Cleaning up the family past

Transcription

Cleaning up the family past
T U E S D AY
JUNE 14, 2016
162nd YEAR • NO. 39
CLEVELAND, TN 16 PAGES • 50¢
American Atheists lawsuit headed for mediation
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
The parties in the case of American
Atheists Inc., et al. vs Sheriff Eric
Watson, et al. is headed to mediation.
During a telephonic status conference Monday morning, attorneys Perry
Craft and Thomas LeQuire, representing the plaintiffs and defendants
respectively, informed U.S. District
Judge Thomas W. Phillips they would
proceed with the mediation process.
The minutes of the conference filed
with the court show the parties will be
contacted by Magistrate Judge
Christopher H. Steger.
Both counsels will have to schedule
the mediation with Steger. Those meetings are not held in a public forum.
Should the sides not come to terms, a
trial on the merits and preliminary
injunction remains set for Aug. 24 at 9
a.m., in Courtroom 1A in Knoxville
before U.S. District Judge Phillips.
Monday’s conference came within
hours after the plaintiffs filed a motion
to amend their original complaint to
include the two personal Facebook
pages posted by the sheriff.
The plaintiffs are asserting that
Watson, in his official role, is just “indirectly doing what he can't do directly”
when it comes to expressing faith-based
beliefs.
The argument by the atheist organization is as a government official, for
Watson to be espousing his religious
beliefs amounts to a violation of the sep-
aration of church and state clause of
the U.S. Constitution.
The plaintiffs failed last week in an
attempt to get a temporary restraining
order keeping Watson from posting
such faith-based messages; however,
the original complaint was about the
“BCSO Facebook page” which has since
been deactivated.
Their arguments also involve alleged
violations of the First Amendment — the
right to freedom of speech. They directly
accuse Watson of removing posts that
were critical of the sheriff’s postings as
well as their charge they were blocked
from being able to post comments on
what they say was a public site.
It is that First Amendment charge
that has led the attorney for the atheist
organization to request the addition of
Joshua Stephens as a co-plaintiff in the
case.
Stephens, who was identified as being
a resident of Bradley County, has not
See MEDIATION, Page 16
Recent
sightings
of black
bears not
abnormal
Inside Today
TWRA provides
prevention tips
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Dogs paddle
The Waterdogs remained perfect in CASL swimming with a victory over Fort Oglethorpe. The
Aqua Tigers tangled with powerhouse Signal Mountain. Six local
linksters are headed to Nashville
for the Women’s State Amateur. A
former Blue Raider returned to
the diamond for an interstate AllStar Game. The Atlanta Braves
again failed in an attempt to close
out an opponent. See Sports,
Pages 9-11.
Understanding
folds of the flag
As the Cleveland and Bradley
County community joins the rest
of America in observing Flag Day,
it is interesting to understand the
meaning of each fold of Old Glory
during ceremonies involving an
Honor Guard and flag presentations. See the editorial on Page
12 of today’s edition.
Forecast
Today looks to be partly sunny
and hot, with a high near 92. There
is a 40 percent chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Tonight’s forecast
calls for mostly cloudy skies and a
50 percent chance of rain, with a low
around 73. Wednesday calls for partly sunny and hot conditions, with a
high near 92 and heat index values
as high as 99. There is also a 40
percent chance of rain. Wednesday
night calls for mostly cloudy skies
and a 40 percent chance of rain, with
a low around 73.
Index
Classified................................14-15
Comics...........................................6
Editorials......................................12
Horoscope......................................6
Obituaries.......................................2
Sports........................................9-11
Stocks............................................4
TV Schedule..................................7
Weather..........................................8
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
THE OLD CLINGAN FAMILY cemetery is located in a small wooded area on the east
side of Georgetown Road in north Cleveland. There are less than 20 burial markers in
the small cemetery, dominated by a large marker for Bradley County’s first elected
sheriff, A.A. Clingan, and his wife, Martha. At right is a road sign marking the location
of the cemetery on the east side of the roadway near Cleveland Middle School.
Cleaning up the family past
Long-neglected Clingan cemetery gets
needed facelift and a new roadside sign
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
There’s a new road sign along
Georgetown Highway, near the split before
reaching Cleveland Middle School.
The sign marks the location of an old,
very small, family cemetery marking the
location of the burial of Bradley County’s
first elected sheriff, Alexander Adam “A.A.”
Clingan.
The burial plot is located on the right
side of Highway 60, northbound. It is up a
slight embankment alongside a residence.
Clingan served in office from 1837-38, a
year prior to the Cherokee Removal to
Oklahoma along the “Trail of Tears.” He
later served additional terms, from 1840
CLEVELAND
through 1846.
Clingan was not the county’s first sheriff. William James “Jimmy” Carter was
appointed sheriff of the just-formed
Bradley County in 1836, but died in office.
Clingan was then elected, in 1837.
The small cemetery suffered from neglect over the years, but recently descendants of the family discovered its location
and cleaned up the area. The sign was
then located along the nearby roadway.
The reclamation of the cemetery
See CEMETERY, Page 16
Sheriff’s Wall of Fame
needs old photographs
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Former Bradley Sheriff Dan Gilley initiated a Wall of Fame at
the Bradley County Justice Center when he was in office, and
the display has been maintained since that time.
The arrangement of plaques provides recognition and is a place
of honor for Bradley County’s 48 former sheriffs. It is located in
the lobby of the Justice Center.
Beginning with William James “Jimmy” Carter, who served
when Bradley became a county in 1836, a tribute to each sheriff
through former Sheriff Jim Ruth is displayed.
Carter was appointed by the governor, but died in office that
year.
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
A.A. Clingan was Bradley County’s first elected sheriff, serving
FORMER BRADLEY COUNTY Sheriff Dan Gilley began this
first from 1837-38. He served additional terms from 1840-46.
Wall of Fame to recognize all of the community’s former sheriffs,
Current Sheriff Eric Watson will be included on the Wall of
See PHOTOGRAPHS, Page 16
from 1836 through current Sheriff Eric Watson. Just over a dozen
of the plaques do not have photographs of the former sheriff.
County schedules new vote
on Westland property future
Around Town
Pam Turley excited about a
recent award ... Mike and Tammy
Green celebrating their wedding
anniversary just a bit late ... Jim
Gumm receiving some rave
reviews ... Miranda Stamper talking about a well-known writer ...
Emma Moore learning a little
Japanese.
6 89076 75112 4
HIDDEN
required removal of underbrush, leaves,
poison ivy, 16 small saplings, one large
dead tree, and straightening and repair of
headstones which had fallen or were leaning. One headstone had broken.
The Clingan family of the first half of the
1800s has evolved into the Roark-Conner
Family Association, and members are
located across the nation.
Members of the association located the
cemetery and initiated the reclamation
project. They are hopeful a historical group
or society in the Cleveland area will show
interest in maintaining the old cemetery.
Anyone interested can contact the association’s secretary, Wanda L. Wilkey, 1372
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
David Benton
The county giveth and the county may
taketh away — again.
Bradley County commissioners will vote
next week on whether to keep a piece of
property located off Westland Drive as a
potential site for a new Emergency
Management Agency communications
tower.
It is the same piece of property commissioners have voted to sell for back taxes,
then keep, then sell, and now may choose
to keep again.
The property was originally set to be sold
for delinquent taxes until 911 Board member David Benton addressed commissioners May 2, and asked them to hold on to
the property.
They voted to keep the property until
last week, when Commissioner Johnny
Mull reported he had spoken to EMA
Director Troy Spence, who had told him
the agency could do “with or without it.”
Mull also said, and County Mayor D.
See VOTE, Page 16
There have been a few sightings of black bears in Cleveland
and Bradley County during
these warm-weather months,
but according to authorities, no
more than are normal this time
of year.
The most recent reported
sighting was in the Oak Grove
area of Bradley County, though
an incident report was not filed.
According to Cleveland Police
Department Sgt. Evie West,
there have been no sightings
reported within the city of which
she has been made aware.
Communications
Director
James Bradford of the Bradley
County Sheriff’s Office echoed
West’s comments.
According to Mime Barnes,
public information officer for the
Tennessee Wildlife Resources
Agency, bears are not coming
out of the mountains searching
for food — yet.
“We are not hearing any more
reports on bears than we [normally] do as spring ends and
summer begins,” Barnes said.
“There are no problems with
food with the bears in the mountains, so they have no reason to
be coming into a populated
area.”
However, that still does happen, and food may be the reason
for the sightings.
“People have trash outside,
and those are easy calories for
these bears,” she said. “As I tell
children when I am speaking to
them about wildlife, and specifically about bears, would you
rather walk miles and miles and
miles for food, or take food that
is nearby.”
Barnes said bears sometimes
get into hummingbird feeders,
or eat ripe vegetables or fruits
that have fallen off their trees
and are lying on the ground. She
added that grills which have
fatty residue on them are attractive to bears and other wildlife
also.
But the food they most often
go after is inside garbage bags,
“They have an incredible sense
of smell, so they know there is
something in there,” Barnes
said.
She added that in many
cases, the smells from outdoor
grills, fruits and vegetables and
garbage also attract racoons and
skunks.
In some cases, TWRA officials
have to use tranquilizers to
remove bears from certain
areas. These officers do anything they can to avoid harming
the bears.
“Everyone who works here
loves wildlife,” Barnes said, “We
do everything we can to keep
areas safe without harming any
animals.”
She
suggested
keeping
garbage from outside areas
where bears may smell it.
“If you see a bear in your
neighborhood, contact the
authorities and the TWRA,”
Barnes said. “These places are
not their normal habitat, so we
will try to remove them and take
them where they belong.”
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
Michele Bishop
(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
www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion
Funeral
and
Cremation Service and the Cody
family are honored to assist the
House family with these arrangements.
Michele Bishop, 58, of
Cleveland, died Monday, June
13, 2016, in a Chattanooga hospital.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by Jim
Rush Funeral and Cremation
Services, Wildwood Avenue
Chapel.
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.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Publishser Reserves the Right to Change Rates Without Notice
kathleen Bryson
Kathleen Denise Carmody
Bryson, 62, of Cleveland, died on
Monday morning, June 13, 2016,
at her home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
Anna Jean Butts
Anna Jean Butts, 87, of
Cleveland, died on Sunday, June
12, 2016.
She was preceded in death by
her mother and father, Walter
and Crystal Wade; husband,
Lewis Butts; and son, James R.
Whitlatch.
She leaves behind to cherish
her memory one son, Mike
Whitlatch (Trish); five siblings;
four grandchildren; and nine
great-grandchildren.
The funeral and interment will
be held in Ontario, Ohio.
Companion Funeral Home is
handling arrangements.
Mary J. Cronan
Mary J. Cronan, 73, of Benton,
died Saturday, June 11, 2016, at
Starr Regional Medical Center in
Etowah.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, George and Aznef
Seto Green; and sister, Edna
Green.
She is survived by her husband, William (Bill) Cronan Jr.;
daughters: Jauda Lopez and
Yusheah Abalos,
both
of
California; stepchildren: Mike
Cronan of Benton, Jennifer
Hughes of Chatsworth, Ga.; six
grandchldren; three step-grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; two step-great-grandchildren; sister, Ruth Wade; brother,
George Green; and several
nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be held at 8
p.m. today, June 14, 2016, in the
chapel of Higgins Funeral Home
in Benton, with the Rev. Ray
Cheatham officiating.
Interment will be 11 a.m.
Wednesday in Antioch Baptist
Church Cemetery.
A white dove release ceremony
will conclude the service.
The family will receive friends
from 6 until 8 this evening at the
funeral home.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Cronan family guestbook at
www.higginsfuneral.com.
Christopher John dennis
Christopher John Dennis, 37,
of Chattanooga, died Sunday,
June 12, 2016, at Erlanger
Medical Center.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
Brian Hicks, Caleb Disney,
Cheri Ellis, Holly York and Fred
Clinard, who are celebrating
birthdays today ... Brent Runyon,
who turns 55 today ... Shelby
Beasley, who turns 15 ...
Matthew Passmore, who turns 15
... Bryce Bennett, who turns 8 ...
... Morgan Thompson, who celebrated a birthday Monday ...
Hudson Ross, who celebrated his
fifth birthday Monday ...
Christian and Nattalie Passmore,
who are celebrating their first
anniversary today.
Reuse the News
Gil Frederick
david Patrick Harris
Gilbert “Gil” Wesley Frederick,
47, of Harrison, passed away on
Saturday, June 11, 2016, after a
long battle with cancer.
He was a native of Cleveland,
and graduated from Cleveland
High School in 1987. He received
his associate's degree in art from
the Atlanta Art Institute. He began
his professional career in graphic
art.
In 1994 he began volunteering
as a fireman and was instrumental in the development of Bradley
County Fire and Rescue Station
No. 1 (Taylor). He moved up the
ranks as a volunteer and was
named Volunteer of the Year in
1999. In 2000, he moved to
Station No. 6 where he became
the commander in 2001. He
served many roles, but his mainstays were fire inspector, training
coordinator, and assisting with fire
investigations. It was then he
achieved his rank as captain.
In 2004, he began volunteering
with Highway 58 Volunteer Fire
Department Station No. 5, serving
as captain. He was hired on Sept.
4, 2007, as a lieutenant fire
inspector. He served as safety
officer and was on the Safety
Committee for the City of
Cleveland. He also served as a
fire investigator for the Cleveland
Fire Department.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Allen Frederick; maternal grandparents, Herman (Fat)
and
Margaret
Mooneyham
Horton; and paternal grandparents, Mary and James Amsbary.
He is survived by his wife, Amy
Bell Frederick; sons: Garrett and
Clayton Frederick, all of Harrison;
mother, Brenda Horton Frederick;
sister, Mary Margaret (Mimi)
Frederick; aunts: Shari Horton,
Sue Amsbary Lott, Jan Amsbary
Falls, Shirley Liner and Nancy
Amsbary Beavers; special “brother”, Blaine Horton Headrick; sisters-in-law: Kim Peak (Junior),
Holly Black (Kent), Cindy Easley
(Wayne); nephews: Robert, Riley,
Dawson and Benjamin Peak,
Tyson Black and Will Easley;
mothers-and
fathers-in-law,
Shirley and Jay Wallis and Pattie
and Joe Bell; longtime dear
friends, whom they thought of as
family, Cathy and Pete Faulkner;
and numerous other extended
family members, fellow firefighters
and a host of friends.
A memorial service celebrating
Gil's life is planned for today, June
14, 2016, at 7 p.m. at First Baptist
Church, 1275 Stuart Road NE in
Cleveland, with Chaplain William
Lamb officiating.
The family will receive friends
today, June 14, 2016, from 4 until
the 7 p.m. service time in the
church sanctuary.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests donations be made to
either: Cleveland Firefighters
Association, Jonathan, Vice
President; 370 Keystone Drive
NE; Cleveland, TN 37323 or
Carcinoid Cancer Foundation;
333 Mamaroneck Avenue #492;
White Plains, NY 10605 in Gil's
memory.
You are encouraged to share a
memory of Gil and/or your personal condolences with his family
by visiting his memorial web page
and guestbook at www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion Funeral Home and
the Cody family are honored to
assist the Frederick family with his
arrangements.
David Patrick Harris, 58, a resident of Tellico Plains, passed
away early Saturday afternoon,
June 11, 2016.
He was the son of the late
Loretta Blythe Harris and
Charles Harris. His granddaughter, Blythe Smith; his grandson,
Gabriel Harris; and his nephew,
Scott Harris Jr., also preceded
him in death.
He was a U.S. Air Force veteran and a U S. National Guard
veteran. He served two tours of
duty in Iraq and one tour of duty
in Jordan. While serving in the
National Guard, he served on
the funeral honors detail. He had
30 years of service in the military.
At the time of his death, he
worked for Pen Gulf Corporation
in Charleston. He loved the outdoors including panning for gold,
hiking, repelling and cave exploration. He was a member of the
New Hope Assembly of God in
Coker Creek.
Survivors include his wife of
21 years, Robin Harris, of Tellico
Plains; his children: Julie Harris,
Zachary
Harris,
Heather
McMahan and her husband,
Jonathan, Chris Wingard and his
companion, Glori Viviano, and
Josh Ziegler; his grandchildren:
Haley, Sarah, Olivia, and Emma
McMahan, Alexandria Wingard,
Chloe Ziegler and Anna and
Judah Smith; his sister, Kate
Wetzel and her husband, Tony;
his brothers: Scott Harris and his
wife, Debbie, Steve Harris and
his wife, Cathy; and several
nieces, nephews, great-nieces
and great-nephews.
The Remembrance of Life
service will be held Thursday,
June 16, 2016, at 11 a.m. from
the Jim Rush Funeral and
Cremation Services, Wildwood
Chapel with Pastor Lyndia
Dicandio officiating.
Interment will follow at 1:30 in
the U.S. National Cemetery in
Chattanooga
with
Chris
Wingard, Zach Harris, Joshua
Ziegler, Jonathan McMahan,
Daril Magnetti and Cephas White
serving as casketbearers.
Military honors will be given.
The family will receive friends
from 5 until 8 p.m Wednesday at
the funeral home.
You may share your condolences and your memories with
David’s family at www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
donald Edwin House
Laurel Howell
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Laurel
Howell,
93,
of
Cleveland, died Monday evening,
June 13, 2016, at her home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
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donny Ray Pope
Donny Ray Pope, 59, a lifetime
resident of Cleveland, passed
away at his home on Monday
morning, June 13, 2016.
He was born in Cleveland on
Dec. 22, 1956, a son of the late
Ernest and Clyde Mae Pope.
He is survived by his loving
wife, Susie Pope; two sons:
Christopher Pope and Benjie
Pope and his wife, Sandra; five
grandchildren; and numerous
other extended family members
and friends.
There will be no service at this
time per his wishes.
You can however share a
memory or your personal condolences with his family by visiting
his memorial web page and
guestbook at www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion Funeral Home and
the Cody family are honored to
assist Donny’s family with his
arrangements.
Banner photo, BRIAN GRAVES
HAydEN BRNIk, right, a student from Michigan Avenue
Elementary School, served as “Chief of the Day” on Monday for
Bradley County Fire-Rescue. Introducing him at a meeting of the
County Commission was BCFR Chief Troy Maney.
To submit an obituary,
have the funeral home or
cremation society in
charge of arrangements
e-mail the information to
obituaries@clevelandbanner.com and fax to
423-614-6529, attention
Obits.
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
(AP) — These lotteries were
drawn Monday:
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
Man sentenced for distributing
child pornography
CHATTANOOGA (AP) — The U.S.
Justice Department says a 29year-old Chattanooga man has
been sentenced to serve nearly six
years in prison for distribution of
child pornography through the
online sales site Craigslist.
Authorities say U.S. District
Judge Harry S. Mattice Jr. sentenced Larry Vance to 70 months
in prison Monday and ordered him
to be supervised by the U.S.
Probation Office for 15 years after
his release from prison.
Vance pleaded guilty to distribution of child pornography in
December. A Justice Department
news release says Vance was
arrested after Texas law enforcement noticed that a Tennessee
man was sending images of child
pornography and discussing the
molestation of these children
through Craigslist.
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 3-9-4, Lucky
Sum: 16
Cash 3 Midday: 7-8-7, Lucky
Sum: 22
Cash 3 Morning: 7-6-9
Cash 4 Evening: 0-1-1-2,
Lucky Sum: 4
Cash 4 Midday: 2-1-4-1, Lucky
Sum: 8
Cash 4 Morning: 4-6-4-8
Cash4Life: 35-40-51-55-60, State: Hunter Industrial moving new
operations to Nashville
Cash Ball: 1
Tennessee Cash: 02-07-11-20NASHVILLE (AP) — Tennessee
34, Bonus: 4
Department of Economic and
Community
Development
Georgia
Commissioner Randy Boyd has
5 Card Cash: QC-3C-3H-4S-9S announced that Hunter Industrial,
All or Nothing Day: 01-02-04- a division of the Hunter Fan
05-06-07-09-10-15-19-20-21
Company, is opening new operaAll or Nothing Evening: 01-02- tions in Nashville.
03-05-10-12-14-15-16-19-23-24
State officials said the company
All or Nothing Morning: 01-02- will locate its business headquar07-09-12-13-14-17-18-19-20-23 ters and production center in a
All or Nothing Night: 01-02-06- 30,000 square foot facility in
07-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-22
MetroCenter office park. A press
Cash 3 Evening: 3-3-1
release says Hunter Industrial will
Cash 3 Midday: 4-3-0
invest $1.4 million on new operaCash 4 Evening: 9-1-6-6
tions and create 41 new jobs in
Cash 4 Midday: 4-7-8-4
Davidson County.
Fantasy 5: 08-09-27-28-29
U.T. to get $1.5 million to study fetal
Estimated jackpot: $125,000
Georgia FIVE Evening: 7-7-6-0-4 alcohol syndrome
KNOXVILLE (AP) — The
Georgia FIVE Midday: 5-0-4-1-4
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 02-09-24- University of Tennessee has
received a $1.5 million grant to
27-36-37
study the role of genetics in fetal
alcohol syndrome.
Kristin Hamre, an assistant professor in the Department of
Anatomy and Neurobiology, said
researchers have known for some
time that the harm that comes to
babies as a result of their mother’s
alcohol consumption while pregnant varies. Hamre, in a press
The
Bradley
County release from the university, said
Republican Women organization
both the genetics of the mother
will meet Thursday at noon, in
and the baby play a key role in fetal
the Community Room at the
alcohol syndrome.
Bradley County Justice Center.
Animal models, and to a lesser
Chief Mark Gibson of the
extent,
human studies, have
Cleveland Police Department will
shown
that
genetics are likely to
be the guest speaker.
contribute
to
the severity of harm
———
as
a
result
of
alcohol
exposure.
The “Young at Heart” group
Donald Edwin House of
Cleveland, passed away on
Sunday, June 12, 2016.
Roger Joe Gore
He was born in Hagerstown,
Roger Joe Gore, 71, of Md.
Riceville, died Sunday, June 12,
He is preceded in death by his
2016, at his home.
mother, Geneva Snyder House;
He is survived by his wife, father, Jacob Franklin House,
Marta McAnally Gore; children: sisters: Ethel Juanita Everhart,
Pamela Gillingham, Anthony Norma Catherine McGown, and
Paisley and Dawn Williams; six Beulyn May House; brother
grandchildren; two sisters: Ova Bruce Franklin House; and baby
Townsend and Sally Davidson; brother, Paul William House.
and
beloved
nieces
and
He is survived by his wife,
nephews.
Teresita Bulacan House; sons:
A private memorial service will Daniel Stephen House of
be held at a later date.
Chicago, Ill., and Randel
Funeral arrangements are Leonard House of Louisiana;
being handled by Grissom- stepson, Eugene Hererra; and
Serenity Funeral Home and grandchildren: Kayla, Radel,
Cremation Services.
Lucian, Deja and Sara House.
No public service will be held
at this time.
You are invited to share a personal memory of Don or your from Big Spring United Methodist
condolences with his family at his Church will meet Thursday at 9
online memorial located at a.m., at Old Fort Restaurant.
CHURCH
ACTIVITIES
MTSU offers new workplace
leadership program
MURFREESBORO
(AP)
—
Middle Tennessee State University
is offering leadership training to
adult learners already in the workforce.
Each of four certificates offered
in the Applied Leadership program
requires two, 7-week online courses and a 1-week intensive training
on campus. The certificates are in
leadership theory; communication
and problem solving; leading
teams; and leading people and
managing change. The credits can
be used toward a bachelor’s
degree.
According to the school, the program was developed through a
partnership with tire and rubber
company Bridgestone Americas.
Bridgestone employees are expected to be among the inaugural
group of students to begin this fall.
MTSU says the new program
complements Gov. Bill Haslam’s
Drive to 55 initiative. That seeks to
increase
the
percent
of
Tennesseans with a college degree
or certificate to 55 percent by
2025.
Prosecutors say ex-Vandy player
encouraged woman’s assault
NASHVILLE (AP) — Prosecutors
say a former Vanderbilt football
player encouraged his teammates
to have sex with an unconscious
woman whom he had been dating.
During opening statements
Monday in the retrial of Brandon
Vandenburg, a prosecutor said the
former player even passed out condoms to three teammates before
the woman was raped.
But one of Vandenburg’s attorneys blamed the three other players,
saying
that
maybe
Vandenburg could have stopped
the June 2013 attack but that he
couldn’t stop the others.
The defense attorney said
Vandenburg had been drinking all
day long, and the 19-year-old
newly arrived recruit had asked
players he didn’t even know to help
him carry the unconscious woman
to his dorm. He said the others
were on the woman as soon as they
got her in the room.
2 inmates attempt to escape, 1 falls
down rock quarry
NASHVILLE (AP) — An inmate
has been injured after authorities
say he fell down a rock quarry
while trying to escape with another
inmate in Nashville.
Media outlets report the
Davidson County Sheriff’s Office
says they were transporting
inmates Saturday afternoon
from the facility to the
Correctional Development Center
when 34-year-old Jerry Young
and 30-year-old Michael Young
tried to run away when the bus
stopped.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—3
Officials: French police commander slain by jihadi recruiter
PARIS (AP) — A Frenchman
once convicted of recruiting jihadi fighters stabbed a police commander to death outside his suburban Paris home, recording the
attack and posting it on
Facebook Live, French officials
said Tuesday. The commander’s
partner and the attacker were
found dead inside the home after
a three-hour standoff with police.
The couple’s 3-year-old was in
the house in Magnanville, about
35 miles (55 kilometers) west of
Paris, but was unharmed. A
police official said that at one
point in the video the attacker
puzzled over what to do with the
child.
The Islamic State’s Amaq news
agency cited an unnamed source
as saying an IS fighter carried
out the attack late Monday.
While the extremist group has
not officially claimed responsibility, French President Francois
Hollande said it was “incontestably a terrorist act” and that
France faces a threat “of a very
large scale.”
Two people close to the attacker, identified as 25-year-old
Larossi Abballa, were detained,
authorities said Tuesday. They
gave no details about them.
France has been on particularly high alert as it hosts Europe’s
top sporting event, the monthlong European Championship
soccer tournament, and is still
under a state of emergency after
the November IS attacks in Paris
that killed 130 people.
Hollande held an emergency
security meeting Tuesday.
“France is not the only country
concerned (by the terrorist
threat), as we have seen, again,
in the United States, in Orlando,”
he said.
Abballa was from the nearby
suburb of Mantes-la-Jolie and
was sentenced in 2013 to three
years in prison for recruiting
fighters for jihad in Pakistan,
according to two police officials.
The officials spoke on condition
of anonymity because they were
not authorized to be publicly
named discussing investigations.
A resident of the apartment
building where Abballa lived,
who did not want to give his
name, said police raided it early
Tuesday.
Neighborhood
resident
Henriette Yenge, who lives and
works near the building, said she
would say hello to Abballa when
he went to the mosque around
the corner.
“He was a neighborhood kid,”
she said. “I was surprised it was
him. It’s sad to see things like
that.”
Two other security officials
who also spoke on condition of
anonymity said Abballa recorded
a video during the knife attack.
One official said the assailant
posted the video on Facebook
Live, the social media site’s live
feed.
A Facebook profile bearing the
name Larossi Abballa — which
vanished from the internet early
Tuesday — showed a photo of a
smiling, bearded man. Two
recent posts featured videos critical of Israel and Saudi Arabia.
The last publicly available post
was a mock-up of the European
Championship logo, highlighting
what the poster said were
masonic and occult symbols.
“Some will say we see evil
everywhere!” Abballa said in a
message posted about 18 hours
before the attack.
On Tuesday, Interior Minister
Bernard Cazeneuve visited the
police station in the suburb of
Les Mureaux where 42-year-old
Jean-Baptiste Salvaing worked.
Police did not identify his partner
but said she was an administrator for police in Mantes-La-Jolie.
Cazeneuve said more than 100
people seen as potential threats
have been arrested in France this
Global agency:
Oil price is
unlikely to rise
much further
AP Photo/John Locher
The MonAco Tower at the Riviera Hotel and Casino crumbles to the ground during a controlled demolition Tuesday in Las Vegas. The casino opened in 1955 and was closed last year
to make room to expand the Las Vegas Convention Center. The Riviera Hotel and Casino was
the Las Vegas Strip’s first high-rise and was as famous for its mobster ties as its Hollywood personification of Sin City’s mobster past.
Chinese lawyer not giving up despite torture
BEIJING (AP) — One of China’s
best-known dissident lawyers
said his newly launched memoir
is his latest act of resistance to
show he has not been silenced by
years of solitary confinement and
torture, accounts of which have
drawn international criticism of
Beijing.
In an exclusive interview with
The Associated Press, Gao
Zhisheng, 52, who has been living
under near-constant surveillance
by Chinese authorities since his
release from jail in 2014, said he
wrote his book “to expose the
truth and crimes of this regime.”
The Chinese-language book, titled
“Stand Up China 2017 — China’s
Hope: What I Learned During Five
Years as a Political Prisoner,” was
launched in Hong Kong on
Tuesday at an event attended by
Gao’s daughter.
“This book is my way of posing
resistance,” Gao said in Monday
night’s interview, which was conducted over a messaging app
instead of by phone to circumvent
surveillance and interruption. “I
wrote it secretly because I had to
hide from the minders who watch
me around the clock.”
He said he kept the book a
secret even from his family to
avoid endangering them.
In the book, Gao recounts the
torture he says he endured, as
well as the three years he spent in
solitary confinement. It was the
strength of his Christian faith and
his unwavering hope for China
that sustained him in that period
of isolation, he said.
A spokeswoman for China’s
Public Security Ministry, which
oversees the police, said the ministry hadn’t been directly involved
with Gao’s case and had no information about his treatment while
in custody or in prison. The
spokeswoman, who gave only her
surname, Wang, said only local
authorities were qualified to
answer questions about Gao’s
claims.
Gao Zhisheng
Gao’s interview and book come
as Chinese authorities wage what
rights groups say is one of the
most severe crackdowns on the
country’s rights-defending legal
community in recent memory.
Several Chinese rights lawyers
have been arrested on state subversion charges that carry potential life sentences. Activists say
the use of such charges indicates
that the ruling Communist Party
sees this group of lawyers as a
threat to its grip on power.
Authorities are also putting
lawyers on trial on other charges.
On Friday, Xia Lin, a rights
lawyer whose clients have included dissident artist Ai Weiwei, will
stand trial in Beijing for fraud.
Gao had won international
renown for his courage in defending members of the outlawed
Falun Gong spiritual movement
and fighting for farmers’ land
rights. After he was detained, he
upset the authorities by publicly
denouncing the torture he said he
had suffered.
When Gao was released from
prison straight into house arrest
in August 2014, the formerly outspoken lawyer could barely walk
or speak a full, intelligible sen-
tence, raising concerns that one
of the most inspirational figures
in China’s rights movement had
been permanently broken —
physically and mentally. Since
then, he has kept a low profile
while living in a small village in
Shaanxi province, several hundred kilometers (miles) from
Beijing, giving the AP his first
interview in five years early last
year.
International rights groups
have condemned Gao’s treatment
both in and out of custody, and
the U.S. government has urged
China to allow him to come to the
U.S. to be reunited with his family
if he chooses. His wife lives in San
Francisco.
Presenting Gao’s book in Hong
Kong on Tuesday was his 23-yearold daughter, Grace Geng, who
said it has been seven years since
she last saw her father. Geng said
her father was not well and that
his teeth in particular needed
urgent treatment that he has been
denied. She said she, her mother
and brother, who all fled to the
United States in 2009, have limited communication with him.
“At the very beginning, I did not
totally understand. I wondered
why our father couldn’t be with
us,” said Geng, sobbing with emotion. “But ... after some time, I
came to think of his decision as
truly great. He loves the Chinese
people so much that he put his
family in second place. I think
that what he thinks is very, very
great, so I am very proud of it.”
In a sign of the chill Beijing’s
influence has cast over Hong
Kong, Gao’s book is being published in Taiwan and will not at
first be sold in the semiautonomous Chinese-controlled
city, Hong Kong pro-democracy
lawmaker Albert Ho told the AP.
Books on sensitive political topics have increasingly been pulled
from mainstream Hong Kong
bookstores or consigned to the
back shelves.
LONDON (AP) — The price of oil
is unlikely to rise much further
after rallying almost 90 percent
since January, as the global market shows signs of stabilizing, the
International Energy Agency said
Tuesday.
The Paris-based agency, which
advises the world’s top oil consuming nations, nudged up its
estimate for global oil demand
this year in its monthly report. It
noted, however, that supply and
past inventories remain high.
“At halfway in 2016 the oil
market looks to be balancing,”
said the IEA in its monthly market report.
After touching a 13-year low in
January, the international price
of oil has rallied to trade above
$50 a barrel in recent days and
has struggled to advance any further. On Tuesday, the Brent
benchmark for international oil
was down 56 cents at $49.79 a
barrel.
In its report, the IEA raised its
forecast for world demand in
2016 to 96.1 million barrels a
day, up 0.1 million barrels from
its previous prediction. It expects
demand to grow next year by 1.3
million barrels a day, the same as
this year.
However, the IEA noted that
large volumes of production
remain affected by shutdowns.
That’s true particularly in Nigeria,
where regional militants have
blown up pipelines, and Libya,
which is struggling to emerge
from conflict. When that oil starts
returning to market, it would
boost supply, weighing on prices.
Inventories are also high globally after three years of overproduction, the agency said. “This is
likely to dampen prospects of a
significant increase in oil prices,”
its report concluded.
year, including in recent weeks.
France, like other countries in
Europe, has seen a series of
stabbings aimed at police officers
or soldiers and carried out by
Muslim radicals. IS has encouraged its supporters to stage such
attacks.
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Trump, Clinton offer different visions in Orlando response
WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald
Trump and Hillary Clinton outlined dramatically different proposals for combating terrorism
and gun violence following the
deadly
Orlando
nightclub
attacks, with the presumptive
Republican nominee vowing to
suspend immigration from countries with a history of terrorism
and the Democratic candidate
warning against demonizing
Muslims.
The candidates’ back-to-back
speeches Monday underscored
the clear choice Americans face
in the November election.
Clinton’s vision builds on
President Barack Obama’s campaign against the Islamic State in
Iraq and Syria and expands on
his gun control executive orders,
while Trump is calling for a drastically different national security
posture.
The cornerstone of Trump’s
anti-terror plan was sweeping
changes to the nation’s immigration rules, despite the fact that
the Orlando shooter was born in
the U.S.
He redoubled his previous call
for a temporary ban on Muslims
coming to the U.S., saying that
policy would stay in place until
the government can “properly
and perfectly” screen immigrants. Going further, he also
said he would use presidential
discretion to “suspend immigration from areas of the world
where there’s a proven history of
terrorism against the United
States, Europe and our allies.”
The businessman did not
specify what countries would be
affected or whether the suspension would apply regardless of
religion.
Clinton said such proposals
would only make it more difficult
for law enforcement to work with
Muslim communities.
“Inflammatory anti-Muslim
In remarks at the ceremony,
Kerry called the war “an indelible
but an increasingly distant memory.”
“And for most, it’s not a memory
at all,” he noted. “Certainly, the
students who are going to enroll at
this university are far more interested in plugging into the world
economy than in being stuck in
the past or reliving memories of
events that took place long before
they were born.”
Though news of Kerrey’s
appointment set off criticism
among some Vietnamese in the
press and on social media, Nguyen
Thi Ha, a 23-year-old third-year
university student in Hanoi,
shares Kerry’s sentiment.
“It’s a desire for most students
including myself to study in a university that offers good education
with affordable expenses,” she
said in an interview with The
Associated Press. “We will not forget the past, but the past should
be put aside and look forward to
build better future for both countries.”
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Congress on Monday sent
President Barack Obama
legislation making it easier
for Americans to obtain
government records.
The bipartisan bill would
require federal agencies to
consider release of government information under a
“presumption of openness”
as opposed to a presumption the information is
secret. Supporters of the
shift said it would make it
harder for agency officials
to block release of government records.
The House approved the
bill Monday on a voice vote,
three months after the
Senate acted.
Obama is expected to
sign the measure, which
aims to reduce the number
of exemptions the government uses to withhold
information from the public
and news media. It also
would create an online portal for individuals to submit
a request under the 50year-old
Freedom
of
Information Act. Such
requests currently are handled by separate agencies
in different ways.
The legislation was sponsored by Sens. John
Cornyn, R-Texas and
Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont.
Leahy said he could “think
of no better way to celebrate the 50th Anniversary
of FOIA than by passing the
FOIA Improvement Act.”
Cornyn said the legislation will “build on what our
Founding Fathers recognized hundreds of years
ago: that a truly democratic system depends on an
informed citizenry to hold
their leaders accountable.
If the public doesn’t know
what government is doing,
how can they consent” to
actions taken by the government on their behalf?
Members of Congress
have long complained that
the White House and executive-branch agencies have
not been fully transparent
in sharing records with
lawmakers and the public,
while Obama and previous
presidents have criticized
Congress for exempting
itself from the requirements. FOIA does not apply
to Congress.
“Problems with FOIA
have persisted under both
Republican and Democrat
administrations, but under
President Obama, things
have only worsened and
his commitment to a ‘new
era of openness’ has
proven illusory at best,”
said Sen. Charles Grassley,
R-Iowa, a frequent Obama
critic.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
AP Photo/Jim Cole
AP Photo/Tony Dejak
RePubliCAn presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at
DemoCRATiC presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the
Cleveland Industrial Innovation Center, Monday in Cleveland, Ohio. Saint Anselm College Monday in Manchester, N.H.
rhetoric and threatening to ban
the families and friends of
Muslim Americans, as well as
millions of Muslim business people and tourists from entering
our country, hurts the vast
majority of Muslims who love
freedom and hate terror,” she
said.
Clinton called for increasing
the U.S.-led air assault on the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria,
and pointedly blamed American
partners in the Middle East —
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar
— for not stopping terror funding
emanating from their countries.
She also called for tougher gun
control legislation in the U.S.,
including outlawing assault
weapons like one used by the
Orlando shooter.
“I believe weapons of war have
no place on our streets,” Clinton
said. Though she drew implicit
contrasts with Trump, she never
mentioned him by name, saying
“Today is not a day for politics.”
Trump clearly disagreed, criticizing Clinton harshly and often.
The Republican pledged to
protect all Americans “wherever
they come from, wherever they
were born,” but he repeatedly
referred to Muslims in a negative
context.
Though the Orlando shooter —
29-year-old Omar Mateen — was
born in the United States, Trump
noted that he was “born to
Afghan parents who immigrated
to the United States.” He said
Muslim communities must turn
over to law enforcement “people
who they know are bad,” adding
“they do know where they are.”
He also said gays and lesbians
are often discriminated against
in the Muslim world, and said
Clinton could not claim to be an
ally of the LGBT community if
she supports immigration from
such countries.
“Ask yourself, who is really the
friend of women and the LGBT
community: Donald Trump with
actions, or Hillary Clinton with
her words?” Trump said.
However, the businessman has
said he opposes gay marriage —
the official position of the
Republican Party — while
Clinton and Democrats back
same-sex unions.
The Republican did not repeat
suggestions he’d made in earlier
television interviews that Obama
may not be taking tougher action
against terrorism because he
may sympathize with the perpetrators.
“He doesn’t get it or, or he gets
it better than anybody understands,” Trump said on Fox
News Channel’s “Fox and
Friends.” ‘’It’s one or the other.
And either one is unacceptable.”
Clinton said her anti-terror
efforts would center on identifying “lone wolf” attackers — those
who may be radicalized but not
connected to a broader network
or carrying out plans on behalf of
any group. Obama said Monday
that the Orlando attacker
appeared to fall into that category.
Clinton also reiterated her call
for tougher gun control measures, a policy proposal that has
been a centerpiece of her presidential campaign. In addition to
her support for an assault
weapons ban, she also said
Americans should be able to
agree that “if the FBI is watching
you for a suspected terrorist link,
you shouldn’t be able to just go
buy a gun with no questions
asked.”
The FBI said Mateen had twice
come to its attention, but the
investigations did not reveal any
definitive links to terror groups
or plots. Mateen purchased at
least two firearms legally within
the past week or so, according to
federal authorities.
War record of Vietnam university’s U.S. chairman angers some
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — The
limits of forgiving and forgetting
are being tested by the former U.S.
senator picked to be board chairman of the new Fulbright
University Vietnam: Bob Kerrey,
who has described how his squad
killed civilians including women
and children during the Vietnam
War.
It’s an unusually sensitive point
in a relationship between two
nations that in many ways have
put the war behind them. While a
top Vietnamese Communist Party
official has expressed support for
Kerrey’s appointment, and many
people interviewed by The
Associated Press were pragmatic
or forgiving, others find his role
upsetting.
Ton Nu Thi Ninh, a former
Vietnamese ambassador to the
European Union, wrote in an article published this month in the
state-run online newspaper Zing
that when she learned of the
appointment she was “extremely
stunned and could not understand.”
Whether Kerrey truly felt
remorse for his wartime actions
was something only he could
know, she wrote, but “taking a
leadership role in the university
with ambitions like Fulbright
University should not be considered to atone for the wrongdoing
in the past.” Ninh declined to comment further when contacted by
telephone in Ho Chi Minh City.
Fulbright University Vietnam,
partially funded by the U.S. government, will be the first private
nonprofit university in the country. Hoped-for corporate sponsorship and planned programs in
management and public policy
hint strongly at a capitalist academic agenda, but this is no cause
for controversy, because the
Communist Party has jettisoned
most aspects of a command economy for the type of freewheeling
entrepreneurship that is a hallmark of modern Asian culture.
During a visit to Vietnam last
month, President Barack Obama
announced the university would
open this fall in Ho Chi Minh City.
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
5,000
Close: 4,848.44
Change: -46.11 (-0.9%)
4,920
5,400
For some, the announcement of
the university’s board chairman
sent old animosities rushing back.
Kerrey, a former Democratic
governor and senator from
Nebraska and former president of
The New School in New York, was
a Navy SEAL during the war. He
lost part of a leg in a combat
engagement for which he received
the Medal of Honor.
Earlier in his war service, on
Feb. 25, 1969, he led a seven-man
squad in a nighttime raid on
Thanh Phong, in Vietnam’s
Mekong Delta, to eliminate
Vietcong officials. They ended up
shooting dead at least a dozen
women and children.
Those details came to light only
in early 2001, shortly after Kerrey
retired from the Senate.
Kerrey and five members of his
squad issued a statement saying
the civilians were caught in crossfire as the men fought their way
out of the village. One member of
his squad and two surviving villagers painted a darker picture,
saying the civilians were executed
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
DAILY DOW JONES
4,840
10 DAYS
17,600
4,800
16,800
4,500
16,000
4,200
15,200
52-Week
High
Low
18,188.81 15,370.33
8,530.82 6,403.31
684.33
539.96
11,170.82 8,937.99
5,231.94 4,209.76
947.85
809.57
2,132.82 1,810.10
1,551.28 1,215.14
22,537.15 18,462.43
1,296.00
943.09
J
F
M
A
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
Name
Dow Industrials
Dow Transportation
Dow Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 100
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Last
17,732.48
7,676.10
680.04
10,349.17
4,848.44
919.45
2,079.06
1,482.32
21,507.18
1,150.70
M
Net
YTD
Chg
%Chg %Chg
-132.86
-.74 +1.76
-88.75 -1.14 +2.23
-.58
-.09 +17.69
-96.93
-.93 +2.03
-46.11
-.94
-3.17
-7.30
-.79
+.88
-17.01
-.81 +1.72
-16.75 -1.12 +5.99
-181.61
-.84 +1.60
-13.23 -1.14 +1.30
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
LinkedIn 192.21 +61.13 +46.6
ArcadBio n 2.18 +.49 +29.0
ElevenBio 2.39 +.52 +27.8
Pavmed un 15.00 +2.55 +20.5
Medovex n 2.25 +.30 +15.4
Vuzix
6.64 +.84 +14.5
TurqHillRs 3.26 +.38 +13.2
Versartis 11.86 +1.38 +13.2
NewStarFn 10.43 +1.10 +11.8
BFC Cp pf 29.93 +3.14 +11.7
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
CareDx
4.70 -1.23 -20.7
Intelsat
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PSBMetDS 16.05 -3.95 -19.8
ArgosTher 5.95 -1.46 -19.7
Cyclacel pf 5.60 -1.37 -19.7
BioScrip
2.28 -.55 -19.4
Workhrs rs 7.04 -1.61 -18.6
NovoCure n 10.97 -2.44 -18.2
AccVIXdn rs 4.48 -.92 -17.0
RxVlmxInF 22.05 -4.31 -16.4
Dow Jones industrials
18,040
Close: 17,732.48
Change: -132.86 (-0.7%)
17,840
18,400
5,100
D
to ensure the squad could make a
safe exit without the local Vietcong
being alerted.
In his 2002 book “When I Was a
Young Man,” Kerrey said, “I saw
women and children in front of us
being hit and cut to pieces. I heard
their cries and other voices in the
darkness as we made our retreat
to the canal.
“The young, innocent man who
went to Vietnam died that night.
After that night, I no longer had
illusions or objectivity about the
war. I had become someone I did
not recognize.”
Controversy over Kerrey’s revelation flared for a while, then
eased off. The United States had
little inclination to recall such old
battles when facing the challenges
of 9/11.
Fulbright University Vietnam
had been gestating since 2013 and
finally cleared all hurdles to be
inaugurated on May 25 this year
in a ceremony attended by U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry, a
former Senate colleague of
Kerrey’s and fellow Vietnam vet.
J
12-mo
%Chg
-.33
-8.35
+21.57
-5.48
-3.61
+.28
-.26
-2.60
-2.59
-8.75
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
BkofAm
711475 13.60 -.23
Microsoft
472115 50.14 -1.34
Twitter
410189 14.55 +.53
SiriusXM
371018 3.90 -.02
Apple Inc 365970 97.34 -1.49
ChesEng 352671 4.33 -.09
Symantec 338881 18.21 +.91
GenElec
320434 29.83 -.21
Facebook 302136 113.95 -2.67
Pfizer
286160 34.74 -.55
Name
17,640
Last
Name
D
J
M
A
M
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
AT&T Inc 1.92
Apple Inc 2.28
BB&T Cp 1.08
BkofAm
.20
B iPVixST
...
ChesEng
...
CocaCola 1.40
CmtyHlt
...
CSVelIVST ...
CSVixSh rs ...
DukeEngy 3.30
Eaton
2.28
Facebook
...
FstHorizon .28
GenElec
.92
Gevo h
...
HomeDp 2.76
iShEMkts .84
iShR2K
1.73
Kroger s
.42
Lowes
1.40
F
4.8
2.3
3.0
1.5
...
...
3.1
...
...
...
4.0
3.8
...
2.0
3.1
...
2.2
2.5
1.5
1.2
1.8
17
11
13
10
...
...
26
10
...
...
19
14
54
15
38
...
23
...
...
18
22
40.19
97.34
35.77
13.60
16.52
4.33
45.12
13.28
25.15
3.48
81.61
60.63
113.95
13.68
29.83
.49
127.83
33.06
114.81
36.14
77.50
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.14 +16.8
-1.49
-7.5
-.15
-5.4
-.23 -19.2
+2.13 -17.8
-.09
-3.8
-.52 +5.0
-.77 -39.2
-4.44
-2.5
+.78 -44.4
+.37 +14.3
-.99 +16.5
-2.67 +8.9
-.24
-5.8
-.21
-4.2
+.05 -21.8
-1.00
-3.3
-.47 +2.7
-1.26 +1.9
-.67 -13.6
-.81 +1.9
Name
Div Yld PE Last
Microsoft 1.44
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
PaneraBrd ...
Pfizer
1.20
PUVixST rs ...
RegionsFn .26
S&P500ETF4.13
Scotts
1.88
SiriusXM
...
SkylineMd h ...
SouthnCo 2.24
SPDR Fncl .46
SunTrst
.96
Symantec .30
Target
2.40
Twitter
...
UtdCmBks .28
VanEGold .12
WalMart 2.00
Whrlpl
3.60
2.9
2.8
3.3
...
3.5
...
2.8
2.0
2.8
...
...
4.4
2.0
2.3
1.6
3.6
...
1.5
.5
2.8
2.1
35
15
32
35
18
...
13
...
17
35
...
18
...
12
5
12
...
16
...
15
15
Pvs Wk
50.14
83.23
24.56
211.92
34.74
15.70
9.36
208.45
67.30
3.90
.20
50.99
23.00
41.89
18.21
66.89
14.55
18.95
25.91
70.53
175.01
J
YTD
Chg %Chg
-1.34
-.86
-.21
-1.31
-.55
+3.61
-.16
-1.62
-1.49
-.02
+.02
-.12
-.16
-.59
+.91
-.99
+.53
-.36
-.05
-.61
-2.51
-9.6
-1.6
+42.3
+8.8
+7.6
-44.6
-2.5
+2.2
+4.3
-4.2
-93.1
+9.0
-3.5
-2.2
+7.7
-7.9
-37.1
-2.8
+88.8
+15.1
+19.2
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.
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds FnInvA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds NewPerspA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity Contra
Fidelity ContraK
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard DivGr
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm x
Vanguard MuIntAdml
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
Vanguard STGradeAd
Vanguard TgtRe2025
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotIntl x
Vanguard TotStIAdm x
Vanguard TotStIdx x
Vanguard WellsIAdm
Vanguard WelltnAdm
Vanguard WndsIIAdm x
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.3552
1.4260
1.2761
.8882
106.79
18.6360
.9635
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
MA
IH
WS
LB
LG
AL
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LG
LG
LB
CA
FB
LG
LB
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
CA
MA
LV
52,342 24.67 +1.4
70,868 57.90 +0.6
52,128 43.32 +1.0
45,863 52.11 +2.1
73,403 41.42 +2.7
72,772 20.97 +1.1
56,851 35.07 +1.8
36,386 35.25 +1.2
50,823 39.81 +2.0
44,918 13.74 +0.7
54,313 35.46 +0.8
55,614 162.02 +1.9
76,886 97.10 +0.9
30,953 97.07 +0.9
55,064 73.41 +1.8
44,436
2.16 +1.9
36,711 58.34 -1.0
37,262 50.87 +1.3
162,119 192.65 +1.8
29,620 23.23 +1.3
37,644 86.41 +3.1
40,945 23.58 -0.1
45,848 14.51 +0.2
38,499 101.24 +1.7
35,813 10.75 +0.4
30,439 16.01 +1.1
67,107 11.02 +0.7
81,878 14.10 -0.1
134,864 51.67 +2.1
99,141 51.66 +2.1
32,392 62.69 +1.2
70,388 65.66 +1.2
31,315 60.23 +1.8
+4.3/A
-0.1/A
-6.3/C
+2.1/A
-0.6/B
+1.7/A
+1.3/A
-3.9/B
+3.0/A
+3.9
-19.5
-5.9
-0.3/B
-0.2/A
+1.5/A
-3.6/E
-14.5/D
-3.1/C
+1.5/A
+5.5/A
-5.3/A
-11.8/B
+6.4/B
-2.2/B
+3.2/A
-1.2/C
+5.5/A
-11.9/B
-0.3/B
-0.4/B
+7.3/A
+2.4/A
-3.4/C
+10.1/A
+6.6/A
+6.4/C
+11.4/C
+12.0/B
+8.4/A
+11.8/B
+8.2/A
+12.0/A
+3.8
+2.1
+11.6
+12.4/B
+12.6/A
+12.7/A
+5.3/B
+1.3/C
+13.5/A
+12.7/A
+12.6/A
+17.5/B
+0.9/D
+4.6/B
+13.3/A
+2.3/A
+7.3/A
+3.4/C
+0.8/D
+12.3/A
+12.2/B
+8.0/A
+9.2/A
+10.9/B
MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW,
Suite 1
472-6814
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
0
10,000
1,000
50,000
2,500
10,000
3,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
1,000
10,000
3,000
10,000
3,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.3533
1.4228
1.2796
.8856
106.21
18.8245
.9643
Prime Rate
3.50
3.50
Discount Rate
1.00
1.00
Federal Funds Rate
.25-.50 .25-.50
Treasuries
1.13
1.26
5-year
1.61
1.74
10-year
2.43
2.56
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1284.40 $1244.60
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot) $17.428 $16.428
10 DAYS
Bill will ease
access to
gov’t records
112 Stuart
Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
3575 Keith
St. NW
Suite 201
476-0190
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—5
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
There is still an opportunity
available for youth interested in
being part of a new career skills
program for rising high school
juniors and seniors.
Local nonprofit organization
The Refuge has announced it still
has spots available for its inaugural Youth Career Connection
program,
which
begins
Wednesday, June 22.
Youth Career Connection is a
program for rising high school
juniors and seniors who might
like to get a jump-start on developing their career skills.
“It’s a great opportunity for
them to get ready for the workforce,” said Kelli Kyle, vice president of The Refuge.
The Youth Career Connection
program is a new version of The
Refuge’s
existing
Career
Connection program.
Career Connection classes
cover such areas as decisionmaking skills, job interview
skills, resume writing, money
The Youth Career Connection program is set to take
place at The Refuge from Wednesday through Saturday,
June 22-25. Optional Industrial Skills in Mechatronics
training will be offered at Cleveland State June 27-29,
while Customer Service training will be offered June 29
to July 1.
management,
beginning
Microsoft Word and Microsoft
Excel skills. The Refuge also
partners with Cleveland State
Community College to offer
optional training in customer
service or industrial mechanical
skills.
“We’re still going to teach the
same information to these students,” Kyle said. “But this is
going to be tailored to where they
are in life.”
The Refuge decided to partner
with Boys & Girls Clubs George
Johnson Teen Center and the F.I.
Denning Center of Technology
and Careers, Cleveland City
Schools’ alternative school, to fill
its first Youth Career Connection
class.
Bailey Parker, director of the
BGC’s George Johnson Teen
Center, said earlier this year she
was excited this program would
be giving youth the opportunity
to build their work skills during
the summer, a time when they
are out of school and may not
have much to do.
Derek Morris, the work-based
learning teacher at the F.I.
Denning Center, said the Youth
Career Connection program will
help reinforce what he is already
teaching students.
Morris explained he and his
fellow educators have been trying
to get the school’s at-risk students to see they can make positive changes for their futures.
“We’re trying to build success-
es for them and give them the
building blocks they need to be
successful,” Morris said.
Though youth with both
organizations were given the
opportunity to be part of the program, there were additional
spots left over after the interested
students registered.
Now, the first session of the
program is being made available
to any student in Bradley County
or Polk County who will be a high
school junior or senior this fall.
A total of six spots remain,
Kyle said.
Each community participant is
being asked to pay a $25 registration fee, but Kyle said the program will provide training valued
at more than $2,000.
Students who complete both
the program at The Refuge and
one of the programs at Cleveland
State can receive two completion
certificates, 2.5 college credit
hours and an ACT National
Career Readiness Certificate.
“It’s a huge opportunity for
them to enhance their career
skills while still in high school,”
Museum Center at Five Points schedules
busy summer; Triplett reception is tonight
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Cleveland’s Museum Center at
Five Points has a new executive
director on board in Rufus
Triplett, and the facility has
scheduled a busy summer.
The first event is a reception
from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday evening
for the new director.
According to Jan Neyman, who
has been serving as interim
director until Triplett’s arrival,
there are two exceptional exhibitions now on display at the
Museum Center.
“Reading Appalachia: Voices
from Children’s Literature” will
run through July 23, and
“Novelties and Knick-Knacks:
Why and How We Collect Things”
runs through Oct. 22.
A book signing is scheduled for
Saturday, from 8 until 10 a.m. at
the museum.
Author Blair Howard, who has
written more than 40 books and
thousands of article, will be the
featured guest. He has lived in
Cleveland since 1979.
Howard's works include historical fiction and detective
thrillers, based in and around
our region. Anyone interested
should drop by the Museum
Store to meet the author and
have him autograph copies of his
books.
For more information, visit
www.museumcenter.org/calendar/blairhoward.
Upcoming museum events:
— From June 20 through
June 24, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m.
daily, you can attend summer
camp.
The MC5P Archaeology Camp
is an opportunity to dig into the
past while learning the tools and
methods of real archaeologists.
For more information about
summer camp, and how to register,
go
to
www.museumcenter.org/summercamp.
— It will be Family Day with
the Chattanooga Zoo on
Saturday, July 9.
The event, from 10 a.m. until 3
p.m., will be free for museum
members, $5 for non-member
adults, and $4 for non-member
children.
The day will be filled with animals, children’s activities, and
stories. You can join museum
staff throughout the day as the
Chattanooga Zoo shows off some
local and not-so-local animals!
— A teachers’ workshop on
“Teaching with Primary Sources”
is scheduled from 9 a.m. until
3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, July
13. The workshop is free for
teachers.
The workshop was originated
by the Library of Congress, from
Middle
Tennessee
State
University in Murfreesboro. For
more information, or to register,
email JKey@museumcenter.org.
— On Thursday, July 14, from
9 a.m. until 4 p.m., the museum
will be host to a teacher workshop roadshow called “Tennessee
History Highlights.”
The presentation is by the East
Tennessee Historical Society and
Humanities Tennessee, and free
for teachers. For more information, or to register, email
JKey@museumcenter.org.
— There will be a “History Day”
teachers’ workshop from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Friday, July 15.
This event will be hosted by
McCallie School in Chattanooga.
Free for teachers, middle and
high school instructors are invited to learn more about the
History Day program and con-
Contributed photo
THE MUSEUM CENTER at Five Points has scheduled a busy summer of activities for Cleveland and
Bradley County residents. It gets started tonight as the downtown facility hosts a reception for its new
executive director, Cleveland native and retired businessman Rufus Triplett.
test. For more information, or to
register, email JKey@museumcenter.org.
— Appalachian Tales and
Music is scheduled from 6 until 8
p.m. on Thursday, July 21.
It is free for museum members, with a $10 registration fee
for non-members.
Musician Tim Poteet, and Judy
Baker with the Cleveland
Storytelling Guild, will share
music and stories from, and
inspired by, the traditions of
Appalachian peoples. This is also
an opportunity to check out the
Reading Appalachia exhibit.
— A special program on the
Ocoee Region is scheduled from
6 until 7 p.m. on Thursday, July
28.
This will be a members-only
opening for the exhibit, “One
River, Many Stories: Ocoee River
History and Heritage.”
Blake McPherson, river operations manager for Cherokee
Rafting and adviser to the exhibit, will introduce Museum members to this temporary display.
— On Saturday, Aug. 13, from
9:30 a.m. until 1 p.m., the museum will host a jewelry class with
Dale Armstrong.
The participation fee is $35 for
members, and $45 for non-members.
You can make your own Tree
of Life Pendant with the noted
jewelry designer, with all materials provided. You must be 12 or
older to participate. For more
information, call the Museum
Store at 423-339-5745, or regis-
ter online.
— The museum staff reminds
local residents that Centenary
Avenue’s annual flea market is
scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 22,
this year.
Kyle said. “It places them a step
above their peers.”
The Youth Career Connection
program is set to take place at
The Refuge from Wednesday
through Saturday, June 22-25.
Optional Industrial Skills in
Mechatronics training will be
offered at Cleveland State June
27-29, while Customer Service
training will be offered June 29
to July 1.
Those interested in being part
of the program must register by
Monday, June 20, at 2 p.m. You
can either call The Refuge at
423-584-5211 or visit the organization inside the Blythe Family
Support Center at 1075 Blythe
Ave., between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Mondays through Thursdays.
©2014
The Refuge has openings in Youth Career Connection
JEWELERS
1721 KEITH STREET • STUART PARK PLAZA(
(Next to The Town Squire)
478-0049 • 478-0050
LAY-AWAYS WELCOME
EMPOWERING
YOUR BUSINESS
Marketing to Existing
Customers
By Tennessee Small Business Development Center
at Cleveland State Community College
Business owners
often place a lot of
effort attracting new
customers. Existing
customers, though,
typically make up the
majority of most
business’ revenue. So
how can you reach out
to existing customers
and convince them to
buy more?
Gather current data
on your customers
about what they buy,
when, and how much
they spend. This will
allow you to craft
personalized marketing
campaigns based on
customer preferences.
Also make sure you
are staying in regular
contact with customers
through print or email
This is the second year of the
event along the historic
Cleveland street. All proceeds
from the benefit sale, sponsored
by local residents, will go to the
Museum Center.
newsletters ensuring
they are aware of new
products, services or
offers.
Host customer
appreciation events
such as after-hours
sales or luncheons. Be
sure to follow up after
a sale to get feedback.
This will allow you an
opportunity to address
any questions or
problems. You may
also find this to be a
chance to sell
complementary
services or products.
Retaining existing
customers can help
those marketing
dollars stretch and
provide a better return
on your marketing
investment.
sbdcempowers.org
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Can you help the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office?
Residents with information about the individuals listed on this page
should NOT attempt to interact with these suspects.
Please call the tip line at 423-728-7336 or in an emergency 911.
ED
R
U
T
P
A
C
STEPHEN
JOSEPH MORRIS
TIMOTHY
LEE CRONAN
04/17/1981. CAPIAS- NEW
01/22/1979. F.T.A. BURGLARY x
BILL FELONY/ ILLEGAL POSS.,
2/ THEFT OVER 1000/ POSS.
FRADULANT USE OF CREDIT
BURGLARY TOOLS/ POSS.
CARD/ THEFT OVER $10,000
PROHIBITED WEAPON/ SALE/
DELIVERY SCH.IV
DAVID
CALVIN KING
LAUREN CASEY
HENDRICKS
THOMAS EUGENE
MCCROSKEY
10/28/1969.
VIOLATION OF
SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY,
MISD. V.O.P.
9-16-1985. VIOLATION OF
PROBATION FOR
INTRODUCTION OF DRUGS IN A
PENAL FACILITY, AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT, THEFT OF PROPERTY.
10/26/1983.
PAROLE VIOLATION—FAIL TO
PAY FINES—CONSPIRACY TO
SALE AND DELIVER
SCHEDULE II
ADVERTISING IS
NOT
AN EXPENSE...
ADVERTISING
CODY DANIEL
MORROW
BONNIE
FAY ENSLEY
JONATHAN
BRYAN HILLIARD
CHARLES JUNIOR
BROWN II
CHRISTOPHER
CLARENCE HUSKINS
IS
6-5-1990.
VIOLATION OF SEX
OFFENDER REGISTRY.
03/04/1975 . POSS. SCH. II
FOR RESALE X 4/ SIMPLE
POSSESSION SCH IV /
POSSESSION OF A WEAPON
BY A CONVICTED FELON
4-21-1992
BURGLARY X 2,
FRAUDULENT USE OF A
CREDIT CARD X 3, THEFT
UNDER 500 X 2
6/9/1974. FAILURE TO APPEAR ON
SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY
RESTRICTIONS. FAILURE TO
APPEAR ON MISDEMEANOR
VIOLATION OF PROBATION.
01/24/1975.
POSSESSION OF A
WEAPON BY A
CONVICTED FELON
AN INVESTMENT...
PLAN WISELY
INVEST YOUR
ADVERTISING DOLLAR
IN THE
ALL INFORMATION PROVIDED BY THE BRADLEY COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE.
1505 25th Street NW
Cleveland, TN 37311
Call Now! 423-472-HELP (4357) “Reuniting Families in a professional,
Cleveland
Daily
Banner
472-5041
one call does it all
confidential and timely manner”
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2016
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Neil Patrick Harris, 43; Ice Cube,
47; Courteney Cox, 52; Helen Hunt, 53.
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Happy Birthday: Alter the way you
look or strive to improve your emotional
situation. Making changes will help you
move forward. Associate with people
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
and groups that share your beliefs and
you will gain the courage required to
implement what you need to achieve
greater happiness. Make your own
decisions instead of bending to someone else's will. Your numbers are 9, 15,
22, 23, 35, 41, 46.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take
advantage of any time you get to spend
with someone special to you. The conversations or interaction you have will
change the way you move forward.
Make vacation plans. Taking action will
impress someone you love.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You will
get what you ask for. Pay attention to
details and you will exceed expectations. A professional or financial gain is
possible, but don't spend money before
you have received what's owed to you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Look for
signs to guide you in one direction or
another. Once you make up your mind,
make your choices clear to avoid any
interference. A change is overdue and
will encourage and motivate you to follow your heart.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Look
for a unique way to present what you
have to offer. It's OK to be different,
and doing so will help you capture
interest that can make your life easier.
A new venture looks promising.
Consider forming a partnership with
someone.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Consider
what you can contribute to something
or someone you believe in. You can
bring about change if you feel passionate about a cause, concern or belief.
Taking control will lead to new opportunities. A romantic connection will flourish.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep a
close watch on the way others
respond. Someone will take advantage
of you if you aren't careful. An opportunity to learn will present itself. Don't rely
on others for information. Network and
negotiate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Look outside your normal surroundings and you
will discover a new way to deal with old
problems. Business trips will help you
see what needs to be done in order to
advance. The information you pick up
will lead to personal gains.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Donate possessions you no longer
need, or have a garage sale to bring in
extra cash. Use your imagination and
you will find an innovative way to market something you enjoy. Keep your
emotions hidden and personal matters
a secret.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Concentrate on stabilizing your relationships with others. Bring about
changes that will keep the peace and
give you leeway to work at something
that makes you happy. Romance is in
the stars.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Close deals, complete projects and
make plans to spend time with family or
friends. Your downtime will give you the
break you need to regenerate and will
provide the incentive to invest in something that will free up more time.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Don't let peer pressure stop you from
heading in a direction that appeals to
you. Bringing about change may not
please everyone, but it will give you
the boost you need to do your own
thing. Celebrate with someone you
love.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Look
for alternatives rather than giving in to
someone who is offering you a poor
deal. Someone who has advised you in
the past will be able to help you out
again. Favors will be granted and partnerships look promising.
Birthday Baby: You are engaging,
popular and impressive. You are inventive and dynamic.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—7
TUESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
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WTVCABC
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WTVC2FOX 11
WDEFCBS 12
QVC
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CSPAN
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WGN-A
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HSN
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E!
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ESQTV
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LIFE
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TLC
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TBS
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TNT
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USA
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FX
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ESPN
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ESPN2
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FSTN
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SEC
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GOLF
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FS1
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FSSE
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CNBC
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MSNBC
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CNN
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FNC
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HIST
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NGC
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FREE
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DISN
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NICK
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TOON
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TVLND
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AMC
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TCM
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HALL
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OXYGEN
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BRAVO
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SYFY
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SPIKE
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COM
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MTV
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VH1
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CMTV
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BET
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SCIENCE 83
CSPAN2
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EWTN
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WPXA ION 107
DISXD
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GSN
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COOK
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WE
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GALA
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TELE
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UNIV
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NBCSP
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DLC
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4:30
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JUNE 14, 2016
6 PM
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8:30
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9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Ent. Tonight Inside Edition America’s Got Talent Hopefuls perform for the judges. (N)
Maya & Marty “Episode 3”
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Prophecy
Praise the Lord Å
Max Lucado Supernatural Potters
Joyce Meyer Everyday
Prince
Bil Cornelius Praise the Lord Å
War &
Journey-Faith World Impact
Artist Bio / Music Special
WTNB Today
Body
Book
Tennova Talk Unity
Rise Up
Spirit Fest
Around Town
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
The Flash ’ Å
Containment (N) ’ Å
Tosh.0 Å
Crazy Talk
Hollywood
Paid Program Anger
Paid Program
Martha Speak Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Time Scanners “Petra” ’
Genealogy Roadshow (N) ’ The Draft ’ Å
Frontline “Gunned Down”
POV “The Genius of Marian” ’ Å
Urban
Reflections
Bill Winston Love a Child Jewish Voice Guillermo
Creflo Dollar Jerry Savelle John Hagee Rod Parsley SBC 2016: A National Call to Prayer (N)
Joel Osteen Å
Walking/Faith K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) To Tell the Truth (N) Å
Uncle Buck ’ Å
To Tell the Truth ’ Å
News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Alabama: Hymns & Gospel Favorites Å
Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You ’ Å
21 Days to a Slimmer Younger You
The People’s Court (N) ’
Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Big Bang
Big Bang
Hotel Hell (N) Å (DVS)
Coupled “Love Bites” (N) ’
News at 10
Seinfeld ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Paid Program Seinfeld
The Dr. Oz Show (N) Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith NCIS “Double Trouble” ’
NCIS: New Orleans “I Do”
Person of Interest “.exe” (N) News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Diamonique Jewelry Gala 14K gold and sterling silver.
Computer Shop
Tuesday Night Beauty
The Deal Spot
Emeril’s Kitchen
(12:00) U.S. House of Representatives Legislative Business ’
US House of Representatives Special Orders ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods “Dedication” ’ Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
›› “U.S. Marshals” (1998, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Smart Home Electronics (N) Yummie--H. Thomson
Storage & Organization (N) One on One With Tony Little Smart Home Electronics (N) Home Solutions (N)
Home Solutions (N)
Beauty Bioscience Skin
Victoria Wieck Absolute Jwl
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
E! News (N) Å
Botched “Super Fupa”
Botched “Plastic Fantastic”
Famously Single Å
E! News (N) Å
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles “Leipei” NCIS: Los Angeles ’
American Ninja Warrior Competitors take on six obstacles.
Boundless (N) Å
American Ninja Warrior Competitors take on six obstacles.
UnREAL “Insurgent” Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
(:02) Celebrity Wife Swap ’ (:02) Celebrity Wife Swap ’ (12:02) Celebrity Wife Swap
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries My Giant Life ’ Å
Little People, Big World ’
Little People, Big World
Little People, Big World (N) (:01) My Giant Life (N) Å
(:02) Little People, Big World (12:02) My Giant Life Å
Friends
Friends
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Wrecked
(:27) Wrecked Conan (N) Å
Wrecked
(:29) Conan
(:15) ›› “The Hangover Part III” (2013) Bradley Cooper. Å (DVS)
›› “We’re the Millers” (2013, Comedy) Jennifer Aniston. Å (DVS)
Animal Kingdom “Pilot”
(:04) Animal Kingdom (N)
(:01) Animal Kingdom “Pilot” (12:05) Animal Kingdom
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Chrisley
Impressions Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Two Men
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly › “Identity Thief” (2013, Comedy) Jason Bateman, Melissa McCarthy.
›› “Ride Along” (2014, Comedy) Ice Cube, Kevin Hart.
›› “Ride Along” (2014, Comedy) Ice Cube, Kevin Hart.
› “Identity Thief” (2013)
2016 UEFA European Championship
Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson’s popularity explodes.
O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson polishes his image. (N) SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn ESPN FC (N) Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
WNBA Basketball Indiana Fever at Minnesota Lynx. (N)
NFL Live Å
O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson polishes his image.
UFC Main Event
Bob Redfern Destination UFC Insider Game 365
UFC
Cardinals Pre MLB Baseball Houston Astros at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
Cardinals Live! Postgame
Tennis
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show Paul Finebaum discusses all things SEC. (N) (Live)
SEC Storied Å
Tenn Tour
So. Car. Tour College Football From April 9, 2016. Å
SEC Inside
SEC Inside
SEC Storied
Live From the U.S. Open (N) Live From the U.S. Open (N) (Live)
Live From the U.S. Open (N) (Live)
Live From the U.S. Open
World Poker Tour: Alpha8
NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) Speak for Yourself (N) Å
Copa America Pregame
2016 Copa America Centenario Chile vs. Panama. (N) (Live) 2016 Copa America Centenario Argentina vs. Bolivia. (N) (Live) Å
MLB
(3:00) MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves.
Golf America Braves Live! MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N) (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves.
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
Weather Underground
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
23.5 Degrees (N)
American Supernatural
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money (N)
Mad Money (N)
West Texas Investors Club Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
West Texas Investors Club Shark Tank Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
MSNBC Live (N)
MTP Daily (N)
With All Due Respect (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Special Report
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Special Report
Forensic File Forensic File 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
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cars
Top Gear “Winter Drop Top” Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Car Hunters Car Hunters Cnt. Cars
Cars
Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
››› “Gladiator” (2000, Historical Drama) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. ’ Å
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:03) ››› “Gladiator”
Dark Woods Justice Å
Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch: On Deck
Deadliest Catch (N) Å
(:04) Dark Woods Justice (N) (:06) Deadliest Catch Å
(12:10) Dark Woods Justice
Inside Cocaine Wars
Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia America’s Wild Spaces
America’s National Parks
Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Bert the Conqueror (N)
Bizarre Foods (N) Å
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods Å
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped “T.G.I. Fry-Day”
Chopped “G’day, Chefs!”
Chopped Junior (N)
Chopped “Four Fathers”
Chopped “San Franchopco” Chopped “Fig Out”
Chopped “Four Fathers”
Fixer Upper Waco, Texas.
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Hunters
Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
North Woods Law ’ Å
North Woods Law ’ Å
North Woods Law ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters: Unhooked (:01) Yellowstone: Battle for Life ’ Å
(:03) Lair of the Killer Crocs Yellowstone: Battle for Life
››› “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” (2013) Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson. ’
Guilt “Pilot” ’ Å
››› “Grease” (1978, Musical) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John. ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
So Raven
So Raven
Judy Moody Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Liv-Mad.
›› “Ice Age: The Meltdown” (2006) ‘PG’
(:40) ›› “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” (2009) ‘PG’
Liv-Mad.
K.C. Under. Girl Meets
Stuck/Middle Best Friends “The Color of Friendship”
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Harvey Beaks Henry Danger Henry Danger The Thundermans ’ Å
Nicky, Ricky Kingdom
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Gunsmoke Å
(:09) The Andy Griffith Show Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) George Lopez Å
George
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Magnum
››› “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) George Clooney. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “Man on Fire” (2004, Crime Drama) Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning. ‘R’
Feed the Beast (N) Å
Feed the Beast Å
›› “Man on Fire” (2004)
Young W.
(:45) ›››› “Gandhi” (1982) Ben Kingsley. A portrait of the man who led India to independence. Å
›››› “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1948)
(:15) ›››› “The Graduate” (1967) Dustin Hoffman. Å
“Earring-Madam”
Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Virtually Love Virtually in Love Å
Douglas
Douglas
Douglas
›› “The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” (2004)
Virtually in Love (N)
›› “The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” (2004)
Virtually in Love
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Happens
Southern Charm
Tour Group
Bride-Chucky “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze” ›› “Blade” (1998, Horror) Wesley Snipes, Stephen Dorff. Å
›› “Watchmen” (2009) Billy Crudup. A masked vigilante probes the murder of a fellow superhero. Å
Dark City
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ 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
Vegas
Jail ’ Å
(3:46) Tosh.0 (:17) Tosh.0 (4:48) Tosh.0 Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ (7:52) Tosh.0 (:24) Tosh.0 (8:56) Tosh.0 (:28) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N)
Not Safe With Daily Show
Nightly Show At Midnight (:31) Tosh.0
(:15) Ridiculousness ’
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Are You the One? ’
› “How High” (2001, Comedy) Method Man, Redman. ’
› “How High” (2001, Comedy) Method Man, Redman. ’
Ladylike ’
Girl Code ’
Black Ink Crew ’
Black Ink Crew ’
Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ›› “Above the Rim” (1994) Duane Martin, Leon. ’
››› “Gridiron Gang” (2006, Drama) The Rock, Xzibit, Jade Yorker. ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ››› “The Parent Trap” (1998, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid, Natasha Richardson. Premiere.
Reba Å
(3:00) Madea’s Big Happy Family Å
TBA
To Be Announced
TBA
The BET Life of “B2K” (N)
Inside the Label (N)
Inside the Label
The BET Life of “B2K”
The Wendy Williams Show
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files
Space’s Deepest Secrets (N) (:02) What on Earth? Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files
(2:15) U.S. Senate Coverage ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Rosary
With Jesus
Super Saints Choices
EWTN News Last Call
Daily Mass - Olam
Mother Angelica Live
EWTN News Holy Rosary Threshold of Hope
Catechism
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Plain Sight” Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “L.D.S.K.”
Criminal Minds “The Fox”
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Derailed”
Saving Hope Å (DVS)
Saving Hope “Defense” ’
Spider-Man Guardians
Star-For.
Walk the
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Spider-Man Star-Rebels Star-For.
Wander
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Winsanity
Winsanity
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest (N)
Idiotest (N)
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique Eats Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
Good Eats
Good Eats
Man Fire
Man Fire
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order “Flight” Å
Law & Order “Agony” Å
Law & Order “Scrambled”
Law & Order “Venom” ’
Law & Order “Punk” Å
Law & Order “True North”
Law & Order “Hate” Å
Vivan los Niños
Vivan los Niños
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Vecinos
Vecinos
María
María
María
María
La Familia
Vecinos
Cásate
Noticiero Con Joaquin
María
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Eva la Trailera (N) ’ (SS)
La Esclava Blanca (N) (SS) El señor de los cielos (N) ’ Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
La Esclava Blanca ’ (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. La Rosa de Guadalupe
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
Copa América Centenario 2016 Argentina contra Bolivia. (N) (En Vivo)
Impacto
Outdoors
Babe W.
NASCAR: List NASCAR: List NASCAR America (N) Å
World Series of Fighting 30 From Las Vegas.
World Series of Fighting 29 From Greeley, Colo.
World Series of Fighting 25 From Phoenix.
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
Tuesday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WRCB)
America’s Got Talent
Earning the Golden Buzzer — which means
being sent straight through to the liveperformance phase — has to be especially
sweet for anyone at this early stage of the
competition, and that possibility exists as
the season’s “Auditions” continue here.
Getting that affirmation from the notoriously
choosy Simon Cowell would have to be
even sweeter, but it also can come from
any of his fellow judges: Mel B, Heidi Klum
or Howie Mandel. Nick Cannon is the host.
8 p.m. on (WTVC)
To Tell the Truth
One of several classic game shows being
revived by ABC this summer begins its run,
with Anthony Anderson spending his hiatus
from “blackish” as both the host and an executive producer here. The format still has
several people claiming to be the individual
in question, with a panel having to determine who indeed is telling the truth. Notable
among the guessers: tireless genre veteran
Betty White. NeNe Leakes, the NBA’s Jalen
Rose and guest panelists also participate.
9 p.m. on (WNGH)
The Draft
The process of selecting Americans for
military duty is considered by this special,
which notes controversies that the draft
has generated — encompassing President
Franklin Roosevelt’s creation of a peacetime draft. Those chosen to serve often
have had long tours of duty in foreign lands,
with protests on home turf being among the
results, certainly during the Vietnam War.
Interviews also trace reforms that have
been applied to the draft over the years.
9 p.m. on (WTVC)
Uncle Buck
The premise is the same but the veneer
has been changed up as the 1989 John
Candy movie yields this sitcom, premiering
with back-to-back episodes, “Pilot” and “L’il
Scarface.” Now played by Mike Epps, the
title character still becomes the unlikely sitter for the children (Iman Benson, Sayeed
Shahidi, Aalyrah Caldwell) of his brother
and sister-in-law (James Lesure, Nia Long).
As offbeat as Buck’s approach is, he proves
to be a good match for the kids.
9 p.m. on (TNT)
Animal Kingdom
Adapted from a critically acclaimed 2010
Australian feature film, this edgy new drama
revolves around a spectacularly dysfunctional Southern California crime family
headed by tough-as-nails grandmother
Janine “Smurf” Cody (Ellen Barkin). Into
this world moves a teenage grandson,
Joshua (Finn Cole, “Peaky Blinders”), after
his mother dies of a heroin overdose. Scott
Speedman (“Underworld”), Shawn Hatosy
(“Southland”), Ben Robson (“Vikings”) and
Jake Weary (“Pretty Little Liars”) also star.
WEDNESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
3
WELFTBN
4
WTNB
5
WFLICW
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WNGHPBS
7
DAYSTAR 8
WTVCABC
9
WTCIPBS
10
WTVC2FOX 11
WDEFCBS 12
QVC
13
CSPAN
14
WGN-A
15
HSN
16
E!
23
ESQTV
24
LIFE
25
TLC
26
TBS
27
TNT
28
USA
29
FX
30
ESPN
31
ESPN2
32
FSTN
33
SEC
34
GOLF
35
FS1
36
FSSE
37
WEA
38
CNBC
39
MSNBC
40
CNN
41
HDLN
42
FNC
43
HIST
44
TRUTV
45
A&E
46
DISC
47
NGC
48
TRAV
49
FOOD
50
HGTV
51
ANPL
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FREE
53
DISN
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NICK
55
TOON
56
TVLND
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AMC
58
TCM
59
HALL
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OXYGEN
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BRAVO
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SYFY
63
SPIKE
64
COM
65
MTV
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VH1
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CMTV
68
BET
69
SCIENCE 83
CSPAN2
85
EWTN
100
WPXA ION 107
DISXD
117
GSN
144
COOK
153
WE
163
GALA
217
TELE
223
UNIV
224
NBCSP
311
DLC
319
4:30
5 PM
5:30
JUNE 15, 2016
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
The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Ent. Tonight Inside Edition 2016 Stanley Cup Final San Jose Sharks at Pittsburgh Penguins. (N) ’ (Live) Å
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Destined Win Drive Through History Gospels
Caroline Leaf The Blessed Potters
John Gray
Turning Point Prince
S. Furtick
Living Proof Blessed Life John Gray
Drive
Zacharias
J. Duplantis
Yesteryear ’
WTNB Today
Body
Wesley UMC First Baptist Church
Gaither Gospel Hour ’
Westmore Church of God
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
Arrow “The Candidate” ’
Supernatural ’ Å
Tosh.0 Å
Crazy Talk
Hollywood
Look Sexy
Anger
Paid Program
Martha Speak Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
The Bear Family and Me ’ Brain Male or Female?
NOVA ’ Å (DVS)
Life on Fire ’ Å
The Best of Big Blue Live
Sharks: The Big Five Å
Huch
Bill Winston Time-Hope
Jewish Voice Amazing
Creflo Dollar David Reagan John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni: Table
Marcus and Joni
Supernatural Deep Calls to Z. Levitt
K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) The Middle
Goldbergs
Mod Fam
(:31) blackish Fresh-Boat
Real O’Neals News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Friends: 50 Years 50s & 60s Party Songs (My Music) ’ Å
The Age Fix With Dr. Anthony Youn, MD ’
The People’s Court (N) ’
Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Big Bang
Big Bang
MasterChef (N) ’
Wayward Pines (N) ’
News at 10
Seinfeld ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Paid Program Seinfeld
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith Undercover Boss ’ Å
Criminal Minds “The Bond”
Criminal Minds
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Gourmet Holiday “Emeril” (N)
In the Kitchen With David “Emeril”
Dooney & Bourke
Clarks Footwear
(12:00) U.S. House of Representatives Legislative Business ’
US House of Representatives Special Orders ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Cellar Boy” ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
››› “King Kong” (2005, Adventure) Naomi Watts, Jack Black, Adrien Brody. A beauty tames a savage beast. Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Slinky Brand Fashions (N)
Storage & Organization (N) Cheeks Footwear
Beauty Bioscience Skin
Victoria Wieck Gemstone
Victoria Wieck Gemstone
Slinky Brand Fashions (N)
Slinky Brand Fashions (N)
Trish McEvoy Beauty (N)
Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian E! News (N) Å
Famously Single Å
The Kardashians
Famously Single Å
E! News (N) Å
American Ninja Warrior ’
American Ninja Warrior Competitors face six obstacles. ’
American Ninja Warrior Competitors take on six obstacles.
›› “Johnny Dangerously” (1984) Michael Keaton. Å
›› “Johnny Dangerously” (1984) Michael Keaton. Å
Grey’s Anatomy ’ Å
Little Women: NY Å
Little Women: NY Å
Little Women: NY Å
Little Women: NY (N) Å
Little Women: NY Å
(:02) Atlanta Plastic Å
(:02) UnREAL “Insurgent”
(12:02) Little Women: NY
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries My Giant Life ’ Å
My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ My Big Fat Fabulous Life
My Big Fat Fabulous Life (N) (:01) I Am Jazz (N) ’ Å
My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ (12:02) I Am Jazz ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan (N) Å
Wrecked
Conan Å
Castle “Vampire Weekend”
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle “Kill the Messenger”
››› “Catch Me if You Can” (2002) Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks. Å (DVS)
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Royal Pains “Saab Story”
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Law & Order: SVU
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ›› “Taken 2” (2012) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace.
››› “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013) Leonardo DiCaprio. A stockbroker develops habits of excess and corruption.
››› “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013) Jonah Hill
2016 UEFA European Championship
Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson polishes his image.
O.J.: Made in America O.J. Simpson is arrested for murder. SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn ESPN FC (N) Around/Horn Interruption MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at Boston Red Sox. From Fenway Park in Boston. (Live)
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
City Slam From Los Angeles. Baseball Tonight (N) Å
World Poker Tour
Titans of Mavericks
Cardinals Pre MLB Baseball Houston Astros at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
Cardinals Live! Postgame
World Poker Tour
Bull Riding Championship.
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show Paul Finebaum discusses all things SEC. (N) (Live)
SEC Storied
Miss. Tour
Missouri Tour College Football Å
SEC Inside
SEC Inside
SEC Storied
Live From the U.S. Open (N) Inside PGA
Learning
Inside PGA
European
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Live From the U.S. Open
At the U.S. Open
NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) Speak for Yourself (N) Å
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UFC Tonight (N) Å
The Ultimate Fighter Å
The Ultimate Fighter (N) ’
TUF Talk (N) Sports Live Garbage
TMZ Sports
(3:00) MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves.
Cuba
Braves Live! MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N) (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves.
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
Weather Underground
Weather Caught on Camera Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money (N)
Mad Money (N)
Jay Leno’s Garage
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Jay Leno’s Garage
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Shark Tank ’ Å
MSNBC Live (N)
MTP Daily (N)
With All Due Respect (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
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 Tonight w/ Don Lemon Anderson Cooper 360 Å
CNN Newsroom Live (N)
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Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon Forensic File Forensic File 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
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’
American Pickers ’
American Pickers (N) Å
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (12:03) American Pickers ’
World’s Dumbest...
Fameless
Fameless
Fameless
Fameless
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Wahlburgers Wahlburgers Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
Dual Survival ’ Å
Dual Survival: Survival Guide Dual Survival: Survival Guide Dual Survival: Survival Guide Dual Survival: Untamed (N) Dual Survival ’ Å
(:02) Alaskan Bush People (:02) Dual Survival ’ Å
Alaska: The Last Frontier ’
Southern Justice
Southern Justice
The Yard “Severed Hand”
America’s Wild Spaces
America’s National Parks
Chasing the High
Drugs, Inc. “Heroin” Heroin. Chasing the High
Drugs, Inc. “Heroin” Heroin.
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown (N)
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Chopped Junior
Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cutthroat Kitchen
Celebrity
Celebrity
Cutthroat Kitchen
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Brother vs. Brother (N)
Hunters
Hunters Int’l Listed Sisters (N) Å
Brother vs. Brother Å
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
(:01) River Monsters Å
River Monsters: Unhooked (:03) River Monsters Å
(12:04) River Monsters Å
The Middle
Guilt “Pilot” ’ Å
››› “Grease” (1978, Musical) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John. ’
Young
Baby Daddy › “Billy Madison” (1995, Comedy) Adam Sandler. ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
Lizzie
Lizzie
(:15) ›› “Ice Age: The Meltdown” (2006) ’ ‘PG’ Å
(5:55) “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” ’ Liv-Mad.
Stuck/Middle K.C. Under. Girl Meets
Best Friends K.C. Under. Girl Meets
Stuck/Middle Best Friends “Good Luck Charlie”
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Harvey Beaks Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Kingdom
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Gunsmoke Å
Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith George
George
Raymond
Raymond
Lopez (N)
The Soul Man King
King
King
King
Ocean’s 11
››› “Secretariat” (2010, Drama) Diane Lane, John Malkovich. ‘PG’
›››› “Jaws” (1975, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw. ‘PG’ Å
›› “Jaws 2” (1978, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary. ‘PG’ Å
Hellboy
One More
›› “Picture Snatcher” (1933, Drama) Å
››› “Too Hot to Handle” (1938) Clark Gable. Å
››› “The Odd Couple” (1968) Jack Lemmon. Å
››› “The Importance of Being Earnest” (1952) Å
››› “Harvey” (1950) Å
Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
(3:48) Tia & Tamera
(4:50) Tia & Tamera
(5:52) Tia & Tamera
Douglas
(:25) ›› “Burlesque” (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera. Å
Douglas
›› “Burlesque” (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane. Å
Housewives/OC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Couch
Happens
Happens
Housewives/NYC
Housewives
(3:00) ›› “Blade” (1998) Wesley Snipes.
›› “Watchmen” (2009) Billy Crudup. A masked vigilante probes the murder of a fellow superhero. Å
›› “The Lone Ranger” (2013, Western) Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer. Å
West Texas Investors Club
(2:30) “Final Destination” ’ ›› “Final Destination 2” (2003) Ali Larter, A. J. Cook. ’
› “The Final Destination” (2009) Bobby Campo. ’
› “Red Dawn” (2012) Chris Hemsworth, Josh Peck. ’
›› “Varsity Blues” (1999) James Van Der Beek. ’
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
Period
South Park
Daily Show
Nightly Show At Midnight Period
(3:40) Catfish: The TV Show (4:50) Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
The Challenge: Rivals III (N) (:01) Are You the One? ’
Ladylike ’
Ridiculous.
(2:00) ››› “42” (2013) ’
››› “Gridiron Gang” (2006, Drama) The Rock, Xzibit, Jade Yorker. ’
››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. ’
››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ›› “Armageddon” (1998) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton. A hero tries to save Earth from an asteroid.
Reba Å
(3:00) ›› “Soul Men” (2008) Samuel L. Jackson. Å
TBA
To Be Announced
TBA
Inside the Label
(:02) Martin (:43) Martin ’ Å
Wayans Bros. BET Experience
The Wendy Williams Show
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science
(3:00) U.S. Senate Coverage ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
The Friar
John Paul II Grandparents The World
EWTN News Last Call
Daily Mass - Olam
EWTN Live (N)
EWTN News Icons
Religious
Vaticano
The Catholic Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Doped” Å
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Shotgun” ’
Law & Order “Fed” Å
Law & Order “Blackmail” ’
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Boy on Fire”
Penn Zero
Pickle-Peanut Star-For.
Walk the
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Spider-Man Star-Rebels Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Skin Wars The artists paint runway looks. (N) Å
Idiotest
Idiotest
Skin Wars Å
Donut
Donut
Sugar
Sugar
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Cake Hunters Cake Hunters Good Eats
Good Eats
Cupcake Wars
House “Unwritten” ’ Å
House “Massage Therapy”
Law & Order “Tabula Rasa” Law & Order “Empire” ’
Law & Order “Ambitious” ’
Law & Order “Admissions”
Law & Order “Refuge”
Law & Order “Refuge”
Law & Order “Gunshow” ’
Vivan los Niños
Vivan los Niños
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Vecinos
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Eva la Trailera (N) ’ (SS)
La Esclava Blanca (N) (SS) El señor de los cielos (N) ’ Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
La Esclava Blanca ’ (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Sueño de Amor (N) ’
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
(:03) Yago (N) ’
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
Knot Right
Classic Car NASCAR America (N) Å
2016 Stanley Cup Final: Sharks at Penguins
Spartan Race
Spartan Race
Spartan Race
NHL Overtime (N) ’ (Live)
Mecum Auto Auctions
Emergency 24/7 ’ Å
Emergency 24/7 ’ Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ My Addiction My Addiction My Addiction My Addiction Strange Sex Strange Sex Strange Love Strange Love My Addiction My Addiction Strange Sex Strange Sex
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
NATIONAL BRIEFS
Defense to review information
from state in officer trial
BALTIMORE (AP) — The
defense team for an officer facing
a murder charge stemming from
the death of a 25-year-old black
man in custody will determine
whether to file motions after the
state was forced to turn over a
packet of information to them.
Forty-six-year-old
Caesar
Goodson, who is black, is charged
with second-degree murder stemming from Freddie Gray’s death.
Gray died in 2015, a week after he
suffered a critical spinal injury in
Goodson’s van. Goodson’s trial
began Thursday.
Last week Baltimore Circuit
Judge Barry Williams admonished the state for failing to disclose information to Goodson’s
defense team and gave prosecutors until Monday to turn over
anything that could be considered
helpful to the defense. On
Monday, prosecutors produced a
packet.
Testimony
will
resume
Tuesday.
National Aquarium to move
dolphins into refuge
MIAMI (AP) — Eight dolphins
that have spent their lives swimming in tanks will be retired from
the National Aquarium in
Baltimore into a seaside sanctuary.
By announcing plans to move
its dolphins into a protected habitat by the end of 2020, the aquarium sails into uncharted waters
for the marine mammal industry.
SeaWorld, which earlier this year
ended its orca breeding and hinted at similar changes for its dolphins someday, has balked at
similar proposals from activists
who want its animals released
into natural waters.
“There’s no model anywhere,
that we’re aware of, for this,”
aquarium CEO John Racanelli
told The Associated Press in an
interview ahead of Tuesday’s
announcement. “We’re pioneering
here, and we know it’s neither the
easiest nor the cheapest option.”
Potential sites in the Florida
Keys and the Caribbean have
been explored, Racanelli said.
The Atlantic bottlenose dolphins won’t simply be released
into open seas. The aquarium’s
criteria for a sanctuary include a
full-time staff, “excellent water
quality” in a temperate climate,
isolation pools for medical care or
temporary refuge from harmful
conditions and barriers to stop
breeding among the dolphins or
mingling with wild dolphins,
Racanelli said.
Only the oldest dolphin in the
group has ever swum in ocean
water: a female captured in 1972.
Six were born at the aquarium
and one was born at SeaWorld in
Orlando.
Trial to begin for officer charged
with murder in shooting
CHESTERFIELD, Va. (AP) —
The trial is set to begin for a
Virginia police officer charged with
murder in the off-duty shooting of
an 18-year-old at a car wash.
Richmond police officer David
Cobb’s trial is expected to begin
Tuesday at the Chesterfield
County Circuit. It’s supposed to
last three days.
A grand jury indicted Cobb in
February on charges including
second-degree murder in the
death of Paterson Brown Jr. in
October.
Officials say Brown got into the
officer’s vehicle at the car wash
and drove it out of the washing
bay. They say Cobb told him to get
out and later shot Brown during
an altercation. Cobb wasn’t on
duty.
Surveillance video from the car
wash showed the officer and
Brown struggled briefly before a
shot was fired.
Both men are black.
Virginia man to be sentenced
in church attack plot
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A
Virginia man accused of plotting
to shoot up or bomb synagogues
and black churches is set to be
sentenced in federal court.
A sentencing hearing is scheduled Tuesday for Ronald Chaney
III. Chaney pleaded guilty in
March to robbery conspiracy and
firearm charges.
Prosecutors say Chaney and a
co-conspirator, Robert Doyle, are
white supremacists who bought
guns and explosives from undercover agents. Officials say the two
men and another defendant conspired to rob a silver and coin
dealer and use the money to
finance a race war.
Prosecutors are asking for 12 ½
years in prison. Chaney’s attorney
is arguing for a lower sentence,
saying there’s no evidence he
agreed to carry out specific acts of
violence.
Doyle was sentenced to 17 ½
years in prison.
Indiana man arrested in LA area
wasn’t allowed to have guns
CHARLESTOWN, Ind. (AP) — A
man arrested in Southern
California with three assault rifles
who told police he was headed to
a gay pride event had earlier been
ordered by a judge in his home
state of Indiana to give up all his
guns.
But authorities there said
Monday that they didn’t make any
surprise checks on James Wesley
Howell to confirm he was following the probation requirement.
Howell has a California court
appearance tentatively scheduled
for Tuesday, but it wasn’t yet clear
what charges he’ll face, if any.
He was arrested early Sunday
in Santa Monica with the weapons
and explosives in a car he apparently drove from Indiana. He told
police he was headed to a gay
pride event in West Hollywood
that attracts hundreds of thousands of people.
It’s unclear whether Howell, 20,
intended any violence at the LA
Pride event, but the timing of the
arrest — hours after the massacre
at a gay nightclub in Orlando,
Florida — put police and event
organizers on heightened alert.
An Indiana probation officer
met with Howell of Charlestown,
Indiana, three weeks ago, rated
him a low-level offender, and had
yet to schedule the in-home visit,
said James Hayden, chief probation officer in Clark County.
Howell didn’t have permission
to leave Indiana after pleading
guilty to a misdemeanor intimidation charge. Authorities there are
seeking to have him returned as a
probation violator.
Court records in Indiana and
friends depict Howell as a gun
enthusiast with a quick temper.
Jury to decide whether ‘Stairway
to Heaven’ riff is lifted
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Generations of aspiring guitarists
have tried to copy the riff from Led
Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven.”
Starting on Tuesday, a Los
Angeles court will try to decide
whether the members of Led
Zeppelin themselves ripped off the
riff.
The band’s guitarist Jimmy
Page and singer Robert Plant are
named as defendants in the lawsuit brought by the trustee of guitarist Randy Wolfe from the band
Spirit. Attorneys for the trustee
contend that 1971’s “Stairway to
Heaven” copies music from the
Spirit song “Taurus,” which Wolfe
wrote in either 1966 or 1967.
Wolfe died in 1997, drowning
while saving his son in Hawaii.
Page, Plant and their bandmate
John Paul Jones are all expected
to testify at the trial, though Jones
has been dismissed as a defendant in the case.
Led Zeppelin and Spirit performed at some concerts and festivals around the same time, but
not on the same stage.
U.S District Judge R. Gary
Klausner ruled in April that evidence presented in hearings made
a credible case that Led Zeppelin
may have heard “Taurus” performed before their song was created.
Francis Alexander Malofiy,
attorney for Wolfe’s trustee
Michael Skidmore, said while
many copyright cases are an
uphill battle, Klausner’s ruling
brings his client one step closer to
getting Wolfe credit for helping
create one of the most recognizable song introductions in rock history.
Protesters want to nix Confederate
sign on Miss. flag
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) —
Protesters plan to gather outside
the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday to say
the Confederate battle emblem on
the Mississippi flag is a vestige of
slavery and Congress should
erase it.
Among the scheduled speakers
for the Flag Day rally is Aunjanue
Ellis, an actress who lives in Pike
County, Mississippi, where she
grew up. One of the stars of the
ABC series “Quantico” and the
2011 movie, “The Help,” Ellis said
the Mississippi flag is a national
issue because Americans shouldn’t spend tax dollars on a symbol
tied to slavery and the Ku Klux
Klan.
“This country presents itself as
this beacon of hope and opportunity and equality and race-transcendence to the world,” Ellis told
The Associated Press last week.
“We can’t say that and, ‘Well, with
the exception of Mississippi.’”
U.S. House Republican leaders
last week blocked Democratic
Rep. Bennie Thompson of
Mississippi from trying to ban
Confederate symbols from the
House side of the Capitol.
Thompson, the only black member of Mississippi’s congressional
delegation, responded that the
House “will continue to sanction
and glorify relics of bondage, big-
otry and oppression.”
Nearly 38 percent of Mississippi
residents are black — the highest
percentage of any state. It is the
only state with a flag that still
includes the Confederate battle
emblem. The symbol has been
there since 1894, and voters
chose to keep it in 2001.
Supporters of the flag, including
Sons of Confederate Veterans, say
it represents their heritage.
Vigil held in New Jersey
hometown of slain ‘Voice’ singer
EVESHAM TOWNSHIP, N.J.
(AP) — Family, friends and fans
gathered for a candlelight vigil in
the New Jersey hometown of a
singer who was shot dead as she
signed autographs for fans following a Florida concert.
Hundreds paid tribute to 22year-old Christina Grimmie
Monday night in Evesham
Township at the town’s Memorial
Complex, where photos of her
graced the field.
“It doesn’t seem real,” close
family friend Hope Compton told
the Courier-Post. “But we’ll see
her again in heaven.”
Compton told the newspaper
that she flew to California to be
with Grimmie’s mother after the
shooting and flew back with her
Monday afternoon.
Authorities said Grimmie was
gunned down by Kevin Loibl
Friday night as she signed autographs after performing at a show
in Orlando. A motive for the
shooting has not been determined. Authorities said she had
no personal connection to Loibl,
who fatally shot himself after
being tackled by her brother.
“She loved this town, Marcus
Grimmie told the crowd. “She
loved this state. She loved singing.
She loved the Lord and she loved
me. She was my baby sister.”
Grimmie was a YouTube star
who was widely known from her
appearances on NBC’s “The Voice”
two years ago. She lived in
Evesham, a small community
about 20 miles from Philadelphia,
before moving to Los Angeles in
2012.
Earlier Monday pop star Adam
Levine, who mentored Grimmie
when she finished third on “The
Voice,” offered to pay funeral
expenses. Spokeswoman Carleen
Donovan confirmed that Levine
made the offer.
since his teens had performed in
numerous circuses, including the
Ringling Brothers and Barnum &
Bailey Circus.
He had also appeared in films,
including “Big Top Pee-wee” and
“Freaked,” as well as on TV. He
was best known costumed as the
extraterrestrial title character of
“ALF,” which aired from 1986 to
1990. (Otherwise, ALF was a puppet operated and voiced by Paul
Fusco.)
Police: Suspect in death of
wife, 4 daughters in custody
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —
The search for a man charged in
the deaths of his wife and four
daughters in the United States
ended in the hills of a northern
Mexico town where authorities
say the suspect threatened to take
his life as officers closed in on
him.
Juan David Villegas-Hernandez
was taken into custody by Sonora
state police on Sunday — a day
after police in Roswell, New
Mexico, said the 34-year-old shot
and killed his wife, Cynthia
Villegas, and their four daughters
— ages 14, 11, 7 and 3.
The mother, who also was 34,
was a well-respected employee of
the Eastern New Mexico Medical
Center, said Roswell Mayor
Dennis Kintigh, who spoke with
the CEO of the hospital on
Sunday.
“This rippled through town
quickly,” he said. “Candidly, it’s
hard to get your mind around the
deaths of small children. It’s hard
for law enforcement; it’s hard for
family members and the whole
community.”
He described Roswell, a desert
town in southern New Mexico, as
a community that can often feel
isolated from much of the rest of
the state. It’s home to about
50,000 people.
Records show that nearly 10
years ago the Villegas purchased
their home in Roswell, where the
shooting happened. Before that, it
appeared Villegas-Hernandez had
lived in Sierra Vista, Arizona.
He is originally from Arizpe, a
city in the Mexican state of Sonora
where he was arrested. It lies
southeast of the border crossing
nearest Nogales, Arizona.
Villegas-Hernandez has dual
citizenship in the United States
and Mexico, which means he can’t
be deported and is subject to
Mexico’s often-lengthy extradition
process, said Victor Felix, of
Sonora state police.
Roswell police haven’t released
a possible motive for the killings.
But according to court documents
obtained Monday by the
Albuquerque Journal, Cynthia
Villegas had just asked her hus-
band for a divorce.
Prosecutor: FedEx knew suicide
linked to illegal pharmacy
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — FedEx
delivered packages containing illegal prescription drugs for internet
pharmacies even after it noticed
that authorities were cracking
down on the businesses and was
told that one had shipped drugs
to a woman who committed suicide, prosecutors said Monday as
a trial began over drug trafficking
charges against the shipping
giant.
FedEx knew that drugs in millions of packages it delivered over
a decade were illegally prescribed
but shipped them anyway
because it did not want to lose
millions of dollars in revenue to
rival UPS, Assistant U.S. Attorney
John Hemann said during his
opening statement.
“They faced a choice, and the
choice is to stop or go, and time
and time again, they went,”
Hemann said at the trial in San
Francisco.
The government plans to rely
on FedEx’s emails to make its
case.
FedEx has denied the charges
and says it only shipped what it
believed were legal drugs from
pharmacies licensed by states
and registered with the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration.
Albuquerque police say shooter
scare may have been hoax
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —
Albuquerque police conducted a
floor-by-floor search Monday
night of City Hall after getting a
flood of frantic calls about a possible shooter and hostage situation,
but they said there was no evidence any shots were ever fired or
that anyone was held against
their will.
Authorities set up a wide
parameter around the government office complex in the heart
of downtown Albuquerque after
the first calls for help came.
Albuquerque police spokesman
Tanner Tixier said one man was
being detained and investigators
believed that person was “the initiator” who spurred calls from
employees inside the building.
The man, who was not immediately identified, had previous contact with the police department’s
crisis intervention unit and was
known to have issues, Tixier said.
Police had received reports of a
man running through the halls
and yelling that there was a
shooter in the building.
Police believe the situation may
have been the result of a hoax,
but they were not taking any
chances.
“We’re going to make sure we do
a very thorough and systematic
search. We’re going to make sure
we don’t miss anybody in any
offices that may be hiding,” Tixier
said, noting that officers were not
working an active hostage situation.
The search of City Hall, which
houses both city and county government offices, was expected to
take a couple of hours, Tixier said.
Albuquerque police Chief
Gorden Eden was at the scene
along with Bernalillo County
Sheriff Manny Gonzales.
Employees were escorted away
from the building by officers in
tactical gear. No injuries were
reported.
Michu Meszaros, diminutive
performer who played ‘ALF,’ dies
NEW YORK (AP) — Michu
Meszaros, a former circus performer who played “ALF” in the
popular NBC sitcom, has died,
according to his manager, Dennis
Varga.
Meszaros, who died Sunday,
had been rushed to a Los Angeles
hospital several days ago after he
was found unresponsive in his
home, and had been in a coma
since. He was 76.
Born in Budapest, Hungary, he
stood less than 3 feet tall and
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016— 9
TUESDAY
SportS
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
Sports@clevelandbanner.com
James, Irving each score 41
Cavs stay alive in NBA Finals
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Booed
every time he touched the ball,
LeBron James cut through
Golden State’s defense and made
layups look easy. Dunks and 3pointers, so smooth, too.
And Kyrie Irving also completely had his way with the
Warriors.
King James and Irving thoroughly overpowered the defending champions from every spot
on the floor, and the Cavaliers
are still alive to chase that elusive championship.
The unflappable, determinedas-ever James had 41 points, 16
rebounds and seven assists,
Irving also scored 41 points and
Cleveland capitalized on the
absence of suspended star
Draymond Green, staving off
NBA Finals elimination with a
112-97 victory in Game 5 on
Monday night.
“We had a mindset that we
wanted to come here and just
extend our period and have
another opportunity to fight for
another day,” James said. “That
was our main concern, and we
were able to do that.”
James and Irving became the
first teammates to score 40
points in an NBA Finals game as
the Cavaliers pulled within 3-2
and sent their best-of-seven
series back to Ohio.
Afterward, sitting side by side
on the podium, they offered
back-and-forth shoutouts, with
James noting of Irving, “It’s
probably one of the greatest performances I’ve ever seen live.”
Take that, haters. James has
much more to say about these
playoffs before he’s done — and
not with his mouth, even as the
criticism came from all directions following his Game 4 tussle
with Green and reaction to what
he considered the Golden State
forward’s inappropriate words.
James was booed again as the
Cavs left the court for their locker room, but thousands of fans
had already made for the exits
minutes earlier.
“Now, mind you, to repeat a
performance like this would definitely be tough, but whatever it
takes to win,” Irving said.
Cleveland handed Golden
State just its fourth defeat all
season at sold-out Oracle Arena,
denying MVP Stephen Curry and
the Warriors a chance to celebrate another championship
with their golden-clad “Strength
In Numbers” supporters. Now,
Curry and Co. must try to win on
the road, just the way the
Warriors did last year and also in
their only other championship
Half dozen locals in
Women’s Am field
Senior Player of the Year.
Last year’s Tennessee Women’s
Amateur Finalist Katie Story of
A half dozen local linksters are Dickson and medalist Riley
in the state capital for the next Rennell of Columbia will also be
few days to participate in the vying for the title of Tennessee
84th annual Tennessee Women’s
Women’s
Amateur
Amateur Championship.
Champion.
The event teed off this
The format for the
morning and will run
championship includes
through Saturday at the
36 holes of stroke play
Hillwood Country Club
qualifying for both diviin Nashville, recently
sions. The low 32 players
hosted the 54th US
in the Championship
Senior
Women’s
Division will advance to
Amateur. The course is
match play. The stroke
hosting the Tennessee
play qualifying will
Women’s Amateur for the
determine flights of eight
third time.
for the Flighted Division.
Scott
Led by TGA Hall of
For information or
Famer Maggie Scott, who
current scoring on the Tennessee
won this title in 1994, the local Women’s
Amateur
contingent includes veterans Championship,
visit
Linda Mullins and Pam Morrow, www.tnwomensam.com.
as well as high school standouts
The TGA Women’s Amateur is
Kelsey Cassada (Walker Valley), one of 18 state championships
Olivia Williams (Bradley Central) that the Tennessee Golf
and Danielle Bates (Polk County). Association conducts annually.
Of the 95-player field, 61
In 1914, the TGA was organwomen will be competing in the ized at Memphis Country Club as
Championship Division while 34 an association of private clubs.
will be in the Flighted Division.
The objective of the TGA, as statThe field features the 2015 ed in its constitution, “shall be to
Tennessee Women’s Amateur promote the game of golf in
Champion Allyson Dunn of Tennessee.”
Kingsport, 2015 Tennessee
From these small origins, the
Senior
Women’s
Amateur TGA has become an association
Champion Terri McAngus of which now includes over 200
Mount
Juliet,
the
2015 member clubs, courses and
Tennessee Women’s Four-Ball organizations, comprised of over
Champions Jenna Burris of 32,000 individuals from across
Manchester and Hanley Long of the state. For more information
Clarksville and Lynda Wimberly, on the TGA, visit online at
2015 Tennessee Golf Association tngolf.org/tga.
By JOE CANNON
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
Reds get real ‘walk off’
from Braves pitchers
AP photo
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS GUARD Kyrie Irving (2) shoots between Golden State Warriors center
Festus Ezeli (31) and guard Klay Thompson (left) during the first half of Game 5 of NBA Finals in
Oakland, Calif., Monday. season out West in 1975.
The Warriors will get Green
back Thursday as they try again
for that repeat title.
“I kind of like our position,”
coach Steve Kerr said. “... I like
our position a lot better than
theirs.”
Banned from the arena, Green
watched from a baseball suite in
the Oakland Coliseum next door,
joined by Golden State general
manager Bob Myers.
The All-Star forward was suspended Sunday for his fourth
flagrant point of the postseason.
He was assessed a retroactive
Flagrant-1 for his swipe at
James in the fourth quarter of
Friday’s Game 4.
Tied 61-all at halftime
Monday, the Warriors missed 14
of their first 20 shots out of
intermission and shot 7 for 24 in
the third as James and the Cavs
grabbed command by doing all of
the little things on both ends of
the floor — the very intangibles
Golden State desperately missed
without Green’s high-energy
presence on both ends. James
jumped in the passing lanes to
create defensive havoc, flipped
passes around and got open.
Klay Thompson scored 37
points with six 3-pointers and
Curry added 25 points with five
3s, seven rebounds, four assists
and two blocked shots. But as
the game wore on, the Splash
Brothers shot airballs and
clanked 3-point tries off the front
rim. The Warriors often failed to
get a hand in the face of
Cleveland’s shooters.
“We weren’t very good defensively,” Kerr said. “We obviously
knew
we
were
without
Draymond, so there’s no point in
harping on that. We had to play
better, and we didn’t.”
James and Irving combined to
See NBA FINALS, Page 11
ATLANTA (AP) — Five Braves
pitchers, from starter Aaron Blair
to closer Arodys Vizcaino, made it
too easy for the Cincinnati Reds.
Vizcaino walked three batters in
the ninth, including a basesloaded free pass to Tyler Holt that
forced in the tie-breaking run, and
Atlanta lost to the Reds 9-8 on
Monday night.
Braves pitchers combined for
eight walks, including three
straight by Blair in the third
inning. His third walk also forced
in a run.
“You can’t defend it,” said
Braves interim manager Brian
Snitker of the walks by Blair. “You
can’t do anything with it. And he
ended up, what, retiring the last
nine out of 10. Seemed like he got
tired of it and got aggressive but
that’s kind of the way you’ve got to
start the game.”
Blair allowed six runs on four
hits and four walks in five innings,
leaving his ERA at 7.59.
“It’s kind of been a roller coaster
from inning to inning but hopefully in five days I can make it
smooth,” Blair said.
Reds closer Tony Cingrani
restored order in the ninth with
three quick groundouts by Freddie
Freeman, Nick Markakis and
Adonis Garcia.
Cingrani said he was determined he wouldn’t add more
walks to the daunting collection
by the two teams. He said aggressive approaches by Atlanta’s hitters helped him record quick outs.
“I wanted to come in and throw
strikes and quality strikes,”
Cingrani said earning his seventh
save in 12 chances.
“Freeman swings at the first
pitch and Markakis was up there
swinging at two pitches and he
grounds out. Garcia seemed like
he wanted to swing it so just
throw it in there and let them get
themselves out. A nice, easy
inning.”
Ross Ohlendorf (5-5) allowed
one run in the eighth on Garcia’s
tying homer.
Freeman drove in three runs
with three hits, including a tworun homer off JC Ramirez in the
fifth.
Adam Duvall hit a two-run
homer and drove in three runs for
the Reds.
Joey Votto hit a leadoff bloop
double into shallow left field to
lead off the ninth. The ball fell off
third baseman Garcia’s glove as
he ran with his back to the infield.
Vizcaino (1-2) struck out
Brandon Phillips before issuing an
intentional walk to Jay Bruce.
Duvall popped out before Eugenio
Suarez walked to load the bases
for Holt, who walked on a 3-1
pitch.
See BRAVES, Page 11
Waterdogs now 3-0 in CASL white division
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
It may have been hot outside,
but the real scorching action was
in the local pools as both the
Waterdogs and Aqua Tigers hosted swim meets on Monday.
The Waterdogs were able to
improve their record to 3-0 after
defeating the Fort Oglethorpe
(Ga.) Marlins 423-324. CAT (0-3)
battled, but fell to the Signal
Mountain Green Giants 458-312.
According to Waterdogs coach
Tony Womac, the meet between
his new team and his former
team was very tight.
“We won by 99 points. It was a
great meet and was very close —
it was back and forth for most of
the meet,” Womac said. “Our kids
did a great job. They are improving every week, and it was great
to hear them come up to me and
tell me how they had dropped
time.”
While the swim meet was back
and forth for the majority of the
night, the number of swimmers
on the Waterdogs’ roster proved
beneficial in the long run.
“We really had numbers on
them, so that kind of helped during the relays,” the Waterdog
coach explained. “They had a lot
of great individual swimmers, but
overall we could win some events,
but we’d also come in second,
third and fourth — we were very
solid across the board. That really shows up in the relays, when
you have four strong swimmers
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
WATERDOG SWIMMER Katie Estes is cheered on by younger teammate Maddy Dauphinais as she makes the turn during Monday’s
meet against Fort Oglethorpe (Ga). going up against maybe only one
or two that are strong.”
Juliet Bryant and Davina
Sharma both finished with the
max amount of high points, at 19
each. Coming in with 17 points
was Maddy Dauphinais and
Martin Shapoval.
Maya Sharma, Josephy Arnett,
Andrew Ruckman and Brendon
Ruckman all finished with 13
points each, while Katie Estes,
Audrey Torchick and Grace
Dauphinais had 12 points each.
Ashley Bryant, Mason Cross
and Micah Hicks swam for 11
points a piece.
Rounding out the high point
scorers
were
Pollianna
Moshenskiy, Noah Thornton,
Simon Hummelsberger and Ridge
Asble with 10 points each.
The Waterdogs will be back in
action on June 23, when they
travel to Red Bank.
“I’m looking forward to a good
week and a half of practice,”
Womac commented. “Getting
started late, we’ve been looking
forward to some time away from
swim meets so that we can really
concentrate on improving our
techniques and getting faster.”
Swimming in the top division
has proven quite a challenge for
the Aqua Tigers.
“Signal is a solid team and we
did lose, (but) that’s just how it’s
going to be this year, swimming
in the top division. A lot of the
other teams are extremely deep
and we’re a little thin in some age
groups,” CAT coach Matt Huff
explained. “We’re making a lot of
improvements and progress, so
we’re just going to ‘keep on keeping on,’ regardless of the win-loss
records.”
Those improvements were evident on Monday night.
“[Monday] night we really cut
down on the disqualifications,
which was really nice. We had a
lot of good swims from pretty
much every age group,” the coach
continued.
Peter Falcone led the Aqua
Tigers in high point scoring with
19 points, while Alexia Jackson
and Grayson Payne finished with
17 points each.
Jacob McDaniel swam for 16
points and Lauren Thompson
had 14 points
Finishing with 13 points were
Benjamin Cooper and Rebecca
Nolen, with Grayson Office and
Luke Bixler following closely with
12 points each.
Trey Parris rounded out the
high point scoring with a total of
10.
The Aqua Tigers continue to
See WATERDOGS, Page 11
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
Houston
Oakland
Los Angeles
On air
Sports on TV
Tuesday, June 14
MlB BaSEBall
12:30 p.m.
MLB — Philadelphia at Toronto
7 p.m.
MLB — Chicago Cubs at Washington OR Pittsburgh at N.Y
Mets
FSSE — Cincinnati at Atlanta
SOCCEr
11:30 a.m.
ESPN — UEFA, European Championship, group stage,
Austria vs. Hungary, at Bordeaux, France
2:30 p.m.
ESPN — UEFA, European Championship, group stage,
Portugal vs. Iceland, at Saint-Etienne, France
8 p.m.
FS1 — Copa America Centenario, group stage, Chile vs.
Panama, at Philadelphia
10 p.m.
FS1 — Copa America Centenario, group stage, Argentina
vs. Bolivia, at Seattle
WnBa BaSKETBall
8 p.m.
ESPN2 — Indiana at Minnesota
On TaP
Thursday, June 16
GOlF
TGA Sneds Tour at Chatata Valley GC
SWiMMinG
Aqua Tigers at Dalton, 6
aMEriCan lEaGuE lEadErS
BaSKETBall
nBa Playoff Glance
FinalS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Golden State 3, Cleveland 2
Thursday, June 2: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89
Sunday, June 5: Golden State 110, Cleveland 77
Wednesday, June 8: Cleveland 120, Golden State 90
Friday, June 10: Golden State 108, Cleveland 97
Monday, June 13: Cleveland 112, Golden State 97
Thursday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 9 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 8 p.m.
WnBa Glance
EaSTErn COnFErEnCE
W
l
Pct
Atlanta
7
3
.700
New York
5
4
.556
Chicago
5
5
.500
Indiana
4
6
.400
Washington
4
7
.364
Connecticut
2
8
.200
WESTErn COnFErEnCE
W
l
Pct
Minnesota
10
0
1.000
Los Angeles
9
0
1.000
Phoenix
4
6
.400
Seattle
4
6
.400
Dallas
3
6
.333
San Antonio
1
7
.125
Saturday’s Games
Minnesota 83, Washington 76
New York 90, San Antonio 75
Los Angeles 97, Dallas 73
Sunday’s Games
Atlanta 93, Connecticut 87
Phoenix 86, Chicago 80
Seattle 90, Indiana 88
Monday’s Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday’s Games
Dallas at New York, 7 p.m.
Washington at Connecticut, 7 p.m.
Indiana at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Seattle at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
GB
—
1½
2
3
3½
5
GB
—
½
6
6
6½
8
BaSEBall
national league
East division
W
l
Pct GB
40
24 .625 —
34
28 .548 5
33
31 .516 7
30
34 .469 10
18
45 .286 21½
Central division
W
l
Pct GB
Chicago
43
19 .694 —
St. Louis
35
28 .556 8½
Pittsburgh
32
31 .508 11½
Milwaukee
30
34 .469 14
Cincinnati
25
39 .391 19
West division
W
l
Pct GB
San Francisco
39
26 .600 —
Los Angeles
33
32 .508 6
Colorado
30
33 .476 8
Arizona
29
37 .439 10½
San Diego
26
39 .400 13
Monday’s Games
Washington 4, Chicago Cubs 1
Philadelphia 7, Toronto 0
Cincinnati 9, Atlanta 8
Arizona 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
Miami 13, San Diego 4
San Francisco 11, Milwaukee 5
Tuesday’s Games
Philadelphia (Eflin 0-0) at Toronto (Stroman 5-2), 12:37
Chicago Cubs (Lackey 7-2) at Washington (Gonzalez 3-5),
7:05
Cincinnati (Finnegan 2-4) at Atlanta (Teheran 2-6), 7:10
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 3-2), 7:10
Houston (Fister 6-3) at St. Louis (Garcia 4-5), 8:15
N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 6-2) at Colorado (De La Rosa 2-4),
8:40
L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 5-4) at Arizona (Bradley 2-2), 9:40
Miami (Koehler 4-6) at San Diego (Pomeranz 5-6), 10:10
Milwaukee (Garza 0-0) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 7-2),
10:15
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-3) at Colorado (Bettis 4-5), 3:10
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 9-1) at Arizona (Corbin 3-5), 3:40
Miami (Nicolino 2-3) at San Diego, 3:40
Milwaukee (Guerra 3-1) at San Francisco (Cueto 9-1),
3:45
Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-2) at Washington (Strasburg 100), 4:05
Toronto (Estrada 4-2) at Philadelphia (Hellickson 4-4),
7:05
Cincinnati (DeSclafani 0-0) at Atlanta (Norris 2-7), 7:10
Pittsburgh (Locke 5-4) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 6-2),
7:10
Houston (McHugh 5-5) at St. Louis (Wainwright 5-4), 7:15
Washington
New York
Miami
Philadelphia
Atlanta
naTiOnal lEaGuE lEadErS
BATTING-Murphy, Washington, .367; Ramos, Washington,
.337; Prado, Miami, .332; Marte, Pittsburgh, .332; Zobrist,
Chicago, .319; Yelich, Miami, .319; Ozuna, Miami, .318;
Diaz, St. Louis, .315; LeMahieu, Colorado, .314; Herrera,
Philadelphia, .314.
RUNS-Bryant, Chicago, 47; Arenado, Colorado, 45;
Zobrist, Chicago, 44; Diaz, St. Louis, 44; Carpenter, St.
Louis, 44; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 43; Rendon, Washington,
42; Seager, Los Angeles, 42; Gonzalez, Colorado, 41;
Myers, San Diego, 41.
RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 53; Rizzo, Chicago, 47; Bruce,
Cincinnati, 46; Bryant, Chicago, 45; Duvall, Cincinnati, 44;
Kemp, San Diego, 43; Story, Colorado, 42; Murphy,
Washington, 42; Carpenter, St. Louis, 42; Carter,
Milwaukee, 41.
HITS-Murphy, Washington, 87; Prado, Miami, 79; Marte,
Pittsburgh, 78; Segura, Arizona, 78; Ozuna, Miami, 77;
Jay, San Diego, 71; Gonzalez, Colorado, 71; Myers, San
Diego, 71; Herrera, Philadelphia, 71; Seager, Los Angeles,
71.
DOUBLES-Polanco, Pittsburgh, 22; Jay, San Diego, 20;
Carpenter, St. Louis, 20; Parra, Colorado, 20; Yelich,
Miami, 19; Marte, Pittsburgh, 18; Fowler, Chicago, 18;
LeMahieu, Colorado, 17; Murphy, Washington, 17; Diaz,
St. Louis, 16; Cozart, Cincinnati, 16; Piscotty, St. Louis,
16; Lamb, Arizona, 16; Markakis, Atlanta, 16.
TRIPLES-Bruce, Cincinnati, 6; Granderson, New York, 4;
Hernandez, Philadelphia, 4; Peralta, Arizona, 4; Blanco,
San Francisco, 4; Story, Colorado, 4; Owings, Arizona, 4;
Segura, Arizona, 4; Smith, Atlanta, 4; Ozuna, Miami, 4;
Carpenter, St. Louis, 4; Panik, San Francisco, 4.
HOME RUNS-Arenado, Colorado, 19; Duvall, Cincinnati,
18; Carter, Milwaukee, 17; Story, Colorado, 16; Cespedes,
New York, 16; Bryant, Chicago, 15; Seager, Los Angeles,
15; Kemp, San Diego, 15; Moss, St. Louis, 14; Myers, San
Diego, 14; Gonzalez, Colorado, 14; Rizzo, Chicago, 14;
Bruce, Cincinnati, 14.
STOLEN BASES-Villar, Milwaukee, 23; Marte, Pittsburgh,
19; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 16; Upton Jr., San Diego, 13;
Harrison, Pittsburgh, 11; Smith, Atlanta, 11; Herrera,
Philadelphia, 8; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 8; Perez,
Milwaukee, 8; Duffy, San Francisco, 8; Polanco,
Pittsburgh, 8; Myers, San Diego, 8; Owings, Arizona, 8.
PITCHING-Arrieta, Chicago, 10-1; Strasburg, Washington,
10-0; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 9-1; Cueto, San Francisco, 91; Greinke, Arizona, 9-3; Fernandez, Miami, 9-3; Scherzer,
Washington, 8-4; Chatwood, Colorado, 8-4; Lester,
Chicago, 8-3; Samardzija, San Francisco, 7-4.
ERA-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.52; Arrieta, Chicago, 1.86;
Bumgarner, San Francisco, 1.88; Lester, Chicago, 1.89;
Syndergaard, New York, 2.00; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.16;
Hammel, Chicago, 2.36; Pomeranz, San Diego, 2.44;
Fernandez, Miami, 2.57; Lackey, Chicago, 2.63.
STRIKEOUTS-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 122; Scherzer,
Washington, 118; Fernandez, Miami, 118; Strasburg,
Washington, 110; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 99;
Syndergaard, New York, 95; Arrieta, Chicago, 90; Nola,
Philadelphia, 88; Lester, Chicago, 85; Lackey, Chicago,
84.
SAVES-Familia, New York, 21; Melancon, Pittsburgh, 19;
Gomez, Philadelphia, 19; Ramos, Miami, 19; Jeffress,
Milwaukee, 18; Jansen, Los Angeles, 17; Papelbon,
Washington, 16; McGee, Colorado, 15; Ziegler, Arizona,
13; Casilla, San Francisco, 13.
american league
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
Cleveland
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago
Minnesota
Texas
Seattle
East division
W
36
36
35
31
29
Central division
W
35
33
32
32
20
West division
W
39
34
30
35 .462 9½
27
36 .429 11½
27
37 .422 12
Monday’s Games
Philadelphia 7, Toronto 0
Chicago White Sox 10, Detroit 9, 12 innings
Kansas City 2, Cleveland 1
Minnesota 9, L.A. Angels 4
Oakland 14, Texas 5
Tuesday’s Games
Philadelphia (Eflin 0-0) at Toronto (Stroman 5-2), 12:37
Baltimore (Tillman 8-1) at Boston (Price 7-3), 7:10
Seattle (Walker 3-6) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 3-3), 7:10
Detroit (Zimmermann 8-3) at Chicago White Sox
(Gonzalez 1-1), 8:10
Cleveland (Tomlin 8-1) at Kansas City (Young 2-6), 8:15
Houston (Fister 6-3) at St. Louis (Garcia 4-5), 8:15
N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 6-2) at Colorado (De La Rosa 2-4),
8:40
Minnesota (Santana 1-6) at L.A. Angels (Chacin 2-4),
10:05
Texas (Perez 5-4) at Oakland (Surkamp 0-3), 10:05
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-3) at Colorado (Bettis 4-5), 3:10
Toronto (Estrada 4-2) at Philadelphia (Hellickson 4-4),
7:05
Baltimore (Wilson 2-5) at Boston (Wright 7-4), 7:10
Seattle (Karns 5-2) at Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-7), 7:10
Houston (McHugh 5-5) at St. Louis (Wainwright 5-4), 7:15
Detroit (Pelfrey 1-6) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 10-2),
8:10
Cleveland (Kluber 6-6) at Kansas City (Kennedy 4-5), 8:15
Minnesota (Duffey 2-5) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 3-4),
10:05
Texas (Holland 5-5) at Oakland (Gray 3-6), 10:05
l
26
26
31
32
32
Pct
.581
.581
.530
.492
.475
GB
—
—
3
5½
6½
l
28
30
31
32
43
Pct
.556
.524
.508
.500
.317
GB
—
2
3
3½
15
l
25
29
Pct GB
.609 —
.540 4½
BATTING-Bogaerts, Boston, .359; Altuve, Houston, .344;
Ortiz, Boston, .340; Martinez, Detroit, .333; Nunez,
Minnesota, .324; Hosmer, Kansas City, .318; Kinsler,
Detroit, .317; Mazara, Texas, .315; Saunders, Toronto,
.311; Bradley Jr., Boston, .311; Pedroia, Boston, .311.
RUNS-Betts, Boston, 58; Kinsler, Detroit, 55; Bogaerts,
Boston, 51; Donaldson, Toronto, 49; Cano, Seattle, 48;
Machado, Baltimore, 47; Altuve, Houston, 46; Davis,
Baltimore, 46; Desmond, Texas, 44; Pedroia, Boston, 44.
RBI-Ortiz, Boston, 55; Encarnacion, Toronto, 54; Cano,
Seattle, 51; Trumbo, Baltimore, 49; Betts, Boston, 47;
Napoli, Cleveland, 45; Bogaerts, Boston, 44; Trout,
Anaheim, 44; Beltran, New York, 44; Kinsler, Detroit, 44.
HITS-Bogaerts, Boston, 94; Altuve, Houston, 88; Kinsler,
Detroit, 80; Betts, Boston, 79; Pedroia, Boston, 78;
Machado, Baltimore, 77; Cano, Seattle, 76; Desmond,
Texas, 76; Hosmer, Kansas City, 75; Escobar, Anaheim,
73; Lindor, Cleveland, 73.
DOUBLES-Ortiz, Boston, 27; Machado, Baltimore, 25;
Altuve, Houston, 21; Bogaerts, Boston, 20; Shaw, Boston,
19; Pedroia, Boston, 18; Pillar, Toronto, 17; Saunders,
Toronto, 17; Lawrie, Chicago, 17; Cano, Seattle, 16;
Martinez, Detroit, 16; Desmond, Texas, 16; Bradley Jr.,
Boston, 16; Seager, Seattle, 16; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 16.
TRIPLES-Ellsbury, New York, 5; Bradley Jr., Boston, 5;
Eaton, Chicago, 5; Burns, Oakland, 4; Betts, Boston, 4;
Miller, Tampa Bay, 4; Aoki, Seattle, 3; Buxton, Minnesota,
3; Andrus, Texas, 3; Swihart, Boston, 3; Donaldson,
Toronto, 3; Correa, Houston, 3.
HOME RUNS-Trumbo, Baltimore, 20; Frazier, Chicago,
19; Cano, Seattle, 18; Davis, Baltimore, 16; Machado,
Baltimore, 16; Ortiz, Boston, 16; Beltran, New York, 16;
Davis, Oakland, 15; Encarnacion, Toronto, 15; Cruz,
Seattle, 15; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 15.
STOLEN BASES-Altuve, Houston, 18; Nunez, Minnesota,
15; Davis, Cleveland, 15; Desmond, Texas, 12; Ellsbury,
New York, 12; Burns, Oakland, 12; Betts, Boston, 11;
Dyson, Kansas City, 11; Gardner, New York, 11; Santana,
Minnesota, 10; Escobar, Kansas City, 10; Lindor,
Cleveland, 10.
PITCHING-Sale, Chicago, 10-2; Zimmermann, Detroit, 83; Hill, Oakland, 8-3; Tomlin, Cleveland, 8-1; Tillman,
Baltimore, 8-1; Salazar, Cleveland, 7-3; Porcello, Boston,
7-2; Price, Boston, 7-3; Fulmer, Detroit, 7-1; Wright,
Boston, 7-4.
ERA-Wright, Boston, 2.09; Salazar, Cleveland, 2.19; Hill,
Oakland, 2.25; Estrada, Toronto, 2.57; Quintana, Chicago,
2.66; Hernandez, Seattle, 2.86; Sale, Chicago, 2.87;
Lewis, Texas, 3.00; Tillman, Baltimore, 3.01; Tanaka, New
York, 3.08.
STRIKEOUTS-Archer, Tampa Bay, 96; Price, Boston, 91;
Verlander, Detroit, 90; Salazar, Cleveland, 89; Kluber,
Cleveland, 87; Sale, Chicago, 86; Sanchez, Toronto, 83;
Quintana, Chicago, 81; Hamels, Texas, 81; Keuchel,
Houston, 81.
SAVES-Rodriguez, Detroit, 19; Britton, Baltimore, 19;
Colome, Tampa Bay, 18; Davis, Kansas City, 18;
Robertson, Chicago, 15; Cishek, Seattle, 14; Kimbrel,
Boston, 14; Allen, Cleveland, 13; Osuna, Toronto, 13;
Gregerson, Houston, 13.
nCaa College World Series
at Td ameritrade Park Omaha
Omaha, neb.
double Elimination
x-if necessary
Saturday, June 18
Game 1 — Oklahoma State (41-20) vs. UC Santa Barbara
(42-18-1), 3
Game 2 — Miami (50-12) vs. Arizona (44-21), 8
Sunday, June 19
Game 3 — Texas Tech (46-18) vs. TCU (47-16), 3
Game 4 — Florida (52-14) vs. Coastal Carolina (49-16), 8
Monday, June 20
Game 5 — Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 2
Game 6 — Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner, 7
Tuesday, June 21
Game 7 — Game 3 loser vs. Game 4 loser, 5
Game 8 — Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner, 9
Wednesday, June 22
Game 9 — Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 loser, 7
Thursday, June 23
Game 10 — Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 8
Friday, June 24
Game 11 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 3
Game 12 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 8
Saturday, June 25
x-Game 13 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, TBA
x-Game 14 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, TBA
If only one game is necessary, it will be played at night
Championship Series
(Best-of-3)
Monday, June 27: Pairings TBA, 7
Tuesday, June 28: Pairings TBA, 8
x-Wednesday, June 29: Pairings TBA, 8
GOlF
World Golf ranking
Through June 12
1. Jason Day
2. Jordan Spieth
3. Rory McIlroy
4. Bubba Watson
5. Rickie Fowler
6. Dustin Johnson
7. Henrik Stenson
8. Adam Scott
9. Danny Willett
10. Justin Rose
11. Patrick Reed
12. Branden Grace
13. Sergio Garcia
14. Louis Oosthuizen
15. Hideki Matsuyama
16. Brooks Koepka
17. Phil Mickelson
18. Matt Kuchar
19. J.B. Holmes
20. Brandt Snedeker
21. Zach Johnson
22. Charl Schwartzel
23. Chris Wood
24. Paul Casey
25. Russell Knox
26. Kevin Kisner
27. Byeong-Hun An
28. Rafa Cabrera Bello
29. Daniel Berger
30. Lee Westwood
31. Justin Thomas
32. Jim Furyk
33. Kevin Na
34. Matthew Fitzpatrick
35. Bill Haas
36. Charley Hoffman
37. Kevin Chappell
38. Jimmy Walker
39. K.T. Kim
40. Marc Leishman
41. Shane Lowry
42. Andy Sullivan
43. Danny Lee
44. Soren Kjeldsen
45. William McGirt
46. Emiliano Grillo
47. Bernd Wiesberger
48. Kiradech Aphibarnrat
49. David Lingmerth
50. Harris English
51. Ryan Moore
52. Thongchai Jaidee
53. Jaco Van Zyl
54. Martin Kaymer
55. Billy Horschel
56. Smylie Kaufman
57. Anirban Lahiri
58. Chris Kirk
59. James Hahn
60. Jason Dufner
61. Patton Kizzire
62. Ryan Palmer
63. Robert Streb
64. Jamie Donaldson
65. Joost Luiten
66. Gary Woodland
67. Scott Piercy
68. Thomas Pieters
69. Fabian Gomez
70. Rikard Karlberg
71. Victor Dubuisson
72. Webb Simpson
73. Jeunghun Wang
74. Tony Finau
75. Thorbjorn Olesen
AUS
USA
NIR
USA
USA
USA
SWE
AUS
ENG
ENG
USA
SAF
ESP
SAF
JPN
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
SAF
ENG
ENG
SCO
USA
KOR
ESP
USA
ENG
USA
USA
USA
ENG
USA
USA
USA
USA
KOR
AUS
IRL
ENG
NZL
DEN
USA
ARG
AUT
THA
SWE
USA
USA
THA
SAF
GER
USA
USA
IND
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
WAL
NED
USA
USA
BEL
ARG
KOR
FRA
USA
KOR
USA
DEN
13.17
11.25
9.59
7.50
7.27
7.24
6.98
6.80
6.53
5.79
5.11
5.04
4.93
4.73
4.46
4.28
4.13
4.10
3.94
3.86
3.78
3.59
3.55
3.42
3.40
3.39
3.35
3.16
3.10
2.99
2.98
2.97
2.95
2.94
2.94
2.93
2.92
2.88
2.88
2.81
2.77
2.77
2.74
2.70
2.69
2.60
2.46
2.43
2.38
2.37
2.33
2.30
2.30
2.30
2.30
2.29
2.27
2.24
2.23
2.17
2.12
2.09
2.09
2.08
2.07
2.06
2.04
2.02
2.00
2.00
2.00
1.96
1.91
1.91
1.91
naSCar
naSCar Sprint Cup Points leaders
Through June 12
1. Kevin Harvick,
2. Kurt Busch,
3. Brad Keselowski,
4. Carl Edwards,
5. Joey Logano,
6. Chase Elliot,
7. Jimmie Johnson,
8. Martin Truex Jr,
9. Kyle Busch,
10. Matt Kenseth,
11. Dale Earnhardt Jr,
12. Austin Dillon,
13. Denny Hamlin,
14. Jamie McMurray,
15. Ryan Newman,
526
496
480
472
455
453
441
433
417
409
383
381
380
374
369
16. Ryan Blaney,
17. Kasey Kahne,
18. Trevor Bayne,
19. Kyle Larsen,
20. AJ Allmendinger,
21. Ricky Stenhouse Jr,
22. Paul Menard,
23. Clint Bowyer,
24. Greg Biffle,
25. Danica Patrick,
26. Aric Almirola,
27. Landon Cassill,
28. Casey Mears,
29. David Ragan,
30. Brian Scott,
31. Regan Smith,
32. Chris Buescher,
33. Michael McDowell,
34. Matt DiBenedetto,
35. Tony Stewart,
364
353
345
341
337
337
289
270
267
265
264
237
221
208
197
186
182
161
158
152
Through June 11
1. Daniel Suarez,
2. Elliot Sadler,
3. Ty Dillon,
4. Erik Jones,
5. Justin Allgaier,
6. Brandon Jones,
7. Brendan Gaughan,
8. Brennan Poole,
9. Darrell Wallace Jr,
10. Ryan Reed,
11. Blake Koch,
12. Ryan Sieg,
13. Ross Chastain,
14. Jeb Burton,
15. Jeremy Clements,
16. Dakoda Armstrong,
17. J.J. Yeley,
18. Ryan Preece,
19. Garret Smithley,
20. Ray Black Jr,
452
434
416
397
388
388
386
373
340
301
294
292
276
260
256
248
229
226
223
188
Through June 10
1. Matt Crafton,
2. Timothy Peters,
3. William Byron,
4. Daniel Hemric,
5. John Hunter Nemechek,
6. Tyler Reddick,
7. Johnny Sauter,
8. Spencer Gallagher,
9. Ben Kennedy,
10. Ryan Truex,
11. Cameron Hayley,
12. Tyler Young,
13. Christopher Bell,
14. Cole Custer,
15. Ben Rhodes,
16. Parker Kligerman,
17. Rico Abreu,
18. Brandon Brown,
19. John Wes Townley,
20. Austin Wayne Self,
194
176
171
168
153
153
151
145
142
129
128
127
125
122
120
116
109
92
91
90
naSCar XFiniTy Points leaders
aP photo/Gene J. Puskar
dEFEndinG u.S. OPEn Champion Jordan Spieth walks off the 15th green during a practice round
for the 2016 US Open golf championship at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa., Monday.
naSCar Camping World Truck Points leaders
SOCCEr
Copa america Glance
FirST rOund
Top two in each group advance
GrOuP a
GP W
d
l GF Ga
x-United States
3
2
0
1
5
2
x-Colombia
3
2
0
1
6
4
Costa Rica
3
1
1
1
3
6
Paraguay
3
0
1
2
1
3
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Saturday, June 11
at Philadelphia
United States 1, Paraguay 0
at Houston
Costa Rica 3, Colombia 2
GrOuP B
GP W
d
l GF Ga
x-Peru
3
2
1
0
4
2
x-Ecuador
3
1
2
0
6
2
Brazil
3
1
1
1
7
2
Haiti
3
0
0
3
1 12
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Sunday, June 12
at East rutherford, n.J.
Ecuador 4, Haiti 0
at Foxborough, Mass.
Peru 1, Brazil 0
GrOuP C
GP W
d
l GF Ga
x-Mexico
3
2
1
0
6
2
x-Venezuela
3
2
1
0
3
1
Uruguay
3
1
0
2
4
4
Jamaica
3
0
0
3
0
6
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Monday, June 13
at Houston
Mexico 1, Venezuela 1
at Santa Clara, Calif.
Uruguay 3, Jamaica 0
GrOuP d
GP W
d
l GF Ga
Argentina
2
2
0
0
7
1
Panama
2
1
0
1
2
6
Chile
2
1
0
1
3
3
Bolivia
2
0
0
2
2
4
Tuesday, June 14
at Philadelphia
Chile vs. Panama, 8 p.m.
at Seattle
Argentina vs. Bolivia, 10 p.m.
QuarTErFinalS
Thursday, June 16
at Seattle
United States vs. Ecuador, 9:30 p.m.
Friday, June 17
at East rutherford, n.J.
Peru vs. Colombia, 8 p.m.
Saturday, June 18
at Foxborough, Mass.
Group D winner vs. Group C second place, 7 p.m.
at Santa Clara, Calif.
Group C winner vs. Group D second place, 10 p.m.
SEMiFinalS
Tuesday, June 21
at Houston
Seattle winner vs. Foxborough winner, 9 p.m.
Wednesday, June 22
at Chicago
East Rutherford winner vs. Santa Clara winner, 8 p.m.
THird PlaCE
Saturday, June 25
at Glendale, ariz.
Semifinal losers, 8 p.m.
CHaMPiOnSHiP
Sunday, June 26
at East rutherford, n.J.
Semifinal winners, 8 p.m.
Pts
6
6
4
1
Pts
7
5
4
0
Pts
7
7
3
0
Pts
6
3
3
0
Spieth on ‘major’ roll
going into U.S. Open
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Jordan Spieth feels confident about his game, typical talk from most top players going into a major.
Unlike so many others at this U.S. Open, however,
Spieth speaks from experience.
Not since Tiger Woods a decade ago has anyone
had this kind of run in golf’s biggest events. From
the time he missed the cut at Valhalla in the 2014
PGA Championship, Spieth has not finished worse
than fourth in his last five majors. He won the
Masters and U.S. Open, missed a playoff at the
British Open by one shot, was runner-up at the PGA
Championship, and he tied for second at this year’s
Masters.
He made it sound Monday as though form were
secondary to sheer belief.
“Is my game always (good) ... no,” he said, answering his own question before he finished it. “The
Masters this year, tee to green, I felt much worse
than I did at events where I finished 25th at a tour
event. But because I just felt that we were ready and
that we could do it and I could draw on past experience — especially at that event — we got into contention. I willed the putts in. I couldn’t really
describe it to you other than it just being kind of a
mental state of being confident at the majors.”
Such streaks are rare.
In the last 60 years, only Jack Nicklaus (three
times), Woods (twice) and Arnold Palmer have gone
at least five straight majors in the top five. Nicklaus
went seven straight majors from the 1971 PGA
Championship through the 1972 British Open, while
Woods’ longest stretch of top 5s was six majors from
the 1999 PGA Championship through the 2001
Masters. He won five of those six majors.
Whether the 22-year-old Texan can extend his
streak depends largely on Oakmont.
The course has lived up to its reputation as the
toughest championship test in golf over the last couple of days of dry weather. Spieth was among those
who predicted no one will finish the week under par,
as was the case in 2007 at Oakmont when Angel
Cabrera won at 5-over 285.
Rain could change that. But rain won’t make the
rough shrink.
The density of the grass is as fearsome as the
speed of the greens. Graeme McDowell had a bet
with his caddie on Sunday in which the former U.S.
Open champion would get $30 for every birdie, and
he would lose $10 for every bogey. He played the
back nine and lost $50.
The wind was so strong Sunday that Spieth said
he would have shot somewhere around 75 or 76 at
best, and he would have been happy with it.
“But today, with less wind, I thought that it was
more playable,” he said. “Still extremely challenging,
where par is a great score, but I thought if you hit
the ball where you were looking you could have
birdie opportunities on quite a few holes. At the
same time ... I’d sign for even par. I don’t think anyone is going to be in the red come 72 holes. So it will
be a challenge. But I’m looking forward to it.”
Spieth is coming off a stretch of playing four
straight weeks, with one very important tournament.
He missed the cut at The Players Championship,
his first tournament back since losing a five-shot
lead on the back nine at the Masters. He lost a good
chance to win in his hometown at the AT&T Byron
Nelson when he shot 74 in the final round. The
important week was Colonial, where Spieth birdied
his last three holes to win. He started well at the
Memorial until fading badly on the weekend, but
that win in Texas was big for his morale.
And it eased some of the sting from Augusta.
“That was a huge week for us, especially to win
before any of the next majors,” he said. “If we can get
ourselves in contention here, I can draw back on
Colonial, what happened at the end there. I think it
would have been that much harder.”
The really hard part is winning at Oakmont — not
just because it’s Oakmont, but the history against
him. Curtis Strange is the only player in the last 65
years to win the U.S. Open in back-to-back years.
Strange won in 1988 and 1989.
No one has come particularly close, either. Retief
Goosen was defending champion in 2005 and took a
three-shot lead into the final round at Pinehurst No.
2 only to close with an 81 to finish eight shots
See SPIETH, Page 11
TranSaCTiOnS
Monday’s Sports Transactions
BaSEBall
Major league Baseball
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL —
Suspended Texas minor league C Melvin Novoa (Arizona)
56 games and Boston minor league C Jhon Nunez (LowellNYP) 25 games for violations of the Minor League Drug
Prevention and Treatment Program.
american league
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Designated 3B Kyle Kubitza
and LHP David Huff for assignment. Selected the contracts
of RHPs Al Alburquerque and A.J. Achter from Salt Lake
(PCL). Placed RHP Cory Rasmus on the 15-day DL. Sent
OF Daniel Nava to Salt Lake for a rehab assignment.
MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned RHP J.T. Chargois to
Rochester (IL).
NEW YORK YANKEES — Agreed to terms with INF Ike
Davis on a one-year contract. Designated RHP Layne
Somsen for assignment. Optioned RHP Chad Green to
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent RHP Henderson Alvarez to
Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment.
TEXAS RANGERS — Activated OF Shin-Soo Choo from
the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Alex Claudio from Round
Rock (PCL). Placed RHP Yu Darvish on the 15-day DL,
retroactive to June 9. Optioned OF Jared Hoying to Round
Rock.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Optioned L/RHP Pat Venditte to
Buffalo (IL). Selected the contract of LHP Scott Diamond
from Buffalo. Transferred LHP Franklin Morales to the 60day DL.
national league
ATLANTA BRAVES — Placed LHP Eric O’Flaherty on the
15-day DL. Recalled RHP Ryan Weber from Gwinnett (IL).
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Activated RHP Frankie
Montas from the 60-day DL and optioned him to Oklahoma
City (PCL).
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Optioned RHP Chris Stratton
to Sacramento (PCL). Reinstated RHP Matt Cain from the
15-day DL.
BaSKETBall
national Basketball association
DETROIT PISTONS — Signed general manager Jeff Bower
to a contract extension.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS — Announced the retirement of
assistant coach Kevin Eastman.
FOOTBall
national Football league
BUFFALO BILLS — Signed DE Leger Douzable and OT
Chris Martin. Released DE Claudell Louis and OT Keith
Lumpkin.
DALLAS COWBOYS — Signed CBs Isaiah Frey and Dax
Swanson.
DETROIT LIONS — Signed DB Keith Lewis and WR Andre
Roberts. Waived WR Austin Willis. Placed WR Corey
Washington on injured reserve.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Agreed to terms with DT
Fletcher Cox on a six-year contract.
HOCKEy
national Hockey league
CALGARY FLAMES — Signed G David Rittich to a oneyear contract.
CAROLINA HURRICANES — Agreed to terms with F
Sebastian Aho and C Aleksi Saarela to three-year, entrylevel contracts.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed G Marek Mazanec to
a one-year, two-way contract.
ST. LOUIS BLUES — Named Mike Yeo associate coach.
OlyMPiC SPOrTS
USADA — Suspended rugby athlete Nia Williams four years
after testing positive for prohibited substances during the
2015 World Rugby Women’s Seven Series. Suspended
track & field athlete Gwen Berry three months for using an
inhaler containing the prohibited substance vilanterol trifenatate at the United States track & field indoor championships.
COllEGE
EMORY — Named Donovan Ricketts assistant soccer
coach.
FLORIDA — Announced the retirement of athletic director
Jeremy Foley.
KENTUCKY — Named Nick Mingione baseball coach.
Submitted photo
THE ClEVEland CyClOnES 8-under baseball team recently captured the Rawlings Gold Glove
World Series Championship. Team members are, front from left, Skyler Yerkes, Brayden Carroll, Tristian
Lyles, Hunter Zanaty and Jonas West; middle row, Peyton Harden, Brannon Siler, Christian Lee, Cooper
Henry, Brayden Harris and Jaxon Chapman; back, coaches Chris Davis, Micah Harris and Josh Lee
Michael West.
Contributed photo
THE BradlEy THundEr baseball team won the 2016 Open Baseball World Series over the weekend in Dalton, Ga. Front, from left, are Ethan Meadows, Payton Armour, Taylor Duggan, Conner Crumley,
Austin Darnell and Seth Adams. In back are Ryan Lay, Jhovanny Angeles, Tucker Beshears, Jacob
Hutchenson, Spencer Skidmore and Tommy Rollins. Coaches are Steve Crumley, Paul Adams, and
Jason Rollins.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—11
Nats’ Scherzer allows just 2 hits to dominate Cubs
WASHINGTON (AP) — Max
Scherzer retired the first 16 batters he faced and threw seven
innings of two-hit ball, striking
out 11 in a pitching masterpiece
that carried the Washington
Nationals past the Chicago Cubs
4-1 Monday night.
Scherzer’s bid for his third
career no-hitter ended with one
out in the sixth when Addison
Russell homered on a 3-2 pitch.
The only other batter to reach
against Scherzer (8-4) was
Anthony Rizzo, who doubled in
the seventh.
Facing the team with the best
record in the majors, Scherzer
became the 26th pitcher in baseball history to have 40 games
with at least 10 strikeouts. He
has won three straight starts,
allowing only three runs over 22
innings.
Shawn Kelley got five outs for
his first save.
Wilson Ramos hit a tiebreaking homer in the sixth inning for
the NL East-leading Nationals,
who have won four straight and
seven of eight.
Kyle Hendricks (4-6) gave up
four runs and six hits in 5 1/3
innings.
ROYALS 2, INDIANS 1
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —
Whit Merrifield hit his first career
homer, Edinson Volquez tossed
seven scoreless innings of twohit ball and Kansas City beat
Cleveland to end a five-game skid
against the Indians.
Alcides Escobar also drove in a
run for the Royals, who have won
three in a row after an eightgame losing streak. They also
won their seventh consecutive
game at Kauffman Stadium.
Volquez (6-6) walked the bases
loaded in the first inning before
settling down, allowing only a
double to Jason Kipnis and a
single to Lonnie Chisenhall.
Kelvin Herrera allowed a leadoff homer to Kipnis in the eighth.
Wade Davis earned his 18th
save.
Carlos Carrasco (2-2) gave up
both Kansas City runs and 10
hits over six innings.
WHITE SOX 10, TIGERS 9,
12 INNINGS
CHICAGO (AP) — Adam Eaton
singled home the winning run in
the 12th inning for his fourth hit
of the night, and Chicago rallied
from seven runs down in a wild
victory over Detroit.
J.B. Shuck led off the 12th with
a double down the first-base line
and advanced on Tim Anderson’s
sacrifice. With the infield playing
in, Eaton bounced a grounder up
the middle against Anibal
Sanchez (3-7).
Jose Abreu hit a two-run homer
for Chicago, and Dioner Navarro
had a solo shot. Zach Duke (1-0)
pitched a scoreless inning for the
win, long after White Sox manager
Robin Ventura was ejected for
arguing balls and strikes.
The White Sox trailed 7-0 in the
third after another shaky outing
from James Shields in his second
start since he was acquired from
San Diego. They faced a 9-7 deficit
in the ninth before they got to
Francisco Rodriguez for two runs
with two outs, snapping a string
of 19 straight successful save
opportunities for the veteran closer.
Brett Lawrie and Avisail Garcia
delivered consecutive RBI singles
to tie it.
Ian Kinsler homered for the
third straight game for Detroit,
which had won seven of nine. J.D.
Martinez had three hits while subbing for designated hitter Victor
Martinez, sidelined by right knee
irritation.
DIAMONDBACKS 3,
DODGERS 2
PHOENIX (AP) — Zack Greinke
won his sixth consecutive start,
aided by three defensive gems in
his first game against his former
team since leaving Los Angeles,
and Arizona got home runs from
Paul Goldschmidt and Jake Lamb
to beat the Dodgers.
Greinke (9-3), who signed a
$206.5 million, six-year contract
with the Diamondbacks last offseason, was backed by big plays
from left fielder Peter O’Brien, second baseman Jean Segura and
center fielder Michael Bourn. The
AP photo/Alex Brandon
WASHINGTON NATIONALS STARTING PITCHER Max Scherzer throws during the first inning of
Monday’s game against the Chicago Cubs at Nationals Park, in Washington. Scherzer dominated the
Cubs with a two-hitter for a 4-1 victory.
right-hander allowed two runs
and seven hits, throwing a season-high 119 pitches in seven
innings.
Brad Ziegler got five outs for his
41st consecutive save, 13th this
season. He escaped a basesloaded jam in the eighth with the
help of a diving catch by Bourn.
Goldschmidt and Lamb homered off Mike Bolsinger (1-4). Corey
Seager hit his 15th homer for the
Dodgers.
PHILLIES 7, BLUE JAYS 0
TORONTO (AP) — Ryan Howard
and Odubel Herrera homered,
Jerad Eickhoff pitched six spotless innings to win consecutive
starts for the first time this season, and Philadelphia snapped a
four-game losing streak by beating Toronto.
Herrera had three RBIs as the
Phillies won for the third time in
13 meetings with the Blue Jays.
Peter Bourjos had two hits and
two RBIs for Philadelphia, which
had lost 17 of 22 overall.
Eickhoff (4-8) allowed three hits
and four walks. David Hernandez,
Hector Neris and Andrew Bailey
finished the six-hitter.
Toronto scored 21 runs in winning its previous two games but
did not manage an extra-base hit
against the Phillies.
Herrera and Howard homered
off knuckleballer R.A. Dickey (47), who went 6 1/3 innings. He is
0-5 with a 5.14 ERA in seven
home starts.
MARLINS 13, PADRES 4
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Adeiny
Hechavarria drove in four runs
and Miami routed San Diego.
Ichiro Suzuki had three of the
Marlins’ season-high 19 hits, leaving him one shy of equaling Pete
Rose’s total of 4,256 — the major
league record. Suzuki collected
1,278 hits during his nine seasons in Japan.
Martin Prado homered for the
Marlins, who rested sore slugger
Giancarlo Stanton. Still, they built
an 8-1 cushion by the third inning
and eased to their third win in five
games.
Wei-Yin Chen (4-2) allowed four
solo homers and seven hits in six
innings. He struck out seven and
won for just the second time in
eight starts.
Colin Rea (3-3) was battered for
eight runs and nine hits in 2 2/3
innings, the shortest start of his
career.
ATHLETICS 14, RANGERS 5
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Khris
Davis homered and drove in five
runs, Marcus Semien and Jake
Smolinski each had three hits and
Oakland pounded first-place
Texas, hours after the Rangers
put pitcher Yu Darvish on the disabled list.
The A’s snapped a seven-game
losing streak on Sunday, then
beat a Texas team that had won
eight of 10.
Davis hit his 15th homer off
Cesar Ramos (1-3) in the fifth.
Ramos allowed eight runs in 3
2/3 innings. He pitched in place
of Darvish, who had been scheduled to start this game before
experiencing shoulder discomfort.
Daniel Coulombe (1-0) won in
relief of starter Sean Manaea, who
exited after 4 1/3 innings with a
strained left forearm.
Rangers outfielder Shin-Soo
Choo homered in his first game
back from the disabled list.
Josh Phegley added a three-run
homer for the A’s, his first. Zach
Neal went three innings for his
first save.
TWINS 9, ANGELS 4
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Trevor
Plouffe hit a three-run homer,
Byron Buxton and Robbie
Grossman also went deep and
Minnesota beat slumping Los
Angeles.
Joe Mauer had two hits while
reaching base for the 25th consecutive game for the AL-worst
Twins (20-43), who battered Jered
Weaver (5-6) in their highest-scoring performance of the season.
Ricky Nolasco (3-4) yielded
three runs over six innings in his
second victory since April 21 for
Minnesota, which won consecutive games for the second time in
June.
Johnny Giavotella homered and
tied a career high with four hits
for the Angels (27-37), who committed three errors. They dropped
to a season-worst 10 games below
.500 with their eighth loss in 10
games.
GIANTS 11, BREWERS 5
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Brandon Crawford drove in three
runs and Denard Span hit a leadoff homer to help San Francisco
beat Milwaukee.
Crawford’s sacrifice fly in the
sixth against Corey Knebel (0-1)
broke a 4-all tie. The shortstop
added a two-run single an inning
later as the Giants won for the
ninth time in 11 home games.
Gregor Blanco had a two-run single in San Francisco’s four-run
seventh.
Albert Suarez (2-1), the third of
five Giants pitchers, allowed two
runs in 3 2/3 innings for the win.
Matt Cain gave up three runs,
five hits and five walks in 3 2/3
innings after missing his previous
two turns with a right hamstring
strain.
Top-seeded Gators blank FSU to advance to CWS
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Widely regarded
Schwarz provided plenty of cushion for
Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley, who
as the best team in the country all season, right-hander Dane Dunning (6-3), the 29th announced his retirement earlier in the day,
Florida will get a chance to prove it on college overall pick in the baseball draft. Dunning opted not to attend the series finale. The
baseball’s biggest stage.
replaced fellow first-rounder A.J. Puk in the school said Foley wanted to avoid being a disJJ Schwarz broke out of a two-week hitting fourth inning and tossed 4 1/3 scoreless traction and keep the spotlight on the baseslump by driving in five runs — most of them innings.
ball team. Foley decided last week to retire
on a grand slam — and the Gators beat rival
Puk’s next start should come in Omaha, and announced it publicly Monday, the same
Florida State 7-0 on Monday night to secure where Florida endured two gut-wrenching day he told University Athletic Association
the last spot in the College World Series.
loses in 2015.
board members.
Florida (52-14) won the final two games in
“We wanted to go back so bad,” Schwarz
MORE DISTRACTIONS
the best-of-three super regional to earn its said. “We were so close to playing in the
Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan lauded his
fifth trip to Omaha, Nebraska, in the past championship series. We wanted to get back team for what it already has accomplished
seven years. The Gators, the overall No. 1 and see what we could do.”
this season, from handling preseason expecseed in the tournament, will play Coastal
The Gators believe they have a decent shot tations to the No. 1 seed. The Gators also had
Carolina on Sunday night.
at winning the program’s first national cham- six players drafted in the top 108 picks in the
And they will be looking for redemption pionship this time around. They have the MLB draft.
after losing two one-run games to eventual deepest pitching staff in the country and
“It’s very, very difficult to juggle those
national champion Virginia in Omaha last have started swinging the bats better since things,” O’Sullivan said. “I couldn’t be more
season.
Peter Alonso returned to the lineup. Alonso proud with how they handle the expectations
“We’ve
got
a
lot
of
unfinished
business
missed nearly a month with a broken bone in from a team standpoint and how selfless they
Banner file photo, JOE CANNON
we’ve got to take care of,” centerfielder Buddy his left hand.
were individually. I’m just proud that we’ve
FORMER CLEVELAND CATCHER Hunter Oliver played in
Reed said.
He returned for the tournament and has got an opportunity to go back out to Omaha
the Tennessee-Georgia All-Star Baseball game Monday night.
The Gators can only hope Schwarz keeps been on a tear since.
and have these guys experience that again.”
The Tennessee All-Stars won 8-4. Oliver was named
swinging as he did against the Seminoles (41He homered for the fourth time in six
SCORELESS STREAK
Tennessee’s player of the game thanks to two hits, including an
22). With the bases loaded, the sophomore games in the third inning, driving starter
Florida State’s bat went cold in the final
RBI double.
hammered Jim Voyles’ hanging slider over Cole Sands’ belt-high fastball to left. That got two-plus games in the series. The ‘Noles
the left-field bleachers to put the Gators up the Gators going and Schwarz opened the failed to score in their 22 innings of the super
6-0 in the fifth inning. He added an RBI dou- game up, propelling Florida to its 11th win in regional. They scored three runs in the first
ble in the sixth.
its past 14 games against FSU.
five innings of Game 1 and didn’t really get
Those hits snapped a 4-for-27 (.148)
“I don’t know if I’ve seen as strong a pitch- close after that.
stretch over the past eight games for Schwarz ing staff,” longtime FSU coach Mike Martin
QUOTABLE
and provided his latest highlight against said. “Florida is very deserving of a No. 1
“We hope and pray that we never come
From Page 9
Florida State. Schwarz improved to 19-for-44 seed. Anything happens in baseball. I don’t back down here for a super regional.” —
(.432), with seven homers and 20 RBIs in 11 want to say something to jinx anybody.”
Martin, whose program ended the past two
work with their less-experienced kicks in practice. We’re doing a lot career games against FSU.
FOLEY SKIPS
seasons in Gainesville.
swimmers to help them continue of drills, because eventually those
to see improvements with every drills will turn into proper stroke
meet.
mechanics,” Huff said.
“Basically we’ve been focusing
On Thursday, CAT travels will
on making sure that they are face their toughest challenge of
swimming a legal stroke. In swim- the season as they travel to the From Page 9
ming, you want to really focus on home of the reigning City Meet
the kick first, so we’re pushing Champion Dalton (Ga.) Dolphins.
shoot 33 for 54, while the thoughts and prayers to victims straight playoff series with at Warriors had won their last four
Warriors went cold and finished in the Orlando mass shooting least one road win. ... James against the Cavs on their home
36.4 percent from the field. before a moment of silence.
played his 197th postseason court, outscoring Cleveland by a
James also had three steals and
TIP-INS
game, tying him with Manu combined 48 points in Games 1
three blocked shots.
Cavaliers:
Kevin
Love Ginobili for No. 9 on the NBA’s and 2 of these finals. ... Golden
Andre Iguodala had 15 points, returned to the starting lineup career list. He also passed Elgin State had its streak of six
From Page 10
11 rebounds and six assists for the first time since sustain- Baylor (1,724) for No. 9 on the straight Game 5 victories in the
starting in place of Green, but ing a concussion in Game 2 here rebounds list.
postseason dating to last year’s
behind.
“It just honestly feels like a nor- Oakland must hold off in plan- on June 5. ... James extended
Warriors: Golden State com- Western Conference semifinals
Different about this major title mal week that I got here earlier for ning another victory parade for his NBA-record streak to 26 mitted 17 turnovers. ... The snapped.
defense is that Spieth doesn’t go and I’m preparing harder for,” he now.
to a special locker room for cham- said. “I feel very confident about
“We like our chances going
pions. He doesn’t have to host a my game right now. I wish the forward and continuing to just
dinner for past champions.
tournament started tomorrow.”
try to be us, the best we can,
and get one more win,” Curry
From Page 9
said.
Warriors center Andrew Bogut
went down early in the third
Reds right-hander Daniel be cleared for game action by Weber was recalled from Triple-A
From Staff Reports
Coulthard shot a 45 and 43 for a grabbing his left knee and Wright, making his second career Thursday, when he’ll be eligible Gwinnett and gave up two runs in
total of 88. Finishing 14th was
the sixth.
CHATTANOOGA — Competing Lucas Maynard, who shot a total writhing in pain, and will have start, allowed five runs, three for reinstatement.
an
MRI
exam
on
his
sprained
earned,
on
six
hits
and
a
walk
in
Braves:
SS
Erick
Aybar
was
UP NEXT
at the Brainerd Golf Course on
of 96 and Corbin Grannan tied knee Tuesday.
three innings.
knocked to the ground when hit
Reds: LHP Brandon Finnegan
Monday, a number of local
Irving’s three-point play with
FORGET IT
on his chest by Blake Wood’s pitch (2-4, 3.77) will make his first
golfers performed well in the lat- for 15th with a total of 102.
In the girls 12-18 Tour, Gracie 7:30 remaining put Cleveland
Reds manager Bryan Price in the sixth. He needed several career appearance against Atlanta
est stop on the Sneds Tour.
Medley
finished third after shoot- ahead 102-92, and the Cavs described the game as “really odd minutes before returning to his on Tuesday night. Finnegan is tied
In the boys 10-13 Tour, John
feet and remaining in the game. ... with Dan Straily for the staff lead
Thomas McKenzie tied for second ing a 46 and 43, for a total of 89. kept pushing. They answered on baseball.”
In the girls 12-18 half round, offense and made all the key
“If you’re a baseball purist, I RHP Shea Simmons, recovering with seven quality starts and
place after shooting a 41 in the
don’t think that’s one you’re going from Tommy John surgery on allowed a combined three earned
half round. Bennett Burris tied Sidney Starr shot a 60 for a stops on defense.
“It
obviously
stings
real
bad,”
to put on a CD and save forever,” Feb. 12, 2015, was scratched from runs in his last two starts.
fourth
place
finish,
while
Allie
for 11th place, with a score of 57.
his last injury rehab start with
Braves: RHP Julio Teheran will
The Sneds Tour is named for Oliver followed in fifth place with Thompson said. “We’ll come Price said.
back stronger.”
TRAINER’S ROOM
Double-A Mississippi on Friday as look to extend his career success
Brandt Snedeker, a former a 62.
MOMENT OF SILENCE
Reds: Price said OF Billy he continues to experience sore- against the Reds. Teheran (2-6,
Whitney Kincaid finished third
Vanderbilt standout and a curFormer Orlando Magic star Hamilton, on the seven-day con- ness. ... LHP Eric O’Flaherty was 2.85) is 2-1 with a 1.78 ERA in
in the girls 16-18 Masters.
rent player on the PGA Tour.
Torr Coulthard tied for eighth Kincaid shot a 44 and 45 for a Grant Hill spoke on behalf of the cussion DL, had a “really good placed on the 15-day disabled list four career starts against the
NBA in offering support, day” on Sunday. Hamilton could with a right knee strain. RHP Reds.
in the boys 13-15 Tour. total of 89.
Waterdogs
NBA Finals
Spieth
Sneds Tour stops in Chattanooga
Braves
12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Editorial
Understanding 13 folds
in our American flag
A
s patriots from corner to
corner of this proudly
diverse land called
America pause today in observance of Flag Day, we thought
it appropriate to share some
information that might be only
vaguely familiar to many men
and women of our nation.
Its message is no secret.
Access to it is as simple as
logging on to the Internet.
Many veterans, and the widows and widowers of
America’s veterans, probably
keep it framed in prominent
locations on a living room wall.
Truth is, the first time we
published this information as
an editorial — back on June
14, 2013 — we were surprised
at the number of phone calls
and emails, and comments
made in person, that we
received afterward from
Cleveland and Bradley County
residents, many of whom are
our newspaper’s readers and
did not know this story.
For this reason, we’ve made
it a point — on Flag Day — to
revisit the story’s telling. We
trust it will be just as beneficial
to a new audience three years
later, as well as to any who
need to clip a new copy for
their refrigerator door or other
areas of prominent household
viewing.
We refer to the symbolism
behind the 13 folds of the
American flag. Explanations
we came upon — in the editorial’s first printing — on an
array of websites commonly
preface the information by
posing this question, “Have
you ever noticed how the
Honor Guard pays meticulous
attention to correctly folding
the American flag 13 times?
Truly, it comes with purpose.
From this point on, we will
quote from already established
narrative, which, based on our
online research, is titled “The
Meaning of the 13 Folds of the
American Flag.”
It reads:
“The 1st fold of our flag is a
symbol of life.
“The 2nd fold is a symbol of
our belief in eternal life.
“The 3rd fold is made in
honor and remembrance of the
veterans departing our ranks
who gave a portion of their
lives for the defense of our
country to attain peace
throughout the world.
“The 4th fold represents our
weaker nature, for as
American citizens trusting in
God, it is to Him we turn in
times of war for His divine
guidance.
“The 5th fold is a tribute to
our country, for in the words of
Stephen
Decatur,
‘Our
Country, in dealing with other
countries, may she always be
right; but it is still our country,
right or wrong.’
“The 6th fold is for where our
hearts lie. It is with our heart
that we ‘... pledge allegiance to
the flag of the United States of
America, and to the republic
for which it stands, one Nation
under God, Indivisible, with
Liberty and Justice for all.’
“The 7th fold is a tribute to
our Armed Forces, for it is
through the Armed Forces that
we protect our country and our
flag against all her enemies,
whether they be found within
or without the boundaries of
our republic.
“The 8th fold is a tribute to
the one entered into the valley
of the shadow of death, that
we might see the light of day.
“The 9th fold is a tribute to
womanhood, and Mothers. For
it has been through their faith,
their love, loyalty and devotion
that the character of the men
and women who have made
this country great has been
molded.
“The 10th fold is a tribute to
the Father, for He too, has
given His sons and daughters
for defense of our country
since they were first born.
“The 11th fold represents the
lower portion of the seal of
King David and King Solomon
and glorifies in the Hebrews’
eyes, the God of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob.
“The 12th fold represents an
emblem of eternity and glorifies, in the Christians’ eyes,
God the Father, the Son and
Holy Spirit.
“The 13th fold, or when the
flag is completely folded, the
stars are uppermost reminding
us of our nation’s motto, ‘In
God We Trust.’
“After the flag is completely
folded and tucked in, it takes
on the appearance of a cocked
hat, ever reminding us of the
soldiers who served under
Gen. George Washington, and
the sailors and marines who
served under Capt. John Paul
Jones, who were followed by
their comrades and shipmates
in the Armed Forces of the
United States, preserving for
us the rights, privileges and
freedoms we enjoy today.”
For those who still fervently
cling to the uncompromised
ideals, and to the original values of our America — whether
they are written or merely
understood — the above passages carry great meaning
and incredible weight in determining our balance in life.
We agree, without condition,
with this narrative’s final
reminder, “In the future, you’ll
see flags folded and now you
will know why. Share this with
the children you love and all
others who live the symbol of
‘Liberty and Freedom.’”
God Bless America.
She is not a perfect country.
But she is our country.
She has stood tall when others have fallen.
She has fought for what is
right when others have cowered.
She has defended the
defenseless when others have
turned away.
She has spoken for those
without a voice when others
have kept their silence.
She has shown without condition why she is the land of
the free and the home of the
brave.
She has pursued the cause
of America even as some
might believe America has lost
her cause.
In today’s eyes of some, the
American flag is just a fabric
and her colors denote what is
now a time of the past and a
past long forgotten.
To these naysayers and
other proponents of such
belief, we say this. America is
still America. Yes, sometimes
we are bruised. Yes, sometimes we bend. Yes, other
times we might stagger. But
we never break.
And the colors of our
America, and of our American
people ... remain the icon of
freedom and the symbol of
unending hope.
May the red, white and blue
of America’s rippling flag forever fly in the face of any who
would oppress and all who
would turn a deaf ear to the
precious doctrine of human
rights.
We are America. Our flag
defines our people. Our people
defend our flag.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Balancing a budget similar to beating
Murphy’s Law, but it takes some work
Have you ever been given a task to complete that consumes your every waking
hour? Have you ever noticed that Murphy’s
Law (Anything that can go wrong, will go
wrong) has a way of entering in to this equation?
If you have, you are not alone!
Many who attempt the completion of any
task soon find that there are, or will be,
many detractions and obstacles to overcome
before the finish line is crossed. How we
respond to these life interruptions is what
makes us who we are, and either ensures
victory or allows us to accept defeat.
I am not immune from these opportunities either. Those who know me best understand that budget time is a time of intense
debate, conversation and meetings that
leaves little time for anything else.
This time is a time in which my schedule
is full and time for anything else is limited,
at best. These two to three months are
spent in finding the best use of limited
funds for maximum impact.
This year you may have seen me recently
with an eye patch covering my left eye, due
to eye surgery that added a new dimension
of empathy, and also determination, to my
process.
Missing sleep, overcoming health limitations during recovery and adapting are
items that many do each day. To those who
meet these obstacles and make them opportunities, please know that I salute, and
value, your positive contributions even more
today than before. And in doing so I hope
that you appreciate my efforts to present not
only a balanced budget to the Bradley
County Commission for a vote, but one in
which we continue to live within our means.
You may have read previous news articles
concerning the budget for 2016-17. The
goals and highlights are:
OUR
COUNTY
Bradley County
Mayor
D. Gary Davis
1. No tax increase;
2. A 2 percent raise for employees, if possible;
3. Maintain fund balance of approximately
15 percent; and
4. Capital Project Fund created, with
growth dollars, to pay the extra $2.5 million
for Lake Forest Middle School (over three
years).
After a very difficult budget process this
year, we have one that is fiscally sound and
based on conservative estimates. Most
departments did as we asked and requested
no increase. Some departments requested
even less and, of course, a few requested
more.
I reminded our Bradley County commissioners that they asked me to put every
penny possible into the “other capital project
fund” for the additional $2.5 million for Lake
Forest Middle School. Needless to say, I
have made minor cuts throughout to get
this proposed budget balanced and presented to the Commission.
The result after all expenditures is a $7.5
million, or 14.9 percent, fund balance. With
this budget, every single department in the
General Fund will continue to provide the
level of service that our citizens have come
to expect and deserve. The Road Fund meets
the 5-year average required by law and the
schools are funded about the same. And a 2
percent raise for full-time employees is
included in this budget proposal.
Debt Service includes $3 million in industrial park bonds with hotel/motel tax revenue to cover cost; and $2 million in bonds
for the work-release addition (Bradley
County Workhouse), with revenue from
operations to cover cost.
In the Community Development Fund,
this year we pay the balance of our commitment for the APD 40 interchange/connector
road, and the purchase of the industrial
park property. Most of our veterans home
commitment is in this fund this year. This is
also where I put the Santek Waste Services
donation to help fund the industrial park
purchase.This is something that benefits the
city as well as the county.
Other Capital Projects is a new fund, following the request of the Finance
Committee. It was created by consolidating
the General Capital Project Fund, the
Education Capital Project Fund and a few
fractions of a penny moved from most all
others. This is what was meant when you
have heard me say, numerous times, “We
will re-allocate every single dollar possible to
this new fund to pay for the additional $2.5
million that this Commission approved for
Lake Forest.”
A 400-plus page budget request document, covering over 70 departments, has
now been reduced to 100 pages with the
help of every department, elected official and
employee of Bradley County working together to reach this significant achievement.
I appreciate the opportunity to work
together in our efforts to not only present
this budget, but to also serve those who call
Bradley County our home.
This extra effort by all, and the defeat of
Murphy’s Law, is not only appreciated, it is
one of the reasons Bradley County is
Tennessee at its Best!
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
TODAY IN HISTORY
(AP) — Today is Tuesday, June
14, the 166th day of 2016. There
are 200 days left in the year. This
is Flag Day.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On June 14, 1777, the
Continental Congress, meeting in
Philadelphia, adopted the original design of the Stars and
Stripes, specifying a flag containing thirteen red and white stripes
and thirteen stars.
On this date:
In 1775, the Continental
Army, forerunner of the United
States Army, was created.
In 1801, former American
Revolutionary War general and
notorious turncoat Benedict
Arnold died in London.
In 1922, Warren G. Harding
became the first president heard
on radio, as Baltimore station
WEAR broadcast his speech dedicating the Francis Scott Key
memorial at Fort McHenry.
In 1934, Max Baer defeated
Primo Carnera with an 11th
round TKO to win the world
heavyweight boxing championship in Long Island City, New
York.
In 1940, German troops
entered Paris during World War
II; the same day, the Nazis began
transporting prisoners to the
Auschwitz concentration camp in
German-occupied Poland.
In 1943, the U.S. Supreme
Court, in West Virginia State
Board of Education v. Barnette,
ruled 6-3 that children in public
schools could not be forced to
salute the flag of the United
States.
In 1954, President Dwight D.
Eisenhower signed a measure
adding the phrase “under God” to
the Pledge of Allegiance.
In 1967, the space probe
Mariner 5 was launched from
Cape Kennedy on a flight that
took it past Venus.
In 1972, the Environmental
Protection Agency ordered a ban
on domestic use of the pesticide
DDT, to take effect at year’s end.
In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the
disputed Falkland Islands.
In 1985, the 17-day hijack
ordeal of TWA Flight 847 began
as a pair of Lebanese Shiite
Muslim extremists seized the jetliner shortly after takeoff from
Athens, Greece.
In 1990, the U.S. Supreme
Court upheld, 6-3, police checkpoints that examined drivers for
signs of intoxication.
Ten years ago: President
George W. Bush, just back from a
surprise visit to Iraq, dismissed
calls for a U.S. withdrawal as
election-year politics and refused
to give a timetable or benchmark
for success that would allow
troops to come home.
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama made a four-hour
visit to Puerto Rico, becoming the
first president since John F.
Kennedy to make an official visit
to the U.S. territory. The longdelayed, problem-plagued musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the
Dark” officially opened on
Broadway.
One year ago: Thousands of
Syrians cut through a border
fence and crossed over into
Turkey, fleeing intense fighting in
northern Syria between Kurdish
fighters and jihadis. Inbee Park
shot a final round 68 and finished at 19-under par to win the
KPMG
Women’s
PGA
Championship for the third consecutive year and retake the No.
1 ranking in women’s golf.
Today’s Birthdays: Actress
Marla Gibbs is 85. House
Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, DMd., is 77. Writer Peter Mayle is
77. Actor Jack Bannon is 76.
Country-rock musician Spooner
Oldham is 73. Rock singer Rod
Argent (The Zombies; Argent) is
71. Real estate mogul, TV personality and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump
is 70. Singer Janet Lennon (The
Lennon Sisters) is 70. Rock
musician Barry Melton is 69.
Rock musician Alan White (Yes)
is 67. Actor Eddie Mekka is 64.
Actor Will Patton is 62. Olympic
gold-medal speed skater Eric
Heiden is 58. Jazz musician
Marcus Miller is 57. Singer Boy
George is 55. Rock musician
Chris DeGarmo is 53. Actress
Traylor Howard is 50. Actress
Yasmine Bleeth is 48. Actor
Faizon Love is 48. Actor Stephen
Wallem is 48. International
Tennis Hall of Famer Steffi Graf
is 47. Screenwriter Diablo Cody
is 38. Actor Lawrence SaintVictor is 34. Actor Torrance
Coombs is 33. Actor J.R.
Martinez is 33. Actor-singer
Kevin McHale is 28. Actress Lucy
Hale is 27. Pop singer Jesy
Nelson (Little Mix) is 25. Country
singer Joel Crouse is 24. Actor
Daryl Sabara is 24.
Dear Readers: Today is Flag
Day. We promised to print some
of the patriotic poems that readers have been sending in for July
4, but we thought this one would
be perfect for today. The author is
Audrey Bashlor.
“Honor our flag of red, white
and blue,
remembering our war heroes
brought freedom to you.
Men and women of today and
years past
fought with valor so our freedoms would last.
The colonials bravely fought
the British redcoats;
our warriors fought the Nazis
and their U-boats.
Many wars have been fought
through the ages
filling our history books with a
great many pages.
So very long ago our independence was declared;
something for over 200 years
we have all shared.
Raise the flag, rejoice this day,
strike up the band,
people of many races enjoy
freedom in this land.
Remember our brave men and
women who fought
giving their lives to keep the
freedoms we sought.
Give thanks to those in our
armed forces today
Respect our flag and to them a
‘thank you’ say.”
———
(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 or comments 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.)
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—13
Possible
motives
emerge
for
club
gunman
On FBI’s radar: Shooter
was investigated before
WASHINGTON (AP) — He
didn’t come out of nowhere.
The Orlando shooter came
under suspicion three full
years ago, after boasting of
mutual acquaintances with
the
Boston
Marathon
bombers and making statements to co-workers that
suggested he had radical, violent intentions. But after a
10-month investigation the
FBI closed the case, finding
no criminal charge to pursue.
Omar Mateen was scrutinized again in 2014 as part of
a separate probe into a suicide bomber who attended
the same Florida mosque and
was a casual acquaintance.
Again, agents found no significant radical ties and shifted their focus away.
Did investigators miss
something they should have
seen? A look at how law
enforcement makes these
life-and-death judgments:
—DOES THE GOVERNMENT
BELIEVE IT SHOULD HAVE DONE
ANYTHING DIFFERENTLY?
“So far, the honest answer
is, I don’t think so,” FBI
Director James Comey says.
But he also says the FBI will
continue examining its past
actions.
Mateen’s behavior and
contacts were enough to
prompt surveillance, the use
of confidential informants
and three direct interviews
with him. But his was just
part of a huge volume of
investigations that has only
grown in an era of prolific
Islamic State propaganda
and its advocacy of do-ityourself terrorism.
President Barack Obama
on Monday lamented the difficulty of tracking “lone
wolves” who operate without
ties to known terror groups,
and Comey said the FBI
opens “hundreds and hundreds” of investigations
across the United States
just like the one Mateen
faced.
Most conclude without
any basis for arrest or further monitoring, and once
that happens, there’s no
mechanism for keeping perpetual watch on those subjects — or preventing them
from buying weapons.
Mateen was added to a terror watch list when he came
under investigation in 2013
but was removed once that
matter was closed.
Discerning whether someone under scrutiny will
commit violence, or even
who should be scrutinized,
is more than just finding
the proverbial needle in a
haystack, Comey said. “It’s
which pieces of hay are likely to become a needle.”
—HOW BIG IS THAT HAYSTACK,
REALLY?
Obama said Monday it’s
concerning when radical
groups are promoting violence “very effectively over the
internet.” In the U.S., he
said, “out of 300 million,
there are going to be some
individuals who find for
whatever reason that kind of
propaganda enticing.”
—WHAT’S THE PROTOCOL
FOR FBI COUNTERTERROR
INVESTIGATIONS?
Guidelines set by the attorney general spell out different
levels of investigation that
permit agents to use progressively more intrusive methods depending on the circumstances.
Mateen’s 2013 examination was a preliminary investigation, a type of inquiry that
requires a supervisor’s
approval and can go on for
six months, with an extension if warranted. This one
lasted 10 months before
being closed. In a preliminary
investigation, agents may
track phone calls and obtain
Internet
communications
and bank records.
Investigators looking into
Mateen’s statements to coworkers introduced confidential informants, followed him
and recorded his conversations, among other methods.
Mateen admitted making
the statements reported by
his coworkers, but explained
that he did it in anger
because he thought they
were discriminating against
him and teasing him because
he was Muslim, Comey said.
“The evidence developed
during the investigation was
consistent with his explanation that he had said these
things to try to freak out his
co-workers,” Comey said.
Agents ultimately accepted
that explanation.
More serious, longer-term
terrorism investigations can
employ invasive techniques
such as obtaining an order
from the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court to conduct electronic surveillance
and physical searches.
—HOW OFTEN DO PEOPLE
PREVIOUSLY KNOWN TO THE
FBI GO ON TO COMMIT
VIOLENCE?
It’s certainly not unheard
of.
A notable example is
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who
along with his brother carried
out the 2013 Boston
Marathon bombings. The FBI
interviewed Tsarnaev and relatives in 2011 following a tip
from a Russian intelligence
security service that he was a
follower of radical Islam. The
FBI did not find any domestic
or foreign terrorism activity.
More recently, Elton
Simpson, one of the two men
fatally shot during an
attempted attack last year on
a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in Garland,
Texas, had previously been
prosecuted in Arizona in a
terrorism-related case. He
was given probation for lying
to a federal agent. But soon
before the May 2015 violence,
he re-emerged onto the FBI’s
radar because of postings on
social media.
ize I was normal and so much like
everyone else.”
Some, including Jason Primar,
who lost two friends in the massacre, released balloons that flew
high above the downtown skyscrapers.
Primar went to Pulse at 2 a.m.
Sunday, hoping for a good time
with friends. Instead, he was greeted with gunshots and worries
about those inside.
“I felt like I was over in Iraq,” he
said. He called his two friends
inside; they never answered. He
later discovered they died.
Comey said the FBI also was trying to determine whether Mateen
had recently scouted Disney World
as a potential target, as reported by
People.com, which cited an
unidentified federal law enforcement source.
“We’re still working through
that,” Comey said.
He defended the bureau’s handling of Mateen during two previous investigations into apparent
terrorist sympathies. As for
whether there was anything the
FBI should have done differently,
“so far, the honest answer is, I
don’t think so,” Comey said.
Wielding an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and a handgun, Mateen
opened fire at Pulse early Sunday
in a three-hour shooting rampage
and hostage siege that ended with
a SWAT team killing him. During
the attack, he called 911 to profess
allegiance to the Islamic State
group.
At the White House, President
Barack Obama said there is no
clear evidence so far that Mateen
was directed by the group, calling
the attack an apparent example of
“homegrown extremism.” Obama
will traveling to Orlando on
Thursday to pay respect to the victims and stand in solidarity with
the community, according to the
White House.
More details of the massacre
emerged, with Orlando police Chief
John Mina saying Mateen was
“cool and calm” during phone calls
with negotiators. But Mina said he
decided to send the SWAT team in
and bash through a wall after
Mateen holed up with hostages in a
bathroom and talked about bombs
and an explosive vest.
“We knew there would be an
imminent loss of life,” Mina said.
As it turned out, Mateen had no
explosives with him.
The tragedy hit the city’s gay and
Hispanic communities especially
hard. Sunday was Latino Night at
the club.
“As the names come out, they
are overwhelmingly Latino and
Hispanic names,” said Christina
Hernandez, a Hispanic activist.
“These were not just victims of the
LBGT community, but of the
Hispanic community, as well. This
was senseless bloodshed.”
Five of the wounded were reported in grave condition, meaning the
death toll could rise. A call has
gone out for blood donations.
Mateen’s grasp of the differences
between Islamic extremist groups
appeared shaky.
During three calls with 911 dispatchers, Mateen not only professed allegiance to the Islamic
State but also expressed solidarity
with a suicide bomber from the
Syrian rebel group Nusra Front,
and a few years ago he claimed
connections to Hezbollah, too —
both ISIS enemies, according to
Comey.
The FBI became aware of
Mateen in 2013 when co-workers
reported that the private security
guard claimed to have family connections to al-Qaida and to be a
member of Hezbollah, too, Comey
said. He was also quoted as saying
he hoped law enforcement would
raid his apartment and assault his
wife and child so that he could
martyr himself.
The FBI launched a 10-month
time, Obama blasted as “crazy” a
preliminary investigation, following
system in which law enforceMateen, reviewing his communicament officials weren’t alerted
tions and questioning him, the FBI
when he purchased the assault
chief said. Mateen claimed he
rifle and handgun used in the
made the remarks in anger
attack.
because co-workers were teasing
White House spokesman Josh
him and discriminating against
Earnest revived the White
him as a Muslim, and the FBI
House’s oft-repeated critique of
eventually closed the case, Comey
Republicans for blocking “comsaid.
mon-sense” gun legislation.
His name surfaced again as part
Though he declared the presiof another investigation into the
dent was not resigned to accept
Nusra Front bomber. The FBI
the outbreak of mass violence as
found Mateen and the man had
normal and described considerattended the same mosque and
able “presidential frustration,”
knew each other casually, but the
he did not outline any new push
investigation turned up “no ties of
for gun control measures.
any consequence,” Comey said.
The Orlando attack comes as
Mateen was added to a terror
the White House had begun
watch list in 2013 when he was
touting new progress against the
investigated, but was taken off it
Islamic State group, one of the
soon after the matter was closed,
groups that Mateen claimed to
according to Comey.
follow as he carried out the
People who are in that database
attack.
are not automatically barred from
Last week, the U.S. envoy to
buying guns. Mateen purchased
the anti-IS coalition argued that
his weapons in June, long after his
the group’s morale was “plumremoval from the list.
meting” and its funding and
The Islamic State’s radio hailed
recruiting were drying up. Brett
the attack and called Mateen “one
McGurk said that IS had lost
of the soldiers of the caliphate in
half its territory in Iraq and that
America.” But it gave no indication
the U.S. and its partners were
the group planned or knew of the
killing an IS leader about every
attack beforehand.
three days.
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — As thousands in Orlando turned out to
mourn 49 people killed inside a gay
nightclub, federal investigators
examined possible motives for the
gunman who committed the worst
mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
The White House and the FBI
said 29-year-old Omar Mateen, an
American-born Muslim, appears to
be a “homegrown extremist” who
had touted support not just for the
Islamic State, but other radical
groups that are its enemies.
“So far, we see no indication that
this was a plot directed from outside the United States, and we see
no indication that he was part of
any kind of network,” FBI Director
James Comey said Monday. He
said Mateen was clearly “radicalized,” at least in part via the internet.
Despite Mateen’s pledge of support to the Islamic State, other possible explanations emerged. His exwife said he suffered from mental
illness. His Afghan-immigrant
father suggested he may have
acted out of anti-gay hatred, and
said his son got angry recently
about seeing two men kiss. But
questions also emerged over
whether Mateen was conflicted
about his own sexuality.
Jim Van Horn, 71, said Mateen
was a “regular” at the popular
Pulse nightclub where he’d later
take hostages and leave 49 dead.
“He was trying to pick up people.
Men,” Van Horn told The
Associated Press late Monday outside the Parliament House, another
gay club.
Van Horn, a retired pharmacist,
said he met Mateen once, and the
younger man talked about his exwife. But Van Horn said his friends
soon “told me they didn’t want me
talking to him, because they
thought he was a strange person.”
Van Horn acknowledged that he
didn’t know Mateen well, but said
he suspects that the massacre was
less about Islamic extremism and
more about a man conflicted about
his sexuality.
“I think it’s possible that he was
trying to deal with his inner
demons, of trying to get rid of his
anger of homosexuality,” said Van
Horn, who lost three friends in the
shooting. “It’s really confusing to
me. Because you can’t change who
you are. But if you pretend that
you’re different, then you may
shoot up a gay bar.”
The Orlando Sentinel and other
news organizations quoted other
regulars from Pulse who said they
had seen Mateen there a number
of times.
“Sometimes he would go over in
the corner and sit and drink by
himself, and other times he would
get so drunk he was loud and belligerent,” said Ty Smith, who
remembered seeing Mateen inside
at least a dozen times.
On Monday night, just about a
mile from Pulse in downtown
Orlando, thousands gathered for a
vigil to support the victims and
survivors. The names of the dead
were read aloud. It was held on the
lawn of Orlando’s main performing
arts venue, where mourners created a makeshift memorial of flowers,
candles and notes for the victims.
Many said they felt compelled to
attend because of the role Pulse
played in their lives.
“It was a place that a young 20year-old who wasn’t openly gay felt
safe for the first time,” said
Cathleen Daus, now 36, who
worked at Pulse in her 20s. “Pulse
gave me confidence, made me real-
Making no promises, Obama
struggles for solution on violence
WASHINGTON (AP) — Was it
homegrown terrorism, bigotry or
random gun violence?
Americans searching for
answers after the Orlando
shootings are finding no easy
solutions from President Barack
Obama, who is conceding that a
deadly mix of extremism and
easy gun access have made
future tragedies almost a foregone conclusion.
In the days after the deadliest
shooting in modern U.S. history,
Obama has offered no simple
prescriptions or promises for
new action — even as the candidates vying for his job put forward aggressive plans of their
own. Instead, the president has
suggested the root causes
behind a “disturbed” man’s
actions are difficult to determine
and may be less important than
a sort of “soul searching” about
what to do about it.
“We know that at some point
there are going to be, out of 300
million, there are going to be
some individuals who find for
whatever reason that kind of
horrible propaganda enticing,”
Obama said Monday. “And if that
happens, and that person can
get a weapon, that’s a problem.”
The comments were Obama’s
most direct acknowledgment yet
that the attacks like the one in
Orlando may be a new fixture of
American life — the sort of
observation that could only be
delivered by a second-term president with seven months left in
office. Obama’s two-prong message, delivered with weary resignation to reporters, was unlikely
to quell the fears of those hoping
such attacks will never happen
again.
But the president has seemed
to embrace his end-of-term role.
He’s also mindful that his
administration has overseen the
dawn of a new era of domestic
attacks and it is incumbent to
try to explain the forces at play.
The White House began pointing in various directions on
Monday, defending the administration at each turn while
announcing Obama would travel
to Orlando on Thursday to
“stand in solidarity with the
community.”
There appeared to be no missteps at the FBI, which had
interviewed presumed shooter
Omar Mateen in the past,
Obama said. Although Mateen
wasn’t on any watch list at the
MySpace via AP
ThiS undATed image shows
Omar Mateen, who authorities
say killed dozens of people
inside the Pulse nightclub in
Orlando, Fla., on Sunday. The
gunman opened fire inside the
crowded gay nightclub before
dying in a gunfight with SWAT
officers, police said.
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Dad (dad’s name if desired), you are the
greatest! Thanks for all you do! Your names(s).
Daddy, Happy Father’s Day! We love you!
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It’s as easy as 1-2-3
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14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Rising premiums rattle consumers paying their own way
WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions
of people who pay the full cost of
their health insurance will face the
sting of rising premiums next year,
with no financial help from government subsidies.
Renewal notices bearing the
bad news will go out this fall, just
as the presidential election is in
the homestretch.
“I don’t know if I could swallow
another 30 or 40 percent without
severely cutting into other things
I’m trying to do, like retirement
savings or reducing debt,” said
Bob Byrnes, of Blaine, Minnesota,
a Twin Cities suburb. His monthly
premium of $524 is already about
50 percent more than he was paying in 2015, and he has a higher
deductible.
President Barack Obama’s
health law provides income-based
subsidies for consumers who buy
individual
policies
on
HealthCare.gov and state insurance markets. About 10 million
people get assistance, helping
reduce the uninsured rate to a
historically low 9 percent.
But there’s no subsidy for those
making more than $47,520 for an
individual and $97,200 for a family of four — cutoffs that represent
four times the federal poverty
level. Also, subsidies are not available for consumers at any income
level who purchase outside of
HealthCare.gov or a state marketplace. Those who remain uninsured risk fines.
Premiums are expected to climb
next year in many areas because
major insurers have taken significant financial losses under the
health law. Enrollment has been
lower than anticipated, new customers were sicker than expected
and a government system to stabilize the markets had problems.
“People receiving subsidies can
protect themselves from premium
increases, but others who buy
their own coverage don’t have that
option,” said Larry Levitt, who
tracks the health law for the nonpartisan
Kaiser
Family
Foundation. He estimated 5 million to 7 million consumers
nationally may be paying full
freight.
Byrnes, a manager for a medical
courier service, says he supports
the law’s goal of expanded coverage, but he hasn’t found his policy
particularly affordable.
In the small East Texas city of
Lufkin, Kirk Smith buys his policy
from the only insurer available,
which also happens to be the
state’s largest.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas
is seeking an average premium
increase of nearly 60 percent for
2017, and Smith says his monthly
bill of about $350 is already about
as much as a car payment.
Moreover, he’s had to drive to a
neighboring county for medical
care because he couldn’t get an
appointment close to home.
“I’ve got a problem when you
can’t see somebody in the county,
and they want an increase?” said
Smith, who works for a contractor
installing telecommunications
equipment. He said the government should subsidize everyone in
rural communities with no insurer
competition.
Michelle Scarola of Queens, a
borough of New York City, said she
has received notice that her 2017
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Default having been made in the terms, conditions, and payments provided in
a certain Deed of Trust dated JANUARY 21, 2010, executed by PATRICK
SHIELDS AND WIFE, CINDY SHIELDS, to CHARLES B. BURNS, JR., A RESIDENT OF CLEVELAND, TN 37311, Trustee, of record in BOOK 1954, PAGE 877
AS MODIFIED IN BOOK 2228, PAGE 59, for the benefit of SOUTHERN HERITAGE BANK, EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE,
P.O. BOX 4730, CLEVELAND, TN 37320-4730 , in the Register's Office of
BRADLEY County, Tennessee and to J. PHILLIP JONES, appointed as Substitute Trustee in an instrument of record in the Register's Office for BRADLEY
County, Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness described; WHEREAS, the said
Deed of Trust was last assigned to U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, the
entire indebtedness having been declared due and payable by U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, 4801 FREDERICA STREET, OWENSBORO, KY 42301,
being the present owner/holder or authorized agent, designee or servicer of
the holder/owner of said indebtedness, has requested foreclosure proceedings
to be instituted; and as provided in said Deed of Trust, I, J. PHILLIP JONES,
will by virtue of the power and authority vested in me as Substitute Trustee,
on THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2016 AT 1:00 P.M. (LOCAL TIME), AT THE MAIN
DOOR OF THE BRADLEY COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 155 NORTH OCOEE STREET
IN CLEVELAND, BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, sell to the highest bidder for
cash, free from the equity of redemption, homestead, and dower, and all other
exemptions which are expressly waived, and subject to any unpaid taxes, if
any, the following described property in BRADLEY County, Tennessee, to wit:
PROPERTY LOCATED IN THE COUNTY OF BRADLEY, TENNESSEE:
LOCATED IN THE FOURTH CIVIL DISTRICT OF BRADLEY COUNTY AND IN
THE FIRST WARD OF THE CITY OF CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE, TO-WIT:
LOT THIRTY-SEVEN (37), STONEWOOD FOREST, SECTION 2, A PLAT OF
WHICH IS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE 67, IN THE REGISTER'S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE (ROBCT), TO WHICH REFERENCE IS
MADE FOR A MORE SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION.
PRIOR TITLE SOURCE: BEING THE SAME REAL ESTATE CONVEYED TO PATRICK SHIELDS AND WIFE, CINDY SHIELDS BY DEED DATED AND RECORDED
20 MAY, 2008 IN BOOK 1837, PAGE 901 IN ROBCT.
SUBJECT TO ANY AND ALL GOVERNMENTAL ZONING AND/OR SUBDIVISION
ORDINANCES AND REGULATIONS IN EFFECT THEREON.
SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS RECORDED IN MISC. BOOK 183, PAGE 555,
ROBCT. SEE ALSO WAIVER/AMENDMENT TO SETBACK REQUIREMENTS AS
RECORDED IN BOOK 1954, PAGE 875, ROBCT.
SUBJECT TO DRAINAGE AND UTILITY EASEMENTS AND TO BUILDING SETBACK LINE REQUIREMENTS PER PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE 67, ROBCT.
SUBJECT TO TVA TRANSMISSION LINE EASEMENT ALONG THE WESTERNMOST PORTION OF LOT AS SET OUT ON RECORDED PLAT.
SUBJECT TO SANITARY SEWER EASEMENT AS RECORDED IN BOOK 1281,
PAGE 996, ROBCT.
SUBJECT TO BRADLEY COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT REQUIREMENTS AS
SET OUT ON PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE 67, ROBCT.
ALSO BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO PATRICK SHIELDS AND
WIFE, CINDY SHIELDS BY WARRANTY DEED DATED MAY 20, 2008 AND RECORDED MAY 23, 2008 IN BOOK 1837, PAGE 901, IN THE REGISTER’S OFFICE FOR BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
FURTHER BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED FROM CINDY SHIELDS
TO PATRICK SHIELDS, BY QUIT CLAIM DEED AND ASSUMPTION DATED DECEMBER 1, 2010 OF RECORD IN BOOK 2008, PAGE 798, IN THE REGISTER'S
OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
THIS IS IMPROVED PROPERTY KNOWN AS 175 STONEWOOD DRIVE NW,
CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE 37311 (A/K/A 175 STONEWOOD DRIVE NW, CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE 37312).
MAP 049B GROUP E PARCEL 025.00
THE SALE OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
KIND, AND IS FURTHER SUBJECT TO THE RIGHT OF ANY TENANT(S) OR
OTHER PARTIES OR ENTITIES IN POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY. ANY REPRESENTATION CONCERNING ANY ASPECT OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY BY A
THIRD PARTY IS NOT THE REPRESENTATION/ RESPONSIBILITY OF TRUSTEE(S)/ SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE(S) OR THEIR OFFICE.
THIS SALE IS SUBJECT TO ANY UNPAID TAXES, IF ANY, ANY PRIOR LIENS OR
ENCUMBRANCES LEASES, EASEMENTS AND ALL OTHER MATTERS WHICH
TAKE PRIORITY OVER THE DEED OF TRUST UNDER WHICH THIS FORECLOSURE SALE IS CONDUCTED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE PRIORITY
OF ANY FIXTURE FILING. IF THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY/ INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, THE STATE OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF
REVENUE, OR THE STATE OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
WORK FORCE DEVELOPMENT ARE LISTED AS INTERESTED PARTIES IN THE
ADVERTISEMENT, THEN THE NOTICE OF THIS FORECLOSURE IS BEING
GIVEN TO THEM, AND THE SALE WILL BE SUBJECT TO THE APPLICABLE
GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES RIGHT TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY, ALL AS REQUIRED BY 26 U.S.C. 7425 AND T.C.A. 67-1-1433. THE NOTICE REQUIREMENTS OF T.C.A. 35-5-101 ET. SEQ. HAVE BEEN MET.
THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER
DAY, TIME AND PLACE CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON
ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR THE SALE SET FORTH
ABOVE. THE TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE
IF YOU PURCHASE A PROPERTY AT THE FORECLOSURE SALE, THE ENTIRE
PURCHASE PRICE IS DUE AND PAYABLE AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE AUCTION IN THE FORM OF A CERTIFIED/BANK CHECK MADE PAYABLE TO OR
ENDORSED TO LAW OFFICE OF J. PHILLIP JONES. NO PERSONAL CHECKS
WILL BE ACCEPTED. TO THIS END, YOU MUST BRING SUFFICIENT FUNDS TO
OUTBID THE LENDER AND ANY OTHER BIDDERS. INSUFFICIENT FUNDS WILL
NOT BE ACCEPTED. AMOUNTS RECEIVED IN EXCESS OF THE WINNING BID
WILL BE REFUNDED TO THE SUCCESSFUL PURCHASER AT THE TIME THE
FORECLOSURE DEED IS DELIVERED.
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: NONE OF RECORD
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
This is improved property known as 175 STONEWOOD DRIVE NW, CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE 37311 (A/K/A 175 STONEWOOD DRIVE NW, CLEVELAND,
TENNESSEE 37312).
J. PHILLIP JONES, SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE
1800 HAYES STREET
NASHVILLE, TN 37203
(615) 254-4430
www.phillipjoneslaw.com
www.auction.com
F16-0420
June 7, 14, 21, 2016
premiums will be going up in a
range of 8 percent to 25 percent.
Scarola, who’s in the midst of a
career transition from advertising
to interior design, isn’t happy that
her insurer dropped the hospital
network she’s interested in.
“For people like me who are in
the middle, there is very limited
choice, and now that limited
choice is going to get more expensive,” she said.
Insurance broker Liz Gallops in
Raleigh, North Carolina, says she
tries to let customers vent about
large increases. Some see insurance bills that surpass their mortgage payments. The state’s biggest
insurer is proposing average
increases of nearly 19 percent.
“I’ve had people yell on the
phone,” she said. “I’ve had people
curse.”
Back in 2010, the Obama
administration used public anger
about premium increases as leverage to win passage of the health
law. It now says worries about
next year’s premiums are premature because final rates have not
been approved. Officials say people who don’t receive subsidies
still have options.
For example, some people buying directly from an insurer might
find that they qualify for subsidies
if they go through HealthCare.gov.
Those who make too much for a
subsidy still can shop for lower
premiums. Under the health law,
insurers have to accept consumers with health problems.
People are no longer locked into a
plan indefinitely.
Another wrinkle is that people
who pay their own premiums may
be able to later deduct the cost on
their income taxes. But the rules
are complex, and it’s not the same
as getting an upfront subsidy.
It may seem counterintuitive
that premium increases for health
law policies also hit people who get
no financial assistance. It’s happening because the law created
one big insurance pool in each
state for consumers buying individual coverage, whether or not
they go through markets such as
HealthCare.gov.
Many people respond to premium hikes by switching to skimpier
coverage, yet that leads to bigger
medical bills if they need treatment. Some insurance brokers
encourage customers to get plans
linked to a health savings account.
But rising premiums can cut into
how much people stash away.
LEGAL PUBLICATION
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE
Default having been made in the terms, conditions, and payments provided in
a certain Deed of Trust dated FEBRUARY 22, 2010, executed by BOBBY D.
COFFMAN, MARRIED (JOINED BY HIS WIFE, RACHAEL L. COFFMAN), to J. MICHAEL SHARP, Trustee, of record in BOOK 1959 PAGE 418, for the benefit of
SOUTHERN HERITAGE BANK, EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS OF STATE OF
TENNESSEE, P.O. BOX 4730, CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE 37320, in the Register's Office for BRADLEY County, Tennessee and to J. PHILLIP JONES AND/OR
JESSICA D. BINKLEY, either of whom may act, appointed as Substitute Trustee in an instrument of record in the Register's Office for BRADLEY County,
Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness described; WHEREAS, the said Deed of
Trust was last assigned to TENNESSEE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AGENCY, the
entire indebtedness having been declared due and payable by TENNESSEE
HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AGENCY BY AND THROUGH ITS SERVICER AND
AUTHORIZED AGENT, U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, being the present
owner/holder or authorized agent, designee or servicer of the holder/owner of
said indebtedness, has requested foreclosure proceedings to be instituted; and
as provided in said Deed of Trust, I, J. PHILLIP JONES/JESSICA D. BINKLEY,
will by virtue of the power and authority vested in me as Substitute Trustee,
on THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016 AT 1:00 P.M. (LOCAL TIME) AT THE MAIN
DOOR OF THE BRADLEY COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 155 NORTH OCOEE STREET
IN CLEVELAND, BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, sell to the highest bidder for
cash, free from the equity of redemption, homestead, and dower, and all other
exemptions which are expressly waived, and subject to any unpaid taxes, if
any, the following described property in BRADLEY County, Tennessee, to wit:
PROPERTY LOCATED IN COUNTY OF BRADLEY, TENNESSEE:
LOCATED IN THE FIRST CIVIL DISTRICT OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE:
LOT ONE (1), BLUE RIDGE SUBDIVISION, UNIT II, AS SHOWN BY PLAT OF RECORD IN PLAT BOOK 8, PAGE 97, IN THE REGISTER’S OFFICE OF BRADLEY
COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
AND ALSO CONVEYED IS THE SOUTH SEVEN (7) FEET OF LOT TWO (2) IN
BLUE RIDGE SUBDIVISION, UNIT 11, AS SHOWN BY PLAT OF RECORD IN
PLAT BOOK 8, PAGE 97, IN THE REGISTER’S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY,
TENNESSEE.
BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO STEPHANIE L. DAVIS, UNMARRIED, BY WARRANTY DEED FROM TODD CHASTAIN AND WIFE, SANDRA
CHASTAIN, DATED 11/12/2004 AND RECORDED 11/16/2004 IN BOOK 1485,
PAGES 465-466, IN THE REGISTER’S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
SUBJECT TO ANY GOVERNMENTAL ZONING AND SUBDIVISION ORDINANCES
OR REGULATIONS IN EFFECT THEREON.
SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS AS SET OUT IN INSTRUMENT RECORDED IN
DEED BOOK 375, PAGE 996, AS AMENDED IN BOOK 1101, PAGE 368, IN THE
REGISTER’S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
SUBJECT TO BUILDING SETBACK LINES: TWENTY-FIVE (25) FOOT FRONT;
TEN (10) FOOT SIDE; FIFTEEN FOOT REAR; AND TWENTY-FIVE (25) FOOT
SIDE STREET, AS SHOWN OR SPECIFIED BY RECORDED PLAT.
SUBJECT TO FIFTEEN (15) FOOT UTILITY EASEMENT ON ALL LOT LINES
ABUTTING ROADS, AS SHOWN OR SPECIFIED BY RECORDED PLAT.
SUBJECT TO TEN (10) FOOT DRAINAGE/UTILITY EASEMENT ON EXTERIOR
LOT LINES, AS SHOWN OR SPECIFIED BY RECORDED PLAT.
SUBJECT TO FIVE (5) FOOT DRAINAGE/UTILITY EASEMENT ON ALL OTHER
LOT LINES, AS SHOWN OR SPECIFIED BY RECORDED PLAT.
SUBJECT TO ALL NOTES, STIPULATIONS, RESTRICTIONS, EASEMENTS, CONDITIONS AND REGULATIONS AS SET OUT ON RECORDED PLAT.
M/P 65O-F-6.00
GR
COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 3712 BLUE SPRINGS ROAD, CLEVELAND, TN 37311
BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO BOBBY D. COFFMAN, MARRIED,
BY WARRANTY DEED DATED FEBRUARY 22, 2010 OF RECORD IN BOOK
1959, PAGE 416, REGISTER’S OFFICE FOR BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
ALSO BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED FROM RACHAEL LYNN COFFMAN TO BOBBY D. COFFMAN BY QUITCLAIM DEED DATED JULY 14, 2011 OF
RECORD IN BOOK 2042, PAGE 564, REGISTER’S OFFICE FOR BRADLEY
COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
THIS IS IMPROVED PROPERTY KNOWN AS 3712 BLUE SPRINGS RD, CLEVELAND, TN 37311 (3712 BLUE SPRINGS ROAD, CLEVELAND, TN 37311).
PARCEL ID: 065O F 006.00 000
THE SALE OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
KIND, AND IS FURTHER SUBJECT TO THE RIGHT OF ANY TENANT(S) OR
OTHER PARTIES OR ENTITIES IN POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY. ANY REPRESENTATION CONCERNING ANY ASPECT OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY BY A
THIRD
PARTY
IS
NOT
THE
REPRESENTATION/RESPONSIBILITY
OF
TRUSTEE(S)/ SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE(S) OR THEIR OFFICE.
THIS SALE IS SUBJECT TO ANY UNPAID TAXES, IF ANY, ANY PRIOR LIENS OR
ENCUMBRANCES LEASES, EASEMENTS AND ALL OTHER MATTERS WHICH
TAKE PRIORITY OVER THE DEED OF TRUST UNDER WHICH THIS FORECLOSURE SALE IS CONDUCTED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE PRIORITY
OF ANY FIXTURE FILING. IF THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY/ INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, THE STATE OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF
REVENUE, OR THE STATE OF TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
WORK FORCE DEVELOPMENT ARE LISTED AS INTERESTED PARTIES IN THE
ADVERTISEMENT, THEN THE NOTICE OF THIS FORECLOSURE IS BEING
GIVEN TO THEM, AND THE SALE WILL BE SUBJECT TO THE APPLICABLE
GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES RIGHT TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY, ALL AS REQUIRED BY 26 U.S.C. 7425 AND T.C.A. 67-1-1433. THE NOTICE REQUIREMENTS OF T.C.A. 35-5-101 ET SEQ. HAVE BEEN MET.
THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER
DAY, TIME AND PLACE CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON
ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR THE SALE SET FORTH
ABOVE. THE TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE
IF YOU PURCHASE A PROPERTY AT THE FORECLOSURE SALE, THE ENTIRE
PURCHASE PRICE IS DUE AND PAYABLE AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE AUCTION IN THE FORM OF A CERTIFIED/BANK CHECK MADE PAYABLE TO OR
ENDORSED TO LAW OFFICE OF J. PHILLIP JONES. NO PERSONAL CHECKS
WILL BE ACCEPTED. TO THIS END, YOU MUST BRING SUFFICIENT FUNDS TO
OUTBID THE LENDER AND ANY OTHER BIDDERS. INSUFFICIENT FUNDS WILL
NOT BE ACCEPTED. AMOUNTS RECEIVED IN EXCESS OF THE WINNING BID
WILL BE REFUNDED TO THE SUCCESSFUL PURCHASER AT THE TIME THE
FORECLOSURE DEED IS DELIVERED.
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: NONE OF RECORD
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
This is improved property known as 3712 BLUE SPRINGS RD, CLEVELAND, TN
37311 (3712 BLUE SPRINGS ROAD, CLEVELAND, TN 37311).
J. PHILLIP JONES/JESSICA D. BINKLEY, SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE
1800 HAYES STREET
NASHVILLE, TN 37203
(615) 254-4430
www.phillipjoneslaw.com
www.auction.com
F16-0380
June 7, 14, 21, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016—15
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SALE
The following vehicles are being held at Brewer
Wrecker, 509 20th St SE, Cleveland, TN 37311.
Anyone who has proof of ownership must reclaim
the vehicle. Owner or Lien Holder must pay all storage and towing charges, Failure of the Owner or
Lien Holder to exercise their rights to reclaim the
vehicle within the time allowed shall be deemed a
waiver of all rights, title and interest in the vehicle
and consent to sale of the vehicle at public auction.
VIN 3FAFP07Z06R217038
VIN F10GCF51990
VIN 1FAFP53U93G214620
VIN 1HGEJ8140VL113523
VIN 1FAFP5520YA280155
VIN 1G8ZH5282VZ110979
VIN 1GCGC24KXNE194530
VIN 1HGCD5655RA121357
VIN 1HGCM56807A142754
June 14, 21, 2016
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
OF CONSTRUCTION BIDS
BIDS TO BE RECEIVED Friday, July 08, 2016
Sealed bids will be received by the CITY OF
ETOWAH at the office of their Purchasing Agent at
723 Ohio Avenue, Etowah, Tennessee 37331, until
2:00 PM EST, Friday, July 08, 2016 and opened
publicly at the location above at that hour. The
reading of the bids will begin at 2:00 PM EST.
TDOT PIN: 118148.00
Federal Project No.: SRTS-5400(36)
State Project No.: 54LPLM-F3-017
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
The Safe Routes to School project involves construction of
400’ of 5’ wide sidewalk, 16 A.D.A. accessibility ramps, and miscellaneous signage.
PROPOSAL CONTRACTS WILL BE ISSUED UNTIL
THE TIME SET FOR OPENING BIDS
A Prime Contractor must prequalify with the Department of Transportation in accordance with Section 54-5-117 of the “Tennessee Code Annotated”
and Tennessee Department of Transportation Rule
1680-5-3 prequalification of contractors before
biddable proposals will be furnished.
The CITY OF ETOWAH hereby notifies all bidders
that a N/A Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(DBE) goal has been set for this project and must be
met or exceeded.
The CITY OF ETOWAH hereby notifies all bidders
that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract
entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be afforded full
opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation, and will not be discriminated against on the
grounds of age, race, color, religion, national origin,
sex or disability in consideration for an award. No
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) goal has
been set on this contract. However, the use of DBE
or minority/women owned firms are encouraged.
The CITY OF ETOWAH is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer, drug-free with policies
of non-discrimination on the basis of race, sex, religion, color, national or ethnic origin, age, disability or military service. The CITY OF ETOWAH’s
telephone number is (423) 263-2202.
THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS IS RESERVED
Bidding documents and information, and plans,
may be obtained at the office of McGill and Associates, P.A., 2240 Sutherland Avenue, Suite 2, Knoxville, Tennessee, 37919; (865) 540-0801 for a
non-refundable fee of $75.00.
Electronic Documents may be examined at the following locations:
McGraw Hill Construction, www.construction.com
Builders Exchange of Tennessee, www.bxtn.org
Associated
General
Contractors
&
IsqFt,
www.isqft.com
June 14, 2016
CLASSIFIEDS
0. WEBSITE DIRECTORY
2. Special Notices
CLEVELAND DAILY Banner
(423)472-5041
www.clevelandbanner.com
classifieds@clevelandbanner.com
SCHOLARSHIPS gUARANTEED or
your money back! Beware of scholarship “guarantees.” Before you pay
for a search service, get the refund
policy in writing. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-HELP to learn how to
avoid scholarship scams. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
1. Classified Ad Policy
ERRORS NOT the fault of the advertiser which clearly reduce the
value of the advertisement should be
corrected the first day. Then, one
corrected insertion will be made
without charge, if the advertiser calls
before 3pm the afternoon the error
appears. The CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER assumes no responsibility
for errors after the first corrected insertion. The Publisher reserves the
right to revise or reject, at his option,
any advertisement he deems objectionable either in subject or phraseology or which he may deem detrimental to his business. Deadline for
classified ads: Tuesday through Friday is 2pm for business ads and
3pm for personal ads the day before
ad is to run. Sunday deadline is
11am Friday for business ads and
12 noon Friday for personal ads.
Monday deadline is Friday 4pm. All
corrections must be made by deadline day before ad runs. Visa/Mastercard/Discover/American Express are
accepted. Cleveland Daily Banner..... 472-5041
2. Special Notices
ClASSIfIED
ADvERTISEmENTS
at Your Convenience!
24 Hours A Day!
Email your AD to us!
classifieds@clevelandbanner.com
or fax to 423-476-1046
Include the following information:
• Name with address
& phone number
• Person to contact if a business
• Requested start date
& classification
• We will contact you for prepayment. We accept Visa, Mastercard,
Discover, and American Express
• If you are a billing customer,
please confirm your current billing
address.
Deadline for ads:
2pm Monday for Tuesday ad
2pm Tuesday for Wednesday ad
2pm Wednesday for Thursday ad
2pm Thursday for Friday ad
11am Friday for Sunday ad
4pm Friday for Monday ad
For Personal Assistance
CALL 423-472-5041
CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER
Classified Department
***SPECIAl BONUS***
All Ads Are Published On Our
Website At No Additional Cost!
5. lost And found
LOST YOUR pet? Check daily at the
Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 Hill
Street.
LOST DOg in the Cleveland Country Club area on June 9th. He is a
red and white Chihuahua/ Rat Terrier mix. He looks like a little fox. His
name is Wiley. He is an unneutered
male. 269-744-7116. Reward offered.
7. Personals
AL-ANON OFFERS help for families
of alcoholics. For meeting information call 423-284-1612.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE support
group for abuse victims. Meets Mondays. Call 479-9339, extension 15 or
25 for location.
IF YOU want to drink that's your
business…If you want to quit, call Alcoholics Anonymous. Call 499-6003.
8. Adoptions
ADOPTION: LOVINg couple promises your baby a secure, happy
home.
Denise
&
Nick,
1-888-449-0803.
14. Want To Buy
If you are searching for a product
or service AND do not want to use
loads of time searching everywhere,
WHY NOT Advertise your need under the heading: 014 WANT TO
BUY in THE CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER!!
18. Articles for Sale
LOSE 30 lbs. in 30 days! Medical
doctors say the only way to lose
weight is to eat less and exercise
more.
Learn
how
to
avoid
weight-loss scams. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
PAllETS!!!
fREE WHIlE THEY lAST!
Cleveland Daily Banner
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
DIRECTOR OF Music part time position available. First Presbyterian
Church, PCUSA of Cleveland, Tennessee is seeking a part time Director of Music to conduct adult, children and Hand Bell Choirs. Please
email a resume with cover letter to
church7049@bellsouth.net by June
30th.
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
34. money To lend
49. Apartments for Rent
53. Houses for Rent
FAMILY HOME Care Services is hiring caregivers in the Cleveland and
Benton areas. $9.50 to $10 hourly.
Insurance benefits after 90 days. Apply on line at www.fhcsllc.com.
* LOANS up to $1,250 *
Quick Approval
423-476-5770
1 BEDROOM apartments, $395
monthly.
FIRST
ENTERPRISE.
423-472-5416.
MondayFriday,
9am-5pm.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, located 5
minutes north of town. Hardwood
floors, central heat/ air, kitchen, appliances furnished, dining/ living
room combination, laundry room, garage, full size basement, large yard.
423-476-5098.
CHARMINg, CLEAN 1.5 story, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, located near
downtown. $1,050 lease, $1,050 deposit. Call 423-774-7686
COMPLETELY REMODELED 3
bedroom, 1 bath.
Stove, dishwasher, central heat and air, washer
and dryer hookup. No smoking and
no pets. 770 Johnson Boulevard,
Cleveland, 37312. $800 monthly.
$400
deposit.
Contact
423-715-6032.
NEW FLOORINg, paint and appliances, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, living
room plus den. No pets. Rent $975.
Deposit
$975.
Owner/
Agent
423-284-4454.
HANDYMAN NEEDED part time.
Call 423-380-8446 ext. 3604 to
schedule an interview.
OPTOMETRY/ OPTICAL hiring staff.
Apply in person. Dr. Sherrie Holman.
1450 Decatur Pike, Athens, TN.
WAITER/ WAITRESS wanted parttime. Experience helpful. Also bus
boy and dishwasher needed. Apply
in Person. gondolier, 3300 North
Keith Street.
30. Help Wanted - full Time
BARgAIN BARN/ United grocery
Outlet Warehouse
Now Hiring Direct
Positions Open: Pickers, Stacker
Drivers
Part Time or Full Time
2nd or 3rd Shift
Earn up to $14/ hour
Voice Pick Experience a Plus
High School Diploma or
gED Required
Benefits include: Health, Dental,
Vision, Vacation, Paid Holidays and
Profit Sharing
Apply online at www.myugo.com
in person at 2924 Lee Highway in
Athens, TN
or send your resume’ to
humanresources@myugo.com
Any questions call 423-746-0022
We are a Drug Free Workplace and
EOE Employer M/F/D/V ADA
CERTIFIED PHARMACY technician
with more than one year experience
to join our team in Benton. It is an
opportunity for a motivated individual
to grow with our business and to
help serve the needs of our community by individualized and prompt
customer care. Come by the Preferred pharmacy to fill out application
or
e-mail
resume
to
preferredphcy@comcast.net
CLERK/ RECEPTIONIST - full time
position. Key Competencies: great
communication/ customer service
skills, organization. Main job task:
provide customer service at counter
and over the phone/ maintain data
entry. Some legal experience preferred. Send resumes to:
resumeclevelandtn@gmail.com
CUSTOMER SERVICE Representatives needed. Full time, no nights
or weekends, Monday- Friday
9am-5pm. Excellent compensation
and benefits package. Please send
resume to: #771-P, c/o Cleveland
Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600,
Cleveland, TN 37320-3600
EARN THOUSAND$ 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
ExPERIENCED
ACCOUNTANT
needed to prepare individual, corporate, partnership and non-profit tax
returns. Preparation of financial
statements will be part of job duties
also. CPA or CPA track. Send resume to: Accountant, P.O. Box 921,
McDonald, TN 37353-0921.
NEED CA$H fast but can’t get a
loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a
loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP to learn
how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. A message from Cleveland
Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
38. Barber/Beauty Salons
gREAT STYlISTS Wanted
great Clips is seeking great Licensed Stylists in our busy Cleveland locations! BEST pay plan in the
industry! Vacation/ holiday pay,
health benefits, management opportunities, advanced live training. Call
Debbie at 423-504-8625 NOW for a
confidential interview.
40. general Services Offered
gROUNDS/ MAINTENANCE crew
needed at Sunset & Hilcrest Memorial gardens. Must be available for
weekends, have dependable transportation. Apply at 7180 North Lee
Highway, Cleveland.
NOW HIRINg: Newly Weds Foods,
Inc. Starting Pay $11 hour. Apply in
person at 187 Industrial Lane SW
Cleveland TN 37311.
SECRETARY - Lee University
School of Nursing seeking qualified
candidates for office support position. Associate of Science in business or certification in office administration and 5 years' experience required. Must be familiar with database management systems, including reporting, and proficient with PC
applications, including Microsoft Office. A high degree of proficiency is
required in Word, Excel, and Outlook. Salary commensurate with
education and experience. Submit
cover letter and resume to Lee University School of Nursing at
nursing@leeuniversity.edu.
No phone calls.
SEEKINg MAINTENANCE Man.
Full time/ 40 hour week. $11.50 per
hour. Experience preferred. Fill out
application at front desk in person at:
Mountain View Inn, 2400 Executive
Park Drive, Cleveland, TN.
2 BEDROOM apartment, updated,
close- in, $700 monthly, plus security deposit. 423-476-9101.
2 BEDROOM behind Ace Hardware
on Peerless Road. ground level,
walk to shopping. Stove, refrigerator,
water furnished. For information, call
between 9am-6pm. No pets/ smoking. 423-479-5570.
2 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, fresh paint.
$600 month. $500 deposit. No pets.
No smoking. 543 20th Street, NW.
423-618-2738.
* AAA House PAINTINg: InteriorExterior, Pressure Washing, FREE
estimates,
References.
423-284-9652.
3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, newly remodeled. Next to Lee University and
Mayfield School. $700 monthly. No
smoking. No pets. 423-478-3212
and leave message.
BO’S TREE SERVICE: Over 30
years experience. Insured, free estimates.
Bucket
Truck.
423-284-9814 or 423-544-2249.
AS gOOD as it gets luxury condo,
fully furnished, plus washer and
dryer, utilities and cable paid.
$1,550. 423-618-6383.
DANNY'S TREE SERVICE: Tree removal, shrubbery trimmed and
planted, firewood. Senior Discounts.
30 years experience. 423-244-6676.
BEST PLACE for Living! 3 bedroom,
2 bath. $850 monthly. 2 bedroom, 2
bath with bonus room $800 monthly;
2 bedrooms, 1.5 bathroom, $650
monthly. 423-667-4967.
ExTREME MAINTENANCE Home/
Mobile Home Commercial, residential, Painting (interior/ exterior).
Decks, plumbing, electrical, roofing,
siding, all work! 30 years experience.
Free
estimates.
423-331-7045.
LAWN CARE services, property
clean-up, will beat any prices.
423-464-0665 or 423-716-7132
MATTHEWS DUMPSTERS:
Dumpster rental, roofing, clean out,
remodel, haul off. 423-506-7600.
BlYTHEWOOD- STEEPlECHASE
APARTmENTS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($389- $579); 2
Bedroom ($429- $609). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
CHAPEL COVE Townhouses for
lease. One and two story units available. 2 bedroom 1.5 bath starting at
$850.
www.kaceproperties.com.
423-667-5760.
POWER WASHINg, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
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
TOMMY'S STUMP grinding and
Tree Removal: Free estimates.
423-244-3991.
FULLY
FURNISHED
downtown
Cleveland, $795 monthly, $600 deposit, 423-595-7070.
TOP CUT Lawn Care: Professional
service, affordable prices, honest
and dependable. Credit cards accepted. 423-593-9634.
NEW UNFURNISHED 1 bedroom
apartment located in very safe,
quiet, peaceful area. Near Larry Hill
Ford dealership. Apartment has refrigerator, stove, free electricity, free
water. $650 monthly, $175 deposit.
6 month lease. No pets. No smoking
anywhere
on
property.
423-304-2973.
45. vacation Rentals
2 RIVERS CAMPINg: RV Park,
Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee
Rivers. 423-338-7208.
BEAR PAW COTTAgES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
46. Storage Space for Rent
CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent:
georgetown Pike, Spring Place
Road and Highway 64. Call
476–2777.
TEMPSAFE STORAgE
Climate Controlled
& Outside Units
Downtown Location
& georgetown Road
614-4111
48. Office Space for Rent
ExPERIENCED COOKS and Servers wanted- full and part time. Apply
at Nick's Pizza Steaks and More, off
Stuart Road behind Sonic.
ExPERIENCED KNITTERS needed.
Second and Third Shift. Please Contact Southern Industrial Fabrics, Inc.
Ask for Philip Bryan or Eddie Mizell
at 706-861-0111.
1 OR 2 bedroom available. No pets,
no smoking in house. For more information call 423-227-9146.
NORTHWEST, CLEAN, large, 2
bedroom apartment. $650 monthly,
$650 deposit. Call 423-774-7686.
ONE BEDROOM, one bath, washer/
dryer hookup. Convenient location.
1262 South Ocoee, Apartment B.
$450 monthly $250 deposit. Text or
call (423) 605-0623.
50. mobile Homes for Rent
$795: 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, new paint,
new laminate flooring, new carpet,
separate lot in country. PROVISION
REAL ESTATE and PROPERTY
MANAgEMENT, LLC 423-693-0301.
COLLEgETOWN
MOBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
56. Houses for Sale
ATTENTION 1ST TImE
HOmE BUYERS
THIS gREAT PROgRAm
OffERS “NO” DOWN PAYmENT
TO gET QUAlIfIED
CAll mY CEll 423-593-1508
HERB lACY
AffIlIATE BROKER
CENTURY 21 1ST CHOICE
REAlTORS
2075 OCOEE ST
ClEvElAND, TN 37311
HlKl3@YAHOO.COm
478-2332
FURNISHED 3 bedroom 2 bath
house
on
Tennessee
River.
423-715-6549.
REMODELED HOME, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, den, basement. Owner/
Agent financing. STONY BROOKS
REALTY 423-479-4514.
57. farms & Acreage for Sale
20 ACRES SE Cleveland/ SE Old
Fort. Partially cleared, level, creek,
partly fenced, lots of ROAD FRONTAgE on 2 roads, surveyed already.
NEVER priced this low. $105,000.
To move quickly, don't miss this
great property. AWARD REALTY.
423-476-3205. Call Anne Marie Lynn
423-595-3378.
20 VERY nice acres. Fenced, pond,
creek through property. 1000 feet of
road frontage. Southeast Cleveland.
423-650-1497 or 423-479-4280.
68. Sport Utility vehicles
TOYOTA HIgHLANDER 2002 SUV.
6-cylinder. gold AM/FM/CD player.
Tow kit. Original owner. 123,200
miles. Excellent condition. $8,100.
423-310-8585.
72. Cars for Sale
LLOYD'S USED CARS
423-476-5681
5526 Waterlevel Highway
Cleveland, TN
www.lloydsusedcars@gmail.com
good selection of vehicles Warranties - History Reports Come by and make an offer
NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE OR
RENT? USE CLASSIFIED ADS.
THEY WORK! CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER, 472-5041.
MOVE IN today! 2 bedrooms at
$460+. 3 bedrooms at $535+. Nice
community in georgetown. Call
423-529-0588.
www.georgetownmhp.com
52. Sleeping Rooms
SPACE AVAILABLE for
start- up businesses.
Call Hurley Buff at 423-478-6476
$149 PlUS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
MULTIPLE ROOM office. Reception
area, bathroom, convenient in
Cleveland.
$350
monthly.
423-991-4984.
BREEzEWAYExTENDEDSTAY.COM
WEEKLY rate paid in advance, averages $46.43 nightly plus tax.
423-584-6505.
49. Apartments for Rent
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.
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.
• Director of Nutritional &
Environmental Services: At
least 3 years experience as a
manager/director in a health
care facility. Experience must
include fiscal management,
staffing, regulatory
compliance and clinical
experience with patient
nutrition. Certified Dietary
Manager preferred.
• RN – Med/Surg (FT Night
Shift 7 pm – 7 am)
• RN – Med/Surg (PRN)
• RN/Paramedic – Emergency
Department (PRN):
Paramedics must be enrolled
in RN program or willing to
obtain RN degree.
• Patient Care Technician –
Med/Surg (PRN)
• Radiologic Technologist (FT
– Dayshift & 2nd Shift)
• Phlebotomist – PRN
Apply online www.r heamedical.org
Click on Career Opportunities
Rhea Medical Center
9400 Rhea County Hwy.
Dayton, TN 37321
Equal Opportunity Employer
STARS, INC. is hiring Personal Assistant,
wage
$8.50.
Call
423-447-2590 ext. # 1
SURFS UP Car Wash is now hiring
for our new car wash near the Walmart off APD 40. Opening June
27th. Part time and full time positions available, including evenings
and weekends. We are looking for
friendly, honest, hardworking attendants and assistant managers to
work in a fun, fast- paced environment. Must have a good mechanical
aptitude. Apply in person at 2575
guthrie Street NW, Cleveland, TN
between 8am and 4pm Monday
through Saturday. We do background checks and drug tests.
Adoption
Help Wanted
WELL ESTABLISHED, busy medical
office in Cleveland seeking dependable, cheerful, Medical Assistant
who is a team player. Must enjoy
fast pace and be self motivated.
Must have experience in Phlebotomy, Injections, and EKg's. Monday
thru Friday 8am-5pm. Email Resume
to medicaloffice37311@gmail.com.
ENERGETIC, STRONG-WILLED,
YOUNG, Widowed, NY Teacher,
looking to create a family through
adoption. Vowing to provide love,
stability and opportunities. Contact me
1(888)488-0551 or
WWW.RandeeLovesChildren.com.
(TnScan)
$1000 WEEKLY!! Mailing Brochures
From Home. Helping home workers
since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No
Experience Required. Start Immediately
www.CentralMailing.NET (TnScan)
33. Business Opportunities
Auctions
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
GET THE WORD OUT about your
next auction! Save Time & $$$. One
Call For All. Your ad can appear in this
newspaper + 99 other TN newspapers.
For more info, contact this newspaper’s
classified dept. or call 865-584-5761
ext. 117. (TnScan)
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
Cable/Satellite TV
DISH TV 190 channels plus Highspeed
Internet Only $49.94/mo! Ask about 3
year price guarantee & Netflix included
for 1 year! CALL 1-800-423-6015
(TnScan)
Mobile Homes for Sale
MOBILE HOMES WITH ACREAGE.
Ready to move in. Seller Financing
(subject to credit approval). Lots of
room for the price, 3Br 2Ba. No
renters. 865-291-0506 (TnScan)
Help Wanted - Drivers
Services
RECRUITING HEADACHES? WE CAN
Help! Advertise your job opening in this
newspaper + 99 newspapers across
the state - One Call/Email for All!
Contact our classified dept. or email
belliott@tnpress.com (TnScan)
BATHTUB REFINISHING - RENEW or
change the color of your bathtub, tile
or sink. Fiberglass repair specialists!
5 year warranty. Locally owned since
1989. CarolinasTubDoctor.com.
865-446-5027 or 423-518-0077.
(TnScan)
Miscellaneous
SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $4,397.00Make & Save Money with your own
bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension.
In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD:
www.NorwoodSawmills.com
1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N (TnScan)
YOUR LOW COST ADVERTISING
Solution! One call & your 25 word ad
will appear in 100 Tennessee
newspapers for $275/wk or 35 East
TN newspapers for $120/wk. Call this
newspaper’s classified advertising
dept. or go to www.tnadvertising.biz.
(TnScan)
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, June 14, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Photographs
From Page 1
Fame once he leaves office.
The concept of setting aside a
place of honor for former office
holders grew out of a visit by
Gilley to another law enforcement agency where he viewed a
similar display.
One account reads, "He wasted no time getting his ideas
underway, using the county’s
historical records to compile a
list of sheriffs. Other sources,
including publications, historical records, and descendents,
added pictures of many of these
legendary lawmen.”
Sheriff’s Office personnel who
helped with research quickly
learned the earliest sheriffs did
not like to be photographed.
That compounded efforts to
locate photographs of the county’s earliest lawmen.
Sheriff Thomas L. Bates, who
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS served 1848 through 1854, is
LOCATED JUST EAST of Georgetown Road near Cleveland Middle School, the old Clingan family the
earliest
photograph
cemetery is located in a small wooded area in north Cleveland. The cemetery has less than 20 burial acquired.
Anyone who may be able to
markers. The most prominent is a large marker for Bradley County’s first elected sheriff, A.A. Clingan,
add to the sheriff’s Wall of Fame
and his wife, Martha.
is asked to share their photos.
Submissions will be copied and
returned in their original condition.
Cemetery
From Page 1
Polaris Drive, Hixson, TN 373434337, or call 423-877-8177.
In a January, 2016, issue of
the Roark-Conner Family News
publication, a longtime official of
the organization printed an article about the “Neglected
Cemetery.”
The story says Gene F.
Johnson of Harrison and Connie
Perrin of Chattanooga located the
cemetery after extensive “private
research and geographical investigations.”
The highlight of the discovery
was the headstone for A.A.
Clingan, who was closely associated with the Roark and Blythe
families in early settlement of the
“Ocoee District.”
The cemetery contains the
graves of 11 members of the
Clingan family, plus three graves
for three infants of the Spriggs
family.
Research shows Clingan
homesteaded in the Ocoee
District, and was hugely involved
in the formation of Bradley
County in the 1830s.
He was born Feb. 20, 1801, in
Hawkins County, the son of
Edward and Jeanette Clingan.
He met and married Martha
“Patsy” Blythe in 1828.
They started their family in
Sale Creek, but moved to a log
cabin just north of present-day
Cleveland in 1834 — in the
Candy’s Creek community.
According to historical documents, the family later constructed a large home place a half mile
east of Candy’s Creek, along
“I was in the process
of giving up hope, when
I stopped and asked a
woman outside her
house if she knew
anything about the
cemetery. She pointed to
her side yard, and said,
‘There it is.’”
— Gene F. Johnson
Candy’s Creek Ridge.
The home was a two-story,
three-chimney structure with
twice as many fireplaces, and a
long front porch.
The Clingans had 16 children,
with three buried in the recently
discovered family cemetery with
their parents. A.A. Clingan died
on Feb. 1, 1864, and his wife followed on Aug. 6, 1868.
There was an intermingling of
the Clingan family with the
Blythe and Roark families
through the early years. There
were also several marriages
involving Cherokee heritage.
Many from the white families
cast their lot with the Cherokees
at the time, many raising their
children in the Cherokee
Culture.
Martha Clingan’s Blythe family
had earlier founded Blythe Ferry
on the south side of the
Tennessee River, and had dedicated ties to the Cherokee. Many
moved west with the Cherokee.
Martha Clingan remained in
Cleveland with her husband,
Vote
From Page 1
Gary Davis confirmed, there may
potentially be an upgrade to the
tower on Johnson Road.
He added the developer for the
subdivision there had plans to
put several homes there and
expressed concerns a cell tower
would make it difficult to sell
homes located adjacent to the
property.
The developer had placed a
winning bid for the property of
less than $860.
Benton spoke again Monday,
asking that the move to sell the
property be reconsidered once
again.
“I’m concerned about this
asset Bradley County had in its
possession, and I came up here
to talk to you about this on May
2 [to argue] that the county
should retain this asset that was
set aside for a cell tower in the
1990s for future use by the
Bradley County EMA, and this
Commission voted unanimously
to do so,” Benton said.
“I’m concerned about
this asset Bradley
County had in its
possession, and I came
up here to talk to you
about this on May 2 [to
argue] that the county
should retain this asset
that was set aside for a
cell tower in the 1990s
for future use by the
Bradley County EMA,
and this Commission
voted unanimously
to do so.”
— David Benton
He said the property was cut
out of Emerald Hills subdivision,
and is not part of the subdivision
itself.
“I thought I had made my case,
but come to find out you reversed
your decision on the whole
thing,” Benton said. “I know
Mediation
From Page 1
asked to remain anonymous for
the proceedings.
Phillips ruled last week the
“Jane Doe” associated with the
case could continue to be a coplaintiff with the cloak of
anonymity.
The “Jane Doe” co-plaintiff in
the lawsuit has apparently been
identified already in previous
Cleveland Daily Banner articles
as Bradley County resident Lois
Crawford.
The apparent identification
came about when the plaintiffs’
attorney erred in posting a county phone log requested by the
Banner. The phone log apparently showed the identity of “Jane
Doe” as Crawford.
Steger began his law career in
1983, after obtaining a law
degree from Baylor University.
He has also served as general
counsel
for
Coca-Cola
Enterprises.
prideful of her Cherokee ancestry.
A.A. Clingan became connected with the Roark family through
a niece, Jane, who was taken in
by Joseph and Juda Ann Roark
after her parents had died within
a few weeks of each other in
1830.
This was when Clingan and his
wife were in a log cabin with eight
kids of their own. He asked the
Roarks to consider taking in his
niece, after he had assumed
guardianship of her and four siblings.
The Roarks raised her as one
of their own, although Juda was
only 17 when Jane’s parents had
died.
Through this family arrangement, Clingan remained close to
the Roarks through the remainder of his life, and during his
terms as sheriff.
Johnson, who located the old
Clingan cemetery in 2014, has
related his experience to RoarkConner family members.
“I was in the process of giving
up hope, when I stopped and
asked a woman outside her
house if she knew anything
about the cemetery,” Johnson
said. “She pointed to her side
yard, and said, ‘There it is.’”
Since that time, the ancient
cemetery has been reclaimed and
cleared. The dominating feature
is the tall A.A. Clingan marker,
surrounded by the smaller markers designating the resting place
of other members of the 19th
Century family.
Those needed and the time of
their service are:
A.A. Clingan, 1837-1838 and
1842-1846; James Lauderdale,
1838-1842; Charles I. Price,
1846-1848; James H. Kuhn,
1854-1860; Issac Low, 18601866 and 1872-1876; P.W.
Norwood, 1868-1872; George B.
Hayes,
1876-1880;
W.G.
Stockburger, 1882-1884; W.F.
Barrett, 1888-1890; C.T. Duff,
1890-1894; J.M. Hambright,
1898-1902; J.C. Cockerham,
1910-1912; and J.L. Boyd,
1922-1924.
Anyone who may have a photo
of any of these men that could
be used for the sheriff’s Wall of
Fame is asked to contact the
Office of Public and Media
Relations.
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
PLAQUES OF RECOGNITION are shown for Bradley County’s
first three sheriffs at the Justice Center. The center plaque is for the
county’s first elected sheriff, A.A. Clingan. He is buried in a small family cemetery off Highway 60. The county’s first sheriff, William Carter,
was appointed by the governor in 1836.
Senate to vote on defense bill
as White House warns of veto
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Senate is scheduled to vote
Tuesday on a $602 billion
defense policy bill that the White
House has said President Barack
Obama will veto over numerous
objections, including a prohibition on shuttering the prison at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
In addition to the ban on closing Guantanamo, the White
House is opposed to provisions
that would limit the size of the
president’s National Security
Council staff and block a new
round of military base closings.
The bill must be reconciled
with a version the House passed
earlier this year.
Debate over potential amendments to the Senate legislation
came to a halt late last week due
to procedural disputes. The gridlock has left in doubt the future
of a program that allows Afghan
civilians in danger of being
harmed or killed by the Taliban
to resettle in the United States.
A measure that would have
stripped a provision from the bill
that compels young women to
register for a potential military
draft also was sidelined. The
requirement has roiled social
conservatives, who fear the mandate is another step toward blurring gender lines.
The
National
Defense
Authorization Act is an annual
piece of legislation that often
serves as a vehicle for a broad
array of subjects, not all of which
are specific to the Defense
Department. More than 600
amendments were filed to this
year’s bill. But only a handful
have been considered because of
what a senior lawmaker lamentthere is some concern by ed as a breakdown in the way the
builders. They didn’t like the idea
of a tower going up in their
neighborhood.”
He referred to Crown Colony
subdivision and noted after peoWASHINGTON (AP) — The
ple had moved in, Cleveland
Utilities built a water tank there Obama administration is trying
and there are now two cell towers to make it easier for students
who have been misled or
in the same area.
“It didn’t hurt those property defrauded by their colleges to
have their loans forgiven.
values,” Benton said.
A rule proposed Monday
“Cell towers are becoming
such a part of our society now, would lay out a clear relief
they are a fixture just like tele- process for borrowers who
phone poles and power poles,” he believe they were lied to about
said. “We have to have them, and job prospects after college or
otherwise deceived in order to
the higher the better.”
He said the county may not enroll in the school. It also aims
need it immediately, but might in to hold schools accused of fraud
or at financial risk more
the future.
Commissioner Mark Hall accountable by requiring them
asked for the item to be put on to notify prospective and
next week’s agenda for a vote to enrolled students, as well as set
hold the property for at least five aside money that could help
years, at which time the county cover future claims against the
could reconsider the property’s school.
The proposal follows the colvalue to county services.
lapse last year of Corinthian
Colleges, one of the largest forprofit college companies.
“A college degree remains one
of the best investments anyone
can make in his or her future,”
Education Secretary John B.
King Jr. said on a call with
reporters. “But that’s only true if
it’s a meaningful degree that
helps you land a better job, not
if it’s a worthless piece of paper
that’s an artifact of deception
rather than proof of accomplishment.”
Undersecretary Ted Mitchell
said the new regulations,
expected to be in place by July
2017, “would replace a complicated uneven and burdensome
standard that varies by state
Judge Christopher H. Steger with a new robust federal stan-
Senate is supposed to operate.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the
chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, said Friday
he’d become so frustrated that he
would consider supporting
changes to the Senate’s rules so
that “one individual out of 100
can’t bring everything to a
screeching halt.”
The difficulty started last week
when Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah,
demanded a vote on his measure
that would prevent the government from detaining indefinitely
U.S. citizens apprehended on
American soil for being suspected of supporting a terrorist
group.
Lee refused to allow a vote on
two other amendments, including one to extend and expand a
program that gives visas to
Afghans who defied the Taliban
and sided with the American-led
coalition, unless senators agreed
to a vote on his.
But Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., a retired Air Force lawyer,
objected to Lee’s amendment. He
said it could lead to terrorists
being treated as criminals
instead of enemy combatants.
That would prevent U.S. intelligence officials from getting critical information because the suspects’ attorneys likely wouldn’t
allow them to be interviewed.
The resulting stalemate effectively shut down debate on all
amendments, leading McCain to
warn of life-or-death consequences if the Senate failed to
take up the Afghan visa program.
“By not allowing them to come
to this country, they’re going to
die,” McCain said.
The Afghans worked for the
coalition as interpreters, fire-
fighters and construction laborers. Without the option to leave
Afghanistan, they and their families risk being harmed or killed
by militants, the top American
commander in Afghanistan has
warned.
An amendment authored by
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H.,
would extend the so-called special immigrant visa program
through 2017 and authorize an
additional 2,500 visas for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 to
meet the growing demand.
In the House version of the
defense bill, lawmakers refused
to provide additional visas. The
House extended the program for
a year, but also narrowly restricted eligibility to Afghans whose
jobs took them outside of a military base or secured facility.
The measure to expand the
draft to women has sparked disagreement.
Women have never been
required to register and have
never been part of a large-scale
draft. But McCain’s committee
said any justification for barring
them was erased last year, when
the Pentagon lifted all genderbased restrictions on front-line
combat units.
But Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb.,
wants to replace the provision
with a study of whether a draft is
even necessary. Sasse’s amendment also would do away with
the Selective Service in three
years unless a compelling case is
made to preserve the draft.
“Why are we now fighting
about drafting our sisters, our
mothers, and our daughters
into a draft that no one anywhere is telling us they need?”
Sasse said.
Rule aims to protect students
dard that will allow easy use by
students.”
The proposal would streamline debt relief for groups of students if they all experienced the
same misconduct by a school,
such as instances of wide misrepresentation — meaning they
all wouldn’t have to file individual applications for loan forgiveness.
The new provisions also would
bar schools from forbidding students from class-action lawsuits
as part of enrollment agreements, something Corinthian
had done.
A whistleblower raised concerns about Corinthian in early
2011, alleging that employees of
the for-profit chain fabricated
employers to make it appear as
though unemployed graduates
had secured good jobs in their
careers of study. California’s
attorney general filed a lawsuit
in 2013, alleging rampant lies to
students about job placement.
Corinthian filed for bankruptcy
protection last year, closing
schools and leaving thousands
of students with hefty debt and
frustrated their efforts to earn
degrees.
The Education Department
continues to vet thousands of
requests from Corinthian students for relief from their federal
loans. So far, it has erased the
debt for more than 8,800 former
Corinthian students, totaling
more than $132 million. But
that’s only a small fraction of the
estimated $3.6 billion in federal
loans given to Corinthian students.
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