Herald-Citizen - Creative Circle Media Solutions

Transcription

Herald-Citizen - Creative Circle Media Solutions
Wednesday
Herald-Citizen
The Daily Newspaper of the Upper Cumberland
114th Year — No. 34
Weather
Tonight
Tomorrow
Cookeville, Tennessee, February 10, 2016
Body found in burning outbuilding identified
By TRACEY HACKETT
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
18º
36º
Complete forecast, Page 2
16 Pages — 2 Sections • 50¢
PUTNAM COUNTY — The remains
of a body found inside a burning outbuilding at an Edwards Lane residence
on Sunday morning have been identified.
Sports
The remains are that of 24-year-old
Christopher Joseph Patton, whose last
known address was Shady Oak Drive in
Cookeville.
“We are proceeding with this death investigation, but at this time, we do not
suspect that foul play was involved,”
Major Terry Hembree of the Putnam
County Sheriff’s Department’s criminal
investigation division told the HeraldCitizen this morning.
The discovery of Patton’s remains was
made when the Putnam County Fire Department was dispatched to the address,
located near the Bloomington Springs
community, shortly after 7:30 a.m. on
Sunday.
Upon their arrival, firefighters encountered an active fire in a wooden outbuilding behind the home, and as they
fought the blaze, they discovered the remains inside the shed.
Collision
See BODY, Page 2
Board
updates
compulsory
attendance
policy
By AMY DAVIS
8-AA winners
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
Upperman girls win 8-AA
regular season title /B1
the oncoming vehicle, a 2015 Kenworth
tractor trailer.
The driver of the tractor trailer was unable to avoid colliding with the vehicle.
According to the THP accident description, the commercial vehicle struck the
passenger door of the Honda and pushed
it over an embankment, causing it to turn
over onto its driver’s side.
The Honda came to rest with its roof
PUTNAM COUNTY — A
couple of weeks can make a big
difference.
In the coming school year,
that amount of time will separate those students who are old
enough to start kindergarten
from those who aren’t — and
it’s a different cut-off date from
that of two years ago.
“We get calls a lot about what
the date is,” Director of
Schools Jerry Boyd said at last
week’s school board meeting as
board members approved an
update to the policy addressing
compulsory attendance ages.
While the 2013-2014 school
year’s cut-off date was Aug. 31
for a child to have reached his
or her fifth birthday and begin
kindergarten, this year (as it
also was last school year) it’s
16 days earlier — Aug. 15.
“It was passed in legislation, I
think, two years ago... and
we’ve just adjusted the policy,”
Boyd noted. “That’s the day
currently in the law and moving forward this year and thereafter.”
Parents of little ones who will
be 5 by Aug. 15 can go ahead
and mark their calendars for a
Putnam County School System
kindergarten registration and
orientation event set for April
12 from 1-5 p.m. at all elementary schools.
That’s when students and
families will have an opportunity to meet their teachers and
See FATAL, Page 10
See ATTEND, Page 2
Living
On display
Paintings on display in
February at local bank /A8
Nation
Ty Kernea | Herald-Citizen
Scott Bilbrey of the Tennessee Highway Patrol’s Critical Incident Response Team works on reconstructing this
traffic accident at the intersection of Mirandy Road and Highway 111 yesterday afternoon that killed two local residents, William G. Reagan and Ashley B. Sweat.
Local man and woman killed in
Highway 111 wreck yesterday
By TRACEY HACKETT
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
Victors
Trump, Sanders tops in
New Hampshire
primary /A10
Index
Abby............................A8
Calendar......................A6
Crossword ...................A9
Living ..........................A8
Obituaries ...................A7
Betty Sue Goss
Roger Vaughn
Debra Pierce
William Rowland
Shirley Jones
Kathleen Horst
Robert Dickerson Jr.
Mary Seybert
Mary Ledford
Opinion.......................A4
Sports ..........................B1
Sudoku ........................A9
Weather ......................A2
ALGOOD — A local man and woman
were killed in a wreck at Mirandy Road
and Highway 111 yesterday after the car
they were in collided with a fuel tanker.
William G. Reagan, 24, and Ashley B.
Sweat, 29, both of whom have Cookeville
addresses, were killed in the accident.
According to reports from the Tennessee
Highway Patrol, the accident happened
just after 5 p.m. yesterday.
Reagan was driving a 2002 Honda fourdoor sedan northbound on Highway 111,
and Sweat was a passenger in that vehicle.
The commercial vehicle, which was not
carrying fuel at the time of the traffic accident, was traveling southbound on Highway 111.
The wreck happened when the Honda
driven by Reagan attempted to make a left
turn from Highway 111 onto Mirandy
Road and turned directly into the path of
Algood council
starts long-term
budget discussions
By LAURA MILITANA
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
ALGOOD — The Algood city
council is looking ahead to the
next few years with regards to
big budget items.
An open meeting discussing
the five-year plan was held
Monday night in conjunction
with the council’s regular worksession, with Mayor Scott Bilbrey being the lone absent
member.
“We were going to try to get a
trailer this year...to haul the
backhoe on, but I do think we’re
going to need a trailer by next
year,” city administrator Keith
Morrison said. “The less I can
put that backhoe on pavement,
the better off we’re going to be,
especially on these long hauls.”
Other long-term things Morrison set out in the plan include in
the 2016/2017 budget allocating
$330,000 for a commercial
garbage truck, a snow plow in
the amount of $135,000, a first
responder truck in the amount
of $30,000, $10,000 for improvements to the community
center, $5,000 for entrance
signs, $85,000 for patrol cars,
and $55,000 for a water/sewer
truck.
Other items include $150,000
for paving and $40,000 for sideSee ALGOOD, Page 10
Black and white
Ty Kernea | Herald-Citizen
A flock of blackbirds covers a snowy field yesterday looking for food.
A-2 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
LOCAL
READER
SERVICES
Contact us:
Address:
1300 Neal St.
Cookeville, Tenn.
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 2729
Cookeville TN 38502
Sparta woman pleads guilty to sale and delivery of meth
By TRACEY HACKETT
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
COOKEVILLE — A 31-year-old Sparta
woman has pleaded guilty in Putnam
County Criminal Court to two counts of
sale and delivery of methamphetamine.
Shalana Irene Lang, whose address is
listed as Franklin Avenue in Sparta, was
originally charged with six counts of the
offense.
Lang will serve concurrently 10 years,
all of which will be suspended to probation, for each offense to which she has
pleaded.
She will also be required to pay a fine of
$2,000 for each of the two offenses to
which she pleaded.
She was indicted by the Putnam County
Grand Jury in November 2013, after she
allegedly sold drugs to undercover drug
officers multiple times.
Lang was arrested for those offenses on
Jan. 13 this year, and her initial appearance in Putnam County Criminal Court
was scheduled for Jan. 25.
On the day of that scheduled appearance, she entered the guilty plea to two of
those six offenses for which she was
charged.
Had her case gone to trial and had she
been found guilty, she could have faced a
sentence of eight to 30 years and a fine of
Lanes closed
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HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
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Herald-Citizen
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ISSN 8750-5541
The Herald-Citizen is published daily except Saturdays,
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use for publication news
printed in the Herald-Citizen.
Mike DeLapp
Editor & Publisher
Buddy Pearson
Managing Editor
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Advertising Director
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Circulation Manager
Smithville man
on parole
arrested here for
DUI, burglary
By TRACEY HACKETT
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up to $100,000 for each count.
The offenses for which she was charged
are class B felonies.
Lang is classified as a standard offender,
which means she has one or fewer prior
felonies in her criminal history.
The prosecution was represented by Assistant District Attorney General Beth
Willis in the case.
Lang’s guilty plea was approved by
Criminal Court Judge David Patterson.
Traffic will be redirected on South Jefferson Avenue (Highway 136) on Thursday, Feb. 11
from 8 a.m. till 5 p.m. starting at the intersection of E Jackson Street going north to Spring
Street (Highway 70). Truck Traffic will be directed at E Jackson Street to turn left towards
Willow Avenue or right towards Lowe/Washington Avenue. One lane of traffic will be
open going north on South Jefferson Avenue (Highway 136) from E. Jackson Street to
Proffitt Street. The northbound lanes of South Jefferson Avenue (Highway 136) will be
closed starting at Proffitt Street to Spring Street (Highway 70). The inside southbound
lane of South Jefferson (Highway 136) will be closed to traffic during construction from
Spring Street (Highway 70) to Proffitt Street.
COOKEVILLE — A 43year-old Smithville man with
a past history of criminal activity and an arrest here just
two days earlier has again
been arrested
— this time for
the burglary at
a Pen Oak
Drive
residence.
Turnbill
Melvin Eugene Turnbill,
of Joe Evins Avenue in
Smithville, was arrested on
the burglary charge around
10:30 p.m. on Monday, just
two days after being arrested
for driving under the influence.
Both arrests were made by
the Cookeville Police Department, and according to a report by Officer Kyle Farley,
the man’s most recent arrest
came upon the officer being
dispatched to a possible burglary in progress.
“On arrival, I made contact
with a male, later identified
as Melvin Turnbill, at the
front door of the residence,”
Officer Farley reports.
The officer detained the man
in his patrol car while he
checked on the Pen Oak
Home, making contact with
the residents.
The homeowner reportedly
told the officer that Turnbill
“had attempted to gain entry
into the house through the
back and the front doors.”
According to the officer’s
report,
the
homeowner
thought the man had come
across a house key to the residence in an unlocked vehicle
outside the home.
“He had unlocked the door
at one point and was trying to
push the door open,” the officer reports that the homeowner told him.
A female resident said she
held the home’s deadbolt in
the locked position to keep
the man from entering the
home.
The officer returned to his
patrol car and asked Turnbill
if he had a key to the house.
The man reported to the officer that he did have a key
and that he got the key from
the unlocked car, as the
homeowners suspected.
According to Officer Farley’s report, he was able to retrieve the key from the man.
Officer Farley placed Turnbill under arrest for burglary
of a motor vehicle and transported him to the Putnam
County Jail.
“While en route to the jail,
Mr. Turnbill informed me that
he is currently on parole for
facilitation of first degree
murder out of DeKalb
County,” the officer reports.
Capt. Carl Sells, of the criminal investigation division,
told the Herald-Citizen that
Turnbill had been arrested by
the Cookeville Police Department on a charge of DUI two
days prior to the burglary incident.
Turnbill was booked with a
bond of $10,000 for the Monday burglary charge, and according to his arrest warrant,
his initial appearance in Putnam County General Sessions
Court is set for March 7.
ATTEND: School
board updates policy
BODY: Authorities identify body on compulsory
found in burning outbuilding
attendance
From Page 1
At the time of that initial discovery, however, the victim’s
identity was unknown.
The remains were sent to the
medical examiner’s office for
autopsy, and determining who
the victim was became the primary focus of the investigation.
Residents of the Edwards Lane
address told authorities immediately following the blaze that
they reportedly had not given
anyone permission to be in the
outbuilding nor had they known
anyone was there at the time.
Upon the discovery of the victim’s identity, sheriff’s department sources this morning said
the residents have reportedly
confirmed that they were acquainted with Patton and that
the man had allegedly been at
their home on Saturday night,
just prior to the fire the following morning.
But they were reportedly unaware that he was on their property at the time the fire broke
out. As the death investigation
proceeds, authorities say, the
focus is now on trying to determine the victim’s cause of
death.
“As with any death, we are investigating this to try to determine the cause,” Major
Hembree told the Herald-Citizen following the incident.
The cause of the fire is also
still under investigation.
The incident is being investigated by state Bomb and Arson
and the Putnam County Fire
Department, as well as the Putnam County Sheriff’s Department.
“It’s always sad to work incidents that result in a loss of life,
but knowing the victim’s identity puts us another step closer
to knowing what we’re dealing
with in this ongoing investigation,” Putnam County Fire
Chief Daryl Blair said.
Sheriff Eddie Farris and Chief
Blair both commented on the
team work of the agencies involved, with Sheriff Farris calling it “commendable” and
Chief Blair calling it “phenomenal.”
From Page 1
principal and explore the
learning environment they’ll
be part of come the first day
of school, July 25.
During that event, parents
can enroll their children and
take home information about
school and district policies,
transportation, before- and
after-school child care, extended school day possibilities and school nutrition as
well as ideas for working with
them at home to prepare them
for kindergarten.
According to school policy,
children between ages 6 and
17 must attend a public or private school.
Parents who believe their
child is not ready for school at
the designated age of mandatory attendance may make an
application to the principal of
the public school their child
would attend for a one semester or one year deferral in required
attendance.
The
compulsory attendance law
does not apply to a student
who is 6 or younger whose
guardian has filed a notice of
intent to conduct home school
with the director of schools or
a student enrolled in a home
school who has reached age
17. For more details about the
policy, call the Putnam
County Board of Education at
526-9777.
Weather
Tonight
Thursday Night
A 20% chance of
snow. Low around
18. West wind
around 5 mph.
Thursday
Mostly cloudy. High
near 36. Calm
wind.
Mostly cloudy. Low
around 18. North
wind around 5
mph.
Friday Night
Mostly cloudy. Low
around 20. NW
wind 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday
Friday
A 20% chance of
snow and rain. High
near 41. Calm
wind.
Mostly cloudy. Low
around 20. NW
wind 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday Night
Partly cloudy. Low
around 12. North
wind around 5
mph.
Sunday
Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 34.
Readings: Tuesday’s high in
Cookeville was 27, low 17,
with 1” of snow. Tuesday’s
high in Monterey was 23, low
13, with 1” of new snow, for a
total of 2”.
Almanac: Wednesday is the
41st day of the year with 325
remaining. The sun sets at
5:18 p.m. and will rise at 6:34
a.m. on Thurday. The moon is
a waxing crescent with 6% of
the visible disc illuminated.
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — A3
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Herald-Citizen
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
OPINION
4
Herald-Citizen
The Daily Newspaper of the Upper Cumberland
Established 1903
Mike DeLapp, Editor and Publisher
Buddy Pearson, Managing Editor
What Republicans
get wrong
about amnesty
S
ince when did being a conservative mean also having
to agree that some wall
with mythical powers could
“make America great again,” a la
Donald Trump?
Both Ronald Reagan and
George W. Bush were very proimmigration. After all, ”legal”
immigration is whatever the law
says it is. So if the law permits
someone who entered the country without permission to eventually obtain her green card and
live permanently in the United
States, he or
she is a legal
immigrant.
But now, to
be a respected Republican, you
need to
somehow
caucus with
Trump and
Ted Cruz
Christine
(and a someFlowers
times
squeamish
Marco Rubio) and come out loud
and strong against “amnesty.”
Let’s be clear on what
“amnesty” really is. The simplest
and most common definition of
amnesty is “a decision that a
group of people will not be punished” or “a group of prisoners
that will be allowed to go free.”
Since we’re not dealing with
prisoners, let’s focus on the “not
be punished” part.
Anyone who has examined any
of the proposals set forth by
George W. Bush during his
tenure, John McCain and Arlen
Specter a decade ago and the
Gang of Eight in 2013 would, if
they were honest, acknowledge
that not one so-called illegal immigrant was going to be getting
off scot-free.
In the best-case scenario, they
were going to have to wait many
years before actually becoming
lawful residents or citizens, pay
fines, learn English and clear the
kind of background checks that
not even Hillary Clinton could
pass.
The proposal of the Gang of
Eight was a bipartisan attempt to
address head-on an issue that
had languished in Congress and
at grass-roots levels for years,
with no sure resolution. In addition to providing a decade-long
process for legalization, it also
required certainty that the border
with Mexico and the U.S. is secured within five years of its
passage. The proposal passed the
Senate, but died in the House.
The people who scream about
amnesty are being dishonest, because nowhere in any piece of
legitimate legislation has there
been a “decision that a group of
people will not be punished.”
Telling someone to pay thousands of dollars in fines, wait
many years before becoming legalized, possibly returning home
and waiting outside of the country for long stretches or even relinquishing the right to ever
become a citizen is not exactly a
slap on the wrist.
And people like Clinton, who
stuff their rallies with burqas and
Latinos and “Dreamers,” are
nothing more than panderers
using immigrants as a bargaining
chip. Then there are the people
who actually tried to do something, such as Rubio (who has
since backtracked) or Chuck
Schumer, who was willing to
sleep with the enemy to move
the ball forward.
And that, sadly, is all this
amnesty talk is. While I will not
vote for Hillary or Bernie
Sanders, I’m also not going to
look at Trump or Cruz or any of
the other GOP candidates who
exploit, in their own fashion, irrational American fears. The
whole idea that refugees are really ISIS operatives waiting to
pounce makes for great sound
bites, but is statistically fraudulent.
Just last week I had five Central American clients in my law
office trying to legally seek
refuge in this country. They were
doing it legally, because there is
a law that gives them that right.
They deserve respect.
And unless the GOP candidates
realize that, and stop talking
about “amnesty,” they are guaranteeing that another Democrat
named Clinton will be sitting in
the Oval Office come January.
So, run Marco, run. And stop
apologizing for one of the things
you actually got right.
Christine Flowers is a syndicated columnist. Her email
address is
[email protected].
Second wave subsides
T
wo recent comments by famous
feminists have underscored the
inevitable and predicted the
foregone: The feminist era of Hillary
Clinton, Gloria Steinem and
Madeleine Albright has come to a
close.
Each heroic in her own way, these
three icons of second-wave feminism
have reached a pinnacle of sorts,
along with the bittersweet recognition
that they are sorely out of touch with
today’s younger women. The world
they knew and helped change has produced a new generation no longer as
concerned with the issues that animated their mothers and grandmothers.
So it goes.
Adding possible injury to insult, liberal millennial women are tilting toward Bernie Sanders rather than she
who would be the first woman president of the United States. What are
they thinking?
Albright and Steinem, speaking on
different days in different environments, offered comments that are by
now familiar: “There’s a special place
in hell for women who don’t help each
other,” said Albright, who was the
first female U.S. secretary of state.
And, “When you’re young you’re
thinking, ’Where are the boys?’ The
boys are with Bernie,” said Steinem,
co-founder of Ms. Magazine and
iconic leader of the ’60s feminist
movement.
Much bestirring followed on social
media. The gist of critics: How dare
Steinem insinuate that young women
are just chasing boys? And, how dare
Albright curse young women for failing to support Clinton!
They have a point.
But they’re missing the bigger point
that had these women not cut a path
for others to enter and expect to be
treated fairly in
the workplace and
elsewhere, these
same young
women would, indeed, be following
the boys in hopes
of inserting an
“R” between the
“M” and the “S”
in their titles, as
their predecessors
Kathleen
had to.
Parker
This is the irony,
isn’t it? Of all
people to suggest that girls just wanna
have fun with boys: Though it’s not
necessarily untrue, Steinem has lived
a life based on quite the opposite
premise. It was she, after all, who
said, “A woman without a man is like
a fish without a bicycle.” Come on,
it’s funny. And it is certainly true to
women of a certain age.
Albright’s comment, meanwhile, is a
well-known and, perhaps, worn-out
trope of the former secretary’s. Now
78, she might have imagined that her
audience — at a Clinton rally —
would have been familiar with it and
responded with laughter, as had so
often been the case.
Rather than cursing younger versions
of herself, she was offering a gift in
the spirit of Arnold Schwarzenegger
saying, “I’ll be back,” or Ronald Reagan saying, “Win one for the Gipper.”
Whether some of the young women
preferring Sanders to Clinton are also
interested in boys, a not-dishonorable
distraction, was probably a weak stab
at humor, for which Steinem, 81, has
apologized. Also, she was talking to
Bill Maher on his show, hardly the
forum for solemn pronouncements.
The more likely explanation, however, is that young liberal women, like
their male counterparts, are attracted
There’s an app for that!
A
million-dollar inspiration hit me
after spending a week in the car
driving across this great land of ours
with Sue.
My idea would be a new variation on the
GPS navigation systems in cars now. Instead of the voice coming from the dashboard, it would use the speakers in the
backseat and say things like, “Turn left,
idiot! Not here, the next left!” And “Are
you sure you know where you’re going?”
And of course, “You know the speed limit
is 45 here.”
How helpful would that be? Not so much
for the driver, but for the passenger, who
could now do crossword puzzles or play
Candy Crush instead of wasting time helping to navigate. At least then someone could
enjoy the drive.
Another million-dollar idea I had was for
an app that could tell me how long I’d be
without cellphone service. “Your phone will
reconnect to the modern world in one day
and 16 hours.”
One thing I never realized about the
fruited plain is how big it is. It goes on and
on and on and on. Now I know how a gerbil
must feel on its wheel. No matter how fast
you go, the view never changes.
“The speed limit here is 65.”
“Did you say something?”
“I’m just saying the speed limit here is
65.”
“I’m doing 69. We
haven’t seen a car in
two hours.”
“We passed one 15
minutes ago.”
“Do you want to
drive? Can your legs
reach the pedals from
the backseat?”
Of course, the entire
ride wasn’t like that.
Jim
Most of the time it was
just one long, seething
Mullen
silence. After about
eight hours of that, it’s
time to chill out and relax.
“Oh, look, there’s a Motel 2 at the next
exit.”
“For once, can’t we stay at a Motel 3? The
shower in the Motel 2s are so small that I
have to break the soap in half so I can use
it.”
“Fine, we’ll just spend the $4 more. Like
we’re made out of money. Where’s the next
Motel 3?”
“The very next exit.”
The very next exit turned out to be 67
miles away. It had a Motel 3 and not much
else: a restaurant that said “Family Dining”
and a Gas & Go Away. It turned out we
should have eaten at the Gas & Go Away;
the food would have been better.
Did I mention that I am a morning person
and Sue is not? Do you know how hard it is
to take a shower, get dressed, go back and
forth to the car a few times and practice
electric guitar without waking someone up?
Face it, there’s just no making some people
happy. I’ve been up since 5, and we finally
hit the road at 11.
It seems my million-dollar ideas are a
dime a dozen, but there should be another
travel app that says absolutely nothing until
you’ve been on the road for 20 minutes,
then says, “Did you remember to bring the
cellphone charger?”
Twenty minutes later it will say, “What
about your heart medicine?” Another 15
minutes, then, “Did you turn in the key
cards?”
We still don’t know where our email got
hacked; was it from using the Motel 3’s free
Wi-Fi, or was it at a rest stop on the way?
Anyway, if you get an email saying that
we’re in Turkey and our wallet was stolen
and won’t you please send us $2,500 — we
aren’t. However, I would love to go to
Turkey and finally scratch that off my
bucket list, so if you have an extra $2,500
lying around, I’m your man.
Actually, I don’t know if $2,500 is
enough. Turkey’s a big country and I’d like
to see it all. Unless I have to do all the driving.
Jim Mullen is a syndicated columnist.
to the cool old guy because he’s promising a dream in which the rich have
less and the poor have more. Robin
Hood is so awesome.
And socialism has always appealed
to the young, the cure for which isn’t
age but responsibility. This usually
comes in the form of taxes and children, both of which involve working
and sacrificing for the benefit of others, the extent of which forms the axis
upon which all politics turns. That
Sanders never outgrew his own socialist-rebellious tendencies — We’re
going to have a revolution! — is
vaguely interesting, but not his best
recommendation for commander in
chief, among other presidential duties.
Clinton, ever the adult in the room,
may be doomed by her own sober
“momliness.” To whom do children
run to when Mom is no fun? She isn’t
helped by the two elder women in the
room.
What is obvious, if bittersweet, is
that Steinem and Albright, and possibly Clinton by association, have
passed the baton, if without realizing
it. Through their temerity and hard
work, they’ve created a world in
which their original purposes have become obsolete through acceptance.
Millennial women, who reached
adulthood around 2000, and those afterward have never known a world in
which they were not treated to daily
doses of go-girl power. They’ve never
known a time when abortion wasn’t
an option.
They really can have it all, including
the choice to not vote for a woman
just because she’s a woman because,
after all, this would be sexist.
And no one would want that.
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated
columnist. Her e-mail address is
[email protected].
Moderately Confused
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — A5
PUTNAM COUNTY WEEK
The Baxter Hotel.
Baxter Hotel — Main Street Baxter 1923
Charlie Hughes begins to climb the pole in his yard to
sound his bugle.
Baxter’s Human
Alarm Clock blew
his bugle on a pole
from 1922-1953
The Baxter Bugler, Charlie
Hughes climbed a 30 ft. pole
in his backyard, sat on a
wooden box and trumpeted
reveille at 4:30 every morning, without fail, from 1922
until 1953. He liked the exercise, whereas neighbors and
folks all over town could hear
it, depending on which way
the wind was blowing.
His notoriety grew, the Bugler was flown to New York
City, blew his $2.98 bugle
into the mic, over the radio
program “We the People”
being heard coast to coast.
After health conditions
made him end his morning
climb, he would ring a diner
bell for several years.
Charlie had a park at his
home, where elementary
school classes would take a
field trip to his house. He
made his see-saws, swings
and merry-go-round, showing
the kids his animals, letting
the kids ride some of the animals, all was free. Charlie
loved having children visit
him.
The building of the hotel began in 1901,
completed in 1902.
The land was purchased from W.R. Bradford by George W. Hays. Brick and lumber
used in construction was purchased from the
Atlantic Lumber Company. The postal serv-
ice came from Ai, and the town was called
Mine Lick. In 1902, Mine Lick was changed
to Baxter. John E. and Cora Lee Oliver became owners of the hotel on December 12,
1911.
The hotel remianed in the Oliver Family for
66 years. The hotel property was sold to the
city on February 15, 1977.
The current city hall (officially named the
John E. Oliver Community Center) was built
using the columns from the Baxter Seminary’s Pfeiffer Hall.
Baxter Depot built in 1904
The rails were completed
through Baxter in 1890. The
Tennessee Central rail lines
were eventually laid from
Nashville to Harriman. The
original depot was built in
1904. The Baxter Depot
served as a “hub” where the
mail was picked up and
dropped off.
Produce and poultry were
sent to the big cities from Baxter. Large crowds would gather
with excitement waiting the
arrival of the passenger trains
to welcome friends home and
see visitors.
The completeion of the rail
lines made people become
more aware of business opportunities. Baxter is the exact
distance of 82.4 miles by railway to either Nashville or
Knoxville, TN.
The Baxter Depot.
Pfeiffer
Hall first
at Baxter
Seminary
The Baxter Seminary broke
ground for the Pfeiffer Hall
1930. The building was mainly
funded by the Pfeiffer Family
for the administration building.
The Baxter Seminary had attendance over 10,000 students.
The Pheiffer Hall became the
main building for Upperman
High School in 1959 when
Baxter Seminary was sold to
the Putnam County Board of
Education.
Pheiffer Hall was torn down
in 1976 when a new Upperman
High School building was built
right up against it on the left
side. The auditorium was built
after Pheiffer Hall was removed.
Pfeiffer Hall on the campus of Baxter Seminary.
wilsonbank.com
Member FDIC
Come See
Amy & Philip
Amy Grissom
(NMLS#1375623, (931) 255-1109
Philip Clemmons
(NMLS# 447469), (931) 528-4928
A6 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
LOCAL/NATION
Yellen to face Congress amid uncertainty on Fed rate policy
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
the Fed’s role in supporting the U.S. economy.
After testifying to the House Financial Services
Committee on Wednesday, Yellen will address the
Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.
Last week’s jobs report for January further complicated the likelihood and timetable of additional
rate increases. It showed more pay for workers and
rising confidence among job seekers, even though
the pace of hiring slowed.
So are more Fed rate hikes coming soon?
There is less certainty now than when the Fed
raised its target rate for overnight lending on Dec.
16 from a record low near zero to a range of 0.25
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve Chair
Janet Yellen will address Congress on Wednesday
at a time of deepening uncertainty about the Fed’s
interest rate policies.
Since the Fed raised rates from record lows in December, the economic landscape has become
clouded by falling stock markets, global weakness
and sharply lower energy prices. Against that backdrop, lawmakers will likely want to question Yellen
about the probable pace of further rate hikes and
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
NYSE
9,187.80
-43.53
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Belden
Glatfelter
Cambrex
SilvrSpNet
EgyTrEq s
Tenneco
AlbnyIn
AlonBlue rs
OwensIll
Sparton
Last
45.74
17.53
37.55
11.12
4.57
40.15
35.60
3.77
13.54
13.64
d
Chg
+8.59
+2.30
+4.85
+1.38
+.52
+4.56
+3.69
+.37
+1.23
+1.18
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
ION Geo rs
JP Energy
ChesEn pfD
Unit
BristowGp
ClayEng
SemGroup
NStRFn rs
TeekOffsh
HCP Inc
Last
3.92
2.96
6.03
7.47
14.75
13.74
15.74
8.57
3.17
28.33
Chg
-1.93
-1.01
-1.92
-2.14
-3.73
-3.14
-3.55
-1.79
-.66
-5.66
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
BkofAm
Pfizer
EgyTrEq s
FordM
FrptMcM
Citigroup
ChesEng
GenElec
AT&T Inc
BarrickG
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Volume
Vol (00)
2356311
559826
532896
482684
425490
389383
385984
361623
343919
318846
DIARY
Last
12.20
29.10
4.57
11.35
5.00
37.51
1.95
28.28
36.65
11.22
%Chg
+23.1
+15.1
+14.8
+14.2
+12.8
+12.8
+11.6
+10.9
+10.0
+9.5
%Chg
-33.0
-25.4
-24.2
-22.3
-20.2
-18.6
-18.4
-17.3
-17.2
-16.7
Chg
-.07
+.54
+.52
-.24
-.27
-.30
-.09
+.11
-.46
-.69
955
2,169
61
3,185
63
480
4,956,035,827
NASDAQ d
4,268.76
-14.99
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Belleroph n
TrovaGn wt
NeosTher n
ArgosTher
AxsomeT n
MarPet
NymoxPh
Cyclacel pf
DifferBr rs
Fonar
Last
2.84
2.55
9.73
4.53
6.30
4.00
2.28
4.63
5.95
14.88
Chg
+.86
+.47
+1.62
+.71
+.93
+.58
+.33
+.61
+.73
+1.56
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
RetailMNot
ASciE
ParaShp 21
Qualys
ViacomB
SeanrgM rs
TxCapB wt
EditasM n
ViacomA
LegcyR pf
Last
5.81
24.83
2.65
17.36
32.86
2.41
17.81
12.81
36.77
2.40
Chg
-2.21
-9.33
-.90
-5.15
-8.99
-.63
-4.31
-3.04
-7.94
-.48
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Facebook
Microsoft
Apple Inc
SiriusXM
Zynga
21stCFoxA
Cisco
MicronT
Netflix s
Intel
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Volume
Vol (00)
617891
452789
430778
362284
315449
308399
294654
284484
257289
222229
DIARY
Last
99.54
49.28
94.99
3.35
2.03
24.14
22.65
9.98
86.13
28.81
%Chg
+43.4
+22.6
+20.0
+18.6
+17.3
+17.0
+16.9
+15.2
+14.0
+11.7
%Chg
-27.6
-27.3
-25.4
-22.9
-21.5
-20.6
-19.5
-19.2
-17.8
-16.8
Chg
-.21
-.13
-.02
-.01
-.06
-.46
-.28
-.19
+2.81
-.01
960
1,810
162
2,932
8
447
2,361,265,853
AGRICULTURE FUTURES
Open
High
Low
Settle
Chg.
CORN
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 16 362.25
362.75 359.25
361 -1.25
May 16 366.75
367.50
364
366
-1
Jul 16
372.25
372.50 369.25
371 -1.25
Sep 16 377.50
378 374.75 376.25 -1.25
Dec 16
385
386.25 382.75
384 -1.50
Mar 17 393.50
395 392.25 392.75 -1.75
May 17 399.50
400 398.50 398.75 -1.50
SOYBEANS
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 16 862.75
866.50 859.50 863.25
+.75
May 16 866.75
870 863.50 867.25
+.75
Jul 16
872.75
875.50 869.25
873
+.50
Aug 16 874.75
876 871.50
875
+.50
Sep 16
875
876.25 871.75
875
+.50
Nov 16 877.25
881 875.25
878
+.75
Jan 17 882.75
884.50
880
883
+1
WHEAT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 16 458.75
460.25 455.25 457.50
-1
May 16
463
464.25 459.25 461.75 -1.25
Jul 16
468.25
469.50 464.50 466.50 -1.75
Sep 16 477.75
478.25 473.25 475.25 -1.75
Dec 16
492
492.25
488 489.25 -1.75
Mar 17
500
501.75 499.50 501.25
-.50
May 17
511
511
507
509
-.50
CATTLE
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Feb 16 130.80
132.67 130.77 131.40 -1.65
Apr 16
130.40
132.30 130.40 131.15
-.25
Jun 16 120.65
122.02 120.65 120.85
-.20
Aug 16 117.50
118.45 117.22 117.60
-.02
Oct 16
117.92
118.72 117.65 118.17
+.07
Dec 16
...
...
... 117.97
+.05
Feb 17
...
...
... 117.07
+.10
HOGS-Lean
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Feb 16
65.00
65.47
64.60
64.85
-.17
Apr 16
69.40
70.25
69.20
69.62
-.10
May 16
...
...
...
75.75
-.32
Jun 16
79.60
80.12
79.17
79.57
-.25
Jul 16
...
...
...
79.90
+.10
Aug 16
78.90
79.47
78.67
79.30
+.23
Oct 16
68.47
68.75
68.40
68.70
...
COTTON 2
50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Mar 16
59.61
59.74
58.25
58.64
-.96
May 16
60.29
60.40
58.91
59.24 -1.12
Jul 16
60.95
61.07
59.59
59.88 -1.12
Oct 16
...
...
...
59.83 -1.05
Dec 16
60.90
61.18
59.74
60.11 -1.07
Mar 17
61.44
61.60
60.69
60.96 -1.07
May 17
61.59
61.59
61.40
61.45 -1.06
Tables show three most current contracts for each future.
Grains traded on Chicago Board of Trade; livestock on
Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on the
Intercontinental Exchange.
Dow Jones industrials
16,520
Close: 16,014.38
Change: -12.67 (-0.1%)
16,160
18,000
15,800
10 DAYS
N
D
17,500
17,000
16,500
16,000
15,500
A
S
52-Week
High
Low
18,351.36
9,214.77
629.68
11,254.87
5,231.94
947.85
2,134.72
1,551.28
22,537.15
1,296.00
Name
15,370.33
6,403.31
539.96
8,937.99
4,212.81
809.57
1,812.29
1,215.14
18,550.48
955.70
2.8
5.2
3.2
3.7
2.2
1.6
...
3.0
3.3
...
3.9
1.5
24.9
...
.8
2.0
1.8
5.3
9.7
2.1
1.2
2.9
1.8
4.2
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
Name
Dow Industrials
Dow Transportation
Dow Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 100
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
10
16
...
22
10
9
...
28
19
...
11
18
5
65
34
14
15
6
...
21
...
...
...
8
Last
Name
YTD
Chg %Chg
57.93 -.07 -3.3
36.65
-.46 +6.5
9.96 +.09 -11.5
60.45 +.33 +3.8
94.99 -.02 -9.8
12.20
-.07 -27.5
27.88 +.26 +38.7
43.30 +.65 +.8
131.43 +.36 +3.6
1.42
-.28 -64.1
99.70 +1.27 +13.3
92.32 +.20 -12.1
4.57 +.52 -66.7
99.54
-.21 -4.9
129.77
-.56 -12.9
12.07 +.14 -16.9
39.59
-.80 -5.9
11.35
-.24 -19.4
4.32
... -7.5
113.86 +2.01 -13.9
10.72
-.21 -11.6
29.19
-.41 -9.3
95.78
-.65 -15.0
124.07 -2.91 -9.8
MONEY RATES
Prime Rate
Discount Rate
Federal Funds Rate
Treasuries
3-month
6-month
5-year
10-year
30-year
Last
Chg
16,014.38
6,996.30
626.77
9,187.80
4,268.76
830.97
1,852.21
1,252.75
18,883.75
963.89
J
%Chg
-12.67
-.08
+71.99 +1.04
+3.82 +.61
-43.53
-.47
-14.99
-.35
-1.20
-.14
-1.23
-.07
-3.59
-.29
-38.18
-.20
-5.44
-.56
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE
AFLAC
1.64
AT&T Inc
1.92
AllegTch
.32
Altria
2.26
Apple Inc
2.08
BkofAm
.20
B iPVixST
...
CocaCola 1.32
CrackerB
4.40
CSVLgCrd rs ...
Cummins 3.90
Disney
1.42
EgyTrEq s 1.14
Facebook
...
FedExCp
1.00
FstHorizon .24
Flowserve
.72
FordM
.60
FrontierCm .42
HomeDp
2.36
iShJapan
.13
iShEMkts
.84
iShR2K
1.73
IBM
5.20
O
Last
3.50
1.00
.25-.50
0.28
0.41
1.15
1.73
2.55
Pvs Week
3.50
1.00
.25-.50
0.32
0.45
1.27
1.85
2.66
Name
Div Yld PE
IntPap
1.76
Kroger s
.42
Lowes
1.12
MktVGold
.12
McDnlds
3.56
Microsoft
1.44
NorthropG 3.20
Penney
...
PepsiCo
2.81
Pfizer
1.20
PhilipMor
4.08
PwShs QQQ 1.52
RegionsFn .24
S&P500ETF 4.13
SearsHldgs
...
SPDR Fncl .46
Textron
.08
TractSupp
.80
US Bancrp 1.02
US OilFd
...
Vapor hrs
...
VerizonCm 2.26
WalMart
1.96
Wendys Co .24
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
5.0
1.1
1.7
.7
3.0
2.9
1.7
...
2.9
4.1
4.5
1.2
3.1
2.2
...
2.3
.2
1.0
2.6
...
...
4.5
3.0
2.5
13
18
20
...
23
32
18
...
29
17
18
...
11
...
...
...
13
27
12
...
...
11
14
30
F
YTD 12-mo
%Chg %Chg
-8.10
-6.82
+8.47
-9.42
-14.75
-8.83
-9.38
-10.43
-10.79
-15.14
Last
-10.38
-21.54
+.99
-15.83
-10.84
-8.66
-10.46
-15.39
-13.43
-19.89
YTD
Chg %Chg
35.13 +.77 -6.8
36.73 -.09 -12.2
64.15 +.60 -15.6
16.75
-.72 +22.1
117.01 +.96 -1.0
49.28
-.13 -11.2
187.32 +1.70
-.8
7.39 +.02 +11.0
98.28 +.76 -1.6
29.10 +.54 -9.9
90.02 +.30 +2.4
96.32 -.30 -13.9
7.65 +.12 -20.3
185.43 +.01 -9.0
15.25 -1.48 -25.8
20.39
-.03 -14.4
32.03 -.45 -23.8
81.45 +1.63 -4.7
39.40 -.13 -7.7
8.18
-.46 -25.6
.00
-.00 -99.6
50.15
-.59 +8.5
65.81 -1.09 +7.4
9.71
-.44 -9.8
CURRENCIES
Last
1.4172
1.4455
1.3892
.8860
115.01
18.8060
.9723
Pvs Day
1.4116
1.4440
1.3935
.8918
115.35
18.7565
.9846
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
Total Assets
Obj ($Mlns) NAV
AB GlbThmtGrB m
WS
10
AB GrB m
LG
14
AB IntlGrB m
FG
2
AllianzGI FcGrC m
LG
219
American Century ValueInv
LV 1,897
American Funds AmBalA m
MA 48,214
American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 66,929
American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 49,538
American Funds FnInvA m
LB 42,264
American Funds GrthAmA m LG 68,237
American Funds IncAmerA m MA 68,651
American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 52,513
American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 47,650
Dodge & Cox Income
CI 43,367
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
FB 51,575
Dodge & Cox Stock
LV 50,943
Fidelity BlChGrow
LG 14,217
Fidelity Contra
LG 73,007
Fidelity Magellan
LG 12,529
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
LB 48,827
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m CA 41,656
FrankTemp-Templeton Fgn A m FV 3,540
Janus EnteprsT
MG 1,996
Lord Abbett AffiliatA m
LV 5,088
MFS GrowB m
LG
130
MFS HighIncA m
HY
396
MFS TNMuniBdA m
SL
102
MFS TotRetA m
MA 4,398
Metropolitan West TotRetBdI
CI 44,335
Nuveen TNMuniBdA m
SL
289
Oppenheimer CapIncA m
CA 1,671
PIMCO TotRetIs
CI 58,942
Pioneer PioneerA m
LB 4,184
Prudential Investmen BlendB m LG
12
Putnam EqIncomeA m
LV 3,126
Putnam MultiCapGrA m
LG 3,125
Vanguard 500Adml
LB 146,311
Vanguard HltCrAdml
SH 36,605
Vanguard InstIdxI
LB 100,346
Vanguard InstPlus
LB 85,157
Vanguard InstTStPl
LB 36,124
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
FB 35,932
Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls
FB 52,857
Vanguard MuIntAdml
MI 42,832
Vanguard TotBdAdml
CI 62,206
Vanguard TotIntl
FB 73,995
Vanguard TotStIAdm
LB 120,312
Vanguard TotStIIns
LB 56,830
Vanguard TotStIdx
LB 92,592
Vanguard WelltnAdm
MA 65,584
61.15
30.37
12.16
25.62
6.98
22.65
53.68
39.21
45.67
35.70
19.27
30.95
35.56
13.23
30.24
142.27
57.90
86.52
78.05
65.21
1.94
5.55
76.40
12.95
51.67
3.02
10.75
16.43
10.76
12.15
9.21
10.08
29.29
14.51
17.54
58.85
171.16
80.42
169.47
169.49
41.26
21.69
86.75
14.47
10.83
12.97
45.59
45.60
45.57
60.39
Total Return/Rank
Pct Min Init
4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load
Invt
-8.5
-7.4
-6.5
-7.0
-2.4
-1.7
-0.3
-4.1
-4.2
-7.4
-1.1
-1.9
-1.9
-0.8
-9.5
-6.3
-9.5
-5.8
-6.5
-3.5
-3.0
-6.3
-4.9
-2.6
-6.3
-4.0
+0.8
-1.0
+1.0
+0.8
-1.1
+0.1
-2.4
-9.5
-3.1
-6.5
-3.5
-8.4
-3.5
-3.5
-4.3
-4.4
-4.4
+0.9
+1.3
-4.4
-4.4
-4.4
-4.4
-1.3
prices have squeezed energy companies.
On the other hand, the job market — the most
vital part of the economy — remains solid. Worker
pay is even starting to show its first significant
gains since the Great Recession ended 6½ years
ago. The Fed has long awaited faster wage growth
for evidence that the job market is as strong as the
steady hiring gains and low unemployment rate
(now 4.9 percent) would suggest.
After the Fed began raising rates late last year, the
widespread expectation was that it would continue
to boost its benchmark rate gradually but steadily,
most likely starting in March.
For Donald Trump, for one night,
there was so much winning
DAILY DOW JONES
STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS
percent to 0.5 percent. Stocks have been battered.
So far this year, the Dow Jones industrial average
has lost 8.1 percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500
index is down 9.4 percent. And the tech-heavy Nasdaq has plunged 14.8 percent.
It’s unclear how much Yellen will say about the
likely timetable for rate increases. She and other
Fed officials have stressed that their decisions remain “data dependent” — that is, hinge largely on
the latest economic data.
Much of that data since December has been tepid.
Manufacturing has slumped. Corporate profits are
down. Business stockpiles are up. Shrunken oil
-14.8/D
-2.0/E
-6.5/A +8.1/B
-16.4/E
-2.6/E
-5.9/A +9.0/A
-11.7/C +7.6/B
-3.6/A +7.9/A
-7.7/A +5.4/A
-12.6/C +4.3/B
-7.1/A +8.0/C
-9.2/B +8.0/C
-6.9/B +6.7/A
-8.4/B +8.2/B
-7.3/A +9.4/A
-1.8/E +3.5/C
-27.2/E
-1.8/E
-15.1/D +7.3/B
-11.4/D +9.3/A
-6.4/A +9.0/A
-9.0/B +7.0/D
-7.6/A +9.3/A
-15.1/E +2.8/D
-20.0/E -2.4/D
-9.3/A +8.1/A
-11.9/C +5.7/D
-6.1/A +8.5/B
-9.4/C +2.9/C
+3.4/B +5.2/D
-4.7/A +6.4/A
+0.8/B +5.0/A
+4.0/A +6.0/B
-3.9/A +4.7/A
-0.3/C +3.7/C
-8.1/B +6.4/D
-16.4/E +3.6/E
-11.9
+8.2
-13.2/D +7.0/D
-7.6/A +9.3/A
-4.3/A +17.4/B
-7.6/A +9.3/A
-7.6/A +9.3/A
-9.6/C +8.8/B
-15.8/D -1.5/D
-15.7/D -1.4/D
+3.9/A +5.3/B
+1.4/A +3.8/B
-15.8/D -1.5/D
-9.7/C +8.7/B
-9.7/C +8.7/B
-9.8/C +8.5/B
-4.8/A +7.2/A
4.00
2,500
4.00
2,500
4.00
2,500
1.00
1,000
NL
2,500
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL
10,000
4.25
1,000
5.75
1,000
NL
2,500
5.75
1,000
4.00
1,000
4.25
1,000
4.25
1,000
5.75
1,000
NL 3,000,000
4.20
3,000
5.75
1,000
NL 1,000,000
5.75
1,000
5.00
2,500
5.75
0
5.75
0
NL
10,000
NL
50,000
NL 5,000,000
NL 200,000,000
NL 200,000,000
NL
10,000
NL 100,000,000
NL
50,000
NL
10,000
NL
3,000
NL
10,000
NL 5,000,000
NL
3,000
NL
50,000
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet
continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf =
Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within
the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at
least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd
= When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants.
Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d
= Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple
fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split
shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Objectives: CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign
Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, HY - High-Yield
Bond, IB -World Bond, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MG -Mid-Cap Growth, MV
- Mid-Cap Value, SB - Small Blend, SG -Small Cap Growth, SH -Specialty-heath, WS
-World Stock.
Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs.
others with same objective = A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum
$ needed to invest in fund.
Source: The Associated Press and Morningstar. Sales figures are unofficial.
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) —
For Donald Trump, for one night,
there was so much winning.
The billionaire political novice
on Tuesday posted a decisive victory in the New Hampshire primary, a once-unthinkable first for
an enterprise built on the promise
of putting America on top and
turning politics on its head.
Restive Democrats had their own
act of anti-establishment defiance, lining up behind Vermont
Sen. Bernie Sanders, while delivering a broad rejection of Hillary
Clinton’s second bid for the
White House.
“We are going to make our
country so strong,” Trump told a
raucous crowd in Manchester,
with typical bombast. “We are
going to make America so great
again. Maybe greater than ever
before.”
With votes still being tallied,
Trump led with 34 percent of the
vote. In his wake was a field of
Republicans still-struggling to
break out of the pack. With about
16 percent, Ohio. Gov. John Kasich surged from relative obscurity to second-place, a feat his
poorly funded campaign will
struggle to replicate. Texas Sen.
Ted Cruz, former Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush and Florida Sen. Marco
Rubio jostled for third place,
while a disappointed New Jersey
Gov. Chris Christie trailed behind.
The results offered little clarity
to the nomination battles likely to
David Goldman | AP
Republican
presidential
candidate,
businessman
Donald Trump speaks to
supporters during a primary
night rally, Tuesday.
stretch on into the spring — giving the parties’ establishment fits
and testing voters’ commitment
to the outsider excitement. Republicans head to South Carolina, a hotbed of tea party
groups and evangelical voters
that will test Trump’s staying
power. Democrats move on to
Nevada, where Sanders will
leave his New England neighborhood and try to prove his mettle
with a more diverse and urban
electorate.
Sanders was leading Clinton by
21 percentage points, with
roughly 90 percent of the vote
tabulated.
“We have sent a message that
will echo from Wall Street to
Washington, from Maine to California,” he told a cheering crowd
in Concord, later asking viewers
to log-on and send cash to fuel
his next steps.
“The government of our great
country belongs to all of the people and not just a handful of
wealthy campaign contributors,”
Sanders declared.
Clinton tried to show she’d
heard the message.
“People have every right to be
angry,” she said, as she conceded
to Sanders. “But they are also
hungry. They’re hungry for solutions. What are we going to do?”
A night of victory speeches
from a reality TV tycoon and
avowed democratic socialist was
all-but unimaginable six months
ago, before outsider fever
gripped both parties’ search for a
president. But the outcome had
been brewing for months.
Trump’s campaign seized the top
slot in New Hampshire and never
relented, despite rivals dumping
millions into advertising and late
signs that Rubio’s strong thirdplace showing in Iowa had
earned him a second look. In remarks Tuesday night, Rubio acknowledged his bungled debate
performance Saturday night hurt
him: “It’s on me,” he said.
Ted Cruz, the Iowa winner and
a favorite of social conservatives,
proved unable to win over New
Hampshire’s more moderate
brand of Republican.
Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is
a daily list of announcements of
one-time events hosted by nonprofit groups. To include your
information, call 526-9715 and
ask for the newsroom secretary, fax 526-1209 or email
[email protected]. Be
sure to include your name and
number as well as a time, date
and location of the event.
Feb. 11
DODSON BRANCH: The
Dodson Branch monthly meeting
will be on Thursday at 6 p.m.
This will be our first meeting
since December, so come and
help us plan activities to keep
your center open.
MEETING: PEO Chapter L
will meet at 10 a.m. on Thursday
at First Cumberland Presbyterian
Church.
LIVINGSTON: Millard Oakley Public Library in Livingston
will have preschool storytime on
Thursday at 10:30 a.m. At 11:30
a.m., they will have their Friends
of the Library monthly meeting.
Both of these are library events.
Feb. 12
HABITAT: The 7th annual
Have a Heart for Habitat
fundraiser/luncheon will be on
Friday from 11 a.m.-1 p.m., at
Progressive Savings Bank, 1080
Interstate Dr., Cookeville. Join
us at the bank to eat and bid in
the silent auction. Cost is $10 per
person for sandwich, chili,
dessert and drink. All proceeds to
Habitat for Humanity. For
info/orders, call Emilee Wilson at
372-2265 by Thursday, Feb. 11.
Feb. 13
CUPID’S CHASE: Community Options will hold their annual Cupid’s Chase 5K at TTU’s
Tucker Stadium parking lot. Registration at 8 a.m. and race begins
at 10 a.m. Registration before
Feb. 12 is $30, afterward is $40.
Proceeds benefit people with disabilities. To register, visit
www.comop.org/cupidschase.
SCAVENGER HUNT: Set out
from the Cookeville Depot to
have fun, win fabulous prizes and
meet wonderful WestSide neighbors at one of the WestSide Scavenger Hunts. The first of 2016 is
Saturday, Feb. 13. Stop in the
Cookeville Depot between 10
a.m. and 2 p.m. to participate.
NATURE HIKE: Join the park
ranger for a 2.5 mile hike of the
Millennium Trail at 10 a.m. at
Edgar Evins State Park. Spring is
just around the corner, and spring
wildflowers may be starting to
pop out. Make sure to wear
sturdy boots and dress appropriately for the weather.
GENEALOGY: The Upper
Cumberland Genealogy Association will meet at 2 p.m. at the
Putnam County Library in
Cookeville. The speaker will be
Tennessee Tech University’s new
archivist, Megan Atkinson.
BENEFIT:
The
Putnam
County Scottish Rite club will
host a pancake breakfast to raise
money for the “Next Step Home
— A transition for Young Adults”
on Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at the
Cookeville Masonic Lodge. A $5
donation is requested. For more
info., call 931-252-4443.
20th Annual
On Friday, February 12th from 7am-Noon
* Persons will be signed in as they arrive until the maximum
number that can be served this day is reached.
Given by the offices of:
Stephen C. Johns, DDS, FAID
Mary Harding Johns, DDS
Andrew Johns, DDS
121 S. Washington Ave., Cookeville, TN
Jason Hintz, DDS
Ben Oakley, DDS
120 W. Jackson St., Cookeville, TN
Also joining in this year is Brandon Smith, DDS,
who will be participating at the Johns Family
and Implant Dentistry location.
We look forward to providing this free dental
care for those in the community that would
otherwise be unable to receive dental services.
Services typically offered include:
• Simple Fillings • Routine Cleanings
• Simple Extractions
Care will be provided on a first come,
first serve basis.
Both adults and childen are welcome.
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — A7
LOCAL/NATION
Baby fatally struck by bullet while lying in her crib
COMPTON, Calif. (AP) — A 1-year-old girl
lying in her crib was fatally struck in the head by a
bullet at a home in Compton, and authorities are
searching Wednesday for two suspects, Los Angeles County sheriff’s officials said.
The gunman got out of a car and opened fire Tues-
Man
arrested
for identity
theft,
forgery
By TRACEY HACKETT
HERALD-CITIZEN Staff
COOKEVILLE — A 39-yearold man in Cookeville has been
arrested for identity theft and
forgery.
Ronaldo Bartolome Ignacia
was charged with the offenses
by the Tennessee Highway Patrol’s Identity Crimes Unit recently.
According to reports by
Trooper Jeff Phann, he received a report that someone
locally had been using the
identity of a Texas man.
An investigation into that report led the trooper to Ignacia.
“During the investigation, [I]
determined that the defendant
had used illegal identity to gain
employment at a business in
Putnam County and had continued to use the victim’s name
and Social Security information for over 16 years as an employee of that company,”
Trooper Phann reports.
According to the trooper’s
findings in that investigation,
Ignacia had also obtained a
Tennessee identification card
more than 10 years ago using
the victim’s name and Social
Security number.
And he forged the victim’s
name on the application for
that document.
Ignacia had reportedly been
using the victim’s identity
since 1997.
Through the investigation,
Trooper Phann said he found
that the Ignacia had purchased
the Social Security number and
birth certificate with the victim’s identity information for
$1,000 upon his entry across
the border into the United
States.
Ignacia is charged with two
counts of identity theft, which
is a class D felony, and a count
of forgery.
He was transported to the Putnam County Jail, where he was
booked on a total bond of
$12,500.
According to his arrest warrants, his initial appearance in
Putnam County General Sessions Court has been set for
March 7.
Kentucky officers
cleared in deadly
shooting in
October
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) —
Criminal charges will not be
filed against two Jeffersontown police officers who fired
at a robbery suspect and killed
him.
Commonwealth Attorney
Tom Wine released a statement Tuesday saying he
cleared officers Dwight Taylor
and Torray Walker of any
wrongdoing in the death of
Roger D. Hall Jr.
Police say Hall was shot to
death after he defied their orders to show his hands. When
he reached inside his hoodie’s
pocket, officers opened fire.
Two of Tyler’s bullets struck
Hall, who died soon after.
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day evening at a converted garage where the child
and her parents live, said Sheriff’s Commander
Rod Kusch.
A bullet hit the child in the head. Deputies rushed
the girl in their patrol car to a hospital where she
was declared dead. Detectives are investigating
528-6467
FULL LINE OF KITCHENAID APPLIANCES
“WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL”
child, raced to the hospital when she heard about
the shooting on social media.
Burleson said when she got there the family was
gone, so she came to the block where they live.
“It just hurts and bleeds,” Burleson, a Long Beach
resident, told the Los Angeles Times.
Obituaries
Debra Pierce
COOKEVILLE — Funeral
services for Mrs. Debra Pierce,
58 of Cookeville, will be held at
3 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11,
from the chapel of Crest Lawn
Funeral Home in Cookeville. Interment will follow in Crest
Lawn Memorial Cemetery in
Cookeville.
The family will receive friends
from 1 p.m. until time of serves
on Thursday at the funeral home.
Mrs. Pierce passed from this life
on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016, at her
home in Cookeville.
She was born on Saturday, June
22, 1957, in Temple, Texas, to the
late Ben Seward and the late Sue
Blacklock Penn.
Mrs. Pierce was a loving wife,
mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother. She loved the outdoors including fishing, camping
and her pets.
She is survived by her husband
of 13 years, James Troy Pierce of
Cookeville; two daughters, Amy
Belli of Cookeville and Jaclyn
Cauthorne of Cookeville; a son,
Brandon Walker of Cookeville; a
stepson, Steve Pierce of
Cookeville; six grandchildren,
Michiel Belli, Hayden Cauthorne, Jaxon Cauthorne, Ava
Cauthorne, Blake Pierce and
Abbie Pierce; and a great-grandchild, Piper Pierce.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded in death by a
brother, Benny Seward.
In Lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the family to
help with final expenses.
Bro. Jimmy Arms will officiate
at the services.
Please visit www.crestlawnmemorial.com and sign the online guest register and send a
message to the family.
Crest Lawn Funeral Home-Cremation Center in Cookeville is in
charge of arrangements, (931)
526-6384.
Mary Ledford
and care for friends and family.
She is survived by her husband
of 54 years, Jim (Smiley) Ledford (whom she married July 6,
1961, in Ringgold, Ga.); a son
and daughter-in-law, Wade and
Lisa Ledford; two grandsons, Jim
Ledford and wife Kayla and John
Ledford and fiancee Allie
Wheeler, all of Cookeville; a sister, Peggy Roddy of Sevierville;
and two great-grandchildren,
Dallas and David Ledford.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her sister, Minoka Billings.
Pallbearers will be members of
Mary’s Sunday school class,
God’s Servants.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Care Center at
Stevens Street Baptist Church,
377 Short Street, Suite B,
Cookeville, TN 38501.
Dr. Jimmy Arms will officiate at
the services.
Hooper-Huddleston & Horner
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements, (931) 526-6111.
You may share your thoughts
and memories at www.hhhfunerals.com.
Mary Roberta Seybert
COOKEVILLE — Mary
Roberta Seybert, 71, of Rickman,
passed away on Monday, Feb. 8,
2016, at her home in Rickman.
There will be no service.
The family will receive friends
from 1-3 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.
11, at Presley Funeral Home in
Cookeville.
Presley Funeral Home in
Cookeville is in charge of
arrangements, (931) 528-1044.
Robert F. Dickerson Jr.
COOKEVILLE — Funeral
services for Mrs. Mary Ledford,
72, of Cookeville, will be held at
1 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11, at
Stevens Street
Baptist Church.
Interment will
follow in Crest
Lawn Memorial
Cemetery
in
Mrs.
Cookeville.
Ledford
The family will
receive friends
from 5-8 p.m. today, Wednesday,
Feb. 10, at the Cookeville chapel
of Hooper-Huddleston & Horner
Funeral Home, and from noon
until time of services on Thursday time at the church.
Mrs. Ledford died on Monday
afternoon, Feb. 8, 2016, at her
home.
She was born Jan. 2, 1944, in
Rockwood, Tenn., to the late
Abraham Lincoln and Willie
Mae Litton Pickrell.
Mary was a member of Stevens
Street Baptist Church. She was
always faithful and served in a
variety of capacities in the
church.
She was employed at General
Telephone Company and later
worked for and retired from
Cookeville Cable TV.
Mary was a loving wife,
mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother. She loved to cook
LIVINGSTON — Funeral
services for Robert F. Dickerson,
Jr., 87, of Livingston, will be held
at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11,
from the chapel of Livingston
Funeral Home. Burial will be in
Hill Gunter Cemetery in the Ivyton Community of Overton
County.
The family will receive friends
from 4-8 p.m. today, Wednesday,
Feb. 10, at the funeral home.
Mr. Dickerson passed away on
Monday, Feb. 8, 2016, in Livingston Regional Hospital.
Livingston Funeral Home in
Livingston is in charge of
arrangements, (931) 823-1272.
ment will follow
in Gordonsville
Cemetery.
Visitation with
the Jones family
will be held from
4-8 p.m. today,
Mrs. Jones Wednesday, Feb.
10, and from 11
a.m. until time of
services on Thursday at the Gordonsville Chapel of Bass Funeral
Homes.
Mrs. Jones passed away on
Tuesday, Feb, 9, 2016, at her
home.
She was born Sept. 15, 1934, in
Stonewall, Tenn., to the late
Henry Robin Bellar and Era
Allen Orange.
She married Sonny Almond and
he preceded her in death. She
then married John Jones, who
also preceded her in death.
Shirley was a 1952 graduate of
GHS and attended Tennessee
Technological University. She
was vice president of Almond
Grading for 28 years. Shirley was
a real estate agent for Century 21
Realty and Cumberland Valley
Realty.
Mrs. Jones is survived by a
daughter, Karen Holliday of
Charlotte, N.C.; a son, Doug Almond of Rickman; a son-in-law,
Bob Givens of Memphis; two
grandchildren, Jeremy Floyd and
Leslie (Danny) Smith; four greatgrandchildren, Cole Floyd, Jesse
Floyd, Cody Holliday and Olivia
Smith; three brothers, Jerry
(Jackie) Bellar of Nashville,
Jacky Bellar of Gordonsville and
Ronnie (Becky) Bellar of Seymour, Tenn; and longtime friend
and companion, Reed Ramsey of
Cookeville.
In addition to her parents and
husbands, she was preceded in
death by a daughter, Janice
Givens, who passed away on
Dec. 30, 2013.
In lieu of flowers, Mrs.
Shirley’s family requests donations, in her memory, be made to
Gordonsville United Methodist
Church Food Bank or to Gentiva
Hospice.
Bro. Dickie Johnson will officiate at the services.
Bass Funeral Home, Gordonsville chapel is in charge of
arrangements, (615) 683-8212.
William L. Rowland
COOKEVILLE — Funeral
services for William L. Rowland,
80, of Cookeville, will be held at
11 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 12, from
the chapel of Crest Lawn Funeral
Home in Cookeville. Interment
will follow in Crest Lawn Memorial Cemetery in Cookeville.
The family will receive friends
from 6-9 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.
11, from 9 a.m. until time of services on Friday at the funeral
home.
Mr. Rowland passed from this
life on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016, at
his home in Cookeville.
He was born on Sunday, May
26, 1935, in Blue Springs, Miss.,
to the late Loyd
Rowland and the
late Tula Shaw
Rowland.
Mr. Rowland
was loving husband,
father,
Mr.
grandfather,
Rowland
great-grandfather
and brother. He
was a veteran of the Army, serving in Germany. His passion was
his cars. He was an excellent mechanic, who was on call 24/7 by
all his friends. He loved attending car shows and showing his
own cars. He also loved collecting pennies as well as everything
else.
He is survived by his wife of 56
years, Deanna (Copp) Rowland
of Cookeville; a son and daughter-in-law, Russell and Sunshine
Rowland of Yorkville, Ill.; a
daughter, Kathy Rowland and finance, Bill Heier, of Cookeville;
six grandchildren; seven greatgrandchildren; a sister, Tommye
Nell Gillardi; and four brothers
and their spouses, Walter and
Mary Kay Rowland, Mancel Ray
Rowland, Garland and Brenda
Rowland and Gayland Rowland.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by four
brothers; and two sisters.
Please visit www.crestlawnmemorial.com and sign the online guest register and send a
message to the family.
Crest Lawn Funeral Home-Cremation Center in Cookeville is in
charge of arrangements, (931)
526-6384.
GORDONSVILLE — Funeral
services for Mrs. Shirley Bellar
Jones, 81, of the Stonewall community of Gordonsville, will be
held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.
11, from the Gordonsville Chapel
of Bass Funeral Homes. Inter-
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115 South Dixie Ave., Cookeville, TN
526-7868
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528-1247
filled with fond memories and an
exceptional example of what
makes for a happy life: the Lord,
tithing, love, honesty, thinking of
others first, working hard, laughter, family and friends. Through
the lives of the people she has
touched, her legacy will continue.
She was not boastful or proud
and would “humph” at any attention, but her children, Johnny
Wayne Goss and wife Cheryl,
Maurice Kent Goss, Ginny
Lynne Poteet and husband Sandy,
along with grandchildren and
church family, will be saying
their earthly good-byes on Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016, at First Christian Church, located at 780
Fairground Street in Cookeville,
Tenn.
Visitation will begin at 11 a.m.
and continue until time of services at 6 p.m. In death as in life,
all are welcome.
She will be laid to rest Friday,
Feb. 12, at 10 a.m., in Green Hill
Cemetery, located in Alpine,
Tenn.
Condolences may be shared
with
the
family
at
www.dyerfh.com.
Dyer Funeral Home in
Cookeville is in charge of
arrangements, (931) 526-7158.
Roger Wallace Vaughn
LIVINGSTON — Funeral
services for Roger Wallace
Vaughn, 54, of Rickman, will be
held at 10 a.m. on Friday, Feb.
12, at First Baptist Church of
Livingston. Burial will be in
Okolona Cemetery.
The family will receive friends
from 5-8 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.
11, at Hall Funeral Home of Livingston.
Mr. Vaughn passed away Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016, in Vanderbilt
University Medical Center.
Betty Sue Goss
Hall Funeral Home of Livingston is in charge of arrangeCOOKEVILLE — Looking to- ments (931) 823-5010.
ward heaven, she quietly left us
on a cold, sunny day in the early
Kathleen Horst
afternoon, bringing us all to tears
and feeling dazed from the pro- MONTEREY — Funeral servfound loss of one ices for Kathleen Horst, 65, of
we so loved and the Muddy Pond community, will
cherished.
be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, Feb.
But she was 12, at Pilgrim Christian Fellowhappy as she em- ship Church. Interment will folbraced her Sav- low in Weeks Cemetery in the
ior and smiled at Muddy Pond community.
Mrs. Goss her mother. She The family will receive friends
was our Heart, from 2-4 p.m. and from 6-8 p.m.
center, comforter, our shoulder to on Thursday at the church.
cry on, always willing to listen. Mrs. Horst passed away on
She was the mother everyone Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016, in Upper
wanted. She had a heart of a Cumberland Hospice and Pallianurse until the end.
tive Care in Cookeville.
She was happy when company Goff Funeral Home in Moncame, whether family, friend or terey is in charge of arrangestranger. You felt welcome and ments, (931) 839-2311.
didn’t leave empty handed or
without hearing “Have I got anything you need?” She enjoyed
girls basketball, camping, fishing, quilting, reading, crossword
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whether gang rivalries are involved, Kusch said.
“Clearly the baby is an unintended victim,” Kusch
said. Authorities are searching for two men who
were spotted fleeing the residential neighborhood
in a dark sedan.
Rena Burleson, who said she used to babysit the
Harris Monuments
149 W. Spring St., Cookeville
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Herald-Citizen
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
LIVING
8
It’s just for
whipped
cream
Wedding
cast of
characters
reflects
turbulent
history
M
D
EAR ABBY: My son,
“Chad,” is being married
in June to “Jenny,” a girl
his sister “Madison” introduced
him to. Madison feels she
should be a bridesmaid in their
wedding because she introduced
them. Madison had sex with
Jenny’s boyfriend “Axel” before
she met Chad, got pregnant and
had Axel’s baby.
Jenny feels Madison screwed
up her life and, even though
she’s about to marry my son,
she doesn’t want to reward
Madison by asking her to be in
the wedding. My daughter says
if she’s not
in the wedDear
ding she
Abby
won’t attend, and
won’t allow
her son (by
Axel) to be
the ring
bearer, either.
I feel Chad
and his fiancee
should be
Abigail
able to have
Van Buren
their wedding the
way they want. I do not want to
miss my only son’s wedding because my daughter feels
slighted. What should I do and
say? — COMPLICATED IN
WEST VIRGINIA
DEAR COMPLICATED:
While it’s unfortunate that
Jenny can’t let bygones be bygones in the interest of future
family harmony, you must not
allow your daughter to dictate
the plans for her brother’s wedding. When the big day arrives,
you should definitely attend and
celebrate with Chad and Jenny.
If Madison chooses not to attend as a guest, that’s her decision, and you should not allow
her to make it your problem.
DEAR ABBY: My mother
married a man, “George,” a few
years ago. They met online, and
he makes her happier than I’ve
ever seen her. Our entire family
adores George and is supportive
of their marriage.
My husband and I had our first
child, “Ella,” this year. This has
made Mom’s dreams of becoming a grandma come true.
When I see George hold, play
with, or just be in the same
room with my daughter, I can’t
help but keep a really close eye
on how he acts with her. He hasn’t said or done anything for me
not to trust him, but it makes me
really uneasy, and I want to restrict his interaction with her.
It is my responsibility to protect my baby girl, and I’m extracautious because I was molested
as a young girl. I can’t discuss
this with Mom because she
doesn’t know about what happened to me, and I know this
would cause a huge fight between us.
How can I limit George’s contact with Ella while still giving
Mom the time she wants with
her? Is this intuition or paranoia? — CAUTIOUS IN
KANSAS
DEAR CAUTIOUS: Why
does your mother not know
what happened to you as a
child? Did you stay silent because you were afraid you
wouldn’t be believed? Because
you wanted to protect her? Because your abuser was your father? You should have told her.
It was her job to protect YOU.
I think the time has come for
you to let her know what happened and how it has affected
you. While I can appreciate
your reason for not trusting
men, not all men are molesters.
If you would feel better keeping
a close eye on your daughter’s
interactions with males until
she’s old enough to know what
kind of touches are appropriate
and which ones are not, that’s
your privilege. And if it leads to
an argument with your mother,
you will just have to stand by
your decision.
Artwork Exhibit
Jennifer Brooks of Putnam 1st Mercantile, left, helps Heather Calfee Seals display her artwork.
Seals’ art will be displayed at the main office of the bank, located at 200 W. Jackson St. through
the month of February. She is a graduate Tennessee Tech with a bachelor of fine arts degree with
a concentration in painting.
Upper Cumberland Home and
Garden show set for March 4-6
COOKEVILLE — Winter is definitely still here, but “Spring is Calling.”
The
Home
Builders
Association is ready for warmer
weather and the Upper Cumberland
Home & Garden Show March 4-6 at
the Hyder Burks Pavilion in
Cookeville. See the latest trends for
home building, remodeling, decorating, and landscaping with more than
170 exhibits featuring products and
services from the Upper Cumberland and beyond.
If you are shopping for a pool, furniture, lawn mower, windows,
plants, cookware, specialty foods or
even a complete new home, you will
find everything at this event. For
more than 40 years, the Home
Builders Association of the Upper
Cumberland has sponsored this annual event, bringing the best local
values together under one roof. With
spring on the way, this is the perfect
time to preview products that will
enhance your home, garden and outdoor living spaces.
The Cooking Stage is always a
popular attraction in the “Gourmet
Gallery” of the show, with local and
regional celebrities demonstrating
recipes and sharing tips for entertaining and healthy living. Presenters include restaurant chefs,
cookbook authors, and more.
Since
barn
sales and the
American Pickers TV Show
have become so
popular in recent years, a
barn sale area
will be added to
the event this
Chef Chad Combs year with antiques, vintage
home decor, and handmade shabby
chic items for sale. Whether your design style is cottage or industrial,
you will find a special gem for your
home to buy from a variety of stylish
dealers.
The Putnam Friends of the Library
“Coffee with An Author” at the
event will be Saturday, March 5, at
10:30 a.m. with a program by Nancy
Vienneau, author of “Third Thursday Community Potluck Cookbook.” Nothing is more down-home
and authentically American than a
potluck supper, and Vienneau will
talk about how this fine tradition can
be enhanced with southern, sustainable, and seasonal accents.
The Home Builders Association
believes in empowering homeowners with the latest information on
new products and trends. Be sure to
attend the Sunday afternoon semi-
nar, “Beautiful Finishes with Pure &
Original Paints” to learn about a European paint line that is brand new
to the USA. Leslie Stocker, graphic
designer, artist, and creator of the hit
blog, “Colorways with Leslie
Stocker,” will demonstrate how easy
it is to create amazing finishes for
your home and for rejuvenating
pieces of furniture. Don’t miss this
opportunity to learn about this incredible paint line now available in
the USA!
Another highlight of the show will
be the Upper Cumberland Tourism
“Stay and Play” Travel Expo. You
will have a unique opportunity to see
great ideas for vacations and weekend or day trips that are within a
short drive from home. Information
on the Upper Cumberland’s cultural,
historic and scenic attractions, as
well as its outdoor recreational opportunities and lodging options will
be available in the Travel Expo area
of the Home & Garden Show.
Admission is $5, with an opening
night special two-for-1 price on Friday night, March 4. Event hours are
Friday 4-8 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m.-6
p.m., and Sunday noon–4 p.m. For
directions and more information,
call the Home Builders Association
at 931-528-7472 or check out the
website at www.uchba.com.
ESPN weighs down Disney’s quarter
By RYAN NAKASHIMA
AP Business Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) — ESPN,
the sports network that drives Disney’s profit engine, has hit a soft
patch. Subscribers have fallen by
about 7.2 million over the last three
years, according to Nielsen, and it’s
coming off a round of layoffs in the
latest quarter. As more people cut the
cord to watch programming online,
its perch on top of the pay TV empire is looking unsteady at best.
The network’s troubles are a bellwether for one of TV’s biggest challenges: the ever-increasing cost of
sports rights and whether consumers
want to keep footing the bill.
The conundrum was reflected in
Disney’s quarterly earnings Tuesday.
Even though “Star Wars: The Force
Awakens” helped Disney’s earnings
soar 32 percent to a record $2.9 billion, its television profits slumped
by 6 percent, in part due to increases
in the cost of sports-broadcast rights.
It was Disney’s second profit decline
in the TV segment in the last four
quarters. Shares fell 3 percent to
$89.48 in after-hours trading, the
lowest level in more than a year.
Major media companies have invested $130 billion in sports rights
over the next several years, Morgan
Stanley analyst Benjamin Swinburne said in a recent investor presentation. But the cost of those rights
is increasing faster than the revenue
those companies reap.
Leading the pack of big spenders:
Disney and its ESPN juggernaut,
which accounts for an estimated 29
percent of those long-term contract
rights, from “Monday Night Football” to the NBA playoffs. Should
the ad market falter and the pay TV
audience decline even faster than its
current 1 percent a year — the “bear
case” — Disney’s overall profit
growth rate for the next four years
could be nearly halved, Swinburne
said.
Disney CEO Bob Iger sought to
rebut worries on Tuesday’s conference call, saying ESPN actually saw
a mild uptick in subscribers after the
quarter ended. (Nielsen put ESPN
subscribers at 91.4 million in January, down from 94.5 million a year
ago.) Iger surmised the improvement
had to do with good sales of Dish
Second City names comedy school for Ramis
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago
improv troupe Second City is
opening a school focusing on
comedic filmmaking and naming it after late writer-directoractor Harold Ramis.
Second City said Tuesday
that applications are being accepted for the school’s yearlong filmmaker program that
starts in September in Chicago.
Students enrolled in the intensive program will learn comedy training, film history,
storytelling and film production. They’ll produce a pilot
TV show or short film.
Ramis’ longtime collaborator
and film producer Trevor Albert will be the chairman.
Network’s Sling TV online bundle
of channels, which includes ESPN
for a relatively inexpensive $20 a
month.
“This notion that either the expanded basic bundle is experiencing
its demise, or that ESPN is cratering
in any way from a sub perspective,
is just ridiculous,” Iger said. “Sports
is too popular.” He said the company
would be looking for more opportunities to sell ESPN into so-called
“skinny bundles” that are cheaper
than most pay TV packages today.
Iger’s comments helped stanch the
bleeding, said Robin Diedrich, an
analyst at Edward Jones, who has a
“buy” rating on the stock. That’s in
part because its other segments from
movies to theme parks are booming.
“Even considering some of the risk
and slowdown we are seeing in
media, we look at this as a really
good buying opportunity,” she said.
Still, ESPN’s impact at Disney is
huge because it leads the cable networks division that accounted for
nearly half of Disney’s operating income last year. Sports rights “may
ultimately turn into more risk than
reward,” Swinburne said.
Subscribe to the Herald-Citizen
526-9715
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Call Devon or Michelle at Falcon
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y most favorite newest kitchen
gadget is fun and it makes delicious whipped cream. When I
watched a friend pour heavy cream into a
canister and seconds later squirt fresh
whipped cream on strawberry shortcake, I
was hooked. “Your Grands will love it!”
Kathy said. “I can’t believe you don’t have
one of these.”
So I put whipped cream dispenser at the
top of my birthday wish list last summer.
“What’s that?” Husband asked. “It’s just for
whipped cream?”
“Lots of really delicious whipped cream
and it keeps in the refrigerator for almost
two weeks and our
Grands and I will love
Where
it. They can squirt their
We Are
own.” I tried to justify
the cost.
“Whipped cream
tonight!” I said, when I
ripped open the package. I had bought a pint
of heavy cream in anticipation of serving it
with birthday cake. But
that wasn’t to be. I’d
neglected to notice that
chargers were needed.
Susan
Chargers filled with
Ray
N2O, nitrous oxide,
and sold specifically as
whipped cream propellant.
I eagerly waited for the delivery of chargers and the day they arrived I was as giddy
as a kid with a new puppy. That night I
poured cream in the metal canister, added a
little powdered sugar and vanilla, and Husband dispensed the N2O charger. Following
the manual’s directions, he shook the canister exactly six times and then, as a test, I
pressed the nozzle toward the kitchen sink.
Whipped cream splattered the sink. Husband’s turn. More splatters. On the next
page of the manual, the directions for operation were specific. “The whipper must be
held “headfirst” (with the decorator tip facing vertically downwards!) and the lever
must be operated gently.” It worked! Holding the canister vertical, not at a 45-degree
angle, I sprayed whipped cream into a big
serving spoon and licked it clean.
We’ve eaten whipped cream on brownies,
ice cream, banana pudding, cake. All
desserts are better with real cream. A little
cream makes my morning coffee perfect.
And the Grands do like my new gadget. A
lot.
Last week, our five in-town Grands ate
lunch with Husband and me, and after lunch
Annabel, age 6, asked, “Can we have a
treat?”
“Well, we still have some ice cream cake,”
Husband said.
“With whipped cream?” Samuel, age 10,
asked.
“Sure.”
“Can I do my own?” eight-year-old Elsie
asked.
Husband nodded and put slices of the
frozen cake on plates. He shook the
whipped cream canister and helped Elsie
hold it straight down. Samuel stood close
waiting his turn to squirt cream.
And as Elsie told her mother later, “I
squirted the whipped cream and there was a
giant whipped cream explosion and it went
everywhere.” Yes, a whipped cream explosion.
I was at the kitchen table with my back
turned, helping the younger Grands put
away their lunch plates. I heard a loud
swoosh and Elsie scream, “Oooohhhh!”
Husband, Elsie, and Samuel were covered
with white blobs. Face, hair, clothes. The
floor, the stove, kitchen counters — everything within a few feet was splattered.
The shocked looks on Elsie’s, Samuel’s
and Husband’s faces quickly changed to
surprise chuckles and then to hysterical
laughter. What a mess! And what laughing!
“I don’t know where to start,” Husband
said. Samuel and Elsie licked whipped
cream off their arms. Eventually, the mess
was cleaned up and the Grands ate their ice
cream cake, sans whipped cream.
Like I said, the gadget is fun and makes
yummy real whipped cream. But when it’s
almost empty, watch out.
Susan Ray is a Cookeville writer. Her
column appears every Wednesday.
Read her blog online at
http://susanrray.com.
Are you ready for whole Bible Church?
Do you desire all of God’s Word from Genesis
to the Maps at the end of the Book?
Are you ready to experience the true and living Savior
as prophesied in the Hebrew Scriptures and as clearly
portrayed in the four Gospels?
Would you like to walk as Jesus walked?
And, be filled with His Spirit?
If you want to invest more time in the Bible at Church,
then Hungry Hearts Church may be for you! We live the Saturday
Sabbath, the Jewish Holy Days and follow the Dietary Laws.
Join us at Hampton Inn at 1:00pm on Sat. February 13 - (731) 736-1055
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — A9
ENTERTAINMENT
Dilbert
Peanuts
Snuffy Smith
Shoe
For Better or For Worse
Zits
The Born Loser
Garfield
Frank & Ernest
Arlo & Janis
Horoscope
Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016
Don’t doubt your capabilities.
Enforce your original ideas and
be proud of who you are and
what you can do. Stand tall and
embrace whatever comes your
way. Utilize your time wisely and
plan your strategy with precision.
Good timing, flexibility and discipline will lead to positive results.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
— Stick to your game plan. Giving in to temptation will not end
well. Strive to reach the personal
and professional goals that will
help you excel.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) —
You will get ahead, make financial gains and find your niche if
you are diligent in your pursuit of
happiness and satisfaction. Romance will ease stress and improve your life.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) —
Observation will help you recognize what will and won’t work.
Be fastidious in the way you approach your job in order to avoid
the wrath of someone waiting for
Sudoku
you to screw up.
Surprise everyone by
TAURUS (April 20making an unusual
May 20) — What you
change to the way you
do out of kindness and
look or live. It’s time to
respect will result in all
shake things up a bit
sorts of rewards. Your
and to do things the
actions will make othway you want to do
ers take notice and put
them.
you in the running for
LEO (July 23-Aug.
a special position.
22) — You’ll feel anxGEMINI (May 21ious if you give in to
June 20) — Don’t Eugenia
someone you disagree
jump in to something Last
with. Don’t be afraid to
too quickly. What
say no or walk away
sounds feasible at first
from an argument that
will turn out to be a fiasco. Bide is impossible to win.
your time and consider the prac- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —
ticality of whatever you want to Avoid bullies and fast talkers.
pursue.
Explore your ideas and invest in
CANCER (June 21-July 22) — the possibilities that make you
World Almanac Databank
Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2016
TODAY’S HISTORY: In
1840, Britain’s Queen Victoria
married Prince Albert.
In 1967, the 25th Amendment
to the Constitution, establishing
presidential succession, was ratified.
In 1996, the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue defeated reigning world champion Garry
Kasparov for the first time in a
game of chess.
In 2005, North Korea publicly
announced that it had produced
nuclear weapons.
TODAY’S
BIRTHDAYS:
Charles Lamb (1775-1834), author; William Allen White (18681944), author/journalist; Boris
Pasternak (1890-1960), author;
Jimmy Durante (1893-1980),
singer/comedian; Bertolt Brecht
(1898-1956), playwright; Robert
Wagner (1930- ), actor; Mark
Spitz (1950- ), swimmer; Greg
Norman (1955- ), golfer; John
Calipari (1959- ), basketball
coach; George Stephanopoulos
(1961- ), journalist; Laura Dern
(1967- ), actress; Vince Gilligan
(1967- ), TV writer/producer;
Elizabeth Banks (1974- ), actress; Emma Roberts (1991- ),
actress.
TODAY’S FACT: Playwright
Arthur Miller died exactly 56
years after his “Death of a Salesman” opened in New York on
this date in 1949.
TODAY’S SPORTS: In 1968,
Peggy Fleming won the women’s
figure skating gold for the United
States at the Winter Olympics in
Grenoble, France.
TODAY’S QUOTE: “It is not
enough to demand insight and informative images of reality from
the theater. Our theater must
stimulate a desire for understanding, a delight in changing reality.” — Bertolt Brecht
TODAY’S NUMBER: 9 —
children Queen Victoria and
Prince Albert had together. All
married into royal houses in Europe.
Lottery
Tuesday
Cash 3 Evening 6-2-0
Cash 3 Midday 4-6-5
Cash 3 Morning 6-7-3
Cash 4 Evening 5-4-6-5
Cash 4 Midday 1-4-5-7
Cash 4 Morning 0-9-3-6
Mega Millions
03-42-46-56-71
Mega Ball 13, Megaplier 4
Est. jackpot: $80 million
the most excited. Be true to yourself and spend time with likeminded people.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) —
Trust in your abilities and make
the changes that will bring you a
high return.
Back away from situations that
are limiting. Don’t be afraid to
make a move.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
— Speak up, share your ideas
and concerns and make things
happen. You can make a difference if you put your plans in mo-
tion. Love freely and unconditionally.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) — Stop before you go too far.
There will be a fine line between
too little and too much. Moderation in all your dealings will be
the key to success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) — Your instincts will lead
you to something or someone
that will change your life. An
open mind will encourage others
to share their aspirations. You can
make a difference.
Crossword
A10 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
LOCAL/NATION
Nation
in Brief
Obama vows to
press ahead on Clean
Power Plan after
setback
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Obama administration is vowing to press ahead with efforts
to curtail greenhouse gas emissions after a divided Supreme
Court put aside his signature
plan to address climate change
until after legal challenges are
resolved. Tuesday’s surprising
move by the court is a blow to
a President Barack Obama and
a victory for the coalition of 27
mostly Republican-led states
and industry opponents, who
call the regulations “an unprecedented power grab.”
By issuing the temporary
freeze, a 5-4 majority of the
justices signaled that opponents made strong arguments
against the rules. The high
court’s four liberal justices said
they would have denied the request for delay.
Records fall as
winter heat wave
hits Southern
California
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A
midwinter heat wave baked
Southern California again
Tuesday, breaking more February records as temperatures
soared into the 80s and 90s
even as the Santa Ana winds
that stoked the atmosphere
began to fade.
Records for the date fell by
midday as temperatures
climbed into the upper 80s, and
by afternoon there were numerous readings in the 90s
throughout the region.
Downtown Los Angeles
topped out at 89 degrees, beating the old Feb. 9 record by 4
degrees. The high was 21 degrees above normal for the
date, the National Weather
Service said.
Other records were set or tied
in Long Beach, where it
reached 92 degrees, Santa Barbara, Camarillo and at Los Angeles International Airport.
Unseasonable warmth began
building over the weekend as
high pressure set into the Great
Basin, sending air flowing toward Southern California. The
gusty, dry Santa Ana winds
form as air descends through
mountain passes and canyons,
warming through compression
and pushing out to sea.
Red flag warnings for wildfire danger that were posted on
Monday were not reissued
Tuesday as the winds subsided.
Senate eyes hitting NKorea with tougher sanctions
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Senate is considering hitting
North Korea with more stringent
sanctions in the wake of Pyongyang’s satellite launch and
technical advances that U.S. intelligence agencies say the reclusive
Asian nation is making in its nuclear weapons program.
The bill that senators are expected to vote on Wednesday targets North Korea’s ability to
access the money it needs for developing miniaturized nuclear
warheads and the long-range missiles to deliver them, according to
the legislation’s backers.
The House overwhelmingly approved a similar measure last
month and there is strong bipartisan support in the Senate for the
North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act.
“The kind of belligerence we’ve
seen from Pyongyang must not be
ignored,” Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky
Republican, said Tuesday.
North Korea on Sunday
launched a long-range rocket carrying an Earth observation satellite into space.
The launch, which came about a
J. Scott Applewhite | AP
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., joined by, from left, Sen. Roger Wicker,
R-Miss., Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. and Senate Majority Whip
John Cornyn of Texas, talks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
month after the country’s fourth Washington, Seoul and others
nuclear test, was quickly con- consider the launch a banned test
demned by world leaders as a po- of missile technology.
tential threat to regional and That assessment is based on Pyglobal security.
ongyang’s open efforts to manu-
facture nuclear-tipped missiles
capable of striking the U.S. mainland and that the technology used
to launch a rocket carrying a
satellite into space can be applied
to fire a long-range missile.
In the annual assessment of
global threats delivered to Congress on Tuesday, Director of National Intelligence James R.
Clapper said North Korea has expanded a uranium enrichment facility and restarted a plutonium
reactor that could start recovering
material for nuclear weapons in
weeks or months.
Both findings will deepen concern that North Korea is not only
making technical advances in its
nuclear weapons program, but is
working to expand what is
thought to be a small nuclear arsenal. U.S.-based experts have estimated that North Korea may
have about 10 bombs, but that
could grow to between 20 and
100 by 2020.
Clapper said that Pyongyang has
not flight-tested a long-range, nuclear-armed missile but is committed to its development.
Underscoring the difficulty of
understanding North Korea’s actual intentions, Clapper said the
U.S. does not know whether
North Korea would use nuclear
weapons for defensive or retaliatory purposes.
ALGOOD: Long-term budget talks now underway
From Page 1
walks.
“I think if we (pave) Main Street after the
water line (improvement) and take
$150,000 out of general fund and maybe
do a $150,000 out of the street aid account, that would ease the cost there and
try to push the sidewalks to maybe to
$40,000, even $50,000 to put a few sidewalks in,” Morrison said.
“$40,000 would allow us to do several
more sidewalks.”
Victor Jones, public works director,
spoke about the snow plow and commercial garbage truck.
“We’re working on our snow plow as we
speak, but the rust has gotten it pretty
good,” he said. “Right now is the time to
start thinking.”
As for the commercial garbage truck, it’s
showing its age.
“It’s about 13 years old and has rust really bad,” Jones said.
The one budgeted isn’t just a regular
commercial garbage truck — it has an automated loader so personnel can dispose
of residential cans and commercial dumpsters.
“This would allow us to sell the backup
residential (garbage truck),” Morrison
said.
That truck has a good transmission and
engine, but the body is not in good shape.
“This (new) truck can also haul twice as
much trash, allowing the truck to run all
day without dumping,” Morrison said.
“And there’s no manpower on the back of
the truck. It would make it a whole lot easier to do things.”
FATAL: Two die in
Highway 111 collision
with tanker truck
From Page 1
against a tree.
Troopers said that neither Reagan nor Sweat were wearing seat
belts at the time of the wreck,
but according to the officer’s
opinion, seat belts would not
have made a difference in the
outcome of the wreck.
At this time, drinking or drugs
are not believed to be factors
contributing to the accident, but
as standard procedure in such
situations, troopers who worked
the wreck requested tests on
both victims and the driver of
the fuel tanker, who was not injured.
The accident is under investigation by Trooper Matilda Mahaney.
The THP’s Critical Incident
Response Team is performing an
accident reconstruction, which
is also standard procedure in situations resulting in two or more
fatalities.
The current snow plow is eat up with
rust.
“I’ve got a quote for a single-axle dump
truck that would have an insert bed instead
of salt being dumped in the actual truck
bed, a slide in insert with an automatic
feeder...that would hopefully keep a lot of
the salt off the inside of the bed and extend
the life of the bed,” Morrison said.
The funds budgeted for the community
center would be for kitchen upgrades and
clean up.
Morrison would like to have entrance
signs on both ends of town, but definitely
have one set up in the next year.
In 2017/2018 budget, Morrison suggested allocating $60,000 for construction
of the farmers market, $10,000 for the
community center, $45,000 for public
works trucks, $125,000 for paving,
$45,000 for sidewalks and $65,000 for patrol cars.
In the 2018/2019 budget, Morrison is
looking to allocate $340,000 for a new fire
engine, along with $125,000 for paving,
$45,000 for sidewalks, $45,000 for public
works trucks, $10,000 for the community
center and $45,000 for patrol cars.
In the 2019/2020 budget, $125,000
would be allocated for paving, $45,000 for
sidewalks, $60,000 for public works
trucks and $40,000 for patrol cars.
Since Tuesday’s regular meeting of the
planning commission and council were
snowed out, the meetings will take place
Tuesday, Feb. 16, at 5:30 p.m. in Algood
city hall.
Call 526-9715 to subscribe
Herald-Citizen
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
SPORTS
B
Titans release safety Griffin
By TERRY McCORMICK
TitansInsider.com
NASHVILLE — The makeover of the
Tennessee Titans is beginning as the
team turned the page on a long-time fixture in the secondary Tuesday, releasing
safety Michael Griffin.
Griffin, a two-time Pro Bowl selection,
was the Titans first-round pick in 2007
and after a brief try as a cornerback, became a fixture at free safety in the Titans
secondary.
Griffin reacted to his release with a
comment on his Twitter account: “I
knew one day my time would come and
I cherished every minute of it. It’s been
real Tennessee. Thanks for everything.”
Griffin’s final game as a Titan was in In-
dianapolis and after that game, he joked
out loud in the locker room about the
possibility of his release, saying he has
been asked about it for
years. Griffin told TitanInsider.com via text
that his release was not
about him, but that his
wishes are that the Titans franchise can
get things turned around.
“Not going to make this about me.
Team before me. Hope this team goes in
the right direction and will forever be in
debt to the Adams family for giving me
a chance. Thanks for the best memories
of my life and and to the fans. They deserve a winning team and this team in
headed in the right direction with a good
coach and GM aboard,” Griffin said in
the text message.
Griffin totaled 25 interceptions during
his nine-year run with the Titans, a number that ranks eighth in franchise history.
“We would like to thank Michael for
all of his efforts and impact on the Titans
during his nine seasons with our franchise,” said Titans general manager Jon
Robinson said in a statement.
“Michael’s reputation around the NFL is
as a very durable player who always
gives his best both on and off the field.
His passion for the game of football, dating back to his college days at Texas, is
also well-known, and we wish him all
the best moving forward.”
Griffin was selected to the Pro Bowl in
2008 and 2010, but in recent years his
TENNESSEE
Hubbs,
Tennessee
breeze past
ice-cold
Auburn
play had been up-and-down, and he
often was a scapegoat for fans’ frustrations. The Titans drafted him 19th overall in 2007 and then signed him to a $35
million contract extension in 2012. He
was entering the final year of that extension in 2016, and his release wipes $6.5
million in base salary off the Titans
books for the coming year. “I want to
thank Griff for his time here with the organization,” said Titans coach Mike
Mularkey. “He was a leader who
showed up to work every day in an effort to get better, and I appreciated his
effort both on and off the field for this
team. He touched a lot of people in this
community and in our organization. I
want to wish him the best, and I hope he
will always be remembered as a great
Titan.”
The release of Griffin means the Titans
will be in the market for a new free
safety either through free agency or the
draft. Tennessee signed Da’Norris
Searcy last off-season to play strong
safety and has backups in Daimion
Stafford and Marqueston Huff, though
neither of them are considered to be
bona fide starter material.
There has also been talk that the club
could move Jason McCourty from cornerback to safety, a transition his twin
brother made in New England a few
years ago.
The top safety available in free agency
is Eric Berry, but the Kansas City Chiefs
are expected to do everything they can
to re-sign him.
UPPERMAN HIGH
One title down...
By STEVE MEGARGEE
AP Sports Writer
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Tennessee’s Robert Hubbs III and
Devon Baulkman broke out of their
personal slumps while Auburn remained as cold as ever.
Hubbs scored 20 points and Baulkman added 14 as Tennessee defeated
Auburn 71-45 on
Tuesday night and
handed the Tigers
their sixth consecutive loss.
Baulkman
had
scored a total of 12
points and had shot a combined 5 of
25 over the five games leading up to
this one. Hubbs had totaled 12
points and had shot 4 of 17 from the
floor over his last three contests.
“Tonight I had a lot more energy,”
Hubbs said. “I knew my mind was
right from the get-go, cheering on
my teammates and all that and just
being locked into the game.”
Auburn (9-14, 3-8 SEC) posted its
lowest point total of the season and
shot a season-low 23.7 percent
against a Tennessee (12-12, 5-6)
team that entered the night allowing
a league-high 78.2 points per game
in SEC competition. Auburn’s Bruce
Pearl said he couldn’t remember one
of his teams ever shooting so poorly
during his 21-season head coaching
career.
The Tigers were playing a second
straight game without leading scorer
Kareem Canty, who is indefinitely
suspended for conduct detrimental
to the team. In those two games,
Auburn has averaged 50 points and
shot 24.8 percent from the floor.
“Our roster’s been decimated with
injuries, ineligibilities, suspensions,” Pearl said, “It’s really tough.
You can see how challenged we are.
But we can play better than that. We
can play harder than that, and we
can represent Auburn better than
Ben Craven | Herald-Citizen
See VOLS, Page B2
Upperman’s Abby Greenwood chases down the ball during the Lady Bees 66-19 win over the Smith County Lady Owls.
Upperman sweeps Smith County
By BEN CRAVEN
HERALD-CITIZEN Sports Staff
Adam Lau, Knoxville News Sentinel | AP
Tennessee guard Shembari
Phillips (25) leaps for a slam
dunk against Auburn during
the first half at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville on Tuesday. Tennessee won 71-45.
BAXTER — The running clock was
needed twice Tuesday night as the Upperman girls clinched the District 8-AA regular-season title with a 66-19 win over Smith
County, then the Bees defeated the Owls 69-33 to
set up a first-place showdown on Thursday.
The UHS girls will be the
top overall seed at next
week’s District 8-AA girls
tournament at Tennessee Tech’s Hooper
Eblen Center.
The Lady Bees (26-2, 13-0 8-AA) broke
out the pink jerseys in the first game of the
night in honor of breast cancer awareness,
but that was not the only honor of the
evening. Just before the game got underway,
Gracie Maynord was joined at halfcourt by
her coach, Dana McWilliams, so she could
be acknowledged for hitting 1,000 career
points last Monday at DeKalb County.
“Gracie is a great shooter,” commented
McWilliams. “It’s really a nice honor for her.
It was last week, and it would have been
nice if she could have got it at home. But we
appreciate all that she does for our team. She
has such good teammates around her too.
This group is just a lot of fun. We’re all excited for Gracie, and we realize that she’s got
a special gift as far as shooting the basketball. She’s a special player.”
Maynord scored 14 points, made 4-of-7
from the 3-point line, and stole the ball
twice, but she was second on the team in
terms of scoring to Abby Greenwood.
Greenwood scored 20 points and only
missed one shot all night. She was a perfect
9-of-9 from the field and 2-of-3 from the
free throw line.
The final Lady Bee to hit double-digit scoring was Akira Levy, who scored 10 points
and had a team-high seven assists.
And it was pretty obvious who would win
this bout early on.
Upperman’s
Gracie
Maynord
poses with
head coach
Dana
McWilliams
in celebration of her
1,000 point,
scored last
Monday in
Smithville.
Ben Craven |
See UHS, Page B2
Herald-Citizen
B2 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
SPORTS
Johansson has goal, two assists as Caps beat Predators
By JIM DIAMOND
Associated Press
NASHVILLE (AP) — A return to
Nashville for Washington Capitals coach
Barry Trotz was nice, but winning was
even better.
Marcus Johansson had a goal and two
assists to lead the Capitals over the Predators 5-3 on Tuesday night.
Trotz was the first coach of the Predators and spent 15 years behind the
Nashville bench. In his second season at
the helm in Washington, he earned his
first win over Nashville.
“Just getting a win back in this building, it’s good,” Trotz said. “More importantly, it’s not necessarily the Preds, it’s
just in this building. I’ve got so many
good memories and I’m going to add
this one to it.”
Tom Wilson and Justin Williams each
had a goal and an assist, and Jason
Chimera and Alex Ovechkin also
scored. Braden Holtby made 23 saves
for the Capitals, winners of four straight.
Filip Forsberg scored twice and Roman
Josi had a goal for Nashville. The Predators have lost three of four since the
All-Star break.
Chimera scored the game’s first goal at
12:02 of the opening period.
Predators captain Shea Weber had the
puck inside the Nashville blue line, but
his pass attempt was intercepted by Wilson. He carried the puck into the right
faceoff circle and sent a pass in front to
Chimera, who tipped it by goalie Pekka
Rinne.
“We made a couple of bad mistakes,”
area. There weren’t a lot of them, but the
ones that did happen, we need to do a
better job.”
Washington is 27-1-0 when scoring
first this season.
The Predators carried the majority of
the play in the first, outshooting the Capitals 14-6, but Holtby was sharp
throughout.
He denied Cody Bass’ backhand attempt from in close at 2:11 and then
made back-to-back saves on Weber and
Ryan Johansen on a power play 2 minutes later. Holtby stopped Weber’s slap
shot from the left point, then stuck his
leg out and kicked away Johansen’s rebound attempt at what appeared to be an
open net.
“When you see Weber winding up, you
are usually keying in on your reflexes
pretty big,” Holtby said. “He kind of
knuckled it, kind of flubbed it and it
sunk and hit my pants and gave up a rebound I usually wouldn’t. After that, you
are just kind of in scramble mode and
luckily got a pad on it.”
Wilson made it 2-0 at 4:55 of the second.
Following another Nashville turnover,
Johansson carried the puck on the right
side and sent a cross-ice pass toward
Wilson, who beat Rinne with a onetimer from inside the left circle.
Johansson returned to the Washington
Mark Humphrey | AP
lineup after missing four games with an
Nashville Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis (4) keeps Washington Capupper-body injury.
itals forward Marcus Johansson (90) away from the puck in the first
“You have to take advantage if you are
period on Tuesday in Nashville. The Predators lost 5-3.
going to win games,” Johansson said.
Nashville coach Peter Laviolette said. coming across the crease, uncovered “As it came down to the end, all of a
“You can’t leave opportunities that are men. We need to do a better job in that sudden it was 4-3 and those goals mean
Upperman’s
Austin Shrum
soars to the
basket during
the Bees 6933 victory
over Smith
County High
School.
Adam Lau, Knoxville News Sentinel | AP
Tennessee guard Devon Baulkman (34) attempts to steal the ball from Auburn forward Horace
Spencer (0) during the first half in Knoxville on Tuesday. Tennessee won 71-45.
VOLS: Travel to Missouri on Saturday
From Page B1
Ben Craven |
Herald-Citizen
UHS: Hosts Livingston
Academy on Thursday
From Page B1
The Lady Bees came out and scored the
first 14 points of the game capped off by
back to back threes from Maynord and
Sarah Eldridge, and the Lady Owls (15-10,
9-4 8-AA) didn’t score their first points until
1:57 to go in the first.
By the end of the first quarter, the score
was 20-5, and the Lady Bees scored 15
more points in the second quarter. The Lady
Owls only scored five more for a halftime
deficit of 35-10.
By 5:10 in the third quarter, the lead was
up to 35 for the Lady Bees, and by the
fourth quarter the running clock had begun.
A big staple for the Lady Bees was their
defense. Upperman stole the ball 12 times
and forced 19 turnovers overall.
“I think defense was a key for us,”
McWilliams commented. “I thought we
were very ready defensively (Tuesday
night). We had a lot of intensity out on the
defensive end.”
“We were really excited for this game. We
knew this game meant a lot for us as far as
giving us a chance to clinch the regular season outright, and we knew Smith (County)
has a good team. We were ready to play.”
The boys game was not much different.
The Bees (22-4, 10-3 8-AA) didn’t score
the first 14 straight points, but they still
outscored the Owls (17-9, 10-3 8-AA) 16-5
in the first quarter and 18-12 in the second
for a 17-point halftime advantage at 34-17.
Ben Guffey scored back to back 3-pointers
to open the second half, and the Bees scored
22 points in the third quarter to the Owls
seven to further cement their win.
The Bees defense was on point just like the
a lot. It’s good to be back and there’s
nothing better than coming back and
being a part of winning a game.”
Rinne finished with 18 saves.
Forsberg halved the Washington lead at
14:42 of the second with a wrist shot
from the left faceoff dot that beat Holtby
high to the far side.
Nashville acquired Forsberg in a 2012
trade-deadline deal with the Capitals in
exchange for longtime Predator Martin
Erat and forward Michael Latta.
Washington regained a two-goal lead
in the third on Williams’ 17th goal when
Evgeny Kuznetsov sent a pass from the
left dot to Williams in the low slot for
the tap-in.
Kuznetsov has assists in three consecutive games.
Johansson scored at 8:03 of the third
and Josi answered at 9:49.
Forsberg drew Nashville within one at
the 12-minute mark when he scored his
second of the night.
“I think we were doing a great job after
their fourth goal,” Forsberg said. “Before that, in the third period, we weren’t
as desperate as we have to be. We were
kind of shooting ourselves in the foot,
with letting two goals in.”
Ovechkin scored an empty-net goal on
the power play with a minute remaining
to seal it.
NOTES: Washington LW Andre Burakovsky had an assist, extending his
point streak to eight games. ...
Kuznetsov’s assist was his 100th NHL
point. ... Forsberg has three goals and
two assists in his last two games against
his former team.
Lady Bees as they stole the ball 18 times
and forced 22 total turnovers by the Owls.
The Bees also shot 83 percent from the free
throw line, 56 percent from inside the arc,
and 37 percent from outside of it.
“I think our intensity has picked up in the
last couple of weeks,” commented Upperman head coach Bobby McWilliams. “We
are playing like I thought we could play,
with levels of intensity that I don’t know if
they realize they can get to. I give a lot of
credit to our seniors for creating that and
making it happen. Leadership has been key,
and every one has followed suit. Our overall
intensity has been tremendous the last couple weeks.”
The Bees had four players break into double-digits scoring.
Austin Shrum led the team with 15
points, four rebounds, and four assists,
while Austyn McWilliams followed
closely with 14 points, three rebounds, and
a team-high five assists. Josh Endicott tallied 13 points with four rebounds and 5of-5 from the free throw line, and lastly,
Guffey added 11 points, four assists, and
five steals.
“Smith (County) has got a real good team,”
McWilliams said. “I thought our kids came
out and played extremely hard (Tuesday
night). Any win you get in this league is a
good one. But to win of this difference in
span was surprising, and it makes me really
proud that these kids could dig in and play
that hard. It was a great team effort for us
(Tuesday night). I thought we played really
hard.”
Up next, Upperman will host Livingston
Academy on Thursday in the final game of
the regular season.
that.”
Pearl dropped to 1-2 against his
former school since taking over
Auburn’s program last season.
Pearl led Tennessee to six straight
NCAA Tournament appearances
from 2006-11 before getting fired
amid an NCAA investigation.
Bryce Brown scored 18 points
and Cinmeon Bowers added nine
points and 15 rebounds for
Auburn. Detrick Mostella had 10
points for Tennessee.
Tennessee won easily despite getting a season-low four points from
Kevin Punter Jr., who played just
19 minutes while dealing with foul
trouble. Punter entered the night
averaging 23.2 points per game,
tied for eighth among all Division
I players.
“I’m very confident in the state
of our basketball program,” Pearl
said. “I do believe that we can be
a very competitive program at
Auburn. But that team right now is
not competitive. I’m the one that’s
got to be accountable and responsible for that.”
TIP-INS
Auburn: Tyler Harris scored just
two points and missed all 10 of his
field-goal attempts on the court
where his older brother starred.
Orlando Magic forward Tobias
Harris played for Pearl at Tennessee in the 2010-11 season.
Tyler Harris entered the night averaging 14.8 points per game.
Pearl said Harris is dealing with a
back issue that prevented him
from practicing Monday.
Tennessee: Freshman guard
Shembari Phillips made his first
career start and had six points and
six rebounds in 31 minutes.
REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
Auburn beat Tennessee 83-77 last
month by shooting 12 of 26 from
3-point range. In the rematch, the
Tigers were just 5 of 26 on 3pointers. Brown was 4 of 8 from
beyond the arc, but his teammates
were 1 of 18.
“We really wanted to defend the
3-point line,” Tennessee coach
Rick Barnes said. “That was a big
thing for us tonight with them.
They’ve got guys who have lit us
up. We felt they had a couple of
guards that could go get you seven
(or) eight 3’s apiece.”
NEW ROLE FOR HUBBS
Hubbs has started for most of the
season but has been coming off the
bench the last three games. Barnes
was asked whether he believed
Hubbs has benefited from moving
out of the starting lineup.
“I don’t know that, (but) I’ve said
before I think that bench is a great
motivator,” Barnes said. “When
your tail starts talking to your
head, it will help you sometimes.”
NEXT UP
Auburn: Hosts Vanderbilt on Saturday.
Tennessee: At Missouri on Saturday.
Lawsuit alleges Tennessee has ‘hostile sexual environment’
By STEVE MEGARGEE
AP Sports Writer
KNOXVILLE (AP) — A lawsuit filed by a group of
women alleges that the University of Tennessee has violated Title IX regulations and created a “hostile sexual
environment” through a policy of indifference toward
assaults by student-athletes.
The federal suit filed Tuesday in Nashville states Tennessee’s policies made students more vulnerable to sexual assault and says that the school had a “clearly
unreasonable response” after incidents that caused the
women making complaints to endure additional harassment. The suit also states the university interfered with
the disciplinary process to favor male athletes.
There have been several sexual assault complaints
made against Tennessee student-athletes over the last
four years, including former football players A.J. Johnson and Michael Williams. They were indicted on aggravated rape charges in February 2015 and have
separate trial dates this summer.
The suit was filed by David Randolph Smith, a lawyer
representing six unidentified plaintiffs, against the University of Tennessee and the director of the office of
student conduct and community standards. No individual were named as defendants in the complaint.
The suit also states that Tim Rogers, a former vice
chancellor for student life, stepped down in 2013 “in
protest over the violation of Title IX and the UT administration’s and athletic department’s deliberate indifference to the clear and present danger of sexual
assaults by UT athletes.”
Bill Ramsey, a lawyer representing the school, said in
a statement the university “acted lawfully and in good
faith” in the situations outlined in the complaint. Ramsey said the school “has devoted significant time and
energy to provide a safe environment for our students,
to educate and raise awareness about sexual assault and
to encourage students to come forward and report sexual assault.”
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — B3
SPORTS
Martin Brodeur has his No.
30 jersey retired by Devils
By TOM CANAVAN
AP Sports Writer
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Martin Brodeur tried to
start his thank you speech only to be drowned out
by the roaring crowd.
Finally, he stepped away from the podium and
simply soaked it all in.
The New Jersey Devils retired Brodeur’s No. 30
jersey Tuesday night during a pregame ceremony,
giving his adoring fans at the Prudential Center one
more chance to cheer the winningest goalie in NHL
history.
After serenading Brodeur with chants of “Mar-ty,
Mar-ty, Mar-ty” and “Marty is better,” the sellout
crowd gave him a standing ovation that lasted more
than 2 minutes and grew louder by the second.
Ready to voice his appreciation, Brodeur realized
he would only be muffled by the noisy din inside
the arena. He eventually walked away from the microphone and waved to the crowd, as well as the
players from the Edmonton Oilers and Devils who
sat on their benches during the ceremony.
Finally, when the crowd quieted down at last,
Brodeur thanked his former teammates, coaches —
and of course, the fans.
It was a fitting celebration for a goalie who set
league records for games played, shutouts, playoff
shutouts, number of 30- and 40-win seasons and
most wins in a season.
The Montreal native changed goaltending in the
NHL and turned the Devils from a “Mickey
Mouse” organization, as Wayne Gretzky once
called the team, into a three-time Stanley Cup
champion.
This was Brodeur’s night and he was the show for
everyone in attendance.
It also was closure for the 43-year-old Brodeur,
now an assistant general manager with the St.
Louis Blues. After his speech, he walked with his
family to the crease in front of the net and watched
the banner bearing his No. 30 and his years with
the team (1990-2014) get hoisted to the rafters.
After waving to the crowd with his goaltending
stick raised, he walked to one corner of the arena
and stood next to a statue of him that the team plans
had position around the arena. With a final wave,
he walked off the ice.
SCOREBOARD
■ On Television
Wednesday, Feb. 10
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
5:15 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Tulane at East Carolina
5:30 p.m.
FS1 — Butler at Seton Hall
6 p.m.
BTN — Nebraska at Wisconsin
CBSSN — Providence at Marquette
ESPN2 — LSU at South Carolina
ESPNU — Memphis at Houston
SEC — Texas A&M at Alabama
7:15 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Baylor at Kansas St.
8 p.m.
BTN — Michigan at Minnesota
CBSSN — Tulsa at SMU
ESPN2 — Washington at Utah
ESPNU — Iowa St. at Texas Tech
SEC — Missouri at Vanderbilt
10 p.m.
CBSSN — San Diego St. at Fresno St.
GOLF
2:30 a.m. (Thursday)
GOLF — European PGA Tour, Tshwane Open,
first round, at Waterkloof, South Africa
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
ESPN — L.A. Lakers at Cleveland
9:30 p.m.
ESPN — Houston at Portland
NHL HOCKEY
7 p.m.
NBCSN — N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh
SOCCER
1:30 p.m.
FS1 — FA Cup, West Bromwich Albion at Peterborough United FC
7:30 p.m.
FS1 — International friendly, Mexico vs. Senegal, at Miami
■ High School Basketball
Upperman girls 66,
Smith County 19
SCHS
5
5
4
5 — 19
UHS
20 15
18 13 — 66
SCHS — Kiera Crawford 6, Alyssa West 3, Natalie Brown 3, Lacey Mitchell 2, Madison
Spivey 2, Abbi Gregory 1.
UHS — Abby Greenwood 20, Gracie Maynord
14, Akira Levy 10, Brooke Farris 7, Sarah Eldridge 3, Autumn Dyer 3, Lexie Strickland 2,
Lexie Martin 2, Graci Waller 2, Jaide Cushing
2, Riley Hurst 1.
Upperman boys 69,
Smith County 33
SCHS
5
12
7
9 — 33
UHS
16 18
22 13 — 69
SCHS — Jaylon Shepperson 8, Johnny Hayden 7, Camron Hutt 5, Carson Hackett 4,
Shermar King 3, Isaac Dick 3, Bryant
Goolsby 2, TJ Smith 1.
UHS — Austin Shrum 15, Austyn McWilliams
14, Josh Endicott 13, Ben Guffey 11, Jake
Dronebarger 5, Dylon Cushing 4, Cade
Stover 3, Braxton Lafever 2, Brendan Ely 2.
■ College Basketball
Tennessee men 71, Auburn 45
AUBURN (9-14)
Spencer 1-5 3-4 5, Bowers 4-11 1-8 9, Harris
0-10 2-2 2, Brown 5-11 4-4 18, Lang 0-6 2-4
2, Walker 0-0 0-0 0, Keim 0-1 0-0 0, Allison
0-0 0-0 0, Granger 3-9 0-2 6, Waddell 0-2 00 0, Stockton 0-0 0-0 0, Williams 1-4 0-0 3.
Totals 14-59 12-24 45.
TENNESSEE (12-12)
Moore 1-6 0-0 2, Alexander 1-2 1-2 3, Punter
Jr. 2-7 0-0 4, Phillips 2-9 2-2 6, Baulkman 511 0-0 14, Kasongo 1-2 3-4 5, Hubbs III 7-12
5-6 20, Schofield 2-8 1-1 5, Mostella 3-5 2-3
10, Reese 1-1 0-2 2, Campbell 0-0 0-0 0,
Woodson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 25-64 14-20 71.
Halftime-Tennessee 34-23. 3-Point GoalsAuburn 5-26 (Brown 4-8, Williams 1-3, Bowers 0-1, Keim 0-1, Harris 0-2, Waddell 0-2,
Granger 0-4, Lang 0-5), Tennessee 7-24
(Baulkman 4-10, Mostella 2-3, Hubbs III 1-1,
Moore 0-2, Phillips 0-2, Schofield 0-3, Punter
Jr. 0-3). Fouled Out-Spencer. ReboundsAuburn 44 (Bowers 15), Tennessee 48
(Moore 12). Assists-Auburn 5 (Harris 2), Tennessee 15 (Baulkman, Moore 4). Total FoulsAuburn
23,
Tennessee
21.
Technicals-Bowers, Moore, Schofield. A13,740.
Men’s scores
EAST
Monmouth (NJ) 87, Marist 61
North Carolina 68, Boston College 65
Rhode Island 81, George Mason 63
Toledo 71, Buffalo 69
SOUTH
Cincinnati 69, UCF 51
Florida 77, Mississippi 72
Kentucky 82, Georgia 48
Maryland 93, Bowie St. 62
Miami 65, Pittsburgh 63
Mississippi St. 78, Arkansas 46
Tennessee 71, Auburn 45
Virginia 67, Virginia Tech 49
MIDWEST
Akron 83, Bowling Green 68
Creighton 70, Xavier 56
Dayton 76, Duquesne 74
E. Michigan 71, Cent. Michigan 56
Kansas 75, West Virginia 65
Kent St. 75, N. Illinois 74
Miami (Ohio) 45, W. Michigan 44
Ohio 72, Ball St. 69
Ohio St. 71, Northwestern 63
Purdue 82, Michigan St. 81, OT
Villanova 86, DePaul 59
Wichita St. 74, Drake 48
SOUTHWEST
Cent. Arkansas 88, SE Louisiana 72
Texas-Arlington 65, Texas St. 53
FAR WEST
Utah St. 80, New Mexico 72
Women’s scores
EAST
Rider 68, St. Peter’s 67
SOUTH
Coastal Carolina 79, High Point 53
Liberty 67, Campbell 55
Presbyterian 52, Charleston Southern 37
Radford 54, Gardner-Webb 51
South Florida 77, Tulane 65
UNC Asheville 61, Longwood 54
MIDWEST
Kansas St. 87, Oklahoma 71
Temple 74, Cincinnati 49
SOUTHWEST
SMU 74, East Carolina 67, OT
Texas-Arlington 80, Texas St. 48
■ National Basketball Association
Standings and schedule
All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Pct
Toronto
35
16 .686
Boston
31
23 .574
New York
23
32 .418
Brooklyn
14
39 .264
Philadelphia
8
44 .154
Southeast Division
Atlanta
30
24 .556
Miami
29
24 .547
Charlotte
26
26 .500
Washington
23
27 .460
Orlando
23
28 .451
Central Division
Cleveland
37
14 .725
Indiana
28
24 .538
Chicago
27
24 .529
Detroit
27
26 .509
Milwaukee
21
32 .396
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct
San Antonio
44
8
.846
Memphis
30
22 .577
Dallas
29
26 .527
Houston
27
27 .500
New Orleans
19
32 .373
Northwest Division
Oklahoma City
39
14 .736
Utah
26
25 .510
Portland
26
27 .491
Denver
21
32 .396
Minnesota
16
37 .302
Pacific Division
Golden State
47
4
.922
L.A. Clippers
35
17 .673
Sacramento
21
31 .404
Phoenix
14
39 .264
L.A. Lakers
11
43 .204
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee 112, Boston 111
San Antonio 119, Miami 101
Washington 111, New York 108
Utah 121, Dallas 119, OT
Golden State 123, Houston 110
Wednesday’s Games
Charlotte at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Sacramento at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
San Antonio at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Memphis at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Denver at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Utah at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Cleveland, 8 p.m.
Golden State at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Houston at Portland, 10:30 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Washington at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.
GB
—
5½
14
22
27½
—
½
3
5
5½
—
9½
10
11
17
GB
—
14
16½
18
24½
—
12
13
18
23
—
12½
26½
34
37½
■ National Hockey League
Standings and schedule
All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
54 32 16 6 70 155 123
Tampa Bay 53 29 20 4 62 142 130
Detroit
53 27 18 8 62 134 134
Boston
53 28 19 6 62 157 147
Montreal
55 27 24 4 58 151 146
Ottawa
54 25 23 6 56 157 170
Buffalo
54 21 27 6 48 125 150
Toronto
52 19 24 9 47 125 149
Metropolitan Division
Washington 52 39 9
4 82 174 118
N.Y. Rangers 53 30 18 5 65 153 137
N.Y. Islanders52 28 18 6 62 149 132
Pittsburgh
52 27 18 7 61 139 135
New Jersey 55 27 21 7 61 124 129
Carolina
54 24 21 9 57 130 144
Philadelphia 52 23 20 9 55 124 142
Columbus
55 21 28 6 48 140 173
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Chicago
57 36 17 4 76 159 130
Dallas
54 34 15 5 73 176 147
St. Louis
56 30 17 9 69 136 134
Nashville
54 25 21 8 58 141 145
Colorado
56 27 25 4 58 150 155
Minnesota 53 23 20 10 56 130 132
Winnipeg
53 24 26 3 51 138 153
Pacific Division
Los Angeles 52 32 17 3 67 146 121
San Jose
52 28 20 4 60 151 139
Anaheim
52 26 19 7 59 119 124
Arizona
52 24 22 6 54 139 162
Vancouver 53 21 20 12 54 127 146
Calgary
52 24 25 3 51 139 153
Edmonton 55 21 29 5 47 137 167
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Rangers 2, New Jersey 1
Pittsburgh 6, Anaheim 2
Ottawa 5, Tampa Bay 1
Detroit 3, Florida 0
Tuesday’s Games
N.Y. Islanders 3, Columbus 2, SO
Winnipeg 2, St. Louis 1, SO
Los Angeles 9, Boston 2
Florida 7, Buffalo 4
Anaheim 4, Philadelphia 1
Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 2
New Jersey 2, Edmonton 1
Washington 5, Nashville 3
Dallas 4, Minnesota 3, OT
San Jose 2, Chicago 0
Vancouver 3, Colorado 1
Calgary 4, Toronto 3
Wednesday’s Games
Ottawa at Detroit, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Arizona, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Los Angeles at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Anaheim at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Boston at Winnipeg, 8 p.m.
Dallas at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Toronto at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Calgary at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
■ Transactions
Tuesday
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms
with LHPs Ashur Tolliver and Hideki Okajima
and 3B Patrick Palmeiro on minor league
contracts.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms
with RHP Mat Latos on a one-year contract
and 1B Travis Ishikawa on a minor league
contract.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Extended their
player development contract with Burlington
(Appalachian) through the 2020 season.
SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with
RHP Joel Peralta on a minor league contract.
National League
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with
OF Skip Schumaker on a minor league contract.
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Signed
OF Chad Mozingo.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Signed RHP Casey
Collins.
WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed INF Wes
Darvill.
Can-Am League
ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Signed INF Jared
Schlehuber.
Frontier League
EVANSVILLE OTTERS — Signed RHP Ryan
Minteer.
FLORENCE FREEDOM — Signed RHP Matt
Pobereyko.
GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Signed OF Madison
Beaird to a contract extension.
SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS — Signed RHP
Tony DiMaio.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA — Suspended L.A. Clippers F Blake Griffin four games for punching a team staff
member.
HOUSTON ROCKETS — Recalled G-F K.J.
McDaniels and F-C Donatas Motiejunas
from Rio Grande Valley (NBADL).
MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Recalled F Jarell
Martin from Iowa (NBADL).
FOOTBALL
National Football League
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Released QB Ryan
Lindley. Named Maurice Drayton assistant
special teams coach, Lee Hull wide receivers
coach and Jemal Singleton running backs
coach, Quadrian Banks conditioning-performance analyst and Andrew Hayes-Stoker
assistant to the head coach. Promoted Joe
Philbin to assistant head coach-offensive
line.
OAKLAND RAIDERS — Terminated the contract of S Nate Allen.
TENNESSEE TITANS — Released S Michael
Griffin.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Signed WR
Ryan Smith to a two-year contract and PK
Justin Medlock, RBs Andrew Harris and Pascal Lochard and DT Keith Shologan.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ARIZONA COYOTES — Recalled F Tyler
Gaudet from Springfield (AHL).
OTTAWA SENATORS — Traded D Jared
Cowen, Fs Milan Michalek, Colin Greening
and Tobias Lindberg and a 2017 secondround draft pick to Toronto for D Dion Phaneuf and Cody Donaghey and Fs Matt
Frattin, Casey Bailey and Ryan Rupert.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Signed OL
Jeff Keeping.
ECHL
ECHL — Suspended Norfolk D Samuel
Noreau five games.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
D.C. UNITED — Traded F Conor Doyle to Colorado for a 2017 third-round draft pick.
NEW YORK RED BULLS — Completed the
transfer of D Gideon Baah from Helsingin
Jalkapalloklubi (HJK Helsinki).
PHILADELPHIA UNION — Acquired G Matt
Jones on loan from Belenenses (Primeira
Liga-Portugal).
National Women’s Soccer League
SKY BLUE FC — M Hayley McCall announced
her retirement.
COLLEGE
INTERCOLLEGIATE TENNIS ASSOCIATION
— Named Wes Beaullieu championships coordinator.
STANFORD — Announced the retirement of
defensive line coach Randy Hart.
■ Today in Sports
Feb. 10
1908 — Tommy Burns knocks out Jack Palmer
in the fourth round to keep his world heavyweight title in London.
1949 — Joe Fulks of Philadelphia scores 63
points in a 108-87 win over Indianapolis to
set an NBA scoring record that would last for
nearly a decade.
1952 — The Baltimore Bullets play all 48 minutes without a substitution and beat the Fort
Wayne Pistons 82-77.
1962 — Jim Beatty becomes the first American
to break the 4-minute mile indoors, running
3:58.9 in Los Angeles.
1968 — Peggy Fleming wins the women’s
Olympic figure skating gold medal in Grenoble, France.
1969 — LSU’s Pete Maravich scores 66 points
in a 110-94 loss to Tulane.
1971 — Former first baseman Bill White becomes the first black announcer in major
baseball league history, joining the New York
Yankees WPIX broadcast team.
1991 — Charles Barkley of the Philadelphia
76ers, playing with a stress fracture in his left
foot, becomes the NBA All-Star MVP with 17
points and 22 rebounds after leading the
East to a 116-114 victory.
1992 — Bonnie Blair becomes the first woman
to successfully defend an Olympic gold
medal in 500-meter speed skating and the
first American woman in any sport to win gold
medals in consecutive Olympics.
1998 — Picabo Street charges to an Olympic
gold by one-hundredth of a second in the
women’s super-G — the games’ first Alpine
medal after three days of snow-related postponements.
2002 — Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers scores 31 points — the most in an NBA
All-Star game since 1988 — to lead the
Western Conference to a 135-120 win over
the East.
2003 — Detroit’s Brett Hull becomes the sixth
NHL player to score 700 regular-season
goals. Hull beats San Jose’s Evgeni
Nabokov with a wrist shot in a 5-4 win over
the Sharks.
2007 — San Diego’s Nate Kaeding kicks a 21yard field goal as time expires to cap another
strong drive led by MVP Carson Palmer in
the AFC’s 31-28 victory over the NFC in the
Pro Bowl.
AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 2016
12:30 PM
Durango Auto Sales
814 So Willow Ave
Cookeville, TN.
(931)5288431
1986 Chevy
Vin# 1GCDC14N1GF407403
1969 VW
Vin 119052676
To recover wrecker and storage
bill. Previous owner or leinholder can recover vehicle before
auction by paying all the
charges. Durango's Body Shop
reserves the right to reject any/or
all bids.
2/10
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS,
default has occurred in the performance of the covenants,
terms and conditions of a Deed
of Trust dated February 17,
2015, executed by FRANK C
PAPA, JR. , conveying certain
real property therein described
to ARNOLD M WEISS, as Trustee, as same appears of record in
the Register's Office of Putnam
County, Tennessee recorded
March 9, 2015, in Deed Book
862, Page 191; and WHEREAS,
the beneficial interest of said
Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to New
Penn Financial, LLC d/b/a Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing who is
now the owner of said debt; and
W H E R E A S ,
t h e
undersigned,Rubin Lublin TN,
PLLC, having been appointed as
Substitute Trustee by instrument to be filed for record in the
Register's Office of Putnam
County, Tennessee. NOW,
THEREFORE, notice is hereby
given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and
payable, and that the undersigned, Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC,
as Substitute Trustee or his duly
appointed agent, by virtue of the
power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee will, on February
25, 2016 at 10:00 AM at the
Main Hall or Front Steps of the
Putnam County Courthouse, located in Cookeville, Tennessee,
proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash or certified funds ONLY,
the following described property
situated in Putnam County, Tennessee, to wit: THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED TRACT OR
PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED
IN THE FIRST CIVIL DISTRICT
OF PUTNAM COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AS FOLLOWS: BEING LOT 8A OF THE RESUBDIVISION OF LOTS 3 & 8, THE
VILLAS AT MAPLE POINT, A
PLAT OF WHICH IS OF RECORD IN PLAT CABINET F,
SLIDE 6A, IN THE REGISTER`S
OFFICE OF PUTNAM COUNTY,
TENNESSEE, WHICH PLAT
REFERENCE IS HEREIN REFERRED TO FOR A MORE
COMPLETE DESCRIPTION.
Parcel ID: 066D C 0 08.00
PROPERTY ADDRESS: The
street address of the property is
believed to be 726 MAPLE
POINT DRIVE, COOKEVILLE,
TN 38501. In the event of any
discrepancy between this street
address and the legal description of the property, the legal description shall control. CURRENT OWNER(S): FRANK C
PAPA, JR. OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: The sale of
the above-described property
shall be subject to all matters
shown on any recorded plat; any
unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back
lines that may be applicable; any
prior liens or encumbrances as
well as any priority created by a
fixture filing; and to any matter
that an accurate survey of the
premises might disclose. This
property is being sold with the
express reservation that it is
subject to confirmation by the
lender or Substitute Trustee.
This sale may be rescinded at
any time. The right is reserved to
adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication,
upon announcement at the time
and place for the sale set forth
above. All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise,
homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of
Trust, and the title is believed to
be good, but the undersigned
will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The Property is
sold as is, where is, without representations or warranties of any
kind, including fitness for a particular use or purpose. THIS
LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL
BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC,
Substitute Trustee 119 S. Main
Street, Suite 500 Memphis, TN
3
8
1
0
3
www.rubinlublin.com/propertylistings.php Tel: (877) 813-0992
Fax: (404) 601-5846 Ad #92202:
2016-01-27 2016-02-03, 201602-10
1/27, 2/3, 10
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Default having been made in the
payment of the debts and obligations described in and secured
by a certain Deed of Trust executed by BRIAN SCOTT
MITCHELL and LORI LEANN
MITCHELL, husband and wife,
to W. Aaron Fortner, Trustee, recorded December 4, 2007 in
Putnam County Register's Office at Record Book 434 Page
756 and modified at Book 721,
Page 270 and the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust is
owned by CARRINGTON
MORTGAGE SERVICES, LLC,
and the undersigned having
been appointed Successor
Trustee by instrument recorded
in said Register’s Office, this is
notice that the undersigned will
on March 8, 2016 at 1:00 PM
local time, at the Putnam County
Courthouse, Cookeville, Tennessee will proceed to sell at
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder for cash the following property located in Putnam
County, Tennessee, will be sold
to the highest call bidder subject
to all unpaid taxes, prior liens
and encumbrances of record.
Described property is located in
Putnam County, Tennessee, being Lot 29, Fisk Park Subdivision, Phase II, per plat Cabinet
B, Slide 149. Being the same
property conveyed to Brian Scott
Mitchell and wife, Lori LeAnn
Mitchell, recorded 4/18/97, at
Book 381, Page 709, in the Register’s Office of Putnam County,
Tennessee.
Property Address: 1069 Fisk
Park Drive, Cookeville, TN
38506
TAX ID: 026I E 017.00 000
Current Owner(s) of Property:
BRIAN SCOTT MITCHELL and
LORI LEANN MITCHELL
The street address of the above
described property is believed to
be 1069 Fisk Park Drive,
Cookeville, TN 38506 but such
address is not part of the legal
description of the property sold
herein and in the event of any
discrepancy, the legal description referenced herein shall control.
SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION.
If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. 35-5-117 have
been met.
Other Interested Parties: None
All right of equity of redemption,
statutory and otherwise, and
homestead are expressly waived
in said Deed of Trust, and the
title is believed to be good, but
the undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the sale to another day,
time and place certain without
further publication, upon announcement of the time and
place for the sale set forth
above. If you purchase the property at the foreclosure sale, the
entire purchase price is due and
payable at the conclusion of the
auction in the form of certified
bank check made payable to Solomon Baggett, LLC Escrow Account. No personal checks will
be accepted. You must bring
sufficient funds to outbid the
lender and any other bidders. Insufficient funds will not be accepted. Amounts received in excess of the winning bid will be
refunded to the successful purchaser at the time the foreclosure deed is delivered. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is
subject to confirmation by the
lender or trustee. This sale may
be rescinded by the Substitute
Trustee at any time.
THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS
A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A
DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR
THAT PURPOSE.
Robert J. Solomon
Substitute Trustee
Solomon | Baggett, LLC
3763 Rogers Bridge Road
Duluth, Georgia 30097
(678) 243-2512
Our File No. CMS.01453
1/27, 2/3, 10
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE
TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS,
default has occurred in the performance of the covenants,
terms and conditions of a Deed
of Trust dated December 30,
2011, executed by SHAWNA
KAY FLOREA, ADRIENNE RAE
HAWKINS, SYLVIA KAY MCCLOUD, conveying certain real
property therein described to
ALAN E. SOUTH, as Trustee, as
same appears of record in the
Register's Office of Putnam
County, Tennessee recorded
January 18, 2012, in Deed Book
675, Page 254; and WHEREAS,
the beneficial interest of said
Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Finance
of America Reverse LLC, f/k/a
Urban Financial of America, LLC
who is now the owner of said
debt; and WHEREAS, the undersigned,Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC,
having been appointed as Substitute Trustee by instrument to
be filed for record in the Register's Office of Putnam County,
Tennessee. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given
that the entire indebtedness has
been declared due and payable,
and that the undersigned, Rubin
Lublin TN, PLLC, as Substitute
Trustee or his duly appointed
agent, by virtue of the power,
duty and authority vested and
imposed upon said Substitute
Trustee will, on February 25,
2016 at 10:00 AM at the Main
Hall or Front Steps of the Putnam County Courthouse, located in Cookeville, Tennessee,
proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash or certified funds ONLY,
the following described property
situated in Putnam County, Tennessee, to wit: THE LAND DESCRIBED HEREIN IS SITUATED IN THE STATE OF TENNESSEE, COUNTY OF PUTNAM, AND IS DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A
1/2" REBAR (NEW) #762 IN
THE NORTH RIGHT-OF-WAY
OF MAXWELL STREET, BEING THE SOUTHWEST
CORNER OF MICHAEL & BARBARA NELSON (366-521);
THENCE WITH THE NORTH
RIGHT-OF-WAY OF MAXWELL
STREET N83 DEGREES
42`24"W 95.77 FEET TO A
ROCK, BEING THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF CHARLES
HARRIS (RB: 212-251);
THENCE LEAVING THE
NORTH RIGHT-OF-WAY OF
MAXWELL STREET AND WITH
THE EAST LINE OF CHARLES
HARRIS (RB; 212-251) N19 DE-
Cookeville office opened in 1987
by Arnold E. Lefkovitz
ALL TYPES OF
BANKRUPTCIES
Chapter 7 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13
•
•
•
More than 35 years of experience filing
tens of thousands of bankruptcies.
• STOP Garnishments • STOP Foreclosures
• STOP Repossessions • STOP Debt Harassment
ADOPTIONS
DIVORCE
CHILD CUSTODY
WILLS & PROBATE
312-A East Broad St., Cookeville
Serving Cookeville & the Entire Upper Cumberland Area
528-5297
www.lefkovitz.com
We are a debt relief agency. We help people file for relief.
© 2014 Lefkovitz & Lefkovitz
B4 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
001
Legals
GREES 56`44"W 161.95 FEET
TO A 1" PIPE (OLD), BEING A
COMMON CORNER OF
CHARLES HARRIS (RB: 212251), CHARLES HARRIS (RB:
156-681) AND VICTORIA PALK
(RB: 154-110); THENCE WITH
THE SOUTH LINE OF VICTORIA PALK (RB: 154-110) N73 DEGREES 12`29"E 94.18 FEET TO
A 2" PIPE (OLD), BEING THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF
JIMMY & PHYLLIS GAW (316679); THENCE LEAVING THE
SOUTH LINE OF VICTORA
PALK (RB 154-110) AND WITH
THE WEST LINE OF JIMMY &
PHYLLIS GAW (316-679) S19
DEGREES 46`37" E 97.03 FEET
TO A 1" PIPE (OLD) BEING
THE SOUTHWEST CORNER
OF JIMMY & PHYLLIS GAW
(316-679), ALSO BEING THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF
JOHNNY & DEBORAH MAHAN
(394-567); THENCE WITH THE
WEST LINE OF JOHNNY & DEBORH MAHAN (394-567) AND
THE WEST LINE OF MICHAEL
& BARBARA NELSON (366521) S15 DEGREES 32`49"E
102.38 FEET TO THE POINT
OF BEGINNING. CONTAINING
0.384 ACRES, MORE OR
LESS, BY SURVEY DONE BY
BARLETT SURVEYING, 214
EAST STEVENS STREET,
COOKEVILLE TENNESSEE,
38501, ALFRED M. BARTLETT,
R.L.S. #762, ON DECEMBER
19, 2011, DRAWING. #2011223. Parcel ID: 041C-E-01200000 PROPERTY ADDRESS:
The street address of the property is believed to be 124 Maxwell Street, Cookeville, TN
38506. In the event of any discrepancy between this street address and the legal description
of the property, the legal description shall control. CURRENT
OWNER(S): ESTATE AND/OR
HEIRS-AT-LAW OF SYLVIA
KAY MCCLOUD OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: DISCOVER BANK, THE SECRETARY
OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT The sale of the
above-described property shall
be subject to all matters shown
on any recorded plat; any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back
lines that may be applicable; any
prior liens or encumbrances as
well as any priority created by a
fixture filing; and to any matter
that an accurate survey of the
premises might disclose. This
property is being sold with the
express reservation that it is
subject to confirmation by the
lender or Substitute Trustee.
This sale may be rescinded at
any time. The right is reserved to
adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication,
upon announcement at the time
and place for the sale set forth
above. All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise,
homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of
Trust, and the title is believed to
be good, but the undersigned
will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The Property is
sold as is, where is, without representations or warranties of any
kind, including fitness for a particular use or purpose. THIS
LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL
BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC,
Substitute Trustee 119 S. Main
Street, Suite 500 Memphis, TN
38103
001
Legals
Lost and Found
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
BOXER MISSING: Fawn color,
family pet. Microchipped. Please
WHEREAS, default has oc- call with any info (931)319-7636.
curred in the performance of the
covenants, terms, and condi- 103
Auto Svc. & Repair
tions of a Deed of Trust Note
dated May 29, 2009, and the J & A AUTO SERVICE Great
Deed of Trust of even date se- service at discount prices! TOWcuring the same, recorded June ING AVAILABLE 931-260-6459
5, 2009, in Book No. 533, at
Page 115, and modified on Feb- 105
Cleaning
ruary 12, 2013, In Book No. 743,
At Page 250 in Office of the Re0 FIRST CARPET CARE 0
gister of Deeds for Putnam
TOM'S CARPET CLEANING
County, Tennessee, executed by
++ 25YRS EXP++ LIC'D++
Deborah L. Craig, conveying
certain property therein de- + PUTNAM GUARANTEED +
scribed to Arnold M. Weiss as
349-2288
Trustee for Mortgage Electronic
Same day service/Saturdays
Registration Systems, Inc., as a
nominee for Guaranty Mortgage WOULD LIKE to clean homes.
Services LLC, its successors Dependable, ref's & exp'd.
Call 931-260-8070
and assigns; and the undersigned, Wilson & Associates,
Concrete,Masonry
P.L.L.C., having been appointed 108
Successor Trustee by Selene
Finance, LP.
BELLIS! CONCRETE
NOW, THEREFORE, notice is
hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared
due and payable; and that an
agent 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, by
Selene Finance, LP, will, on
March 31, 2016 on or about
12:00 PM, at the At the Putnam County Courthouse, 421
East Spring Street,,
Cookeville, Tennessee, offer
for sale certain property hereinafter described to the highest
bidder FOR certified funds paid
at the conclusion of the sale, or
credit bid from a bank or other
lending entity pre-approved by
the successor trustee. The sale
is free from all exemptions,
which are expressly waived in
the Deed of Trust, said property
being real estate situated in Putnam County, Tennessee, and
being more particularly described as follows:
Lying and being in the Third
Civil District of Putnam
County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows:
BEING Lot No. 221 of the Eastlake Estates Subdivision,
Phase IV, as shown by plat of
record in Plat Cabinet A, Slide
199, Putnam County, Tennessee, which plat is here referred
to for a metes and bounds description.
Complete Concrete Work
Slabs, driveways, bsmts, sidewalks
Stamped & colored concrete,
acid staining, exposed aggregate.
Serving Cookeville Area Since 1997
This 4TH DAY OF FEBRUARY
2016
FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE
Signed ALICIA HAILE FLOOD &
JEAN EVELYN HAILE CO-EXECUTORS
The Herald Citizen has installed
an after hours drop box for
! Circulation Dept. payments
! Classified Dept. payments
! Letters to the Editor
! Community News Bulletin
! I Like to Know Questions
! News & Sports Info & Photos
Marcia Borys, Circuit and
YOUR LOCAL NEWS SOURCE
Probate Clerk
421 East Spring Street
Herald-Citizen
Cookeville, TN 38501
1300 Neal Street
2/10, 17
Cookeville, TN 38501
130 Tree Service/Related
ALLEN'S TREE SERVICE
Stump grinding, tree removal, topping.Lic'd/Ins'd.
Roger Allen owner,
537-6493 / 979-6493
FARLEY TREE SERVICE
Trimming & Removal.
Free Est. Lic'd/Ins'd.
All wk guaranteed
(931)520-0114,
cell 239-6184
EVERGREEN TREE service We
top, trim, prune & remove trees.
Jeff Burchett & Shawn Roberson. Satisfaction guaranteed
Fully Ins'd (931)319-1199, 261-8870
THE TREE GUYS
TREE SERVICE
FREE ESTIMATES
Call (931)267-6191 or 319-7572
135
Yard Work/Related
RHETT BUTLER's
LAWN CARE
Mowing, Landscaping, Mulching,
Yard Maintenance
Call local cell 544-3303
215
Employment Opp.
AT&T Wireless of Ckvl, TN is
accepting applications for a Retail Sales Assoc. Qualified applicants should submit resume
and cover letter to store location
at 416 West Jackson St,
Cookeville or via email
[email protected]
ATTN: Keith West
Weekly Job
Fairs and
Hiring Events!
Call or stop by today to
find out who is hiring!
565-C S. Jefferson Ave.
(931) 520-8789
Certified Occupational
Therapy Assistant
Part time
Salary: Comm. w/ educ & exp.
Putnam County Schools
Special Ed Dept.
1400 E. Spring St.
Cookeville, TN 38506
(931) 525-4708
LAWN MOWING: Gutter cleaning, light hauling. odd jobs, remove old barns & buildings, garCOOKEVILLE CONCRETE
Driveways, slabs, all types of age cleaning. Free Est, Reasonstamped concrete, all types of able rates. 432-0863 / 510-4040
metal bldgs. 20% disc to all Sr M O W I N G , L A N D S C A P I N G ,
Citizens. Winter time special. Pressure Washing, hauling,
40 yrs exp. Lic/Ins. (931) 284-8663 cleaning, odd jobs. Free Est.
Complete applications on-line at:
Call 265-5775
www.pcsstn.com
Licensed, insured. Drug free workplace. 858-6240 / 528-6240
110
Construction Work
YARD MAN
BOB'S Construction: Specializing in concrete, brick/block, addiFREE Est., experienced
tions, remodels, hardwood/tile,
Low rates, great work.
roofing, building packages, and
Mowing.
all your construction needs. 931-432-2494 or 931-261-4629
Lic'd/Ins'd. Quality Work • AffordWOULD LIKE to do yard work
able Prices 931-319-6107.
Call
B&B ROOFING
(931)650-1005
Roof Repairs & Replacements.
AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE
Home Repairs & Remodeling,
Make Appt. (931)260-1659
Comm/Res. Lic'd/Ins'd. Free Est.
Lic'd/Ins'd - FREE ESTIMATES
Call (931)526-6557
DODSON LAWN CARE!
ALL TYPES of Backhoe Work,
All types of Water lines, Footers; • Commercial - Residential
all types of Basement Water • Mowing
Proofing; Top soil, Field Dirt de- • Landscaping
• Sod
livered. (931)252-1486, 510-0696
• Seed & Aerate
METAL ROOFS & BUILDINGS • Mulch
and CONCRETE JOBS
• Fertilize
Call (931)284-8249
15 years experience.
FLATT CONSTRUCTION For
Use Commercial
all your building needs. Any Equipment Call (931) 260-8646
home repair, plumbing, garages,
BUSHHOGGING
decks, porches, siding, roofing,
FREE ESTIMATES
additions.(931)265-5687
(931) 510-8505
120
Painting/Wallpaper
ALSO KNOWN AS: 3849 Bartlett Drive, Cookeville, TN PAINTING/ STAINING / P.
WASH, window screens,
38506
Plumb., Elec., Storm Doors. 38
This sale is subject to all mat- yrs exp. Exc. Ref's. Call David,
931-445-3796 or 265-0639.
ters shown on any applicable recorded plat; any unpaid taxes;
BUDGET PAINTING CO.
any restrictive covenants, ease- Int/Ext Painting & Log/Deck
ments, or setback lines that may Staining, Power Wash Vinyl,
be applicable; any statutory Driveways. FREE EST. Lic./Ins.
rights of redemption of any govCall 931-525-6482
ernmental agency, state or fedKERBY PAINTING
eral; any prior liens or encumCHECK OUT MY WORK
brances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and to Go to www.kerbypainting.com
Ask for Mike (931) 979-3122
any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disBUENA VIEW PAINTING
close. In addition, the following Res/Comm, Lic'd/Ins'd, Painting,
parties may claim an interest in Interior & Exterior, Water damthe above-referenced property: age, Wall Repairs, WINTER
SPECIALS. 931-255-1542
DEBORAH L. CRAIG
www.buenaview.com
The sale held pursuant to this
Notice may be rescinded at the
Successor Trustee’s option at
www.rubinlublin.com/property-listings.php
any time. The right is reserved to
Tel: (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) adjourn the day of the sale to an601-5846 Ad #92056
other day, time, and place cer1/13, 1//27, 2/3, 2/10 tain without further publication,
upon announcement at the time
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
ESTATE OF EVELYN B. HAILE and place for the sale set forth
DECEASED Notice is hereby above. W&A No. 311592
given that on 4TH day of FEBRUARY 2016, Letters TESTA- DATED January 25, 2016
MENTARY in respect of the Estate of EVELYN B. HAILE, de- W I L S O N & A S S O C I A T E S ,
ceased who died JANUARY P . L . L . C . ,
2ND 2016 were issued to the un- Successor Trustee
dersigned by the Probate Court
of Putnam County, Tennessee. FOR SALE INFORMATION,
All persons, resident and non- VISIT WWW.MYFIR.COM and
resident, having claims, ma- WWW.REALTYTRAC.COM
2/3, 10, 17
tured or unmatured, against the
estate are required to file same
Public Notices
with the Clerk of the above- 005
named Court on or before the
earlier of the dates prescribed in
Some secrets need
(1) or (2) otherwise their claims
to be shared.
will be forever barred:
(1)(A) Four (4) months from the
SEXUAL
date of the first publication of this
notice if the creditor received an
ASSAULT
actual copy of this notice to credit's not
itors at least sixty (60) days beyour fault!
fore the date that is four (4)
months from the date of the first
For confidential help
publication; or
or information, call
(B) Sixty (60) days from the date
the creditor received an actual
copy of the notice to creditors if
the creditor received the copy of
the notice less than sixty (60)
days prior to the date that is four
(4) months from the date of first
(931)526-5197 • 1-800-707-5197
publication as described in
(1)(A): or
(2) Twelve (12) months from the
025
decedent's date of death.
Special Notices
Attorney for the Estate
JAMES H. FLOOD
501 PARK AVENUE, SUITE B
LEBANON, TN 37087
050
121
Pest Control
ALL STAR PEST CONTROL
OF TENNESSEE
Complete Termite Service
Lic'd/Ins'd. Bonded.
All work guaranteed
Free Estimates.
MARTY KELLY
931-526-8550
Charter # 4252
125
BUSHHOGGING GARDEN
TILLING, FRONT END LOADER, DIRT & GRAVEL WORK
LAWNMOWING,Reasonable
Rates. Exp'd(931)261-7871
Greener Grass Landscaping &
Lawncare. Veteran owned & operated, complete lawn care &
landscaping services, free estimates, yearly contracts available,
Kyle Farley 931-239-6183 or
Wesley Goff 931-265-8841
140
Other
"JACKSON'S MOVING SERVICE"
Need to move? We have the 20'
box truck & men to do the job. No
stress for you & your furniture. Ref's
Avail. Call for free Est. 931-268-9102
LADIES,
Do you need time to just relax
and be stress free? Can!t afford
the high costs of going to the
spa? If so call me today to book
your FREE spa party for you
and your friends!!!
(931) 349-1352.
Ask for Rebecca.
DISABLED? Having trouble
getting your social security or
VA disability?
We can help! Call Disability
Consulting @ 877-453-9151
Home Renovation
BOULDIN HOME REPAIR &
REMODELING. Plumbing, electrical, painting, dry wall, bathroom &
kitchen remodels. Carpentry work.
30 yrs exp. Free Est. 239-6061
GANTT'S AUTO TRIM
& UPHOLSTERY
Complete Auto and Boat Interiors.
Owner Wayne Gantt
931-372-7606
210
Child/Elder Care
I WOULD LIKE TO SIT
with the elderly
Call Mary @ (931)319-3538
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS &
DOORS. Call today for free inhome Est. Serving Mid. TN for I WOULD like to house clean
12 years. 931-Windows
or sit with elderly people parttime. 931-252-3893, 372-2540.
!!!
THE BLESSED CARPENTER
Honest. Dependable. Helping the
world get better one job at a time.
Let Me Help You! Rodney Hogue
Owner/Operator 931-881-5851
215
Employment Opp.
ANSEI AMERICA has immediate openings for the following
postions.
127
Sheetrock,Drywall •Assembly 1st & 2nd shift
•Production Assistant
•Quality Supervisor
LUNA'S DRYWALL
Sheetrock Work: Hang, finish, •Accounting Supervisor
touch up. No job too big/small. Accepting applications & resumes M-F 8A-3P at 1659 N.
Insured. 931-212-6899
Grundy Quarles Hwy, G'sboro
130 Tree Service/Related
OLD TIMERS TREE SERVICE
4 generations of tree care.
Specialize in dangerous tree
removal. Grind stumps. Lic/Ins.
T. Bowman 537-2466;260-5655
M & M TREE SERVICE
We trim, top & remove trees.
Also stump removal.
Free Est. Lic/Ins
Call 432-4382 or 260-6304
ARBOR MEDICS Tree Service
Owner: Scott Winningham.
ISA Certified Arborist,
#SO-5152-AT
537-6829 / 261-1967
Are you an up-coming or recent graduate with an AA or
BA in Electrical or Mechanical
Engineering, looking for interesting work in the automation
field? Join our team working with
PLC’s, vision systems, robotic
packing systems, CAD/CAM
systems and other real-world
manufacturing applications.
Stable, growing company with
national market that’s locally
owned & debt free looking for
talented, eager people willing to
learn. EEOE. Fax resume to:
931-738-2019 or mail to Box
1149, H-C, PO Box 2729, Ckvl,
TN 38502-2729
215
Employment Opp.
Cookeville Regional Medical
Center seeking
• Food Service Aides
Duties may include stock receiving and delivery, food preparation, patient tray line and cafe
service, patient tray deliver, dish
room duties, and cleaning assignments
such
as
sweeping/mopping, trash and
cardboard removal. High school
diploma or equivalent preferred.
Previous experience preferred.
• Cashiers
Assumes daily responsibility for
performing routine tasks that include duties for production, patient line, catering/special
events, coffee cart and/or retail.
Duties may include stock receiving and delivery, food preparation, patient tray line and cafe
service, patient tray delivery,
cashier assignments, dish room
duties, and cleaning assignments such as sweeping/mopping, trash and cardboard removal.
High school diploma or equivalent required. Previous experience preferred.
• Clinical Dietician
This position is responsible for
nutrition assessment, care planning, monitoring, education and
counseling of hospitalized patients and outpatients in a variety of settings. Conduct in-service training. Plans, implements,
and evaluates means to imPutnam County School System is an prove customer satisfaction on a
continuous basis. Places orders
Equal Opportunity Employer.
for equipment and supplies, and
C O O K P T : E x p . i n a arrange for the routine maintenhealthcare/commercial setting ance and upkeep of the equippreferred. Apply in person at ment and facility.
Morningside Assisted Living,
1010 East Spring Street, Ckvl EDUCATION: Bachelor of SciCosmetology/Nail Instructor ence Degree in Nutrition or DiNeeded Immediately. We are etetics, as well as the complelooking for a strong coach. Able tion of an Academy of Nutrition
to connect with students. Open and Dietetics approved internto new ideas. Quick learner. Mo- ship or clinical experience. Suctivator. Ability to multi-task. cessfully passed RD exam. LiStrong cosmetology skill set. censed in the State of TennessStrong team player. Must be ee by the Board of Dietitian/Nuable to work a regular & reliable tritionist Examiners. Certified
schedule. Must have a valid TN Diabetes Educator (C.D.E.) recosmetology/Instructor's license. quired for the Diabetes EducaCall 526-8735 or come by 880 E. tion Program.
10th St, Ckvl, or email
EXPERIENCE: Prefer minimum
[email protected]
of 3-5 years previous related exCovington Credit in Living- perience, training or equivalent
ston is seeking a F/T Assistant combination of education and
Manager. Great benefits, com- experience.
petitive pay. Apply online
mymoneytogo.com
• Cook/Baker
or apply at 430 Marketsquare Under the direction of the Lead
Plaza, Livingston.
Chef and Immediate Supervisor
this skilled individual assumes
Direct Support Professional
daily responsibility for preparing
$$$ 300 Sign on Bonus $$$
Full time & Part-time Available all menu items using recipes
NOW for the right candidates: provided by the Lead Chef. Ensures that customers are served
Imagine a position where you properly and in a timely manner.
have the direct responsibility for Ensures quality is maintained
helping to improve & positively a n d s a f e t y a n d s a n i t a t i o n
impacted the lives of those with g u i d e l i n e s a r e o b s e r v e d .
o High school diploma or equidevelopmental disabilities.
valent required. Requires minimNot only do you feel purpose & um of 1-year previous related
confidence in what you do but experience, training or equivalyou help instill those same attrib- ent combination of education
and experience.
utes in others.
Apply online at
We seek those that are empathwww.crmchealth.org
etic, caring, organized, patient
E.O.E.
and committed to our mission to
facilitate independence and employment support opportunities
in the community for persons
with developmental disabilities to Putnam County Parks and Relive as independently as pos- creation seeks qualified applicants for the position of Field
sible.
Maintenance Worker. All applicCommunity Options provides ations should be submitted to
substantial paid time off, Health 240 Carlen Dr. or faxed to 931and Dental Insurance, pay rate 525-1518 no later than February
15th at 4 PM.
is $8.30/hr!
Are you Community Options Responsibilities:
next Direct Support Profession- Clean and maintain athletic
al? If so you can apply in person fields and park facilities
at 201 North Oak Ave, Suite B Operate equipment such as zero
Cookeville TN 38501 or fax a turn mower, tractor, edger, trimresume to 931-372-0095 or mer, chainsaw, etc.
Line and drag softball, baseball,
email
and t-ball infields
[email protected].
Maintain infields
EOE.
Communicate with public
Experienced Tile Installer Assist in maintenance of comneeded for CNC Construction. munity centers
Please call (931)319-5613
Qualifications:
LEGITIMATE JOB placement High school or equivalent educafirms that work to fill specific po- tion
sitions cannot charge an upfront Valid driver's license
fee. For free information about Preferred:
avoiding employment service Field turf management degree or
scams, write to the Federal relevant degree
T r a d e C o m m i s s i o n , 6 0 0 Field turf management experiPennsylvania Avenue, NW, ence
Washington, DC 20580, or you Valid CDL license
can go online to
Other information:
http://www.fraud.org/.
Position may require some
This message is a public service of
nights and weekend work occathe Herald-Citizen &
sionally as needed
Regional Buyers Guide.
Signature HealthCARE of
Putnam County
Come Join the Signature Revolution!!
We are accepting applications for the following:
Dietary Aide FT/PT
Day & Evening Shifts Available
BENEFITS
Ɣ Paid VacationƔ Sick TimeƔ
Holiday PayƔ Flexible SchedulingƔ Health InsuranceƔ
DentalƔ VisionƔ 401(k) ƔLong & Short Term Disability
Submit your application to:
HR Director
278 Dry Valley Road; Algood, TN
38506
931-537-6524
[email protected]
EOE, AA,
Male/Female/Protected Vet/Disability
HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016 — B5
215
Employment Opp.
215
Employment Opp.
Cookeville Regional Medical Cookeville Regional Medical
Center seeking
Center seeking
• Housekeepers and Floor
Techs
Successful candidates will perform daily cleaning procedures
in accordance with CRMC training. High school graduate preferred, but may be waived if able
to read, write, follow oral and
written communications and do
simple math calculations. Experience preferred.
Full-Time & PRN Registration
Representatives
This position is responsible for
serving as first impression of the
hospital while initiating the registration processes in a professional and consistent manner by
assuring prompt and proper
treatment for all patients. Will
perform certain functions on the
front end of the registration pro• Full-Time 3rd shift Environ- cess, which decreases the wait
mental Services Supervisor
time for patients and hospital deThis position is responsible for partments.
reporting to the Environmental
Services Manager and or Direct- EDUCATION: High School Dipor for work and scheduling. Per- loma or GED.
form daily cleaning procedures
in accordance with CRMC train- EXPERIENCE: Previous experiing videos in assigned areas. ence preferred in a medical setDay to day operations on the pa- ting involving clerical and basic
tient floors and ancillary/support medical terminology. Minimum of
areas. Record work completed one year of clerical office setting
on Area Assignment Checklist, required.
maintain, employee scheduling,
complete quality assurance proApply online at
gram daily and complete patient
www.crmchealth.org
surveys daily. Police assigned
E.O.E.
areas at the beginning of each
shift, respond to Housekeeping SFEG CORP in Smithville, TN
pages and perform other tasks has a job opening for a Screw
Machine Set-Up Operator. Hours
as assigned by Director.
EDUCATION: High school dip- are Monday thru Thursday 5:00
loma or equivalent education am to 3:30 pm.
preferred.
EXPERIENCE: Must have three Job Responsibilities/Duties
year’s previous supervisory ex- Sets up and operates screw maperience in Environmental Ser- chine to perform turning, boring,
vices Management or 5 years threading and related operaprevious supervisory experience tions on metal bar stock. Must
in related fields, i.e. Hospitality, be able to set-up, operate and
Building Management, and/or make adjustments as needed to
Food Service Industry.
Acme, Traub and Brown Sharpe
Machines. Must be able to read
For more information and to
Blue Prints and use various
apply go to
gauges and measuring instruwww.crmchealth.org
ments. Must be able to work with
E.O.E.
vendors on tool design for any
new products. Compensation
Immediate Openings for Exp'd based on experience and skill
front desk manager, desk clerks, level.
breakfast hostess & housekeepers. Apply in person Comfort Inn Must be able to pass drug
& Suites, 1045 Interstate Dr, Ckvl. screen and background check.
283
Trucking Emp.
DRIVERS WANTED. 18 mos
flatbed experience. CDL license.
Home weekends. 931-686-2977
Need team driver for dedicated
route with at least 2 years experience. This is a drop and hook
run, driver must be able to do
2600+ miles per week. 1 week
paid vacation after 6 mos employment, home every weekend.
The job pays $900/wk for 30
days. After 30 days, $1200/wk
with approval. 2 years or more
experienced applicants ONLY.
(931)854-1445 ask for Judy or
501-618-5970 ask for Robert.
290
Schools/Instruction
NO HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA NEEDED. How often
do you see that? Putnam
County Adult High School can
show you a way to complete
the credits you missed when
you were in school before.
Flexible schedule -- days or
evenings. Individualized
study. Possible credit for work
or armed services training.
Relaxed atmosphere. Free.
If you are between 18 and
118 and want information
about registering, call
528-8685. This could be your
year to graduate. If you can
dream it, you can do it.
315
Financial Services
EXPERIENCED
PLUMBERS NEEDED
NOW HIRING Asst. Project
Manager, construction laborers,
concrete workers & equip. operators. Drug Screen Req'd. Mail
to/apply - HR 165 W Broad St
Cookeville TN 38501, fax 931526-5171
NOW HIRING Exp'd Pipe Fitters
& Labors. Must pass background check. Apply in person
723 W Jackson St.
NOW HIRING for PT & FT Desk
Clerk. Apply in person @ Americas Best Value Inn, 897 So
Jefferson Ave.
Public Works/Sanitation
City of Algood, TN
The City of Algood is seeking
qualified applicants for a position in the Public Works/Sanitation Department. Duties and responsibilities include but not limited to: operation of light equipment such as tractor, brush hog,
push mower, trimmer, chainsaw,
etc. Assist in the daily residential trash pickup and perform other miscellaneous assignments.
Must possess knowledge and
experience in the safe use of
and operation of heavy equipment.
EXPERIENCED HVAC
INSTALLERS NEEDED
Residential and
commercial experience.
Salary based on
experience, including
Retirement, vacation and
insurance.
Apply in person @
Charles Stone Heating &
Cooling, LLC
315 Transport Drive,
Algood
Oremailresumeto
[email protected]
KAWASAKI VULCAN classic
1470cc motorcycle in excellent
condition. 37,703 miles, 4 speed
gearbox and runs strong. Sells
with saddle bags (leather lyke), 2
helmets, T-bag, trailer hitch and
misc items. 931-261-3582.
425
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
St Thomas Highlands Hospital Qualifications include but not
Sparta, TN / PRN. Contact Erika
limited to:
more information
Must have CDL License, be for
[email protected]
able to lift 50 lbs and be a
High school graduate or equi- PT CNA/PERSONAL CARE ASvalent.
SISTANT – Apply in person at
Morningside Assisted Living,
Interested candidates must sub- 1010 East Spring Street, Ckvl
mit an application and resume.
Applications are available at
Algood City Hall
LPNs, RNs, CNAs
215 W Main Street, Algood
Dietary
Aide & Cook
Mon thru Fri – 8AM to 4PM
Deadline for applications
Now hiring RN for all shifts, LPN
Friday, Feb. 19, 2016 at 4 PM
for 2nd and 3rd shift, CNA for 2nd
EOE
shift and 3rd shift, Cook and an
aide all shifts. All positions full time.
SUBCONTRACTOR: ABOVE
We offer top pay and benefits
Ground Pool Installer
including 401k Retirement,
Employee Stock Ownership,
Pool & Spa Depot of Ckvl, TN is
Health, Dental, Life, Vacation
looking for Exp'd subcontractors
Package, Scholarship program
for above ground pool installafor nurse advancement.
tions for the 2016 season. Subcontractor must provide their
(931) 525-6655 - Phone
own worker's compensation, li(931) 525-3581 - Fax
ability insurance & equipment.
444 One-Eleven Place
Position is F/T & weekends are
Cookeville, TN 38506
req'd. Excellent pay & career opportunity. Please apply in person at 1470 Interstate Dr, Ckvl,
Health Care Center
TN 38501 or send resume to
We are an equal opportunity employer
[email protected]
BETHESDA
MAGNIFYING SHEET
ONLY $3.25 EA. PLUS TAX
GET ONE TODAY!!
! Start Seeing
! Start Reading
Herald-Citizen
1300 Neal Street
Cookeville, TN. 38501
931-526-9715
Rooms for Rent
1, 2, 3 & 4 BR APTS /
HOUSES NEW $280 - $800
Cable, Water/Appl's Furnished
OVER 100 LOCATIONS
Kids Welcome; Some Pets in
Designated Apts.
Open Mon - Fri
SOARD PROPERTIES
526-1988
Storage units available
1BR APT in Cookeville, conveniently located. No pets. Stove,
frig. Call (931)267-3052
WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE
TODAY?
2BR, 1BA. Stove, refrig, DW,
CH/A, cable pd. $360/mo. Small
Kenmore 27' frig/freezer water pets OK!! Call 526-1988.
in door. Also approx 27' upright 2BR, 1.5BA Condo in middle of
freezer, both in good condiiton. t o w n . 1 5 A D e n t o n A v e .
$250 each. (931) 265-6112
$675/mo, $675/dep. Call
QS BED $150; QS canopy bed ( 9 3 1 ) 9 7 9 - 7 0 1 4
$250; QS regular bed $150; Lk 2BR, 1B duplex in Ckvl city limnew couch $125; Recliner $75; i t s . W / D H U , C H A , a p p l s .
loveseat w/dual recliners $75; $45/mo. $450/dep. 1 yr lease.
(931)854-0645, 644-5937
No pets/smoking. 526-8594,
303-4933
515
Garage/Yard Sales
PLANNING A
YARD SALE???
725
Houses For Rent
320 State Street
Cookeville
3BR/2BA, large fenced
yard, wraparound
porch, storage bldg.,
clean & newly
remodeled w/gas heat.
Background check required
$1000/m $1000 deposit
526-5023 • 239-9548
730
Mobile Homes/Rent
2BR 1BA in town, water/appls
furn'd. NO PETS. $300/mo +
dep. Ref's req'd. (931)260-2032
2BR/1BA Newly Remod'd,
Country Set., 1yr lease req'd. No
pets $350/mo + dep. 858-1998
740
Comm & Indus/Rent
10TH ST: Medical Office/Retail.
Park Village Shopping Ctr. 1600
SF. $1200/mo. (931)265-3545
3,000 SF Mfg Space
2 offices, 2 docks - $575/mo.
528-8173
Live within the city limits
of Algood or Cookeville?
You MUST go to your
city’s business office to
obtain a permit.
City of Algood
215 W Main St.
Algood, TN
or
City of Cookeville
45 E. Broad Street
Cookeville, TN
INDOOR YARD SALE
MULTIPLE VENDORS
SATURDAY .. 7AM - 2PM
Cookeville Nazarene Church
360 S. Old Kentucky Rd, Ckvl
TOO MANY ITEMS TO LIST!!
530
Boats & Equip.
FOR RENT
1 , 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts, Houses.
Many locations
FALCON REALTY,
528-2158
falconrealtycookeville.com
CYPRESS CREEK APTS
Leasing 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apts
Security Deposit only $250!
600 W. 8th Street • Cookeville
931-372-1605 - EHO*
Northgate Business Park:
4800 SF Ground level &
3000 SF Suite avail. 261-7903
OFFICE / RETAIL SPACES
Locations on S. Jefferson
$395-$850. 979-5550
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
RETAIL & OFFICE SPACE
Great locations, competitive
rents. Call 372-8720
DUPLEX: 3 extra lg BR's, 2BA,
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
gas FP, single car gar w/2 car
carport. Front/back porches, lrg
Homes For Sale
y a r d . N o p e t s . I n c i t y . 825
$1,000/mo, 1715 Denton Ave,
$0 CASH to Move In!!!
Apt A. Shown by appt only.
(931)528-1689 aft 5pm or lve msg New custom built homes at spec
home prices! Ready for you and
FOR RENT 1, 2, & 3 BR Apart- your family. New Home, full warments, 3BR Homes. Clean, & ranty, extra nice large home
well maintained, conveniently sites, fully landscaped. Prices
located. NO PETS. Call for avail- start at $133,900.
ability Mon- Fri
Call Now!
JUDD PROPERTIES 526-2119 Very Limited Number For Sale!
Gray Hunter Arms: 2BR, 1BA. Call Greg Baugh Construction
at 931-261-3110
Peaceful, cable/water pd.
$595/mo. 528-1441.
www.grayhunterarmsapartments.com
Tracker Jon Boat 14 ft. New
trailer, trolling mtr & battery,
depth/fish finder + anchor. Asking $1,625 obo. Rick 931-2603838
540
Firewood/Stoves
FIREWOOD SALE
$45 or $55/rick. We can deliver
Call (931)349-4219
Health Care Emp.
LPN or MA needed for busy
phyisican's office. PTO, 401K &
profit sharing offered. Send resume to Box 1150, H-C PO Box
2729, Ckvl, TN 38502-2729.
715
ROOM for RENT in my home. 3BR, 1BA in town. Remodeled,
Everything incl'd. $500/mo. For new everything. CHA, W/D HU,
details call 931-349-4561
No pets/smoking $800/mo 979-2077
4BR, 2.5BA house, 46 Proffitt
STAR MOTOR INN
510
Misc. For Sale
St. Carport, deck, full bsmnt,
Weekly, starting at $180
free internet, frig, guest laundry, park setting. $975/mo. + sec
258 pds of standard weight movie rentals. Pet Friendly - dep. Non smoking/pets ok. Avail
plates. 1 tricep bar, 1 curl bar, 1 Construction Crews welcome. 3/1/16. (931)267-3594, 526-8504.
weight bar, & 4 dumbell handles.
526-9511
4BR, 3BA stove, frig, Circle Dr
Collars incl'd. Good cond $125.
on dead-end street. $850/mo +
Call 931-761-5809
720 Apts/Duplex For Rent dep. Call 865-360-7878
FREE
5BR, 3BA historic house 2600
WOOD SKIDS
(2) 1BR Apts $400 1841 N SF, 290 E. Jere Whitson Ave,
Available at the rear of the
Dixie; Studio $315, Market Sq. totally renovated. Bsmnt, Lrg
Herald-Citizen
Apts 41 E 4th St. Incls water, yard, wrap-around porch, close
1300 Neal Street,
trash. Non-smoking/pet friendly to TTU. Non-smoking/pets ok.
Cookeville, TN. 38501
near TTU (931)267-3594, 881-6877 $1200/mo (931)267-3594, 5268504.
1, 2, & 3 BR APARTMENTS
HAVING A HARD TIME SEEING the print in your favorite
BRICK RANCH 3/1.5. No
Apartments with W/D Hook-Up
Newspaper, Magazine or Bible
smoking/pets. Dep, ref's req'd.
Amenities
include
2
swimming
or ever had trouble reading the
$800/mo. Call (931)260-3800.
pools,
fitness
center
&
laundry
telephone directory or a map?
facility all on site
RENT OR SALE: 2.5BR, 2BA 217 Sewell St, Baxter. $600
Now Available
SAXONY APARTMENT
first & last, will neg. dep. Call
HOMES
(931)284-8663
Deluxe Framed
931-526-7711
Autos for Sale
1990 HONDA ACCORD EX. AT
4dr sedan, 138k, sunroof, alloy
wheels, excellent paint condition.
Local fast paced surgery center Very good condition. $2,900.
is seeking a surgical scrub Call (931)644-0395
technologist or LPN. ENT and
instrumentation processing experience is preferred. Current
BLS/ CPR certification is required. Monday thru Friday. No
call and no weekends. If interested please send resume to
[email protected]
241
Misc. Wanted
CDL DRIVER: Class A OTR WANTED OLD APPLIANCES &
w/good record needed. Flexible
JUNK - WILL PICK UP
time out & routes. For more info,
CALL 931-510-4138
call business hrs: 615-390-2787
IT'S ILLEGAL for companies
doing business by phone to
promise you a loan and ask you
to pay for it before they deliver.
For free information about avoiding advance fee loan scams,
write to the Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C.,
20580 or call the National Fraud
Information
Center,
1-800-876-7060. This message
is a public service of the
Herald-Citizen & Regional BuyLocal 70 yr old Co. looking for Send resumes to SFEG Corp - ers Guide.
various driving positions. Re- 625 Miller Rd, Smithville, TN FEDERAL LAW allows you to
quires Class B CDL, tow motor 37166 Attn: Human Resources correct your credit report for
exp. a plus. Apply: Builders
free. For more information about
Supply, 50 Scott Ave, Ckvl
credit repair scams, write to the
Federal Trade Commission,
LOOKING FOR A STABLE
Washington, D.C., 20580 or call
JOB WITH A GROWING
the National Fraud Information
COMPANY??
Center, 1-800-876-7060. This
Residential and
message is a public service of
commercial
experience.
Tri State Distribution, Inc., is now
the Herald-Citizen & Regional
hiring for entry level positions on
Salary based on
Buyers Guide.
all shifts. If you want to work in a
experience, including
clean & safe working environ410
Cycles & ATVs
ment, for a stable company who
Retirement, vacation and
offers competitive wages + be2007 HARLEY DAVIDSON
insurance.
nefits, such as paid vacations &
DYNA Super Glide,
Apply in person @
holidays, & group health, dental,
garage kept, alarm system,
vision, disability, & life insurance,
Charles Stone Heating
lots of chrome. $9,500.
this is the place for you. High
(931)528-0348 / 260-0405
& Cooling, LLC
School Diploma or GED equivalent + background check/pre-hire
315 Transport Drive,
drug screen Req’d. Apply in perAlgood
son during normal business
hours or send resume to 600
Or email resume to
Vista Drive, Sparta, TN, 38583
[email protected]
or by fax at 931-738-2019. Tri
State Distribution is an EOE.
MAMMA ROSA's now taking
applications for servers P/T day
or evening shifts, hostesses &
pizza maker/cook P/T, afternoon into evening hours. Apply
in person.
505
OAK FIREWOOD
$65/rick delivered
Call 931-808-5347
RIDGECREST CONDO
3BR/2BA, W&D Hookup, basement & garage, very nice neighborhood $750/mo 1 yr lease Dep
1830 BAYVIEW $170,000: 3BR,
Neg. 526-5186
2BA under construction.
SMALL 2BR Apt, Market
260-4227 or 261-7979
Square, 41 E. 4th St. $425/mo.
LandJcontractors.com
Water incl'd. (931)267-3594,
526-8504
STEEPLECHASE: 2BR 1.5BA
townhouse. W/D HU, cable pd.
$550/mo, $500/dep. No
pets/smoking. Call Claudia,
ASSET Prop. Svcs 520-4724
7157 COLEMAN CIRCLE
TERRACE VIEW Town Homes $199k. New & Ready to Move
545
Pets & Supplies offers 3BR town homes in a Into! 3BR, 2BA Craftsman Style.
country setting. Call for availabil- 260-4227 or 261-7979
LOOKING FOR A PET? Adopt ity…931-528-7633. 1366 CresLandJcontractors.com
your new best friend!
cent Dr, Ckvl. Office hours TuesVisit us online at www.aarf- day & Thursday
tn.com to see all of our rescued
www.perryreid.com/teraceview
dogs, cats, puppies and kittens!
EHO
Meet the dogs and cats for adoption at our adoption events - TOTALLY FURNISHED 2BR,
2003 FORD Econoline: Bur- call, email or visit our website for 1.5BA Condo. Located close
gundy, seats 6, AT, Power win- our event schedule. All pets are to TTU/Hosp. $850/mo.indows, locks, & drivers seat, all fully vetted and already fixed. cludes maintenance fee and 7 1 6 1 C O L E M A N C I R C L E
new front brake system. $4,000 A.A.R.F. is a 501(c)(3) non- water bill for more info. please $199k. 3BR, 2BA under construction. 260-4227 or 261-7979
obo. Call (931)854-7899
p r o f i t , n o - k i l l a n i m a l call (931)267-4607
LandJcontractors.com
rescue/foster organization run by TOWNHOUSE: 2BR, 1.5BA.
volunteers. Please be part of the CHA, WD/HU. Appls, water,
solution to end animal overpopu- cable furn'd 510-2394.
lation - spay or neuter your pets.
A.A.R.F. (All About Rescue and 725
Houses For Rent
Fixin' Inc.)
931-260-8018 (voicemail only) •
1, 2, 3, & 4 BR Houses & Apts
www.aarf-tn.com
Starting at $325/mo or
2006 FORD E-350XL Cargo BLUE PITS 5wks, check photos
$81.25/wk . Pets OK.
Van: 6.8L V10, AC, cruise, on FB under Tamra Chavis AnStevens Realty LLC
163K. Good tires. Excellent imated Profile. If interested call
READY TO BUILD? 6 lots on
866-806-3815 O/A
shape. $8,395. Call
Boyd Farris Rd. Let us build your
www.stevensrentals.com
931-349-0185. Not Registered
931-372-2775 or 931-979-7879
"We Now Offer Weekly Rentals" home. 260-4227 or 261-7979
POM- A -POO shots & wormed
LandJcontractors.com
106 East Stewart St, Monterey.
warranty. $400.
430
Trucks For Sale written health
Extra nice 2BR, 1BA house.
(931)319-0000
Lots & Acreage
CHA, stove, frig. Deposit, no 840
pets.
$400/mo
839-2467
705
Wanted To Rent
LOT 4 SALE: Hawkins Hill S/D,
1BR HOUSE. Completely fur- .48 acres $16,000. Buffalo ValEqual Housing Opportunity
nished, including utilities & satel- ley Rd just off Hawkins CrawPUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate adverlite TV. Call (931)858-2234
tised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal
ford. Call (931)432-1092.
Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to adver1BR, 1BA HOUSE
tise "any preference, limitation or discrimination
$400/mo. Private.
based on race, color, religion, sex, familial status
or national origin, handicap/disability or an intenCall 865-360-7878
2001 ISUZU FRR: $13,750: 6cyl
turbo diesel, 6sp, 123k, Exc.
cond. Locally driven, xtra cab,
clean int, storage boxes, ramp,
chrome wheels. 7,000lb
front/14,000lb rear. (931)979-0736
tion to make any such preference, limitation or
discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which
is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
Herald-Citizen &
Regional Buyers
Guide
1300 Neal St., Cookeville, TN
931-526-9715 (FAX) 526-1209
2BR/1BA, Near Tech, Basement, Hdwd Floors, CH&A, W/D
incl, No Pets/Smoking, min 6
mo. Lease req'd, 950/mo,
950/deposit, call 931-260-4100
3BR 2BA, full bsmnt, in Colonial
Est behind the mansion.
$950/mo.Lease req‚d. leave
msg. 644-3582
B6 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Wednesday, February 10, 2016
SPORTS
Warriors sweep Rockets in consecutive seasons
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Stephen Curry
had 35 points, nine assists and six rebounds,
and the Golden State Warriors put away the
Houston Rockets in the fourth quarter for a
123-110 victory Tuesday night.
Andrew Bogut added 13 points, 11 rebounds, three steals and a season-high six
blocked shots — three in the fourth — during
one of his best games yet.
Andre Iguodala and Harrison Barnes hit
consecutive 3-pointers to start the fourth
quarter to get the defending champions going
after the game was tied at 93 after the third.
Golden State won its 42nd straight regularseason home game and is 24-0 at Oracle
Arena this season. The Warriors are within
two home victories of matching the Chicago
Bulls’ NBA-record home winning streak of
44 games from March 30, 1995 to April 4,
1996.
James Harden overcame a scoreless first
quarter to finish with 37 points, five assists
and five rebounds in Houston’s eighth
straight loss to Golden State.
The Warriors went 3-0 against Houston to
sweep the Rockets in consecutive seasons for
the first time.
SPURS 119, HEAT 101
MIAMI (AP) — LaMarcus Aldridge scored
28 points, Kawhi Leonard added 23 and San
Antonio got seven points on one possession
in the fourth quarter against Miami.
Danny Green added 15 points for the Spurs,
who have won six straight over the Heat
going back to the 2014 NBA Finals.
Dwyane Wade scored 20 points on 9-for-12
shooting for Miami, which goes into the AllStar break on a two-game slide. Chris Bosh
scored 18 and Hassan Whiteside added 14
points and six rebounds before getting ejected
during that pivotal possession in the fourth.
Whiteside was assessed a flagrant-2 foul for
elbowing the Spurs’ Boban Marjanovic as
they tried to get position for a rebound. That
was part of a seven-point trip for the Spurs,
who pushed an 87-80 lead to 94-80 in 16 seconds and weren’t threatened again.
JAZZ 121, MAVERICKS 119, OT
DALLAS (AP) — Gordon Hayward hit a
fadeaway jumper at the buzzer in overtime
and Utah extended its season-best winning
streak to seven games.
Rodney Hood had a tying 3-pointer with 1.5
seconds left in regulation as the Jazz ended a
10-game losing streak in Dallas. Their last
win on the Mavericks’ home court was Jan.
9, 2010.
Hood finished with 29 points, and Hayward
had 20, including 13 in the second half and
overtime.
Chandler Parsons led Dallas with 24 points
but missed an open 3-pointer for the lead
with 24 seconds left in the Mavericks’ second
straight overtime game and NBA-high eighth
of the season.
WIZARDS 111, KNICKS 108
NEW YORK (AP) — John Wall had 28
points and 17 assists, Bradley Beal scored 26,
and Washington beat New York in the
Knicks’ first game under Kurt Rambis.
Wall made four free throws in the final 6.6
seconds and the Wizards held on when
Langston Galloway’s 3-pointer at the buzzer
was just short.
Carmelo Anthony had 33 points and 13 rebounds, but the Knicks lost their sixth
straight in their first game since firing Derek
Fisher on Monday. They have dropped 10 of
11 and started Rambis’ era the same way
Fisher’s ended, by quickly falling in a huge
early hole.
Rookie Kristaps Porzingis scored 20 points,
but just two after his 14-point third quarter.
BUCKS 112, CELTICS 111
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Khris Middleton
made one of two free throws with 0.6 seconds left and Milwaukee defeated Boston.
Middleton drew a foul on Avery Bradley to
get to the line. Boston had tied the game
when Kelly Olynyk made two free throws
with one second remaining.
Milwaukee appeared to have won the game
on Greg Monroe’s last-second hook shot,
giving the Bucks a 111-109 lead. Olynyk
then drew the foul with no time expiring off
the clock.
Monroe, who was removed from the starting lineup, had 29 points and 12 rebounds as
the Bucks ended a five-game losing streak.
Ben Margot | AP
Middleton had 20 points and Michael CarterWilliams, who also was benched, added 16. Houston Rockets’ James Harden, right, shoots over
Crowder and Bradley had 18 points each for Golden State Warriors’ Andre Iguodala during the first half
the Celtics.
Tuesday in Oakland, Calif.
Villanova 1-0 as No. 1
The Associated Press
Stew Milne | AP
North Carolina head coach Roy Williams
questions a call during the first half against
Boston College in Boston on Tuesday.
UNC’s Williams
collapses
By KYLE HIGHTOWER
AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) — North Carolina coach Roy
Williams got dizzy and had to be taken to the
locker room during the second half of the Tar
Heels game at Boston College on Tuesday night.
UNC spokesman Steve Kirschner says Williams
got dizzy but is doing OK. The incident occurred
during the first media timeout of the second half.
Kirschner gave another update about 20 minutes
later and said that Williams got up from his chair
too fast, triggering a bout of vertigo. He is currently receiving medication and is expected to remain in the locker room for the remainder of the
game.
Assistant coach Steve Robinson assumed coaching duties on the sideline.
The 65-year-old Williams had previous bouts
with vertigo in the past and felt dizzy when standing up quickly.
The Tar Heels are concluding a three-game road
trip. Their last home game was Jan. 30, against
Boston College.
USF rebounds
from rare loss
The Associated Press
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Courtney Williams scored
18 points, Alisia Jenkins grabbed 20 rebounds —
one short of her career best — and No. 22 South
Florida rebounded after a rare conference loss to
beat Tulane 77-65 Tuesday night.
Three of South Florida’s five made field goals to
start the second quarter were from 3-point range,
capped by Kitija Laksa’s 3 for a 34-22 lead.
Williams made the Bulls’ seventh 3-pointer of
the first half to extend their lead to 40-30 at the
break. Laksa led the way with 11 points while
Jenkins grabbed 12 boards.
Laksa finished with 14 points for South Florida
(17-6, 10-3 American), which improved to 13-1
at home.
KANSAS STATE 87,
No. 21 OKLAHOMA 71
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kindred Wesemann made 6 of 8 from 3-point range, 8 of 10 free
throws and finished with 26 points and five assists
to help the Kansas State women beat Oklahoma.
Breanna Lewis had 15 points, seven rebounds,
two steals and two blocked shots, while Bri Craig
scored a season-high 12 for Kansas State.
Derica Wyatt’s layup with 2:14 left in the third
pulled the Sooners within three, 56-53, but Wesemann answered with a 3-pointer and Oklahoma
went eight minutes, 55 seconds without a field
goal while Kansas State pushed its lead to 23 with
3:31 to play.
Gioya Carter led Oklahoma with 19 points.
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Josh Hart scored 18
points and No. 1 Villanova celebrated its first
game as the nation’s top team with an 86-59 victory over DePaul on Tuesday night.
Kris Jenkins made three 3-pointers and finished with 13 points as the Wildcats (21-3, 111) rolled to their 13th win in their last 14 games.
They moved two games clear of fifth-ranked
Xavier for the Big East lead after the Musketeers lost 70-56 at Creighton.
Villanova turned 19 DePaul turnovers into 19
points in its debut in the top spot of The Associated Press’ poll. The Wildcats had climbed to
No. 2 on six occasions before Oklahoma and
North Carolina lost last weekend, clearing the
way for them to ascend to No. 1.
Eli Cain scored 15 points for DePaul (8-16, 210), which shot 41 percent from the field in its
fourth loss in five games.
No. 2 MARYLAND 93, BOWIE ST. 62
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Maryland got
16 points from Rasheed Sulaimon in its schoolrecord 27th consecutive home victory.
Taking a break from their rigorous Big Ten
schedule, the Terrapins (22-3) enjoyed a stressfree encounter with Bowie State, a Division II
school in Maryland.
Backup center Michal Cekovsky, who usually
sees little playing time behind Diamond Stone
and Damonte Dodd, scored 11 of his 14 points
in the first half to help the Terrapins take a 4729 lead. His previous career high was 10.
Maryland’s home winning streak eclipses a 26game run at Cole Field House from Feb. 10,
1979, to Jan. 10, 1981. The Terrapins are 14-0 at
home this season and haven’t lost on their own
court since falling to Virginia on Dec. 3, 2014.
Miles Jackson scored 13 points for the Bulldogs (13-10), a member of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
CREIGHTON 70, No. 5 XAVIER 56
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Maurice Watson
scored a career-high 32 points and Creighton
rode a fast start to the upset.
The Bluejays (16-9, 7-5 Big East) used an early
16-0 run to take a 17-point lead 9 minutes into
the game and then held off the Musketeers after
they pulled within five with 6 minutes left.
Watson scored 22 points in the second half and
finished off the Musketeers with a bank-in high
off the glass, a layup and then a steal and layup
to make it 66-53 with 1:54 to play.
Xavier (21-3, 9-3) got 17 points from Jalen
Reynolds and 14 from James Farr. The Musketeers’ five-game winning streak ended as they
shot a season-worst 30 percent from the field,
including 1 of 21 from 3-point range.
No. 6 KANSAS 75,
No. 10 WEST VIRGINIA 65
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Perry Ellis had 21
points and Landen Lucas pulled down a careerhigh 16 rebounds as Kansas forged a three-way
tie atop the Big 12.
Frank Mason III added 14 points for the Jayhawks (20-4, 8-3), who handled the Mountaineers’ pressure well in avenging a loss lost
month in Morgantown.
Now, they are tied with the Mountaineers (195, 8-3) and No. 3 Oklahoma (20-3, 8-3) as they
pursue their 12th consecutive championship. All
three teams have seven games remaining.
Devin Williams had 14 points and nine rebounds, and Jaysean Paige also had 14 points
for the Mountaineers — though their leading
scorer was just 5 of 16 from the field.
No. 7 VIRGINIA 67, VIRGINIA TECH 49
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Anthony
Gill scored 16 points and Virginia turned the tables on its state rival Virginia Tech for its seventh straight win.
Isaiah Wilkins added a career-best 14 points
and Malcolm Brogdon had 12 for the Cavaliers
(20-4, 9-3 Atlantic Coast Conference). Virginia
avenged a 70-68 loss to the Hokies in Blacksburg on Jan. 4 in what rates as their worst per-
formance of the season, and extended their winning streak at John Paul Jones Arena to 17
games.
Freshman Justin Robinson scored 16 points
and classmate Chris Clarke had 11 in his first
action for the Hokies (13-12, 5-7) since breaking
his right foot in late December. Virginia Tech’s
top two scorers, Zach LeDay (16.0 ppg) and
Seth Allen (14.5), were limited to seven and six
points, respectively, in part because of foul trouble.
No. 18 PURDUE 82,
No. 8 MICHIGAN ST. 81, OT
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Raphael
Davis made one of two free throws with 4.6 seconds left in overtime to help Purdue pull off the
upset.
The Boilermakers (20-5, 8-4 Big Ten) snapped
a seven-game losing streak in the series despite
blowing an 18-point second-half lead, trailing
by four late in regulation and allowing the Spartans to tie it at 81 with 11.5 seconds left.
Davis broke the tie with the decisive free
throw, giving him 24 points. A.J. Hammons
wrestled the second shot away from Michigan
State (20-5, 7-5) to seal it.
Hammons had 19 points, 13 rebounds and
eight blocks.
Denzel Valentine led the Spartans with 27
points, eight rebounds and 10 assists.
No. 9 NORTH CAROLINA 68,
BOSTON COLLEGE 65
BOSTON (AP) — Playing most of the second
half without coach Roy Williams, who left the
bench after complaining of vertigo, North Carolina rallied for the win thanks to 20 points from
Justin Jackson.
The Eagles, who have not won an Atlantic
Coast Conference game this season, led the
whole way until Theo Pinson hit two free throws
with under 4 minutes remaining. After BC retook the lead, Marcus Paige hit a 3-pointer to
make it 62-60.
The Tar Heels (20-4, 9-2) snapped a two-game
losing streak.
Dennis Clifford had 14 points and 13 rebounds
for BC (7-17, 0-11).
BC’s Matt Milon hit a 3-pointer with 5.6 seconds left to make it a one-point game. But after
Paige made two free throws, Eli Carter’s 3-point
attempt from halfcourt at the buzzer bounced
harmlessly off the backboard.
Carter scored 26 points.
Carolina spokesman Steve Kirschner said
Williams, 65, who has suffered from vertigo in
the past, felt dizzy and returned to the locker
room but was OK. Assistant Steve Robinson
took over the coaching, and the Tar Heels eventually came around after falling behind by nine
points in the first half.
No. 12 MIAMI 65, PITTSBURGH 63
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — Guard Angel
Rodriguez scored on an offensive rebound with
1.4 seconds left for Miami.
With the game tied, the Hurricanes missed two
shots in the final 6 seconds and Pitt’s Ryan
Luther batted the ball before Rodriguez charged
into the lane and slapped it into the basket with
his left hand.
That was the only offensive rebound of the
game for the 5-foot-11 Rodriguez, who had 17
points and eight assists.
The Hurricanes (19-4, 8-3 Atlantic Coast Conference) trailed by eight points in the first half
but won for the sixth time in the past seven
games. Pittsburgh (17-6, 6-5) has lost two
straight for the first time this season.
Luther had 12 points and seven rebounds for
the Panthers, while Michael Young scored 12
points.
No. 19 DAYTON 76, DUQUESNE 74
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Scoochie Smith hit a
3-pointer that put Dayton ahead to stay as the
Flyers overcame a late 12-point deficit.
The Flyers (20-3, 10-1 Atlantic 10) got their
eighth straight win by going on a closing 19-5
run. Smith’s 3-pointer from the top of the arc put
Nam Y. Huh | AP
Villanova guard Ryan Arcidiacono, right,
shoots as DePaul guard Eli Cain guards during the first half Tuesday in Rosemont, Ill.
Dayton ahead 73-70 with 46 seconds left, and
the Dukes (15-9, 5-6) never pulled even again.
Smith hit a free throw with 2.7 seconds left.
Charles Cooke led Dayton with 22 points and
Smith added 14.
Micah Mason had 27 points for Duquesne.
Derrick Colter had 19 of his 21 in the second
half.
No. 22 KENTUCKY 82, GEORGIA 48
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Jamal Murray
scored 24 points and Tyler Ulis added 14 as
Kentucky held Georgia to a season-low 22 percent shooting.
Picking up where he left off after a career-best
35 points on Saturday against Florida, Murray
made 8 of 14 from the field including 6 of 10
from 3-point range. His accuracy helped spur
the Wildcats (18-6, 8-3 Southeastern Conference) to 52 percent shooting against a team that
entered as the nation’s No. 6 team and SEC
leader in field goal defense.
Georgia (13-9, 6-5) just couldn’t make shots as
its two-game winning streak ended. The Bulldogs closed the first half on a 0-for-17 drought
and weren’t much better in the second half as
they trailed by 37 points in the final minutes.
Yante Maten’s 16 points led the Bulldogs.
No. 25 WICHITA ST. 74, DRAKE 48
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Ron Baker and
Shaq Morris had 11 points each and Wichita
State won for the 13th time in 14 games.
Thirteen players scored for the Shockers (185, 12-1 Missouri Valley Conference), who
moved within two victories of clinching at least
a share of its third straight league title.
Wichita State had little trouble with the Valley’s worst team, rattling off a 27-5 run to close
the first half in beating the Bulldogs for the
ninth straight time.
Reed Timmer scored 20 points for Drake (619, 1-12), which lost for the 15th time in 17
games.
Wichita State was coming off just its second
Valley loss in three seasons, as it fell at Illinois
State 58-53.