley County, Tennessee, will in the Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennesbe sold to the highest call bidder subject to all un- see, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the
paid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record.
original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and
Described property is situated in the First Civil Dis- NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
trict of Bradley County, Tennessee, being part of entire indebtedness has been declared due and payLot Fourteen (14), Chestuee Estates, in Plat Book 3, able as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Note
Page 214. Being the same property conveyed to Holder, and that the undersigned, Priority Trustee
Kent B. Copeland and wife, Kim Copeland by War- Services of TN, LLC, Substitute Trustee, or its duly
ranty Deed dated 12/09/2008, and recorded appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the
12/15/2008 in Book 1876, Page 763, and Instru- power and authority vested in it, will on Thursday,
ment No. 08018523, in the Register’s Office for October 8, 2015, commencing at 11:00 AM at the
Bradley County, Tennessee.
Main entrance on Ocoee St. of the Bradley County
Property Address: 159 NE Dogwood, Cleveland, TN Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed to sell
37323
at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for
TAX ID: 060C A 031.00 000
cash or certified check only. The wiring of funds
Current Owner(s) of Property: KENT B. COPELAND will not be accepted. The following described propand KIM COPELAND, Husband and Wife, As Joint erty situated in Bradley County, Tennessee, to wit:
Tenants
The
following
described
property
in
Bradley
The street address of the above described property County, Tennessee: In the Second Civil District of
is believed to be 159 NE Dogwood, Cleveland, TN Bradley County, Tennessee: Lot Two (2), Revision of
37323 but such address is not part of the legal de- Lots Two (2) and Three (3), Woodstone Subdivision,
scription of the property sold herein and in the as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 20, Page 51,
event of any discrepancy, the legal description ref- in the Register's Office of Bradley County, Tenneserenced herein shall control.
see. For Informational Purposes Only: The APN is
SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POS- shown by the county assessor as 064 042.12;
SESSION.
Source of Title is Book 1615, Page 597 (Recorded
If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. 02/15/06) Re-recorded Deed PROPERTY ADDRESS:
35-5-117 have been met.
907 BLACKFOX RD SW, McDonald, TN 37311 CUROther Interested Parties: None
RENT OWNER(S): AIMEE GREGORY AKA AMIEE
All right of equity of redemption, statutory and oth- GREGORY AND ARNOLD GREGORY The sale of the
erwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said above-described property shall be subject to all
Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, matters shown on any recorded plan; any unpaid
but the undersigned will sell and convey only as taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or
Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior
the sale to another day, time and place certain liens or encumbrances as well as any priority crewithout further publication, upon announcement of ated by a fixture filing; and any matter that an acthe time and place for the sale set forth above. If curate survey of the premises might disclose. Subyou purchase the property at the foreclosure sale, stitute Trustee will only convey any interest
the entire purchase price is due and payable at the he/she may have in the property at the time of
conclusion of the auction in the form of certified sale. Property is sold “as is, where is.” SUBORDIbank check made payable to Solomon Baggett, LLC NATE LIENHOLDERS: Midland Funding LLC, David
Escrow Account. No personal checks will be ac- Lee Martin, and Brian Allen Martin For every lien or
cepted. You must bring sufficient funds to outbid claim of lien of the state identified above, please be
the lender and any other bidders. Insufficient funds advised notice required by § 67-1-1433 (b)(1) was
will not be accepted. Amounts received in excess of timely given and that any sale of the property
the winning bid will be refunded to the successful herein referenced will be subject to the right of the
purchaser at the time the foreclosure deed is deliv- state to redeem the land as provided for in §
ered. This property is being sold with the express 67-1-1433(c)(1). All right and equity of redemption,
reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are
by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title
by the Substitute Trustee at any time.
is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell
THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is
AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY IN- reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another
FORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT day, time, and place certain without further publiPURPOSE.
cation, upon announcement at the time and place
Robert J. Solomon
for the sale set forth above. PRIORITY TRUSTEE
Substitute Trustee
SERVICES OF TN, LLC 2970 Clairmont Road NE,
Solomon | Baggett, LLC
Suite 780
40 Technology Parkway South, Suite 202
Atlanta, Georgia 30329 770-234-9181 Web Site:
Norcross, Georgia 30092
www.rcolegal.com
TS#:
7345.28611
FEI
#
(678) 243-2512
2013.03452
09/18/2015,
09/25/2015,
Our File No. CMS.00886
10/02/2015
September 18, 25; October 2, 2015
September 18, 25, 2015; October 2, 2015
Grove church says members
decided during a meeting that
Biggs’ behavior was harming the
church and couldn’t be allowed.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 20152—23
He? She? Ze?
Universities
add gender
pronouns
BOSTON (AP) — Welcome to
Harvard. Feel free to pick a gender
pronoun on this form: — He __ She
__ Ze __ E __ They __.
During the registration process
at Harvard University, students are
now allowed to indicate which pronouns they use, with suggested
gender-neutral options like “ze” or
“they.” Harvard isn’t the first college to embrace gender-neutral
pronouns, but it’s among a wave of
major institutions that are widening their policies and pronouns to
acknowledge transgender students, as well as “genderqueer”
students, who don’t identify as
male or female.
“If someone is being alienated or
potentially outed by inappropriate
gender references, we think that’s
not appropriate,” said Michael
Burke, registrar of Harvard’s
Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
American University posted a
guide on its website explaining how
to use pronouns like “ey,” and how
to ask someone which pronouns
they use. Cornell University and
MIT offer similar primers on their
websites. Ohio University started
letting students register their gender pronouns this year, and officials at Boston University said
they’re discussing the topic. Last
week, the State University of New
York, one of the nation’s largest
public college systems, announced
that it’s working on a data-collection tool to let students choose
among seven gender identities,
including “trans man,” ‘’questioning” and “genderqueer.”
Advocates for transgender students applaud the changes, saying
it can be insulting to be identified
by the wrong pronoun.
“It feels really invalidating to
have people make an assumption
about what your gender is simply
by looking at you,” said Genny
Beemyn, director of the Stonewall
Center for lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender students at the
University of Massachusetts,
Amherst.
Changes at places like Harvard,
Beemyn said, represent “acceleration of a trend that we have been
seeing for the past few years.”
Beyond pronouns, more colleges
are updating forms that in the past
let students pick between male and
female only. Applications to the
University of California system
include more options starting this
year, letting students choose from
labels including trans female or
genderqueer. The move is meant to
welcome those students, but for
the first time it also lets the school
track data on how transgender students fare on campus, such as
their graduation rates.
“This is something that people
think is long overdue,” said Pamela
Brown, the system’s vice president
of institutional research and academic planning.
Academics have suggested for
years the idea that gender falls
along a spectrum, not into two
options. As early as 2009, schools
like the University of Vermont were
letting students pick their gender
pronouns.
But the work of campus advocacy groups, plus the emergence of
transgender figures in pop culture,
has fueled wider change, experts
say.
It’s now commonplace for colleges to offer housing for transgender students. On the first day of
class, some professors voluntarily
ask students to provide their pronouns.
But on some campuses, change
has provoked backlash.
The University of Tennessee,
Knoxville, sparked outrage among
state politicians in August when a
post on the school website encouraged students to use pronouns
such as “xe.” State senators blasted the idea and called for an investigation of the post. Days later, by
the order of the school president, it
was taken down. A spokeswoman
for the university declined to comment.
Grammarians, too, have chafed
at the idea of pronouns that stretch
modern English. Some individuals
who don’t identify as male or
female use the pronoun “they,”
which some academics say should
be reserved for plural subjects.
At Harvard, 4,000 students have
submitted pronouns so far, with
slightly more than 1 percent
choosing something other than
“he” or “she,” said Burke, the registrar.
Laila Smith filled in “they” and
“their” on the form, pronouns the
junior started using earlier this
year.
“By now, we’ve figured out that
sexuality is fluid, gender is fluid,”
said Smith, who identifies as genderqueer. “I think that we’re at the
beginning of it all, and I hope to see
this more integrated into the student life that I experience.”
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K73DE FA
FULL TIME
Maintenance
Technician needed
HVAC/ AC certification
required, willing to be on call
and familiar with apartment
maintenance. Pool knowledge
helpful. Benefits include paid
medical insurance, vacation
and holidays. Please bring
resume or come by and fill out
an application at
Cherokee Hills Apartments,
2020 Bates Pike, #100,
Cleveland, TN 37311
(423) 559-0800.
Fax 423-559-9966.
$
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EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
Institution of higher learning seeking an
executive secretary to a dean. Successful
candidates must have experience and training
in office management, basic accounting skills,
business communications, able to solve
problems quickly, and exhibit professional
behavior. 10+ years of experience; bachelors
and experience in Higher Education a plus.
Resumes should be emailed to Dr Bill Estes
at bestes@leeuniversity.edu
BRADLEY COUNTY SCHOOLS
INVITATION TO BID
Bradley County Schools is accepting bids for interior
painting of the Lake Forest Gym. The bid specifications
and documents may be seen by using the Bradley County
Schools web site atwww.bradleyschools.org/LFpaint. Bids
from qualified contractors will be accepted through
September 28th where they will be publically opened and
read in the Bradley County Schools Board Meeting room at
11:00AM.
September 17, 18, 20.
Assistant Director of Adult
and Online Admissions
Tennessee Wesleyan College invites applicants for
the position of Assistant Director of Adult and
Online Admissions. This full-time position is
responsible for all aspects of recruitment from
initial contact through matriculation of students in
designated recruitment areas. Resumes will be
accepted through September 25, 2015.
For more information, visit www.twcnet.edu
Email cover letter and resume to
gharris@twcnet.edu
LEGAL PUBLICATION
USDA-Farm Service Agency
Notice of Availability
Of a Draft Environmental Assessment considering potential
environmental impacts to federally protected resources
including water quality, air quality, federally listed
endangered species, protected historic properties and
cultural resources, and other resources covered under the
National Environmental Compliance Act (NEPA). The
proposed project is an FSA Loan Guarantee for a FARM
CREDIT AGENCY loan for Construction of two (66x600)
poultry barns with capacity of 109,600 in BRADLEY County,
TN.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency
(FSA) announces the availability of a Draft Environmental
Assessment for the proposed project. The primary
objective of the activity is providing a loan guarantee to
FARM CREDIT SERVICES for its loan to construct two
poultry barns 66x600) at the property identified as
BRADLEY County Assessor’s Map 092 Parcel 006.04. The
loan guarantee is to reduce risks associated with financing
specialized farming operations.
FSA is accepting comments on the draft EA through
October 3, 2015.
The draft EA can be reviewed in person at the Farm Service
Agency, 320 N. Congress Pkwy Athens, Tn 37303.
Comments should be submitted to William R. Anderson,
Farm Loan Manager at the above address or by email to
rocky.anderson@tn.usda.gov.
September 16, 17, 18, 2015
24—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 18, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
40. general services Offered
48. Office space For rent
50. Mobile Homes For rent
69. Trucks For sale
Car Wash help needed. apply at
917 Keith street. No phone calls
please.
BloosoM aCres GUNs firearms
guns transfer. We do transfer for all
your gun needs 423-591-0066 ask
us about selling your guns.
OFFICe/ reTaIL space available,
short and long term lease. several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
iN CoUNTry: small 2 bedroom mobile home, $475 monthly plus deposit. 423-595-8970.
2008 ForD F-150Xl 4.2 v-6 engine. low mileage- 41,000. very
clean, great truck. 615-289-8559.
52. sleeping rooms
70. vans For sale
49. apartments For rent
$149 PlUs tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, hBo/ esPN.
423-728–4551.
Delivery Driver needed. Box
truck experience helpful. apply in
person at scotts Furniture Company
1650 south lee highway, Cleveland.
DryWallers NeeDeD. Metal
Framers and hangers for work in
athens area. 5 years experience,
MUsT Pass Drug Test and have
own tools. $17.25 hourly plus paid
benefits. Call 423-322-7003 or
423-322-7002.
earN ThoUsaND$ from home. Be
careful of work-at-home schemes.
hidden costs can add up, and requirements may be unrealistic.
learn how to avoid work-at-home
scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission. 1-877-FTC-helP. a message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
FasT PaCeD oral surgery group
seeking registered Dental assistant.
We are a busy oral surgery practice
that is patient centered and focused
on delivering 100% quality surgical
care in a setting of service excellence. Please fax resumes to
423-746-4562
or
email
Crystal@etoms.com.
FroNT DesK– Must be able to
work all shifts and weekends. Must
be neat, friendly, hard worker, and
drug free. apply in person. Whitewater inn, ocoee.
FUll TiMe Bradley County Bail
Bond agent needed for Knox based
company in business for 25 years.
Commission based pay. Phone skills
needed, basic mathematical skills
required. email resume sansean67@gmail.com
or
fax
865-522-8552.
Phone
865-522-2240. resume's preferred
over calls.
BoBCaT For rent or hire with
trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with
boxscrape
or
bushhog.
423-478-2724.
BoX Trailers, 40' goose neck
trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for
rent. 423-478-2724.
COMPLeTe LaWnCare
Commercial and residential
landscaping, aerating and over
seeding
mowing,
trimming,
mulching, pressure washing, yard
clean- up, leaf service.
Licensed and insured.
Free estimates
very reliable
Offering the Best rates in Town!
Call saylors Outdoor services
423-432-7167
CUsToM Tile services: shower
doors installed, tub to shower conversions, new tubs installation,
floors, walls and back- splashes. 25
years experience. Free estimates.
Call robert 423-227-8998.
For sale: Top soil- tandem axle
$250, single axle $125. also fill dirt,
hi- lift, Dozer and Bobcat available.
Paul 423-650-1981,
Dennis 423-284-1814.
PoWer WashiNG, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
sPeCializeD DeMeNTia home
Care Provider: experienced, excellent references. Dalton/ Cleveland
area 352-777-9424.
ToP CUT lawn Care- Professional
service, affordable Prices. Credit
Cards accepted. 423-593-9634
41. Professional services
eXTeNDeD sTay suites. 550
square feet, furnished, cable, internet, utilities, kitchen. 423-584-6505.
53. Houses For rent
PUBlisher's NoTiCe: all real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair housing
act of 1968 and the Tennessee human rights act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. equal housing opportunity, M/F.
1 BeDrooM duplex, in the city,
ground level, No pets, No smoking.
$450 monthly. Call for more information 479-5570.
1 BeDrooM, stove, refrigerator,
water paid, country setting, no pets,
$450 monthly, $300 deposit. owner/
agent sToNy BrooKs realTy
423-479-4514.
2 BeDrooM apartment, updated,
close- in, $700 monthly, $600 security deposit. 423-476-9101.
2 BeDrooM, 2 bath with garage, 1
level
duplex,
$850
monthly,
423-298-1964.
FUll TiMe evening cleaning positions available for the Cleveland
area. Please call 423-472-9344 for
interview.
2031 WyNWooD- 1 bedroom,
stove, refrigerator, water furnished.
$400 monthly, $175 deposit. No
pets.
Noon
to
6pm
call
423-310-0742.
FUll TiMe Floor Tech/ supervisor. evening position, $10- $14 per
hour based on experience. Must
have good driving record. Call
423-472-9344 for interview.
BesT PlaCe for living: 2 bedroom,
1.5 bath, with bonus room, $690.
423-667-4967.
GeNeral laBorers needed:
starting pay $9 hour, drug screen
required. apply in person at 1198
51st street, Ne.
NoW hiriNG: Newly Weds Foods,
inc. starting Pay $10 hour. apply in
person at: 187 industrial lane sW
Cleveland TN 37311
iNsiDe sales applicants NeeDeD
for Medical equipment Company
seeking Professional sales representatives to call patients & medical
facilities. Base pay plus bonus.
Please fax resume to: 423-478-3160
or apply in person at: 1510 stuart
road, suite 109 in Cleveland or call
423-478-7433.
loCal CoMPaNy hiring over the
road drivers Class a CDl. 2 years
minimum experience with good record. 423-595-8922.
BloosoMaCres GUNs we buy
and sell guns. if you find a gun on
the internet and want it sent to you
just give us a call at 423-716-5302.
We can do all of your transfer we
can get your guns to you fast. 30
Dollars long guns, 25 handguns.
Give us a call 423-716-5302
423-591-0066 Bloosomacres Guns.
42. Day Care
ChilDCare availaBle in my
home week days for $20 per child a
day. Pre-school curriculum, healthy
meals provided. Call alicia at
423-599-5698. Tutoring offered in
algebra and Pre-calculus $20 hour.
43. Moving and Hauling
T & C haul- off service quality work
at affordable prices. For a free estimate call 423-208-2046.
45. vacation rentals
2 rivers CaMPiNG: rv Park,
Cabin rentals, directly on the river
at junction of hiwassee and ocoee
rivers. 423-338-7208.
Bear PaW CoTTaGes- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
46. storage space For rent
lPN
MorNiNGsiDe of Cleveland, a Premier assisted living is seeking an
lPN for a full time position, preferably a nurse who loves to work with
seniors and has geriatric experience.
This position requires 7.5 hour shifts
and weekend rotation. all interested
candidates please apply in person to
2900 Westside Drive Cleveland, TN
or fax resume to: 423-614-6259
eoe
NoW hiriNG Care Givers or CNas
in the Cleveland & Benton area. $9
hour, insurance benefits after 90
days.
apply
online
at
www.fhcsllc.com or call Brandy at
423-744-4674.
NoW TaKiNG applications and resumes for a Police officer/ Chief.
respond by september 18, 2015 to
City of Calhoun, attention City Manager P.o Box 115, Calhoun, TN
37309.
o T r Drivers wanted. Teams/
singles. owner operators/ Company
Drivers. late model equipment.
Great home time. steady freight
year round. Call: 423-870-9681.
PalleT haNDlers: Full time/
days or nights. sorting and loading
pallets, maintaining work area and
following all safety procedures
Monday- Friday and every other
weekend, $8.50 to start. Call Jamie
423-598-0634.
33. Business Opportunities
InvesTIgaTe BeFOre
YOU InvesT!
always a good policy, especially for
business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer
affairs at (800) 342-8385 or the Federal Trade Commission at (877)
FTC-helP for free information. or
visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov
ProCess MeDiCal claims from
home? Chances are you won’t make
any money. Find out how to spot a
medical billing scam. Call the Federal Trade Commission,
1-877-FTC-helP.
a message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
Federal Trade Commission. or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
34. Money To Lend
* loaNs up to $1,250 *
Quick approval
423-476-5770
NeeD Ca$h fast but can’t get a
loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a
loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-helP to learn
how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. a message from Cleveland
Daily Banner and the FTC. or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
40. general services Offered
a & J's Painting & remodeling,
roofing, reasonable rates. Free estimates 423-277-6441, 458-4869.
BloosoMaCres GUNs sell and
transfer guns in Tennessee. We buy
and sell guns and do transfer for gun
broker and gun auction. ask us
about
selling
your
guns,
423-591-0066.
CalFee's MiNi Warehouse for rent:
Georgetown Pike, spring Place
road and highway 64. Call
476–2777.
TeMPsaFe sToraGe
Climate Controlled
& outside Units
Downtown location
& Georgetown road
614-4111
47. Business Property For
rent
$595: 1,770 square foot commercial
property, formerly leased as restaurant and an office. Good location.
Call Dennis, ProvisioN real esTaTe & ProPerTy MaNaGeMeNT llC. 423-240-0231.
avaILaBLe IMMeDIaTeLY!
220,000 square foot building
26 dock doors, 2 drive in doors
fully sprinklered
all concrete apron
approximately 1 mile from
i-75 North and south ramps
on North Bypass
706-463-0040
oFFiCe/ reTail- star vue square
7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly.
owner/ agent 423-987-9232.
BesT PlaCe for living: 3 bedroom,
2 bath, master on 1st floor, $840.
423-667-4967.
BLYTHeWOOD- sTeePLeCHase
aParTMenTs- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2
Bedroom ($429- $599). appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
ClevelaND sUMMiT apartments
rent is based on income for persons
62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. equal housing opportunity 44
inman street 479-3005
DUPleX 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher. $495 monthly,
$100 deposit; No Pets. Call
423-457-1696.
JOnes PrOPerTIes, LLC
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz
$475: one bedroom, 1 bath close to
lee University, water/ sewer paid.
$860: large 3 level townhome, 2
bedrooms, 2.5 bath with den/ fireplace.
$1,800: luxury apartment, fully furnished, utilities paid, located on quiet
side street.
larGe 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex,
cathederal ceiling in living room with
fireplace, large down stairs area with
patio, deck, large laundry room with
cabinets and sink, 2 car garage,
abundant kitchen cabinets with all
appliances, nice rural area. $895
monthly. 423-339-3983.
larGe, CleaN 2 and 3 bedroom,
townhomes, and apartments. lease,
deposit, 423-479-5451.
ToWNhoUse: 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
no smoking/ pets. Great location.
$850 monthly. 423-505-3355.
sPaCioUs 1 Bedroom apartment
located in south Cleveland, less
than 5 miles from lee University and
Wal-Mart. No pets and no smoking
allowed. $500 monthly rent and security
deposit.
Please
call
423-650-9056 to set up viewing.
50. Mobile Homes For rent
2 BeDrooM units starting at $110
weekly. Thursday through sunday
423-790-7141.
2 BeDrooM, 1 bath mobile home
$400 monthly. out in the country
423-400-0218.
48. Office space For rent
3 BeDrooM, 2 BaTh, real nice on
private lot, 7 miles east of Cleveland.
Must see! No smoking. No pets. For
information
9am-6pm
call
423-479-5570 or 423-472-6641.
600 sQUare feet, multiple office,
$350 monthly, very convenient,
423-991-4984.
ColleGeToWN
MoBile
esTaTes: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
Chrysler PT Cruiser, 2010, 2.4 4
cylinder, 79k, new tires, looks &
drives great! Not $8,900, wholesale
$4,500. 423-618-7770.
72. Cars For sale
PUBlisher's NoTiCe: all real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair housing
act of 1968 and the Tennessee human rights act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. equal housing opportunity, M/F.
2 BeDrooM, $600 monthly, $600
deposit.
appliances
furnished.
Washer/
dryer
hookup.
423-472-7816.
2 BeDrooM, 1 bath, $500 monthly,
$250 deposit. Must have references.
423-595-4508.
2 BeDrooMs, Fully furnished, Cable, Utilities, Washer Dryer. 15 minutes from Charleston. $375 weekly.
423-503-8234.
3 BeDrooM, 2 bath, finished garage, tile/ 3.5 miles from Target,
$850 monthly, 423-618-0616.
3 BeDrooM, large yard, central
heat/ air, $700 monthly, $700 deposit. Call 423-618-9844.
oFF Peerless road: 3 Bedroom,
1.5 bath, large home, $900 monthly,
$400 deposit. Must have references.
423-595-4508.
lloyD's UseD Cars
5526 Waterlevel highway
Cleveland- 423-476-5681
Come by before you purchase your
next vehicle! Cash talks, warranties,
history reports. 2007 Pontiac G5
Coupe, 2006 Kia sedona, 2004 Nissan Xterra, 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
eXT 4x4, 2003 Ford explorer, 2000
honda accord.
LOOKING FOR
AN AFFORDABLE
PLACE TO LIVE
Are You 62 Years or Older?
• Conveniently Located
• Activities Provided
• Utilities Included in Rent
CaLL TODaY FOr DeTaILs!
HerB LaCY CeLL
# 423-593-1508
eMaIL HLKL3@YaHOO.COM
Century 21 First Choice realtors
478-2332
CoMPleTely reMoDeleD 3
bedroom, 1.5 bath, 1274 square
feet, level lot, 24x24 garage, all new
appliances, all yard equipment, all
miscellaneous tools. Moving to
condo.
$121,000
Firm.
423-584-6513. By appointment.
reMoDeleD hoMe: 3 Bedrooms,
2.5 baths, double garage, rocking
chair front porch, Florida room.
lease with option to buy. owner/
agent, sToNy BrooKs realTy
423-479-4514.
$134,900
129 Emmyllie Court
Cleveland, TN
Open House
Sunday,
September 20,
2015
2-4 pm
Refreshments Served!!!
Call (423) 479-9639
1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311
Accepting
Applications For
Efficiency Apartments
Rent Based On Income
*Income Restrictions Apply
EQUAL HOUSING
1sT TIMe HOMe BUYers
PUrCHase YOUr HOMe
“WITH nO DOWn PaYMenT”
423-476-5518
Online Rental Payment Available
ASK ABOUT SELECT “SPECIALS”
www.bender-realty.com
or come by office
425 25th Street
North Cleveland
Towers
OPPORTUNITY
56. Houses For sale
APARTMENTS &
HOMES FOR RENT
North Cleveland Towers does not discriminate on the basis of
handicapped status in the admission or access to, or treatment or
employment in its federally assisted programs and activities.
Office:423-664-1900
Cell: 423-593-5588
Each office is independently owned
and operated.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
NOW
HIRING
• Production Shift Supervisors
• Production Team Leaders
• Mechanics
• Tech Assistant III
• Stand-Up Forklift Operators
• Production Operators
APPLY IN PERSON AT:
3312 Keith Street NW – Cleveland, TN 37312
Visit our website for additional details
www.globalpersonnelsol.com
Drug Screen required. E-verify and National Criminal Background Check
57. Farms & acreage For sale
horToN roaD at Bohannon road
acreage. 7.6 acres fully fenced
$68,000.
423-476-3766
or
423-650-3181.
LanD FOr saLe.
17 BeaUTIFUL aCres On
LOWer rIver rOaD In
DeCaTUr.
verY CLOse TO THe
Tennessee rIver.
ParTIaLLY CLeareD.
BeaUTIFUL sITe FOr a HOMe
WITH a CreeK rUnnIng
THrOUgH IT LOTs OF PIne
Trees.
{greaT FOr HUnTIng}
Deer sTanDs anD HUnTIng
BLInD aLreaDY On sITe.
reCenTLY BUsH HOggeD.
TaKe HWY 58 nOrTH
TOWarDs DeCaTUr,
CrOss Over rIver
anD TUrn LeFT OnTO
arMsTrOng FerrY rOaD,
TUrn rIgHT On
LOWer rIver rOaD.
PrOPerTY aPPrOXIMaTeLY
7/10 MILe On LeFT.
MUsT see!
$79,900
CaLL 423-285-4030
423-593-1508
Director of Athletic
Development and Corporate
Relations:
Tennessee Wesleyan is seeking a person who will be
responsible for the planning and implementation
of programs and projects that strategically engage
alumni and community partners while securing
charitable support for Athletics and the TWC
Annual Fund.
For more information visit www.twcnet.edu
Email cover letter and resume to
gharris@twcnet.edu