Police arrest suspected drug dealer
Transcription
Police arrest suspected drug dealer
TUESDAY November 22, 2005 Holiday Calendar, 3 YOU’RE NOW READING NEWS S ’ Y A D TO ! DAY Jr. Bulldogs Deny Johnson County, 7 TO Elizabethton Star www.starhq.com Northeast Tennessee’s Only Afternoon Newspaper! www.starhq.com 50 Cents Daily Vol. 75, No. 276 Roan Mountain Christmas Tree Ceremony Police arrest suspected drug dealer By Abby Morris-Frye STAR STAFF amorris@starhq.com Over the weekend, police arrested a Carter County man described in police reports as an “illegal narcotics trafficker” and charged him with several drug charges. Kenneth Patrick Carr, 39, 1664 Highway 19E, was arrested Saturday night by Carter County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Thomas Smith and charged with possession of Schedule II drugs (morphine) for resale, possession of Schedule II drugs (OxyContin) for resale and possession of Schedule VI drugs (marijuana) for resale. According to police reports, around 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Smith was contacted by an agent of the First Judicial District Drug Task Force regarding a man behaving in a suspicious manner in the parking lot of a local service station. “According to the agent the driver, later identified as Kenneth Carr, made several trips to the pay phone and returned n See ARREST, 14 Photo by Suzanne Galyon The Cloudland Elementary High Notes were featured entertainers at last night’s Community Tree Lighting in Roan Mountain. Although the weather was a little on the damp side, there was plenty of spirit inside, as those attending the tree lighting were treated to hot chocolate and cider and a variety of Christmas tunes by the youngsters. Mountains may see snow today Sewer leak at courthouse annex From Staff Reports From Staff Reports The office of John Paul Mathes, Carter County Circuit Court Clerk, has been temporarily closed due to a sewer leak. “It must have happened over the weekend, probably Sunday afternoon,” said Mathes. “Pure, raw sewage came up out of the floor. I think the tanks got full and it backed up. Roto-Rooter came and hopefully took care of the problem. We have the trusties back there working. It may be a couple of days — it’s going to have to be sanitized.” Judge Robert Cupp has ordered that the office be closed until it has been professionally cleaned and then inspected by a state agency. “I’ve got a temporary desk out here in the hall,” said Mathes. “We’re doing the best we can.” The sewer leak was discovered by the first employees to arrive at work Monday. Employees said the odor was unbearable. Unlike previous incidents in which prisoners have flushed clothing and towels down toilets to cause flooding to downstairs offices, courthouse officials said the current problem was caused by a malfunction in the plumbing system. Pressure inside the line reportedly blew off a cap in a bathroom. All the sewage flushed from the jail went out through the opening rather than going into the sewer system. Although the office closed, the clerks in the Circuit Court office will continue to maintain a work station in the hallway to take care of those needing business done. A winter storm watch is in effect for the mountains of Northeast Tennessee today, including Roan Mountain. Colder temperatures are expected to move into the area today, and any precipitation in the mountains will be in the form of snow. Precipitation in the lower elevations will be in the form of rain mixed with snow. As much as 4 to 6 inches of snow is forecast for the mountains of western North Carolina, making for Thanksgiving skiing at Ski Beech and other ski resorts in North Carolina. “The rain is going to be changing over n See SNOW, 14 Community Thanksgiving Day Dinner set for Thursday at First Christian Church By Greg Miller STAR STAFF gmiller@starhq.com The Third Annual Community Thanksgiving Day Dinner, sponsored by “Area Churches Reaching Out to the Community in Love,” will be served at First Christian Church, 513 Hattie Avenue, on Nov. 24 from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. In addition to meals being served at the church, meals will also be delivered to the community’s needy residents. The Rev. Marvin Slagle, pastor of the Church of God of Prophecy, estimates that 75-80 percent of the meals will be delivered. Volunteers are working hard to make the project a success, according to Slagle. “I really like the fact that the churches are coming together in unity to do something to send the love of Christ to people in the community,” said Slagle. “The people who will be delivering will be there to give an encouraging word to people.” Three planning meetings have been held at the Roan Street Church of God. Volun- teers are preparing to work in various areas of ministry. “We usually have about 10-15 people in attendance,” Slagle said. The volunteers, Slagle said, “are really excited about working and helping somebody.” Betty Hudson, who is serving in her third year as a volunteer, was in charge of the servers the first two years. This year, she is in charge of the kitchen. The food will be prepared “in large quantities,” Hudson said. Hudson identifies with many of those to whom meals will be served. “I know how hard it is for elderly people,” she said. “I’m retired and elderly myself. “The church needs to take care of the people at home,” Hudson said. “I’ve been in the ministry for many years, and I believe that we need to take care of our own first. We have just as many people here in the city of Elizabethton that need our help, too.” Hudson has pastored in Virginia and has served as a missionary in Costa Rica, Haiti, Mexico and Canada. Participating churches in- Deaths Sonny C. Buckles Elizabethton Andrew C. Montgomery Phoenix, Ariz. Arthur Winters Roan Mountain clude the Church of God of Prophecy, First Christian Church, Valley Forge Free Will Baptist Church, Roan Street Church of God, Prayer Tabernacle, and Freedom Fellowship. “I saw the need several years ago in our community to do something to help people on this special day,” Slagle said. “I feel like I’m doing my part, along with some of the others on that day, to make the day better for somebody. I think Thanksgiving is more of a traditional family holiday. A lot of people don’t have families. A lot of people are not able to have an enjoyable day because of their age, or family members may have died, or because of other reasons.” Slagle says First Christian Church “has been very cordial in letting us use their facilities” for the annual event. To have a meal delivered, call Sandy Lyons at 547-0564 or Ava Patterson at 542-0573. Names, addresses and phone numbers of those who want a meal delivered are needed by Tuesday, Nov. 22. Dow Jones Volunteers prepare food for the Community Thanksgiving Day Dinner hosted by First Christian Church in 2004. +53.95 10,820.28 √ Wall Street extended its November rally with modest gains Monday Index Stocks . . . . . . . .Page 11 Classified . . . . .Page 12 Editorial . . . . . .Page 4 Obituaries . . .Page 5 Sports . . . . . . . .Page 7 Weather . . . . . .Page 14 Rising grocery costs √ Stocking the fridge and pantry for a big feast at Thanksgiving is never cheap. But consumers who were braced for steeper costs because of the recent spike in energy prices can relax a little when they head to the supermarket before the holiday. Page 6 Weather Low tonight 26 43 High tomorrow Page 2 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 Harold McCormick kids give veterans Broadway-style salute By Brian Graves STAR STAFF bgraves@starhq.com They filled the stage with all of the star-spangled enthusiasm of a professional troupe of singers and dancers. Yes, they had done it once last week — but, it felt right. Despite the rain and cold wind outside, the students of Harold McCormick Elementary School gave an all-out salute to area veterans in a performance at T.A. Dugger Auditorium Monday night. The audience, filled almost to capacity, roared with cheers and applause as each group filled their turn on the stage singing the praises of America and those who wore and now wear the country’s uniform. “We honor their sacrifice, we honor their names,” opened the school’s show choir and that was the theme for the entire evening. After the roaring start, a more settled moment came as faculty member Beth Stevens sang “Color Me, America” accompanied only by the students’ voices and the lone drum of student Chase Blackwell, appropriately dressed in Revolutionary garb. One of the real crowdpleasers was the group of kindergarten and firstgraders who gave a real wallop to the standards “Yankee Doodle,” “You’re A Grand Old Flag,” and “Yankee Doodle Dandy.” Filled with movement and color, the youngsters got some of the biggest ovations of the evening. The second and thirdgraders took their turn dressed in the uniforms of the different branches of the Armed Forces. “Gather around for a story you can tell your children’s children,” they sang in hushed tones to a quite and attentive audience. They were then joined by four local veterans as they sang a medley of each of the service branches’ anthems. Local veterans Christine Hunter (Army), Bill Armstrong (Navy), Frank Robinson (Air Force) and Sid Hughes (Marines) joined hands with their young counterparts as each branch was saluted. The youngsters got into the act as they saluted the veterans and the vets saluted back. Fourth and fifth-graders debuted behind the closed curtain with each wearing a state of the union. “I Love America” told of the perseverance and national togetherness America has as a nation of unique individuals. They ended their part in a strong rendition of “We Appreciate You,” sung especially to all of the veterans in attendance. One of the most moving and poignant moments of the evening came when the song “God Bless America” was played over a slide show of soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. What made it so special was each picture was captioned as being the grandfather, uncle, father, mother, brother or other relative of one of the students or teachers who helped with the production. The emotions crescendoed when all of the students gathered for a mass rendition of “God Bless the U.S.A.” with many of the audience adding their voices to the newest patriotic standard. No one left that auditorium without the warmth and hopes that this next generation may understand what they were singing and talking about, thereby leaving America’s future in very good hands. Photo by Brian Graves Harold McCormick students gave local veterans a Broadway-style salute in a performance last evening at T.A. Dugger Junior High Auditorium. Second and third graders dressed in the uniforms of the different branches of the Armed Forces were joined on stage by local veterans Christine Hunter (Army), Bill Armstrong (Navy), Frank Robinson (Air Force) and Sid Hughes (Marines), who joined hands with their counterparts as each branch was saluted. Tree Lighting Photo by Brian Graves Harold McCormick kindergarten and first grade students drew a rave review from the audience for their performance last evening at T.A. Dugger Junior High Auditorium. The youngsters in a tribute to veterans sang “Yankee Doodle” and “You’re A Grand Old Flag.” Serious Backpain? Elizabethton — A new free report has recently been released that reveals an amazing new medical breakthrough research has proven 86% successful treating debilitating back pain. Even with multiple herniated discs. Find out how space travel solved astronauts back pain and how this accidental discovery has lead to the most promising back pain treatment today. For your free report entitled, How Space Age Technology Is Solving Back Pain Without Drugs Or Surgery!” call 1-800-413-3788 and listen to the toll-free 24 Hr. recorded message for all the details or go to www.saynotobacksurgery.com. Supplies are limited - call now. Senior Thanksgiving dinner, dance A Senior Citizens Dance and Thanksgiving Dinner will be held at the Elizabethton Elks Club from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday. The Rambling Rose Band will provide the music. The charge for the dinner and dance is $10. A full-course Thanksgiving meal will be served. IS YOUR HEARING AS GOOD AS IT USED TO BE? CALL… Dr. Daniel R. Schumaier & Assoc. Audiologists 106 E. Watauga Ave. Johnson City 928-5771 …to our friends, families and customers. SIEMENS - STARKEY SONIC INNOVATIONS - PHONAK - RESOUND Photo by Erica Yoon The Elizabethton Woman’s Club in a brief ceremony last evening turned the lights on for the Love Lights A Tree, located in front of Sycamore Shoals Hospital. The tree is an annual fundraising project of the Woman’s Club, and lights can be purchased for $5 each in memory or in honor of someone. Need Extra Cash? No Payment Until Feb. 06 VISIT OUR WEB SITE Northeast Community Credit Union www.starhq.com 423-547-3820 at Have a safe and happy holiday! CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES For Thursday, November 24 Edition - Wednesday by 10 a.m. For Friday, November 25 Edition - Wednesday by 12 noon DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES The season brings a new reason to show you care. You choose the card and the personal message. Free return address if order is placed by November 25th. For Friday, November 25 Edition - Monday by 5 p.m. For Sunday, November 27 Edition - Tuesday by 5 p.m. LIFESTYLES DEADLINES Lifestyles for Sunday, November 27 - Tuesday Nov. 22 by 12 noon CHURCH PAGE DEADLINES For Friday, November 25 - Monday, November 21 by 5 p.m. Elizabethton Star 300 Sycamore Street Elizabethton, TN 423-542-4151 www.starhq.com # Star Printing - 300 Sycamore Street - Elizabethton, TN • (423) 542-1543 STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 - Page 3 Two professors rattling preparedness Holiday closings for New Madrid earthquakes measuring at least an estimated magnitude 6 have occurred in the New Madrid zone — one in 1843, another in 1895. Moderately damaging quakes have hit the zone every few decades since 1900, and nondamaging earthquakes that are barely felt on the earth’s surface happen a couple times a year, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Scientists give a 7 percent to 10 percent probability on the likelihood of a New Madrid quake the size of the 1811-12 temblors over the next 50 years, said Gary Patterson of the University of Memphis’ Center for Earthquake Research and Information. There’s a 25 percent to 40 percent probability for a smallerbut-still-damaging quake of 6.0 magnitude over the next five decades, he said. Still, experts have warned that the quake that produced last December’s deadly tsunami in the Indian Ocean — and the destruction of Hurricane Katrina — should remind Midwesterners to be proactive in readying for natural disasters. “It’s definitely prudent to prepare,” Patterson said. The possible stakes are high: If the New Madrid fault ruptures, geological and political officials have said the loss of key Midwest roads, railways, power grids and pipelines over the Mississippi would likely choke off vital supplies to distant cities for months. Such a quake also could threaten several densely populated cities, where buildings often predate modern building codes and are not reinforced. Henson and Hodgson hope to stoke awareness with “Suddenly ... On an Average Day,” an updated version of the PBS-aired video Hodgson made in 1989 — just before that year’s 6.9-magnitude California quake killed 63 people and caused about $6 billion dollars in damage to the Bay Area. The new video warns viewers that “Mother Nature can strike at any moment. Her unpredictability has devastating effects on the unsuspecting.” The clip then asks, “When it happens, will you be prepared?” It also shows a family’s life turned upside down as a quake rocks their home. A Toy drive underway ceiling fan smashes to the floor and dishes shatter as the father smartly rides out the temblor with his daughter under the kitchen table. The spot offers suggestions, from turning off all utilities and open flames after the quake. Other tips include bolting large furniture to walls before a quake hits and setting aside a “kit” that has a flashlight, battery-powered radio, canned food and bottled water. Hodgson hopes the campaign that cost $160,000 gets aired on the more than two dozen PBS stations in the New Madrid zone. He also wants to use grants to help make an hour-long video, with much of their project available online, at schools, malls and other agencies. State Rep. John Bradley, a Marion Democrat, cheers the effort. “I was tickled to death to hear they were taking steps to do something like that,” said Bradley, who recently met with Williamson County, state and local emergency officials and politicians to talk about his district’s preparedness for a quake. If the “big one” hits, he said, individual readiness could be crucial. “There’s going to be a period of time, hopefully very short, where people are going to have to be their own first line of defense,” he said. ——— On the Net: U.S. Geological Survey earthquake site, http://earthquake.usgs.gov Southern Illinois University quake site, http://www.science.siu.edu/geology/quakes Center of Earthquake Research and Information, http://www.ceri.memphis.ed u National Earthquake Information Center: http:// neic.usgs.gov Tips for preparing for an earthquake The University of Memphis’ Center for Earthquake Research and Information offers these tips for preparing for and dealing with an earthquake: PREPARATION: —Have an earthquake survival kit on hand, including flashlights, battery-powered radio, bottled water and canned food. —Teach family members how to turn off gas, water and electricity. —Plan family emergency procedures, and make plans for reuniting your family. —Know emergency telephone numbers, including those for a doctor, hospital, police and 911. —Anchor heavy objects such as bookcases, wall units, mirrors and cabinets to walls. —Never place heavy objects over beds, and keep heavy objects lower than the height of shortest member of family. DURING A QUAKE: —If you’re inside, stand in doorway or crouch under a desk or table, well away from windows or glass dividers. —If you’re outside, stand away from buildings, trees, telephones and electrical lines. —If you’re driving, drive away from underpasses and overpasses. Stop in safe area, and stay in vehicle. AFTER A QUAKE: —Check for injuries and provide first aid. —Check for gas, water or sewage breaks, as well as downed power lines and shorts. Turn off appropriate utilities. —Check for building damage and potential problems during aftershocks. —Clean up dangerous spills. —Wear shoes. —Turn on the radio and listen for instructions from public safety agencies. —Use telephone for emergencies only. Service Award The Sullivan County Sheriff’s Auxiliary is conducting a toy drive for needy children. The group is accepting donations of new or good, clean used toys and bicycles for underprivileged children in the area. Last year, the auxiliary collected enough toys to give to over 200 children, and this year, they hope to do even better. Toys will be distributed on Saturday, Dec. 17. A list of children is obtained from area schools for the toys to be distributed. To make a donation or for more information, call Lt. Don Monteith at 279-6042 or the Sullivan County Sheriff’s Dept. at 279-7500. Elizabethton — With a Winterfest theme of “The Night Before Christmas,” the holiday season will feature a Christmas tree exhibit and art show at the Sycamore Shoals State Historic Area. The exhibit will open to the public on Sunday, Dec. 4, with a reception. The tree exhibit will feature Fraser fir Christmas trees decorated by local organizations with handmade ornaments. The artists reception will be held on Monday, Dec. 5 at 1:30 p.m. The park will be open Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on Sunday from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Kingsport The Exchange Place in Kingsport will have a Country Christmas on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 3-4. Celebrate Christmas the old-fashioned way with foods, crafts and entertainment reflecting bygone days on the pioneer farmstead. The celebration on Saturday will be from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. and on Sunday from 12 noon until 4:30 p.m. Jonesborough — A 1940s USO Christmas Show featuring music, comedy and dance, will be held at the Jonesborough Repertory Theatre located at 125 Â1/2 West Main St., Jonesborough. Performance dates are December 9 at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.; December 10 at 2:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.; December 11 at 2 p.m., 3:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. All tickets are $8 and may be purchased at the Historic Jonesborough Visitors Center on 117 Boone Street or by calling (423) 7531010. — At Home With Santa will be held Saturday, Dec. 10, in Jonesborough. The free holiday event for children will feature games, making holiday crafts, a visit with Santa and Mrs. Claus, shopping for the family and carriage rides. — Also, the annual holiday tree exhibit will be held Dec. 1-31 at the Historic Jonesborough Visitors Centers. For hours and more information, call the center at 753-1011. — The Annual Christmas Craft Show and Sale at the Historic Jonesborough Visitors Center will be held Friday and Saturday, Nov. 25 and 26 . Hours are 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. both days. — Jonesborough Christmas Parade will be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 10. The parade will start at Boone Street and travel through the beautifully decorated historic district. Santa will be waiting for everyone at the Courthouse immediately after the parade. Bristol The Highlands Youth Ensemble, under the direction of Beth McCoy, and part of the Mountain Empire Children’s Choral Academy, will perform a holiday concert, “Sweet Christmas Suite,” at 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, at First Presbyterian Church, Bristol. The performance will consist of a variety of secular and sacred Christmas music. Piney Flats Celebrate an 18th century Christmas with the William Cobb family of Rocky Mount in Piney Flats on Friday and Saturday, Dec. 2 and 3. Tours begin at 4:30 p.m. each day with the last tour going out at 8 p.m. Reservations recommended. For more information, contact: Reda Greene at (423) 5387396 web site: www.rockymountmuseum.com. READ ALL ABOUT IT! SUBSCRIBE to the The Elizabethton Star Photo by Erica Yoon Dr. Lee Miller, chairman of the Hampton Utility, was recognized at last week’s County Commission meeting for his service to the utility. A resolution honoring Miller was presented to him by County Mayor Dale Fair. Pictured at left is Richard Tester, a member of the Hampton Utility board. PHOTO REPRINTS available from The Elizabethton Star 423-542-1542 Shirley’s Tan Free all Day Friday (11 AM - 6 PM) Month Unlimited - $20 • Special Discounts • Gift Certificates Available Friday HOME COOKING Closing Sunday, November 20th For the Season See You Next Year! 3266 Hwy. 321 Hampton, TN 37658 (423) 768-2092 (423) 542-5699 434 Railroad Street • Elizabethton Winter Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10 - 8 • Fri. 10 - 7 • Sat. 10 -5 • Sun. Closed EVERY 1.75 LITER ON SALE EVERYDAY HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES Crown Royal.........................$39.99 Bacardi Rum.................................$21.49 George Dickel #12........................$26.99 Wild Turkey 80˚.............................$32.99 Wild Turkey 101˚...........................$35.99 Skyy Vodka...................................$21.99 Ballantine’s Scotch......................$22.99 Seagram’s VO...............................$23.99 Canadian Club..............................$19.99 701 W. Market St. • Johnson City 423-232-WINE We have a large selection of wine for Thanksgiving at our low warehouse prices. M MIIL LIIT TA AR RY Y A AN ND D A AA AR RP P D DIIS SC CO OU UN NT TS S ‘Scrooge’ coming to town The Elizabethton High School Drama Club will present the musical “Scrooge” on December 1, 2, and 3rd at 7 p.m. at the Elizabethton Alliance Church in downtown Elizabethton. Tickets are $7 for adults and $5 for students. Holiday Calendar M MIIL LIIT TA AR RY Y A AN ND D A AA AR RP P D DIIS SC CO OU UN NT TS S CARBONDALE, Ill. (AP) — Harvey Henson knows people don’t worry much about the prospect of Midwest earthquakes. But in this region, with one of the nation’s most active underground faults, it’s that lack of preparedness that can make him tremble. “It’s the nature of what we’re dealing with — we don’t get tested every 10 to 12 years like California does,” said Henson, a Southern Illinois University geophysicist. “Public interest wanes, and I don’t think it’s a good thing.” Henson and Scott Hodgson, an associate professor in the school’s radio-and-television department, have created short public-awareness announcements to begin airing next month between programs on WSIU-TV in Carbondale. The two educators hope to get the spots aired on other PBS stations around the New Madrid seismic zone, which is a network of fissures in the earth’s crust from southern Illinois near Cairo south through parts of Missouri, Arkansas, Kentucky and Tennessee. The video warns that residents in Mississippi and Indiana also may feel the effects. “If an earthquake hits and you have to think for three seconds what to do, that’s too long. You may have a second,” Hodgson said. The video spots should “provide a visual reference, stuff that would instantly just pop into your mind if needed.” Scientists have warned for years that a powerful quake could hit any time along the New Madrid Fault. That zone was blamed for a series of some of the largest quakes in U.S. history in 181112. According to many accounts, those temblors shook the area around New Madrid, Mo., causing the Mississippi River to run backward for a time, church bells to toll on the East Coast, and formed Reelfoot Lake — Tennessee’s largest natural lake. Though no instruments existed then to measure that quake’s strength, estimates put it at magnitude 8.0, near the top of the earthquake range. The Richter scale, which measures earthquakes, was developed in 1935. Two other earthquakes • The Tennessee Department of Agriculture Forestry Division will close Thursday and Friday, Nov. 24-25, in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. Offices will re-open Monday, Nov. 28. • The Carter County Solid Waste Landfill will be closed Thursday. The landfill will re-open on Friday. • The Carter County Courthouse will be closed Thursday and Friday for the Thanksgiving holiday. • The City of Elizabethton offices will be closed Thursday, Nov. 24, and Friday, Nov. 25, to observe Thanksgiving. Tuesday and Wednesday garbage collection will be picked up on Tuesday and Thursday and Friday will be picked on Wednesday. Brush for Zone 6 will be collected on Wednesday, Nov. 23. • Offices of the Elizabethton STAR will be closed Thursday, however, a Thanksgiving paper will be published late Wednesday evening. • The Elizabethton Senior Center will be closed Thursday and Friday. • The Elizabethton-Carter County Public Library will be closed Thursday and Friday. • All state and federal offices will be closed Thursday and Friday. • There will be no mail delivery on Thursday, as the Post Office will be closed. Also, there will be no window service. • All financial institutions in the city will be closed Thursday, re-opening Friday for business. • City and county schools will be closed Thursday and Friday. Page 4 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 EDITORIAL & COMMENTARY Straighten out the Part D maze Looking for a reason to feel good about yourself? Help a Medicare recipient navigate the tangled web of competing prescription coverage plans that went on offer last week. The enrollment period began last week, and it was instantly clear that senior citizens had been paying attention. They logged on to www.medicare.gov, they called Medicare’s information hot line, 1-800-633-4227, and they waited. And they waited. And waited. And . . . They were waiting for guidance in deciding which of the many plans offered by private insurers — more than 40 just in Tennessee, for instance — would best suit their needs. Medicare’s computer servers were overwhelmed by the traffic, though. And since the phone counselors at the federal agency and at state and local call centers around the nation all use the same Web site, they weren’t as much help as they should have been, either. Other frustrations awaited those who managed to get logged on: Information on some plans was incomplete, and people sometimes found themselves referred to other sources to get the informa- tion they needed. Some of those problems can be chalked up to the inevitable start-up glitches of any enterprise that would try, on Day One, to serve an estimated 43 million people. Yes, it could have gone much, much better, but if everything had gone smoothly, it would have been a miracle. OPINION Medicare and the various insurance providers must work unceasingly to make the plan evaluation and signup stage of the system as accessible, understandable, complete and current as it can be. Because George W. Bush preferred offering a wide variety of choices rather than one-size-fits-all convenience, navigating this system will probably never be easy. While you’re waiting on hold for the next available enrollment adviser, you can argue whether that was the right decision. But the bottom line is that at the end of this twisted rainbow, eligible Medicare recipients who persevere may well find a pot of gold. The government, howev- er, should not be standing back and admiring its work. It should instead be increasing its capacity to assist applicants for this new Medicare Part D coverage in a timely, efficient way. It should be working already on designing a better version of the application and approval process. Meanwhile, people to whom the elderly go for advice — doctors, nurses, hospital workers, agencies on aging and other nonprofit entities — should continue to educate themselves about the drug benefit, so they can take some of the frustration out of the application process. It would be a mistake to view Medicare recipients — and the elderly in general — as helpless in the face of this new program’s complexities. Sure, some will need a lot of help, and many will want reassurance that the decisions toward which they are inclined are indeed wise. But what they need most is an enrollment system that quickly becomes easier to use and gives them clearer and more complete information about their options. They’ll make good choices if those in charge of the system can get the technical obstacles out of their way. WASHINGTON TODAY Unease on Iraq is contributing to growing GOP malaise on Bush agenda WASHINGTON (AP) — Most presidents get a boost from overseas trips. President Bush, though, may return from Asia wondering why he left U.S. soil in the first place. Caught off guard when South Korea announced plans to pull one-third of its troops from Iraq, the president also could look back on the home front and find things have not exactly been quiet. Bush returned late Monday to even more political acrimony than when he left eight days ago. The corrosive debate over Iraq is eroding his second term-agenda and challenging the ability of Republican leaders in Congress to maintain discipline. While Bush was away: —The Senate signaled impatience with the war’s direction by voting 79-19 to require regular reports on progress in Iraq and urging that 2006 be “a period of significant transition to full Iraqi sovereignty.” —Increasingly rebellious Republicans defied their leaders on domestic spending cuts. House leaders narrowly won approval of a five-year budget cut plan in the wee hours of Friday on a 217-215 vote. —The top House Democrat on military spending, Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania, withdrew his support for the war and advocated a pullout over six months. That brought sharp criticism from the White House and led to tumultuous late-night battle when the GOP leaders forced a vote on an immediate pullout measure in hopes of trapping Democrats. It was rejected 403-3. In a rare across-the-world exchange of invective, the White House traded daily barbs with its Democratic crit- ics. They accused Bush of manipulating prewar intelligence and deceiving the nation in starting a war he is unable to end. Bush and his aides said Democrats were irresponsible and hypocritical, particularly those who voted in 2002 to authorize the war and now oppose it. So much for the old maxim that “politics stops at the water’s edge.” In deference to a president’s conduct of foreign policy, even lawmakers opposed to his approach traditionally held their fire while the chief executive was overseas, especially during wartime. Bush’s slumping approval rating — 37 percent in an APIpsos poll, the lowest of his presidency — and eroding public support for the Iraq war are taking a toll on the GOP. Republicans fear losing their majorities in next year’s congressional elections. That is spilling over and causing problems in other areas, from reauthorizing the Patriot Act to trimming programs for education, health and the poor. When the Senate passed a $50 billion tax bill early Friday, it left out one of Bush’s second-term priorities: an extension of tax cuts on dividends and capital gains that are now set to expire after 2008. “My colleagues are getting nervous,” said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. “We talk a lot about the president’s unfavorable ratings. Have you noticed the ratings of Congress lately?” The AP-Ipsos poll showed that only 32 percent of those surveyed said they approved of the job Congress was doing. Discontent is growing among Republicans, moder- ates and conservatives, said Norman Ornstein, an analyst at the American Enterprise Institute who specializes in the presidency and Congress. “They probably wouldn’t be angry if Bush were at 55 percent, or 65 percent, or even 45 percent,” he said. “But put him down where he is, with the growing public unhappiness with them and their nervousness over the elections ahead, and it is a bad combination,” Ornstein said. In Bush’s first term, GOP leaders prided themselves on their unity and discipline. They are hampered now, for a variety of reasons: Bush’s plunge in the polls; an unpopular war; the stepping aside of Rep. Tom DeLay as House majority leader after his indictment in Texas; and a federal investigation of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist’s stock transactions. Further contributing to that anxiety are concerns that older people — who make up an active voting bloc — will be frustrated by the level of benefits under the new Medicare prescription drug plan that takes effect early in 2006. The growing GOP restiveness is making it harder for Bush to have his way. “The congressional Republicans have put the president in an awkward spot because they seem to be changing their minds on Iraq,” said Wayne Fields, director of American culture studies at Washington University in St. Louis and a specialist on presidential rhetoric. While Bush takes strong positions, he is not well equipped to make persuasive arguments with the public or Congress or good at give-andtake, Fields said. CAL THOMAS Recovering from falling numbers One of the reasons I prefer to be known as a conservative and not a Republican is that Republicans too often compromise their ideals, hoping the Left will like them. It never works. The Left despises them anyway and, in the end, they’ve sold out for nothing. Cal Perhaps this Thomas explains the latest CNN/USA Today/Gallup survey that finds that just 37 percent of Americans approve of President Bush’s job performance. Sixty percent disapprove. That disapproval is up 2 percent and the approval is down 2 percent from last month’s survey. The survey reveals that the depth of dislike for the president has increased substantially in the last six months with 17 percent disliking him a little (16 percent disliked him a little six months ago), 27 percent disliking him a lot (up from 13 percent) and 6 percent hating him (a 4 percent increase). Considering that 57 percent approved of his job performance after his State of the Union Address last January, the decline ought to trouble him. What he needs, in addition to visible progress in winding down the war in Iraq and fostering a stable government that can take care of the insurgents, is an issue that will re-energize his base and show that his administration is still relevant. That issue should be immigration. In light of the pictures we have seen of the rioting in France, the president should re-shape his immigration policy from one that works best for immigrants, to one that protects the life and culture of the majority (for now) of us. Paul Weyrich, chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation and one of the substantive brains behind the modern conservative movement, recently wrote in an e-mail: “On no issue have a Republican administration and a Republican House and Senate more blatantly or more cynically sold out the conservative movement and our country than on immigration.” He calls the Bush administration’s proposal for “guest workers,” which is nothing more than amnesty for illegal immigrants and encouragement for more to come, “a scandal and a disgrace.” Weyrich wants to look beyond the Bush administration, while still trying to make use of it whenever possible to advance conservative causes. “The next conservatism,” he writes, “needs to recognize that when it comes to immigration policy neither the Republicans nor the Democrats are our friends. . The Democrats want open borders because most of them are cultural Marxists. The Republicans agree because Wall Street wants cheap labor. The next conservatism should not be in Wall Street’s pocket. Our country is more important than their profits.” No votes should be bought at the price of destroying what attracts so many to our shores. History, language, culture and faith are at the center of what it means to be an American. These are rapidly being watered down and compromised to meet the needs of those coming here, often illegally. Does pluralism mean we have to relinquish what made us great? Surely that is too high a price. Conservatives, and the Bush administration, if it wants to save itself, should get behind the TRUE Enforcement and Border Security Act introduced by Representatives Duncan Hunter, California Republican and chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and Virgil Goode, Virginia Republican. The bill seeks to deter illegal immigration by enforcing laws that sanction employers for hiring illegals, ends the automatic citizenship for children of illegals born in America (this might also take some constitutional reinterpretation by the Supreme Court), and removes other incentives for people who would break our laws. If the Bush administration and Republican members of Congress fail to support this measure, it will show how empty their rhetoric is on the subject and give conservatives plenty of time to find candidates for office who do support it before the next two elections. Supporting real immigration reform would surely raise the president’s job approval rating, especially if he explained it as a national security and cultural issue that gets to the heart of our identity. Paul Weyrich said it best: “As conservatives, we need to make it clear that we will not vote for any candidate who refuses to close our borders to illegal immigration and cut back on legal immigration, at least until we can acculturate the immigrants we already have.” Are you listening, Mr. President? Are you listening Republican Party? If not, those approval numbers can still go lower and the disapproval numbers higher. —————— In Chaucer’s Middle English, the “bumble” in bumblebee had much to do with “humming” and nothing to do with “bumbling” as we so well know it. —————— Am told Arabic has 350 words for sword. —————— Historians claim to know that Hannibal, even while he crossed the Alps, wore his wig. —————— We the people are wondrously slow to see the obvious, are we not? We wore eyeglasses for four centuries before a London optician named Edward Scarlett in 1730 thought of anchoring them to our ears. MILD TALK There were those in ancient Greece who held a track meet as a funeral ceremony. In the fifth century B.C., that. Particularly, soldiers killed in war were so commemorated. With races mostly, some wrestling matches, too. —————— Lettuce used to be considered a weed. www.starhq.com Elizabethton STAR Independently Owned and Operated (USPS -172-900) Published each morning, except Saturday, the STAR is pledged to a policy of service to progressive people, promotion of beneficial objectives and support of the community while reserving the right to objective comment on all its affairs. Publication Office is at 300 Sycamore St., Elizabethton, Tenn. TN 37643. Periodical postage paid at Elizabethton, Tennessee. Served by The Associated Press. POSTMASTER: Send address change to Elizabethton Star, P.O. Box 1960, Elizabethton, TN 37644-1960. r (Printed on recycle paper) Where we began … How to reach us Elizabethton Star …………………542-4151 Fax ……………………………...542-2004 Classified………………………....542-1530 Circulation……………………….542-1540 Advertising……………………….542-4151 Photography……………………...542-1542 Sports…………………………....542-1545 Star Printing……………………....542-1543 Subscription rates Home-delivery 3 months 6 months 1 year Daily/Sun.…………$23…………$42…………$80 Seniors 60 & older….$21…………$40…………$76 Military/Student……$21…………$40…………$76 Sunday only……….$18………….$36…………$72 Newsstand Price: Daily, 50 cents; Sunday, $1.25 Rates by Mail: 3 months 6 months The history of the Elizabethton STAR traces back to the Mountaineer, established in 1864. The Mountaineer was the first newspaper in Upper East Tennessee, changing hands and names numerous times over the years. On Oct. 1, 1955, Frank Robinson was named publisher. He purchased the paper in 1977. On Oct. 1, 1980, his son, Charles Robinson, was named publisher. Frank Robinson Publisher frobinson@starhq.com Harvey Prichard Associate Publisher hprichard@starhq.com Rozella Hardin Editor rhardin@starhq.com Delaney Scalf Operations Manager dscalf@starhq.com Charles Fitzsimmons Circulation Director cfitzsimmons@starhq.com Kathy Scalf Circulation Manager kscalf@starhq.com 1 year Daily/Sun.…………$30…………$60…………$120 Military/Student……$26…………$52…………$104 Sunday only………..$20…………$40…………..$78 (Must be paid in advance. No refunds) Circulation Department………542-1540 STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 - Page 5 OBITUARIES Sonny C. Buckles Sonny Clay Buckles, 62, of Johnson City, died Sunday, November 20, 2005, at the James H. Quillen VA Medical Center. Mr. Buckles was a native of Carter County. He was a local Elizabethton businessman, having operated Sonny’s Sunshine Market for several years. He attended Parkway Baptist Church in Bristol. He served in the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam Era. Mr. Buckles was preceded in death by his father, Clay Robinson Buckles, who died October 2, 2002. Survivors include his wife, Marcy Buckles; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Matt and Lora Buckles, Lexington, Ky., and Michael Buckles, Johnson City; his mother: Georgia Danner Buckles, Elizabethton; two grandchildren, Sydney Buckles and Logan Buckles; and three sisters and brothers-inlaw, Carolyn Janette and Robert Buck, Elizabethton, Goldia Rebecca and John Sommers, Johnson City, and Sherry Anne and Gary Montgomery, Bristol. Several nephews and one niece also survive. Funeral services for Mr. Buckles will be conducted at 8 p.m. Tuesday, November 22, at Memorial Funeral Chapel with Pastor Gary Montgomery officiating. Music will be under the direction of the Parkway Baptist Church. Graveside services and interment will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday, November 23, in the National Cemetery, Mountain Home. Pallbearers will be nephews and friends. Military Graveside Honors will be conducted by the Tennessee National Guard Honor Detail, Kingsport. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Family and friends will assemble at the funeral home at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday to go to the cemetery. Condolences to the Buckles family may be emailed to mfc@chartertn.net. Memorial Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Arthur “Junior” Winters Arthur “Junior” Winters, 77, died Sunday, November 20, 2005, at Roan Highlands Nursing Center, Roan Mountain, following an extended illness. Mr. Winters was a lifelong resident of Carter County where he was the eldest son of the late Clyde and Reatha Dugger Winters Jones. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Jerry Winters, a sister, Judy W. Nidiffer, and a brother, Fred Winters. Mr. Winters was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Roan Mountain and was loved by all who knew him. Survivors include two daughters and a son-in-law, Geraldine Winters and Joyce and J.G. Hughes, all of Roan Mountain; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; four sisters and brothers-in-law, Goldie and Millard Jones, Roan Mountain, Edith and Glenwood Arrington, Martinsville, Va., Dimple and Larry Varney, Frankfort, Ky., and Elizabeth and W. Lock Davis, Naho, N.C.; and a brother and sister-in-law, Ralph and Betty Winters, Roan Mountain. Many nieces and nephews also survive. The funeral service for Mr. Winters will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday, November 23, in the Rhododendron Chapel of Tetrick Funeral Home, Roan Mountain, with Rev. Charlie McKinney and Mr. Gerald Holly, minister, officiating. Music will be under the direction of Laura Freire, Patsy Haywood and Gloria Holly. Interment will follow in the Johnson-Roanview Cemetery. Active pallbearers will be selected from family and friends. Honorary pallbearers will be Dr. David Kimmel, Dr. Alfred Earwood, the staff of Roan POLICE BEATS Highlands Nursing Center and Adventa Hospice. While flowers are welcome, other expressions of sympathy may be made to The American Cancer Society, c/o Helen Wilson, 209 S. Riverside Drive, Elizabethton, TN 37643. The family will receive friends from 1 to 2 p.m. Wednesday, prior to the service in the chapel, and anytime at the home of Goldie and Millard Jones, 107 Orr Street, Roan Mountain. Online condolences may be sent to the Winters family through our Web site at www.tetrickfuneralhome.com. Tetrick Funeral Home, Elizabethton, is in charge of arrangements. Obituary Line: (423) 543-4917. Office: (423) 542-2232. Andrew C. Montgomery Andrew C. Montgomery passed away at the Huger Mercy Living Center in Phoenix, Ariz., on Sunday, November 20, 2005. Mr. Montgomery was a native of Lenoir City, Tenn., and a graduate of Milligan College. He was the son of the late A.C. and Margaret Montgomery. Survivors include his wife of 57 years, Wilma Edens Montgomery; three daughters, Sandra Peacock and Andrea McClain, both of Phoenix, Ariz., and Donna Bly, Tigard, Ore.; and a son, Monty Montgomery, St. Louis, Mo. Seven grandchildren, three great-grandchildren and three sisters also survive. Services will be held in Phoenix. Courtesy of Memorial Funeral Chapel. U.S. bans poultry from B. Columbia after duck tests positive for bird flu WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. officials need details on a Canadian case of bird flu to decide whether to continue a ban on poultry from British Columbia. Canadian officials said the case of flu, confirmed Sunday, wasn’t the virulent form in Southeast Asia blamed for more than 60 human deaths. Still, the U.S. on Monday banned imports of poultry from mainland British Columbia to prevent the spread of the virus to U.S. flocks. Canadian officials plan to report to the U.S. within 24 hours, according to Canada’s chief veterinary officer, Dr. Brian Evans. Depending on the results, the U.S. could restrict imports from a smaller, regional area, U.S. Agriculture Department spokesman Jim Rogers said. “We’re waiting to get more information from Canada, at which point we could be able to scale back” the ban, Rogers said. “We just need that infor- mation.” The governments of Taiwan, Japan and Hong Kong indicated they would take similar action. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Sunday that a duck at a commercial poultry farm in British Columbia had tested positive for bird flu. The virus was a low-pathogenic North American form that doesn’t kill poultry and is not a threat to people, officials said. But the virus sickens and weakens the birds, and entire flocks are destroyed to prevent its spread. The virulent form of bird flu in Asia has not been found in the U.S. and is only now spreading into eastern Europe. Authorities there say that cooking kills the virus; health officials in the U.S. say that eating properly handled and cooked poultry is safe. The farm with the infected duck, in Chilliwack outside of Vancouver, isn’t licensed to export. Authorities have be- gun killing about 56,000 birds on the farm with carbon dioxide gas and have quarantined four other farms within three miles of the area. An outbreak of bird flu in 2004 in British Columbia prompted the killing of 17 million birds. Evans said Canada would have preferred that the U.S. take no action since the virus found in the duck is different from the one in Asia. “That would have been consistent with how we’ve treated low-path findings in the United States previously,” he said. “But again, we’re working in an extremely sensitive international environment at this point.” The U.S. bans imports of poultry from any country where the high-pathogenic virus from Asia has been found. Those countries include Cambodia, Romania, China, Russia, Indonesia, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Turkey, Laos, Vietnam and Malaysia. JC developer cuts down old Beech trees to make room for new condominium complex JOHNSON CITY (AP) — A popular grove of beech trees has been cut down to make room for condominiums, and the man who felled the ancient trees says the mayor is responsible. Property owner Stewart Taylor on Saturday cleared the four beech trees that were more than 100 years old. He blamed their removal on the Johnson City Commission’s vote last week to deny a rezoning request that would have allowed commercial development. “It was (Mayor) Steve Darden’s swing vote that forced me to build condos and cut down the trees,” Taylor said. The city had wanted to turn the 8.5-acre plot formerly owned by the Tennessee Valley Authority into a park. But in 2003 Taylor outbid the city and bought the land, which is in the Med Tech Corridor, a planning area targeted for medical and professional development. The property, which is zoned for high-density residential use, is centrally locat- ed near East Tennessee State University, Mountain Home Veteran’s Administration Hospital and Johnson City Medical Center. Darden said he didn’t want commercial development to have a negative effect on the adjacent 60 acres of the ETSU’s Innovation Park. “My hope is that this land will support some type of medical, technical, life science or research related industry that will provide more rewarding work than mini- Kaine to take oath in Williamsburg RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Gov.-elect Tim Kaine announced inaugural plans Monday that include a ball in southwest Virginia and the first inauguration at the Colonial Capitol in Williamsburg since Thomas Jefferson’s oath of office. Because of renovations at the state Capitol in Richmond, the General Assembly decided to hold the January inauguration in Colonial Williamsburg. Jefferson took his oath there in 1779. “Holding the swearing-in ceremony at the Colonial Capitol gives us a wonderful and unique opportunity to celebrate Virginia,” Kaine said in a news release. The inauguration is scheduled for noon on Jan. 14, followed by the inaugural parade and ball. The formal ceremony takes place during a joint session of the House of Delegates and the Senate. Kaine will also hold inaugural events in Abingdon on Jan. 7 and in Richmond on Jan. 14-15. Williamsburg served as Virginia’s capital from 1692 to 1780. It was then moved to Richmond, which was considered a more central location and less vulnerable to British troops occupying parts of Hampton Roads. In 1776, Patrick Henry became Virginia’s first governor chosen by the legislature and was sworn in three times in Williamsburg. mum-wage jobs,” Darden said. Wayne Robertson, a member of the ad hoc environmental committee ROOTS, said many will be unhappy about the trees being cut down. “When I saw that they were gone, it was just disbelief that he did it,” Robertson said. “This was a spite thing. It had no other purpose than that.” Protesters had called for preservation of the trees and demonstrated at or near the site. No demonstrators were present Saturday. “I don’t think anybody was expecting this,” Robertson said. + + A Livingston Hearing Aid Service • Free Hearing Test • Hearing Aid Sales & Service • Senior Discounts Sally Livingston - Lic. Hearing Aid Dispenser serving with 25 years of dedicated service 709 E. Elk Ave. 543-9109 Batteries $2.50 Per Pack Arrests • Rickey Nathaniel Yelton, 20, 238 S. Broadway, Johnson City, was arrested Sunday afternoon by Carter County Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Tim Lowe on a capias charging him with failure to appear in court. • David Lynn Whitaker, 34, 139 Gilbert Lane, Bristol, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Deputy Michael Carlock and charged with DUI, driving without a license and violation of the financial responsibility law. • Teresa Ann Smith, 32, 139 Gilbert Lane, Bristol, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Deputy Michael Carlock and charged with two counts of possession of Schedule IV drugs. • Joshua A. Hobbs, 19, 308 Peach Blossom Court, Johnson City, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Deputy Eric Buck and charged with possession of Schedule VI drugs. • Phillip Steve Presnell, 22, 343 Sims Hill Road, was arrested early Friday morning by CCSD Deputy Eric Buck on a warrant charging him with violation of probation. • Robert James Moffitt, 30, 340 Lovers Lane, was arrested Friday night by Tennessee Constable Harvey Shaffer and charged with first offense driving on a revoked license. • Phillip Hamilton Ray, 21, 139 Elisha Garland Cemetery Road, Roan Mountain, was arrested Friday morning by CCSD Deputy Noah Tidwell and charged with possession of Schedule VI drugs. • Ryant Lee Pinnix, 30, 708 King St., Reedsville, N.C., was arrested Wednesday by CCSD Deputy Amos Halava on two capiases charging him with failure to appear in court. • Krystal Nichole Huser, 21, 212 Jenkins Hollow Road, was arrested Friday night by Tennessee Constable Bobby Canter on a warrant charging her with violation of probation. • Ralph Edward Taylor, 31, 1738 Red Brush Road, Mountain City, was arrested Saturday morning by CCSD Deputy Kevin Cable on a capias charging him with failure to appear in court. Two arrested after police pursuit By Abby Morris-Frye STAR STAFF amorris@starhq.com Two North Carolina men were arrested early Saturday morning following a police pursuit on Highway 19E. The driver of the vehicle, Todd Dwight Henson, 19, 1264 Hickory Nut Gap Road, Newland, N.C., was charged with third offense DUI, felony evading arrest, violation of the light law, possession of a handgun while under the influence, two counts of reckless endangerment and aggravated assault on an officer. The vehicle’s owner and passenger, Allen Elvis Jenkins, 20, 255 Hughes Lane, Linville, N.C., was charged with DUI by consent, public intoxication and possession of a handgun while under the influence. According to a police report on the incident, Constable Harvey Shaffer was on routine patrol on Highway 19E headed south bound near the upper intersection with Rittertown Road when he observed a vehicle traveling north bound with a headlight out. “I then turned on the vehicle to conduct a traffic stop. After getting behind the vehicle I observed the tag number on the vehicle... which was previously dispatched through 911 Communications Center to be on the lookout due to a pursuit which occurred in Avery County, N.C.,” states Shaffer in his report. “I followed the vehicle a short distance while other units could assist. When I reached the intersection of Highway 321 and Highway 19E the vehicle then began to speed away.” At that time, according to the report, Shaffer activated his vehicle’s emergency lights and sirens in order to attempt to initiate a traffic stop on the vehicle but the driver continued to flee. “The driver turned in the Hampton Pharmacy parking lot then back toward Highway 19E. The vehicle then turned south on Highway 19E. At this time I still pursued the driver with the vehicle refusing to stop,” states Shaffer in his report. “At this In Loving Memory Of Bernice Byrd Moore time (Carter County Sheriff’s Department) Deputy Chad Grindstaff joined the pursuit which continued into Roan Mountain. The driver then turned right onto Old Highway 19E. At this time the driver of the vehicle swerved, striking my cruiser. I then turned to the left and was struck once again, nearly striking a parked vehicle. “At this time the vehicle stopped with the driver fleeing on foot, which a foot pursuit ensued. The passenger remained in the vehicle and was placed in custody by Deputy Grindstaff. The driver was located by myself and other officers next to a creek in heavy brush.” After locating the driver, officers identified him as Henson and took him into custody. During a search of his person, officers located a pair of brass knuckles in his jacket pocket. “Also, the driver had a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage about his person,” states Shaffer in his report. “While Deputy (Brad) Hamm and myself were conducting an inventory on the vehicle a loaded 22-caliber Lorcin handgun was located under the passenger front seat, which neither would claim the handgun’s ownership. “The passenger, who was identified as Allen Jenkins, stated he owned the vehicle and had picked Henson up at a store in Newland and was letting him drive to Statesville, N.C. Mr. Jenkins also had a strong odor of alcohol about his person.” At that time, both Henson and Jenkins were transported to the Carter County Jail. Both men are scheduled to appear in Carter County General Sessions Court today. Pick 3 For Nov. 20, 2005 8-1-7 Pick 4 For Nov. 20, 2005 7-2-7-0 11-22-1950 — 4-13-1993 Your birthday reminds us of happier times spent with you. We love you and miss you on your birthday and every day. Love, your husband Fred & your Family Lotto 5 For Nov. 18, 2005 01-20-26-27-28 Powerball For Nov. 19, 2005 08-15-20-41-54 Powerball # 22 Page 6 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 Lifestyles … Rising grocery costs not as bad as feared as Thanksgiving nears CHICAGO (AP) — Stocking the fridge and pantry for a big feast at Thanksgiving is never cheap. But consumers who were braced for steeper costs because of the recent spike in energy prices can relax a little when they head to the supermarket before the holiday. Thanks to stiff retail competition that keeps stores from risking big markups, prices for most food items are only nominally higher than a year ago, according to government data and survey results released this past week. Even shoppers with full carts weren’t grumbling in a spot check at a Chicago supermarket, finding that prices hadn’t shot up as was feared in the aftermath of fall hurricanes that wreaked havoc with transportation costs. “I’d say things are up a little bit but not much,” said Paul Stancy, who was loading up on food and beverages Thursday at the store on the city’s northwest side. That sentiment jibed with monthly statistics reported Wednesday by the U.S. Labor Department showing that food costs edged up 0.3 percent in October, only a slight acceleration. “I think we’re seeing higher food prices than we would have absent the increases in energy costs,” said Ephraim Leibtag, food price analyst for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “But we haven’t seen anything go off the Cost of trimmings Despite concerns about inflation and higher energy prices, the average cost of this year’s Thanksgiving feast is just $1.10 more than last year, according to an annual survey. Price of basic Thanksgiving food items for 10 people $37 $36.78 36 35 34 $29.64 $35.68 33 32 31 30 29 ’95 ’97 ’99 ’01 ’03 ’05 NOTE: Items surveyed include turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, rolls, butter, peas, cranberries, carrots, celery, pumpkin pie, whipped cream, coffee and milk SOURCE: American Farm Bureau Federation AP charts price-wise.” Food price inflation has been relatively low in 2005, he added, with costs estimated to increase about 3 percent over last year. That’s exactly how much more a traditional Thanksgiving dinner with all the fixings is likely to cost a shopper this year compared with 2004, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation. Based on results of informal price checks conducted by 108 volunteer shoppers in 30 states, the average cost of this year’s feast for 10 is $36.78, up $1.10 from 2004. Milk, pumpkin pie mix, frozen vegetables, stuffing and rolls were all higher in ‘Harry Potter’ dominates weekend box office LOS ANGELES (AP) — The bespectacled boy wizard has worked his biggest boxoffice magic to date. “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” grossed $101.4 million in its debut weekend, the best results yet for the franchise, according to studio estimates released Sunday. The latest Potter movie led a lineup that helped reverse the Hollywood box-office slump, with the top 12 films raking in $171 million, up 19 percent from the same weekend last year when “National Treasure” was No. 1 with $35.1 million. “Goblet of Fire” was the fourth-best, three-day opening weekend ever, behind “Spider-Man” at $114.8 million in 2002 and “Star Wars: Episode III — Revenge of the Sith” and “Shrek 2,” at $108 million apiece. The fourth installment of the adventures of Harry and his curious classmates at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry is the first Potter film to earn a PG-13 rating for its fantasy violence and special effects. But that did not deter audiences. “The Potter franchise is just irresistible to moviegoers,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. “The combination of the Potter books and the love audiences have for the movies conspired a big opening weekend.” Debuting in second place was the Johnny Cash film biopic “Walk the Line,” which took in $22.4 million. The film chronicles the early musical career of Cash, played by Joaquin Phoenix, and also stars Reese Witherspoon as Cash’s lifelong love, June Carter. Phoenix and Witherspoon do their own singing. Disney’s computer-ani- mated film “Chicken Little,” which held the top spot last week, slipped to No. 3 with $14.8 million. Jennifer Anniston’s thriller “Derailed” ranked fourth with $6.5 million and the sci-fi fantasy “Zathura: A Space Adventure” rounded out the top five with $5.1 million. Based on the best-selling books by J.K. Rowling, “Goblet of Fire” follows 14-yearold Harry, who unwillingly competes against three older wizards in a dangerous Triwizard Tournament. The movie features a dramatic face-off between Harry and Lord Voldemort — He-WhoMust-Not-Be-Named — the dark warlock who killed Harry’s parents and who tried to kill him when he was a baby. Dan Fellman, head of distribution at Warner Bros., which released “Goblet of Fire,” said the results exceeded the studio’s expectations. The third Potter film, “Prisoner of Azkaban,” premiered last year at $93.7 million. “As the audience has gotten older in time, faithful readers of the Potter books will remain faithful to the movies,” Fellman said. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc. Final figures were to be released Monday. 1. “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,” $101.4 million 2. “Walk the Line,” $22.4 million 3. “Chicken Little,” $14.8 million 4. “Derailed,” $6.5 million 5. “Zathura,” $5.1 million 6. “Jarhead,” $4.8 million 7. “Get Rich or Die Tryin,” $4.4 million 8. “Saw II,” $3.9 million 9. “Legend of Zorro,” $2.3 million 10. “Pride and Prejudice,” $2.1 million YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS Only $15 /month If you have no prescription coverage and annual income below $31k couple / $19k individual, you probably qualify. • Over 22 Million prescriptions, valued over $4 Billion, were provided last year through Patient Assistance Programs. • Over 1400 brand-name prescriptions are available. • price while sweet potatoes and fresh cranberries were among items that were lower, thanks to more abundant crops this year. The slight overall increase can largely be attributed to higher energy prices which affect processing, packaging, refrigeration and shipping costs, said Terry Francl, a senior economist at the federation. Kraft Foods Inc., the biggest U.S. food manufacturer, gave a similar explanation earlier this month in boosting prices for its crackers, pizza, lunch meats and some other items an average 3.9 percent. The entire packaged food industry, in fact, has been hammered by the price of oil, affecting plastic packaging expenses and the cost of energy involved in running plants and transporting goods. So why aren’t shoppers facing sharply higher prices across the board? It’s the same reason why the biggest U.S. airlines continue to offer bargain fares even while losing money: Customers will vote with their feet if they don’t. “Food manufacturers have tried raising prices but every time they do they lose market share,” said Bob Goldin, an analyst at the Chicago-based food consultancy Technomic Inc. “It’s intensely competitive out there.” General Mills Inc. and Campbell Soup. Co. both lost sales by putting through price increases that their competitors didn’t follow. Supermarkets, then, are understandably leery about imposing price rises beyond the ones dictated by manufacturers. “Grocery store owners know energy prices have risen a lot, so if they raise their prices as well they’re likely to see reduced sales,” said Corinne Alexander, an agricultural economist at Purdue University. “It doesn’t make sense for a retailer to raise prices in response to a short-term energy spike.” Another reason why the impact on food prices hasn’t been dramatic despite Katrina and other hurricanes is that wholesale beef and dairy prices have dropped from last year’s record highs, giving retailers an extra cushion to absorb some of the greater energy-related costs, she said. This doesn’t mean grocery bills are immune from higher energy costs indefinitely. Experts say creeping increases in food prices are more likely to show up more and more if oil prices don’t keep dropping. “Consumers so far have not had to pay up too much,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial, a Chicago-based financial services firm. “But we are starting to see some of the increased transportation costs seep into food costs and that will be somewhat apparent this holiday season.” Also, while the cost of Thanksgiving dinner may be going up only marginally, getting there will be much more expensive — gasoline prices are up roughly 50 percent from a year ago. Swonk joked that strong consumer spending on alcohol might be linked to that. “Apparently once they fill up their tanks they need a wine or beer to calm themselves down again,” she said. Plan for seconds … Freezer learn A sizing buyers’ guide for those hosting the holiday is a general rule of thumb—one pound per person. Thawing the bird properly is important to the cooking process. Frozen turkey average thaw times: WEIGHT (LBS.) 8-12 12-14 14-18 18-20 20-24 NUMBER OF PEOPLE WEIGHT’ FRIDGE WATER (LBS.) (DAYS) (HOURS) 4-12 12-16 16-20 20-24 8 12 14 18 20 1-3 3-4 4-5 5-6 2-6 6-8 8-10 10-12 Fixing it fresh Fresh , nonfrozen turkeys should be refrigerated, then cooked within 1 to 2 days after purchase. Oven sit Stuffed turkeys should sit longer to cook the insides thoroughly. WGT. (LBS.) Serving it up Allow the turkey to settle and cool for at least 20 minutes before slicing. Slice it right EMPTY STUFFED (IN HOURS) 8-12 2 3/4-3 3-3 1/ 2 3 12-14 3-3 /4 3 1/ 2 -4 3 1 4-4 1/4 14-18 3 /4 -4 /4 1 1 1 18-20 4 /4 -4 / 2 4 /4 -4 3/4 20-24 4 1/ 2 - 5 4 3/4 -5 1/ 2 Start by removing the drumsticks from the body. Slice or peel meat from them after they have cooled a bit. Slice under breast, to middle of the turkey SOURCE: United States Department of Agriculture, Butterball Slice from top to bottom, pull slice away, then cut again Janet Hamlin • AP DEAR ABBY Rude cell phone use requires new etiquette DEAR ABBY: I’m writing about cell phone conversations in a public eatery. Granted, most of the time it can be avoided - and should be. However, there are exceptions, and bystanders should not be so judgmental. I’m a hospice nurse and am often on call, yet not at the office. I must take the calls I receive and often work through complex problems on the phone, no matter where we are or what we are doing. Sometimes the calls are quite lengthy; sometimes there are none at all. Bystanders who might judge my cell phone use do me a great disservice, and likewise people in other professions. My family is just glad that I can go out and enjoy time with them, even when I’m “working.” They appreciate what I do and are proud that I give these worthy patients attention when they need it. Please consider that when you are a bystander, you might not know the “rest of the story.” — NURSE IN ADA, OKLA. DEAR NURSE: While your cell phone use in restaurants might be necessary, you know as well as I do that most conversations aren’t. You are the exception. Read on: DEAR ABBY: After reading about obnoxious cell phone use in your column, I had to share something I saw. I was waiting in line at a bank while a mother on a cell phone was doing her transactions. Her 10year-old daughter was at her side. The mother was in not one, but two conversations: “Yeah, yeah, that’s right. No, no, I was talking to HIM. OK, fine! No, no, I was talking to HER.” Finally finished and still talking, the woman walked outside, and I went to the teller’s window. I quickly finished my business and noticed the daughter was still standing next to me. I took her outside and found the mother getting into a convertible, still on the cell phone, as was the (male) driver. As the child and I neared the car, I realized the two adults were talking to each other! — ANDY IN TUCSON DEAR ABBY: I informed my 17-year-old daughter that when we are together, it’s of- DEAR ABBY: I work in retail, and this has happened to me. When a customer approaches me while talking on a cell phone and tries to hand me the merchandise, I smile and say, “No, don’t give it to me yet! Finish your call. It must be important.” Then I just stand there. I’m always polite and cordial, and you’d be amazed how quickly they get the “hint.” — LOVES MY JOB DEAR ABBY: An old boss invited me out to lunch; however, within only a few minutes of our being seated, he took a cell phone call. I sat there for 20 minutes trying not to listen in, then finally I got up, walked out and went home. He called me later, upset that I had “abandoned” him. My response: “I thought we were having lunch together, but you were busy.” We’ve had lunch several times since, and he always turns his cell phone off as we take our seats. — READER IN THE SOUTHWEST DEAR ABBY: I have a suggestion. If you notice someone ignoring his or her dinner companion and talking at length on a cell phone, it might be a kindness to invite the ignored person to join you. Not only could you make a friend, the rude person might get the hint that such behavior is unacceptable. — TERI IN LYNN, MASS. —————— Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. —————— What teens need to know about sex, drugs, AIDS, and getting along with peers and parents is in “What Every Teen Should Know.” To order, send a business-size, self-addressed envelope, plus check or money order for $5 (U.S. funds only) to: Dear Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.) Research shows CPR can be learned in just 20 minutes DALLAS (AP) — Too busy to take a four-hour CPR course? New research shows the lifesaving procedure can be effectively taught in a little more than 20 minutes. The finding, presented Sunday at an American Heart Association meeting in Dallas, could broadly expand the number of Americans who can perform CPR. “It’s brilliant,” said Dr. Lance Becker, director of the Emergency Resuscitation Center at the University of Chicago. “I think it’s going to make our ability to train people much, much easier.” The study, led by Dr. Ahamed Idris, professor of emergency medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, found that just five minutes of training on defibrillator use and 20 minutes of instruction in CPR was as effective as the standard fourhour course. Idris said it makes sense that the shorter course was just as memorable: “The more you have to remember, the more likely you are to forget,” he said. The study used American Airlines employees and compared standard training to a short course taught by DVD. Participants were tested by performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation on a computerized mannequin that took data on chest compression and ventilation. Their performance was also reviewed and graded by instructors. The 150 people who took the short course did as well or better than the 118 who received standard training. More importantly, retention rates of knowledge remained similar six months later. Defibrillators are becoming more common in schools, airports and other public places, but the key is having people nearby who are trained to use them. Knoxville Expo 1st Annual Street Rod AUCTION Saturday, December 3rd at 11am Knoxville Expo Center - 5441 Clinton Hwy, Knoxville, TN • 2 Big Events - Free Admission Admission.. Event 1: “Auto Auction” - Pre 1980 Muscle Cars, Street Rods, Imports, Military vehicle, and Org. Antique. Event 2: “Push, Pull or Drag” - Got that unfinished project? Turn it into cash now! Now Taking Consignments. Call or visit our Web Site for more details and directions. Ask about our car corral. Have Prescription List and Income Ready Call 1-877-331-0362 to see if you qualify fensive and rude for her to be on the cell phone. I don’t mind a quick, “I’m having dinner with my mom; I’ll get back to you later.” I give her the same respect, even when her father calls me. In other words, all members of this family extend the same courtesy to each other. — THERESA IN SUGARLAND, TEXAS TN Lic # F735/TAL # 1316 Folks this heavily advertised event will prove to be the biggest, most entertaining auction the Southeast has ever seen! If you are looking for that dream car or next project, don’t miss this one! 865.938.3403 • 865.300.3623 • 800.676.9844 • www.powellauction.com TUESDAY November 22, 2005 Sports Editor: Jamie Combs Daytime Phone: (423) 542-4151 Fax: (423) 542-2004 E-Mail: jcombs@starhq.com Reporting Scores: To report a sports score call (423) 542-1545 after 9 p.m. SundayThursday and Saturday. Scoreboard • 8 Lady Vols • 8 EHS Football • 9 www.starhq.com Sports Spectrum Tim Chambers Game-ending FG lifts Vikings GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Minnesota’s offense isn’t dead. With the steady hand of Brad Johnson, neither is the Vikings’ season. For the second time this season, Paul Edinger kicked a winning field goal against Green Bay, a 27yarder as time expired that gave the Vikings a 20-17 win Monday night and keep their playoff hopes alive. After struggling mightily on offense since quarterback Daunte Culpepper was lost for the season, the Vikings put together a solid showing behind Johnson with 196 yards passing and running back Mewelde Moore, who had 122 yards on 22 carries. The 37-year-old Johnson set up Edinger’s kick with a nine-play, 58yard drive in the final 3 minutes and three seconds after Green Bay tied it at 17. Minnesota coach Mike Tice shuf- fled his offensive line this week hoping to inject some life into the offense that struggled to just 137 yards last week against the Giants. He started 380-plus-pound Toniu Fonoti at left guard and Cory Withrow at center. It worked, for the most part. Johnson was sacked five times, fumbling twice, and Minnesota couldn’t muster much offense in the first half. But just like last week Best prep sports fans found in Carter Co. With the score tied 14-14, Hampton reached down for a little extra in the fourth quarter. The offensive line began moving the orange and black jerseys three yards off the ball. Adam Townsend proved himself as a legitimate all-state running back by slithering through every crease, crack and cranny that he could find en route to 184 yards rushing. Jon Potter was unstoppable, running like a monster truck over wrecked cars, crushing ever tackler that got in his way. The coaching was superb, yet one of the most important factors was overlooked by us media. Thousands of Hampton fans braved temperatures in the low 20’s to cheer on their beloved Bulldogs, yet many fans were present from Cloudland, Happy Valley, Unaka and Elizabethton. I’ve always said that Carter County has the best prep sports fans, and here are my reasons why. When Unaka boys won the Class A state championship in 2004 a near-capacity crowd inside the Murphy Center stood cheering for the Rangers down the stretch, although some were not dressed in maroon and white. Several people from rival schools made the five-hour trip, hoping to see a school from Carter County win a state championship. The same can be said for Cloudland when it finished runner-up in the BlueCross bowl during the 2002 football season. Everyone wanted the Highlanders to bring back that gold football back to Roan Mountain, including all the other local schools. The same can be said about Happy Valley’s 1974 Class A championship or the Cyclones when they advanced to the 4A football semifinals in 1997, 1998 and 1999 during the Jason Witten era. Whether on the gridiron, hardwood or baseball diamond, it’s dog eat dog when all five Carter County teams compete against each other. Community bragging rights is also on the line for players, coaches and fans. But see one go down the road without the other, and watch how Ranger, Highlander, Warrior and Cyclone backers become Bulldog supporters. It would be the same for the other four schools if any of them were playing this deep in the playoffs. Friday night, Hampton is up against what most feel to be the top Class A football team across the state in Trousdale County. Quarterback Dustin Dillehay has already broken the school’s career passing record yet another record needs to be broken Friday night. Every football fan in Carter County needs to be in attendance at J.C. Campbell Stadi- nSee SPECTRUM, 9 — when the Vikings returned a punt, kickoff and interception for touchdowns — they found other ways to score. With Green Bay driving, Dovonte Edwards intercepted Brett Favre’s pass and returned it 51 yards for a touchdown with just more than a minute left in the first half. “It was exciting,” Edwards said. nSee VIKINGS, 8 Jr. Bulldog teams deny Johnson Co. By Marvin Birchfield STAR STAFF mbirchfield@starhq.com Photo by Erica Yoon Hampton’s Dylan Ward looks to dribble around Mikey Freeman of Johnson County. The Jr. Bulldogs experienced another close encounter on their home floor Monday night, but just as they did against Happy Valley last week, they fended off Johnson County by a 24-22 score. Hampton had to battle the entire way in order to pull off the winning bucket with under a minute left. “We’re really struggling on offense right now, and we have become our own worse enemy,” said Hampton coach Leon Tolley. “We played hard and good enough to win on the defensive end, but when you put up just 24 points, then you’re not going to win many ballgames.” The ‘Dogs trailed by one after the first period of action, but responded back to take a twopoint advantage into halftime. Johnson County got a couple of buckets inside from post player Wade Tugman, who led the ‘Horns on the night with 12 points. A rebound and putback inside from Tugman gave the ‘Horns an 8-5 lead midway through the second period. Hampton stormed back in the final minutes with a basket down low by Adam Taylor and free throw coming from Billy Berry. Logan Andrews came up with a buzzer-beating shot off a rebound to give the ‘Dogs a 10-8 lead heading into the half. Hampton captured the first two baskets of the third period when Zach Deyton came up with a loose ball and executed a drive inside. Deyton scored six of the nSee JR. BULLDOGS, 9 Hunter boys, girls quell Central By Tim Chambers STAR STAFF tchambers@starhq.com Central had a Tiger by the tail in the early going, but in the end it was Hunter which prevailed. Holding on down the stretch, the Tigers won the boys game 58-52. Hunter took the girls contest 48-19. The boys game was nip and tuck in the first quarter, with three lead changes in the first six minutes. Central collected four points each from Drew Clark, Derek Mann and Dustin White in the period, but six points apiece from Josh Peterson and Chris Pierce helped Hunter lead 17-13 lead after one. The slugfest was tight-fisted throughout the second period as the score saw three ties, the last one at 25. Two consecutive three-point plays by Chris Pierce enabled Hunter to lead 31-25 at intermission. “I thought our kids came out and played Unaka High School style basketball,” said Hunter coach Chris Collins. “That is the way we want them to play.” Hunter appeared to break the game open in the third, outscoring the Comets 17-8 with Dakota Waters Lady Jr. Rangers post win from staff reports Riding a strong offensive showing from Danielle Jones and two decisive quarters, Unaka’s Lady Jr. Rangers captured a 37-22 homecourt victory over Keenburg on Monday afternoon. Unaka (2-2) trailed the Lady Tigers 4-3 at the end of the first quarter, but outscored Keenburg 12-1 in the second to go up 15-5. Keenburg was still in the game at the end of the third stanza, trailing 24-17, then the Rangers had their way down the stretch. Jones scored a game-high 16 points, and Unaka got a solid 10point performance from Taylor Nidiffer. Tops for the Tigers was Connie Harrell with nine points. Chelsea Moore added eight. Unaka was also victorious in the boys game. tossing down nine in the period. Central got in serious foul trouble, losing point guard White to fouls while two other players had four each. Hunter suffered a severe blow when Chris Pierce went down with a shoulder injury with 52 seconds remaining in the third. At that point, Central started its comeback. nSee HUNTER, 9 TAD girls too much for Sevier By Wes Holtsclaw STAR STAFF wholtsclaw@starhq.com Photo by Danny Davis T.A. Dugger’s Kadey Robinson tries to keep the ball from Sevier’s J.C. Williams. Jasmine Jefferson is well on her way to becoming one of the top girls basketball players in the area. But she’s got to finish middle school first. The T.A. Dugger forward tallied an impressive double-double with 18 points and a whopping 16 rebounds to guide the Lady Cyclones to their second conference win of the season, a 37-30 decision over John Sevier. “Jasmine has really stepped up for us,” said T.A. Dugger coach Angie Barker, whose team is now 5-1 with the 2-0 league mark. “She’s playing hard. She had an ankle injury, but she’s bounced back and become a leader on this team.” nSee TAD, 9 Page 8 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 College Basketball SCOREBOARD New Orleans 2 FOOTBALL Prep Playoff Glance Friday’s Games Division 1 Class 5A Semifinals Riverdale at Oak RIdge Ridgeway at Ravenwood Division 1 Class 4A Semifinals Maryville at Morristown West Melrose at Hillsboro Division 1 Class 3A Semifinals Notre Dame at Livingston Academy Covington at David Lipscomb Division 1 Class 2A Semifinals Tyner at Alcoa Huntingdon at Good Pasture Division 1 Class 1A Semifinals Trousdale Co. at Hampton Union City at Jo Byrns All-MLC Team ALL-MOUNTAIN LAKES CONFERENCE TEAM Coach of the Year—Stacey Carter, Sullivan South Player of the Year—Jake McMillin, Sullivan South Athlete of the Year—Chris Frazier, Sullivan North Offensive Player of the Year—Curt Phillips, Sullivan South Defensive Player of the Year—Justin Dykes, Sullivan South First Team Offense QB—Daniel Booher, Tennessee High, Sr. FB—Josh Puckett, Sullivan North, Sr. FB—Justin Miller, Sullivan Central, Sr. HB—Brian Clarke, Sullivan Central, Sr. HB—Michael Nidiffer, Sullivan East, Sr. TE—Beau Hauldren, Sullivan South, Sr. WR—Ryan Kennedy, Elizabethton, Sr. WR—Chris Colley, Sullivan East, Jr. WR—Shaud Johnson, Tennessee High, Sr. C—Brooks Morelock, Sullivan South, Sr. G—Austin Peterson, Sullivan East, Sr. G—Seth Pearson, Sullivan South, Jr. G—Brandon White, Sullivan North, Jr. T—Ryan Collier, Sullivan South, Jr. T—Russell Fogleman, Tennessee High, Jr. T—Logan Cook, Sullivan North, Jr. K—Nathan Miller, Tennessee High, Sr. Defense E—Chris Eads, Sullivan East, Jr. E—Dustin Street, Sullivan North, Sr. E—Brent Davis, Sullivan South, Sr. T—Ryan Humphrey, Johnson County, Jr. T—Nathan Bryant, Tennessee High, Jr. T—Andrew Murray, Sullivan South, Jr. MLB—Scott Crump, Tennessee High, Sr. MLB—Andy King, Sullivan North, Jr. MLB—Paul Wingfield, Sullivan South, Jr. OLB—Jeff Brinker, Johnson County, Sr. OLB—Josh Tester, Sullivan East, Sr. OLB—Tyson McDaniel, Tennessee High, Sr. CB—Jesse Atwood, Johnson County, Sr. CB—Andy Ollis, Unicoi County, Jr. CB—Preston Smith, Elizabethton, Jr. S—Tyler Stickley, Tennessee High, Jr. S—Jordan Kitzmiller, Sullivan South, Jr. P—Anthony Todt, Sullivan East, Jr. ——— Second Team Offense QB—Ryan Scott, Unicoi County, Jr. FB—Ryan Shaw, Tennessee High, Sr. FB—Daniel Bishop, Unicoi County, Sr. HB—Colin Sandidge, Sullivan South, Sr. HB—James Peterson, Elizabethton, Sr. TE—Drew Rice, Unicoi County, So. TE—Jeff Castle, Sullivan North, Jr. WR—Hunter Compton, Sullivan South, Sr. WR—Jessee Lane, Sullivan Central, Sr. WR—Jake Hicks, Sullivan South, Sr. C—Miles Hite, Tennessee High, Sr. G—Josh Bowman, Sullivan Central, Jr. G—Horace Warden, Johnson County, Sr. T—Scotty Shults, Unicoi County, Jr. T—Logan Hyatt, Elizabethton, Sr. K—Kevin Hudson, Sullivan South, Sr. Defense E—T.R. Smith, Johnson County, Sr. E—Justin Connor, Elizabethton, Sr. T—David Lyons, Elizabethton, Sr. T—Dustin Jarrett, Sullivan North, Sr. MLB—Nick Moore, Sullivan East, Sr. MLB—Will Scheuer, Tennessee High, Jr. MLB—Justin Harmon, Elizabethton, Sr. OLB—Robbie Norton, Sullivan Central, Jr. OLB—Brent Shaver, Elizabethton, Jr. OLB—Charles Peters, Elizabethton, Sr. CB—Drew Hyder, Elizabethton, Jr. CB—Benji Farmer, Sullivan Central, Jr. S—Jeff Baker, Tennessee High, So. S—Tyler Leonard, Johnson County, So. S—Jeremy Nash, Sullivan Central, Sr. P—Josh Hutchins, Elizabethton, Jr. ——— Honorable Mention Elizabethton—J.C. Atkinson, Weston Jeffers, Michael Price, Austin Taylor, Chris Hubbard, Zack Potter, Josh Arnold, Travis Bishop, Thorne Potter, Lucas Deloach, Chase Turley. Johnson County—Luke Palladino, Cody Bryant, Nathan Paisley, Thomas Moore, Chip Gentry, Jesse Jenkins. Sullivan Central—Micheal Crowder, Ryan Lovelace, David Ball, John Gibson, Tanner Looney, Jordan Shipley, Josh Hughes, Morgan Winchell, Zach Brewer, Brett Rodefer. Sullivan East—Josh Reagan, Josh Trinkle, Brent Tester, Matt Miller, Justin Hicks, Brad Boyles, Chris Ward. Sullivan North—Titus Grizzle, Steve Clifton, Jonah Arnold. Sullivan South—George Quarles, Grant Ramey, Andrew Hilton, Chance Morrell. Tennessee High—Alec Turnbull, Anthony Coleman, Carltan Bell, Blake Watson, Jamie Stout. Unicoi County—B.K. Marlowe, Dusty Stephenson, Justin Bennett, Cody Hight, Cody Armstrong. NFL Glance W New England 6 Buffalo 4 Miami 3 N.Y. Jets 2 Indianapolis Jacksonville Tennessee Houston W 10 7 2 1 Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland Baltimore W 7 7 4 3 Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland W 8 6 6 4 Dallas N.Y. Giants Washington Philadelphia W 7 7 5 4 Carolina Tampa Bay Atlanta W 7 7 6 AFC East L T 4 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 South L T 0 0 3 0 8 0 9 0 North L T 3 0 3 0 6 0 7 0 West L T 2 0 4 0 4 0 6 0 NFC East L T 3 0 3 0 5 0 6 0 South L T 3 0 3 0 4 0 Pct .600 .400 .300 .200 PF 227 152 162 121 PA 253 210 196 227 Pct 1.000 .700 .200 .100 PF 305 211 203 141 PA 152 170 262 292 Pct .700 .700 .400 .300 PF 236 247 157 116 PA 161 179 170 184 Pct .800 .600 .600 .400 PF 259 300 244 218 PA 169 202 214 229 Pct .700 .700 .500 .400 PF 222 281 200 210 PA 164 184 201 232 Pct .700 .700 .600 PF 253 206 244 PA 179 183 206 8 0 .200 159 North W L T Pct PF Chicago 7 3 0 .700 169 Minnesota 5 5 0 .500 154 Detroit 4 6 0 .400 167 Green Bay 2 8 0 .200 201 West W L T Pct PF Seattle 8 2 0 .800 272 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 252 Arizona 3 7 0 .300 205 San Francisco2 8 0 .200 151 ——— Monday’s Game Minnesota 17, Green Bay 14 Thursday’s Games Atlanta at Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Denver at Dallas, 4:15 p.m. Sunday’s Games St. Louis at Houston, 1 p.m. Carolina at Buffalo, 1 p.m. San Diego at Washington, 1 p.m. San Francisco at Tennessee, 1 p.m. Chicago at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. New England at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Miami at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Jacksonville at Arizona, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. Green Bay at Philadelphia, 4:15 p.m. New Orleans at N.Y. Jets, 8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 28 Pittsburgh at Indianapolis, 9 p.m. 266 Top 25 Capsules PA 110 228 193 184 MEN Texas ....................................................76 West Virginia ......................................75 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — LaMarcus Aldridge made a putback with 3.6 seconds left and blocked a last-second shot to lift Texas over No. 13 West Virginia in the semifinals of the Guardians Classic. Wake Forest ........................................79 UNC-Asheville ....................................63 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Justin Gray paced a balanced offense with 16 points, Trent Strickland scored 14 and Wake Forest finally got a breather with a victory over pesky UNC-Asheville. Michigan State ....................................89 Chaminade ..........................................67 LAHAINA, Hawaii —Maurice Ager scored 23 points to lead the Spartans over Chaminade on in the opening round of the EA Sports Maui Invitational. Gonzaga .............................................. 88 Maryland ............................................76 LAHAINA, Hawaii — Gonzaga’s “Big Three” took care of the offense and the eighth-ranked Bulldogs’ zone took care of the defense in their victory over Maryland in the opening round of the EA Sports Maui Invitational. Indiana ..............................................100 Florida A&M ........................................63 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Marshall Strickland scored 18 of his 20 points in the first half, and Roderick Wilmont added 17 to help Indiana rout Florida A&M. PA 187 300 268 290 BASKETBALL Prep Glance Land Air Transport Inc. Tip-Off Basketball Classic At Hal Henard Gym, Greeenville First Round Monday’s Games Volunteer 59, Cloudland 40 Knox Powell 79, West Greene 32 Greeneville 64, Madison County 32 Clinton 73, South Greene 67 Today’s Games 4 p.m. — Sullivan Central vs. Murray County, Ga. 5:30 p.m. — Bradley Central vs. Gatlinburg-Pittman 7 p.m. — Science Hill vs. Chattanooga Arts & Sciences 8:30 p.m. — Chuckey-Doak vs. Knox Bearden ——— Hardee’s Classic At David Crockett High School Today’s Games First Round 4 p.m. — University High vs. Cherokee 5:30 p.m. — Hampton vs. Unicoi County 7 p.m. — Happy Valley vs. David Crockett 8:30 p.m. — Elizabethton vs. Sullivan East Prep Boxscore Volunteer, 59-40 Land Air Classic CLOUDLAND (40) Stevens 7, J.Buck 4, Hughes 0, L.Buck 3, Stocton 0, Johnson 3, Sparks 11, Winchester 4. VOLUNTEER (59) Browder 5, Cradic 13, Mauk 2, Mann 10, Moore 9, Seal 3, Eidson 17. Cloudland 14 13 5 8 — 40 Volunteer 11 15 13 20 — 59 3-point go als — Cloudland 5 (Sparks 3, L.Buck, Stevens), Volunteer 6 (Eidson 3, Cradic 2, Browder). Middle School Boxes Boys Hampton, 24-22 JOHNSON COUNTY (22) Tugman 12, Freeman 4, Cullop 2, Payne 2, Tester 2. HAMPTON (24) Andrews 9, Ward 6, Deyton 6, Taylor 2, Berry 1. Johnson County 4 4 6 8 — 22 Hampton 3 7 8 6 — 24 Girls Hampton, 39-36 JOHNSON COUNTY (36) Miller 17, Church 12, Boaum 3, Sexton 2, Hill 2. HAMPTON (39) Lewis 14, Potter 13, Lambert 6, Bradley 2, Townsend 2, Gobble 2. 3-point goals—Hampton 1 (Lewis) Unaka, 37-22 KEENBURG (22) Harrell 9, B.Moore 2, Carr 2, Tilson 1, C.Moore 8. UNAKA (37) Jones 16, Nidiffer 10, Johnson 4, Wilson 3, Oliver 3. Keenburg 4 1 12 4 — 22 Unaka 3 12 9 13 — 37 3-point goals—Unaka 1 (Oliver). T.A. Dugger, 37-30 JOHN SEVIER (30) McCaslin 2, McInturff 6, Lilley 10, Bailiff 7, Blair 5 T.A. DUGGER (37) Kauffeld 2, Robinson 4, Jefferson 18, Fritz 9, Bowling 5 John Sevier 6 7 9 8 — 30 TAD 6 10 10 11 — 37 3-point goals: Sevier (Lilley, Bailiff). John Sevier, 31-23 Seventh Grade JOHN SEVIER (31) Edwards 14, Frazier 9, Clark 6, Collette 2 T.A. DUGGER (23) Gilmore 6, Simmons 5, Quintero 4, Reed 4, Hyatt 2, Kiser 2 John Sevier 6 13 11 1 — 31 TAD 7 5 4 7 — 23 AP Top 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ men’s college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 20, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Duke (65) 3-0 1,793 1 2. Texas (6) 2-0 1,692 2 3. Connecticut 1-0 1,647 3 4. Villanova (1) 1-0 1,474 5 5. Oklahoma 1-0 1,454 6 6. Louisville 1-0 1,359 7 7. Kentucky 2-0 1,329 8 8. Gonzaga 1-0 1,262 9 9. Arizona 0-0 1,255 10 10. Boston College 2-0 1,164 11 11. Memphis 2-0 1,105 12 12. Michigan St. 0-1 915 4 13. West Virginia 2-0 775 14 14. Florida 4-0 754 — 15. Illinois 2-0 642 17 16. UCLA 3-0 612 18 17. Syracuse 3-1 545 16 18. Iowa 2-0 511 20 19. Alabama 2-1 400 15 20. Indiana 1-0 310 23 21. George Washington 0-0 305 21 22. Nevada 1-0 301 22 23. Maryland 1-0 289 24 24. Wake Forest 3-1 277 19 25. Washington 4-0 228 — Others receiving votes: Iowa St. 227, Stanford 189, N.C. State 107, Hawaii 96, Georgetown 60, Kansas 59, LSU 48, Ohio St. 45, Wisconsin 30, Michigan 26, N. Iowa 26, Old Dominion 19, North Carolina 13, Oklahoma St. 12, Ohio 11, Miami 9, Temple 6, Arkansas 4, Bucknell 4, Charlotte 2, Texas Tech 2, Harvard 1, Houston 1, Mississippi St. 1, New Mexico 1, UC Irvine 1, Utah St. 1, Vanderbilt 1. Women’s Top 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ women’s college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 20, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and preseason ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Duke (23) 2-0 1,101 1 2. Tennessee (18) 1-0 1,082 2 3. LSU (3) 1-0 1,023 3 4. Ohio St. 0-0 956 4 5. Baylor (1) 3-0 937 6 6. Rutgers 0-0 900 5 7. North Carolina 1-0 860 7 8. Connecticut 4-0 837 9 9. Michigan St. 2-0 746 10 10. Maryland 2-0 653 14 11. Georgia 1-1 630 8 12. Minnesota 2-0 586 16 13. Notre Dame 2-0 516 15 14. Texas Tech 1-1 509 13 15. Stanford 1-1 500 11 16. Arizona St. 3-0 398 20 17. DePaul 2-0 386 18 18. Texas 0-1 370 12 19. Purdue 1-0 323 19 20. Vanderbilt 2-1 256 17 21. Temple 3-0 250 21 22. Oklahoma 3-1 193 25 23. Utah 1-0 190 22 24. Southern Cal 2-0 151 24 25. New Mexico 3-1 95 — Others receiving votes: UCLA 59, N.C. State 34, Louisville 27, Boston College 13, Virginia Tech 10, Wake Forest 7, Arizona 6, Virginia 6, TCU 4, Florida St. 3, Saint Joseph’s 3, W. Kentucky 2, Bowling Green 1, Kansas 1, Mississippi 1. College Results MEN EAST Drexel 72, Rider 60 Mount St. Mary’s, Md. 62, Binghamton 53 Niagara 101, St. Bonaventure 88 Penn 82, Siena 77 Providence 87, Vermont 77 Sacred Heart 63, Albany, N.Y. 61 Saint Joseph’s 72, Fairfield 41 SOUTH Appalachian St. 51, Va. Commonwealth 47 Army 53, VMI 49 Clemson 102, Coppin St. 71 Coll. of Charleston 97, Lees-McRae 47 Florida St. 85, Alcorn St. 67 Georgetown 73, James Madison 66 Georgia Tech 81, Elon 69 High Point 110, Southeastern, Fla. 57 Jacksonville St. 82, Coastal Carolina 71 LSU 104, Nicholls St. 57 Liberty 88, Cincinnati Christian 54 McNeese St. 98, Louisiana College 46 Middle Tennessee 60, Utah St. 59 Mississippi St. 68, Arkansas St. 63 Portland St. 79, Bethune-Cookman 62 Tennessee St. 72, Fisk 63 Virginia Tech 71, Marshall 54 Wake Forest 79, N.C.-Asheville 63 Wofford 81, Toccoa Falls 15 MIDWEST Cent. Michigan 67, Wis.-Green Bay 62 IPFW 65, SE Missouri 64 Indiana 100, Florida A&M 63 Loyola of Chicago 99, Evansville 86 Miami (Ohio) 58, Dayton 42 Northwestern 69, Florida Atlantic 59 Wis.-Milwaukee 93, Upper Iowa 64 SOUTHWEST Sam Houston St. 76, Huston-Tillotson 46 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 116, Texas A&M International 58 UTEP 97, Texas-Permian Basin 54 FAR WEST New Mexico St. 83, W. New Mexico 51 Pacific 82, Savannah St. 37 TOURNAMENT EA Sports Maui Invitational First Round Arizona 61, Kansas 49 Gonzaga 88, Maryland 76 Michigan St. 89, Chaminade 67 Guardians Classic Semifinals Texas 76, West Virginia 75 Paradise Jam Championship Wisconsin 84, Old Dominion 81 Third Place Georgia 76, E. Kentucky 68 Fifth Place Fordham 72, Norfolk St. 53 South Padre Island Invitational First Round Delaware St. 65, Kent St. 56 ——— WOMEN EAST Boston U. 73, Northeastern 46 Providence 74, Yale 53 Stony Brook 87, Quinnipiac 61 SOUTH Alabama 77, Santa Clara 71 Cal Poly 74, Mercer 66 Charleston Southern 68, Wofford 61 George Mason 71, Howard 49 McNeese St. 93, Belhaven 68 Mississippi 70, Clemson 66 Morehead St. 66, Coll. of Charleston 50 North Carolina 87, Liberty 36 Samford 54, Birmingham-Southern 49 South Alabama 84, Southern Miss. 72 Tennessee 92, Chattanooga 50 MIDWEST Bowling Green 77, St. Francis, Pa. 55 Bradley 79, Valparaiso 71, 2OT Chicago St. 79, Dayton 65 Nebraska 84, Creighton 50 Ohio St. 85, E. Kentucky 38 Weber St. 70, Saint Louis 60 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 99, Memphis 53 Georgia 80, TCU 51 Oral Roberts 96, Jackson St. 70 Prairie View 67, Texas-Pan American 66 Rice 73, Texas Tech 70 Stephen F.Austin 82, Alcorn St. 58 Texas 83, Sam Houston St. 33 Texas A&M 77, St. Peter’s 36 FAR WEST Boise St. 80, Sacramento St. 52 S. Utah 64, Western St., Colo. 58 Wyoming 66, Colorado 50 EXHIBITION Northwestern St. 84, Texas A&M Commerce 74 College Boxscore Women Tennessee, 92-50 CHATTANOOGA (1-2) Brown 3-15 4-6 11, Roberson 4-9 2-2 10, Mattison 2-7 2-2 6, Hall 1-2 0-0 2, Gordon 0-0 0-0 0, Hand 0-3 0-0 0, Mohr 0-0 0-0 0, Spann 0-0 0-1 0, Anderson 5-8 0-0 10, McCoy 0-0 0-0 0, Huff 1-1 2-2 4, Moore 211 0-0 4, Ogan 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 19-59 1013 50. TENNESSEE (2-0) Zolman 6-12 4-4 20, Fluker 3-6 0-0 6, Spencer 2-8 2-2 6, Redding 3-7 0-0 7, Anosike 4-4 0-0 8, Dosty 3-5 2-3 8, Hornbuckle 1-5 2-2 4, Parker 4-8 6-7 14, Wiley-Gatewood 2-5 5-7 9, Fuller 1-1 2-2 4, Moss 2-4 0-0 6. Totals 31-65 23-27 92. Halftime—Tennessee 46-23. 3-Point Goals—Chattanooga 2-16 (Ogan 1-2, Brown 1-6, Mattison 0-1, Hall 0-1, Hand 0-1, Anderson 0-1, Moore 0-4), Tennessee 7-24 (Zolman 4-9, Moss 2-4, Redding 1-3, Spencer 0-2, Hornbuckle 0-3, Wiley-Gatewood 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Chattanooga 30 (Anderson 6), Tennessee 50 (Dosty 11). Assists— Chattanooga 14 (Hall, Mattison 4), Tennessee 16 (Moss, Parker 3). Total Fouls— Chattanooga 21, Tennessee 13. A— 11,398. NBA Glance EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Philadelphia 7 5 .583 New Jersey 5 5 .500 Boston 4 5 .444 New York 3 7 .300 Toronto 1 9 .100 Southeast Division W L Pct Miami 6 4 .600 Washington 5 4 .556 Orlando 3 6 .333 Charlotte 3 8 .273 Atlanta 0 9 .000 Central Division W L Pct Detroit 8 1 .889 Cleveland 8 2 .800 Indiana 6 3 .667 Milwaukee 5 4 .556 Chicago 4 5 .444 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 9 2 .850 Dallas 7 2 .778 Memphis 7 4 .636 New Orleans 4 6 .400 Houston 3 7 .300 Northwest Division W L Pct Minnesota 5 4 .556 Denver 6 5 .545 Seattle 5 5 .500 Portland 3 5 .375 Utah 5 7 .485 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Clippers 8 2 .800 Golden State 7 5 .583 Phoenix 4 5 .444 L.A. Lakers 4 6 .400 Sacramento 4 7 .375 ——— Monday’s Games Philadelphia 103, New Orleans 91 Utah 100, Milwaukee 80 San Antonio 96, Sacramento 93 Golden State 100, New Jersey 97 Today’s Games Denver at Washington, 7 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Portland at Memphis, 8 p.m. Houston at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Toronto at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Utah at Seattle, 10 p.m. GB — 1.0 1.5 3.0 5.0 GB — 0.5 2.5 3.5 5.5 GB — 0.5 2.0 3.0 4.0 GB — 1.0 2.0 4.5 5.5 GB — — 0.5 1.5 1.5 GB — 2.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 NBA Game Caps 76ers ..................................................103 Hornets ................................................91 PHILADELPHIA — Playing with flulike symptoms, Allen Iverson scored all 24 of his points in the first half and then happily sat out the fourth quarter of the 76ers’ victory over New Orleans. Jazz ....................................................100 Bucks .................................................. 80 SALT LAKE CITY — Deron Williams had 10 points and 10 assists for his second career double-double, helping Utah snap a five-game losing streak with a win over Milwaukee. Spurs....................................................96 Kings ....................................................93 SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Tony Parker scored 23 points for the Spurs, while Tim Duncan totaled 22 points and 19 rebounds. Warriors ............................................100 Nets ......................................................97 OAKLAND, Calif. — Jesse Richardson gunned in 25 points for Golden State. HOCKEY NHL Glance Monday’s Games Nashville at Detroit, ppd., player seizure Edmonton 2, San Jose 2, SO Calgary 3, Colorado 2, SO Today’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Ottawa at Carolina, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Anaheim at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Chicago at Vancouver, 10 p.m. NHL Game Caps Oilers......................................................2 Sharks ....................................................1 EDMONTON, Alberta — Ryan Smyth and Ales Hemsky scored shootout goals Monday night, lifting the Edmonton Oilers. Flames ..................................................3 Avalanche ............................................2 DENVER — Philippe Sauve stopped all three shots in a shootout, helping Calgary beat the team that traded him away last summer. SPORTSCAST Television GOLF 7 p.m. — (TNT) PGA Grand Slam of Golf COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. — (ESPN) EA Sports Maui Invitational semifinal 9 p.m. — (ESPN) EA Sports Maui Invitational semifinal 10 p.m. — (ESPN2) Guardians Classic final NBA 8 p.m. — (FoxSportsNet) — Portland at Memphis NHL 7 p.m. — (OLN) Tampa Bay at Philadephia 7:30 p.m. — (TSO) Atlanta at Montreal --- Radio AUTO RACING 7 p.m. — (WJCW 910-AM) NASCAR Live COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — (WJCW 910-AM) ETSU at Radford Lady Vols breeze past Mocs, 92-50 KNOXVILLE (AP) — Chattanooga coach Wes Moore got a sneak peek at the Tennessee Lady Vols this summer. Nothing surprised him on Monday. Shanna Zolman scored 20 points and Candace Parker added 14 points and nine rebounds in second-ranked Tennessee’s 92-50 victory over Chattanooga. “It’s one of Pat’s best teams ever,” Moore said. “You take a Final Four team and add Candace Parker.” The win was Tennessee’s 14th straight over the Lady Mocs (1-2) from its sister school in the university system about 100 miles south. The Lady Vols (2-0), who beat Stetson 83-33 in their opener Sunday night, were playing in back-to-back games to prepare for the three-day Paradise Jam in St. Thomas later this week. They face No. 9 Michigan State on Thursday. Parker, who won a dunk contest for McDonald’s high school All-Americans in 2004, sat out last season to recover from two knee surgeries. She had chances to dunk several times in the opener but didn’t get as close Monday night. Because Chattanooga would not have time to review tape from the Stetson game, Tennessee coach Pat Summitt invited Moore to watch some summer workouts. He saw Parker dunk in one drill. “I’ve been worried about that for six months,” he said. The teams were even in the opening minutes until the Lady Vols broke a tie and went ahead on a 10-0 run that included two 3-pointers by Zolman. Tennessee pushed its lead to 12 and then put the game away with a 17-2 run to go up 42-17 with three minutes left before halftime. The Lady Vols opened the second half with a 14-2 run to stretch the lead to 35. Chattanooga was led by Katasha Brown 11 points, and Alex Anderson and Tiffani Roberson each had 10 points. Sybil Dosty added 11 rebounds for the Lady Vols. Zolman shot 4-of-9 from beyond the arc. The Lady Vols had the rebounding edge, 50-30. Summitt used all 11 players in various combinations, and everyone scored at least four points apiece. “After our game Sunday I just said we can’t play 11 people unless 11 people are going to play a certain way and bring a lot of energy,” Summitt said. “I was pleased with the overall intensity. I thought the energy was good one through 11.” College Volleyball Earhart gains spot on All-Region XII team from staff reports Milligan College Lady Buffs volleyball junior middle blocker Tara Earhart was named to the NAIA All-Region XII second team for the 2005 season. She led the Lady Buffs with 3.1 kills per game as Milligan finished the 2005 with an 18-12 record after a first round defeat in the Region XII tournament. Earhart, a co-caption on the Lady Buffs’ team, was also named to the 2005 All-AAC first team and the All-AAC Academic team. This marks the second straight season that she has been named to the AllRegion XII, All-AAC and AllAAC Academic teams. Prep Basketball Highlanders lose to Falcons in Land Air from staff reports GREENEVILLE — With Cory Eidson coming off the bench to hit for 17 points, Volunteer handed Cloudland a 5940 loss on Monday in the opening round of the Land Air Transport Inc. Tip-Off Basketball Classic at Hal Henard Gym. The Highlanders played very good basketball in the first two quarters, and went to halftime holding a 27-26 lead. However, the Falcons took control by outscoring Cloudland 13-5 in the third period. Keith Cradic and Jared Mann both reached double digits for Volunteer, scoring 13 and 10 respectively, while Justin Moore chipped in nine. Eidson converted three of six Falcon three-pointers, with Cradic accounting for two. Leading the way for Cloudland was big man Luke Sparks, who tallied 11 points and had three of his team’s five treys. Adam Stevens added seven. Volunteer advances to play on Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. Cloudland takes part in a losers bracket game on Friday at 10 a.m. Vikings nContinued from 7 “I had a dream actually last night that I would do something big today and it came true. Mike Tice said you need to dream, dream about making plays and that’s what I did last night and it happened for me tonight.” The play was reviewed after Edwards and intended receiver Andrae Thurman crashed to the ground at the same time. But officials ruled Edwards was not down by contact before he got up and scored. Favre atoned for the mistake seconds later, hitting Donald Driver for a 53-yard touchdown pass after the receiver beat defensive back Antoine Winfield and outran safety Darren Sharper — who spent his first eight years in Green Bay but was not resigned. Green Bay led 14-7 at the half. Green Bay couldn’t capitalize on Johnson’s fumble early in the third quarter and was forced to punt, pinning the Vikings at their own 12. But Minnesota put together its best drive of the game, aided by two defensive penalties inside the Green Bay 10-yard line. The second, a pass interference call in the end zone, put the ball at the 1-yard line. Ciatrick Fason then plunged into the end zone on his second attempt — Minnesota’s first offensive touchdown in nine quarters. Favre finished the game 20-for-33 for 227 yards and two touchdowns. The win keeps the Vikings (5-5) afloat in its hunt for the postseason, two games behind NFC North leader Chicago (7-3). STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 - Page 9 Eagles’ McNabb, Sheppard likely done for season PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Now Donovan McNabb is gone from the Philadelphia Eagles, too. The Eagles’ star quarterback will have surgery for a sports hernia and is expected to miss the rest of the season, another crushing blow for a team that had still hoped to return to the Super Bowl without suspended receiver Terrell Owens. All-Pro cornerback Lito Sheppard also appears out for the season with a severely sprained ankle that will require surgery. The struggling Eagles suspended Owens for four games on Nov. 7, and told him not to return to the team. Monday’s announcements came one day after the reigning NFC champions fell to 4-6 with their fourth straight loss. McNabb didn’t play in Sunday’s 27-17 loss to the New York Giants after he re-injured his groin while trying to tackle Cowboys safety Roy Williams following an interception last Monday night. Williams returned it 46 yards for a touchdown with 2:43 left to lead Dallas to a 21-20 comeback victory over the Eagles. “Once the groin became an issue, rest couldn’t help it out,” Eagles coach Andy Reid said. “There’s too much discomfort where Donovan can’t run.” Sheppard was injured in the third quarter against the Giants when he got tangled up with wide receiver Plaxico Burress on an incomplete pass. He was taken off the field in a cart and the Eagles originally announced the ankle was broken. An All-Pro last year, Sheppard had two interceptions and one sack this season. “There’s quite a separation between the ligaments,” Reid said. Neither McNabb nor Sheppard was placed on injured reserve yet, meaning each could return should the Eagles somehow make the playoffs. McNabb had played through several injuries and hoped to delay surgery for the sports hernia until after the season. Last Thursday, Dr. William Meyers recommended that McNabb have surgery now. He got the same advice from another doctor over the weekend. Reid said McNabb will have surgery after Thanksgiving, and recovery time is eight to 10 weeks. Mike McMahon started for McNabb against the Giants, and completed 18 of 39 passes for 298 yards, one touchdown and one interception. He also ran for a score and helped the offense move the ball against a tough Giants defense that hadn’t allowed a TD for 13 quarters. McNabb clearly wasn’t the same quarterback who led the Eagles to the NFC championship game the last four years and went to five straight Pro Bowls. He threw a costly interception in the fourth quarter in each of his last three games, and has nine picks this season. Hunter Ryan Kennedy Preston Smith Logan Hyatt James Peterson Justin Connor David Lyons Justin Harmon Brent Shaver Kennedy, Smith first-team choices Nine other Cyclones voted to second team from staff reports With senior Ryan Kennedy and junior Preston Smith leading the way, Elizabethton had 11 players voted to this year’s All-Mountain Lakes Conference football team. Kennedy, at wide receiver, and Smith, cornerback, garnered first-team honors while senior Logan Hyatt, offensive tackle; senior James Peterson, halfback; senior Justin Connor, defensive end; senior David Lyons, defensive tackle; senior Justin Harmon, Charles Peters Drew Hyder Josh Hutchins middle linebacker; junior Brent Shaver, outside linebacker; senior Charles Peters, outside linebacker; junior Drew Hyder, cornerback; and junior Josh Hutchins, punter; each earned a spot on the second team. Honorable mentions for the Cyclones were J.C. Atkinson, Weston Jeffers, Michael Price, Austin Taylor, Chris Hubbard, Zack Potter, Josh Arnold, Travis Bishop, Thorne Potter, Lucas Deloach and Chase Turley. For a complete all-conference list, see Page 8. the boys from H-Town might be able to take the sting out of another group of Yellow Jackets. Yankee Doodle Fight Song changed. Here is a song that all Vol fans need to learn by the 2006 football season, sung to the tune of Yankee Doodle: Phillip Fuller hit the trail, recruiting on a pony Searching for a quarterback, a Peyton, Tee or Tony. Phillip Fuller look real hard, Phillip, we need a dandy Because next year you could be out if you go lose to Vandy. Prediction As a former Bulldog, some- thing tells me that this team has what it takes to reach the BlueCross Bowl. Expect the Bulldogs to run hog wild and make Coach Campbell happier than a pig in slop. Hampton 21, Trousdale County 14 (Tim Chambers can be contacted at tchambers@starhq.com) Spectrum nContinued from 7 nContinued from 7 Mann connected on two treys while Landon South added five points that cut a 15-point Hunter lead down to six with 1:01 remaining. But the Comets missed two easy inside buckets while Hunter cashed in on a couple of free throws to hold off the Comets’ comeback bid. Chris Pierce led the Tigers offense with 16 while Waters added 15 and Peterson 13. Mann led all scorers with 20, with Landon South and Drew Clark chalking up 11 and nine points, respectively. “The press started to bother them and we basically wore them down,” added Collins. “I just hated that Chris got hurt. Some of our other players are going to have to step up with him out.” Said Central coach Lamont Barnett: “When we had to set our starters who got in foul trouble, it hurt us and they opened up the lead. Without our point guard on the floor, we didn’t do a good job with the press, and we’re not deep on our bench.” Girls Hunter..................................................................................48 Central ................................................................................19 Hunter girls had a much easier time with the Lady Comets, racing to a 25-2 lead after one. Taylor Byars totaled eight points in the quarter while the Comets had trouble scoring on the pesky Tiger defense. After his Hunter team led 33-9 at halftime, coach Chris Collins emptied the bench during the second half, with all but one player scoring. Byars led the way with 12 while Chesnie Cox tossed in 11. Jamie Andrews and Kat McInturff helped the cause with six each. Samantha Berry scored 11 for the Comets, all during the second half. TAD nContinued from 7 “We have a lot of kids that are leaders on this team, that lead day in and day out,” she said. “The effort we got from all of our starters tonight was unbelievable.” Each of the Lady Cyclones’ five starters — Jefferson, Kamra Fritz, Chelsea Bowling, Kadey Robinson and Tara Kauffeld — all made big plays to contribute to the win. Especially on the defensive side of the ball. “As a team, we played great,” said the coach. “The girls underneath stepped up and I can’t say enough about the defense.” Jefferson had all six of the Lady Cyclones’ points in the first quarter. In the second stanza, Fritz and Bowling each added a bucket to the T.A. Dugger cause, as their squad took a three-point lead into the locker room at the half. In the second half, all five of the starters contributed points to stretch a four-point lead. T.A. Dugger led by as much as nine in the fourth quarter, thanks to some key free throws from Fritz, making it tough for Sevier to stage a comeback. Aside from Jefferson’s efforts, Fritz added nine points, five assists and four steals to the Lady Cyclone cause. All-Mountain Lakes Conference Team Bowling had five points, six rebounds and four assists, while Robinson had four points and a solid 11 boards and Kauffeld added two points. Overall, Barker is pleased with the way the team has begun improving this year. “This team’s pulling together,” Barker added. “One thing we need to improve on is that we need to get some of our shots to fall under the basket.” Seventh Grade John Sevier ..........................31 T.A. Dugger ..........................23 The Lady Cyclones led by one going into the second quarter. Things began to turn around after that. Sevier outscored TAD 24-9 in the second and third quarters, doing just enough to hold onto a win in the end. Sherri Edwards dropped 14 points for Sevier, while Lesley Frazier tallied nine and Haley Clark contributed six. Leading the way offensively for the Lady Cyclones were Dana Gilmore and Kelsey Simmons who had six and five points, respectively. Gilmore also pulled down eight boards, while Simmons had a solid 10 rebounds. Also defensively, Erin Kiser had eight steals for the TAD ladies. um, the day after Thanksgiving. Regardless in you’re a Ranger, Warrior, Highlander or Cyclone, the ‘Dogs are representing us all so all of us should show our appreciation. Hampton will likely be the underdog, but if six or seven thousand fans show up in support of the Big Blue, then Jr. Bulldogs nContinued from 7 eight third-quarter points for Hampton, as it held an 18-14 lead at the end of the period. “We played pretty hard, but we gave up a couple of easy baskets during the second half, which hurt us,” said Johnson County coach Chris Mullins. “We struggling offensively, but these kids are still trying to learn the system, which is the same as the high school uses. I think by Christmas they’ll start catching on pretty good and we’ll start becoming more productive.” Johnson County came back to score the first six points of the fourth period to take a 2018 advantage with 3:20 left. Two free throws by Sam Tester followed by a couple of field goals from Tugman put the ‘Horns back on top briefly. The ‘Horns held a twopoint lead with just over a minute left, but a baseline jumper from Dylan Ward tied the contest at 22. Just like at the end of the first half, Andrews came up with another big shot with 40 seconds left, giving Hampton the final go-ahead points. “They shot like we did, and I told the guys there toward the end it was going to come down to who ever made the big play at the end,” said Tolley. “Logan Andrews finally got the big bucket we needed at the end, but we’re still needing someone to step up on this team and take charge.” Johnson County had a chance to tie the contest in the final 13 seconds, but two straight turnovers eliminated its chances. Hampton moves to 3-2, 3-0 on the season, while Johnson Co. falls to 2-3, 0-2. Girls Hampton ........................39 Johnson County ..........36 It was a nip-and-tuck game the entire way, but when it came down to the crunch time it was the Jr. Lady Bulldogs slipping past Photo by Erica Yoon Hampton’s Chelsey Weddle eyes the bucket as she’s guarded by a pair of Lady Jr. Longhorns, including Amber Sexton (11). Johnson County. Hampton (3-2) trailed by one-point after the first period, as Karlie Miller posted six first-quarter points to give the Lady ‘Horns (3-1) an 8-7 lead. “We couldn’t stop the big girls during the first half, and then we started to double down and do a better job on them in the second half,” said Hampton coach Ronnie Street. “We finally decided we wanted to play toward the end, and we had to use our quickness and speed since we don’t have that much size.” The lead swapped hands after two three-point goals coming from Maci Lewis, but the ‘Dogs were not able to hold on going into the half, after Johnson Co. went on a 72 run in the final two minutes. Hampton came out to take the early lead in the third period after shots fell from Christina Potter and Emilee Townsend, as it held the advantage until the final minute. Angie Church went three of four from the line down the stretch, and a fast-break basket by Mandy Hill gave the lead back to the ‘Horns. The ‘Dogs stepped up their full-court defense during the final period, which caused the ‘Horns to commit several turnovers. “Their press killed us, and we did all right with it up until that fourth quarter,” said Johnson County coach Steve Nave. “We turned the ball over 10 times during the final period, and when we turned it over late, then Hampton capitalized.” A 15-foot jumper from Lewis provided Hampton the lead with 2:25 left to play. Johnson County was able to stay within one possession during the final minutes, but two key free throws from Potter helped seal the victory. “The defensive pressure made a difference in the end, and we really needed this win coming into this game tonight,” said Street. “It also helped us when Christina Potter hit them free throws late in the game.” MILITARY VETERAN? Need more Education? Free Services if you qualify •College •University •Tech Center Call 865-974-4466 or toll free 1-877-656-8387 Veterans’ Pre-College Program Page 10 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 Annie Sally Forth Dilbert Dick Tracey Zits Garfield Blondie Hi and Lois Peanuts Snuffy Smith On The Lighter Side Crossword Fun By: Eugene Sheffer SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Focus your time, attention and energy today on situations that could affect your prestige, career or finances. If you’re going to score at this time, it is likely to be in one of these areas. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Instead of putting limitations on your thinking today, try to envision things in their broadest perspective. Uncluttered horizons enhance your ability to see far ahead. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) It would be wise today to conduct important business or career matters with as little fanfare as possible. Also, unless someone is directly involved, don’t make this person aware of your affairs. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If a good deal comes to your attention today, take the time to alert good friends or associates who have been there for you in the past when you needed them to share in what they discovered. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A major objective can be realized within the next few weeks, but you might need some strong allies to open a couple of doors for you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Dame Fortune may have something really big in mind for you when she puts you in touch with someone who thinks progressively. Pay attention to what others are talking about today. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You could do very well today with either the financial exchange or a flea market. You’re particularly sharp at buying, selling, bargaining or being the middleperson in getting a good deal. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Something mutually constructive can result today from some kind of agreement you’re apt to be negotiating at this time. Conditions that are acceptable to both parties can be achieved. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Better returns than you’re presently receiving can be generated today if you put your mind to it. Study the matter with an eye toward reform. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don’t be bashful about protecting your self-interests in an important involvement today. Pride and humility have their place, but there are times when they can prove to be counterproductive. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) When it comes to your commercial involvements today, it’s wise to get a number of price quotes first instead of jumping at the first offer. It could place you in a stronger bargaining position. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Conditions in general are likely to be vastly improved for you today. A number of opportunities may begin to present themselves in the very areas that looked rather dismal yesterday. What’s On Tonight Donald Duck For Tuesday November 22, 2005 Mickey Mouse A Look at the Stars Henry Cryptoquip STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 - Page 11 After Katrina retailers adjust store formats WAVELAND, Miss. (AP) — No other Wal-Mart in the country looks like the one that reopened here more than two months after Hurricane Katrina nearly wiped the town off the map. Pallets of space heaters, box fans, mops and buckets are stacked on the floor. Plywood walls hide workers still repairing what used to be the food department. Wal-Mart is one of a handful of retailers along the Gulf Coast that have tailored their reopened stores to meet the basic needs of their hurricane-weary customers, stocking shelves with large quantities of hardware, appliances, no-frills clothes, dry food and other post-disaster products. “It’s a real uplifting thing,” Jim Freeman, 60, said as he and his wife, Nina, filled a shopping cart with food. “You take a lot of things for granted until it’s all gone.” Best Buy on Friday opened a first-of-its-kind store in Gulfport, converting a former grocery store into a warehouse-style store with roughly twice as much floor space for appliances as a normal store. The rest of the space is still for computers, televisions and other electronics, but compact discs and DVDs won’t be sold there right away. A Home Depot in eastern New Orleans partially reopened Thursday, 81 days after the hurricane filled it with six feet of water. The store sells only building materials and appliances and uses only half of the original store’s space. Almost all of Waveland’s stores are vacant and littered with debris, but the WalMart’s parking lot was nearly full Saturday when the store opened for the first time since the hurricane flooded it with 14 feet of water. Waveland’s “Wal-Mart Express” is roughly one-third of the size of the original 205,800-square-foot “Supercenter.” Store manager Ray Cox said his inventory will change as residents go from cleaning up their homes to rebuilding them. “It’s quick, it’s easy and we can change on the fly,” he said. Other retailers are sticking to their standard format: When Target reopens a hurricane-damaged store in Beaumont, Texas, it will look like any other store in the chain, said company spokeswoman Lena Michaud. “What our guests have told us is that they like being able to come into a place that is back to normal and reminds them of life before the hurricane,” she said. Richard Hastings, a retail analyst for Bernard Sands in New York, said Wal-Mart and other retailers have nothing to lose by opening these experimental stores in hurricane-affected areas. “They’re helping the community, no question about it, and they’re going to recapture the market down there,” he said. Community Calendar TUESDAY, NOV. 22 • The Carter County Democratic Women’s Club will meet at the Great Wall Restaurant at 5:30 p.m. • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 East Elk Ave., Elizabethton. • Al-Anon “Free to Be Me” meeting will be held at the Watauga Association of Baptists office, across from Elizabethton Lumber, from 6-7 p.m. FRIDAY, NOV. 25 • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 East Elk Ave., Elizabethton. • A Senior Citizens Dance and Thanksgiving Dinner will be held at the Elizabethton Elks Club from 7-10 p.m. Rambling Rose Band will provide the music. Charge for dinner and dance is $10. A full-course Thanksgiving meal will be served. SATURDAY, NOV. 26 • Authors Peggy Poe Stern and Frances Henson VanLandingham will sign copies of their books at Twigs on Roan Exercise for the tech-savvy multitasker MANKATO, Minn. (AP) — With the click of a mouse, Cassie Pap flips through cable TV channels, her legs pumping away on a recumbent exercise cycle. She settles for MTV and reaches for the mouse to turn up the volume during her 2-mile workout. On another day, Pap might check e-mail or write a homework assignment using a flexible keyboard that will survive hundreds of sweaty fingers. Her options are part of the latest technology upgrade on campus: computerequipped exercise equipment. “It’s easier to work out with something in front of you to keep you entertained,” said Pap, a freshman at Minnesota State University, Mankato. She credits the new equipment with motivating her to exercise nearly every day instead of just once in a while. Campus officials, planning a renovation of the recreation building, hit on hightech as a way to get more students to exercise, and brought in the school’s technology staff to help out. But when they went looking for the equipment — treadmills, bikes and stairsteppers with computer/TV capabilities — they couldn’t find it. “We found exercise equipment with TVs in front and others with computer programs but not a complete computer,” said Wayne Sharp, director of the university’s Academic Computer Center. “We had to take it to the next step.” So Sharp and his tech experts set up adjustable stands next to 40 pieces of exercise equipment. Each stand has a computer, keyboard and mouse; the student who uses it chooses his or her own way to pass the time. “Exercising can be monotonous and tedious at times,” said Todd Pfingsten, director of campus recreation. “The important thing is that it becomes habitual.” Pfingsten sees that happening already: Pap and other students fill up the machines almost all day, forcing students to sign up in advance. It’s not clear how many are using the computers for homework; some students have already found that it takes some coordination. “I can’t run and type at the same time,” fourth-year student Jessie Nelson said as she checked her e-mail before getting on a cross-trainer machine. “I’d probably fall over.” Sarah Lerczak, a sophomore, said she’ll probably stick to watching TV, but likes the e-mail option. “If you have to check your e-mail you don’t have to make two stops. You can go right to the gym,” she said. “It’s a big convenience.” It will take time for students to get better at multitasking, said Kent Kalm, a professor in the university’s human performance department, which offers physical education classes. Next spring, students in one of his fitness classes will use the equipment while watching video instruction, taking quizzes and logging their workouts. “As more and more faculty use a multimedia-based curriculum, I see this as a great opportunity,” Kalm said. “I think as students use the ’tech-rec’ equipment, they’ll probably come up with even more ideas.” Some other campus directors said they’d consider following Minnesota State’s lead when it’s time to replace their own old equipment. Students are ready for it, they said. “They’ve grown up with video games, TV and Internet,” said Chris Oelling, associate director of recreation at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. Off campus, some major fitness chains have moved toward individualized entertainment, letting people channel-surf on their own TV screens. But nothing like Minnesota State’s arrangement has caught on yet. “People aren’t really clamoring for that sort of thing,” said Matt Messinger, a spokesman for the national chain Bally Total Fitness. “What they’re really looking for is something to keep them interested and entertained.” That’s a relief to Stephanie Maks, who worked with CEOs and other busy people in 20-some years as a personal trainer. Maks said she’s had to take people’s cell phones away to get them to focus on the exercise. in The Village Shops on Main Street in Roan Mountain from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Stern, a native of Ashe County, N.C., details the darker side of mountain life as well as the bright side in her books. VanLandingham, a Carter County native, resides in Poga. Her first book, “Back on Nowhere Road,” is a memoir. Her just released book, “Puttin’ up Vittles on Nowhere Road,” describes the growing, gathering, preserving and preparing of food during the Depression. The book also features recipes and stories. • The Science Hill High School Class of 1995 will hold its 10-year reunion at Farmhouse Gallery & Gardens, 121 Covered Bridge Lane, Unicoi, from 5-11 p.m. Anyone who is a graduate of the Class of 1995 that has not been notified should call 943-8388 or e-mail shhs95@yahoo.com for details and to register for the event. SUNDAY, NOV. 27 • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 East Elk Ave., Elizabethton. MONDAY, NOV. 28 • Tri-Cities Survivors of Suicide Support Group meets every fourth Monday at 6 p.m. in the fifth floor conference room at Johnson City Medical Center. Please contact Dorothy Gregory at 224-1300 for more information. TUESDAY, NOV. 29 • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 E. Elk Ave., Elizabethton. • Al-Anon “Free to Be Me” meeting will be held at the Watauga Association of Baptists office, across from Elizabethton Lumber, from 6-7 p.m. Classifieds PUBLIC NOTICES ********** ******** ******* ELIZABETHTON STAR Newspaper tubes are the Property of the Elizabethton STAR and are used for the delivery of our product. Any unauthorized use of Elizabethton STAR newspaper tubes for distribution of any material will result in a minimum $300 charge to the responsible party. ELIZABETHTON STAR ********** ********** ***** 6 GOODS TO EAT & SELL 10 HELP WANTED GENERAL APPLES, JOHNSON’S ORCHARD located at NC, TN state line on 19E. 1 mile on Buck Mountain Road. Honeycrisp, Cortland, Virginia Beauty, Winesap, Cameo, Mountain Cabbage. (828)733-4766. EXPERIENCED painters needed. Good pay. 40hrs. wk. Must have own transportation. (423)542-6817 SHELLED 423-753-4429 CORN WE slaughter age, cut, wrap, and freeze beef and pork, processing deer. Potter Meats. (423)543-6956. 10 HELP WANTED GENERAL Avon’s Christmas line has arrived. Earn fifty percent, only $10.00. Call Lisa before 8:00PM! (423)542-0057. HIGHSCHOOL or College Person with own transportation to clean, shop, wrap Christmas presence’s, mail. (423)926-6902. LOCAL FLAT BED COMPANY now hiring short haul drivers, driver friendly company, good home time. 1-800-331-5172. 3 ARTICLES LOST & FOUND POSTAL JOBS BIG REWARD: Lost Boston Terrier, wearing orange, yellow collar on Aviation Dr., behind Airport. (423)542-0557. $15.94 to $22.56 /hr, now hiring. For application and free government job info, call American Asso. of Labor. 1-913-599-8220, 24hrs. emp. serv. REWARD, Mixed Beagle Dog, black and brown, answers to Mandie. Long Hollow Community. (423)543-1858, (423)512-1094. WANTED: Experienced carpenters, helpers, general laborers, carpentry crews for framing, siding, etc. Transportation must! 647-6897. 11 PROFESSIONAL HELP WANTED DENTAL OFFICE RECEPTIONIST, full-time, experience in filing insurance claims, computer skills. Please send resume: Box 585, c/o Elizabethton Star, P.O. Box 1960, Elizabethton, TN 37644. 12 WORK WANTED GEN./PROF. SOUTHERN COMFORTS: Cleaning, hauling off, organizing. yards, homes, offices, debris, more. References. 423-542-5309, 423-213-7937. 15 SERVICES OFFERED $25. REWARD, for any sewing machine I can't repair. Special: Clean/oil/adjust tension. $4.99, Kuykendalls. 423-929-1082. All types of carpentry, masonry work. Drawn on stone, brick, concrete work. 20yrs, experience. (423)474-2882. BACKHOE front loader, septic systems, field lines, land cleared, basements. Demolition. Affordable. 20yrs. experience. 542-3002. Computer Repair: Protect your computer spyware popups. Fast reliable service. Your home, pickup. 647-3430, 547-3430. FOR INFORMATION ON STOCKS, BONDS, MUTUALFUNDS, CDs, AND IRAs CALLUS. STOCK REPORT Edward Jones TIFFANY PETERS DAVID WORTMAN, AAMS CURT ALEXANDER, CFP www.edwardjones.com 401 Hudson Drive • 543-1181 Member New York Stock Exchange, Inc and Securities Investor Protection Corporation 504 East “E” Street • 543-7848 504 East “E” Street • 543-7848 THE MARKET IN REVIEW STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS u NYSE 7,676.64 +42.06 GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Medicis BentleyPh PepBoy CVtPS MidwGm HeclaM CrwfdB FriedBR ParTch CrwfdA Last 31.57 17.92 14.50 18.82 23.39 3.57 6.00 10.05 33.02 5.95 Chg +3.82 +2.02 +1.40 +1.81 +2.02 +.30 +.47 +.79 +2.53 +.45 %Chg +13.8 +12.7 +10.7 +10.6 +9.5 +9.2 +8.5 +8.5 +8.3 +8.2 LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name CompSci CooperCo Mentor PlaybyB MedStaff CarrSrv Dillards Feldman n AtlasPpln PlaybyA Last 48.38 64.82 51.35 14.94 4.80 5.23 22.04 9.77 42.00 12.81 Chg %Chg -6.47 -11.8 -7.78 -10.7 -4.79 -8.5 -.87 -5.5 -.26 -5.1 -.26 -4.7 -1.08 -4.7 -.48 -4.7 -2.00 -4.5 -.59 -4.4 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Lucent 501472 GenElec 324584 LibtyMA 293285 GnMotr 288091 Pfizer 253132 TimeWarn 248212 FordM 243528 AT&T Inc 179883 MicronT 178447 ExxonMbl 174578 Last 2.91 36.20 7.69 23.58 21.74 18.09 8.32 24.37 14.20 59.37 Chg +.07 +.45 -.04 -.47 +.14 +.06 -.08 -.01 +.02 +1.12 DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume 2,054 1,230 163 3,447 181 118 2,069,561,660 u AMEX 1,715.45 +13.13 GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Metretek n 5.89 Bodisen n 9.84 ProPhrm 2.92 CoffeeH n 6.44 AllisChE 11.04 BadgerM s 41.04 Miramar 2.02 Palatin 2.68 EldorGld g 4.29 Yamana g 4.93 Chg +1.84 +2.50 +.44 +.72 +1.21 +4.03 +.19 +.24 +.34 +.38 %Chg +45.4 +34.1 +17.7 +12.6 +12.3 +10.9 +10.4 +9.8 +8.6 +8.4 u NASDAQ 2,241.67 +14.60 GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last ChinaNRes 4.47 ChinAuto 8.23 Catuity h 8.56 CambDis n 10.55 Incyte 5.86 Trmfrd 2.18 IndSvAm 3.76 Expedia wt1 3.74 EvnSut 5.58 HlthExt 22.86 Chg +1.43 +2.11 +1.91 +1.96 +1.06 +.35 +.57 +.56 +.73 +2.99 %Chg +47.0 +34.5 +28.7 +22.8 +22.1 +19.1 +17.9 +17.6 +15.1 +15.0 LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg Barnwell s 23.98 -2.47 -9.3 Gainsco rs 5.97 -.55 -8.4 I-Sector 4.40 -.35 -7.4 InvCapHld 3.02 -.23 -7.1 Uroplasty n 2.80 -.20 -6.7 AmOrBio n 5.43 -.38 -6.5 Adventrx 2.68 -.18 -6.3 AlphaPro 2.71 -.18 -6.2 Servotr 4.15 -.25 -5.7 Tarpon n 3.10 -.18 -5.5 LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg SanDisk 46.84 -9.36 -16.7 Progen 2.04 -.26 -11.4 MonPwrSy 13.35 -1.70 -11.3 Solexa n 7.90 -1.00 -11.2 DynacqHlt n 2.80 -.35 -11.1 Authentdte 2.17 -.25 -10.3 Allscripts 14.22 -1.59 -10.1 Hastings 4.96 -.54 -9.8 AbleEnr 8.24 -.84 -9.3 PacIntrnet 6.05 -.61 -9.2 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg SPDR 479874 125.76 +.63 iShRs2000 s284299 67.57 +.68 iShJapan 259782 12.63 +.08 SP Engy 167981 50.26 +1.22 SemiHTr 143980 36.32 -.16 OilSvHT 70845 123.95 +3.91 BemaGold 52734 3.02 +.11 DJIA Diam 50703 108.16 +.63 SP Fncl 49086 31.85 +.15 AmOrBio n 30408 5.43 -.38 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg SPDR 479874 125.76 +.63 iShRs2000 s284299 67.57 +.68 iShJapan 259782 12.63 +.08 SP Engy 167981 50.26 +1.22 SemiHTr 143980 36.32 -.16 OilSvHT 70845 123.95 +3.91 BemaGold 52734 3.02 +.11 DJIA Diam 50703 108.16 +.63 SP Fncl 49086 31.85 +.15 AmOrBio n 30408 5.43 -.38 DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume 619 374 99 1,092 126 29 307,271,453 DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume 1,891 1,156 157 3,204 161 41 1,688,851,106 Name Ex YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg AT&T Inc NY 1.29 AMD NY ... Alamosa Nasd ... Altria NY 3.20 Amazon Nasd ... Amgen Nasd ... Anheusr NY 1.08 AppleC s Nasd ... ApldMatl Nasd .12 ATMOS NY 1.26 BP PLC NY 2.09 BkofAm NY 2.00 BellSouth NY 1.16 Boeing NY 1.00 CSX NY .52 CpstnTrb Nasd ... Chevron NY 1.80 Cisco Nasd ... Citigrp NY 1.76 CocaCl NY 1.12 Comcast Nasd ... Comc sp Nasd ... DaimlrC NY 1.93 DellInc Nasd ... Disney NY .24 DowChm NY 1.34 eBay s Nasd ... EastChm NY 1.76 EKodak NY .50 EmrsnEl NY 1.78 ExxonMbl NY 1.16 FstHorizon NY 1.80 FleetEn NY ... FordM NY .40 GenElec NY 1.00 GnMotr NY 2.00 GlaxoSKln NY 1.53 GdyFam Nasd .12 HCA Inc NY .60 Heinz NY 1.20 HewlettP NY .32 HomeDp NY .40 HonwllIntl NY .83 iShJapan Amex .04 iShRs2000 sAmex .84 Incyte Nasd ... Intel Nasd .40 IBM NY .80 Interpublic NY ... 5.3 ... ... 4.5 ... ... 2.5 ... .7 4.7 3.1 4.4 4.3 1.4 1.1 ... 3.1 ... 3.6 2.7 ... ... 3.7 ... 1.0 2.9 ... 3.2 2.3 2.4 2.0 4.6 ... 4.8 2.8 8.5 3.1 1.3 1.2 3.4 1.1 .9 2.3 .3 1.2 ... 1.6 .9 ... 21 ... ... 15 40 30 17 42 24 15 12 11 12 24 11 ... 9 20 11 19 44 44 ... 23 20 9 63 8 ... 21 11 12 ... 8 20 ... ... ... 16 17 36 16 20 ... ... ... 19 19 ... 24.37 27.04 18.35 71.61 47.99 84.42 43.45 64.96 17.41 26.77 67.58 45.84 27.19 69.00 48.26 3.91 58.85 17.06 48.51 42.15 27.13 26.81 51.83 30.04 25.05 45.66 46.19 55.35 22.08 72.85 59.37 38.85 10.82 8.32 36.20 23.58 49.16 9.38 51.54 35.06 29.28 42.28 36.65 12.63 67.57 5.86 25.25 87.29 9.91 -.01 -5.4 +.30 +22.8 +2.09 +47.2 +.36 +17.2 +.01 +8.4 +1.20 +31.6 +.28 -14.4 +.40 +101.7 +.17 +1.8 +.36 -2.1 +1.15 +15.7 +.28 -2.4 -.17 -2.2 +2.05 +33.3 -.37 +20.4 +.26 +113.7 +.74 +12.1 +.04 -11.7 +.10 +.7 -.05 +1.2 +.21 -18.5 +.33 -18.4 +.74 +7.9 +.19 -28.7 -.15 -9.9 -.69 -7.8 +1.52 -20.6 +.12 -4.1 +.23 -31.5 +.34 +3.9 +1.12 +15.8 -.72 -9.9 +.01 -19.6 -.08 -43.2 +.45 -.8 -.47 -41.1 -.76 +3.7 +.03 +2.6 -.14 +29.0 -.02 -10.1 -.12 +39.6 -.16 -1.1 +.27 +3.5 +.08 +15.7 +.68 +4.4 +1.06 -41.3 -.05 +8.0 -.48 -11.5 +.06 -26.0 Name Ex DAILY DOW JONES YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg JDS Uniph Nasd ... JohnJn NY 1.32 Kellogg NY 1.11 Kennmtl NY .76 LSI Inds Nasd .48 Level3 Nasd ... Libbey NY .40 LibtyMA NY ... LowesCos NY .24 Lucent NY ... McDnlds NY .67 MeadWvcoNY .92 Merck NY 1.52 MicronT NY ... Microsoft Nasd .32 Motorola NY .16 Nasd100TrNasd .41 NortelNet NY ... OCharleys Nasd ... Oracle Nasd ... PepsiCo NY 1.04 Pfizer NY .76 ProctGam NY 1.12 Qualcom Nasd .36 QwestCm NY ... SanDisk Nasd ... SaraLee NY .79 Schwab NY .10 SemiHTr Amex .23 SiriusS Nasd ... SnapOn NY 1.00 Solectrn NY ... SwstAirl NY .02 SprintNex NY .10 SPDR Amex 2.39 SP Engy Amex .57 SunMicro Nasd ... Symantec s Nasd ... TempleIn sNY .90 TexInst NY .12 TimeWarn NY .20 TiVo Inc Nasd ... Tribune NY .72 VerizonCmNY 1.62 Viragen h Amex ... WalMart NY .60 Wendys NY .68 Wyeth NY 1.00 Yahoo Nasd ... ... 2.1 2.5 1.4 2.7 ... 3.5 ... .4 ... 2.0 3.3 5.0 ... 1.1 .7 1.0 ... ... ... 1.8 3.5 1.9 .8 ... ... 4.4 .7 .6 ... 2.7 ... .1 .4 1.6 1.1 ... ... 2.2 .4 1.1 ... 2.2 5.1 ... 1.2 1.4 2.3 ... ... 20 19 18 24 ... 49 ... 20 12 18 ... 15 53 24 15 ... ... 16 22 25 20 21 37 ... 27 33 34 ... ... 24 ... 26 20 ... ... ... 40 23 25 32 ... 17 10 ... 19 ... 51 39 2.25 61.99 44.85 55.29 17.55 3.80 11.36 7.69 66.38 2.91 33.07 27.50 30.47 14.20 28.16 23.90 41.55 3.10 14.37 12.44 58.40 21.74 57.64 46.08 5.05 46.84 17.96 15.17 36.32 7.13 37.50 3.70 16.45 25.17 125.76 50.26 3.79 17.96 40.55 31.80 18.09 5.50 32.41 31.77 .61 49.62 49.43 43.20 42.27 -.03 -.56 +.28 +.83 +.06 -.10 +.01 -.04 +.43 +.07 -.02 +.38 +.05 +.02 +.09 +.04 +.10 +.04 +.26 -.18 -.12 +.14 +.19 +.15 +.08 -9.36 ... +.21 -.16 -.15 +.22 +.17 -.09 +.23 +.63 +1.22 +.04 -.47 +.09 -.08 +.06 +.23 -.05 +.07 -.04 +.12 +.53 +.03 +.73 -29.0 -2.3 +.4 +11.1 +53.3 +12.1 -48.9 -17.6 +15.3 -22.6 +3.2 -18.9 -5.2 +15.0 +5.4 +39.0 +4.1 -10.7 -26.5 -9.3 +11.9 -19.2 +4.6 +8.7 +13.7 +87.6 -25.6 +26.8 +8.8 -6.4 +9.1 -30.6 +1.0 +1.3 +4.0 +38.4 -29.7 -30.3 +18.6 +29.2 -7.0 -6.3 -23.1 -21.6 -39.0 -6.1 +25.9 +1.4 +12.2 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. Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. 11,000 Nov. 21, 2005 10,750 10,500 10,250 +53.95 10,820.28 Pct. change from previous: +0.50 10,000 OCT NOV Record high: 11,722.98 10,835.33 10,761.05 Jan. 14, 2000 AUG High SEP Low STOCK MARKET INDEXES 52-Week High Low 10,984.46 10,000.46 4,141.79 3,348.36 438.74 315.03 7,667.64 6,902.51 1,752.21 1,186.14 2,234.30 1,889.83 1,249.58 1,136.15 730.17 623.57 688.51 570.03 12,508.27 11,195.22 Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Market Value Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Russell 2000 Wilshire 5000 Last Net Chg %Chg YTD %Chg 12-mo %Chg 10,820.28 4,156.48 397.69 7,676.64 1,715.45 2,241.67 1,254.85 735.07 678.96 12,570.44 +53.95 +15.79 +1.23 +42.06 +13.13 +14.60 +6.58 +6.17 +6.74 +75.34 +.50 +.38 +.31 +.55 +.77 +.66 +.53 +.85 +1.00 +.60 +.35 +9.44 +18.73 +5.88 +19.60 +3.04 +3.54 +10.82 +4.20 +5.01 +3.15 +15.16 +20.30 +9.98 +25.45 +7.50 +6.59 +16.31 +9.24 +8.82 MUTUAL FUNDS Name American Funds A: IncoA p American Funds A: ICAA p American Funds A: WshA p Fidelity Invest: Contra Fidelity Invest: Magelln Oppenheimer A: Disc p Putnam Funds A: GrInA p Putnam Funds A: VoyA p Vanguard Fds: Wndsr Vanguard Idx Fds: 500 Total Assets Obj ($Mlns) NAV MP 47,316 18.40 LV 64,884 32.05 LV 61,281 31.43 XG 54,996 65.51 LC 50,671 108.89 SG 570 ... LV 11,628 20.13 LG 6,814 17.69 XV 12,869 18.57 SP 68,144 115.90 Total Return/Rank 4-wk 12-mo 5-year +2.0 +5.7/C +55.1/A +3.7 +8.3/C +23.4/C +4.0 +6.7/E +31.5/B +5.8 +20.4/A +36.2/A +5.0 +8.6/C -6.3/C NA NA NA +4.4 +8.8/C +16.3/D +5.3 +10.3/D -22.8/C +4.4 +8.9/D +46.5/B +4.8 +9.1/A +0.6/A Pct Min Init Load Invt 5.75 250 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 2,500 NL 2,500 5.75 1,000 5.25 500 5.25 500 NL 3,000 NL 3,000 BL -Balanced, GL -Global Stock, IL -International Stock, LC -Large-Cap Core, LG -Large-Cap Growth, LV -Large-Cap Val., XC -Multi-Cap Core, XG -Multi-Cap Growth, XV -Multi-Cap Val.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. NA = Not avail. NE = Data in question. NS = Fund not in existence. Source: Lipper, Inc. Page 12 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 Star LINE AD DEADLINES word rates: 15 WORDS OR LESS 1 DAY - $4.75 2 DAYS - $7.00 6 DAYS - $10.00 542-1530 Classifieds 15 SERVICES OFFERED 20 ARTICLES FOR SALE 31 APARTMENT FOR RENT 32 HOUSES FOR RENT 37 LAND W/PHOTO FOR SALE ELIZABETHTON:Construction, Trackhoe, backhoe, frontloader, landcleared, site work septic systems, dirt, shale for sale. (423)547-0408, 895-0499. 2006 Electric Scooter 2 seater lots of storage space $400. Beauty shop chair $200. (423)543-7678. 2BR, phone, cable in each room, hardwood floor entrance. W/D hook-up. No pets. $325.mth. (423)542-9417. 1BR, 1BA, city limits. $350.mo. 3BR, 1BA, Stoney Creek $575.mo. 4BR, 3BA, on Watauga River. $850.mo. 3BR, 1BA, in Erwin. $600.mo. 423-547-2871 Broome Real Estate 542-4386 EXPERT tree trimming of all types and stump grinding. Dependable. (423)957-9501, (423) 543-5622. GOOD-MAN-HOME REPAIRS bathrooms, plumbing, leaks, electrical, painting, int. & ext., vinyl flooring. Licensed (423)542-3932, 647-6414. HAUL gravel for driveways, dirt for sale, also backhoe work of any kind. Call 423-542-2909. Have an office overload? Professional secretarial and notary service available. 423-547-0600 HOME IMPROVEMENTS! Sell, install metal roofing, shingle roofs, additions, painting, decks, pressure washing. 542-3763, 512-1387 Immaculate Mowing, Leaf removal. Dependable service, reasonable rates. Free estimates. References provided. 423-542-6911. JLJ HOME IMPROVEMENT, remodeling, room additions & vinyl siding. Licensed & Insured. 423-543-2101. Jones Tree Service. Tree removal, topping & trimming. Free estimates. Senior discount. 423-542-9705, 423-483-7076. KY CONSTRUCTION Specializing in finished grade work and demolition. All types of front end loader work. Dirt for sale. Quality, honest work at the best price. Will beat any other estimates, guaranteed. Keith Younce, (423)543-2816. 423-341-7782 PROFESSIONAL AUTO DETAILING: Complete inside & out. Reasonable prices. For appointment call 957-9501, 543-5622. 16 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 3 rooms: All new. 8 piece solid wood bedroom suite with new pillowtop mattress set. 8 piece dining, 3 piece leather living. Retail $5,800. Must sell $2,495! Will break up. (423)217-4202. 8 piece master dining room. NEW, elegant, formal. Elaborate carvings. Cove glass china cabinet with touch lighting. Worth $7,500. Sacrifice $3,395. (423)217-4245. ANTIQUE 1/2 bed, Cash Family Pottery. Computer, Kay Guitar, Washer. (423)474-2874, (423)213-7621. BEDROOM: 6 piece solid cherry wood. English Dove Tail, never used. List $2,300. $795. (423)343-4601. DINETTE: 5 piece solid cherry. New, beautiful, $145. (423)218-0755. DOCK 1 Furniture-Mattresses Cherry dinette, 4 chairs $149. Queen double pillow top mattress $195. King $295. Ashley stainproof microfiber sofa and loveseat $650. Beautiful 6 piece solid cherry bedroom $750. Ashley 3 piece leather living room $1,295. Bed NASA Space Age. New, in plastic $495. (423)929-9465. www.dock1.com. 1-888-883-6251 KING double pillow top. Nice mattress set. still in factory wrapper. $295. (423)952-3876. ORIGINAL NASA Space Age, mattress set, BASF memory foam. As seen on TV! Brand new. $495. Sacrifice. (423)200-4664. 25 PETS & SUPPLIES Complete dog grooming shop equipment and supplies for $1500. Set up, start grooming today! 943-5765 FREE kittens to good loving indoor home. 306-0340. Pit Bull puppies, all colors. $125.00 Call 542-8756. To see, house beside Hampton Auto Parts. 26 COAL-OILWOOD FOR SALE 1117 EAST MAIN Very affordable 2BR, 2BA brick Condos, with large living room, wooden deck, fully equipped kitchen. Make an offer on one or all five of these condos today. $77,500 Each! C21 WHITEHEAD PENNY WOODSON 543-4663 19 BUILDINGS SALE/RENT FIREWOOD for sale, all hardwood, split and stacked. $40. pick-up load. 213-6772. 213-8486. LARGE pick-up load of firewood. $60. Burning barrel $7. (423)772-3584. WOOD for sale. $60. a load (423)772-3791 28 CHILD CARE HELP/SERVICES COMMUNITY DAY CARE & LEARNING CENTER: Openings 6wk.-5yrs. Early Childhood Education, Kindergarten readiness. 543-5900 . 30 ROOMS FOR RENT 135 Jonesboro Rd. Piney Flats. Great visibility on 11E. Unique. Across from KFC/BK. 3050sqft retail space with 2000sqft living space. $499,900. C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 STEEL BUILDINGS Factory Surplus, 2 remain. Never erected, mint condition. Pay less than clearance price in exchange for small deposit. Can ship immediately 1-800-222-6335 x6000 20 ARTICLES FOR SALE $1,350. 8 piece solid cherry wood. Sleigh bed set. All new, still in boxes. Worth $3,000. Sacrifice. (423) 929-3626. $159. mattress: Full size double pillowtop with boxspring. Brand new! In factory plastic! 423-343-4412. $195. Queen size double pillowtop mattress set. Brand new in plastic. Sacrifice. 423-343-4408. $695. Ashley sofa & loveseat. Stainproof micro-fiber, never opened. Listed at $1,300. Sacrifice (423)434-0603. $695. Ashley sofa & loveseat. Stainproof micro-fiber, never opened. Listed at $1,300. Sacrifice. (423)434-0603. 2 plots in Happy Valley Memorial Park. Crown Section. $1,000 each. (423)542-6282. LARGE room with private bath and entrance. Fully furnished plus utilities. Weekly, monthly. (423)542-4475, 423-612-0132. 31 APARTMENT FOR RENT *SPACIOUS livingroom, 2BR, ground floor, minutes from town. No pets. References. $325mth., $200.dep. Jan, 542-0200. 1BR apartment, furnished, private lot. No pets. $400month, $400deposit. (423)926-1370. 1BR, available 11-15-05. Hampton area. Water and laundry room furnished. (423)725-2277 between 5:30p.m.8p.m. 423-725-3678 1BR, between JC and Elizabethton includes appliances, water, trash pickup, no pets, $280month, $200deposit. (423)543-7677. 1BR, or 2BR, 1BA, water, trash provided. On site laundry. No Pets. $225. -$300.mo. $150. deposit. (423)542-4029. 1BR, stove, refrigerator, A/C, Washer, dryer, trash pickup included. $290.mo. $150.dep. No pets. 542-6667. 1BR, stove, refrigerator, water, garbage pickup furnished, mini-blinds. Call (423)542-9200. 2 car Garage Apt. Blue Springs, 1.5BR, Clean. $300.month, $250. deposit. 423-957-8883. 2BR, stove, refrigerator furnished, W/D hook-up, 409 Brandon Street, close to Watauga River, 3 blocks from downtown. $350.mth., $300. deposit. No pets. 423-542-5726. 2BR, 1.5BA Townhouse. W/D hookup, appliances, carpet, D/W, deck, paved driveway. $450.mo. plus deposit. 423-538-0458. 2BR, 1BA, between J.C., Elizabethton, W/D hookup, heat pump, $420.mo., deposit, lease. No pets. 423-467-8480 2BR, 1BA, From $300.mo includes utilites $425. 3BR, 1BA, $350.mo. 423-547-2871 2BR, 1BA, Hunter. W/D hook-up, No pets. Non-smoking. $380.month, deposit. Ask about FREE gasoline. 895-1145. 2BR, CH&A, close to Hampton Elementary. 543-7088 days, 725-2036 nights and weekends. 2BR, CH&A, water, garbage included in rent. Convenient location. $400mth., $600dep. 918 Stateline Rd. 423-543-8400. 2BR, clean, quiet. $295.-$300.mo. deposit. First month rent free. Will take section-8. No pets. 423-833-2908. 2BR, Hyder Street, appliances, garbage pickup furnished. No pets. $360. month, $350. deposit. (423)543-4365. 2BR, W/D hookup, eat-in kitchen. $375. plus security. Available immediately. Section 8 accepted. 423-391-9352. BILTMORE AREA: 2BR, water, garbage pick-up and ground care provided. $500. month. (423)474-2888. Alexander Apts. Upstairs, Large 2br. 2ba, New carpets, new paint $425mo $175dep. Efficiency apt. New appliances, downstairs, very quiet complex $230mo. $150dep. Downstairs 2br, 1ba $360mo. $175dep. 956-0068 or 542-8493 ALL Real Estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. ”Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD Toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The Toll-free telephone number for the Hearing Impaired is: 1-800-927-9275 2BR home with basement. $400.mo. Siam area 3BR Townhouse $375.mo. Street’s Reality 543-4094 2BR, 1 1/2BA, CH&A, W/D hook-up, newly remodeled. Call (423)547-9803. 3BR, 1BA, appliances, W/D hookup, garbage pickup. No pets, drugs or drinking. Reference, deposit. 542-4276 3BR, 2BA, CH&A, Keenburg Community, nice yard, fenced dog lot. $575month, $575deposit. (423)542-2209. ASSORTMENT of rentals: Farm, brick, frame, pets, rent to own, furnished and unfurnished. 282-6486. Duplex, 2BR, nice, appliances, W/D hookup. Near Hunter Community. References, no pets. 423-543-4613. FURNISHED BASEMENT APARTMENT FOR RENT 712B Johnson Avenue. 1 queensize BR, laundry room with W/D, carpet, 5-piece dinette, appliances, electric. $300 plus utilities, $150.dep. Lawn care included. Available immediately. 542-8827 Nice, Large 1BR,. W/D hookup. 906 Old Stateline Rd. No pets. $325.mo. $325.dep. 542-8683, 647-3778 TOWNHOUSE: 2BR, 1 1/2BA, W/D hook-up, $375.mth., $300. deposit. Townview Estates. (423)543-3896, (423) 772-9452. 5.39 Acres. All wooded, mostly level. There is a 40’ entrance beside Hamby Road that goes approx. 400’ into property. No Signs. $50,000. 38 LOTS FOR SALE WE have real estate lots and land acreage for sale in 4 counties. Calvin, (423)542-2131. 39 LOTS W/PHOTO FOR SALE Broome Real Estate 542-4386 1036 Gap Creek Rd. MLS# 222849 $122,000 Well maintained 3 BR brick home. New roof, heat pump, hot water heater, light fixtures and ceiling fans. Hardwood in Living room, Hall and Bedrooms. Fireplace in LR. Kitchen/Dining combo with new built in range and microwave, countertops and refinished cabinets. New sheet rock walls. One car attached carport with utility room that is vented for heat and air. Paved drive way and 12 x 12 finished storage building. Call Sondra @423-957-5313 NEAR city. 2BR, 1BA, CH&A, all appliances furnished, some furniture furnished. No pets. $450. month, $450. deposit. (423)543-3071. RENT TO OWN, 158 H Heaton, Siam, 2BR, 1BA, TLC $500down, $400month, (423)647-2728 Carol. 33 MOBILE HOME FOR RENT 2BR, 3BR. Possible rent to own. Close to schools & town. Background check required. 543-7468 2BR, 14x70, private lot. Garbage and lawn care furnished. No pets. (423)474-3351. 2BR, 1BA, appliances, private lot. Section 8 accepted. $300.mo. $200.dep. 542-8181 or 895-0517. 2BR, 2BA, completely furnished, private lot. No pets. $420. month, $400. deposit. (423)725-3011. 2BR, Danner Subdivision. Very clean. $375. month, W/D hook-up, CH&A. (423)474-3893. 2BR, nice private lot. Central Community. No pets. 423-542-2449. 2BR, on 1.5 acre lot. Gap Creek area. CH&A, carport. $375.mo. plus deposit. 542-8683, 647-3778 3BR, 2BA. Happy Valley. 16x80. 2BR, 1BA. $175. 423-543-2651, 423-257-2106 FURNISHED, 1BR, water, garbage, lawn service, Hwy. 91. No pets. $240mth., deposit. (423)542-4459 after 4p.m. Buffalo Valley Golf Course 1/2 acre lot located on #8 fairway. Great investment property. Call Rick $25,000. 37 LAND W/PHOTO FOR SALE 1/2 ac +/- in Golf Club Acres. Beautiful land with tall trees & road frontage. $29,900 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 40 LOTS FOR RENT LARGE lot. Singlewide or doublewide. Happy Valley. 2 months free. $125mth plus deposit. (423)543-2651, 257-2106. MOBILE home lot, off Swimming Pool Rd., Hampton. No outdoor pets. $125. month. $125. deposit. 14’ wide minimum. (423)895-0456. ONE DOUBLEWIDE LOT $150month and ONE SINGLEWIDE LOT. $125month. Gap Creek area. (423) 725-2770, 612-2847. A foreclosure. Must sell. Only $16,500. For listings. 800-391-5228xH652 127 STONEBROOK LOOP 146 CLOVER BRANCH 180 Lonesome Dove Road Custom brick stone new construction in Stonebrook. 5BD, 3BA with master on main with steam shower. Home features kitchen with appliances and granite counter tops, 2 car garage and additional garage, full basement and central vac. Top of the line quailty throughout. $349,900 109 Bumpus Cove Rd Just off 107. 4BR, 2BA, main level newly remodeled. Good Condition, 2 car garage, $129,900.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 Great home in East side community with 4Br, 2ba! Large family room. Great location. Owner has done some TLC. $73,900.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 Beautiful chalet on 23+ acres. 2,700 sq.ft. of living, 3BR, 2.5BA, eat-in kitchen, wrap around deck, spectacular views. $390,000. 1528 Slimp Branch MOTIVATED SELLER!! BRING OFFER!! Private and elegant 4BR, 2.5BA, with additions and ungrades. Appx 2500 finished sqft. of main level living with laundry on main. Full unfinished walkout basement on 2 +/- acres of beautiful land. Convenient to Roan Mt. State Park, Watauga Lake, Elizabethton, Unicoi, JC. MLS 219173, $198,000.00 Additional acreage for $212,000. REDUCED 3BR 2BA home. Beautiful hdwd floors, privacy, full basement, half acre site overlooking scenic rolling countryside. C21 Whitehead Deborah Sutherland $124,900 543-4663 158 PETERS HOLLOW ROAD 3BR, 1BA, CH&A, fenced in backyard with outbuilding. RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 Call Leslie Glover @ Realty Executives (423)773-2758 Broome Real Estate 542-4386 138 Woodland Heights Immaculate 2BR, 1BA home on more than a half acre level lot. Brick fireplace. Den and kitchen /dining combination. Breathtaking views! $124,900 RAINBOW REALTY (423)547-2800 Charming 1BR condo, all appliances, fully furnished. fireplace, crown molding. Great mountain retreat, ready to move in!!! $54,900.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LISA POTTER 543-4663 298 Rocky Branch Rd Cute as can be! Like new 2Bdrm log home, hdwdflr, beautiful mountain views, level lot. Must see $89,900 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 328 CEDAR 114 WEST H 3BR, 3BA, close to Watauga River. Stone fireplace with gas logs, hardwood floor, huge master bedroom, oversized garage. $189,900. RAINBOW REALTY (423)547-2800 RAINBOW REALTY (423)547-2800 2BD, 1BA cottage on level lot. Beautiful backyard. House has updated CH&A and roof. Detached two car carport. Priced to sell. $59,800 118 Eastland Drive 4BR, 3BA mini-farm with a beautifully situated house. 5.61 acres, large barn, shed, attached carport, fully equipped mother-in-law unit. 234,900. 229 TAYLOR AVE Call Teresa Homeowners Concept 423-434-0440 or 423-773-6843 CAREGIVER’S DREAM HOME One story living on large level lot. 4BR, 3BA includes optional separate living quarters. Panoramic mountain view. Near Watauga River. MLS#223925. $174,900 3BD, 1BA in peaceful setting. Home has been partially updated. A handyman could make this cottage gorgeous. House sits on 1 acre of scenic beauty. Detached 2 car garage. Better hurry! $62,500 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 RAINBOW REALTY (423)547-2800 1 level condo in the city. 2BR, 2BA, hardwood, tile. A Must See! $78,000 Call Leslie Glover @ Realty Executives (423)773-2758 357 KEENE Location!! Biltmore Area, 162 Taylor Ave, 5BR, 2BA, approx. 2000 sqft., hardwood & carpet floors, open kitchen. Outside, vinyl siding, insulated windows, good roof, CH&A. Excellent condition both inside & out. FHA or VA ready $102,000. Cape Cod 3 or 4BR, 2Ba, Dinning and Living Room Combo. Fireplace With Gas Logs. Den, Bonus Room. Level yard. $139900.00 C21WHITEHEAD SHERREE HOLT 543-4663 141 Forest Hill Newer 3BR 2BA home on private half acre lot with mature trees. Great Layout. Must See! 1209 Ledford Charming 1 level Brick tastefully renovated 2BR, 1 1/2BA, Deck With 3 levels, Outbuilding with concrete pad for storage. $119,000.00 C21 Whitehead Deborah Sutherland $44,900 423-543-4663 C21 WHITEHEAD LISA POTTER 543-4663 1451 MILLIGAN HWY. 361Toll Branch 168 MAPLE TREE LANE Gorgeous mountain views!! Ranch 3BR, 2BA, fireplace, French doors leading to enclosed patio. Outbuilding and workshop with electricity. $132,500.00 3BD, 1BA on level lot. Newer siding and windows. Detached one car garage. Full basement. Large living room. $67,500 122 TIMBER LANE Magnificent views of Watauga Lake, 5.01 acres level, cleared building site, gated community, Underground utilities. $159,900.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LISA POTTER 543-4663 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 BY OWNER 361 LONG HOLLOW ROAD 5 miles to downtown Elizabethton, wooded country setting, 1.5 acres, 3BR, 2BA, basement, garage. $125,000. SAM SHANKS (423)854-6297 C21 WHITEHEAD LISA POTTER 543-4663 Wonderful 5BD, 3BA in scenic neighborhood near Watauga Lake. Open great room with kitchen, dining room with cathedral ceilings. Large covered porch overlooks 1.64 wooded acre lot and mountains beyond. 2786 sq.ft. $169,500 Farm House 2BR, with hardwood floors. 2 car garage detached. Several outbuildings, 2 barns. Gorgeous land, pasture, timber. $249,900.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LISA POTTER 423-543-4663 Lovely 3BR Brick with Fireplace, hardwood floors, New windows, completely remodeled throughout. Extra lot in back with road frontage. $114,900.00 1011 NAVE STREET RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 Hwy 67 Deer Ridge Lot 1 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 134 Carver Crabtree Hampton! 3BR, 3BA, 2 car attached garage, mostly new, large level lot, Seller motivated. $149,900. (423)725-2183 Near Watauga Lake with lake view. approx 14.85 acres. Timber, privacy, great for development. $139000.00 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 Completely remodeled, framed, 3BR, 1BA, sitting upon 1 1/2 acre, approximately 1040sq.ft., appliances, new heat pump, large front porch, $79,850 (423)542-9714 42 HOUSES FOR SALE Call Shar Saidla mountainhomes realty.com (423)895-0430 Copley Branch Rd, Butler, 104 CANDLE KNOB ROAD JOHNSON CITY RARE FIND GOLF COURSE FRONTAGE NICE 2BR, 2BA. Private lot. 110 Warrior Lane. No Pets. $450.mo., $450.dep. Lease (423)543-4365. RENT OR RENT TO OWN 2BR, 1BA, 1970 12x60 New Moon on rental lot, Green Acres area, $600 down with own financing. (423)895-0456. 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 1302 LOWE STREET STOP renting. Buy Hud home. $16,500. For listings call 800-391-5228xF738. VALLEY FORGE AREA 2BR, appliances, deposit, References. $400.mth. 543-7008, leave message. 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 152 Mountain View Lane BLUE SPRINGS: 2BR, Newly remodeled, washer, dryer. $350. month, $300. deposit. No pets. (423)542-4284, 957-8883. BILTMORE: 2BR, appliances, water, trash included. References. No pets. $200. deposit, $300. month. (423)543-7677. Duplex 2BR, W/D hookup, appliances, water, garbage pickup furnished. NO PETS DRINKING OR DRUG USE. Reference, deposit. 423-542-4276 Sciota Road In Unicoi County. 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 928-4151 MONDAY------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. TUESDAY-------------MONDAY 2:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY--------TUESDAY 2:00 P.M. THURSDAY------WEDNESDAY 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY------------THURSDAY 2:00 P.M. SUNDAY---------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. 1683 Silver Grove $120,000 MLS # 222781 Nice 3BR, 2BAs home on large lot in Bluff City. Pool, hardwood floors, heat pump, storage barn. Call Elwanda 676-8052 Realty Executives 952-0226 STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 - Page 13 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 419 Bonnie Kate Boulevard 3BR, 2BA, 1924 sq. ft. Completely remodeled. Lot 100x150. Utility bldg. 16x30. Reduced $167,900 543-3977 or 943-0151 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO ELIZABETHTON 3BR, 1BA, brick rancher, hardwood throughout, large family room, 1400 sq. ft. appliances included. Move in condition, quiet neighborhood. $69,500. (423)383-4211, (423)383-8973. 45 MOBILE HOMES W/PHOTO 28x56 Clayton $57,899 Too Many Features To Mention! Smith Homes 2625 Elizabethton Highway, Johnson City (423)542-2131 60 AUTOS W/PHOTO SOLD PRE-OWNED 1999 Honda Prelude V.TEC, auto, sunroof, loaded, aluminum wheels. Extra Nice stk# 0074 Elizabethton Auto Sales 423-543-7592 63 4X4 VEHICLES FOR SALE GOOD running 1985 GMC pickup truck, 4x4, 4cyl $2,000.00 423-543-1643, 423-512-0184 505 CRUMLEY STREET REDUCED! Wonderful Westside location. One level brick. 3BRs. 2BA. Fireplace. Screened porch. Huge family room. Hardwood floors. Corner lot. 1,805 Sq. Ft. $139,500. RUSS SWANAY REALTY (423)543-5741 120 Tansie St. Beautiful 3BR, 2BA, home on cul-de-sac. Hardwood floors, tile, all appliances including dishwasher. Vinylprivacy fence, new outbuilding. $99,900.00 423-474-3114 or 423-213-9077 Much, Much For Your Money! 64 4X4 W/PHOTO FOR SALE Norris Sectional, 8’ Ceilings, 6/12 Roof Pitch. Too Many Features To Mention! Smith Homes 2625 Elizabethton Highway, Johnson City (423)542-2131 PRE-OWNED 2000 Lincoln Navigator 4X4, V8, auto, 3rd. row, leather, sunroof, $10,900. stk# 5549 Elizabethton Auto Sale 423-543-7592 Reduced!! $91,900 520 JENA BETH DRIVE 2 level brick on 3.5 acres. Mountain views. 3BD, 2BA home with CH&A. Main bath has whirlpool tub. Kitchen with all appliances. Large deck. Westside school. Land is approved for apartments and could be developed. $98,900 302 East H New Clayton Doublewide 3 or 4BR, 2BA, hardwood flooring, CH&A, newer appliances. 3BR, 2BA Call Leslie Glover @ Realty Executives 773-2758 Whisperwood Subdivision Watauga Custom built, 2600+ sq. ft., 4BR, 2.5BA, office, Hardwood floors CH&A, 1 acre, hot tub, & so much more, convenient to Elizabethton & JC, EHS tuition free. $239.000. By Owner 543-3093 44 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE *Thanksgiving Special: 2001 14x46 2BR, 1BA. New carpet & appliances, oak cabinets. Must See! 547-9190 188 Sarah Annie SELLER WANTS OFFER, will pay $1000 toward buyers closing cost. 2BR, 11/2BA, all appliances. Reduced to $27,900 C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 614 West C Street WHAT A BARGAIN! OWN cheaper than rent! Newly remodeled. Convenient location. Great view. Secluded backyard. Decorative fireplace for gas logs. MLS#217379 Shar Saidla 895-0430 mountainhomes realty.com Priced To Sell ! $39,975. 2000 Chevy Z71 Financing Available Extended cab, 4x4, 3DR, V-8, automatic, loaded. $10,995. stk# 3993 Smith Homes 2625 Elizabethton Highway, Johnson City 423-928-9224 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 607 Evergreen Lane Elizabethton MLS # 222974 $165,000 Beautiful 2BR, 2BA home, one level in a semi-private setting in West End. Nice kitchen with lots of cabinets, marble floors, dining room with built in shelves, hardwood floors and brick wood fireplace, large family room with electric fireplace, hardwood floors, sunroom off of dining area, master bedroom with full bath, hardwood floors, 2nd bedroom , hardwood floors, heat pump, all appliances, 1 car carport. Elwanda 676-8052 Realty Executives 952-0226 PRE-OWNED NEW land home packaging, Whispering Meadows Subdivision, Stoney Creek area. Bank, owner financing. (423)543-2578, 943-3418. No down payment if you own your lot. Call Marcia at Smith Homes. (423)542-2131. Norris, 3BR, 2BA, CH&A, with 1/2 acre private lot, located off Smalling Road. $34,900. (423)474-6545. WE are approved FHA lender. Loans up to $164,900. Easy qualification. 423-282-0343 or 1-800-545-5551 ALL Drivers Good Record SR-22. You’re in good company, Wagner Insurance, 604 E. Elk. (423)543-5522. 59 AUTOS FOR SALE 1996 Z24 Cavalier, 5spd. 17” rims, new tires, unique stereo. $3,000. 423-213-0397, 213-0396 1984 Ford T-Bird, black, 5.0, loaded, new tires, flowmaster exhaust. Must see! $2,000. O.B.O. (423)474-6656. $500! Police impound! Cars / Trucks from $500. For listings 800-391-5227x7359. MUST SELL! 1996 Chevy Cavalier, red, 5spd., 4-cyclinder. Runs, look good. 101K. $1800. FIRM. (423)647-6448. 60 AUTOS W/PHOTO SOLD Pre-Owned 2002 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder 6cyl. auto, AC. Loaded, Convertible, Aluminum wheels. $12,995. REDUCED TO $10,000. FIRM! Priced wholesale. stk#9673 Elizabethton Auto Sale 423-543-7592 RARE FIND. C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 1989 Ford Van 188 Sarah Annie Extended Bed, Fully Carpeted, drapes, TV. Captain’s Chairs. Good for family van or work vehicle $1,200. O.B.O. Call 423-542-4995 after 6:PM C21 WHITEHEAD LINDA WHITEHEAD 543-4663 985 Chestnut Nice home in quiet neighborhood, Fenced large lot, 2 car garage with 2 outbuildings, Well maintained and cared for. $120,000.00 C21 WHITEHEAD TERESA MUSICK 543-4663 2004 BLACK CAVALIER 2.2 liter, 33,350 miles, 2DR, 5 speed, A/C, tinted windows, CD player with Fosgate speakers and 1000 W-AMP. $12,000. (423)768-0199 Pre-Owned 2000 Cadillac Escalade Elizabethton Auto Sales 423-543-7592 NOTICE TO CREDITORS per TCA 30-2-306 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the covenants, terms, and conditions of a Deed of Trust Note dated August 13, 2004, and the Deed of Trust of even date securing the same, recorded September 2, 2004, at Book T713, Page 78 in Office of the Register of Deeds for Carter County, Tennessee, executed by James V. Fair, and Sandra S. Fair, conveying certain property therein described to Robert M. Wilson, Jr. as Trustee for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Full Spectrum Lending, Inc.; and the undersigned, Aaron L. Squyres of Wilson & Associates, P.L.L.C., having been appointed Successor Trustee. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable; and that an agent of Aaron L. Squyres of Wilson & Associates, P.L.L.C., as Successor Trustee, by virtue of the power, duty, and authority vested in and imposed upon said Successor Trustee will, on December 9, 2005 on or about 2:15 P.M., at the Carter County Courthouse, Elizabethton, Tennessee, offer for sale certain property hereinafter described to the highest bidder FOR CASH, free from the statutory right of redemption, homestead, dower, and all other exemptions which are expressly waived in the Deed of Trust, said property being real estate situated in Carter County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows: SITUATE in the 6th Civil District of Carter County, Tennessee and being more particularly described as follows: BEING all of Lot 4 of the Stonebrook Subdivision, as 80 VENDING MACHINES With Prime locations. Includes Inventory. MUST Sell Immediately! $11,990 investment. 800-639-2430 PROBATE NO. P-050009 ESTATE OF NOVELLA JOHNSON CAMPBELL DECEASED Douglas Campbell Administrator c.t.a. 4X4, V8, automatic, aluminum wheels. $11,995. stk# 0609 IN THE CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION OF CARTER COUNTY, AT ELIZABETHTON, TENNESSEE PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE TO CREDITORS Per TCA 30-2-306 Notice is hereby given that on the 17th WWW.MYFIR.COM and HYPERLINK "http://WWW.REALTYTRAC.COM" WWW.REALTYTRAC.COM 11/15, 11/22, 11/29 "http://WWW.MYFIR.COM" SOLD IN THE CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION OF CARTER COUNTY, AT ELIZABETHTON, TENNESSEE ESTATE OF DAVID NEAL WOOD DECEASED DSaleNoticeTN-Aaron ccoger-_051108_-1015 Four bay garage, downtown Elizabethton. $750.mo. 2000 sqft. store front 610 East Elk, $550.mo. 423-547-2871 53 INSURANCE Monia M. Williamson Executrix Deceased: David Neal Wood Gerald L. Gulley, Jr. Attorney By: CHARLOTTE MCKEEHAN Clerk and Master 11/22, 11/29 Notice is hereby given that on the 17th day of November 2005; Letters of Administration, C.T.A, were issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court Clerk and Master, Probate Division, of Carter County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the Estate of Novella Johnson Campbell , are required to file the same with the Clerk and Master of the above Court within (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice; otherwise, their claims will be forever barred. All persons indebted to the above Estate must come forward and make proper settlement with the undersigned at once. This the 17th day of November, 2005. FOR SALE INFORMATION, VISIT HYPERLINK 714 N. East St. Looking for Privacy? Check out this 2BR 1 1/2BA, all appliances. Lots of trees, paved driveway. Storage building with electricity. $29,900.00 PUBLIC NOTICES day of November 2005; Letters of Testamentary, in respect to the Estate of David Neal Wood deceased, were issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court Clerk and Master, Probate Division, of Carter County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the Estate of David Neal Wood are required to file the same with the Clerk and Master of the above Court within four (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice; otherwise, their claims will be forever barred. All persons indebted to the above Estate must come forward and make proper settlement with the undersigned at once. This the 17th day of November, 2005. 51 COMMERCIAL SALE/LEASE 45 MOBILE HOMES W/PHOTO Beautiful home, over 400ft Watauga River frontage. Park like 2.5 ac+/- 3BR, 2.5Ba, Bonus room. $349,000. Elizabethton Auto Sale 423-543-7592 PUBLIC NOTICES shown by plat of record in Plat Cabinet B, Slide 279, of the Register's Office for Carter County, Tennessee, reference to which is here had and made. BEING the same property conveyed to James V. Fair and wife, Sandra S. Fair from Larn, LLC by Warranty Deed dated December 3, 2001, and of record in Deed Book D466, Page 298, in the Register's Office for Carter County, Tennessee. ALSO KNOWN AS: 112 Stonebrook Loop, Elizabethton, Tennessee 37643 This sale is subject to all matters shown on any applicable recorded plat; any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements, or setback lines that may be applicable; any statutory rights of redemption of any governmental agency, state or federal; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; and to any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. In addition, the following parties may claim an interest in the above-referenced property: James V. Fair; Sandra S. Fair The sale held pursuant to this Notice may be rescinded at the Successor Trustee’s option at any time. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. W&A No. 726-94934 DATED TIME November 9, 2005. WILSON & ASSOCIATES, P.L.L.C., Successor Trustee By: Aaron L. Squyres PROBATE NO. P-06 PUBLIC NOTICES Novella Campbell Deceased Johnson Earl Hendry Attorney By: CHARLOTTE MCKEEHAN Clerk and Master 11/22, 11/29 Notice of Foreclosure Sale All words and phrases herein which have the first letters thereof capitalized are defined on the attached Identifying Data of Mortgage or Deed of Trust, consisting of one page. The Real Estate to be Sold will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, in lawful money of the United States at the following date, time and place: Date of Sale: December 6, 2005 Place of Sale: Front door of the Carter County Courthouse, Elizabethton, TN Time of Sale: 10:00 a.m. Attorney for Present Mortgagee(s) and/or Substitute Trustee Tennessee Attorney Philip M. Kleinsmith 6035 Erin Park Drive, Ste. 203 Colorado Springs, CO 80918 1-800-842-8417 Registration No. 016987 Identifying Data of Debt, the Collateral and Collateral Instrument The Debt: Dated........: 1/16/2003 Original Principal Balance....: $42,000.00 Original Borrower(s): Michael J. Kierych Present Borrower(s): Michael J. Kierych Original Creditor(s): H & R Block Mortgage Corp. Present Creditor(s): Countrywide Home Loans Inc. Defaults Causing Foreclosure: Non-Payment of Periodic Payments since: 5/1/2005 Present Principal Balance Daily Interest (i.e. as of 5/1/2005) $40,942.97 after same date......... $7.39 Estimated Total Costs... $1,800.00 Attorney Fees for Completed Default Present Value Foreclosure.................. $550.00 of Collateral......... $Unknown The Collateral: Real Estate (Mortgaged Property or PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES Trust Property or Property): Assessor's Tax Parcel # :53-127.00 Common Description..... : 3720 Hwy 321 Butler, TN 37640 Real Estate Records of County Where Real Estate is Located or other records where Collateral Instrument filed): Dated......: 1/16/2003 Date Recorded or Filed....: 1/22/2003 Recording Data.......: BK T647, Pg 153 Original Principal Balance: $(see above) Exhibit "A" Legal Description THE LAND REFERRED TO IN THIS EXHIBIT IS LOCATED IN THE COUNTY OF CARTER AND THE STATE OF TENNESSEE IN DEED BOOK 458 AT PAGE 556 AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS. SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE 1st CIVIL DISTRICT OF CARTER COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND IS MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A CONCRETE RIGHT OF WAY MARKER LOCATED IN THE SOUTHEASTERN SIDE OF STATE HIGHWAY NO. 159 AND 321; THENCE ALONG THE BOUNDARY WITH MARCELLA LEWIS THE FOLLOWING SEVEN CALLS AND DISTANCES: SOUTH 01°59’ WEST, 161.50 FEET TO A POST; NORTH 88°43’ EAST, 62.80 FEET TO A POST; SOUTH 10°56’ WEST, 243.0 FEET TO A POST; SOUTH 69°28’ WEST, 37.0 FEET TO A POST; NORTH 71°02’ WEST, 29.0 FEET TO A POST; NORTH 49°40’ WEST, 85.0 FEET TO A POST AND SOUTH 69°33’ WEST, 52.0 FEET TO A POST IN THE BOUNDARY WITH DONNA C. TEAGUE; THENCE ALONG THE BOUNDARY WITH TEAGUE NORTH 00°13’30” WEST, 244.23 FEET TO A POST IN THE SOUTHEASTERN BOUNDARY OF SAID STATE HIGHWAY NO. 159 AND 321; THENCE ALONG THE SAID BOUNDARY OF SAID HIGHWAY NORTH 53°48’16” EAST, 205.01 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING 1.3837 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. ALL PER SURVEY OF WILLIAM MICHAEL GLASS, TENNESSEE REGISTERED LAND SURVEYOR NO. 927, 140 CABINDALE ROAD, GRAY, TN 37615, FROM THAT PLAT DATED MARCH 8, 1994, TO WHICH REFERENCE IS HERE MADE. BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO MICHAEL J. KIERYCH, UNMARRIED FROM DANNY G. PASS, JR. AND WIFE, ARIZONA LEE PASS BY DEED RECORDED ON 11/29/00 IN BOOK 458 AT PAGE 556. Collateral Instrument (Mortgage, Deed of Trust, or Trust Indenture or Security Agreement Being Foreclosed Per Original Trustee: Priority Trustee Original Mortgagee(s), Beneficiary(ies) Services of TN LLC or Secured Party(ies): H & R Block Mortgage Corporation Original Borrower(s), Mortgagor(s), Present Mortgagee(s), Beneficiary(ies) Grantor(s) or Trustor(s): or Secured Party(ies): Countrywide Home Loans Michael J. Kierych Inc. Present Borrower(s), Mortgagor(s) Present Owner(s) of Collateral Trustor(s) Names & Address(es) Michael J. Kierych 3720 Highway 321 Butler, TN 37640 Names and Address(es) Estate of Michael J. Kierych 3720 Highway 321 Butler, TN 37640 11/8, 11/15, 11/22 REQUEST FOR BIDS Sealed bids will be received in the Purchasing Department of the City of Elizabethton, 136 South Sycamore St., Elizabethton, Tennessee, until Monday, 2:00 PM, November 28, 2005, at which time they will be opened and read aloud. Bids will be on the following: 6’’ DUCTILE IRON WATER PIPE Specifications and bid sheets may be obtained from the above office. The City reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive informalities. The City of Elizabethton does not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, religion, age or disability status in employment or the provision of services. This the 18th day of November, 2005. Gene A. DeLoach Director of Purchasing 11/22 Statewide Classifi ed Ads REACHING 1,088,983 READERS EVERY WEEK! For placement information, contact this newspaper’s classified advertising department. Announcements AN AFFORDABLE AND BEAUTIFUL Wedding Chapel in The Smoky Mountains. Christian ceremony, pictures, video, flowers, music $165. Formal Wear rental also available. www.weddingbellsinthesmokies. com Call 1-800-922-2052 Auctions AUCTION -MAKE YOUR AUCTION Known across Tennessee! Call this participating newspaper or go to www. tnpress.com to place a 25-word ad in 76 TN newspapers for only $245. Business Opportunities GOLF -SERIOUS BUS. X-PGA Tour Players seek Dealers. Yr round bus. Dealers make up to $300K yr. Est co. w/ success stories $69K invest req’d, 800-805-4583 ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 30 Machines and Candy All for $9,995. 1-800-814-6047 Employment SECRET SHOPPERS NEEDED POSE as customers for store evaluations. Local stores, restaurants & theaters. Training provided. Flexible hours. Email Required. Call Now! 1-800-585-9024 ext 6149 Equipment For Sale SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $2,795.00 Convert your Logs To Valuable Lumber with your Norwood portable band sawmill. Log skidders also available. www.norwoodindustries.com -Free information: 1-800-578-1363 ext. 300N Financial $$CASH$$ IMMEDIATE CASH FOR Structured Settlements, Annuities, Law Suit, Mortgage Notes & Cash Flows. J.G. Wentworth #1 1-(800)794-7310. Health / Beauty FA M I LY H E A LT H C A R E W / PRESCRIPTION plan! $69.95/mo. Nationwide Coverage, No limitations. Includes: Doctors, Dental, Vision, Hosp. & more. Everyone Accepted! Call: WCG 800-288-9214 ext. 2302 Help Wanted - Drivers ATTENTION: FLATBED DRIVERS. WTI Transport. Earn up to 30% company & 77% O/O. 1 yr OTR 3 mos flatbed. Home weekends. 1-800-828-6452. www.wtitransport.com. Help Wanted - Drivers DRIVERS GUARANTEED HOMETIME SIGN On Bonus, 44cpm top starting pay, Earn over $50k first year, No Slip Seating, 6 Months Experience Required. 800-4414271 ext.-TN-100 D R I V E R S O W N E R O P E R AT O R AVERAGING over $1.00 for all miles plus fuel surcharge, Insurance, Tag and Discount Purchase Program, Limited Positions. Call 800-441-4271 ext.-TN100 $.41- $.44 PER MILE! Home 3 of 4 weekends! Miles! New Equipment! Health Insurance! Prescription card! Co-pay Dr. Visits! Dental! 401k! 95% no touch! Heartland Express 1-800-441-4953 www.heartlandexpress.com DRIVER- $2,750 SIGN ON! *Home 2 Nights Weekly *Earn up to $49,000 1st year. *Benefits 1st of month after 30 days. *Freightliner/International Conventionals. Need CDL-A/6 months OTR. JDC Logistics. 877-687-5627, 7days/wk. DRIVER- DRIVERS NEEDED- SHORT Haul. Good Equipment, Good Miles. Call 888-637-4552. DRIVERS -PAY INCREASE! $1,000 Sign On For Experienced OTR. Dedicated & Regional Available Also. Owner Operators, Teams & CDL grads welcome. USA Truck 866-483-3413 DRIVER- COVENANT TRANSPORT. REGIONAL Runs Available. Excellent Pay & Benefits. Exp. Drivers, Teams, O/O, & Students Welcome. Refrigerated Now Available. 888-MORE PAY (888667-3729) DRIVERS: OWNER OPERATORS; TRACTORS $1.53+FSC, Straight Trucks $1.15-$1.35+FSC. Free Qualcomm/Trip Pak. Sign-On Incentives. Call Dean at: 615-289-9667 DRIVERS/ DRIVING SCHOOL G R A D U AT E S w a n t e d . T u i t i o n reimbursement. No waiting for trainers. Passenger policy. No NYC. Guaranteed hometime. Dedicated and regional available. USA Truck 866-483-3413 NO EXPERIENCE -NO JOB??? No Problem!!!! CDL Training - Job Placement. $740 - $940 Wk. - No Money Down. Lodging-Meals-Transportation. Hiring In Your Area Today! 1-877-554-3800 Help Wanted - Drivers CLASS A OTR DRIVERS. Flatbed & 53’ Box. Carrier for American Standard. 1 yr exp. Great pay/Benefits. Home Most Weekends. Call Mon-Fri. Commercial Drivers 800-321-1232 or www.amstan.com D R I V E R , O W N E R O P E R AT O R S , COMPANY: Average $1.30/mile. Home weekends, during week. No forced dispatch. Plate Program. Older trucks welcome. Quick Start. Call Max at T&T! 1-800-511-0082 CFI PAYS PRACTICAL MILES effective 12/1! Weekly W. Memphis Orientation. $0.05 NE Bonus Pay! XM Service. Class A CDL Required. Apply 1-800-CFI-DRIVE (1-800-234-3748); www.cfidrive.com IF YOU CAN DRIVE you Can Buy. New Lease Purchase program. Owner Operators also needed. Run regional & dedicated runs. If you have a Class A CDL and the dream of owning your own Truck call 800-895-0017 ask for Mike Miscellaneous STRAW: WHEAT AND BARLEY available in 35 lb small squares. $2.00 each. 50 miles due north of Nashville. Call (270) 726-3005 AIRLINE MECHANIC -RAPID TRAINING for high paying Aviation Career. FAA predicts severe shortage. Financial aid if qualify - Job placement assistance. Call AIM (888) 349-5387. O F F I C I A L 2 0 0 5 D I R E C TO RY O F Tennessee Newspapers on sale now! Titles, addresses, circulation, publication dates/sizes, staff phone/email, ownership, and more for 130 Tennessee newspapers. Map by county. Associate member info. Only $40+tax! Call (865) 584-5761 Miscellaneous For Sale FREE 4-ROOM DIRECTV SYSTEM w/ installation! Free DVR! Free DVD Player! 3 months Free HBO Cinemax! Access 225+ Channels. 100% Digital. Conditions apply. Call now 1-800-474-5293 Sporting Goods GUN SHOW NOV. 26-27 Sat. 9-5 & Sun. 10-4 Knoxville Expo Center (Exit 108 off I-75 N) Over 500 Tables! Largest Gun Show in Knoxville’s History! Info: (563) 927-8176 Steel Buildings STEEL BUILDINGS. FACTORY DEALS Save $$$. 40 x 60’ to 100 x 200’. Example: 50 x 100 x 12’ = $3.60/sq ft. 800.658.2885 www.rigidbuilding.com Page 14 - STAR - TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 MEDICAL CARE LLC 401 E. Main Street (I-26 Exit 32) Johnson City (423) 929-2584 Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. 437 Highway 321 Hampton (423) 725-5062 Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Accepting new patients by walk-in or appointments. • www.medicalcarellc.com “Medical Care with a Heart.” AccuWeather 5-Day Forecast for Elizabethton ® TODAY 1900 W. Elk Avenue Elizabethton (423) 543-2584 Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY National Weather for Nov. 22, 2005 SATURDAY -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Seattle 48/36 Billings 63/40 Minneapolis 41/34 MILD CHILLY Cloudy, breezy and chilly Windy and colder with flurries 42° 49° 36° 43° 26° Cloudy, a shower in spots Mostly sunny and cold Partly sunny San Francisco 69/47 Denver 62/32 30° 46° ® 35° 29° 47° Bristol Almanac RealFeel Temp UV Index Today Statistics are through 6 p.m. yest. The patented RealFeel Temperature is AccuWeather’s exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine, precipitation and elevation on the human body. Shown are the highest values for each day. 8 a.m. .............................................. 0 Noon ............................................... 1 4 p.m. .............................................. 0 Temperature: High yesterday ........................ 54° Low yesterday ......................... 45° Precipitation: Today ........................................... 31° Wednesday .................................. 36° Thursday ...................................... 39° Friday ........................................... 39° Saturday ....................................... 42° 24 hrs. ending 6 p.m. yest. ... 0.30” AccuWeather.com 0-2: 3-5: 6-7: Low Moderate High 8-10: 11+: Very High Extreme The higher the AccuWeather UV IndexTM number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2005 Tennessee Weather Nashville 45/30 Camden 48/31 Knoxville 44/28 The State Sunrise today ....................... 7:13 a.m. Sunset tonight ...................... 5:17 p.m. Moonrise today ................. 11:12 p.m. Moonset today .................. 12:47 p.m. City Athens Bristol Chattanooga Clarksville Cleveland Cookeville Crossville Erwin Franklin Greeneville Johnson City Moon Phases Last Nov 23 New Dec 1 First Dec 8 Full Dec 15 Today Hi Lo W 40 27 pc 42 26 sf 45 30 sh 46 32 pc 43 29 sf 40 28 pc 41 26 pc 43 27 sf 46 30 pc 43 27 sf 42 26 sf Hi 46 45 50 64 49 49 45 44 57 44 45 Wed. Lo W 39 pc 36 c 39 pc 44 pc 39 pc 40 pc 39 pc 35 pc 42 pc 35 c 36 c Los Angeles 80/52 Atlanta 49/32 El Paso 70/40 Today City Hi Lo W Kingsport 41 26 sf Knoxville 44 28 c Memphis 52 40 s Morristown 43 28 c Mountain City 40 24 sf Nashville 45 30 pc Newport 44 29 sh Oak Ridge 45 29 c Pigeon Forge 43 28 sf Roan Mtn. 41 25 sf Sevierville 43 28 sf Hi 43 48 65 47 39 57 47 45 49 42 49 COOL WARM Houston 70/44 Cold front Warm front Stationary front Miami 74/54 Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities. The World The Nation Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Sun and Moon Washington 49/32 Kansas City 51/37 A storm system will move northward into New England today, spreading rain from Maryland to Maine. Colder air arriving in the wake of this storm system will cause snow showers from western North Carolina to western New York. Murfreesboro 44/30 Waynesboro Chattanooga 45/30 48/32 Memphis 52/40 New York 49/34 Detroit 36/27 National Summary Elizabethton 42/26 Union City 48/35 Chicago 38/29 Wed. Lo W 36 c 38 pc 48 s 37 c 36 c 42 pc 36 pc 38 pc 38 pc 35 pc 38 pc Today City Hi Lo W Atlanta 49 32 pc Boston 52 30 r Charleston, SC 59 34 pc Charlotte 52 30 pc Chicago 38 29 sf Cincinnati 40 27 pc Dallas 68 47 s Denver 62 32 s Honolulu 85 72 pc Kansas City 51 37 pc Los Angeles 80 52 pc New York City 49 34 r Orlando 68 43 s Phoenix 82 55 s Seattle 48 36 c Wash., DC 49 32 r Wed. Hi Lo W 53 45 s 39 30 pc 57 41 s 50 32 s 41 21 sn 44 33 sh 79 49 s 62 28 s 84 71 sh 64 36 pc 76 52 pc 40 33 pc 66 47 s 82 53 pc 48 37 c 42 35 pc City Acapulco Amsterdam Barcelona Beijing Berlin Dublin Hong Kong Jerusalem London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Paris Rome Seoul Singapore Today Hi Lo W 90 73 s 48 37 pc 59 39 sh 52 33 s 39 34 c 52 34 pc 72 61 c 59 43 pc 50 36 pc 57 41 pc 68 37 s 42 26 r 36 28 c 50 37 sh 48 36 s 86 75 c Hi 87 48 52 51 37 52 77 64 48 52 71 31 39 46 52 81 Wed. Lo W 74 pc 37 pc 36 pc 32 s 23 pc 41 pc 66 pc 45 s 39 pc 36 pc 39 s 19 sf 30 pc 39 r 32 pc 75 sh Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. TODAY’S WEATHER BROUGHT TO YOU FROM YOUR FRIENDS AT ELIZABETHTON ELECTRIC SYSTEM www.eesonline.org Sprint offers $10,000 reward for vandalism information Sprint officials on Monday offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons involved with malicious acts of vandalism to the company’s facilities in Tennessee and Virginia on the nights of Oct. 28 and Nov. 19. Most recently, on Nov. 19, vandals using hacksaws cut copper and fiber cables and damaged company facilities in the Jonesborough and Erwin areas, temporarily affecting service for more than 3,000 customers for several hours Saturday night and Sunday morning. “We will be working with state and local authorities to try to determine who is responsible for this,” Sprint spokesperson Tom Matthews said. “We hope this reward offer will move the process along even more quickly.” As in previous vandalism incidents in Abingdon, Va., and Limestone and Baileyton, Tenn., it appears that the perpetrators’ acts “were not random. They knew what they were doing,” Matthews said, “in that they damaged the facilities in a particular way that made repairs more difficult.” It was unknown whether the activity was strike-related. Sprint has reached tentative bargaining agreements with bargaining units in Hickory, N.C., Ocala, Fla., Evansville, Ind., and Butler, Pa., and talks are scheduled to resume next week with the Communications Workers of America unit representing several hundred Sprint employees in Northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia. The most recent damage, which triggered Sprint network alarms at about 9 p.m. Saturday, temporarily disrupted customer service in the Sulphur Springs, Hairetown, Meadowview Farms, Douglas Chapel and Leesburg, Tenn., communities near Jonesborough, and the Limestone Cove, Coffee Ridge and Flag Pond communities near Erwin. Sprint management employees were dispatched to repair the damage, and most of the repairs were completed by 2:30 a.m. Sunday. Final repairs in the Limestone Cove and Cof- Guard let Hyattes talk on phone weeks before escape KINGSTON (AP) — A correction officer has been placed on leave after authorities learned that he let inmate George Hyatte use a cell phone to call his wife weeks before the couple mounted a daring escape at a county courthouse that killed another guard. Officer Randall Ridenour admitted during an internal affairs interview that he let inmate George Hyatte use his phone to call his wife, Jennifer Hyatte, prisons spokeswoman Amanda Sluss said Monday. The call was made July 18 — three weeks before the Hyattes’ “Bonnie and Clyde”-style escape — as Ridenour escorted George Hyatte from Brushy Mountain Correctional Complex to the Roane County Courthouse for a hearing, Sluss said. Ridenour also made a personal call to Jennifer Hyatte later that day, Sluss said. A guard at Brushy Mountain since 1998, Ridenour was relieved of duty last week after the interview. He faced the charges at an administrative hearing at the prison Wednesday for violating a ban on personal relationships with inmates. “It is definitely grounds for termination. These are some serious charges,” Sluss said. The content of the phone conversations remains under investigation. Jennifer Hyatte, 31, entered no plea at her arraignment Monday. Police say the former prison nurse, who met and married her husband in prison, ambushed two guards as they were leading George Hyatte, 34, to a prison van Aug. 9 outside the courthouse. She was charged with first-degree murder in the killing of prison guard Wayne “Cotton” Morgan, 56, attempted murder for allegedly shooting at Morgan’s partner, Larry Harris, and with aiding an escape. George Hyatte, serving a 41-sentence for robbery and related offenses, yelled “Shoot him” when he saw her, Harris testified at a previous hearing. Harris said he emptied his revolver and fired several shots from Morgan’s gun as the couple fled. They were captured 36 hours later in a motel in Columbus, Ohio. George Hyatte also is charged with first-degree murder. District Attorney Scott McCluen says he will seek the death penalty against both of them. Circuit Judge Eugene Eblen set Jennifer Hyatte’s trial for July 25 and her husband’s for Aug. 8. In a 34-page handwritten account titled “A Modern Day Bonnie and Clyde,” Jennifer Hyatte allegedly compared herself and her husband to the bank-robbing couple of the Depression era. Prosecutors will likely use it against her, her defense attorney John Eldridge said. “We certainly are concerned about any writings that she may have made that were confiscated from her in jail,” Eldridge said. “I haven’t seem them.” How important is the diary? “That is the basis for the state indicting these two individuals separately,” Eldridge said. “They can use whatever that is against Mrs. Hyatte without using it against Mr. Hyatte.” fee Ridge areas were completed Sunday afternoon. “We will do what we can to assist authorities in Tennessee and Virginia to ensure that this kind of activity is investigated fully and to ensure that anyone found to be involved with it is prosecuted fully. We hope the reward offer will generate leads the authorities can use,” Matthews said. Sprint reiterated an appeal for the public to help the company avoid unnecessary outages with their increased vigilance, asking that the public report any unusual activity near Sprint facilities to local police and to Sprint Security at 800-877-7330. Calls related to the Oct. 28 and Nov. 19 incidents can be made to the toll-free number or to Sprint’s regional security manager at 914-935-7426. Arrest n Continued from 1 to his vehicle,” states Smith in his police report on the incident. “Mr. Carr was known to the agent as a known illegal narcotics trafficker.” Smith states in his report that the DTF agent asked that he make contact with Carr for further investigation into the man’s suspicious behavior. “Upon arrival, (I) spoke with Mr. Carr who appeared to be very nervous. When asked for his identification he fumbled around in his billfold, (I) had to ask several times for his registration and proof of insurance and Mr. Carr gave the wrong registration,” states Smith in his report. “Mr. Carr would look from side to side and then straight ahead without looking at (me).” At that time, according to the report, Smith returned Mr. Carr’s personal papers to him and then asked for permission to search Carr’s vehicle and Carr “voluntarily and freely” gave consent for Smith to search the vehicle. “As Mr. Carr exited the vehicle he began fumbling with something in his right hand and (I), concerned for (my) safety grabbed Mr. Carr’s right hand and he was holding an unlabeled blue pill bottle. Inside the bottle was 17 60mg morphine pills,” states Smith in his report adding that at that time Carr was placed under arrest and read his Miranda Rights and Carr stated that he understood his rights. “A search incident to arrest produced a prescription bottle with an additional 57 60mg morphine pills with his name on the bottle. Another unlabeled blue bottle was located in his right front pants pocket with five 80mg OxyContin. Also in plain view at the center console was an 80mg OxyContin and a 30mg morphine tablet. “In a small cooler, 10 separate bags of green plant material suspected of being marijuana was located. In Mr. Carr’s possession was a total of $1,201 and he said that he was disabled and drew a check. (I) asked Mr. Carr if he dealt drugs and he said yes.” At that time Carr was transported to the Carter County Jail and booked in. He is currently being held on a $53,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in Carter County General Sessions Court on Dec. 5. Snow n Continued from 1 to snow,” said Mary Black, meteorologist for the National Weather Service at Morristown. While some accumulation is expected at the higher elevations, the Tri-Cities will probably have to settle for snow showers mixed with rain over the next couple of days. “There may be 1 to 3 inches in the higher terrain,” the NWS spokesman said. Temperatures are expected to be a little cooler in the coming days. Low temperatures likely will drop into the 20s today and possibly Wednesday, with highs hovering in the middle to upper 30s. Thanksgiving will be somewhat warmer, with temperatures in the 40s during the day and a 30 percent chance of showers mixed with snow flurries. The moisture will come during the busiest travel season of the year as people hit the highways for the long Thanksgiving weekend. “The rain on the roads makes for slick conditions, so I would recommend using caution driving across the area for the holidays,” Black said. Asphyxiated couple were newlyweds MEMPHIS (AP) — A husband and wife who were expecting their first child died from carbon monoxide poisoning while polishing the floor of a business with a propane-powered buffer, Memphis police say. They were identified Monday as Bobby Joe Branch, 45, and Blanche “Cookie” Thomas Branch, 32. Officers patrolling a Cordova business park around 2 a.m. Sunday found the man slumped in a corner on the floor of La Petite Academy day care center. The woman was found in a chair behind the front desk of the center. The victims were contractors polishing the floor at the time they were overcome. The buffer was still running when police got inside the building, said homicide Lt. Joseph Scott. “We are absolutely devastated for this family. It is an awful, awful tragedy,” said La Petite Academy spokesman Karen Craven. Memphis firefighters tested where the victims were found and discovered carbon monoxide levels three times higher than what is considered safe, Scott said. Courthouse Flooding Photo by Anthony Pervm Morse This toilet was responsible for flooding that occurred at the Carter County Courthouse over the weekend. Circuit Court Clerk John Paul Mathes was temporarily “forced out of office” during the minor crisis.
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