Care Mobile rolls on - The Cleveland Daily Banner

Transcription

Care Mobile rolls on - The Cleveland Daily Banner
T U E S D AY
AUGUST 16, 2016
162nd YEAR • No. 93
CLEVELAND, TN 18 PAGES • 50¢
Anti-drug fight finds voice: ‘It’s time to get loud!’
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
“It's time to get loud!”
That is the strong statement
Commissioner Bill Winters recalled
Director of Schools Dr. Linda Cash
making to him concerning the prevalence of drug abuse by area young
people.
Both Winters and Cash on Monday
addressed the initiative to keep youths
Inside Today
from falling into the same trap as others for whom the experience ended in
tragedy.
That initiative begins Thursday
night at the Walker Valley vs. Bradley
Central high school football game at
Bradley.
Winters told his fellow commissioners that for the last nine months he
has been working with a group called
ATS BridgeBuilders — “Awareness.
Treatment. Sustainability.”
"There were two individuals who
interviewed our students and came up
with a statement that the community
wasn't as involved with this problem
as we should be," Winters said. "From
that point on, a core group of about
six people has become seven, and have
been working on dealing with this."
He said there was a thought as to
whether this new group should establish itself as a nonprofit.
"We started looking in the communi-
ty and there are already groups
involved in this, and if you made a
call, there would be very few referrals
because most people don't know all of
these groups exist," he said. "So, there
is a great need for awareness.”
Winters said the group's mission is
to "protect the next generation from
substance abuse."
The group's name also includes "J29
squared."
"That is to take a juvenile and have
them be drug free through age 29,"
Winters said. "What a gift that would
be to give every kid in this community.
"We're going to take what the director of schools said to me one day after
we lost one of our young people: 'It's
time to get loud. It's time to make a
statement,'" he said.
He said prior to Thursday night's
game, students will speak and "share
See ANTI-DRUG, Page 8
County
receives
gripes
on road,
septic
actions
EMA radio
system gets
finance nod
for upgrade
FEMA funds set
to support plan
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
Tennessee linemen
revel in obscurity
The Tennessee Volunteers linemen are gaining notoriety with a
Twitter account joking about their
anonymity. Undrafted rookie
Reece Horn is working to secure a
spot on the Titans’ roster. Atlanta
Falcons receiver Aldrick Robinson
is standing out on the receiverdeep team. The Cleveland and
Walker Valley golf teams were in
action on the links Monday. See
Sports, Pages 11-13. Reagan’s son
and Hinckley
Now that John Hinckley’s name
has resurfaced in the news, it has
revived bad memories for many,
especially those who cannot forgive
him for his attempted murder of
President Ronald Reagan. Yet, a
perspective by Reagan’s son might
help others to find forgiveness. See
the guest “Viewpoint” on Page 14 of
today’s edition.
Forecast
The tornadoes that ravaged
Bradley County five years ago
may have left more than pain
and destruction.
They may have left a legacy
which can serve to better aid
county residents should such a
disaster occur again.
County
Emergency
Management Director Troy
Spence requested the Bradley
County Commission Finance
Committee on
Monday
to
authorize him
to negotiate for
an upgraded
radio system.
"We want to
add capacity
to the system,
and also better
build penetration," Spence
Spence
said.
He said the EMA has a quote
from Motorola for $423,000.
“We have found a place that
has what we are talking about
and we could save quite a bit of
money,” Spence said.
He said the county has
received $173,000 from the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency for the work done involving the tornado outbreak.
“What I am trying to do is take
this free money from FEMA and
invest it into a radio system so
that next time we have a big disaster, we're ready,” Spence said.
He said he felt the price could
Local business,
builders upset
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
PREPARING a new health clinic in a room at Waterville Community Elementary School, staff of
the Ronald McDonald Care Mobile pause for a photo with the school’s principal. From left are Care
Mobile driver Earl Eams, Care Mobile supervisor Reyne Pohl, Waterville Principal Jennifer Huskins
and Care Mobile patient service rep Debbie McBryar. Care Mobile rolls on
Traveling pediatric health clinic
makes changes for the new year
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
The Ronald McDonald Care
Mobile, a traveling pediatric
health clinic which visits local
schools, has made some
changes for this school year.
Among those changes has
been adding a clinic inside a
local elementary school to
increase the number of children who can be seen at one
time.
Care Mobile supervisor
Reyne Pohl and her colleagues
have set up a health clinic
room inside Waterville
“It just adds to the
school. It helps take
the burden off parents
when students need to
see a doctor. … It can
really help with
absences due to
illness.”
— Jennifer Huskins
Community Elementary
School. The clinic, open
Monday through Thursday
between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., is
operated by the Care Mobile,
and allows any student to be
seen.
“It helps us cover all our
walk-in visits,” Pohl said. “This
will allow us to see more children and cut down on wait
times.”
The Care Mobile operates
like a regular health clinic,
with students boarding to see
a licensed nurse practitioner
in a fully equipped exam
room. Last year, the Care
Mobile followed a regular route
visiting schools in Cleveland
and Bradley County schools
See MOBILE, Page 9
See EMA, Page 8
Today looks to be partly sunny
and hot, with a high near 93.
Tonight’s forecast calls for mostly
cloudy skies and a 30 percent
chance of showers or thunderstorms, with a low around 73.
Wednesday calls for clouds and a
70 percent chance of rain, with a
high near 89. Wednesday night
calls for mostly cloudy skies and a
60 percent chance of rain, with a
low around 71. Index
Classified................................16-17
Comics...........................................6
Editorials......................................14
Horoscope......................................6
Obituaries.......................................2
Sports......................................11-13
Stocks............................................4
TV Schedule..................................7
Weather..........................................9
Around Town
Delanie Hobbs celebrating with
her mom ... Jordan Richardson
working on a research project ...
Dewayne Thompson, Bill Winters
and Scott Elam working hard to
prepare for an event this week at
a local high school ... Noland
Waldron getting a nice new pair
of shoes ... Victoria White enjoying a recent lunch.
6 89076 75112 4
By ALLEN MINCEY
Students in the nursing program at Lee University will have a
new home starting Aug. 24, as
the School of Nursing will officially open its doors.
Members
of
MainStreet
Cleveland were able to view the
new facility at the school on
Monday.
Vice President of University
Relations Dr. Jerome Hammond
directed a tour at the new nursing building, located on Parker
Street just south of Central
Avenue.
“We are very excited about the
new facility, and though it has
The
Bradley
County
Commission became the complaint desk Monday, as two issues
returned to the dais which have
caused some exasperation within
the last few months.
Commissioner Terry Cawood
introduced one
of his constituents, Wes
Leverett, who is
constructing a
home and ran
into a delay
concerning a
septic permit.
"We got a
building permit
in June. We
Caywood
have the basement done," Leverett said. "We
went to get a septic permit from
Hank (Thompson). He ends up
coming a month later and he said
we
needed
soil
samples.
Everything passed."
Leverett said his builder went to
see Thompson on Monday morning "and Hank slams it underneath a stack of papers and says,
'I'm going on vacation for two
months, and I'll get back with
you.'"
"We've had nothing but trouble
See COUNTY, Page 8
Lee’s School of Nursing
facility to open Aug. 24
Banner Staff Writer
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
been in our minds to build such
a facility all the way back to
2010, it did not happen, as Lee
was working on other projects,”
Hammond said. “Now, next
Wednesday, it will open for students and we cannot be more
pleased or proud.”
Hammond gave a brief history
of the School of Nursing while
leading the tour through the
building. He said the structure is
capable of holding around 400
students, with a maximum
capacity of 600.
“We expect to have 100 to 110
graduate each year from the
school, and we are looking at a
See NURSING, Page 8
Water main
break affects
4 businesses
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
DR. JEROME HAMMOND, vice president of university relations at
Lee University, discusses with members of MainStreet Cleveland the
new School of Nursing, set to open at the school on Aug. 24. A water main break was
reported on Lauderdale
Memorial Highway this
morning, and while some
businesses were affected,
Walker Valley High School
was not.
Craig Mullinax, vice president of the Water Division
at Cleveland Utilities, said
the break in the 6-inch PVC
line was near the entrance
See WATER, Page 8
‘Women of Hope’ fundraiser slated Saturday at OCI
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Women of Hope in Charleston is hosting
its annual Night of Hope Fundraiser
Saturday at Omega Center International.
Women of Hope is a “rescue and restoration mission for women trapped by substance abuse,” according to a press release.
This year’s theme is “Masquerade — No
More!”
“Only if we band together in an effort to
put this terror that is sweeping our nation
under our feet, will there ever be hope for
the broken mothers and daughters of this
country. Help them to unveil the truth of
who they are in Christ. Make a difference
not just in the lives of the mothers, daughters and sisters out there but help to
change the lives of families everywhere,”
reads the release.
The organization relies on donations to
help women in their first three months of
the program.
“By the time the girls we work with reach
the point of needing and surrendering to an
extended residential program (15 months)
they have usually burned all of their
bridges, lost their families, true friends,
children, jobs, homes, cars — basically
everything. Because WOH is a ministry and
we are called of God to do what we do we do
not turn anyone away because of lack of
support … In our program, they do not
work until after the third month. Once they
begin working they begin being [financially]
responsible for their stay at WOH,” Connie
Herring of Women of Hope said.
“At nine months in the program, they
begin taking classes to educate them in
finance. For example, they attend ‘Financial
Peace’ class as a requirement for graduation, they do budgeting, get their license,
work on child custody issues, GED, etc. It
is so important that these ladies become
productive citizens in our community,”
Herring said.
Fundraiser attendees will enjoy a red
carpet entrance with professional photo
opportunities.
Night of Hope will feature a catered gour-
met dinner with music provided by Aaron
and Amanda Crabb.
“Pastor Rhonda Davis of Church of the
Harvest and Pastor David Herring, director
of WOH, will both be speaking about the
ministry throughout the program,” Herring
said.
Doors will open at 5 p.m., so attendees
can participate in the silent auction with
dinner starting at 6 p.m.
Women of Hope, past and present, will
also be in attendance.
Tickets are still available, but the deadline to purchase is Wednesday. Tickets are
$50 per person.
Omega Center International is located at
410 Urbane Road.
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
To submit an obituary, have the funeral home or cremation
society in charge of arrangements e-mail the information to [email protected] and fax to 423-614-6529, attention
Obits.
Coker.
Survivors include her husband
of 65 years, Richard E. Denton;
children:
Gregory
(Marcia)
Denton of Murfreesboro, Alisa
(Richard) Schnaars of South
Orange, N.J., and Stephanie
(Thomas) Foust of Murfreesboro;
three grandchildren; and three
great-grandchildren.
Condolences may be sent to
www.lanefh.com.
The funeral will be held on
Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2016, at
noon at the Lane Funeral Home,
6601 Ashland Terrace with Bro.
Jamey Eggert officiating
Loretta Brownlee
Burial will follow in the
Loretta Brownlee, 81, a resi- Hamilton Memorial Gardens.
dent of Cleveland, passed away
The family will receive friends
Thursday, Aug. 11, 2016, at the on Wednesday, from 10 a.m. until
family residence.
noon, at the funeral home.
She was a member of St.
In lieu of flowers donations can
Therese of Lisieux Catholic be made to the Alzheimer's
Church in Cleveland. She was an Association, P.O. Box 96011
avid reader, shopper and garden- Washington, D.C. 20090-6011,
er. She loved to travel and was www.lanefh.com.
benevolent to several charities.
She was the daughter of the Thomas Fink
late Maurice and Amanda
Thomas
Fink,
67,
of
Gaspard. She was also preceded McDonald, died today, Aug. 16,
in death by her husband, Harry 2016.
Ray Brownlee Jr.; and two sibSurvivors and arrangements
lings: Provice LeJeune and Celia will be announced by Companion
Carrier.
Funeral Home.
She is survived by her daughter, Sheron Henderson of
Cleveland; two grandchildren:
Joe and Shawn Belcher; two
great-grandchildren:
Alyssa
Maples and Phoenix Belcher;
and two siblings: Gladys Rogers
and Lorena Goodman.
The service will be conducted Carolyn Fletcher
at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug.
Carolyn Fletcher, 79, of Arab,
17, 2016, in the chapel of Ralph
Buckner Funeral Home by Father Ala., died this morning, Aug. 16,
2016, in a local care facility.
Michael Nolan.
Cremation arrangements will
The family will receive friends
from 5 until 6 p.m. prior to the be handled by Companion
Funeral Home.
service.
We invite you to view and sign
the Brownlee family guestbook at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
at the funeral home.
We encourage you to share
your memories and or condolences with the family by going to
www.jimrushfuneralhome.com.
Larry Joe Crowe Sr., 65, of
Cleveland
passed
away
Saturday, Aug. 13, 2016, at his
home.
He was a retired union carpenter and was of the Christian faith.
He is survived by his mother,
Nellie Crowe, of Cleveland; children: Jamie Lynn Crowe and
wife, Ashley, of Delano, Larry J.
Crowe Jr. and Amy Marchant of
Cleveland;
grandchildren:
Conner Crowe, Chelsea Crowe,
Autumn Gilley, Samuel Gilley,
and Jayden Gilley; sister, Nancy
Berry of Cleveland; brothers:
Gary Crowe of Meigs County and
Jack
“Jackie”
Crowe
of
Cleveland; and several nieces
and nephews.
A memorial service will be held
Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2016, at 4
p.m. in the chapel of FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home
with the family receiving friends
from 3 until 4 p.m. prior to the
service at the funeral home.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Crowe family guestbook at
www.fikefh.com.
Betty Helton Denton
Betty Helton Denton, 87, of
Chattanooga, passed away
Saturday, Aug. 13, 2016, in a
local health care facility.
She was a retired teacher with
the Hamilton County Schools.
She received her undergraduate
degree from the University of
Tennessee at Chattanooga and
her master’s degree from
Trevecca Nazarene University.
Her favorite hobbies were rock
collecting, hiking and listening to
music.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Lee and Emily
Helton; brother, Leonard Helton;
and three sisters: Jewell Kimbler,
Mildred Newman and Muriel
Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600)
in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday
and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
Phone (423) 472-5041.
Stephen L. Crass
Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin
herein. All rights of all other material herein are as reserved. ©2016 Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Ruby Thurman
Joe Keller
Joe Keller, 18, a lifelong resident of Cleveland, passed away
in the summer of 2015.
A service celebrating his life is
being planned for Saturday, Aug.
27, 2016.
A complete obituary, along with
finalized arrangements and survivors, is forthcoming and will be
published by Companion Funeral
Home, who are honored to serve
the Keller family.
Ruby
Thurman,
93,
of
McDonald, died Monday, Aug.
15, 2016, at the family residence.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home
and Crematory.
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LOOK wHO’S READING THE BANNER
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
Elizabeth Little
Elizabeth Blair Alford Brewer
Little died on Thursday, July 21,
2016, at a hospice in Nashville.
She was the widow of E.C.
Brewer Jr. and William G. Little
III.
A memorial service will be held
at St. David’s Episcopal Church,
6501 Pennywell Drive, Nashville,
at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 3,
2016.
In lieu of flowers please contribute to your local food pantry,
Second Harvest, St. David’s
Episcopal Church or Alive
Hospice in Nashville.
Gertrude Moore
(AP) — These
drawn Monday:
lotteries were
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 9-2-6, Lucky
Sum: 17
Cash 3 Midday: 1-5-6, Lucky
Sum: 12
Cash 3 Morning: 0-7-5
Cash 4 Evening: 9-6-9-9,
Lucky Sum: 33
Cash 4 Midday: 1-8-4-2, Lucky
Sum: 15
Cash 4 Morning: 1-0-4-1
Cash4Life: 13-40-48-50-57,
Cash Ball: 4
Tennessee Cash: 02-03-12-1421, Bonus: 2
Georgia
5 Card Cash: JC-QC-KH-4C7D
All or Nothing Day: 02-03-0709-10-11-12-14-19-20-22-23
All or Nothing Evening: 03-0405-06-07-11-12-13-14-15-19-23
All or Nothing Morning: 04-0507-11-12-13-15-18-19-20-21-22
All or Nothing Night: 04-07-0809-13-16-18-19-20-21-22-23
Cash 3 Evening: 2-8-6
Cash 3 Midday: 7-4-3
Cash 4 Evening: 6-1-1-9
Cash 4 Midday: 2-1-2-2
Fantasy 5: 13-15-34-38-41
Georgia FIVE Evening: 3-0-8-58
Georgia FIVE Midday: 0-8-5-99
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 02-16-2126-39-42
Factory output
jumps 0.5% for
biggest gain in year
Charles Johnson
Larry Joe Crowe Sr.
noon.
Visitation by friends will begin
after 1 p.m. Wednesday at M.D.
Dotson & Sons Funeral HomeCleveland.
Interment will follow at the
Chattanooga National Cemetery
with military honors.
Publishser Reserves the Right to Change Rates Without Notice
Gertrude Moore, 99, of
Cleveland, died today, Aug. 16,
2016.
Survivors and Arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
Charles
Franklin
“Cob”
Johnson, 64, a resident of
Athens, passed away Saturday
Aug. 13, 2016.
He was the son of the late
James William ‘Bill’ and Elizabeth
Miller Johnson; and was also
preceded in death by his brothers: James William ‘Jay’ Johnson
Jr., and Howard McKinley
Johnson; his mother-in-law,
Georgie Duncan; and brother
and sister-in-law, Ralph and
Levenia Duncan.
“My dad was a good guy. He
enjoyed dune buggy riding and
fixing up old Volkswagens with
his friends. He loved cars in general, and working on them, and
going to car shows and races.
Some fond memories of him
were of going to demolition derbies at Cleveland Speedway and
getting hot-slaw burgers at Dari
Kreme as a kid, and riding rail
buggies in the mountains. My
dad loved the outdoors, and tossing horseshoes. He loved to gossip and joke around with everyone. He was spirited and enjoyed
getting his own way.”
Surviving family members
include his wife of 22 years, Ida
Johnson; stepson, Josh Barnett;
daughter, Lisa Michelle Johnson
Woody and her husband, David
Edward Woody; grandsons: Erik
Ryan Woody and his wife, Brandi
Horton Woody, David ‘Blayne’
Woody and his wife, Jessica
Brooks Woody; great-granddaughter, Cerridwen Artemis
Woody; siblings: Clyde Victor
‘Dudley’ Johnson and wife, Tonya
Reagan Johnson, Wanda Burns
and her husband, Joe; brothers
and sisters-in-law: Bill and his
wife, Sue Duncan, Floyd and his
wife, Brenda Duncan, Mary and
her husband, Marvin Boles, Elsie
and her husband, Scott Laperle,
George and his wife, Penny
Duncan; and many nieces and
nephews.
A Remembrance of Life service will be held 2 o’clock
Thursday, Aug. 18, 2016, at Jim
Rush Funeral and Cremation
Services Wildwood Avenue
Chapel with Pastor Chad Denton
and Bill Duncan officiating.
The interment will follow in
Sunset Memorial Gardens.
The family will receive friends
Wednesday, from 5 until 8 p.m.,
(USPS 117-700)
Periodical Postage Paid at Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Post Office
POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600
Kerry Dovon Smith
Kerry Dovon Smith, 60, affectionately known as “Shorty,” of
Cleveland, departed this life on
Friday, Aug. 12, 2016.
He was the son the late Wanda
Parker, and after her death he
was raised by his grandparents,
John and Violet Smith.
He was of the Methodist faith.
He graduated from Cleveland
High School and entered the
U.S. Army where he served for
four years, and in the U.S. Army
Reserves for 18 years. He was a
Gulf War veteran.
He was employed with
Tennessee
Department
of
Transportation for 23 years. He
loved all sports, and he coached
girls’ softball for a number of
years. He loved camping.
He leaves to cherish his memory his wife of 25 years, Lisa Tate
Smith of Cleveland; daughter,
Karessa; his namesake, Kerry D.
Smith II, both of Cleveland; two
brothers: Carlton Smith of
Nashville, and Rickey (Diane)
Smith of Atlanta, Ga.; aunt,
Earline Tucker of Mansfield,
Ohio; sisters-in-law:
Aileen
(Patrick) Sheppard, Martha
Craigmiles, Vanessa (Reggie)
Howell, and Shannon (Carlos)
Jones, all of Cleveland; brothersin-law: Austin (Pamela) Tate of
Etowah, Calvin (Jan) Crawford of
Cleveland; a host of nieces,
nephews, cousins; his best
friend, Patrick Sheppard; devoted cousins, Allen Goldston, and
Kay McClure; and many dear
friends.
The service will be held
Thursday, Aug. 18, 2016, at noon
at Pleasant Grove Baptist
Church with pastor the Rev.
Edward S. Robinson officiating
and the Rev. Marvin Howard,
pastor of Trinity United Methodist
Church, delivering the eulogy.
The family will receive friends
one hour before the service at
the church from 11 a.m. until 12
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. factories cranked out more autos,
machinery and chemicals in July,
lifting production by the most in a
year.
The Federal Reserve said
Tuesday that factory output grew
0.5 percent in July, after a 0.3 percent gain in June.
The figures suggest that U.S.
manufacturing may be turning a
corner after struggling to overcome
the impact of a stronger dollar,
slower overseas growth and falling
oil prices. Still, factory output is
just 0.2 percent higher than it was
a year ago. And even as output
ticks up, manufacturers aren’t
adding many jobs.
Overall industrial production,
which includes utilities and mining, expanded 0.7 percent. That is
the biggest increase since
November 2014.
Utilities output jumped 2.1 percent as hotter-than-usual weather
boosted air conditioning use.
Mining activity rose 0.7 percent,
its third straight gain.
“The worst is behind us,” said
Stephen Stanley, chief economist
at Amherst Pierpont Securities.
“The outlook is significantly
improved from the flat-to-down
prevailing trend seen up until
recently.”
The production of autos and
auto parts rose 1.9 percent in
July, a solid gain but below the 5.3
percent jump in June.
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
Alesia Cabrera, Stephanie Hill,
Brenda Hjellum, Richmond
Flowers, Darrell Grady and
Zandra Welch, who are celebrating birthdays today ... Doris
Garland, who is celebrating her
84th birthday today.
Banner photo, DONNA KAYLOR
RICHIE VANNOSTRAN enjoys reading the Classifieds
and Sports sections in his Cleveland Daily Banner.
Home construction climbed
to a 6-month high in July
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Apartment construction in the
Northeast fueled a jump in home
building in July as the pace of
housing starts nationwide reached
the strongest pace in six months.
The rate of overall construction
rose 2.1 percent to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 1.21 million from 1.19 million in June, the
Commerce Department said
Tuesday. That was the highest
level since February. Most of the
gain came from an 8.3 percent
acceleration in the construction of
multi-family
buildings.
Construction of single-family
houses edged up just 0.3 percent.
“Continued recovery in housing
will be supported by historically
low mortgage rates, coupled with a
firming labor market that has
begun to spur on wage gains for
workers,” said Neil Shankar, an
economist at TD Bank.
Construction climbed 15.3 percent in the Northeast. The
Midwest and South reported
smaller gains, while starts slipped
in the West.
Still, future gains may be limited because current housing starts
are outpacing permits to build in
the future. Authorized permits
slipped 0.1 percent in July to an
annual rate of 1.15 million.
Ian Shepherdson, chief economist
at
Pantheon
Macroeconomics, expects permits
to increase in response to the
gains in housing starts.
“The gap between the sales and
permits numbers is not unprecedented, but it is wide, and we have
to expect permits to rebound
strongly in the near future,”
Shepherdson said.
For now, more Americans are
upgrading to newly built singlefamily houses. Ground breakings
for houses have shot up 10.6 percent year-to-date, while starts for
apartment buildings have dipped
after a torrid pace in recent years
to accommodate an increase in
renters.
Graceland updating visitor center
MEMPHIS (AP) — A new entertainment complex being built
across the street from Graceland
— Elvis Presley’s former hometurned-museum — will include a
large soundstage for live performances and movie screenings, and
an exhibit honoring influential
music producer Sam Phillips,
officials said Monday.
A large artist’s rendering of the
planned 200,000 square-foot
entertainment
center
was
unveiled by Joel Weinshanker
and Jack Soden, two executives
of Elvis Presley Enterprises.
The $45 million complex is set
to open next spring, replacing the
aging visitor center across the
street from the Graceland home
where the rock and roll singer
and film star spent 20 years
before his death on Aug. 16,
1977.
Construction has begun on the
complex, part of a $137 million
expansion that will also include a
$92 million, 450-room hotel, The
Guest House at Graceland, which
is set to open Oct. 27. Graceland
received a tax incentive package
for the expansion project.
“It’s the fruition of a long-held
dream,” Soden said.
For about three decades,
Graceland’s visitors have been
flowing through aging, gray, flatroofed buildings to see exhibits
highlighting Presley’s career, a
car museum, souvenir shops and
restaurants. Most of those buildings will be torn down to make
way for the new complex.
The car museum will be moved
to the new campus, but the
attraction featuring Presley’s two
airplanes will remain in its current location, also across the
street from the house.
The cornerstone of the new
complex will be a 20,000 squarefoot museum featuring hundreds
of Presley-related artifacts. The
complex will also have a diner, a
barbecue restaurant, an ice
cream shop, retail stores full of
Presley-related merchandise and
the Graceland Soundstage,
which will have seating for 2,000
people.
Elvis Presley fans make
pilgrimage to his
gravesite at Graceland
MEMPHIS (AP) — Thousands of
Elvis Presley fans have made
their annual pilgrimage to
Graceland for a candlelight vigil
marking the 39th anniversary of
the singer’s death in Memphis.
Despite pouring rain, Presley
fans from around the world are
holding candles and walking
slowly through the gravesite of
the rock ‘n’ roll icon, who died on
Aug. 16, 1977. Since his death,
devotees have come to pay their
respects at Presley’s grave, which
is located on the grounds of his
former home-turned-museum.
Monday night’s vigil caps Elvis
Week, the annual celebration of
his life and career. Also Monday,
officials announced details of a
new 200,000 square-foot entertainment complex being built
across the street from the
Graceland house.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—3
WASHINGTON (AP) — Earth
just broiled to its hottest month
in recorded history, according to
NASA.
Even after the fading of a
strong El Nino, which spikes
global temperatures on top of
man-made climate change, July
burst
global
temperature
records.
NASA calculated that July
2016 was 1.51 degrees
Fahrenheit
(0.84
degrees
Celsius) warmer than the 19501980 global average. That’s
clearly hotter than the previous
hotter months, about 0.18
degrees warmer than the previous record of July 2011 and
July 2015, which were so close
they were said to be in a tie for
the hottest month on record,
said NASA chief climate scien-
tist Gavin Schmidt.
Scientists blame mostly manmade climate change from the
burning of fossil fuel with an
extra jump from the now-gone
El Nino , which every few years
is a natural warming of parts of
the Pacific Ocean that changes
weather worldwide.
Georgia Tech climate scientist
Kim Cobb said this is significant
“because global temperatures
continue to warm even as a
record-breaking El Nino event
has finally released its grip.”
NASA’s five hottest months on
record are July 2016, July
2011, July 2015, July 2009 and
August 2014. Only July 2015
was during an El Nino. Records
go back to 1880.
This is the 10th record hot
month in a row, according to
NASA. The National Oceanic
and
Atmospheric
Administration, which calculates temperatures slightly differently, will come out with its
July figures on Wednesday.
NOAA has figured there have
been 14 monthly heat records
broken in a row, before July.
“The scary thing is that we are
moving into an era where it will
be a surprise when each new
month or year isn’t one of the
hottest on record,” said Chris
Field, a climate scientist at the
Carnegie
Institution
and
Stanford University.
This new record and all the
records that have been broken
recently years tell one cohesive
story, said Schmidt, director of
NASA’s Goddard Institute for
Space Studies: “The planet is
©2014
NASA says last month was
hottest in recorded history
AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File
in thiS July 21 file photo, Hank, a quarter horse from Paris, Ill.,
stays close to a fan keeping cool inside a barn at the Illinois State
Fair grounds in Springfield, Ill. Ouch. NASA calculates that just Earth
broiled to its hottest month in recorded history: last July. Even after
the fading of a strong El Nino, which spikes global temperatures on
top of man-made climate change, July burst global temperature
records no sweat.
getting warmer. It’s important
for what it tells us about the
future.”
JEWELERS
1721 KEITH STREET • STUART PARK PLAZA(
(Next to The Town Squire)
478-0049 • 478-0050
LAY-AWAYS WELCOME
Happy Belated Birthday
Democrats seek
repeal of ban on
abortion funding
Bobby
Stansberry
NEW YORK (AP) — The law that
bans federal funding for Medicaid
coverage of most abortions is now
in the spotlight some 40 years after
it was passed by Congress, emerging as an election issue in the
national debate over the procedure.
First approved in 1976, and
renewed annually ever since as
part of the congressional appropriations process, the Hyde
Amendment makes exceptions in
cases of rape or incest, or when a
pregnancy endangers a women’s
life.
For most of its existence, the
amendment had broad bipartisan
support in Congress, but that’s
now changed. At their recent
national convention, Democrats for
the first time included in their platform a call for the Hyde
Amendment to be repealed. Their
presidential nominee, Hillary
Clinton, is embracing that stance,
even as it risks creating friction
within the party.
The amendment’s supporters
depict it as essential in ensuring
that taxpayers who oppose abortion do not have to subsidize it.
Critics assail the policy as discriminatory, making it difficult for lowincome women to obtain a legal
medical procedure that’s readily
accessible for more affluent
women.
“Access to abortion shouldn’t
depend on your zip code, and it
shouldn’t depend on your pocketbook,” said Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive
Rights.
For now, repeal of the Hyde
Amendment is a long-term goal,
not an imminent likelihood. Even if
Clinton wins, Democrats would
need improbably large gains in
Congress to have a chance of ending the policy during her first term.
An extra complication: A handful
of Democratic senators support the
amendment, including Bob Casey
of Pennsylvania, Joe Manchin of
West Virginia and Clinton’s own
running mate — Tim Kaine of
Virginia. Abortion-rights leaders
were dismayed when Kaine reiterated his personal opposition to
repeal.
“We sincerely hope that he will
continue to educate himself on
what Hyde means to the most vulnerable women in this country and
join us in fighting this injustice,”
said Ilyse Hogue, president of
NARAL Pro-Choice America.
In the House, Democrats have
introduced a bill that would nullify
the Hyde Amendment and require
the federal government to ensure
abortion coverage in public health
insurance programs, including
Medicaid.
1935-2015
Correction
A Sunday article about two
Walker Valley High School teachers taking a trip to Europe to
research the Holocaust incorrectly stated the location of one of the
sites they visited.
The former Auschwitz concentration camp is in modern-day
Poland.
You are greatly missed and loved. As days go by
I am healing – thanks and glory to the Lord.
I wish you peace and rest.
I loved you so much, sorry our time together
was so short. Carolyn Carter-Stansberry
Neck Pain, Back Pain & Headaches?
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Symptoms:
AP Photo/Josh Edelson
An Air tAnkEr and a helicopter drop fire retardant and water at a containment line northeast of
Lower Lake, Calif., Monday.
California town that wildfires
had spared faces new reality
LOWER LAKE, Calif. (AP) — the surrounding countryside, in
Unlike many surrounding moun- town crews swept up ash and
tain hamlets and valleys, this worked to clear roads of fallen
hardscrabble Northern California powerlines and telephone poles.
town was spared last summer Homes — some dating to the
when wildfires engulfed large 1880s — were burned to their
foundation. A wooden
swaths of a region unacthreshold in front of one
customed
to
their
home still carried the
destructive power.
address but the house
Lower Lake and its resbehind was gone. Other
idents now well know a
homes nearby were comnew reality.
pletely spared.
A wildfire allegedly
Lower Lake seemed
started by a resident of
safe Sunday morning
the area and fed by pines
from flames that first
in the mountains and
rose the afternoon
oaks that cluster on the
before.
rolling hills closer to town
Pashilk
Like
any
other
wiped out whole blocks,
destroying more than 175 Sunday, Pastor John Pavoni
homes, businesses and other spoke to his congregation and
structures about a two-hour left after locking the front door to
his small United Methodist
drive north of San Francisco.
The flames reached historic church just off Main Street.
On Monday, he stood in front
Main Street, where firefighters
couldn’t save an office of Habitat of burned rubble.
Previous fires in the area had
for Humanity, an organization
that had been raising money to not driven families away, he said.
“Those people have been
help rebuild homes in nearby
communities torched a year ago. through a lot,” he said, “people
Damin Anthony Pashilk of will rebuild.”
Lower Lake is home to about
Clearlake, California was arrested Monday on 17 counts of arson 1,300 mostly working class people and retirees who are drawn
and is in jail.
Pashilk, 40, is suspected of by its rustic charm and housing
sparking the blaze that exploded prices that are lower than the
over the weekend in Lower Lake. San Francisco Bay Area.
Last summer, during a devasOfficials said he is also suspected
in several other fires over the tating period from the end of July
through September, three major
past year in Lake County.
“Mr. Pashilk committed a hor- blazes came within a few miles to
rific crime and we will seek pros- the east and south of town.
Between them, the four blazes
ecution to the fullest extent of the
law. My thoughts continue to be have destroyed more than 1,400
with the people of Lake County of the 36,000 housing units in all
during this difficult time,” said Lake County.
The Lake County blaze was
California
Department
of
Forestry and Fire Protection one of 11 large wildfires in the
state. In central California, a 2Director Ken Pimlott. Several thousand people fled day-old wildfire destroyed 12
the blaze, some after ensuring structures, damaged others and
their goats and chickens were threatened 200 homes. The wildsafe. No one was reported hurt, fire near Lake Nacimiento, about
and though the fire was just 5 180 miles northwest of Los
percent contained and fire Angeles, grew to nearly 7 square
weather persisted, officials said miles and forced authorities to
Monday no other structures were evacuate some residents by boat.
It was 10 percent contained.
directly threatened.
Weather conditions bedeviled
While firefighters worked in
firefighters Monday and the forecast called for temperatures to
reach the upper 90s in coming
days, with no rain in sight. A
heat wave and gusty winds also
put Southern California on high
fire alert. Underlying it all: A fiveyear drought that has sapped
vegetation of moisture.
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PUBLIX MYSTERY COUPON
See What 1¢ Gets!
Bring this coupon to Publix on August 17, 2016, and find out what
one penny gets you! Good with your purchase of $10 or more.
Limit one coupon per household per day. Excluding all alcohol,
tobacco, lottery items, money services, postage stamps, gift cards,
and prescriptions. Customer is responsible for all applicable taxes.
Reproduction or transfer of this coupon is strictly prohibited.
Effective August 17, 2016 at participating stores in Ga., Ala., and Tenn.
LU# 14423
Is Your Child, Parent, Grandparent or Favorite Pet
in the Cleveland Daily Banner? You can purchase
any of our staff photos from our website at
www.clevelandbanner.com. Just find what you want
and click the “Buy this photo” button under it. Then
choose what size and finish, it’s as easy at that!
Previously published photos are also available in
our Photo Galleries.
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
Mississippi woman accused of
fraudulently getting services
NASHVILLE (AP) — A
Southaven, Mississippi woman is
facing felony charges after being
accused of committing TennCare
fraud.
According to the Office of the
Inspector General, 36-year-old
Dinah McNeal filed paperwork
that said she lived in Shelby
County in order to obtain services through TennCare, the state of
Tennessee’s Medicaid program
that provides health care for
about 1.3 million people.
WREG-TV reports McNeal
actually lives in DeSoto County.
McNeal is charged with
TennCare fraud and theft of
property over $10,000.
If convicted, McNeal could face
anywhere from two to four years
behind bars.
McCormick will seek another
term as GOP leader, not speaker
NASHVILLE (AP) — House
Majority
Leader
Gerald
McCormick says he will stand for
another term in charge of the
Republican supermajority in the
lower chamber of the Tennessee
General Assembly.
A Chattanooga newspaper
reports that while McCormick
has long held aspirations to succeed House Speaker Beth
Harwell, he won’t challenge her
for the top post this year.
McCormick said he decided to
make his announcement much
earlier than in past election
cycles to avoid any confusion
over his ambitions after
Republican Rep. Jimmy Matlock
of Lenoir City announced last
week that he would challenge
Harwell.
McCormick said he wanted to
“clear the air” and focus on supporting incumbents and targeting Democrats, especially those
in rural parts of the state.
House Republicans will hold
their leadership votes after the
November election.
Rebuilding of Nashville jail to
start after inmates moved
NASHVILLE (AP) — Inmates at
a downtown Nashville jail have
been transferred out in preparation for the jail’s reconstruction.
Local news organizations
report the last of 300 high-risk
inmates were moved out of the
Criminal Justice Center over the
weekend. The jail is now set to be
demolished to be completely
rebuilt.
Davidson County Sheriff
Daron Hall said the move took
months of planning. The transfer
had to account for many factors
including public safety, inmate
medical appointments, court
dates and the fact that many of
the inmates don’t get along.
Hall called it a complicated
effort.
Most of the inmates will be
moved to the Maximum
Correctional Center on Harding
Place. Hall said about $2 million
was invested into that center to
handle some of the more difficult
inmates.
Former mayor Karl Dean says
the old jail was prone to flooding,
plumbing issues and elevator
problems.
“This building was deemed
unconstitutional in the late ‘80s,”
Hall said. “Finally seeing it come
down is the right thing for the
city.”
The city allotted $113 million
for the reconstruction project.
The new jail will include a separate treatment center for the
mentally ill.
Father accused of shooting
daughter released on bond
HENDERSONVILLE (AP) — A
Tennessee man accused of fatally
shooting his 11-year-old daughter in a suburb north of Nashville
has been released on bond.
News outlets report 29-yearold Timothy Batts’ bond was lowered Friday from $1 million to
$500,000. He posted bond that
night.
Batts was arrested last week
on reckless homicide, tampering
with evidence, false reporting
and other charges in connection
with the shooting death of Timea
Lashay Batts.
Police say Timothy Batts told
detectives that he shot his
daughter thinking she was an
intruder after she came home
from school.
He originally told police that
his daughter had told him she
had been shot after school. She
later died at the hospital.
Since Timea Batts’ death, her
family has been asking for her
father’s release, saying the shooting was an accident.
3rd album of traditional American
music being released
JOHNSON CITY (AP) — The
Great
Smoky
Mountains
Association is releasing a third
album of traditional American
music in conjunction with the
National Park Service’s 100th
anniversary.
East
Tennessee
State
University said in a news release
that Appalachian studies faculty
member Ted Olson is the producer for “On Top of Old Smoky,”
while bluegrass, old-time and
country music studies faculty
member Roy Andrade is the associate producer. Others with the
university were also involved,
and much of the recording took
place in the ETSU recording lab.
Free concerts to launch the
album are set for Aug. 20 at the
Great Smoky Mountains National
Park Oconaluftee Visitor Center
and Sept. 10 at the park’s
Sugarland Visitor Center.
The association’s first album
was nominated for a Grammy,
while the second was nominated
for an International Bluegrass
Music Association award.
Police: Man charged after
14-year-old gives birth
MEMPHIS (AP) — A 33-yearold man is accused of fathering a
baby with a 14-year-old girl.
Multiple news outlets report
Memphis police say James
Coleman was located and arrested Sunday and charged with
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
5,280
Close: 5,262.02
Change: 29.12 (0.6%)
5,180
10 DAYS
AP photo
CLARKSVILLE (AP) — Police in
Clarksville are investigating the
discovery of devices that steal
consumers’ credit card information on the ATMs of local banks.
The Leaf-Chronicle reports a
customer found a skimming
device affixed to a bank ATM on
Saturday in Clarksville.
Clarksville police say in a news
release that the devices also were
found at two other ATM locations.
The skimmers read customers’
debit and credit card information. Thieves also have used the
devices in other cities at gas
pumps.
2 fires caused by oily rags hit
east Tennessee town in month
OAK RIDGE (AP) — An east
Tennessee community is urging
the proper storage and disposal of
oil-soaked rags following the
fourth fire involving spontaneous
combustion in the past four
years.
The city of Oak Ridge says in a
news release that the Fraternal
Order of the Eagles Lodge was
heavily damaged by fire Saturday.
The building was unoccupied.
The statement says the fire
appears to be caused by spontaneous combustion from oily rags
stored after being laundered.
Washing and drying oil-soaked
rags will not prevent spontaneous
combustion.
The release says an Oak Ridge
furniture shop fire on July 22 also
was started by oily rags. The shop
reopened after a few days.
The city says such rags should
be kept in a covered metal container or laid out flat so the
residue can evaporate prior to disposal.
This sePT. 30, 2003, file photo shows the exterior of a dormitory at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.
It is inscribed with the name Confederate Memorial Hall. The private university announced on Monday
that it has struck an agreement to pay $1.2 million to United Daughters of the Confederacy to remove
the name from the building.
Vanderbilt pays $1.2M to remove
‘Confederate’ from dorm name
NASHVILLE (AP) — Vanderbilt
University announced Monday
that it will pay more than a million dollars to remove an inscription containing the word
“Confederate” from one of its
campus dorms.
The private university has
referred to the Confederate
Memorial Hall simply as
“Memorial Hall” since 2002, but
was blocked in court from changing the name chiseled on the
building because it was constructed with the help of a
$50,000 gift from the United
Daughters of the Confederacy in
1933.
Under
the
agreement,
Vanderbilt will pay $1.2 million,
the equivalent of the gift made 83
years ago, to the organization’s
Tennessee chapter. In exchange,
the chapter will relinquish its
naming rights to the building.
“You can memorialize individuals without taking sides in the
bloodiest war that was fought
over the divisive issues of slavery
and equality that we’re still
struggling with today for those
young people coming onto campus,” Vanderbilt Chancellor
Nicholas Zeppos said in a phone
interview.
The money has been pledged
by anonymous donors, and
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North
Carolina officials asked the U.S.
Supreme Court on Monday to keep
a voter identification requirement
and 10 days of early voting for the
November election, even after a
lower appeals court ruled these
changes illegally restricted voting
by blacks.
Republican Gov. Pat McCrory
said his lawyers and those for
other officials, including some
hired by GOP legislative leaders
who championed the 2013 law,
asked the court to delay enforcement of last month’s ruling by the
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
The delay would occur while attorneys draft an appeal for the justices to consider the inherent
issues in the case more deeply.
The ruling struck down the
photo ID mandate and returned
early voting to 17 days.
The attorneys wrote that altering the voter laws would create
voter confusion weeks before the
election in North Carolina, a presi-
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Dow Jones industrials
18,680
Close: 18,636.05
Change: 59.58 (0.3%)
18,460
18,240
10 DAYS
18,000
17,500
4,800
16,500
F
M
52-Week
High
Low
18,638.34 15,370.33
8,411.70 6,403.31
723.83
539.96
10,906.08 8,937.99
5,238.54 4,209.76
969.42
809.57
2,188.45 1,810.10
1,566.91 1,215.14
22,697.52 18,462.43
1,235.78
943.09
A
M
J
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
Name
Dow Industrials
Dow Transportation
Dow Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 100
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Last
18,636.05
7,852.56
681.34
10,891.66
5,262.02
968.82
2,190.15
1,569.10
22,748.74
1,241.86
J
Net
YTD
Chg
%Chg %Chg
+59.58
+.32 +6.95
+45.38
+.58 +4.58
-10.82 -1.56 +17.92
+69.25
+.64 +7.38
+29.12
+.56 +5.08
+2.31
+.24 +6.30
+6.10
+.28 +7.15
+11.33
+.73 +12.19
+89.38
+.39 +7.47
+12.04
+.98 +9.33
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
SORL
2.84 +.99 +53.5
PrvWor
24.56 +8.26 +50.6
AmElTech 3.95 +1.29 +48.5
Histogenics 2.82 +.70 +33.0
OceanBio 2.81 +.61 +27.7
Yirendai n 35.25 +7.30 +26.1
Talend n 31.11 +6.00 +23.9
TillCap n
4.15 +.77 +22.8
Servotr
11.51 +2.11 +22.4
OcularTher 8.21 +1.43 +21.1
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Pavmed wt 6.30 -1.68 -21.0
MaxPoint n 8.86 -1.78 -16.7
PwSBMetS 21.50 -4.32 -16.7
MeetMe
6.15 -1.19 -16.2
PwSGBund 44.76 -6.73 -13.1
Sophiris
4.41 -.64 -12.7
SmLEDS rs 6.40 -.83 -11.5
AurisMed
3.79 -.49 -11.4
CleBio hrs 2.32 -.28 -10.7
NewConcEn 3.53 -.41 -10.4
A
12-mo
%Chg
+6.22
-6.28
+12.30
+.68
+3.35
+4.74
+4.17
+3.61
+2.74
+1.37
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
ChesEng 739768 5.50 +.48
Twitter
565584 20.86 +1.32
BkofAm
477694 15.02 +.11
SiriusXM
355522 4.24 +.03
Penney
351025 11.29 +.74
Alibaba
318260 97.17 -1.08
MicronT
288381 15.53 +.60
ValeantPh 285661 26.59 +1.67
AMD
281452 6.95 +.22
Apple Inc 246951 109.48 +1.30
16,000
Name
their July 29 ruling, which found
the Republican-led General
Assembly enacted the law with
intentional discrimination in mind.
The court ruled the changes targeted black voters more likely to
support Democrats.
McCrory said the ruling is factually wrong and maligned the state,
adding requiring photo ID makes
common sense and protects the
integrity of elections at a time
when people must show IDs all the
time.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Last
Name
17,000
4,600
removing historical markers.
That’s an increase from the previous requirement of a simple
majority vote.
Calls to remove Confederate
imagery from public places multiplied across the South after last
year’s slaying of nine black
churchgoers in Charleston,
South Carolina. A white man
espousing racist views and who
posed in a photo with a
Confederate flag has been
charged with murder in the
killings.
Following the church shooting,
Republican Gov. Bill Haslam said
he supported removing the
Capitol bust of Forrest, who is
famous for his exploits as a
Confederate cavalry general and
amassed a fortune as a plantation owner and slave trader in
Memphis before the Civil War.
After the defeat of the
Confederacy, the newly formed
Ku Klux Klan elected Forrest its
honorary grand wizard, though
he publicly denied being
involved. Two years later, he
ordered the Klan to disband
because of its members’ increasing violence.
The Forrest bust remains in
the lobby between the House and
Senate chambers at the state
Capitol.
dential battleground state with
races for governor and U.S. Senate
also on the ballot. The voter ID
requirement already was used in
this year’s primary elections.
“North Carolina should not be
forced to scramble mere months
before the general election to rejigger settled election plans at the 4th
Circuit’s command,” the state’s
attorneys wrote to Chief Justice
John Roberts.
A three-judge panel of the 4th
Circuit already refused to delay
F
M
A
4.5
...
...
2.1
3.2
2.0
...
...
3.2
...
...
...
4.2
3.4
1.8
2.0
2.0
2.2
1.5
1.7
...
17
...
34
13
14
12
...
...
27
21
...
...
18
16
16
24
...
...
15
23
50
J
J
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
AT&T Inc 1.92
AMD
...
Alibaba
...
Apple Inc 2.28
BB&T Cp 1.20
BkofAm
.30
Cemex
.29
ChesEng
...
CocaCola 1.40
CmtyHlt
...
CSVLgCrd rs ...
DirDGlBr rs ...
DukeEngy 3.42
Eaton
2.28
FstHorizon .28
HomeDp 2.76
iShChinaLC .76
iShEMkts .84
Kroger s
.48
Lowes
1.40
MicronT
...
M
43.02
6.95
97.17
109.48
37.53
15.02
8.89
5.50
44.24
11.03
24.36
5.00
81.66
67.63
15.19
137.06
37.96
37.87
32.73
81.54
15.53
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.26
+.22
-1.08
+1.30
+.52
+.11
+.16
+.48
+.21
+.08
+1.71
+.10
-1.83
+.42
+.25
+.49
+.83
+.39
+.15
-.18
+.60
+25.0
+142.2
+19.6
+4.0
-.7
-10.8
+66.0
+22.2
+3.0
-49.5
...
...
+14.4
+30.0
+4.6
+3.6
+7.6
+17.6
-21.8
+7.2
+9.7
Name
Div Yld PE Last
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
PaneraBrd ...
Penney
...
Petrobras
...
RegionsFn .26
S&P500ETF4.13
Scotts
2.00
SiriusXM
...
SouthnCo 2.24
SunTrst
1.04
Target
2.40
Twilio n
...
Twitter
...
UtdCmBks .32
US OilFd
...
ValeantPh
...
VanEGold .12
WalMart 2.00
Whrlpl
3.60
WhitingPet ...
2.7
3.9
...
...
...
2.7
1.9
2.4
...
4.4
2.5
3.2
...
...
1.6
...
...
.4
2.7
1.9
...
16
45
37
...
...
13
...
21
39
18
11
13
...
...
15
...
...
...
16
14
...
Pvs Wk
88.92
20.71
220.79
11.29
9.08
9.56
219.09
82.83
4.24
51.49
42.10
75.53
58.47
20.86
19.89
10.76
26.59
30.86
73.32
184.86
8.27
A
YTD
Chg %Chg
+.56
+.66
-.45
+.74
+.35
+.33
+.63
+.30
+.03
-.86
+.26
+.32
+5.18
+1.32
+.08
+.26
+1.67
-.19
-.57
-1.11
+.61
+5.1
+20.0
+13.4
+69.5
+111.2
-.4
+7.5
+28.4
+4.1
+10.0
-1.7
+4.0
+103.1
-9.9
+2.1
-2.2
-73.8
+124.9
+19.6
+25.9
-12.4
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.
lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at
least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt =
Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge,
or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s
net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds FnInvA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds NewPerspA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity 500IdxPr
Fidelity Contra
Fidelity ContraK
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard DivGr
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
Vanguard MuIntAdml
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
Vanguard STGradeAd
Vanguard TgtRe2025
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotIntl
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard WellsIAdm
Vanguard WelltnAdm
Vanguard WndsIIAdm
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.3074
1.2917
1.2957
.8958
101.27
18.2646
.9749
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
MA
IH
WS
LB
LG
AL
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LB
LG
LG
CA
FB
LG
LB
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
CA
MA
LV
54,386
73,020
53,220
46,949
75,018
75,436
58,795
37,249
52,382
46,739
54,402
56,007
56,961
77,969
31,355
45,669
36,275
37,673
169,697
31,468
39,161
43,277
47,580
38,686
36,932
31,446
71,004
86,463
141,878
101,692
34,817
72,764
31,809
25.20
59.99
45.96
54.33
44.00
21.80
37.01
37.46
41.51
13.91
38.05
171.17
77.21
102.38
102.36
2.24
62.44
54.02
202.60
24.16
90.91
25.51
14.56
110.33
10.79
16.81
11.09
15.25
54.75
54.72
63.92
67.70
63.52
+0.6
+0.5
+2.4
+1.7
+2.7
+0.6
+1.3
+2.5
+1.1
+0.7
+4.4
+3.6
+1.5
+2.4
+2.4
+0.5
+4.2
+3.4
+1.5
+0.7
+1.6
+4.1
+0.3
+4.6
+0.3
+1.9
+0.3
+4.1
+1.7
+1.7
+0.3
+0.9
+2.0
+7.5/A +11.4/A
+4.9/A
+8.3/A
+1.5/C
+9.6/B
+8.5/A +14.2/B
+5.3/A +14.6/B
+8.2/A +10.2/B
+8.0/A +14.4/B
+2.6/B +10.9/A
+8.4/A +14.1/A
+5.8
+4.1
-6.5/E
+5.4/B
+2.4/D +14.8/A
+7.0/A +15.1/A
+2.7/C +13.9/C
+2.8/B +14.0/B
+4.8/B
+7.4/A
-4.3/C +4.4/C
-0.4/D +15.3/A
+7.0/A +15.1/A
+9.1/A +14.8/A
-2.0/A +20.3/C
-0.5/A +4.0/D
+6.2/B
+4.3/B
+7.6/A +16.9/A
+3.7/A
+2.4/A
+4.6/B
+9.1/A
+5.7/B +3.2/D
-0.6/A +4.0/D
+6.1/B +14.9/A
+5.9/B +14.7/B
+9.7/A
+8.7/A
+6.3/A +10.9/A
+3.3/C +13.7/B
MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW,
Suite 1
472-6814
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
2,500
2,500
2,500
10,000
2,500
0
1,000
50,000
2,500
10,000
3,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
1,000
10,000
3,000
10,000
3,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.3024
1.2876
1.2915
.8942
101.25
18.0865
.9726
Prime Rate
3.50
3.50
Discount Rate
1.00
1.00
Federal Funds Rate
.25-.50 .25-.50
Treasuries
1.14
1.15
5-year
1.56
1.59
10-year
2.28
2.31
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1340.30 $1333.40
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot) $19.821 $19.768
18,500
5,000
Zeppos said the school chooses
to focus on “moving Vanderbilt
forward” rather than on what
projects the Daughters of the
Confederacy will spend the funds
on, especially in light of a new
Tennessee law that makes it
more difficult to remove
Confederate symbols and statues
from public places.
“The donors and I and others
understand that this donation
will go to another organization,
but this is a very positive step for
Vanderbilt,” Zeppos said.
The Daughters of the
Confederacy did not immediately
respond to an email seeking comment.
About 30 miles to the southeast, Middle Tennessee State
University in Murfreesboro wants
to remove the name of
Confederate
Gen.
Nathan
Bedford Forrest from one of its
buildings. The public higher education system overseeing the
school endorsed the change last
month, but the proposal faces a
tougher hurdle when it reaches
the
Tennessee
Historical
Commission.
Under the “Tennessee Heritage
Protection Act” passed earlier
this year, it now takes a vote of at
least two-thirds of the commission to approve changing or
N. Carolina asks Supreme Court to keep voter ID for now
19,000
5,200
4,400
Police: Skimmers found at 3
Clarksville ATM locations
DAILY DOW JONES
5,080
5,400
aggravated statutory rape.
Authorities began investigating
in March after the girl, who gave
birth to the child last year when
she was 14, told officials
Coleman was the father and the
two were still sexually involved.
A police affidavit shows
Coleman, who was a family
friend, began having sex with the
girl when she was 13. At the
time, the girl told police she lied
to Coleman about her age, saying
she was 16.
The girl says Coleman continued having sex with her even
after learning her real age.
It isn’t clear if he has an attorney.
112 Stuart
Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
3575 Keith
St. NW
Suite 201
476-0190
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—5
Police chief was surprised by
violence after fatal shooting
David Grunfeld/NOLA.com The Times-Picayune via AP
Dee VAzquez, from left, helps Georgette Centelo and her grandfather Lawrence Roberts after they
tried to recover their belongings from a family mobile home in Central, north of Baton Rouge, La.,
Monday.
Louisiana officials: Flood danger
persists, body pulled from waters
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — As
waters begin to recede in parts of
Louisiana’s capital city, some
residents struggled to return to
flood-damaged homes on foot, in
cars and by boat. But though the
rain had mostly stopped, new
places in the state faced flood
dangers from the deluge that has
sent thousands into shelters.
Rivers and creeks were still
dangerously bloated in areas
south of Baton Rouge as people
filled sandbags there to protect
their houses, bracing for the
worst as the water worked its
way south. In one area,
Ascension Parish, officials said
some small towns have already
been inundated.
Seven deaths have been
reported and more than 20,000
have had to be rescued since
Friday in some of the worst flooding the state has ever seen. And
at least 11,000 have hunkered
down in shelters to wait out the
floods.
The slow-moving, low-pressure
system that dumped more than
20 inches of rain on some parts
of Louisiana was crawling into
Texas, but the National Weather
Service warned the danger of new
flooding remained high due to
the sheer volume of water flowing
toward the Gulf of Mexico.
In and around Baton Rouge,
many were anxious to check on
damage. But a police officer at
one Baton Rouge area roadblock
warned Jack Miller that the 60year-old was risking arrest if he
tried to drive a boat on a trailer
down a stretch of the highway
down to just two lanes.
“I’m trying to get back to my
home and rescue my cat,” Miller
said.
Authorities late Monday said a
body had been pulled from floodwaters in Baton Rouge, raising
the toll to seven dead.
Casey Rayborn Hicks, a
spokeswoman for the East Baton
Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office,
said a volunteer patrolling in his
boat Monday found the victim in
front of a library though the
manner of death and the person’s identity still awaited confirmation.
Despite the dangers, people
ventured out.
Karla
and
Johnathon
McDaniel waded through chestdeep water to revisit their home
they fled late Saturday night but
the water was too deep to get
inside.
On their way out, the
McDaniels stopped to gawk at a
monster truck revving its engine
in a failed attempt to free a
National Guard vehicle mired in
a muddy ditch. It was a welcome
moment of levity after days of
worry around the state’s southeast, which saw thousands of
water rescues.
Julee Doiron, 56, and a friend
walked down the road to a flood-
By the numbers
BATON ROUGE, La.
(AP) — A look at the deadly flooding that has ravaged Louisiana:
— 7: The number of
storm-related deaths since
rain began falling Friday.
— More than 20,000:
The number of people who
have had to be rescued
from their homes as floodwaters rose.
— More than 11,000:
The number of people
staying in shelters.
— More than 2,000: The
number of evacuees staying at a large film studio
complex that has been
turned into a makeshift
shelter.
— More than 500: The
number of pets rescued.
— 48 hours: The
amount of time a torrent
of rain fell across parts of
south Louisiana.
— More than 2 feet: The
amount of rain that fell in
two days in the town of
Zachary, Louisiana.
— 8 inches: The
amount of rain initially
forecast on Thursday, with
some higher totals possible in some areas.
— 12 percent: The portion of homes in hard-hit
Baton Rouge covered by
flood insurance; in
Lafayette, which has also
been hammered, the number is 14 percent.
ed storage facility where she has
a valuable record collection. She
felt fortunate the flooding
stopped a block short of her
home, but she owns a couple of
water-damaged rental properties
that aren’t covered by flood
insurance.
“None of these places are in a
flood zone,” she said. “Why buy it
if you don’t need it? My agent
didn’t recommend it to me.”
In a state more accustomed to
hurricanes, forecasters said the
rains were nearly off the charts
in intensity. Meteorologist Ken
Graham of the National Weather
Service’s office in Slidell, near
New Orleans, said forecasters
had alerted people days ahead of
the rain. Yet the forecasts
Thursday were for 8 inches of
rain, with higher totals expected
in some areas.
One town, Zachary, received
more than 2 feet of rain in a 48hour period that ended Saturday
morning. Another, Livingston,
got nearly 22 inches over the
same stretch. Rivers in the region
reached historic highs — occasionally shattering old records
dating to 1983 floods.
Google’s Duo app joins the
crowded field of video calling
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Knock, knock, Google’s video
chatting app has arrived.
The app, dubbed Duo, represents Google’s response to other
popular video calling options,
including Apple’s FaceTime,
Microsoft’s Skype and Facebook’s
Messenger app.
Duo isn’t much different from
the other video chatting services,
except that it gives a glimpse at
who is making the call, helping
the recipient decide whether to
answer. Google calls this feature,
“Knock, knock.”
The new app, announced in
May, is being released Tuesday as
a free service for phones running
on Google’s Android operating
system as well as Apple’s iPhones.
Like FaceTime for iPhones, Duo
only requires a person’s phone
number to connect. Many other
services require both participants
to have account logins to use their
video calling options.
Google has been offering video
calling through its Hangout feature for several years, but the
internet company is now tailoring
that service for business meetings.
Duo is being billed as a simpler,
more reliable way to see friends
and family as you talk to them.
It is the first of two new mobile
apps that Google, owned by
Alphabet Inc., has planned for
this summer. The Mountain
View, California, company also
is preparing to unveil a new
messaging app called Allo featuring a robotic assistant that
will suggest automated responses to texts.
As the scope of the disaster
became clear, churches, schools
and other places opened to take
evacuees. Shelters filled up so
fast that some slept on the floor
because not enough cots had
arrived. And some shelters had
to shut down when they also took
on water.
Volunteers have been dropping
off supplies and food like jambalaya or red beans and rice at
shelters. They have also been
going out in boats — locally
referred to as the “Cajun Navy” —
to rescue people, supplementing
the
efforts
of
National
Guardsmen, state officials and
Coast Guardsmen deploying in
high-water vehicles, boats and
helicopters.
Jared Serigne of St. Bernard
Parish said he helped organize
volunteer efforts involving roughly 70 experienced boaters who
helped hundreds of people from
flooded communities. He criticized government officials for
closing roads, blocking boats
from reaching launch areas.
“You’ve got all of these people
who hunt and fish who have
more experience than the average first responder,” he said.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel
Edwards defended the state’s
response, saying unprecedented
flooding “presented tremendous
challenges for everyone.”
“But I’m very proud of the
effort that we’re making. More
than anything else, I’m proud
that Louisianians are taking care
of their own and people are being
neighbors to one another,” he
said.
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Following a
night of violence that left half a
dozen businesses in flames, the
Milwaukee police chief expressed
surprise at the level of unrest that
erupted after the fatal shooting of a
black man by a black officer.
“This was, quite frankly, unanticipated,” Police Chief Edward
Flynn said Monday, two days after
the worst of the rioting hit the
Sherman Park neighborhood on
the city’s economically depressed
and largely black north side.
The city was calmer on Monday
evening after two nights of unrest.
Six arrests were made after some
“heated confrontations” but there
was no destruction of property or
rioting, Flynn said. A 10 p.m. curfew for those under the age of 18
appeared to be honored with the
aid of community leaders and parents, Milwaukee Mayor Tom
Barrett said.
The chief’s statement raised
questions about whether authorities could have taken steps to curb
the violence, perhaps by sharing
details of the shooting earlier,
including the officer’s race or
footage from his body camera.
Randolph McLaughlin, a Pace
University law professor and a civil
rights attorney, questioned how
Milwaukee leaders could have
expected the streets to stay quiet
on Saturday night given the
national debate about law enforcement and race.
“For a mayor to say everything’s
fine (and) we just killed somebody,
that’s turning a blind eye to his
town,” McLaughlin said.
He said Barrett should have
reached out to residents and community leaders and asked: “What
do we need to do to make sure
your community is safe?”
McLaughlin said. “He needs to stay
on the job.”
David Klinger, a University of
Missouri-St. Louis sociology professor who studies police use of
deadly force, said it would not necessarily have helped for police to
release the officer’s race sooner. He
pointed out that the city saw disruptions on Sunday night, after his
race had been publicized, though
less intense than the previous
night.
He also said the city may have
hesitated to give the officer’s race
sooner for fear it would identify
him.
Remy Cross, a criminologist at
Webster University in St. Louis,
said the officer’s race probably
does not matter to many people in
the community.
“They see the institution as
racist, not the individual,” Cross
said. “Once you put on the uniform, you’re blue, and blue sees
black as bad.”
Flynn said it was “an error in
narrative to assume” that because
police shot someone that the
shooting will be controversial “so
let’s have a riot.”
The problems began Saturday
afternoon when police stopped a
rental car that was driving suspiciously, Flynn said. Sylville Smith
bolted from the car with a gun,
leading an officer on a short foot
chase before the officer shot the
23-year-old man. Police said Smith
was fleeing a traffic stop but
released few other details.
The violence erupted later that
evening. During a news conference
around midnight calling for calm,
Barrett said people were gathering
at the scene when he left at 5 p.m.
Saturday, but they were peaceful
and he thought everything was
under control.
Revival
“MAY BE YOUR LAST
OPPORTUNITY”
AUGUST 14TH THRU 17TH
With Special
Guest Speaker
Dr. Steve
Hale
From
Atlanta, GA
Sunday School 9:45 pm
Worship 10:45 pm
Sunday Night 6:30 pm
Monday-Wednesday 7:00 pm
PHILIPPI
BAPTIST CHURCH
2484 Old Harrison Pike • 479-5385
Can you help the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office?
Residents with information about the individuals listed on this page
should NOT attempt to interact with these suspects.
Please call the tip line at 423-728-7336 or in an emergency 911.
DAVID
AMADOV
TIMOTHY
LEE CRONAN
DAVID
CALVIN KING
LAUREN CASEY
HENDRICKS
THOMAS EUGENE
MCCROSKEY
04/15/1987
AGGRAVATED STATUTORY
RAPE
01/22/1979. F.T.A. BURGLARY x
2/ THEFT OVER 1000/ POSS.
BURGLARY TOOLS/ POSS.
PROHIBITED WEAPON/ SALE/
DELIVERY SCH.IV
10/28/1969.
VIOLATION OF
SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY,
MISD. V.O.P.
9-16-1985. VIOLATION OF
PROBATION FOR
INTRODUCTION OF DRUGS IN A
PENAL FACILITY, AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT, THEFT OF PROPERTY.
10/26/1983.
PAROLE VIOLATION—FAIL TO
PAY FINES—CONSPIRACY TO
SALE AND DELIVER
SCHEDULE II
DEVONTE
CORTEZ WELCH
BONNIE
FAY ENSLEY
MICHAEL
BLEDSOE
CHARLES JUNIOR
BROWN II
CHRISTOPHER
CLARENCE HUSKINS
06/21/1993. AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT/ AGGRAVATED
BURGLARY/ F.T.A. POSS. OF
PROHIBITED WEAPON/
FELON WITH A WEAPON/
SIMPLE POSS.
03/04/1975 . POSS. SCH. II
FOR RESALE X 4/ SIMPLE
POSSESSION SCH IV /
POSSESSION OF A WEAPON
BY A CONVICTED FELON
01/04/1984. F.T.A. POSS.
SCH II FOR RESALE x2/
POSS. SCH. VI/ POSS.
OF FIREARM BY
CONVICTED FELON
6/9/1974. FAILURE TO APPEAR ON
SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY
RESTRICTIONS. FAILURE TO
APPEAR ON MISDEMEANOR
VIOLATION OF PROBATION.
01/24/1975.
POSSESSION OF A
WEAPON BY A
CONVICTED FELON
D
E
R
U
T
P
CA
ALL INFORMATION PROVIDED BY THE BRADLEY COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE.
Call Now! 423-472-HELP (4357) “Reuniting Families in a professional,
one call does it all
confidential and timely manner”
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2016
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Dustin Pedroia, 33; Donnie
Wahlberg, 47; Sean Penn, 56; Robert
De Niro, 73.
Happy Birthday: Move forward
regardless of what everyone around
you is doing. Express how you feel
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
and what you want to see happen.
Stay informed and don't deviate from
your plans. Happiness will result from
doing the right thing at the right time.
If you are kind, the people around you
will be more accepting of the choices
you make along the way. Your numbers are 4, 11, 18, 24, 30, 42, 45.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Deal
with the things that are stopping you
from fulfilling your dreams.
Reconnect with someone who can
help you find a new outlet for the
skills and services you have to offer.
Changes can be made if you go
about them the right way.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Your
creative imagination will lead you to
solutions as well as opportunities to
show off what you have to offer.
Taking on a new hobby is encouraged. Greater intimacy with someone
you love is likely. Don't waffle.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Temptation will be hard to resist.
Consider what you will miss out on if
you fail to put in the effort required to
be successful. Your past will haunt
you if you are too weak to say no.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You
can bring about a host of positive
changes if you make plans and oversee every detail. A partnership will
play an important role in the decisions you make and will bring you
closer together.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Rely on
firsthand information if you take on a
challenge. Staying on top of things
will be the difference between winning and losing. Don't ignore your gut
feeling. Your emotions will not mislead you. Protect your possessions
and reputation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take a
break and go have some fun.
Connect with others and make new
friends by being a participant.
Pamper yourself or purchase something that will lift your spirits. Love is
highlighted and a romantic gesture is
encouraged.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Your
energy and enthusiasm will help you
win favors and boost your reputation.
A chance meeting will promote a positive change in your current direction.
Express your emotions and walk
away from negativity and adversity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Someone will share ideas with you
that will stir your imagination. You
may face a negative response from
your colleagues, but once you set
your plans in motion, you'll win
approval.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Keep an open mind, but don't feel like
you have to follow the crowd. Be
patient, especially when dealing with
matters pertaining to travel or educational pursuits. Personal and domestic alterations are your best bet.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Take care of situations pertaining to
money, health and legal matters. An
open dialogue will help you decide
what your next move should be. Be
honest about what you want to see
happen, and you can't lose.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Let
your actions speak for you.
Encourage others to follow suit and
work diligently to bring about positive
changes at work or at home. Don't
give in to someone who is using emotional manipulation.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Rethink each step you take before
you engage in something that can
cause isolation or loss. A partner is
best treated as an equal to avoid any
backlash. A creative approach to life
will bring you the best results.
Birthday Baby: You are innovative, smart and resourceful. You are
fearless and motivated.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—7
TUESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
3
WELFTBN
4
WTNB
5
WFLICW
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WNGHPBS
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WTVC2FOX 11
WDEFCBS 12
QVC
13
CSPAN
14
WGN-A
15
HSN
16
E!
23
ESQTV
24
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25
TLC
26
TBS
27
TNT
28
USA
29
FX
30
ESPN
31
ESPN2
32
FSTN
33
SEC
34
GOLF
35
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38
CNBC
39
MSNBC
40
CNN
41
HDLN
42
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43
HIST
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A&E
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47
NGC
48
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50
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54
NICK
55
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56
TVLND
57
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58
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60
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61
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62
SYFY
63
SPIKE
64
COM
65
MTV
66
VH1
67
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68
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69
SCIENCE 83
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EWTN
100
WPXA ION 107
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GSN
144
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153
WE
163
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217
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UNIV
224
NBCSP
311
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319
4:30
5 PM
5:30
AUGUST 16, 2016
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
Rio Olympics
Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Ent. Tonight Olympic Zone Rio Olympics Track and Field, Gymnastics, Beach Volleyball. (N) ’ (Live) Å
News
Rio Olympics
John Hagee Prophecy
Praise the Lord Å
Max Lucado Supernatural Potters
Trinity Family Everyday
Prince
Bil Cornelius Praise the Lord Å
Spirit
Not a Fan
World Impact
Nancy’s Neighborhood
WTNB Today
Body
Book
Tennova Talk Unity
Rise Up
Spirit Fest
Around Town
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
The Flash “Potential Energy” MADtv “Episode Two” ’
Tosh.0 Å
Crazy Talk
Hollywood
No-Dentures Anger
Paid Program
Martha Speak Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
››› “Last Days in Vietnam: American Experience” ’
American Experience Ronald Reagan, actor and president.
Dick Cheney: A Heartbeat Away ’ Å
Gorongosa
Grace
Bill Winston Love a Child Jewish Voice Guillermo
Creflo Dollar Jerry Savelle John Hagee Rod Parsley Pink Impact 2016 “Charlotte Gambill” (N)
Joel Osteen Å
Walking/Faith K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! ’ Bachelor in Paradise (N) ’ Bachelor in Paradise: After The Middle
Fresh-Boat
News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Dick Cavett’s Watergate ’
American Experience Ronald Reagan, actor and president.
A-List
World News Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å
The People’s Court Å
Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Big Bang
Big Bang
Brooklyn
New Girl ’
Lucifer “Favorite Son” ’
News at 10
Seinfeld ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Paid Program Seinfeld
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith NCIS “Charade” ’
Zoo “Sins of the Father” (N)
NCIS: New Orleans ’
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Gourmet Holiday “Labor Day” (N)
Easy Solutions
Lug - Travel & Handbags
Fall Cleanup
Tuesday Night Beauty
The Find With Shawn Killinger (N)
Emeril’s Kitchen
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
›› “Old School” (2003) Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell. Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Electronic Connection (N)
Electronic Connection (N)
Joyful Discoveries-Joy
Home Innovations (N) Å
Perfect Pressure Mattress
Electronic Connection (N)
Electronic Connection (N)
Highgate Manor Home (N)
Bellezza Jewelry Collection
Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian E! News (N) Å
Botched By Nature Å
Botched By Nature Å
Hollywood Medium
E! News (N) Å
NCIS: Los Angeles “Burned” NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
››› “The Big Lebowski” (1998) Jeff Bridges, John Goodman. Å
Big Lebowski
“Toni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart” (2016) Lex Scott Davis. ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” (2009) Å
›› “Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds” (2012) Tyler Perry. Å
(:02) › “Tyler Perry’s Temptation” (2013, Drama) Å
“Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds”
Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras “Showdown Throwdown” (N) ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras ’ Å
Toddlers & Tiaras “Showdown Throwdown” ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends
Friends
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan Å
2 Broke Girls Conan Å
Castle “I, Witness” ’
Castle “Resurrection”
Castle “Reckoning”
Castle “The Wrong Stuff” ’
Castle “Hong Kong Hustle”
Castle “At Close Range” ’
Castle “Habeas Corpse” ’
Castle “Sleeper” ’ Å
Castle “In Plane Sight” ’
Rio Olympics
NCIS “Gone” Å (DVS)
NCIS “Devil’s Trifecta” ’
NCIS “Hit and Run” ’
WWE SmackDown! (N) ’ (Live) Å
Chrisley
Chrisley
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ›› “Battleship” (2012, Science Fiction) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd. ’ Å
››› “Lone Survivor” (2013) Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch. ’ Å
››› “Lone Survivor” (2013) Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch. ’ Å
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter Special Michelle Beadle and Trey Wingo host a live fantasy football draft. (N) (Live)
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
First Take ’ SportsNation (N) (Live) Å
Little League Softball World Series, Semifinal: Teams TBA. SC Featured Little League Softball World Series, Semifinal: Teams TBA. NFL Live (N) Å
First Take ’
UEFA Soccer
Bob Redfern Destination UFC Insider Halls of Fame Game 365
Cardinals Pre MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Houston Astros. From Minute Maid Park in Houston.
Cardinals Live! Postgame
UEFA Soccer
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show (N) Å
SEC Now (N) SEC Now
College Football From Oct. 31, 2015. Å
SEC Now
SEC Now
SEC Now
SEC Now
(3:30) Golf Central Live From the Olympics Inside PGA
Golf Central Live From the Olympics (N) (Live)
Golf Central Live From the Olympics
UEFA Soccer
NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) Speak for Yourself (N) Å
MLB Whiparound (N) Å
MLB’s Best School of Rickey
UFC Unleashed Å
UFC
Sports Live TMZ Sports Speak for Yourself ’ Å
(3:30) Rodeo From March 20, 2016.
XTERRA Adv. Golf America Braves Live! MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Atlanta Braves.
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
(5:59) Weather Underground
Secrets of the Earth
Dead of Winter: The Donner Party
23.5 Degrees (N)
Secrets of the Earth
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Rio Olympics Cycling, Volleyball. (N) (Live)
Rio Olympics
The Profit “Amazing Grapes” Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank Å
The Profit “Da Lobsta”
Rio Olympics
MTP Daily (N)
With All Due Respect (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon Anderson Cooper 360 Å
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Greta Van Susteren
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor
The Kelly File
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Big Easy
Big Easy
Big Easy
Big Easy
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
The First 48 “River’s Edge”
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Married at First Sight Å
Married-Sight (:45) Married at First Sight (N) Å
(:01) Born This Way (N) ’
(:03) Married at First Sight
(12:03) Married at First Sight
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Deadliest Catch: On Deck “The Widowmaker” Bill learns Zack’s secret. (N) ’ Å
Deadliest Catch: On Deck Bill learns Zack’s secret. Å
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Border Wars
Border Wars “Last Defense” Border Wars
Border Wars
Border Wars
Border Wars
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Delicious Destinations
Andrew Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Andrew Zimmern
Chopped A seafood surprise. Chopped
Chopped “Waste Not”
Chopped
Chopped Junior “Nest Test” Chopped “Bacon Boys”
Chopped “Souper Chefs”
Chopped “Wild Ride”
Chopped “Bacon Boys”
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Hunters
Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Finding Bigfoot ’ Å
Finding Bigfoot ’ Å
Finding Bigfoot ’ Å
Finding Bigfoot ’ Å
Finding Bigfoot ’ Å
(:01) Finding Bigfoot Å
(:02) Finding Bigfoot Å
(:03) Finding Bigfoot Å
(12:04) Finding Bigfoot ’
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Dead of Summer “Townie”
Pretty Little Liars ’ Å
Pretty Little Liars (N) Å
Dead of Summer (N) Å
Pretty Little Liars ’ Å
The 700 Club ’ Å
So Raven
So Raven
Bizaardvark Austin & Ally (:15) “Adventures in Babysitting” (2016) Sabrina Carpenter. Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
Bizaardvark K.C. Under. Girl Meets
Stuck/Middle Liv-Mad.
K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Bunk’d Å
Girl Meets
Best Friends
SpongeBob Loud House Loud House Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Crashletes
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Clarence
Clarence
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Steven Univ. We Bare
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Squidbillies
Gunsmoke “The Brothers”
(:09) The Andy Griffith Show Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) The Andy Griffith Show Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Die Hard
››› “True Grit” (2010, Western) Jeff Bridges, Josh Brolin. ‘PG-13’ Å
›››› “Unforgiven” (1992, Western) Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman. ‘R’ Å
›› “U.S. Marshals” (1998, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. ‘PG-13’ Å
(:15) ›› “Carnival Story” (1954, Drama) Anne Baxter.
›› “The North Star” (1943, War) Anne Baxter. Å
›››› “All About Eve” (1950, Drama) Bette Davis, Anne Baxter. Å
›› “Swamp Water” (1941) Premiere.
(12:15) “The Razor’s Edge”
Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Sisterhood of Hip Hop Å
Sisterhood of Hip Hop Å
Sisterhood of Hip Hop Å
Sisterhood of Hip Hop Å
Sisterhood of Hip Hop
Sisterhood of Hip Hop (N)
Sisterhood of Hip Hop
Sisterhood of Hip Hop Å
››› “Waiting to Exhale”
Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Housewives/NJ
Housewives/OC
Happens
››› “Mrs. Doubtfire” (1993) Sally Field
(3:00) “Lavalantula” (2015) “2 Lava 2 Lantula” (2016) Steve Guttenberg. Å
›› “Drive Angry” (2011, Action) Nicolas Cage. Å
›› “Knowing” (2009, Science Fiction) Nicolas Cage, Rose Byrne. Å
“Anacondas: Hunt for the Blood Orchid”
(2:00) ›› “Escape Plan”
›› “The Expendables” (2010) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham. ’
›› “Four Brothers” (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. ’
›› “The Book of Eli” (2010, Adventure) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. ’
(3:45) Tosh.0 (:18) Tosh.0 (4:50) Tosh.0 Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Tosh.0 Å
Daily Show
Nightly Show At Midnight (:31) Tosh.0
(3:40) Teen Mom OG Å
(4:50) Teen Mom OG Å
Teen Mom OG ’ Å
Teen Mom OG ’ Å
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Scream (N) ’
Scream (N)
Wild ’n Out
Wild ’n Out
Wild ’n Out
›› “You Got Served” (2004) Marques Houston. ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ›› “Stomp the Yard” (2007, Drama) Columbus Short, Meagan Good. ’
Drumline
Reba Å
Reba Å
Raymond
Raymond
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ›› “Overboard” (1987, Comedy) Goldie Hawn, Kurt Russell, Edward Herrmann.
Steve Austin’s Broken Skull
2015 BET Hip Hop Awards ›› “Think Like a Man” (2012) Michael Ealy, Jerry Ferrara. Men use an advice book to turn the tables on their gals.
Music Moguls “Artisty”
(:10) Music Moguls “Artisty”
Martin Å
The Wendy Williams Show
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
Bermuda Triangle: Science Unearthed ’ Å
Impossible Engineering ’
(:01) Impossible Engineering (:02) Hunt for Particle X (N) (:03) Impossible Engineering Impossible Engineering ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Foster v. Chatman
Q & A “Mary Sarah Bilder”
Stories I Tell Myself
A Carlin Home Companion
Stacey Dash Diane Guerrero Discusses
Stories I Tell Myself
Cat Chat (N) With Jesus
Super Saints Choices
EWTN News Our Faith
Daily Mass - Olam
Mother Angelica Live
EWTN News Holy Rosary Threshold of Hope
Preview
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds “Run” ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “The Pact”
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Saving Hope “Awakenings”
Saving Hope “Stand By Me”
Gamer’s G.
Yo-Kai Watch Spider-Man Marvel’s Av. Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Lego
Star-For.
Future-Worm! Walk the
Gamer’s G.
Lab Rats
Spider-Man Star-Rebels Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Ultimate
Ultimate
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest
Idiotest
Idiotest
Idiotest
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique Eats BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Good Eats
Good Eats
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order “Sanctuary” ’
Law & Order “Nurture” ’
Law & Order “Doubles” ’
Law & Order “Old Friends”
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Coma” Å
Law & Order “Blue Bamboo”
Vivan los Niños
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
Vecinos
Vecinos
María
María
María
María
La Familia
Vecinos
María
Noticiero Con Joaquin
CONCACAF
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Silvana Sin Lana (N) (SS)
Sin Senos Sí Hay Paraíso ’ Señora Acero 3: La Coyote Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Juegos Olímpicos Río
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. La Rosa de Guadalupe (N)
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
(3:00) Rio Olympics Soccer, Badminton. (N) Rio Olympics Women’s Basketball: Third Quarterfinal. (N)
Rio Olympics
(:15) Rio Olympics Volleyball, Table Tennis. (N) (Live)
Sports
Sports
Emergency: Life and Death Emergency: Life and Death Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
Tuesday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WRCB)
Rio Olympics
As the Summer Games continue from Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, events available for coverage include: the women’s quarterfinals
in volleyball; gymnastics competitions; and
the semifinals of the men’s 110m hurdles
and the men’s and women’s 400m hurdles,
the qualifying rounds of the women’s javelin
and the women’s long jump, and the finals
of the men’s high jump and the women’s
1500m in track and field.
8 p.m. on (FREE)
Pretty Little Liars
When Emily (Shay Mitchell) applies for the
job of Rosewood High School swim coach,
she’s surprised to learn that her ex, Paige
(Lindsey Shaw), is up for the same position in the new episode “Exes and OMGs.”
Hanna (Ashley Benson), meanwhile, gets
a visit from the clairvoyant Mrs. Grunwald
(guest star Meg Foster) after having a vision that she and her friends are in danger.
Elsewhere, Ali (Sasha Pieterse) hopes going back to work will restore normalcy to
her life.
9 p.m. on (WNGH) (WTCI)
American Experience
Over two consecutive nights, the series repeats its four-hour profile “Reagan,” recalling one of the most popular political figures
of the 20th century — and the person who
ended any notion that an actor couldn’t
become president. Starting with the episode
“Lifeguard,” the presentation features interviews with former Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan biographer
Edmund Morris, among others. David Ogden Stiers narrates.
9 p.m. on (FREE)
Dead of Summer
Any fan of horror movies is familiar with a
moment toward the end of most fright flicks
when the source of peril, in whatever form,
appears to be vanquished, only to have the
biggest scare of all waiting to startle us.
That may be where the new episode “The
Devil Inside” takes us, as some of the surviving members of the Camp Stillwater staff
are convinced they’ve solved the sinister
mystery of the place. Some of their friends
aren’t nearly as convinced, though. Elizabeth Mitchell and Alberto Frezza star.
WEDNESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
3
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WTNB
5
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QVC
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14
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15
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23
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24
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25
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26
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27
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28
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29
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31
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34
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35
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36
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39
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40
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41
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42
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43
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44
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45
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46
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47
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48
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49
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50
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51
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52
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53
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54
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55
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56
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57
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58
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59
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60
OXYGEN
61
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62
SYFY
63
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64
COM
65
MTV
66
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67
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68
BET
69
SCIENCE 83
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85
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100
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DISXD
117
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144
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153
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163
GALA
217
TELE
223
UNIV
224
NBCSP
311
DLC
319
4:30
5 PM
5:30
10:30 p.m. on (WTVC)
Fresh Off the Boat
Louis and Jessica (Randall Park, Constance Wu) both try to alter their parental
images for the better in “Gotta Be Me.”
Louis tries to give Emery (Forrest Wheeler)
a makeover for school, while Jessica acts
as a chaperone on a field trip for Eddie’s
(Hudson Yang) class. Ray Wise (“Twin
Peaks”) reprises his guest role. Ian Chen
and Chelsey Crisp also star.
AUGUST 17, 2016
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
Rio Olympics
Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Ent. Tonight Olympic Zone Rio Olympics Track and Field, Diving, Beach Volleyball. (N) ’ (Live) Å
News
Rio Olympics
John Hagee Destined Win Not a Fan
Caroline Leaf Overload
Potters
John Gray
Turning Point Prince
S. Furtick
Living Proof Blessed Life John Gray
Drive
Zacharias
J. Duplantis
Nancy’s Neighborhood
WTNB Today
Body
Wesley UMC First Baptist Church
Gaither Gospel Hour ’
Westmore Church of God
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
Penn & Teller: Fool Us (N)
My Last Days ’ Å
Sports Zone Tosh.0 Å
Hollywood
Paid Program Anger
Crazy Talk
Martha Speak Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Secrets of the Dead ’
NOVA “Cold Case JFK” ’
American Experience Ronald Reagan, actor and president.
Ga. Greats
Hi Gene
American Experience ’
Huch
Bill Winston Time-Hope
Jewish Voice Amazing
Creflo Dollar David Reagan John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni: Table
Pink Impact 2016 (N)
Supernatural Hillsong TV Z. Levitt
K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
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World News Wheel
Jeopardy! ’ Real O’Neals Real O’Neals Real O’Neals Real O’Neals Mod Fam
(:31) blackish News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
NOVA “Cold Case JFK” ’
American Experience Ronald Reagan, actor and president.
Hi Gene
World News Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å
The People’s Court Å
Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Big Bang
Big Bang
MasterChef Contestants prepare entrees on a budget. ’
News at 10
Sports Zone 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls L King Report Seinfeld ’
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith Big Brother (N) ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Hostage”
American Gothic (N) Å
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Quacker Factory
Clarks Footwear
Emeril’s Kitchen
In the Kitchen With David “PM Edition-Emeril”
Philosophy: Beauty
Barbara Bixby Jewelry
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Partners” ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Labor Day Feast (N) Å
Joyful Discoveries-Joy
Ybf Beauty (N) Å
Ybf Beauty (N) Å
Beauty Innovations (N)
Bellezza Jewelry Collection Bellezza Jewelry Collection Ybf Beauty (N) Å
LYSSE Fashions (N) Å
Botched Å
Botched By Nature Å
Botched By Nature Å
E! News (N) Å
Hollywood Medium
Botched By Nature (N) Å
Chrisley
E! News (N) Å
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
›› “Semi-Pro” (2008) Will Ferrell, Woody Harrelson.
›› “Semi-Pro” (2008)
Grey’s Anatomy ’ Å
Little Women: Atlanta Å
Little Women: Atlanta Å
Little Women: LA Å
Little Women: LA (N) Å
Little Women: LA (N) Å
(:02) Little Women: Atlanta (:02) Little Women: Atlanta (12:02) Little Women: LA
My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ My Big Fat Fabulous Life ’ My Big Fat Fabulous Life
My Big Fat Fabulous Life
(:01) Love at First Kiss (N)
My Big Fat Fabulous Life
(12:03) Love at First Kiss ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan Å
2 Broke Girls Conan Å
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle “Hollander’s Woods”
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle “Nanny McDead” ’
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle City councilman dies. Major Crimes Å
Major Crimes Å
CSI: NY ’ Å
Rio Olympics
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Suits “Spain” (N)
(:01) Mr. Robot “eps2.5h4ndshake.sme” (N) Law & Order: SVU
(:16) Suits
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ›› “Riddick” (2013, Science Fiction) Vin Diesel, Karl Urban. ’ Å
›› “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit” (2014) Chris Pine. ’
Tyrant “Bedfellows” (N) ’
(:14) Tyrant Emma’s death haunts Barry. ’
(:28) Tyrant
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) Å
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live)
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
NFL Live (N) Å
Spanish Super Cup Soccer: Second leg -- Barça vs Sevilla Arm Wrestling (N)
NFL Live Å
Little League Softball World Series, Final: Teams TBA. (N)
Arm Wrestling
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
MLB Baseball
Cardinals Live! Postgame
Destination Game 365
Bull Riding Championship.
NHRA Drag Racing Protect The Harvest.com Northwest NHRA Nationals. ’
World Poker Tour
UEFA Soccer
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show (N) Å
SEC Now (N) SEC Now
SEC Nation (N) Å
SEC Football Coaches Cor SEC Football Coaches Cor SEC Nation SEC Now
SEC Now
SEC Now
Live From the Olympics
Golf Central Live From the Olympics
Rio Olympics Women’s Golf, First Round.
(3:00) Golf U.S. Amateur, First Round. (N) ’ (Live) Å
Speak for Yourself (N) Å
MLB Whiparound (N) Å
Setup
NASCAR Racing
UFC Tonight (N) Å
Sports Live Garbage
TMZ Sports Speak
(3:00) MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Atlanta Braves.
Driven (N)
Braves Live! MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Atlanta Braves.
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
(5:59) Weather Underground
Strangest Weather on Earth Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Rio Olympics Volleyball, Field Hockey. (N) (Live)
The Equalizer
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
The Profit “Vision Quest”
Rio Olympics
MTP Daily (N)
With All Due Respect (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Town Hall: Green Party CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon CNN Town Hall: Green Party
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Town Hall: Green Party Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Greta Van Susteren
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor
The Kelly File
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’
American Pickers ’
American Pickers ’
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (12:03) American Pickers ’
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Knockout
Knockout
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Jep
Wahlburgers Black-White Wahlburgers Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
Dual Survival ’ Å
Dual Survival Å
Dual Survival “Snow Daze”
Dual Survival ’ Å
Dual Survival ’ Å
Naked and Afraid “Jeff & E.J. Origins” (N) ’ Å
Naked and Afraid XL Å
Naked and Afraid XL Å
Border Wars
Border Wars
Border Wars
Drugs, Inc. “Pill Nation”
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown Å
Expedition Unknown
Chopped (Part 1 of 4)
Chopped (Part 2 of 4)
Chopped (Part 3 of 4)
Chopped (Part 4 of 4)
Chopped
Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cooks vs. Cons
Cooks vs. Cons
Cutthroat Kitchen
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers: Buying Hunters
Hunters Int’l Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers: Buying
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
(:01) The Great Barrier Reef ’ Å
(:03) River Monsters Å
The Great Barrier Reef ’
(3:30) ››› “Ratatouille” (2007) Voices of Patton Oswalt.
››› “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” (1971) Gene Wilder. ’
››› “Ratatouille” (2007) Voices of Patton Oswalt, Ian Holm. ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
Lizzie
Lizzie
Bizaardvark Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
K.C. Under. Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
›› “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules” (2011) ‘PG’
Stuck/Middle K.C. Under. Bizaardvark Bunk’d Å
Girl Meets
Best Friends
SpongeBob Loud House Loud House Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Crashletes
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends
(:33) Friends
Clarence
Clarence
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Steven Univ. We Bare
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Squidbillies
Gunsmoke “Homecoming”
Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
HappyGil
›› “Alice in Wonderland” (2010, Fantasy) Johnny Depp. ‘PG’
›› “Monsters vs. Aliens” (2009, Comedy) ‘PG’
››› “Men in Black” (1997) Tommy Lee Jones. ‘PG-13’
›› “Monsters vs. Aliens” (2009, Comedy) ‘PG’
(:15) ›› “Men in War” (1957) Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray.
(:15) ››› “The Steel Helmet” (1951, War) Gene Evans.
››› “Home of the Brave” (1949, War)
(:45) ››› “The Set-Up” (1949) Å
(:15) ››› “Bright Victory” (1951) Arthur Kennedy.
Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Top Model
America’s Next Top Model
›› “Cruel Intentions” (1999) Sarah Michelle Gellar. Å
(:35) ››› “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” (2005) Premiere.
(:15) ››› “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” (2005) Amber Tamblyn.
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Real Housewives of
Happens
Housewives/NYC
Housewives
››› “Fright Night” (2011, Horror) Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell. Å
›› “Knowing” (2009, Science Fiction) Nicolas Cage, Rose Byrne. Å
Ghost Hunters (N) ’ Å
Paranormal Witness (N)
Ghost Hunters ’ Å
Paranormal Witness
(3:00) ›› “Homefront” (2013, Action) ’
›› “Four Brothers” (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. ’
›› “The Book of Eli” (2010, Adventure) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. ’
››› “Fight Club” (1999) Brad Pitt. Premiere. ’
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
Period
South Park
Daily Show
Nightly Show At Midnight Period
Nick Cannon: Wild ’n Out
Wild ’n Out
Wild ’n Out
› “Friday After Next” (2002) Ice Cube, Mike Epps. ’
››› “Friday” (1995) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. ’
Catfish: The TV Show (N) ’ Unlocking the Truth (N) ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked (N) ’
Dating Naked ’
››› “Beverly Hills Cop” (1984) Eddie Murphy. ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Raymond
Raymond
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ››› “Double Jeopardy” (1999) Tommy Lee Jones, Ashley Judd.
Steve Austin’s Broken Skull S. Austin
(3:30) “Chocolate City” (2015, Drama) Robert Ri’chard.
Fresh Prince House of Payne
House/Payne Music Moguls “Artisty”
(:12) Martin ’ Å
(9:54) Martin (:36) Martin “Love T.K.O.”
(:18) Martin The Wendy Williams Show
Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science How to Build How to Build Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Supreme Court Rules
Q & A “Robert Gates” ’
Clara Bingham Discusses
Book Discussion on Eruption Ronald Reagan
Howard Means Discusses
Clara Bingham Discusses
The Friar
Behold
Preview
The World
EWTN News Catholic
Daily Mass - Olam
EWTN Live “Tom Peterson”
EWTN News Holy Rosary Religious
Vaticano
The Catholic Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Law & Order “Melting Pot”
Law & Order “Murder Book” Law & Order “Good Faith”
Law & Order “Bling” Å
Law & Order “Fallout” Å
Law & Order “Captive” ’
Law & Order “Over Here”
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Called Home”
Gamer’s G.
Yo-Kai Watch Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Lego
Star-For.
Future-Worm! Walk the
Gamer’s G.
Lab Rats
Spider-Man Star-Rebels Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Phineas and Ferb
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Skin Wars: Fresh Paint
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Donut
Donut
Sugar
Sugar
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars “Surf’s Up!”
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Good Eats
Good Eats
Cupcake Wars
House “Euphoria, Part 2”
House “Forever” ’ Å
House “Who’s Your Daddy?” House “No Reason” Å
›› “Monster-in-Law” (2005) Jennifer Lopez, Jane Fonda.
›› “Monster-in-Law” (2005) Jennifer Lopez, Jane Fonda.
Vivan los Niños
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
Vecinos
(:25) Vecinos Vecinos
(:25) Vecinos (7:55) Vecinos
Vecinos
Fútbol Copa MX: Coras de Tepic vs Azul
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Vecinos
Juegos Olímpicos Río (N)
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Silvana Sin Lana (N) (SS)
Sin Senos Sí Hay Paraíso ’ Señora Acero 3: La Coyote Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Juegos Olímpicos Río
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. La Rosa de Guadalupe (N)
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
(3:00) Rio Olympics Soccer, Gymnastics.
Rio Olympics Men’s Basketball: Third Quarterfinal. (N) (Live) Rio Olympics
Rio Olympics Beach Volleyball, Basketball. (N) (Live)
Rio Olympics
Sports
Sports
Surgeon Oz Surgeon Oz Surgeon Oz Surgeon Oz Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Conjoined Twins: Miracle
Conjoined Twins: Sister
Separation Anxiety
Conjoined Twins: One Mind Conjoined Twins: Sister
Separation Anxiety
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland businessman gives back
by giving to Blythe-Bower students
Nursing
From Page 1
new building that will let those
who are in the program ... receive
what we consider the best education possible,” he said.
It took several years for the
School of Nursing to become a
reality, though Lee University
has had a nursing program for a
couple of years. As buildings at
the university go, the first project
was the new Science and Math
building, at the intersection of
Ocoee Street and Billy Graham
Avenue. Then, the next project
was the construction of the new
chapel at Ocoee and 11th streets.
The next project was the completion
of
the
new
Communication Arts building at
Ocoee Street and Central
Avenue. Finally, the School of
Nursing building was to be the
next construction project.
“It’s a $10 million project and
was funded through Lee
University supporters. We couldn’t approach (nursing) alumni,
because we didn’t have any
alumni yet” in that new school,
Hammond said.
The building has three floors,
with one area being a simulated
hospital room where lifelike medical mannequins are substituted
for patients. There are many lecture halls in the building, as well
as an abundance of classrooms.
The third floor will be for faculty,
with a special area there set up
as a prayer room.
Hammond praised Sarah
Campbell, who will head the
Donald Humes
delivers needed
school supplies
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
MAINSTREET CLEVELAND members toured the new School of
Nursing at Lee University on Monday. Dr. Jerome Hammond, right,
directed the tour, and gave the group a brief history of the three-story,
41,000-square-foot building, set to open Aug. 24.
school, for her work in getting
the building online. He said that
one of her major jobs was setting
up the building for state certification, which was a very important issue.
“And we had to have it ready
for this coming semester, which
Sarah provided tremendous help
in,” Hammond said.
He also pointed out the green
space outside the building students will be able to use, as well
as an area for the new Lee
University lacrosse team.
“This breathing space is something that we are very excited
about also, and is located outside
the School of Nursing and communications
buildings,”
Hammond said. “It will be an
area where the students can
enjoy being outside and studying, or just relaxing.”
Registration for classes at Lee
University will be Monday and
Tuesday, with classes to begin on
Wednesday.
Anti-drug
From Page 1
they have had enough, as well,
of losing their close friends to
substance abuse."
"We will have a chance to circle those kids and make a
statement," Winters said.
"I have six grandkids who are
drug free, thanks to this great
community, a good church and
great friends," he said. "If any of
that falls apart — and it could
hit anyone of us — I want to
make sure they are as drug free
as they possibly can be. That's
why I'm in this."
Cash said the biggest thing is
a group of young students who
have taken on this goal.
"We have 13 who have taken
the lead from Walker Valley and
Bradley. They have already spoken to both football teams and
all the cheerleaders, spreading
the message that we need to be
drug free," Cash said. "They
have also included Cleveland
City Schools. We have the
Cleveland band, cheerleaders
and football players who will
join us on the field Thursday
night. We are trying to get the
message out we want everybody
to have a chance in life."
She called the students leading this moral charge "impressive."
“We have 13 who have
taken the lead from
Walker Valley and
Bradley. They have
already spoken to both
football teams and all
the cheerleaders,
spreading the message
that we need to be drug
free. They have also
included Cleveland City
Schools. We have the
Cleveland band,
cheerleaders and
football players who will
join us on the field
Thursday night. We are
trying to get the message
out we want everybody
to have a chance in life.”
— Dr. Linda Cash
"They are above anything I
expected them to be, and they
took it and, they are so fast on
social media, when we said we
needed social media they said
they already had it out there,"
Cash said.
"What we are asking our
community to do is stand
behind our kids, because it's
hard to stand up and say,
'We're not going to do this anymore,'" she said.
Cash said she directly asked
the students to verify what she
had heard — a student can get
"anything you want in five minutes."
"They said with a text you
can get anything you want in
five to 15 minutes — whether
you are on campus or off campus," she said. "They said we
have a problem and [they] are
asking us to stand with them."
Winters added many of the
support groups will be available
at the Family Expo at the YMCA
on Saturday.
"One of our findings is this is
a spiritual battle as well," he
said. "So on this Sunday morning, we are asking every pastor
and every church leader to
stand up to this as well. This is
an attack on our children. This
is an attack on a generation
and it's time to stand up and be
counted."
Winters said the students
"did not want old men to tell
them what to do."
“They said they want to fight
this, and I applaud them," he
said. "It's going to take kids to
stop other kids from doing
this.”
EMA
From Page 1
be negotiated down to where
the equipment could be shipped
here and Motorola could do the
upgrade work, "and have it for
everybody to use — the sheriff,
police departments, fire departments and EMS — everybody on
one system."
“Once we get it [operational],
the state will pay for all of the
upgrades from that point on,”
Spence said. "This is state of
the art. It doesn't get any better.”
He said there is "pretty good
coverage" throughout the county, but a major issue is when
there are communications from
within buildings.
"We have done a lot in preparation for this," Spence added.
Jerry Johnson of EMA said
the engineering done on the
Johnson Boulevard repeater
site allowed the system to reach
95 percent of the county.
"We will have six more channels with this system, and
that's a big deal when we have a
disaster," Spence said. "I think
this is a great opportunity to
upgrade our public safety radio
system to where it needs to be."
The Finance Committee
unanimously
approved
Spence's request.
Also approved was the addition of an archival fee of $5, collected through the clerks of the
court, for the purpose of initiating a legal proceeding.
Commissioners have already
looked at renovating four of the
Lake Forest Middle School
classroom pods into the county
archives and the fees would be
able to help with that renova-
tion as well as potentially digitizing county records.
Clerk and Master Sarah
Coleman told the committee,
"We don't have any more space
at the courthouse."
She said once the fee was
established, her office could
begin collecting it within two
weeks.
Since the county cannot
begin using the Lake Forest
building until late next year, it
is hoped there would be enough
to build up in the archive fund
to initiate the necessary work to
prepare the buildings for their
new use.
The fees are allowed by state
statute and "must be designated exclusively for duplicating,
storing and maintaining any
records required by law to be
permanently kept."
The committee's recommendation will go before the full
Commission for a vote on Sept.
6 and could become effective
Oct. 1.
nearby high school. According
to the restaurant’s manager,
the Hardee’s in that vicinity
was not affected by the break.
Cleveland Utilities crews
were excavating the area this
morning to locate the exact
spot of the water line break.
Once located, the break would
be repaired immediately. CU
crews would also determine
the cause of the water line
break.
Mullinax said he expected
the work on the line to be
completed quickly, meaning
that repairs could be completed as early as noon.
"We will have six more
channels with this
system, and that's a big
deal when we have a
disaster. I think this is a
great opportunity to
upgrade our public
safety radio system to
where it needs to be."
— Troy Spence
Water
From Page 1
to the GE/Exel facility on
Lauderdale Highway. He said
four businesses to the south
side of the highway were
affected, though he did not
know exactly which businesses.
Mullinax did say the water
main break did not affect the
Cleveland
businessman
Donald Humes, owner of the
Humes Paint Company, has
taken a step to give back to his
community.
Humes recently provided a
number of back-to-school
items
to
students
at
Cleveland’s
Blythe-Bower
Elementary School.
“It’s one of our most diverse
schools, and there are a number of students there who need
assistance,” said Humes during an interview with the
Cleveland Daily Banner.
He said he didn’t present the
items directly to the students.
“I took them to the school
and let them pick out what
they needed,” Humes said.
There is another reason
Humes selected Blythe-Bower
Elementary for the donation, a
family connection. Humes’
daughter, Prisavia Croft, is an
assistant principal at the
school.
Humes Painting Company
has been in operation in
Cleveland for about 40 years
(since 1978), and Humes says
he has enjoyed the community,
but feels everyone should give a
little back. He wants to expand
his program of giving back-toschool supplies to kids.
He also said he would welcome other businesses, church
groups, or organizations to
assist him in this annual
endeavor. He started the assistance program four or five
years ago.
In addition to this effort to
assist students in the BlytheBower community, Humes has
assisted with a number of volunteer efforts in Cleveland.
He was a longtime member
of the Cleveland Beer Board, a
charter member of The 100
Contributed photo
CLEVELAND BUSINESSMAN Don Humes is shown with an
assortment of back-to-school supplies he presented to students
at Blythe-Bower Elementary School. He said it was a way he can
give back to the community.
Black Men of Bradley County
Inc., among the first and the
last members of the College Hill
School Reunion Committee,
has been a member of the
Masonic Lodge for more than
30 years, gives faithfully to St.
Jude’s Children’s Research
Hospital in Memphis, and was
a member of the advisory committee for the selection of the
new Cleveland city manager
recently.
Humes said he tries to be a
generous person. He said he
raised his six children with a
firm hand. “When I said something, they knew I meant it,” he
has said.
Humes said he hunts and
fishes in the wintertime, but
his summertime enjoyment is
his vegetable garden. He raises
corn, okra, green beans, tomatoes, squash, zucchini, and
more. “My garden is my hobby,
my passion,” he said.
He has said his garden is a
hobby and an enjoyment, but
raising a family and running a
business are serious.
He is also serious about his
volunteer efforts in the community, and giving back.
To Donald Humes, it is also a
serious matter to assist the
students at Blythe Bower
Elementary. “It is one of the
best schools in the state,” he
said.
County
From Page 1
the whole way," he said. "I'm more
upset because of how nasty he
was to us. I've talked to several
builders, and they have had nothing but trouble with him."
Thompson is not an employee
of the county, but is an employee
of the Tennessee Department of
Environment and Conservation,
and was the subject of a push for
the county to issue permits itself
after Thompson's workload —
which covers more than one
county — became an issue in
2014.
That move was scuttled
because of the costs involved;
however,
the
Commission
approved a 90-day plan to have a
county employee assist in
Thompson's office, at the county's
expense.
Commissioner Charlotte Peak,
who is also an area builder, told
Leverett the state laws say a contractor only has to have the application for septic in hand, and not
necessarily a permit.
"You can go ahead and build,"
Peak told him. "He cannot stop
construction of your house right
now as the law stands."
Commissioner
Howard
Thompson observed that for the
county to take over those responsibilities, "We'd probably have to
have a couple of employees and a
vehicle."
Caywood said he hoped the
statements of commissioners
have "renewed the interest in this
problem."
“It's an ongoing problem. It's
one I had personally and I was
treated with the same kind of disrespect five years ago," Caywood
said. "The constituents that elect
us deserve better treatment than
what they're getting from that
office.”
He added, “If it costs us a little
money ... we live in a county
where we ought to get that work
done and not be treated like that.”
Commissioner Mark Hall said
the attitude described is "unacceptable."
"Let's call him right now and
put him on the speakerphone and
have him come right up here,"
Hall said. "We might as well take
care of this right now."
"This is what you get when you
deal with state and federal
bureaucracy," said Vice Chairman
Jeff Yarber, who attempted to call
Thompson on his cellphone, to no
avail.
"I wonder how much he'll be
backed up when he gets back
“It's an ongoing
problem. It's one I had
personally and I was
treated with the same
kind of disrespect five
years ago. The
constituents that elect us
deserve better treatment
than what they're
getting from that office.”
— Terry Caywood
[from vacation]," he said.
Peak said all of the legwork has
been done on starting the county's
own septic inspections.
"We can get that and re-evaluate it, and if you want to pursue it,
maybe we can come up with
something," she said.
Commissioner Bill Winters said
that position "gets a lot of heat"
because of the lack of manpower
and the quantity of work.
"What you probably got,"
Winters said to Leverett, "was the
frustrations of that office."
"The question is would there be
enough revenue to sustain us
having our own office," he said.
"But, no one should be treated
with disrespect."
It was Thompson who brought
up problem No. 2 — the road
department.
The controversy started a few
months ago, when Thompson
advised one of his constituents
they could build a wall on what
was believed to be a 30-foot right
of way.
Thompson said that was the
information on the road list provided to the Commission.
However, the road department
had changed the right of way and
both Thompson and Peak said the
Commission should have been
given better notice of such a significant change.
Peak made a motion Monday to
require the annual road list to go
through the Road committee and
to include a cover page "noting
any speed limit changes, corrected errors from previous years,
right-of-way or setback changes
and new roads approved from the
previous year."
Peak noted the error concerning the constituent in question
was "a clerical error" which had
never been changed on the official
record.
"The road department tore the
wall down," said Thompson. "[The
constituent] went back and put
block back where the lady had
had it for 10 years. The road
department went back last Friday
raising Cain with them again, and
told them they would have to
move those blocks."
"The man called me and he's
mad. He's got a business there
and he said, 'If this is the way
Bradley County is going to be, I'm
going to move my business out of
Bradley County,'" Thompson said.
"They aggravated him to death.
They've got a chip on their shoulder. If they're mad at me, that's
fine. I don't care. There'll be
another election. I'm getting tired
of it. He's going to end up suing
the road department and, if he
does, I'll be right with him to help
him all I can."
Winters said what concerns
him is when the road department
takes an action such as it did with
the wall, it should come before the
Commission.
"When there is this type of situation, we're the group they ought
to bring it to — not after the fact,
but before the fact," he said. "If we
had gotten this beforehand, we
might have been able to keep this
from happening. Before they move
on this, it should come to us or at
least the Road Committee."
Peak noted the Commission
has no real authority over the
road department, but said it is
one of "mutual respect."
"You would kind of expect that
from another elected official," she
said.
Caywood suggested the change
to the 30-foot right of way could
be revisited and "set it back to
what it was."
“We do have that authority,” he
said.
Commissioner Thomas Crye
requested the county attorney
address the Commission at its
next meeting.
"County Commission approves
the road list. County Commission
approves
their
budget.
Commission approves all of these
other things, but then all of a sudden you want something done like
Commissioner Thompson, and
you find out you don't have any
authority," Crye said.
"If we're going to be held
responsible for doing all of these
things and we can't take action on
all of these others, maybe it's time
for the county attorney to get
involved and request legislative
action and get this thing to where
the Commission is in charge,"
Crye said.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—9
TVA schedules drill
at Sequoyah plant
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Contributed photo
THE RONALD McDONALD CARE MOBILE is shown on one of its stops at Lake Forest Middle School. The traveling health clinic travels
among four Cleveland and Bradley County schools each week, and is available to all the local school systems’ students and staff. Residents around the
Sequoyah Nuclear Plant
could see an increase in
emergency traffic and hear
warning sirens during a drill
at the site Wednesday.
Emergency responders
from federal, state and local
agencies will join the
Tennessee Valley Authority in
the emergency preparedness
training drill.
The Cleveland/Bradley
Emergency Management
Agency will be involved in the
exercise, hosting a tabletop
discussion at the building on
Guthrie Drive. While an
increase in emergency traffic
in Cleveland is unexpected, it
is possible the sirens on the
western end of the county
might sound.
The drill is part of an ongoing series of exercises
required by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to
ensure an effective and coordinated response to protect
the health and safety of the
public, in the unlikely event
of an emergency at
Sequoyah.
Wednesday’s drill will
involve hundreds of personnel working in multiple locations, including near the
plant. Officials said residents
may see increased vehicle
traffic and may hear on- and
off-site sirens briefly activated, but that increase will be
seen more nearer Sequoyah.
All 10 counties in the
Sequoyah emergency preparedness area, including
Bradley County, will be
involved in Wednesday’s drill.
The exercise is expected to
begin around 8 a.m.
A similar graded exercise
will be conducted on Sept.
14, and the results will be
shared in a public meeting at
a later date.
Mobile
From Page 1
while also introducing telemedicine.
Other schools have benefitted
from serving as telemedicine
sites under the Care Mobile
umbrella. Telemedicine is a
service allowing a student to
“visit” to a licensed medical professional through technology.
Using a computer with special cameras and medical
equipment, a school nurse can
record a student’s vital signs
and other information for the
Care Mobile’s nurse practitioner
to see in real time. The professional can also video chat with
the patient about his or her
symptoms and call in prescriptions to a pharmacy, if necessary.
“This has allowed us to see
patients where there might not
be a lot of options for pediatric
care,” Pohl said.
Pohl called the first year of
telemedicine “a big success,”
because it allowed more students to receive care without
leaving their schools. Several
schools which were not on the
Care Mobile’s physical route
were outfitted with the technology.
However, the popularity of
telemedicine also resulted in
what Pohl said is considered “a
good problem.” The nurse practitioner shuts the door to one of
two exam rooms on the Care
Mobile while on a telemedicine
call in order to protect patient
privacy. This means there is one
less room and one less person
who can be seeing patients on
the Care Mobile at a given time.
Pohl said that led to the
development of a clinic being
added at Waterville Community
Elementary. Located next to the
school nurse’s office, the new
clinic room provides children
whose parents have given consent with an extra person they
can see for medical care.
“It just adds to the school,”
said Jennifer Huskins, principal
of Waterville. “It helps take the
burden off parents when students need to see a doctor. … It
can really help with absences
due to illness.”
Like the Care Mobile, the new
clinic will be available to any
student from the Bradley, Polk
or Hamilton counties who wants
to pay it a visit.
This year, the Care Mobile will
be traveling to Blythe-Bower
Elementary, George R. Stuart
Elementary, Lake Forest Middle
School and Waterville during
normal school hours.
The Care Mobile will be at the
following schools on the following days: Monday — Lake
Forest; Tuesday — Stuart;
Wednesday — Lake Forest;
Thursday — Blythe-Bower; and
Friday — Waterville.
The following schools will also
be serving as telemedicine sites
this year: Black Fox Elementary,
Charleston Elementary, Park
View Elementary, Prospect
Elementary and Taylor
Elementary. Park View is new to
the program this year.
“We’re hoping to add a few
more Bradley County schools to
that in the future,” Pohl said.
Telemedicine is also available
at four Polk County schools this
fall — Benton Elementary,
Chilhowee Middle, Copper Basin
Elementary and South Polk
Elementary. She said Care
Mobile staff are currently looking into adding more sites in
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
THIS EXAM ROOM is one of two aboard the Ronald McDonald
Care Mobile which travels among local schools. One room is also
equipped with telemedicine equipment which allows children to be
seen with the help of school nurses. Dignified Services at
Realistic Prices!
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
A NEW CLINIC ROOM inside Waterville Community Elementary
School is expected to help more students be seen concurrently by
staff of the Ronald McDonald Care Mobile. It is available to any local
student, whether attending Waterville or not. Polk County, if more schools
express interest in it.
There are also five Hamilton
County sites, and the Care
Mobile will begin offering services in Grundy County in
January. The Care Mobile is
also working to establish partnerships with area pediatricians’
offices to make their care available via telemedicine.
“It’s a very exciting time for us
right now,” Pohl said.
She explained the Care Mobile
has been able to expand its
services with help from Tennova
Healthcare in Cleveland, the
Bradley Cleveland Public
Education Foundation, the
United Way of the Ocoee Region,
the Children’s Hospital at
Erlanger and more.
The Care Mobile is also partnering with Bradley County
Schools to help educate health
occupations students at Bradley
Central High School and Walker
Valley High School. With help
from a grant the school system
received, the students will be
able to use their classrooms’
telemedicine equipment to regularly interact with the Care
Mobile’s medical professionals
and practice their skills.
This fall, the Care Mobile is
also piloting a program with the
Tennessee Department of Health
which is allowing them to begin
offering routine vaccines
through the Vaccines for
Children program. Pohl noted
this is something mobile health
clinics normally cannot do, per
state law.
“Right now, the flu vaccine is
the only one you can move on a
mobile clinic,” Pohl said.
All the Bradley County and
Polk County Care Mobile stops
and telemedicine sites are open
to students and staff of Bradley
County Schools, Cleveland City
Schools and Polk County
Schools. Pohl said the Care
Mobile will bill a patient’s health
insurance if he or she has it.
However, there is no charge for
children who are uninsured.
Huskins said this is a big help
to families who may not be able
to afford good medical care — or
simply need a more convenient
way to receive medical care.
Pohl noted Bradley County
has a large percentage of people
who work in manufacturing and
often have trouble taking off
work to take their children to
the doctor. If a parent signs a
permission slip, a student at
one of the Care Mobile stops or
telemedicine sites can actually
be seen without a parent present. Parents of children not at
one of the sites still have the
option to drive to the Care
Mobile.
Director of Schools Dr. Linda
Cash recently visited the new
clinic room at Waterville and
said she is glad students have
another new option for medical
care.
“This service allows us to keep
our kids in school, because they
get immediate care,” said Cash.
Huskins added teachers “cannot educate students if they are
out sick.”
While all the local schools
have school nurses, Huskins
noted there are plenty of
instances in which a student
may need to see a doctor on
order to get over an illness. The
sooner students become well
again, the sooner they can
return to class.
For more information about
the Care Mobile and its services,
call 423-298-4469.
WEATHER INFORMATION
2415 Georgetown Road, NE
473-2620
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Trump reveals few details on
‘extreme vetting’ of immigrants
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) —
Donald Trump is calling for
“extreme” vetting of immigrants
seeking admission to the United
States, but he’s offering few
specifics about how that might
work, how long it might last or
how taxpayers would foot the
bill.
Trump, who had previously
called for an unprecedented temporary ban on immigration by
Muslims, vowed Monday to overhaul the country’s screening
process and block those who
sympathize with extremist
groups or don’t embrace
American values.
“Those who do not believe in
our Constitution, or who support
bigotry and hatred, will not be
admitted for immigration into
our country,” Trump said in a
foreign policy address in
Youngstown, Ohio. “Only those
who we expect to flourish in our
country — and to embrace a tolerant American society — should
be issued visas.”
The GOP presidential nominee
has made stricter immigration
measures a central part of his
proposals for defeating the
Islamic State — a battle he said
Monday is akin to the struggle
against communism during the
Cold War. He called for parents,
teachers and others to promote
“American culture” and encouraged “assimilation.”
But he didn’t say which countries or regions would be subject
to the “extreme” vetting, and his
announcement that government
agencies would create the list
suggested that would not happen before the election in
November.
The candidate’s aides said federal agencies would use questionnaires, social media, interviews with family and friends or
other means to vet applicants’
stances on issues including religious freedom, gender equality
and gay rights. Trump did not
clarify how U.S. officials would
assess the veracity of responses
to the questionnaires or how
much manpower it would require
to complete such arduous vetting.
He did say that implementing
the policy overhaul would
require a temporary halt in
immigration from “the most dangerous and volatile regions of the
world that have a history of
“We will stop
processing visas from
those areas until such
time as it is deemed safe
to resume based on new
circumstances or new
procedures.”
— Donald Trump
exporting terrorism.”
“We will stop processing visas
from those areas until such time
as it is deemed safe to resume
based on new circumstances or
new procedures,” Trump said.
The address comes during a
trying stretch for Trump’s presidential campaign. He’s struggled
to stay on message and build a
consistent
case
against
Democrat
Hillary
Clinton,
repeatedly roiling the White
House race with provocative
comments that have deeply frustrated many in his own party.
Clinton has seized on
Republican concerns about
Trump, highlighting the steady
stream of GOP national security
experts who’ve said their party’s
nominee is unfit to serve as
commander in chief. She kept
up that argument Monday as
she campaigned alongside Vice
President Joe Biden in Scranton,
Pennsylvania, a working class
area where both have family
ties.
Biden called Trump’s views
“dangerous” and “un-American.”
He warned that Trump’s false
assertions last week about
President Barack Obama founding the Islamic State extremist
group could be used by extremists to target American service
members in Iraq.
“The threat to their life has
gone up a couple clicks,” Biden
said.
Trump has since said he was
being sarcastic in accusing
Obama of founding the Islamic
State. Still, he directly blamed
the president and Clinton, who
served as Obama’s secretary of
state from 2009 to 2013, for
backing
policies
that
“unleashed” the group, including
withdrawing U.S. troops from
Iraq in late 2011.
He also challenged Clinton’s
fitness to be president, declaring
she lacks the “mental and physical stamina” to take on the
extremists.
Trump was vague about what
he would do differently to decimate the Islamic State in its
strongholds in Iraq and Syria. He
vowed to partner with any country that shares his goal of defeating the extremist group, regardless of other strategic disagreements, and named Russia as a
nation he would like to improve
relations with.
Russia and the U.S. have been
discussing greater coordination
in Syria, where the Islamic State
is part of a volatile mix of groups
fighting for power. But they have
been unable to reach an agreement on which militant groups
could be targeted.
Trump also vowed to end “our
current strategy of nation-building and regime change” — a criticism that extends to policies of
both parties. He panned the
long, expensive Iraq War started
under Republican President
George W. Bush, as well as
Obama’s calls for new leadership
in some Middle East countries
during the pro-democracy Arab
Spring uprisings.
Obama has held up Bush’s
years-long commitment to setting up and securing a new government in Iraq after the initial
invasion as a reason to avoid
U.S. military intervention in
countries like Syria.
Trump’s most specific antiIslamic State proposals centered
on keeping those seeking to
carry out attacks in the West
from entering the United States.
He said attacks involving “immigrants or the children of immigrants” underscore the need to
implement “extreme vetting.”
Trump first announced his
call for banning Muslims last
year during the GOP primary. He
introduced a new standard following the June massacre at a
gay nightclub in Orlando, vowing
to “suspend immigration from
areas of the world where there is
a proven history of terrorism
against the United States,
Europe or our allies, until we
fully understand how to end
these threats.”
That proposal raised numerous questions that the campaign
never
clarified,
including
whether it would apply to citizens of countries like France,
Israel, or Ireland, which have
suffered recent and past attacks.
Google’s search engine directs
voters to November ballot box
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google is pulling
another lever on its influential search engine in
an effort to boost voter turnout in November’s
U.S. presidential election.
Beginning Tuesday, Google will provide a
summary box detailing state voting laws at the
top of the search results whenever a user
appears to be looking for that information. The
breakdown will focus on the rules particular to
the state where the search request originates
unless a user asks for another location.
Google is introducing the how-to-vote
instructions a month after it unveiled a similar
feature that explains how to register to vote in
states across the U.S.
The search giant said its campaign is driven
by rabid public interest in the presidential race
between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. As
of last week, it said, the volume of search
requests tied to the election, the candidates and
key campaign issues had more than quadrupled compared to a similar point in the 2012
presidential race.
TURNOUT EFFECTS
It’s difficult to predict whether Google’s
efforts will have a major impact on how many
people cast ballots, says Michael McDonald, a
University of Florida political scientist who
closely studies election turnout.
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That’s because Google will narrowly target its
voting instructions to people who are actively
seeking that information. Sample requests that
will elicit a helping hand from Google include
“what do I need to vote,” ‘’when can I vote,”
‘’what is the absentee ballot deadline” and “can
I vote by mail.”
The summary boxes won’t appear for broader
requests pertaining to the election, such as
“Clinton” or “Trump.”
That means Google may primarily end up
helping out “politically engaged” people who’d
be likely to cast a November ballot even without
prodding from the world’s most popular search
engine. “It’s an open question on how large the
positive effect will be,” McDonald said.
ONLINE PRODDING
Other online services have previously tried to
encourage more people to vote. In the November
2010 midterm election, for instance, Facebook
posted a “get out the vote” message in the news
feeds of about 60 million people on its social
network. A University of California at San Diego
study of that Facebook effort estimated it boosted voter turnout by about 340,000 people.
Google will also release its registration and
voting guides to nonprofit groups and other
organizations aiming to get more people to the
polls this November.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—11
TUESDAY
SportS
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Robinson makes early splash in Falcons’ deep WR competition
AP photo
ATlAnTA wide receiver
Aldrick Robinson makes a catch
in the first half of Saturday’s preseason game against the
Washington Redskins, in
Atlanta.
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP) — A big
preseason debut with the Falcons allowed
Aldrick Robinson to stand out in a deep
competition at wide receiver, if only for the
day.
Then it was back to the training camp
grind in one of Atlanta’s most competitive
positions.
Robinson showed his big-play potential
with receptions of 47 and 68 yards in
Atlanta’s 23-17 preseason win over
Washington last week. He had three
catches for 118 yards.
“We’ve been working so hard. To have
the success I had, it feels good,” Robinson
said Monday.
The team’s depth chart for Thursday
night’s preseason game at Cleveland
includes Julio Jones and Mohamed Sanu
as the starting receivers. Robinson and
Justin Hardy are the top backups.
Eric Weems, whose chances are greatly
helped by his experience as a return specialist, rookie Devin Fuller, Nick Williams,
J.D. McKissic, Jordan Leslie, Corey
Washington and David Glidden also are
competing for spots.
“I’d say it’s a deep group. That’s what
we’ve learned, number one,” coach Dan
Quinn said after practice Monday.
Jones said Robinson’s big debut was no
fluke.
“He had a great game for us,” Jones
said. “But there is more to come from Al.”
The ability to earn a spot on special
teams could be crucial.
McKissic, a rookie free agent from
Arkansas State, showed excellent speed
when he returned a kickoff 101 yards for
a touchdown to open the second half
against Washington. He added a 14-yard
punt return.
Robinson knows he also must make his
mark on special teams.
“I’m not a starter so I’ve got to find a
way to get on the field on game day to try
to help this team,” he said. “If that’s special teams, I’m willing to do that.”
Hardy is pushing Sanu for the No. 2 job,
but Jones’ status as the leader of the
group is unchallenged. Jones is coming
off his first All-Pro season.
“I like the competitiveness of the group,”
Quinn said. “It certainly helps when the
leader of that group has a standard of how
well he works. When you see him busting
it like that, it’s pretty hard not to follow
suit.”
Robinson signed with Atlanta on March
15, two weeks after the team released veteran Roddy White, who holds most of the
Falcons’ career receiving records.
The Falcons also released receiver and
return specialist Devin Hester before
training camp. Veteran Lance Moore
announced his retirement on Aug. 8, only
three days after signing with the team.
Robinson is one of the most experienced
receivers in camp. He had three starts
while playing in 36 games in four seasons
with Washington.
Bird Feathers: The Falcons broke camp
on Monday afternoon, meaning players
were allowed to move out of the dormitory
at the team’s practice facility. ... DT Chris
Mayes, an undrafted rookie from Georgia,
had X-rays after leaving practice with a
foot injury. There was no immediate
report on the results. ... RB Tevin
Coleman returned but had a limited number of reps after being held out Sunday
because of the heat. ... CB C.J. Goodwin,
See FALCONS, Page 13
Mustang
golfers calm
Hurricanes
Former Colts intern Horn
hoping to make Titans
NASHVILLE (AP) — Undrafted
rookie wide receiver Reece Horn
is near the bottom rung of a
crowded depth chart at wide
receiver for the Tennessee
Titans.
But he is much closer to realizing his dream of becoming a
professional football player than
he was a year ago.
In the summer of 2015, Horn
was in the NFL, but not as a
player. Horn was working for his
hometown Indianapolis Colts as
an intern in their community
relations department. Horn said
he helped out in game operations
and event marketing.
“It was a great experience
while I was there throughout the
summer,” Horn said.
Horn followed that up by
catching 108 passes for 1,396
yards and eight touchdowns his
senior year at the University of
Indianapolis, a Division II program. He also averaged 26.3
yards per punt return.
Although he also had caught
68 passes his junior season in
2014, the Colts were unaware he
was a college football player
when they offered him the
internship.
“No, they didn’t (know),” Horn
said. “I kind of told them that I
played college football at the
University of Indianapolis, but
they didn’t understand the level
or what I was reaching for ultimately.”
So rather than try to press
upon the Colts that he was
indeed a football prospect, the
sports management major just
went about doing the best work
possible for the job they’d hired
him to do.
“I knew I wasn’t there for football, so I just went there and got
my work done,” said Horn, who
also has a minor in business
administration.
“It was kind of like football in a
sense. I showed up early, clocking your ticket, and getting to
work. I learned a lot on the business side on how events run with
the Colts, since I was there, and
I’m sure the Titans are kind of
the same way in a sense.
“There’s a lot of behind-thescenes work in community relations, getting out in the community and reaching as many fans
as possible.”
Once he finished his senior
season and went undrafted, the
Colts did give him a tryout.
“I obviously didn’t get signed,”
Horn said, “but my agent called
me the very next day and said,
‘You’re heading to Nashville for
another tryout with the
Tennessee Titans.’ “
Horn tried out for the Titans
and was eventually signed on
June 3. Now, just as he had to
work to get noticed by the Colts,
he must do the same in
Tennessee.
“Reece has done OK for his
AP photo
See TITANS, Page 13
Tennessee offensive linemAn Dylan Wiesman and the rest of Volunteers’ offensive line
are getting more attention than usual this summer, thanks to a popular Twitter account they started
that pokes fun at their relative anonymity.
Tennessee offensive
linemen gain attention
amid stiff competition
AP photo
Tennessee TiTAns wide receiver Reece Horn (87) runs a
route against the San Diego Chargers during their preseason game
Saturday in Nashville. Horn was an intern with the Indianapolis Colts
last season. Now the former Division II All-American from the
University of Indianapolis is in camp with the Tennessee Titans, trying to win a spot on the roster.
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Tennessee’s offensive linemen are gaining notoriety by joking about their
relative anonymity.
The offensive linemen started a Twitter account
titled Life In The Shadows (@OLPShadows) that is
made up of photos in which they stare into the
camera while the background shows Tennessee
quarterback Joshua Dobbs giving an interview or
posing for a different picture alongside fans. In
many instances, the fans apparently either hadn’t
noticed the linemen or asked one to take a picture
of Dobbs for them.
“We made it as a joke and got Dobbs to retweet
it or say something about it, and it’s got over
4,000 followers now,” junior tackle Brett Kendrick
said. “It’s been fun. We’re working our way out of
the shadows.”
If only they knew which of them would be working their way onto the field this fall.
Tennessee coach Butch Jones has emphasized
competition across the offensive line. Tennessee
is still sorting out the right combination of five
linemen with the Sept. 1 opener against
Appalachian State less than three weeks away.
“It’s a good thing,” offensive line coach Don
Mahoney said. “It’s guys coming out every day
knowing there’s no time for anyone to feel comfortable. That’s where you want to be in a place
like this. It should be that way.”
The players apparently don’t mind the discomfort.
“It’s just making us better as a unit, as players,
See UT, Page 13
From Staff Reports
RINGGOLD, Ga. — Heading
south of the state line Monday,
Walker Valley faced a tough layout at the W indStone Golf Club
in Ringgold, Ga., but was able to
prevail over East Hamilton in a
District 5-AAA nine-hole match.
“WindStone is a tough challenge, with a lot of hazards, but
our boys handled it well,” praised
Coach Bob Williams of his
Mustangs’ 151 winning tally. “We
had three good scores of 37 and
below.”
Junior Parker Gray led the way
for the Stallions with a 1-under
35 over nine holes, despite an
ominous start.
“Parker had a double (bogey) on
the first hole after hitting out of
bounds, but bounced back to
shoot 1-under,” related Coach
Williams.
“Cade (Puryear) and Nick
(McCracken) also had strong
(half) rounds with 1-over 37s.”
Colton Humbard rounded off
the winning score with a 42, while
Logan Pendergrass wasn’t far
behind with a 45.
The Walker Valley girls also
picked up a victory as East
Hamilton has just one female
golfer.
Lady Mustang senior Kelsey
Cassada took the low medalist
honors with a 4-over 40, while
teammate Whitney Kincaid shot a
46.
Madalyn Hembree, the lone
Lady Hurricane, carded a 41.
The Mustang squads will be
back in action Wednesday, when
Soddy-Daisy pays a visit to the
Chatata Valley course.
Raiders taste first defeat
CROSSVILLE — After claiming
victory over their first eight opponents this season, the Cleveland
High boys ran into a tough course
and some stiff competition
Monday in Crossville.
“The course just beat us. Lake
Tansi is a course [where] there is
a premium put on hitting fairways, and we weren't able to do a
lot of that,” commented coach
Nick Cantrell after his Blue
Raiders finished fifth at the
Cumberland Invitational.
“There is a lot of out of bounds,
and we managed to find it several
times. We struggled.”
After shooting a 304 on their
home Cleveland Country Club
course in the season-opening
Bradley Invitational two weeks
ago, which would have tied
Cookeville for the top spot
Monday, the Raiders were well off
See MUSTANGS, Page 13
Biles’ run at olympic history ends with bronze on the beam
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Simone Biles felt
her right foot slip. Then her left.
As she reached down to steady herself on
the balance beam — her first visible misstep
during an astonishing Olympics that
includes three gold medals and some of the
most boundary pushing gymnastics ever —
one thought ran through her head.
“Wow, Simone, that’s five-tenths,” Biles
said.
And that’s it. Nothing more. Sure, winning
a record five gold medals in Rio de Janeiro
would have been cool. Yet going 5 for 5 was
always somebody else’s deal. It wasn’t hers.
Her only regret in earning bronze during the
beam final on Monday centered on those five
seconds when she found herself scrambling
trying to recover from a wobbly landing following a front flip.
“I’m not disappointed in the medal that I
received because anyone would love to have
a bronze at an Olympics Games,” Biles said.
“But I’m disappointed in the routine that I
did and not so much the whole entire routine, just the front tuck I guess. Because the
rest of the routine was pretty good.”
Even if it wasn’t quite good enough to
stand atop the podium for once. Her score of
14.733 ended up well behind the 15.466 put
up Sanne Wevers of the Netherlands and the
15.333 “Final Five” teammate Laurie
Hernandez posted while grabbing silver. Biles
won’t leave Brazil with five golds — something no female gymnast has ever done —
and she’s totally OK with it.
“I think you guys want it more than I do,”
Biles said matter of factly. “I just want to perform the routines that I practice.”
Biles will get one more shot Tuesday in the
floor exercise final, where a victory would let
her join Larisa Latynina, Vera Caslavska and
Ecaterina Szabo as the only women to win
four golds during an Olympic meet. It’s heady
territory for a 19-year-old, one who couldn’t
help but sigh as the admitted perfectionist
waited for her score to flash.
“She wasn’t happy with it,” coach Aimee
Boorman said. “She doesn’t like to make mistakes. It’s life and it happens and yes, she is
human.”
Even if Biles had nailed her routine,
there’s no telling if she would have matched
Wevers and Hernandez. Wevers was stunning
while working across the 4-inch slab of wood
4-feet off the ground, calling it the performance of her life, one that ended with a hug
from Dutch King Willem-Alexander and a
phone call from the prime minister.
See GYM, Page 13
AP photo
simone Biles performs on the balance beam during the
women’s Olympic gymnastics final Monday, in Rio de Janeiro.
12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
ON TAP
Tuesday, Aug. 16
GOLF
East Hamilton, Bradley Central, Cleveland (CCC), 4
SOCCER
Boyd Buchanan at Walker Valley, 5:30
Chattanooga Central at Polk County, 5:30
Grace at Bradley Central, 6
Ooltewah at Cleveland, 7
VOLLEYBALL
Walker Valley at East Hamilton, 6 (JV 5)
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 6:15 (JV 5:15, 9th 4:15)
Wednesday, Aug. 17
GOLF
Soddy-Daisy at Walker Valey (Chatata Valley), 4
Polk County at Tellico Plains (Kahite), 4:15
VOLLEYBALL
McMinn County at Walker Valley, 6 (JV 5)
Thursday, Aug. 18
FOOTBALL
Region 1-6A & 4-5A
Walker Valley at Bradley Central, 7:30
GOLF
McMinn County, Bradley Central, Cleveland (CCC), 4
Polk County at McMinn Central (Ridgewood), 4:15
SOCCER
Red Bank at Cleveland, 7
VOLLEYBALL
Polk County, Knox West at Maryville Christian, 5:30
Baylor at Cleveland, 6:15 (JV 5:15, 9th 4:15)
Friday, Aug. 19
FOOTBALL
Region 1-6A
Karns at Bearden, 7:30
Hardin Valley at Knox West, 7:30
Jefferson County at Knox Christian, 7:30
Lenoir City at Wm. Blount, 7:30
Maryville at Heritage, 7:30
Tennessee at Kingsport Dobyns-Bennett, 7:30
Science Hill has a bye
Region 4-5A
Cleveland at Sevier County, 7:30
McMinn County at McMinn Central, 7:30
Rhea County at Baylor, 7:30
Soddy-Daisy at Red Bank, 7:30
White County at Monterey, 8
Region 3-2A
Polk County at East Ridge, 7:30
Sweetwater at Meigs County, 7:30
Chattanooga Christian at Brainerd, 7:30
Silverdale Academy at Lookout Valley, 7:30
Marion County at Hixson, 7:30
Bledsoe County, Tyner Academy have byes
SOCCER
Walker Valley at Notre Dame, 7
Exhibition
Lee University (M) at King University, TBA
VOLLEYBALL
Bradley Central, Cleveland in Bradley Bash (at BCHS)
Walker Valley at Early Bird Tournament (Hardin Valley)
Saturday, Aug. 20
FOOTBALL
Region 4-5A
Ooltewah vs. Riverdale (at MTSU), 6
SOCCER
Walker Valley at GPS, 10 a.m.
VOLLEYBALL
Bradley Central, Cleveland in Bradley Bash (at BCHS)
Walker Valley at Early Bird Tournament (Hardin Valley)
ON AIR
Sports on TV
Tuesday, Aug. 16
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
MLB — Boston at Baltimore OR Kansas City at Detroit
RIO SUMMER OLYMPICS
8 a.m.
NBCSN — Canoe/Kayak - Sprint Gold Medal Finals (LIVE);
Track & Field - Qualifying Rounds (LIVE); Men’s Swimming
- Open Water 10k Gold Medal Final; Women’s Soccer Semifinal, Brazil vs. Sweden (LIVE); Cycling - Track Events;
Canoe/Kayak - Sprint Gold Meal Finals; Women’s Soccer Semifinal, Germany vs. Canada (LIVE); Badminton Doubles Semifinal; Women’s Basketball - United States vs.
Japan (LIVE); Men’s Weightlifting - Superheavy Gold Medal
Final (LIVE); Men’s Boxing - Light Gold Medal Final;
Wrestling - Greco-Roman Gold Medal Finals; Women’s
Volleyball - Quarterfinal, Brazil vs. China (LIVE); Women’s
Table Tennis - Team Gold Medal Final
9 a.m.
USA — Women’s Volleyball - Quarterfinal, South Korea vs.
Netherlands (LIVE); Men’s Field Hockey - Semifinal,
Belgium vs. Netherlands (LIVE); Badminton - Doubles
Semifinal; Synchronized Swimming - Duet Gold Medal Final
(LIVE); Women’s Table Tennis - Team Bronze Medal; Men’s
Beach Volleyball - Semifinal (LIVE); Badminton - Doubles
Semifinal
10 a.m.
NBC — Track & Field - Qualifying Heats (LIVE): Men’s Triple
Jump - Gold Medal Final, Women’s Discus - Gold Medal
Final; Men’s Water Polo - Quarterfinal, Greece vs. Italy
(LIVE); Track & Field - Qualifying Rounds; Equestrian Team Jumping Qualifying; Women’s Volleyball Quarterfinal, Japan vs. United States (LIVE); Men’s Diving Springboard Semifinal; Women’s Beach Volleyball Semifinal, Maestrini/Rocha (Brazil) vs. Ludwig/Walkenhorst
(Germany) (LIVE)
10:30 a.m.
TELEMUNDO - News Recap; Women’s Soccer - Semifinal,
Sweden vs. Brazil; Synchronized Swimming
Noon
MSNBC — Wrestling - Greco-Roman Qualifying; Women’s
Handball - Quarterfinal, Sweden vs. Norway (LIVE); Men’s
Water Polo - Quarterfinals, Brazil vs. Croatia, Serbia vs.
Spain (LIVE); Sailing - Gold Medal Finals
3 p.m.
NBC UNIVERSO - Women’s Soccer - Semifinal, Germany
vs. Canada; Beach Volleyball - Semifinal; Women’s
Volleyball - Quarterfinal; Boxing - Elimination Matches
5 p.m.
CNBC — Cycling - Track Gold Medal Finals (LIVE);
Women’s Volleyball - Quarterfinal, Russia vs. Serbia (LIVE);
Men’s Field Hockey - Semifinal, Argentina vs. Germany
8 p.m.
NBC — Track & Field - Gold Medal Finals (LIVE): Men’s
High Jump, Women’s 1500m, Men’s 110m Hurdles;
Gymnastics - Individual Event Gold Medal Finals: Men’s
Parallel Bars, Women’s Floor, Men’s High Bar; Women’s
Beach Volleyball - Semifinal, Walsh Jennings/Ross (U.S.)
vs. Seixas de Freitas/Bednarczuk (Brazil) (LIVE)
12:35 a.m. (Wednesday)
NBC — Men’s Diving - Springboard Gold Medal Final
SOCCER
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — UEFA Champions League, Playoff Leg 1, Steaua
Bucuresti vs. Manchester City
FS2 — UEFA Champions League, Playoff Leg 1, BSC
Young Boys vs. Borussia Mönchengladbach
FSN — UEFA Champions League, Playoff Leg 1, Dinamo
Zagreb vs. Salzburg
SOFTBALL
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — Little League Softball World Series, semifinal, at
Portland, Ore.
9:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Little League Softball World Series, semifinal, at
Portland, Ore.
BASEBALL
National League
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Washington
70
47
.598
—
Miami
62
56
.525
8½
New York
59
59
.500 11½
Philadelphia
56
63
.471
15
Atlanta
44
74
.373 26½
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
73
43
.629
—
St. Louis
62
56
.525
12
Pittsburgh
60
56
.517
13
Milwaukee
52
64
.448
21
Cincinnati
48
69
.410 25½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Francisco
66
52
.559
—
Los Angeles
65
52
.556
½
Colorado
56
63
.471 10½
San Diego
50
68
.424
16
Arizona
49
69
.415
17
Monday’s Games
Miami 6, Cincinnati 3
Tampa Bay 8, San Diego 2
Washington 5, Colorado 4
Arizona 10, N.Y. Mets 6
Pittsburgh 8, San Francisco 5
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee (Garza 4-4) at Chicago Cubs (Cahill 1-3), 1:20
p.m., 1st game
L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 11-7) at Philadelphia (Velasquez 8-4),
7:05 p.m.
Miami (Urena 1-3) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 6-1), 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Santana 5-9) at Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-5), 7:10
p.m.
San Diego (Jackson 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Snell 3-5), 7:10
p.m.
Milwaukee (Anderson 7-10) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 125), 8:05 p.m., 2nd game
St. Louis (Garcia 9-8) at Houston (Keuchel 7-11), 8:10 p.m.
Washington (Gonzalez 8-9) at Colorado (Bettis 10-6), 8:40
p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 9-7) at Arizona (Shipley 2-1), 9:40
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Taillon 3-2) at San Francisco (Samardzija 10-8),
10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
San Diego (Friedrich 4-8) at Tampa Bay (Archer 6-16), 1:10
p.m.
St. Louis (Martinez 10-7) at Houston (Fister 11-7), 2:10 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 15-3) at Colorado (Gray 8-6), 3:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Nova 9-6) at San Francisco (Cain 4-7), 3:45 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 9-6) at Philadelphia (Thompson 1-1),
7:05 p.m.
Miami (Cashner 4-9) at Cincinnati (Bailey 2-1), 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Gibson 4-7) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 6-5), 7:10
p.m.
Milwaukee (Nelson 6-12) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 12-4),
8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Niese 8-6) at Arizona (Godley 3-2), 9:40 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-Murphy, Washington, .347; LeMahieu, Colorado,
.337; Ramos, Washington, .331; Braun, Milwaukee, .328;
Prado, Miami, .324; Gonzalez, Colorado, .323; Blackmon,
Colorado, .323; Marte, Pittsburgh, .317; Yelich, Miami, .314;
Diaz, St. Louis, .312.
RUNS-Bryant, Chicago, 90; Arenado, Colorado, 86;
Blackmon, Colorado, 80; Myers, San Diego, 78; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 76; Seager, Los Angeles, 74; Gonzalez,
Colorado, 73; Votto, Cincinnati, 72; Goldschmidt, Arizona,
72; Segura, Arizona, 71; Rizzo, Chicago, 71.
RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 93; Murphy, Washington, 87;
Rizzo, Chicago, 85; Bruce, New York, 85; Gonzalez,
Colorado, 79; Duvall, Cincinnati, 76; Lamb, Arizona, 75;
Kemp, Atlanta, 75; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 74; Bryant,
Chicago, 72; Story, Colorado, 72.
HITS-Segura, Arizona, 144; Prado, Miami, 144; Murphy,
Washington, 144; Seager, Los Angeles, 141; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 140; Blackmon, Colorado, 139; Gonzalez,
Colorado, 137; Yelich, Miami, 133; Marte, Pittsburgh, 129;
Villar, Milwaukee, 128.
DOUBLES-Rizzo, Chicago, 34; Murphy, Washington, 34;
Yelich, Miami, 33; Seager, Los Angeles, 32; Belt, San
Francisco, 31; Gonzalez, Colorado, 30; Freeman, Atlanta,
29; Marte, Pittsburgh, 29; Markakis, Atlanta, 29; Segura,
Arizona, 28; Villar, Milwaukee, 28; Bryant, Chicago, 28.
TRIPLES-Hernandez, Philadelphia, 9; Lamb, Arizona, 8;
Crawford, San Francisco, 7; Revere, Washington, 7;
Harrison, Pittsburgh, 7; Bruce, New York, 6; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 6; Segura, Arizona, 6; Owings, Arizona, 6;
Freeman, Atlanta, 6; Carpenter, St. Louis, 6.
HOME RUNS-Arenado, Colorado, 30; Bryant, Chicago, 28;
Carter, Milwaukee, 27; Duvall, Cincinnati, 27; Story,
Colorado, 27; Bruce, New York, 27; Stanton, Miami, 25;
Rizzo, Chicago, 25; Kemp, Atlanta, 24; Lamb, Arizona, 24.
STOLEN BASES-Hamilton, Cincinnati, 51; Villar,
Milwaukee, 46; Marte, Pittsburgh, 40; Nunez, San
Francisco, 29; Jankowski, San Diego, 25; Segura, Arizona,
23; Myers, San Diego, 21; Perez, Milwaukee, 20; Herrera,
Philadelphia, 19; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 17.
PITCHING-Strasburg, Washington, 15-3; Arrieta, Chicago,
14-5; Cueto, San Francisco, 13-3; Roark, Washington, 13-6;
Hammel, Chicago, 12-5; Fernandez, Miami, 12-6; Lester,
Chicago, 12-4; Scherzer, Washington, 12-7; Hendricks,
Chicago, 11-7; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 11-7; Maeda,
Los Angeles, 11-7.
ERA-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.79; Bumgarner, San
Francisco, 2.11; Hendricks, Chicago, 2.19; deGrom, New
York, 2.29; Arrieta, Chicago, 2.55; Syndergaard, New York,
2.75; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.81; Roark, Washington, 2.81;
Fernandez, Miami, 2.81; Hammel, Chicago, 2.90.
STRIKEOUTS-Scherzer, Washington, 211; Fernandez,
Miami, 198; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 189; Strasburg,
Washington, 176; Syndergaard, New York, 163; Ray,
Arizona, 161; Lackey, Chicago, 156; Cueto, San Francisco,
150; Arrieta, Chicago, 149; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 145.
SAVES-Familia, New York, 39; Jansen, Los Angeles, 35;
Melancon, Washington, 34; Ramos, Miami, 32; Gomez,
Philadelphia, 31; Casilla, San Francisco, 27; Chapman,
Chicago, 24; Rodney, Miami, 21; Papelbon, Washington, 19;
Rondon, Chicago, 18.
American League
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Baltimore
66
51
.564
—
Toronto
67
52
.563
—
Boston
65
52
.556
1
New York
61
57
.517
5½
Tampa Bay
48
69
.410
18
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Cleveland
67
49
.578
—
Detroit
63
55
.534
5
Kansas City
58
60
.492
10
Chicago
56
61
.479 11½
Minnesota
47
71
.398
21
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Texas
70
50
.583
—
Seattle
63
54
.538
5½
Houston
61
57
.517
8
Oakland
52
67
.437 17½
Los Angeles
49
69
.415
20
Monday’s Games
Boston 3, Cleveland 2
N.Y. Yankees 1, Toronto 0
Kansas City 3, Detroit 1
Tampa Bay 8, San Diego 2
Texas 5, Oakland 2
Seattle 3, L.A. Angels 2
Tuesday’s Games
Boston (Rodriguez 2-5) at Baltimore (Gallardo 4-4), 7:05
p.m.
Toronto (Estrada 7-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 6-10), 7:05
p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 9-8) at Cleveland (Kluber 128), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Duffy 9-1) at Detroit (Verlander 12-6), 7:10
p.m.
Minnesota (Santana 5-9) at Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-5), 7:10
p.m.
San Diego (Jackson 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Snell 3-5), 7:10
p.m.
Oakland (Triggs 0-1) at Texas (Harrell 3-2), 8:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Garcia 9-8) at Houston (Keuchel 7-11), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Miranda 1-0) at L.A. Angels (Chacin 3-8), 10:05
p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Toronto (Happ 16-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 7-9), 1:05
p.m.
San Diego (Friedrich 4-8) at Tampa Bay (Archer 6-16), 1:10
p.m.
St. Louis (Martinez 10-7) at Houston (Fister 11-7), 2:10 p.m.
Boston (Price 10-8) at Baltimore (Tillman 15-4), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cleveland (Carrasco 8-6), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 8-9) at Detroit (Sanchez 6-12), 7:10
p.m.
Minnesota (Gibson 4-7) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 6-5), 7:10
p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 4-7) at Texas (Darvish 3-3), 8:05 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels (Skaggs 1-1), 10:05 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-Altuve, Houston, .362; Betts, Boston, .313; Ortiz,
Boston, .312; Bogaerts, Boston, .312; Ramirez, Cleveland,
.311; Trout, Los Angeles, .311; Escobar, Los Angeles, .311;
Cabrera, Detroit, .310; Lindor, Cleveland, .309; Pedroia,
Boston, .308.
RUNS-Donaldson, Toronto, 93; Kinsler, Detroit, 92; Trout,
Los Angeles, 91; Betts, Boston, 91; Altuve, Houston, 86;
Springer, Houston, 84; Desmond, Texas, 83; Bogaerts,
Boston, 82; Machado, Baltimore, 81; Lindor, Cleveland, 80.
RBI-Encarnacion, Toronto, 97; Ortiz, Boston, 92; Pujols, Los
Angeles, 89; Trumbo, Baltimore, 85; Betts, Boston, 84;
Napoli, Cleveland, 84; Correa, Houston, 82; Donaldson,
Toronto, 79; Seager, Seattle, 77; Cabrera, Detroit, 77;
Beltre, Texas, 77.
HITS-Altuve, Houston, 167; Betts, Boston, 155; Bogaerts,
Boston, 148; Pedroia, Boston, 142; Machado, Baltimore,
139; Lindor, Cleveland, 139; Desmond, Texas, 138; Cano,
Seattle, 138; Kinsler, Detroit, 137; Cabrera, Detroit, 137.
DOUBLES-Ortiz, Boston, 37; Betts, Boston, 34; Machado,
Baltimore, 34; Altuve, Houston, 32; Seager, Seattle, 31;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 31; Schoop, Baltimore, 31; Ramirez,
Cleveland, 30; Pedroia, Boston, 29; Correa, Houston, 29.
TRIPLES-Eaton, Chicago, 7; Bradley Jr., Boston, 6; Andrus,
Texas, 6; Miller, Tampa Bay, 5; Donaldson, Toronto, 5;
Dozier, Minnesota, 5; Gardner, New York, 5; Betts, Boston,
5; Ellsbury, New York, 5; Naquin, Cleveland, 5.
HOME RUNS-Trumbo, Baltimore, 34; Encarnacion, Toronto,
33; Frazier, Chicago, 31; Cruz, Seattle, 30; Davis, Oakland,
30; Napoli, Cleveland, 29; Donaldson, Toronto, 28; Ortiz,
Boston, 27; Cabrera, Detroit, 27; Cano, Seattle, 26;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 26; Dozier, Minnesota, 26; Betts,
Boston, 26; Machado, Baltimore, 26.
STOLEN BASES-Davis, Cleveland, 32; Altuve, Houston, 26;
Upton Jr., Toronto, 23; Trout, Los Angeles, 20; Ramirez,
Cleveland, 19; Dyson, Kansas City, 18; Betts, Boston, 18;
Ellsbury, New York, 17; Desmond, Texas, 17; Andrus, Texas,
15; Lindor, Cleveland, 15.
PITCHING-Happ, Toronto, 16-3; Porcello, Boston, 16-3;
Tillman, Baltimore, 15-4; Iwakuma, Seattle, 14-7; Sale,
Chicago, 14-6; Wright, Boston, 13-5; Kluber, Cleveland, 128; Hamels, Texas, 12-4; Sanchez, Toronto, 12-2; Verlander,
Detroit, 12-6.
ERA-Fulmer, Detroit, 2.25; Duffy, Kansas City, 2.82;
Sanchez, Toronto, 2.84; Quintana, Chicago, 2.85; Hamels,
Texas, 2.88; Estrada, Toronto, 2.95; Happ, Toronto, 2.96;
Pomeranz, Boston, 2.99; Wright, Boston, 3.01; Kluber,
Cleveland, 3.21.
STRIKEOUTS-Archer, Tampa Bay, 177; Verlander, Detroit,
170; Price, Boston, 167; Sale, Chicago, 157; Kluber,
Cleveland, 156; Pineda, New York, 152; Hamels, Texas,
149; Pomeranz, Boston, 147; Kennedy, Kansas City, 139;
Duffy, Kansas City, 138.
SAVES-Britton, Baltimore, 37; Rodriguez, Detroit, 33;
Robertson, Chicago, 29; Colome, Tampa Bay, 27; Jeffress,
Texas, 27; Dyson, Texas, 27; Osuna, Toronto, 26; Madson,
Oakland, 25; Cishek, Seattle, 25; Allen, Cleveland, 22.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
Thursday’s Games
Atlanta 23, Washington 17
Philadelphia 17, Tampa Bay 9
Baltimore 22, Carolina 19
N.Y. Jets 17, Jacksonville 13
New England 34, New Orleans 22
Denver 22, Chicago 0
Friday’s Games
Detroit 30, Pittsburgh 17
Minnesota 17, Cincinnati 16
Miami 27, N.Y. Giants 10
Green Bay 17, Cleveland 11
Oakland 31, Arizona 10
Saturday’s Games
Seattle 17, Kansas City 16
Indianapolis 19, Buffalo 18
Los Angeles 28, Dallas 24
Tennessee 27, San Diego 10
Sunday’s Games
Houston 24, San Francisco 13
Thursday’s Games
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
Cincinnati at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Cleveland, 8 p.m.
Oakland at Green Bay, 8 p.m.
Chicago at New England, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Friday’s Games
New York Jets at Washington, 7:30 p.m.
Miami at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 9 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Carolina at Tennessee, 3 p.m.
New York Giants at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
Baltimore at Indianapolis, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Jacksonville, 7:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Houston, 8 p.m.
San Francisco at Denver, 9 p.m.
Kansas City at Los Angeles, 9 p.m.
Tennessee Football Prep Polls
The Associated Press’ Top 10 teams in each of
Tennessee’s six Division I non-financial aid classifications
and in the combined Division II financial aid classification as
selected by Tennessee AP-member sportswriters and
broadcasters. With first-place votes in parentheses, records
through August 15, total points based on 10 points for a firstplace vote through one point for a 10th-place vote:
Division 6A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Maryville (8)
0-0
80
—
2. Oakland
0-0
68
—
3. Whitehaven
0-0
58
—
4. Blackman
0-0
56
—
5. Bradley Central
0-0
43
—
6. Smyrna
0-0
37
—
7. Cordova
0-0
27
—
8. Science Hill
0-0
24
—
9. Ravenwood
0-0
18
—
10. Franklin
0-0
16
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Division 5A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Independence (8)
0-0
80
—
2. Rhea County
0-0
61
—
3. Oak Ridge
0-0
50
—
4. Sevier County
0-0
38
—
5. Hendersonville
0-0
36
—
6. Knoxville West
0-0
25
—
7. Henry County
0-0
24
—
8. Walker Valley
0-0
21
—
9. Farragut
0-0
20
—
(tie)Centennial
0-0
20
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Ooltewah 19. 12,
Hillsboro 17. 13, Brentwood 12.
Division 4A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Knoxville Catholic (6)
0-0
69
—
2. Knoxville Fulton (2)
0-0
60
—
3. Marshall County
0-0
58
—
4. Greeneville
0-0
52
—
5. Pearl-Cohn
0-0
51
—
6. East Hamilton
0-0
32
—
7. Lexington
0-0
24
—
8. Memphis East
0-0
20
—
9. Knoxville Central
0-0
17
—
10. Hardin County
0-0
13
—
(tie) Jackson North Side
0-0
13
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Division 3A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Alcoa (8)
0-0
80
—
2. CPA
0-0
71
—
3. Liberty Magnet
0-0
57
—
4. Notre Dame
0-0
43
—
5. CAK
0-0
41
—
6. Milan
0-0
36
—
7. Elizabethton
0-0
29
—
8. Sequatchie County
0-0
22
—
9. Dyersburg
0-0
17
—
10. Covington
0-0
13
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Division 2A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Trezevant (7)
0-0
79
—
2. Marion County
0-0
71
—
3. Boyd Buchanan
0-0
42
—
4. Adamsville (1)
0-0
41
—
5. Waverly
0-0
35
—
6. Tyner Academy
0-0
29
—
7. McKenzie
0-0
26
—
8. Hampton
0-0
25
—
9. Watertown
0-0
18
—
10. Grace Christian
0-0
17
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Austin-East 16. 12,
Trinity Christian Academy 14.
Division 1A
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Nash. Christian School (7) 0-0
79
—
2. Dresden (1)
0-0
59
—
3. Union City
0-0
49
—
4. South Pittsburg
0-0
45
—
5. Wayne County
0-0
42
—
6. Huntingdon
0-0
35
—
7. Greenback
0-0
33
—
8. Columbia Academy
0-0
26
—
9. Peabody
0-0
20
—
10. Cloudland
0-0
18
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Division II
Record
Pts
Prv
1. Brentwood Academy (6)
0-0
69
—
2. Ensworth
0-0
48
—
3. Baylor
0-0
47
—
4. CBHS
0-0
44
—
(tie)MBA
0-0
44
—
6. McCallie
0-0
34
—
7. MUS
0-0
21
—
8. Lausanne Collegiate
0-0
17
—
9. St. George’s (1)
0-0
16
—
10. Harding Academy
0-0
14
—
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
———
All Associated Press members in Tennessee are eligible to
participate in the high school football poll. Those who voted
for this week’s poll are: Chattanooga Free Press,
Chattanooga; Cleveland Daily Banner, Cleveland; The
Tennessean (Nashville)and(Murfreesboro); State Gazette,
Dyersburg; The Jackson Sun, Jackson; Johnson City Press,
Johnson City; Union City Daily Messenger, Union City.
GOLF
PGA Tour Schedule-Winners
Oct. 15-18 — Frys.com Open (Emiliano Grillo)
Oct. 22-25 — Shriners Hospital for Children Open (Smylie
Kaufman)
Oct. 29-Nov. 1 — CIMB Classic (Justin Thomas)
Nov. 5-8 — Sanderson Farms Championship (Peter
Malnati)
Nov. 5-8 — WGC-HSBC Champions (Russell Knox)
Nov. 12-15 — OHL Classic at Mayakoba (Graeme
McDowell)
Nov. 19-22 — RSM Classic (Kevin Kisner)
Dec. 3-6 — Hero World Challenge (Bubba Watson)
Dec. 10-12 — Franklin Templeton Shootout (Jason DufnerBrandt Snedeker)
Jan. 7-10 — Hyundai Tournament of Champions (Jordan
Spieth)
Jan. 14-17 — Sony Open, Honolulu (Fabian Gomez)
Jan. 21-24 — CareerBuilder Challenge (Jason Dufner)
Jan. 28-Feb. 1 — Farmers Insurance Open (Brandt
Snedeker)
Feb. 4-7 — Waste Management Phoenix Open (Hideki
Matsuyama)
Feb. 11-14 — AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am
(Vaughn Taylor)
Feb. 18-21 — Northern Trust Open (Bubba Watson)
Feb. 25-28 — The Honda Classic (Adam Scott)
March 3-6 — WGC-Cadillac Championship (Adam Scott)
March 10-13 — Valspar Championship (Charl Schwartzel)
March 17-20 — Arnold Palmer Invitational (Jason Day)
March 23-27 — WGC-Match Play Championship (Jason
Day)
March 24-27 — Puerto Rico Open (Tony Finau)
March 31-April 3 — Shell Houston Open (Jim Herman)
April 7-10 — The Masters (Danny Willett)
April 14-17 — RBC Heritage (Branden Grace)
April 21-24 — Valero Texas Open (Charley Hoffman)
April 28-May 2 — Zurich Classic (Brian Stuard)
May 5-8 — Wells Fargo Championship (James Hahn)
May 12-15 — The Players Championship (Jason Day)
May 19-22 — AT&T Byron Nelson Championship (Sergio
Garcia)
May 26-29 — Dean & Deluca Invitational at Colonial (Jordan
Spieth)
June 2-5 — Memorial Tournament (William McGirt)
June 9-12— FedEx St. Jude Classic (Daniel Berger)
June 16-19 — U.S. Open (Dustin Johnson)
June 23-26 — Quicken Loans National (Billy Hurley III)
June 30-July 3 — Barracuda Championship (Greg
Chalmers)
June 30-July 3 — WGC-Bridgestone Invitational (Dustin
Johnson)
July 7-10 — The Greenbrier Classic, ccd., flood
July 14-17 — The Open Championship (Henrik Stenson)
July 14-17 — Barbasol Championship (Aaron Baddeley)
July 21-24 — RBC Canadian Open (Jhonattan Vegas)
July 28-31 — PGA Championship (Jimmy Walker)
Aug. 4-7 — Travelers Championship (Russell Knox)
Aug. 11-14 — Olympics (Justin Rose)
Aug. 11-14 — John Deere Classic (Ryan Moore)
Aug. 18-21 — Wyndham Championship, Sedgefield CC,
Greensboro, N.C.
Aug. 25-28 — The Barclays, Bethpage State Park (Black),
Farmingdale, N.Y.
Sept. 2-5 — Deutsche Bank Championship, TPC Boston,
Norton, Mass.
Sept. 8-11 — BMW Championship, Crooked Stick GC,
Carmel, Ind.
Sept. 22-25 — Tour Championship, East Lake GC, Atlanta
Sept. 30-Oct. 2 — Ryder Cup, Hazeltine National GC,
Chaska, Minn.
World Golf Ranking
Through Aug. 14
1. Jason Day
AUS
14.03
2. Dustin Johnson
USA
11.09
3. Jordan Spieth
USA
10.29
4. Henrik Stenson
SWE
9.27
5. Rory McIlroy
NIR
8.90
6. Bubba Watson
USA
6.64
7. Adam Scott
AUS
6.33
8. Rickie Fowler
USA
6.19
9. Justin Rose
ENG
5.99
10. Danny Willett
ENG
5.81
11. Branden Grace
RSA
5.47
12. Sergio Garcia
ESP
5.44
13. Phil Mickelson
USA
5.12
14. Patrick Reed
USA
4.87
15. Matt Kuchar
USA
4.61
16. Brooks Koepka
USA
4.46
17. Jimmy Walker
USA
4.42
18. Louis Oosthuizen
SAF
4.42
19. Russell Knox
SCO
4.35
20. Hideki Matsuyama
JPN
4.30
21. J.B. Holmes
USA
4.21
22. Jim Furyk
USA
3.87
23. Zach Johnson
USA
3.84
24. Charl Schwartzel
SAF
3.68
25. Brandt Snedeker
USA
3.67
26. Chris Wood
ENG
3.53
27. Rafa Cabrera Bello
ESP
3.48
28. Scott Piercy
USA
3.44
29. Paul Casey
ENG
3.38
30. Kevin Kisner
USA
3.25
31. Justin Thomas
USA
3.18
32. Byeong-Hun An
KOR
3.17
33. Bill Haas
USA
3.17
34. Kevin Na
USA
3.15
35. Emiliano Grillo
ARG
3.13
36. Shane Lowry
IRL
3.13
37. Kevin Chappell
USA
3.08
38. Daniel Berger
USA
3.05
39. Andy Sullivan
ENG
3.03
40. Alex Noren
SWE
3.00
41. Thongchai Jaidee
THA
2.95
42. William McGirt
USA
2.94
43. Lee Westwood
ENG
2.89
44. Soren Kjeldsen
DEN
2.85
45. Danny Lee
NZL
2.84
46. Marc Leishman
AUS
2.78
47. Charley Hoffman
USA
2.74
48. Matthew Fitzpatrick
ENG
2.74
49. Martin Kaymer
GER
2.71
50. Ryan Moore
USA
2.70
51. K.T. Kim
KOR
2.67
52. David Lingmerth
SWE
2.67
53. Tyrrell Hatton
ENG
2.64
54. Daniel Summerhays
USA
2.49
55. Jason Dufner
USA
2.40
56. Kiradech Aphibarnrat
THA
2.37
57. Francesco Molinari
ITA
2.34
58. Bernd Wiesberger
AUT
2.34
59. Harris English
USA
2.31
60. Gary Woodland
USA
2.26
61. Thomas Pieters
BEL
2.23
62. Webb Simpson
USA
2.21
63. James Hahn
USA
2.16
64. Robert Streb
USA
2.02
65. Joost Luiten
NED
2.02
66. Hideto Tanihara
JPN
2.00
67. Thorbjorn Olesen
DEN
1.98
68. Chris Kirk
USA
1.96
69. Smylie Kaufman
USA
1.94
70. Anirban Lahiri
IND
1.93
71. Ryan Palmer
USA
1.90
72. Jaco Van Zyl
SAF
1.90
AP photo
OLYMPICS GOLF MEDALISTS, from left, Henrik Stenson, silver; Justin Rose, gold; and Matt Kuchar,
bronze, pose with their medals after the final round of men’s golf at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
A gold medal for
Rose, and for golf
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The
significance of a gold medal hit
Justin Rose at a moment he
wasn’t expecting.
Long after the medal was
draped around his neck and the
British flag was raised to “God
Save The Queen,” Rose called
his 7-year-old son expecting a
small measure of disappointment. The plan was to take his
son, Leo, to a Chelsea game on
Monday night, except that Rose
missed his flight to England.
What he heard on the phone
were tears of joy, and Rose started to choke up just recounting
the conversation.
“I’ve never seen it resonate so
much with him,” he said. “He’s
just beginning to understand
what sport is all about. He
received a medal for a football
camp this past week. And he
said to me a couple of days ago,
‘Right, Dad, I’ve got my medal.
Now it’s time for you to get
yours.’ He was actually crying
when I phoned him. I’ve never
seen that out of him before. And
that was very, very special.”
Golf officials were still buzzing
Monday over a week that
exceeded expectations. Peter
Dawson, president of the
International Golf Federation,
said the International Olympic
Committee members who came
out to see the golf were all complimentary.
“One of the best golf events
I’ve ever been involved with the
last few days on many levels,” he
said. “I think it’s done golf a
great deal of good.”
It began with Adilson da Silva
of Brazil taking a bow after hitting the first Olympic golf shot in
112 years. It ended with Rose
thrusting his fist and popping
the British crest of his shirt
when he outlasted British Open
champion Henrik Stenson in a
five-hour duel that made golf
look and feel like any other
Olympic sport.
The final round was a sellout,
and fans lined both sides of the
fairway for the conclusion. Many
were waving flags and decked
out in the country’s colors.
It helped that the podium featured three players easily recognized in the world of golf. Rose,
Stenson and bronze medalist
Matt Kuchar all are among the
top 20 in the world and have
combined to play in nine Ryder
Cups over the last decade.
Kuchar seemed as excited
about his bronze as Rose was for
his gold.
The notion that second place
is first loser doesn’t apply in the
Olympics, and that’s what stood
out to Rose.
“For me what was heartening
was hearing comments from
guys who really weren’t in contention for being on the podium
who spoke positively about it
being one of the best golfing
weeks of their lives,” Rose said.
“It’s easy to sit here with the gold
medal and tell you it’s been an
incredible experience for me. But
it was deeper than just the guys
on the podium. It was the wonderful spirit here in Rio, which I
think speaks to the bigger picture of what a success it’s been.”
Then again, maybe the bar
was set too low.
Golf last was in the Olympics
in St. Louis in 1904 when only
two nations were represented —
74 Americans, three Canadians.
That was nine years before
Francis Ouimet won the U.S.
Open at The Country Club, the
event that put golf on front
pages in America for the first
time.
Concerns deepened when disputes over land ownership and
environmental protests delayed
the golf course being built. Then
came the Zika virus scare and
harrowing stories about security
in Rio, and so many players
began dropping out that golf was
perceived as not caring.
The Rio Games were critical.
Golf was assured to being part of
the Tokyo Games in 2020, but
this was seen more as an audition ahead of the International
Olympic Committee vote next
year to determine which sports
stayed beyond that.
Sauers wins Senior
Open Championship
UPPER ARLINGTON, Ohio (AP)
— Gene Sauers closed with a 1under 69 and took advantage of
another collapse by Miguel Angel
Jimenez to win the rain-delayed
U.S. Senior Open on Monday for
his first senior victory.
The 53-year-old from Georgia
finished with three straight pars
to go from a one-shot deficit to a
one-shot victory over Jimenez
and Billy Mayfair at Scioto
Country Club.
It capped a remarkable comeback for Sauers, who nearly died
from a rare disease 10 years ago
and was out of golf for seven
years with pain so severe there
were times he couldn’t even get
off the couch.
“It hasn’t sunk in yet,” he said.
“It’s been a long time, and I’m at
a loss for words right now.”
He finished at 3-under 277.
Jimenez had a one-shot lead
going into the final round, but
blew a lead at a second straight
major. The Spaniard regained the
lead with a birdie on the 15th
hole, a two-shot swing when
Sauers made bogey, only to
bogey the 17th hole.
They were tied on the 18th,
but Jimenez missed the green
and made a second straight
bogey. Sauers made a 5-foot par
putt to win it.
Sauers, who once thought he
might never play again, now is
exempt into the U.S. Open next
year at Erin Hills.
Ten years ago, he was incorrectly diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, ended up in the
hospital for seven weeks and was
given a 25 percent chance of survival. Eventually he was diagnosed with Stevens-Johnson
syndrome, a rare disorder of the
skin and mucous membranes
that causes the skin on his
extremities to burn from the
inside out. He was out of the
game for seven years
AP photo
GENE SAUERS celebrates
winning the 2016 U.S. Senior
Open, at the Scioto Country
Club in Upper Arlington, Ohio,
Monday.
“Being back to playing with
these guys, it’s a pleasure,” he
said. “I didn’t think I’d ever be
here. I told my wife, when I was
See SENIOR, Page 13
Ko and the women get their shot at Olympic golf
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Lydia
Ko could hear the cheers as she
played the Olympic Golf Course,
only they weren’t for her.
Not yet, anyway.
The No. 1 player in women’s
golf played five holes about the
time Justin Rose and Henrik
Stenson were battling to the very
end for the sport’s first Olympic
medals in 112 years. She did
make it to the 18th green in time
to see the medals, and she got a
photo with Rose and his gold.
“Hopefully, his vibes came off
to me,” she said Monday.
Now it’s the women’s turn.
Even as the men were finishing up the final round, the
women were allowed to resume
preparations for the start of their
event Wednesday. Ko didn’t even
wait that long. She was on the
course in the morning to watch
fellow her fellow Kiwi golfers,
Danny Lee and Ryan Fox.
“I don’t think I’ve ever been
such a huge fan,” she said.
“Normally, I love my sleep.
Yesterday, I slept a little less. I
told them both, ‘I don’t think I
ever woke up at 7 a.m. to watch
someone else play.’”
Ko is the favorite, as she is
most weeks on the LPGA Tour.
She already has won four times
this year, including her second
major at the ANA Inspiration in
California, and she was runnerup to Brooke Henderson of
Canada in the KPMG Women’s
PGA Championship.
What’s special about this week
is playing for the flag, which she
has never done as a professional.
Ko is not eligible for the
Solheim Cup, which is for
Americans and Europeans. New
Zealand does not have the depth
to form a team for the
International Crown, which was
the closest event golf had to the
Olympics before the Olympics
came along.
There is no team component to
golf in the Rio de Janeiro
Olympics, so this week really is
no different. It just feels that
way.
“Even though there I’m the
only New Zealand woman golfer
in this week, I think it’s not more
about our sport, but just every
other athlete and every other
athlete from New Zealand,” Ko
said. “I do feel that team vibe. I
heard that some of the athletes
might come out and watch me
play, and I think even more then
I’ll be super excited to see the
Silver Fern and see all the logos.”
It’s a quick turnaround for the
women. The competition starts
Wednesday so the Olympics can
conclude ahead of Sunday’s closing ceremony. Some of the men
were able to take part in the
opening ceremony and spent the
early part of the week going to
other events.
Ko chose not to be part of the
opening ceremony and didn’t
See WOMEN, Page 13
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—13
With record 47-game win streak, Sooners ruled the ’50s
By the 1950s, college football’s
balance of power had drifted
from the elite Eastern schools to
the Midwest, where Bud
Wilkinson’s Oklahoma Sooners
dominated the polls and set a
record winning streak that still
stands.
Over the decade, the Sooners
appeared in nearly 95 percent of
The Associated Press polls, with
their 26 weeks at No. 1 by far the
most of any team. They won
three national championships
and rolled to 47 straight victories
between 1953 and 1957.
“I’ve only known one genius in
my lifetime. His name was Bud
Wilkinson,” the late Sooners
quarterback and Colorado coach
Eddie Crowder famously said.
While the Sooners’ unprecedented success dominates any
conversation about college football in the 1950s, the era
brought some notable changes.
In 1953, the NCAA implemented stricter substitution rules
requiring teams to go back to the
one-platoon system used before
1941 (free substitution returned
in the 1960s). More penalties
were called after back judges
were added to officiating crews in
1955, the option to run or pass
for two points after a touchdown
came in 1958 and the goal posts
were widened from 18 feet, 6
inches to 23-4 in 1959.
The 1950s also saw greater
reliance on the running game. Of
the decade’s Heisman Trophy
winners, nine were running
backs, including Alan Ameche,
Howard “Hopalong” Cassady,
John David Crow and Billy
Cannon. The other was Notre
Dame
quarterback
Paul
Hornung, a converted running
back who became one of the
NFL’s greatest halfbacks for the
Green Bay Packers.
At Oklahoma, Wilkinson
unveiled the split-T offensive formation he learned from his mentor, Don Faurot, and in the mid1950s he came up with a hurryup offense allowing the Sooners
to capitalize on their superior
conditioning. Wilkinson also is
credited with introducing the 5-2
defensive alignment — five defen-
sive linemen, two linebackers —
to the college game. That was a
change from the seven-man
defensive fronts that were common.
Wilkinson’s recruiting philosophy required that his players not
only be fast and strong but football smart. He placed a premium
on intelligence because of his low
tolerance for mistakes.
“The fact our men believe they
can use their brains to defeat a
physically superior opponent
pays dividends you can’t reckon
with,” Wilkinson once said.
Rarely were the Sooners outmanned, not with Crowder, Billy
Vessels and Tommy McDonald
among 13 consensus AllAmericans on the field during the
‘50s.
With all that talent and
Wilkinson’s innovations, the
Sooners won conference titles
every year from 1950-59 and
national championships in ‘50,
‘55 and ‘56. But for all the titles,
the Sooners of that era are best
remembered for their 47-game
run in which they outscored
their opponents by an average of
35-6. No major-college team
since has come close to winning
so many in a row.
The streak started in October
1953 with a 19-14 win over rival
Texas in Dallas. The Sooners
ended that season 9-1-1 and
went 10-0, 11-0 and 10-0 the
next three years to extend the
streak to 40 games. Win No. 47
was a 39-14 road victory over
Missouri on Nov. 9, 1957. The
streak ended the following week
when the Sooners, as 18-point
favorites, lost 7-0 to Notre Dame
on their home field.
The star running back on that
OU team, Jakie Sandefer, said, “I
remember coach Wilkinson coming into the dressing room and
saying, ‘I’m proud of you guys.
You’ve been part of winning 47
straight games. That is something no major college team will
ever do again.’”
BEST PROGRAMS
Oklahoma appeared in 94.83
percent of all polls taken.
Michigan State, 74.14 percent.
AP photo
Notre Dame, 71.55 percent.
OklAhOmA cOAch Bud WilkinsOn is hoisted to the shoulBEST RIVALRY
Michigan vs. Ohio State. The ders of quarterback Rodger Taylor, left, and fullback Bill Brown, right,
1950 “Snow Bowl” played in a for the victory ride off the field at the Orange Bowl in Miami, in this
blizzard in Columbus — the No. Jan. 2, 1956, file photo.
8 Buckeyes lost 9-3 — started a
decade in which the teams split
10 games. One or both teams
were ranked in seven of those.
MAIN TAKEAWAY
The decade belonged to From Page 11
Wilkinson and his Oklahoma
Sooners, with their three nation- the pace in the 18-hole format will be interested to see how they
rebound today. Fortunately, we
al championships, 47-game win with a 341.
Allen
Swetman
paced are back in Cleveland today and
streak and 93-10-2 record. The
Sooners’ dominance overshad- Cleveland with a 79, while Drew Thursday.”
The Raider teams will take on
owed the championship program Linkous and Matt Marino both
Woody Hayes started building at carded 87s, plus Cade Caprara Bradley Central and East
Hamilton this afternoon at CCC,
Ohio State. The decade also was shot an 88.
“We need to have a short mem- plus tangle with the Bears and
the dawn of the game’s television
era, though there were no ory,” Coach Cantrell assessed. “I McMinn County on Thursday.
national broadcasts until the
1960s.
Mustangs
Senior
Titans
From Page 12
From Page 11
AP photo
stAnfOrd running BAck Christian McCaffrey (5) runs
past Oregon defenders in Stanford, Calif., in this 2015 file photo.
The Ducks (two) and Cardinal (three) have won all the Pac-12
titles since the conference broke into divisions in 2011. The two
schools meet on the field again Nov. 12.
Six games most likey
to determine playoffs
(AP) — If you can only watch
six games this college football
season, well, you should probably consider changing jobs or
something because that is no
way to live. If that truly is your
plight, though, we're here to
help.
Out of the more than 700
FBS regular season games
(conference championships
not included) scheduled to be
played from Aug. 27 (Aug. 26,
Australia time) to Dec. 2, these
six will have the greatest
impact on which teams reach
the College Football Playoff:
OKLAHOMA vs. HOUSTON
at NRG Stadium in Houston,
Sept. 5
The "neutral site" is about a
10-minute drive from the
Cougars' campus, but expect
plenty of Sooners support at
the home of the NFL's Texans.
The stakes are high for the
Sooners, but Oklahoma can
slip here and recover to make
the playoff. This nonconference game makes the list
because of its importance to
Houston and the American
Athletic Conference. If Tom
Herman's team pulls the
upset, it could vault the
Cougars and by extension the
entire AAC into the playoff
conversation. Lose and the
playoff pretty much comes off
the table for the Cougars — in
week one!
OKLAHOMA at TCU
Oct. 1
Since the Horned Frogs
joined the Big 12 in 2012,
every game against Oklahoma
has been decided by one score.
The Sooners and Frogs have
split the last two, with the winner taking home at least a
share of a conference title.
There will still be a long way to
go in the season, and the Big
12 has the feel of a conference
that will produce an upset or
two from the middle of the
pack. But these are the best
two rosters and the winner in
Fort Worth has the inside
track to being the league's One
True Champion — even
though it has retired the slogan.
CLEMSON at FLORIDA STATE
Oct. 29
The winner of this game has
won the last seven Atlantic
Division titles and as Jimbo
Fisher and Dabo Swinney have
grown their programs into
national title contenders, it
has become one of the most
significant rivalries in the
country. In each of the last
three seasons, the winner has
gone into the postseason with
a chance to win the national
championship. There is certainly a possibility both the
Seminoles and Tigers could be
playoff teams in 2016, but
only one can win the ACC and
this showdown in Tallahassee
could end up being a playoff
elimination game.
ALABAMA at LSU
Nov. 5
Since the Tigers' 9-6 Game
of the Century victory in 2011,
the Crimson Tide has won five
straight in the series. As Ole
Miss can attest, beating
Alabama does not guarantee
an SEC West championship.
But no SEC West team has
won the division in college
football during Nick Saban's
time at Alabama without beating the Tide. Can Alabama's
defense derail a second consecutive Leonard Fournette
Heisman Trophy campaign?
Can the Tigers keep the Tide
from a third straight playoff
appearance?
STANFORD at OREGON
Nov. 12
The Ducks (two) and
Cardinal (three) have won all
the Pac-12 titles since the conference broke into divisions in
2011. The twist last season
was Oregon won the head-tohead meeting and probably
spoiled Stanford's playoff
hopes, though the Cardinal
still went on to win the conference. The Pac-12 could be
looking at another season with
a two-loss champion. And
Washington might very well
have a say, for once, in who
wins the North. But until
proven otherwise this is the
Pac-12's most important
game.
MICHIGAN at OHIO STATE
Nov. 26.
Michigan State fans, feel
free to be a little slighted — the
Spartans have won two of the
past three Big Ten titles, after
all. That said, the second
Harbaugh-Meyer
matchup
sets up to be the first of many
to decide the Big Ten East, and
send
the
winner
to
Indianapolis looking to win not
only a conference title but a
spot in the playoff.
opportunity,” Titans coach Mike
Mularkey. “He hasn’t gotten a lot
of opportunities in camp. But
that will come in the preseason
games, where he is going to have
to show what he can do. It’s just
hard to get reps with 11 receivers
(in camp). He’s done OK. He
works as hard as everybody else.”
Designer unveils 9/11
cleats for Williamson
NASHVILLE (AP) — A custom
footwear designer says he has
Women
From Page 12
arrive until Saturday because she
thought a week in Rio would be
too much. She also is not staying
in the athletes village, though she
did eat there over the weekend.
“Just to be in the team vibe,
wear the uniform, go out yesterday and watch the guys play, it’s
been really great so far,” she said.
“And it’s only going to go up.”
This is the second time in three
years that the women have played
on the same course a week after
the men. The U.S. Open staged
the men and women at Pinehurst
No. 2 in 2014, and the USGA
pulled it off exceptionally well.
The course played shorter, but
the women still were hitting
roughly the same shots into
green.
Ko is expecting the same from
what little she has seen of the
Olympic Golf Course.
“I’m pretty sure I do not hit a 9iron at the same place Bubba
Watson is hitting a 9-iron,” she
said.
Falcons
From Page 11
a converted WR, was held out
with an undisclosed strain.
Quinn said he is hopeful Goodwin
will return Tuesday and play
Thursday night.
in the hospital, I didn’t think I
was ever coming out. She kept
me strong.”
He had 17 top-10 finishes in
five years on the senior tour but
hadn’t managed a win. He last
won a PGA Tour event in 2002.
For Jimenez, it was the third
consecutive tournament he let a
lead slip away.
Three weeks ago at Carnoustie
in the Senior British Open, the
52-year-old Spaniard took a
four-stroke lead into the last
day, then shot 75 and tied for
third — three strokes behind
winner Paul Broadhurst. Last
week in the 3M Championship,
he was a stroke ahead entering
the final round and ended up
losing when Joe Durant shot 63
and eagled the first hole of a
playoff.
He led by a stroke after the
third round at Scioto on
Saturday but double-bogeyed the
second hole to let Sauers overtake him, then couldn’t get it
done at the end after Sauers let
him back in it.
“I’m human, you know?”
Jimenez said. “I’m going to make
bogeys. I’m going to make
birdies. It’s the way it’s coming.
That moment is not on my side.”
Mayfair carded four birdies
against a single bogey for a 3under 67. Ian Woosnam was the
only other player under par, finishing fourth at 1-under after a
68.
“All four days we saw different
golf courses,” Mayfair said. “Kind
of medium on Thursday. It wasn’t
all that bad, that windy, but it
was still hard to play on Friday.
Of course, Saturday the wind
started blowing. It was blowing all
over the place. Today it was wet
and soft and hardly any wind. We
got to see Scioto in four different
ways on four different days.”
“To be out there and do my
best routine ever in such a big
final was amazing,” Wevers said.
It needed to be for Wevers to
edge Hernandez. The 16-year-old
is the youngest member of the
“Final Five” that have turned the
Rio Olympic Arena into a showcase highlighting the widening
gap between the U.S. women’s
program and the rest of the
world. Yet she hardly looked
overcome by the moment as she
dazzled on her favorite event
while securing a seventh medal
for the American women.
“I’m very comfortable when I’m
up there,” Hernandez said. “It’s
incredible to be able to tumble on
four inches of wood.”
Something that comes second
nature to Hernandez, who regularly turns any random street
curb into a chance to practice.
She did it on her way to the
venue on Monday, helping calm
any lingering jitters.
“I don’t really think about it,”
Hernandez said. “I could probably
sprint on the beam if I want to.”
The medal also gave the relentlessly charismatic Hernandez a
chance to step into the spotlight
after national team coordinator
Martha Karolyi opted to keep her
budding star out of the allaround competition during qualifying. Hernandez accepted the
assignment without complaint,
her voice among the loudest in
the arena during Biles’ goldclinching floor exercise. Biles
returned the favor after
Hernandez stuck her dismount,
the two good friends laughing
during the seemingly interminable wait for the score.
“She does those same exact
routines in practice,” Biles said.
“I’m so glad she could share that
with the world and show how
hard she’s been training.”
Hernandez turned professional
shortly before arriving in Rio and
could fill the void at the top of the
U.S. program if Biles decides to
take a break after the games. True
stardom awaits her once she
returns home, a notion Biles is
vaguely aware of but trying to tune
out. She still considers herself
“normal” even as other Olympic
athletes stop her in the village to
pose for selfies or say “Hi.”
There will be a sense of relief
when she finishes her Brazilianthemed floor routine on Tuesday,
an event where she’s the reigning
world champion and put on a display during the all-around final
that Karolyi called the closest
thing to perfection in the sport.
One momentary lapse on Monday
did nothing to diminish Biles’
extraordinary time in Rio.
Also Monday, Ri Se Gwang of
North Korea took gold in men’s
vault, followed by Denis Abliazin of
Russia and Kenzo Shirai of Japan.
Eleftherios Petrounias of Greece
powered his way to gold on still
rings. Arthur Zanetti of Brazil took
silver with Abliazin capturing
bronze.
options at center. Sophomore
Jack Jones made one start at
guard last season but also can
play center. Wiesman also could
move to center if necessary.
But the biggest uncertainty is
at the tackle spots as Tennessee
attempts to replace two-year
starter Kyler Kerbyson.
Hall, redshirt freshman Drew
Richmond and Kendrick are the
top three candidates for the two
starting spots. Kendrick made
five starts at right tackle last season and had two starts at left
tackle in 2014. Hall started
Tennessee’s final seven games at
right tackle as a freshman last
season but missed spring practice to recover from a shoulder
injury. Richmond, who was rated
as a five-star prospect by Rivals,
believes he got better while sitting
out last season.
“I just learned how to work
harder, how to grow, pay more
attention to detail ... to be a good
player in this conference,”
Richmond said.
Mahoney said Richmond has
been focusing on left tackle and
Hall has been working primarily
on the right side while Kendrick
could play either spot.
Jones said he isn’t putting a
timetable on when he wants to
decide on his starting five.
“In the offensive line, you don’t
have a starting five,” Jones said.
“We need a starting six, seven,
eight. In this conference, with the
level of physicality, that’s the way
I look at it”
Whichever combination ends
up on the field, that group will try
to build on the momentum established last season when
Tennessee ranked second in the
SEC in rushing and won its final
six games. That late-season
surge has put Tennessee in the
spotlight as it heads into 2016 as
the SEC Eastern Division
favorite.
Much of that attention has
gone to the guy the linemen are
trying to protect. Through the
power of social media, they’ve
found a way to make the most of
the situation.
“If our quarterback’s getting a
lot of attention that means we’re
doing something right,” Kendrick
said. “Keep him healthy and
being able to walk around and
(pose for) those pictures.”
given a pair of Nike cleats a patriotic look for Titans linebacker
Avery Williamson to wear during
Tennessee’s opener on Sept. 11.
True Blue Customs has posted
a picture of the star-spangled
cleats on Instagram. The shoe is
mostly painted blue with white
stars. The Nike “swoosh” logo is
painted in red and white stripes.
On the back of the cleats is the
date 9-11-01 with the message
“Never Forget.” An outline of the
twin towers stands in for the 11.
Williamson may need permission from the NFL to wear the
cleats. ESPN reports former
Panthers cornerback Josh
Norman was fined $5,000 by the
league last year for wearing patriotic cleats.
Titans spokesman Robbie
Bohren says Williamson hasn’t
decided yet whether he’ll wear
the cleats.
Gym
From Page 11
UT
From Page 11
as even men, just knowing that
we have to go out each day and
compete for our job,” sophomore
tackle Chance Hall said.
Tennessee has much more
experience in the middle of the
line than on the outside.
Junior
guard
Jashon
Robertson has made 23 starts
over the last two seasons and has
been praised by Mahoney for his
consistency throughout training
camp. Senior guard Dylan
Wiesman started all 13 games at
guard last season and earned
second-team all-Southeastern
Conference honors. Junior
Coleman Thomas also had 13
starts last season — 12 at center
and one at right tackle — but still
faces competition this summer.
Mahoney said Thomas started
training camp slowly while dealing with the flu but has come on
strong lately.
Tennessee’s versatility on the
line gives the Vols plenty of
GOLD &
DIAMONDS
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5301 BRAINERD ROAD
(423) 499-9162
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Some needed R’s in life: rest, resolve, recreation
Have you been on an elevator this
month? Sociologists can have a field
day in just the average elevator.
Social mores and conformity are on
vivid display as to how each and everyone usually faces the exact same way
while on this tiny piece of real estate.
Last week I had the opportunity to
ride an elevator while attending a conference. Another thought flashed before
my eyes and I thought that it may be
beneficial for you all as well.
An elevator has a purpose and a destination to fulfill. It also has the ability
to complete the tasks that it is instructed to complete. But without the effort
involved to instruct it as to which floor
you want to go to, it will have all of this
potential, but no achievement. The
same can be said of a person’s choice
to pursue an education.
This school year has begun for our
OUR
COUNTY
Bradley County
Mayor
D. Gary Davis
area and community schools. There are
amazingly capable educators with great
facilities who are awaiting the new students for this school year. The plan is
there, the educational components are
scheduled for a successful year. But
without each student applying themselves and trying, this may not be the
optimal school year and the “wrong”
level may be chosen.
What can each family and communi-
ty do to help ensure success? I am glad
that you asked. There once was a
phrase that included the “three R’s” of
education, known then as Reading,
’Riting and ’Rithmetic. I think that a
new list is needed to help ensure success: Rest, Resolve and Recreation.
Rest: I know how much I enjoy a new
day after adequate rest. The stress level
alone of trying to find your place in a
group of people (known as a classroom)
is enormous. Then add on top of this
the added pressure of literally learning
new skills in educational, athletic or
non-sports extracurricular activities.
Any one of these are stressful to not
only the mind, but also the body.
Adequate rest dramatically helps in all
of these, and helps to ensure success.
Resolve: It may be a brand that your
family purchases to clean your carpets,
but it’s also the “ability to focus deter-
mination in an effort to complete a task
or solve a problem.” This kind of
resolve will not only help us during our
educational pursuits, but will also
prove more and more beneficial as time
goes along in one’s life. The ability to
complete what one starts is yet another
“step” needed in achieving a good
grade, or a good life.
Recreation: It has often been thought
of as something that is not as important as other subjects. This may have
been part of the thinking that has led
to a dramatic increase of what were
once thought of as “adult” diseases and
symptoms that are now showing up in
younger and younger children. The
ability to find a sport or recreational
path that can provide not only a benefit
to your health, but to also allow for a
healthy disconnect and release from
the everyday tensions of life is sure to
be of benefit as one enjoys the fruits of
their labor. It is sad to see those who
fulfill the statement that “When young,
many will spend their health to attain
wealth, but when older, be forced to
spend their wealth in search of their
health.”
This year if this method above
describes you and your family at the
beginning of this new school year,
please accept my congratulations for
starting this year off on a great note. If
you are like me and need a gentle
reminder occasionally to scan the
directory of available options before
picking the correct floor “or educational
path,” please know that we are not
alone.
We are surrounded by ordinary people who do extraordinary things to
ensure that Bradley County continues
to be, Tennessee at its best!
DEAR
ANNIE
Viewpoint
“There are two ways to slice easily through life; to believe everything or to doubt
everything. Both ways save us from thinking.”
— Alfred Korzybski, Polish-American linguist (1879-1950)
An explanation on why
I forgive John Hinckley
A federal judge has ruled
that John Hinckley Jr., the
mentally disturbed man who
tried to assassinate my father
35 years ago, should be set
free.
Many people, including
members of my own family,
think it's a terrible injustice that
Hinckley, now 61, is being
allowed to leave the mental
hospital and live permanently
with his elderly mother in
Virginia.
I don't.
Before I explain, I'd like to
remind people of what my
father said and did in the days
following the events of March
30, 1981.
When I walked into his hospital room the next day and
saw my wounded father, the
first thing he said to me, after
"Good
morning,"
was
"Michael, if you're ever going
to be shot, don't be wearing a
new suit."
What? I thought to myself.
"Well, yesterday I was shot."
"I know, father. I know."
"Well, I was wearing a brand
new suit I had just picked up
the day before. And I'm telling
you, if you're going to get shot
don't be wearing a new suit.
"When I was on the gurney
they cut that suit off me and
the last time I saw it it was in
shreds in the corner of my hospital room. That's what they
do. They cut it off you."
My father was only half done
with his story.
"That young man who shot
me, John Hinckley Jr., I understand his parents are in the oil
biz."
"Yes they are, Dad."
"I understand they live in
Denver."
"Yes they do, Dad.
"Do you think they have any
money?"
"Dad," I said, "they are in the
oil business and live in Denver.
Of course they have money."
My dad looked at me and
said, "Well, do you think they'd
buy me a new suit?"
Humor was my dad's way of
making strangers feel comfortable in his presence. He was
the same way with his family.
Before my father was well
enough to go back to the White
House he did something completely serious. He said he had
forgiven Hinckley.
Not only that, he wanted to
go to meet Hinckley face-toface and tell him that he had
forgiven him.
Hinckley's doctors didn't
think that was a good idea
because
Hinckley was
too mentally
unstable, so it
never happened.
But
it
proves, as I
Reagan
always like to
say, that my father didn't just
recite "The Lord's Prayer," he
lived it.
A lot of people can't forgive
Hinckley even today.
They were shocked in 1981
when he was found not guilty
by reason of insanity and they
were angry when they found
out he'd become eligible for
release some day.
Because of Hinckley, the
laws were changed. Today if
you shoot at the president you
stay in prison for life, no matter
how crazy you are.
Over the years all of us in
the families hurt by Hinckley
have watched the courts and
doctors slowly but surely
release him through the mental health system.
Hinckley's not a threat to my
family or anyone else's. But
he's not totally free and never
will be.
He may not have bars to
look through, but he has his
own type of jail. People will be
watching him all the time. So
will the Secret Service.
At first I was very upset and
angry when Hinckley got off on
the insanity defense. How
could a person shoot the president of the United States and
be allowed to ever have any
freedom at all?
Fifteen years ago I was still
angry. But 15 years later I want
to be more like my father and
have a forgiving heart, not an
angry heart.
So at the same time John
Hinckley has been set free,
maybe I have been too.
(About the writer: Michael Reagan is the son of President
Ronald Reagan, a political consultant, and the author of "The
New Reagan Revolution.” He is the founder of the email service
reagan.com and president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation.
Visit his websites at www.reagan.com and www.michaelereagan.com. Send comments to [email protected].
Follow @reaganworld on Twitter. Copyright ©2016 Michael
Reagan. His column, “Making Sense,” is distributed exclusively
by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Opinions expressed in
guest “Viewpoints” do not necessarily reflect the views of the
Cleveland Daily Banner.)
TODAY IN HISTORY
(AP) — Today is Tuesday, Aug.
16, the 229th day of 2016. There
are 137 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Aug. 16, 1777, American
forces won the Battle of
Bennington in what was considered a turning point of the
Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In 1812, Detroit fell to British
and Indian forces in the War of
1812.
In 1858, a telegraphed message from Britain’s Queen
Victoria to President James
Buchanan was transmitted over
the recently laid trans-Atlantic
cable.
In 1937, the American
Federation of Radio Artists was
chartered.
In 1948, baseball legend Babe
Ruth died in New York at age 53.
In 1954, Sports Illustrated was
first published by Time Inc.
In 1956, Adlai E. Stevenson
was nominated for president at
the
Democratic
National
Convention in Chicago.
In 1962, The Beatles fired their
original drummer, Pete Best,
replacing him with Ringo Starr.
In 1976, the ABBA single
“Dancing Queen” was released in
Sweden.
In 1977, Elvis Presley died at
his Graceland estate in Memphis,
Tennessee, at age 42.
In 1978, James Earl Ray, convicted assassin of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., told a Capitol
Hill hearing he did not commit
the crime, saying he’d been set
up by a mysterious man called
“Raoul.”
In 1987, 156 people were killed
when Northwest Airlines Flight
255 crashed while trying to take
off from Detroit; the sole survivor
was 4-year-old Cecelia Cichan.
In 1991, Pope John Paul II
began the first-ever papal visit to
Hungary.
Ten years ago: A former
American school teacher, John
Mark Karr, was arrested in
Thailand as a suspect in the
1996 slaying of child beauty
queen JonBenet Ramsey in
Boulder, Colorado. (Karr’s confession that he had killed
JonBenet was later discredited.)
New York City officials released
new tapes of hundreds of heartwrenching phone calls from the
World Trade Center on 9/11,
along with other emergency transcripts. Alfredo Stroessner, the
anti-communist general who’d
ruled Paraguay for decades, died
in Brasilia, Brazil, at age 93.
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama, on a Midwest
bus tour, implored Iowans during
a stopover in Peosta to share
ideas with him about how leaders
could give an economic jolt to the
nation’s heartland. Chancellor
Angela Merkel of Germany and
French
President
Nicolas
Sarkozy, meeting in Paris, called
for greater economic discipline
and unity among European
nations but declined to take
immediate financial measures.
One year ago: Trigana Air
Service Flight 257, an Indonesian
ATR 42-300, crashed during a
domestic flight; all 54 people on
board were killed. Tens of thousands of Brazilians demonstrated
their discontent with President
Dilma Roussef.
Today’s Birthdays: Actress
Ann Blyth is 88. Actor Gary
Clarke is 83. Actress Julie
Newmar is 83. Actor John
Standing is 82. College Football
Hall of Famer and NFL player Bill
Glass is 81. Actress Anita Gillette
is 80. Actress Carole Shelley is
77. Country singer Billy Joe
Shaver is 77. Movie director
Bruce Beresford is 76. Actor Bob
Balaban is 71. Ballerina Suzanne
Farrell is 71. Actress Lesley Ann
Warren is 70. Actor Marshall
Manesh is 66. Rock singer-musician Joey Spampinato is 66.
Actor Reginald VelJohnson is 64.
TV personality Kathie Lee Gifford
is 63. Rhythm-and-blues singer
J.T. Taylor is 63. Movie director
James Cameron is 62. Actor Jeff
Perry is 61. Rock musician Tim
Farriss (INXS) is 59. Actress
Laura Innes is 59. Singer
Madonna is 58. Actress Angela
Bassett is 58. Actor Timothy
Hutton is 56. Actor Steve Carell
is 54. Former tennis player
Jimmy Arias is 52. Actor-singer
Donovan Leitch is 49. Actor Andy
Milder is 48. Actor Seth Peterson
is 46. Country singer Emily
Robison (The Dixie Chicks) is 44.
Actor George Stults is 41. Singer
Vanessa Carlton is 36. Actor
Cam Gigandet is 34. Actress
Agnes Bruckner is 31. Singermusician Taylor Goldsmith
(Dawes) is 31. Actress Cristin
Milioti is 31. Actor Shawn Pyfrom
is 30.
Dear Annie: I apparently
failed as a parent at teaching
my daughter financial responsibility. I raised her as a single
parent and worked hard to provide for us. After a few difficult
years when she was young, I
achieved a fair degree of financial success as a professional. I
must have made her think
money grows on trees (or comes
out on demand from ATMs).
I was generous in helping her
through college and graduate
school and helping her buy her
first house. Despite her master’s degree, she makes very little money and struggles financially. I recently inherited some
money from my mother and
told her I would help her
straighten out her financial
mess. I asked her to send me
all her past-due bills and was
shocked and disgusted.
She has defaulted on numerous credit cards (why do they
keep giving her more?), has
lines of credit against the house
I helped her buy, owes years of
unpaid taxes, has stiffed merchants (even her dentist) and
has several judgments against
her for unpaid debt.
She wants me to help her get
a “fresh start.” I am afraid that
if I were to help her wipe out
her substantial debt, she would
just start all over again and in
a few years be back in the same
hole. I will have wasted my
mom’s inheritance. She is 38,
and I have no legal duty to pay
her debts. But if I were not to
help, there would be a huge rift
between us. What is your
advice? — Distraught Mom
Dear Distraught: There’s an
old saying that there are two
gifts parents must give their
children: roots so they know
where home is and wings so
they can take flight. Tell your
daughter she can sleep on your
couch if she loses her home.
But let her pull herself out of
debt so she can learn what
she’s capable of. Keep expecting her to be a deadbeat and
she’ll gladly keep playing the
part.
———
(Editor’s Note: Send your
questions for Annie Lane to
[email protected]. To
find out more about Annie Lane
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate website at
www.creators.com.)
Iraqi Kurds advance near Cleveland Daily Banner
Islamic State-held Mosul
– Established in 1854 –
IRBIL, Iraq (AP) — Iraqi Kurdish
forces say they have retaken five
villages east of the Islamic Stateheld city of Mosul in an operation
launched early Sunday.
U.S.-backed Kurdish forces
known as peshmerga aim to “clear
several more villages” in “one of
many shaping operations” that
will increase pressure on the
extremist group, the Kurdish
region’s Security Council said in a
statement.
Peshmerga Brig. Gen. Dedewan
Khurshid Tofiq described the
operation outside Mosul as “ongoing.” Rudaw, a local television network, showed footage of smoke
rising from a village in the distance as armored vehicles pushed
across a field.
The council’s statement said the
area cleared is about 50 square
kilometers (20 square miles). It
said the U.S.-led coalition is supporting the operation with
airstrikes, one of which destroyed
a car bomb.
Iraq’s Health Ministry meanwhile said a fire which swept
through the maternity ward of a
hospital in Baghdad last week was
a “crime” and not an accident,
without providing further details.
The blaze in the capital’s Yarmouk
hospital killed 13 people, according to the ministry’s statement.
Also on Sunday, Iraqi President
Fuad Masoum approved the death
sentences of 36 men sentenced to
hang over the June 2014 massacre of hundreds of military
recruits based near the central
city of Tikrit. The Islamic State
group massacred the soldiers and
buried them in mass graves during its lightning advance across
Iraq that summer.
Iraqi forces have made steady
progress against the extremists in
recent months, and Mosul, Iraq’s
second largest city, is the group’s
last remaining urban stronghold
in the country.
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
Stephen L. Crass
GENERAL MANAGER
Jim Bryant
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR
Herb Lacy
OFFICE MANAGER
Joyce Taylor
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Rick Norton
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Gwen Swiger
LIFESTYLES EDITOR
William Wright
SPORTS EDITOR
Richard Roberts
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Jack Bennett
RETAIL SALES MANAGER
Sheena Meyer
PRESS SUPERVISOR
Richard Yarber
423-472-5041
Telephone
423-614-6529
Newsroom Fax
423-476-1046
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1505 25th Street N.W. - Cleveland, TN 37311 • P.O. Box 3600 Cleveland, TN 37320
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—15
WIN!
W
IN!
FIRST $
2ND $
PRIZE
30
PRIZE
20
LIGHT TRUCK/SUV/CUV HIGHWAY
Wishing All Area Teams a Safe and
Winning Season! Best of Luck!
2. CLEVELAND
AT SEVIER COUNTY
1. WALKER VALLEY
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DESTINATION™ LE2
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MILE TREADWEAR LIMITED WARRANTY*
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THE REGULAR PRICE
ON A SET OF 4 TIRES
CALL FOR SIZES AND PRICES
PRICES VALID THROUGH 10/31/16
3. POLK COUNTY AT EAST RIDGE
JEWELERS
1721 KEITH STREET
STUART PARK PLAZA
LAY-AWAYS WELCOME
(Next to The Town Squire)
478-0049 • 478-0050
PPICK
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INNERS
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WILL BE
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EACH WEEK
CLIP AND MAIL THIS COUPON ONLY
(No Facsimiles (FAX) or Copies Accepted)
FFOOTBALL
OOTBALL C
CONTEST
O N T E S T RULES
RULES
476-8575 • grissomserenity.com
1. There is a game in each advertisement on this page. You need only pick the winner
in each game but you must guess the score of the Tie Breaker game. Pick your choice
from each advertisement and list in space provided below.
2. This coupon must be returned to THE BANNER no later than Thursday Noon of each
week. Entries submitted after that will not be considered. If entries are mailed, address
to: Football Contest Editor, Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320.
3. This contest is open to everyone except employees of The Banner and their families.
4. Winner’s names will be published weekly. Write name and address clearly in space
below. Contest Judge’s decision will be final.
6. MCMINN COUNTY AT MCMINN CENTRAL
STACY B. POTEET-GENERAL MANAGER
901 SAHARA DRIVE
472-6105
4. COPPER BASIN
AT COALFIELD
NAME:
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
Eric Evans
Offering Insurance and
Financial Services
2431 Spring Creek Blvd
423-476-6505
[email protected]
7. SODDY-DAISY
AT RED BANK
Located in the Spring
Creek Town Center
behind the new
Jenkin’s Deli
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
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WALKER VALLEY_____ BRADLEY CENTRAL_____
To Serve You
Cleveland, Fort
Oglethorpe, Dalton,
Chattanooga:
Gunbarrel Road, Jersey
Pike, Test Drive
717 S. Lee Hwy.
Cleveland, TN
472-6750
11. SOUTH PITTSBURG AT
SEQUATCHIE COUNTY
“Best of luck to
all our local
teams”
8. CHATTANOOGA CENTRAL
AT NOTRE DAME
Call The Team Of
Professionals For
All Your Real
Estate Needs
Woody’s
Lock & Key
423-476-4171
ADVANCED
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10. SIGNAL MOUNTAIN
AT EAST HAMILTON
5. SWEETWATER
AT MEIGS COUNTY
301 South Ocoee St.
Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Sales, Service
Heating & Air
13. SEQUOYAH AT
TELLICO PLAINS
12. OOLTEWAH
AT RIVERDALE
Cut Out The Middle Man
WE COME TO YOU!
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Knob Locks &
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Key Fobs $60.00 & Up
Car & Truck Locks
Replace Lost Car Keys
$75.00 & Up
Safe Openings &
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Serving Cleveland
For Over 25 Years
423-339-3231
Large Enough to Meet All Your Home
Appliance Needs
...Yet Small Enough
www.advancedcollision.org
to APPRECIATE
www.advancedcollision.org
Your Business.
•
•
•
•
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$500
DOWN
Bobby and Angie
Ledford,
Owners
(423) 472-9978
Fax
(423) 339-5884
2091 Waterlevel Hwy. SE
Cleveland
[email protected]
9. MARION COUNTY
AT HIXSON
We Are A Complete
Automotive Collision
Repair Center
Insurance Repairs Welcome
SKIN CANCER
& COSMETIC
DERMATOLOGY
CENTER
U RIDE
2253 Chambliss Ave. NW,
Suite 300
423-472-3332
14. HARDIN VALLEY
AT KNOX WEST
Bradley Professional
Building Cleveland, TN
Inman Street at
Wildwood Avenue
15. RHEA COUNTY
AT BAYLOR
472-1395
16. COFFEE COUNTY AT TULLAHOMA
Call
John Deere Full Line
Kioti Tractors & Implements
Land Pride Implements
STIHL Handheld Equipment
Gravely • SCAG • eXmark
Advertising
Representative To
Highlight Your
Business In This Spot
472-5041
Celebrating 25 Years
in Business!
17. KNOX CATHOLIC AT
MORRISTOWN-WEST
3529 APD 40 SW
Cleveland
559-1958
www.homesteadsuperstore.com
18. BRENTWOOD
AT INDEPENDENCE
3000 Commerce Drive
(423) 472-1152
www.ralphbuckner.com
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
Legal Publications
Death of toddler buried near
bridge ruled as homicide
ELMWOOD, La. (AP) — The
death of a toddler whose body
was found buried in a plastic
garbage bag near a bridge in
Louisiana has been ruled to a
homicide.
News outlets report that the
Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office
confirmed the death of 2-yearold Timothy Thompson IV as a
homicide, but the exact cause of
death remains unclear.
The boy’s decomposed body
was found July 6 in a bag on the
east bank of the Mississippi
River levee near the Huey P. Long
Bridge.
After the body was discovered,
the boy’s parents, 21-year-old
Gabrielle Whittington and 21year-old Onterio Thompson,
were arrested on charges of
unlawful disposal of human
remains and obstruction of justice.
Whittington has been released
from jail on bond. Thompson
remains in jail. It’s unclear if
either has an attorney who might
comment.
Man shot in head by police
gets $2 million settlement
ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia
man whom a police officer says
he accidentally shot in the head
five years ago has received a lawsuit settlement from Fulton
County.
News agencies report that the
county
and
21-year-old
DeAnthony Cunningham’s family
finalized a $2 million settlement
last week ahead of a trial that
was scheduled this week in the
case against Officer Benjamin
Griggs.
Cunningham was 16 years old
when Griggs shot him in July
2011.
Police say the teenager, who
was a passenger in a stolen car,
ran when an officer approached
the vehicle at a Union City gas
station parking lot.
Griggs found Cunningham in
nearby woods and says he accidentally pulled the trigger while
Cunningham had his hands
behind his head.
Cunningham underwent 18
surgeries and amassed over $1
million in medical bills.
2 fetuses found at wastewater
S. Carolina treatment plant
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) —
Authorities in South Carolina say
two fetuses were found at a
wastewater treatment plant on
James Island.
Local news agencies report
that Charleston police say a
Plum
Island
Wastewater
Treatment Plant employee discovered the remains Aug. 8.
Arriving officers were taken to
a pump station where they found
what appeared to be two
“preterm” babies that had been
recovered from the wastewater.
Charleston County Coroner
Rae Wooten says the age of the
fetuses was hard to tell, but they
were probably second trimester.
She says it’s unlikely they could
have survived on their own outside the womb.
Authorities say it’s impossible
to tell how long they were in the
water.
Wooten says there’s no way to
track exactly where the fetuses
came from, referring to it as an
“isolated situation.”
Trial delay makes time for plea
deal in post-Katrina deaths
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A federal judge has granted a delay in
the trial of a former New Orleans
police officer charged in the
cover-up of deadly shootings by
colleagues in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina.
The new trial date for Gerard
Dugue is Oct. 24. He had been
set for trial this month.
Prosecutors recently asked for
more time to complete plea negotiations.
Dugue faces obstruction of
justice and other charges in connection with the investigation of
shootings at the Danziger Bridge.
Two unarmed people were killed
and others were wounded there
by police on Sept. 4, 2005, days
after levee failures caused catastrophic flooding.
Dugue is the lone remaining
Danziger defendant. Earlier this
year, four ex-officers pleaded
guilty in the shootings; another
pleaded guilty in the cover-up.
Police: 2 Florida officers
fired for covering up chase
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Two
Florida police officers have been
fired after an internal investigation concluded that they tried to
cover up an unauthorized vehicle
chase in Orlando last year.
Citing termination letters
released Monday, the Orlando
Sentinel reports that officers
Michael Favorit Jr. and Frederick
Rolle were fired June 29 for their
www.clevelandbanner.com
Legal Publications
Legal Publications
NATIONAL BRIEFS
conduct Dec. 28 when the officers started following a Jeep.
The report says the officers
didn’t use lights or sirens when
they pursued the Jeep and never
informed dispatchers of the
chase. The officers later reported
the Jeep as a stolen vehicle and
drove it to a liquor store after
finding it abandoned in a field,
thereby tainting a crime scene.
Rolle never mentioned the
chase in his report.
Officials say the officers are
appealing the decision and going
to arbitration.
Police: Man shot by deputy
near hospital dies
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) —
Authorities say a man has died
after he was shot by sheriff’s
deputy he threatened with an
unidentified object outside a
northern Virginia hospital.
Fairfax
County
police
spokesman Don Gotthardt said
by telephone Tuesday that the
man has died. Police initially said
his injuries weren’t life-threatening.
Police said in a statement that
that Inova Fairfax Hospital security reported a man with an
edged weapon at a campus bus
stop Monday night. Police say a
deputy on assignment at the
hospital found the man, who
threatened the deputy with an
object. Police say the deputy
fired, striking the man.
Police say the sheriff’s office
will conduct an internal investigation and the deputy will be on
routine administrative leave.
Police didn’t release the names or
races of the man or the deputy.
Mississippi teen missing for
43 years finally identified
GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) — A
Mississippi resident missing for
43 years has been identified as
the unnamed teenager killed in a
traffic accident in Texas City,
Texas, in 1973.
Harrison County Sheriff’s
Investigator Kristi Johnson tells
The Sun Herald that Mary
Raskin, mother of missing teen
Joseph Spears, ended up looking
at pictures of her son’s body to
positively identify him. He died
on Aug. 23, 1973.
Johnson said Monday officials
with the Galveston, Texas, medical examiner’s office were
unable to get a proper DNA sample from Spears’ body to confirm
the identity. Instead, she says
officials called on Harrison
County cold case investigators to
provide all the facts they had on
the case for comparison to the
evidence Texas officials had on
hand.
Authorities say Spears had
escaped from a youth detention
center on July 31, 1973.
Body found in truck of garbage
picked up in South Carolina
EDGEFIELD, S.C. (AP) —
Authorities are investigating
after a body was found in a truck
of garbage picked up in South
Carolina.
Local news outlets report that
the body was discovered Friday
inside a garbage truck in
Edgefield County. Authorities
determined that the body had
been picked up with trash in
neighboring Saluda County.
Sheriff’s offices from both
counties are investigating and
combing through missing persons reports. Investigators have
not released details about the
body, including whether it was a
male or female.
An autopsy was performed
over the weekend, and evidence
was sent to the State Law
Enforcement Division.
Hawaii officials: Restaurants as
likely Hepatitis A source
HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii
health officials have ordered several sushi restaurants closed
immediately after citing them as
a possible source of a Hepatitis A
outbreak.
The Hawaii State Department
of Health said late Monday that
the disease outbreak “is likely
due to imported frozen scallops
served raw at Genki Sushi
Restaurants on Oahu and
Kauai.”
The department says in a news
release that it has ordered the
restaurants on the two islands
closed “ to prevent any further illness and protect the public.”
Officials say more details will
be released later Tuesday.
The Honolulu Star-Advertiser
says that there are 10 of the
restaurants on Oahu and one on
Kauai.
The paper reports that so far
168 people have been infected,
mostly on Oahu, in the state’s
worst outbreak in more than two
decades.
Man charged in slaying of NYC
imam, friend; motive unclear
NEW YORK (AP) — A man suspected of gunning down an imam
and his friend as they left a New
York City mosque was arrested
and charged with murder late
Monday night, said police, who
have not yet released a motive for
the shooting deaths.
Police charged Oscar Morel,
35, with two counts of seconddegree murder and two counts of
criminal possession of a weapon
in the Saturday afternoon slayings of Imam Maulana Alauddin
Akonjee and Thara Uddin near
the Al-Furqan Jame Masjid
mosque in the Ozone Park neighborhood of Queens.
Officers took Morel into custody late Sunday night outside a
Brooklyn apartment as he
approached a vehicle that police
had linked to an unrelated hitand-run and that matched the
description of the shooting suspect’s getaway vehicle.
“Detectives from the Fugitive
Task Force Unit approached the
car, and then he rammed the
detectives’ car several times in an
effort to get away,” said the New
York Police Department’s chief of
detectives, Robert Boyce. “He
was placed under arrest without
any further incident and brought
back to the precinct for more
debriefing.”
Boyce said Morel was seen on
surveillance video fleeing the
area of the shooting in a black
GMC Trailblazer. About 10 minutes later, a car matching that
description struck a bicyclist
nearby in Brooklyn.
Morel initially was charged in
connection with the hit-and-run,
but those charges were upgraded
Monday night after police said
they recovered a revolver at his
Brooklyn home and clothes similar to those worn by the gunman
in the surveillance video.
Procession for fallen officer
travels across New Mexico
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —
A procession for a police officer
fatally shot during a traffic stop
in a small New Mexico village
crossed the state Monday as the
officer’s body was transported
along a 225-mile route, and
dozens lined stretches of a major
highway to pay their respects.
The body of Jose Chavez, 33,
was being transported south to
his hometown of Las Cruces. The
procession
began
in
Albuquerque, where the fallen
officer’s body was taken over the
weekend for an autopsy at the
state Office of the Medical
Examiner.
Near a stretch of the highway
that runs close to the
Albuquerque airport, cars pulled
over to the shoulder of the road,
and people waved American
flags.
The motorcade was expected
to travel through several towns
along Interstate 25, including
Hatch, where Chavez was
gunned down on Friday. The village, famous for growing green
chile, is home to fewer than
2,000 people, according to most
recent U.S. Census figures. It lies
190 miles south of Albuquerque.
“It’s hard to believe it happened in such a small, little
town,” said Oscar Munoz, 36, as
he stood at a highway overpass
in Albuquerque awaiting the
motorcade to approach. “I guess
violence is spreading all over.”
Munoz, who grew up in Hatch
and lives in Albuquerque, said he
was shocked by the shooting.
Victor Lovato, who works as a
security guard and also lined the
overpass, called it senseless.
Funeral services for Chavez
are scheduled for Sunday in Las
Cruces at New Mexico State
University’s
Center.
Pan
American
:/AA7J32A
Jury seated for Arkansas judge
after son’s death in hot car
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (AP) — A
jury was seated Monday in the
trial of an Arkansas judge
charged with negligent homicide
after his 18-month-old son died
after being left in a hot car last
summer.
A jury of six men and six
women with one male alternate
was seated in the trial for
Garland County Circuit Judge
Wade Naramore, who pleaded not
guilty in March in the heat-related death of his son, Thomas.
Jury selection began at 8:30
a.m. Monday and a jury was
seated at 5:45 p.m. The trial is
scheduled to resume Tuesday.
Naramore faces up to a year in
jail and a $2,500 fine in the July
2015 death of his son. His lawyer
has said the boy’s death was “a
tragedy but not a crime.”
Because of pretrial publicity,
clerks summoned a larger number of potential jurors than usual
Monday. Up to 180 potential
jurors could have been called
before Special Judge John
Langston.
LEGAL PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR POLK COUNTY,
BENTON, TENNESSEE. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. Cassandra Calvert, plaintiff vs. Brandon
Strickland, defendant. DOCKET# 16-CV-77.
STATE OF TENNESSEE, COUNTY OF POLK.
In this cause, it appearing from the complaint,
which is sworn to, that the defendant, Brandon
Strickland, is a non-resident of Polk County; and
it further appearing that his/her whereabouts
cannot
after $&
diligent
so
# ( be ascertained
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$ POLK
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CONNIE
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LEGAL
PUBLICATION
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>C0:7A632NOTICE
7< B63 TO
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CREDITORS
E339A COURT
(67A B6FOR
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THE CHANCERY
$##
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&
&
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COUNTY, TENNESSEE PROBATE !DIVISION
IN $)&('
RE: ESTATE OF LARRY WILLIAM
C5CAB (Deceased). No. 2016-PR-141. NOSTEWART,
TICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF: LARRY
WILLIAM STEWART (Deceased). Notice is
hereby given that on the 5th day of August,
2016, Letters Testamentary in respect of the Estate# of( LARRY WILLIAM
# &- STEWART,
$)&( $&Deceased,
& ! who$)#(died July( 19,
issued
##2016,
'' were
%&$
( to the
* 'un$#
dersigned
the (Probate
Court
Bradley
# & by '(
$
! &&-of +
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County,
Tennessee.
All
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&
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in B63
(1) orA
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at least
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reE7:: 03 4=@3D3@ 0/@@32
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of the
Notice
to Creditors
if
=C@ copy
;=<B6A
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less=4
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than
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>C0:71/B7=<date
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August,
Signed:
Lauren
4@=; 2016.
B63 2/B3
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B= @327B=@A
Stewart,
Personal
Representative;
Lau- 74
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:3AA
ren Stewart, Estate of Larry William Stewart, DeB6/< A7FBG
2/GA
>@7=@ B= B63CLERK
2/B3 B6/B
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ceased.
SARAH E.
COLEMAN,
& MAS4@=; White.
B63 2/B3LOGAN-THOMPSON,
=4 47@AB >C0:71/B7=< =@
TER. ;=<B6A
by: Cheryl
>=AB7<5
/A 23A1@7032
/ of
=@ Larry
(E3:D3
P.C.,
Attorneys
for the 7<Estate
William
;=<B6A 4@=;
231323<BIA
=4 23/B6 TN
(67A
Stewart,
P.O. B63Box
191, 2/B3
Cleveland,
B6 2/G =4
C5CAB
'75<32 !/C@3<
37364-0919,
(423)476-2251.
'B3E/@B %3@A=</:
&3>@3A3<B/B7D3 '75<32 !/C
August
16, 23, 2016
@3< 'B3E/@B
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PUBLICATION
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NOTICE TO CREDITORS
'B3E/@B
% $ B.=F
(#
Estate
of Elizabeth
Maierle, No. :3D3:/<2
2016-PR-135
In the Chancery Court of Bradley County, TenC5CAB
nessee Probate Division. Notice is given that on
August 2, 2016 Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Elizabeth B. Maierle, who died July 2,
2016, were issued to the undersigned by the
Chancery
of Bradley
County,
AB/B3 =4Court
:7H/03B6
"/73@:3
#= Tennessee.
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are required to file their claims with the Clerk andA
B/B3 =4
:7H/03B6
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Master
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Chancery"/73@:3
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Bradley
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(1) (A) Four
(4) months
the date
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;/BC@32 =@ofC<;/BC@32
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the1:/7;A
first publication
this notice if/5/7<AB
the creditor
re/@3 @3?C7@32
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E7B6 B63
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of 1:/7;A
this notice
to creditors
"/AB3@ =4 B63 6/<13@G =C@B =4 @/2:3G =C<BG
at =<
least
sixty (60)
days before
the date
that is7<
=@ 034=@3
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from4@=;
the B63
date
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received
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of
the
notice
B63 47@AB >C0:71/B7=< =4 B67A <=B713 74 B63 1@327B=@ to
@3
creditors
creditor
the copy
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B63 the
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Twelve
(12)74months
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<=B713The
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1@327B=@A of74 the
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1@327B=@
death.
and@3137D32
Master B63
is
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7A
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203, 155 North Ocoee Street, Cleveland, TN
=4 47@ABThis
>C0:71/B7=<
7<
=@ B.
37311.
August /A2,23A1@7032
2016. ELIZABETH
(E3:D3 ESTATE
;=<B6A
B63Jackson,
231323<BPersonal
A 2/B3 =4
MAIERLE
By:4@=;
Cheri
23/B6 (63 /22@3AA
=4 B63
/<2PLLC
"/AB3@
Representative.
McMurray
Law :3@9
Office,
By:7A
@/2:3G
=C<BG :3@9
A $44713
&==;
Marcia
M. McMurray,
BPR#"/AB3@
013337,
Attorney
for
#=@B6 $1=33 P.O.
'B@33B
:3D3:/<2
(#
Personal Representative,
Box 610,
Cleve(67A C5CAB
!.
(
land,
TN
37364-0610.
(423)
479-7171;
Filed
this
"
&!
'( (
G 63@7 /19A=< %3@A=</:
August
2, 2016; "1"C@@/G
Sarah E.!/E
Coleman,
Clerk &G
&3>@3A3<B/B7D3
$44713 %!!
Master.
"/@17/ " "1"C@@/G %&
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August
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2016
:/<2 (#
7:32 B67A
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C5CAB
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE
United States
Department
of Agriculture
LEGAL
PUBLICATION
Farm Service
Agency
NOTICE
NoticeDepartment
of Availability
United States
of Agriculture
FSA Direct andFarm
Guaranteed
SBA Guaranteed
Serviceand
Agency
Noticein
ofPoultry
Availability
Loans Resulting
Facility Site
FSA Direct
and Guaranteed
and SBA Guaranteed
Preparation
and Construction
Loans of
Resulting
in Poultry
Facility
Site
Finding
No Significant
Impact
(FONSI)
Preparation
and Construction
The United States
Department
of Agriculture, Farm
No Significant
Impact
(FONSI)
Service Finding
Agency of
(FSA)
issues FONSI
for the
proposed
The
United
States
Department
of
Agriculture,
Farm
loan guarantee to River Valley Ag Credit AssociaService
Agency
(FSA)
issues
for the
tion
(RVACA)
and
(FSA)
for FONSI
its direct
loanproposed
for filoan guarantee
to Riverand
Valley
Ag Creditof Associanancing
site preparation
construction
six (6)
tion
(RVACA)
and barns
(FSA) and
for its
directequipment
loan for to
fi66'
x 600'
poultry
related
nancing site preparation and construction of six (6)
be66'
located
property
in Bradley
County
identified
x 600'atpoultry
barns
and related
equipment
to
asbeBradley
County
Assessor's
Parcel
ID
101
001.00
located at property in Bradley County identified
000.
(FSA) has
completed
an Environmental
as Bradley
County
Assessor's
Parcel ID 101Assess001.00
ment
(EA)
and
has
determined
that the proposed
000. (FSA) has completed an Environmental
Assesssite
preparation,
and that
operation
of the
ment
(EA) and construction,
has determined
the proposed
proposed
facilites will
not have and
a significant
effect
site preparation,
construction,
operation of
the
onproposed
the human
environment;
therefore,
no environfacilites
will not have
a significant
effect
mental
impact
statement
shall betherefore,
prepared. no environon the
human
environment;
FSA
is accepting
comments
FONSI and EA
mental
impact statement
shallon
be the
prepared.
FSA is 15
accepting
comments
on the FONSI
and EA
(through
days from
last publication),
September
15 final
days EA
from
September
2,(through
2016. The
canlast
be publication),
reviewed in person
at
2, FSA
2016.office
The final
EA atcan
be N.
reviewed
in person
at
the
located
320
Congress
Parkway
the FSA
located
at 320
Congress
Parkway
Athens,
TNoffice
37303
between
8:00 N.
a.m.
and 4:30
p.m.
Athens,through
TN 37303
between
8:00 a.m.
and 4:30
p.m.
Monday
Friday.
Comments
should
be subMonday
Friday. Comments
should
be submitted
to through
Rocky Anderson,
Farm Loan
Manager,
at
mitted
Rocky Anderson,
Loan Manager,
at
the
FSA toaddress
above andFarm
to River
Valley AG
the FSA
address above
to River
AG
Credit
Association,
Bruce and
Bradford,
LoanValley
Officer,
CreditKeith
Association,
Bradford,
Loan Officer,
2596
St. NW Bruce
Cleveland,
TN 37312
or by
2596 Keith St. NW Cleveland, TN 37312 or by
phone
at
(423)-479-8553.
For
questions
or
phone at (423)-479-8553. For questions or direcdirections
tionstotothe
theFSA
FSAoffice,
office,lease
lease contact
contact Mr.
Mr. Anderson
Anderson
atat
(423)-745-6302.
(423)-745-6302.
August
15,
August
15,16,
16,17,
17,2016
2016
! * ! #
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LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE
WHEREAS, by Deed of Trust dated July 9, 2013 recorded in Book 2187 Page 27 in the Bradley County
Register of Deeds Office (the deed of trust and any
and all modifications, amendments, restatements,
extensions, renewals, and/or substitutions thereof
in whole or in part are collectively referred to as
the “Deed of Trust”), Charles A. Howard and wife,
Stephanie Howard (collectively the “Grantors”) did
convey in trust to Mickey Torbett, Trustee, a certain tract of land to secure payment of the principal sum of $337,100.67 evidenced by a promissory
note (the note and any and all extensions, modifications, renewals, amendments, restatements, substitutions and/or replacements thereof in whole or in
part are collectively referred to as the “Note”)
dated July 9, 2013 in the original principal amount
of $337,100.67 executed by Charles A. Howard (the
“Borrower”) for the benefit of United Community
Bank “United Community Bank”, “UCB”, the
“Bank” or the “Lender”); and
WHEREAS, United Community Bank is the true and
lawful owner and holder of the Note and other indebtedness secured by the Deed of Trust; and
WHEREAS, by instrument dated July 12, 2016 and
recorded in Book 2387, Page 360 in the Bradley
County Register of Deeds Office, the Lender, exercising its authority as such owner and holder, appointed Mary D. Miller, a resident of Knox County,
Tennessee, as SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE; and
WHEREAS, default has been made in the payment
of debts and obligations secured by said Deed of
Trust and the owner and holder of the note has declared the entire balance due and payable and has
instructed the undersigned Trustee to foreclose
said Deed of Trust in accordance with its terms and
provisions.
NOW, THEREFORE, by the authority vested in Mary
D. Miller as Substitute Trustee under said instrument, Mary D. Miller (or an agent appointed by
Mary D. Miller) will on the 31st day of August,
2016, commencing at 11:30 a.m. at the main front
entrance of the Bradley County Courthouse, 155 N.
Ocoee Street, Cleveland, Bradley County, Tennessee, at which time and place Mary D. Miller (or an
agent appointed by Mary D. Miller) will offer for sale
and sell at public auction to the highest and best
bidder for cash in bar of all rights and equities of
redemption, statutory and otherwise, homestead,
dower and all other rights or exemptions of every
kind, all of which are expressly waived in said Deed
of Trust, the property therein conveyed, the portion of property which is being sold and is described as follows:
Tract 1: M02IO-A-0I3.00
Located in the 3rd Civil District of Bradley Co.,
Tennessee, to-wit:
LOT 18, Revision of Lots 18, 19 and 20, BELLEFOUNTE HEIGHTS SUBDIVISION, as shown by plat
of record in Plat Book 26, page 1, in the Register's
Office of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
BEING THE SAME PROPERTY conveyed by warranty deed from James Doug Lancaster and wife,
Phillis Lancaster to Gene H. Isom and wife, Regina
S. Isom as recorded September 24, 2008 in Book
1862, Page 741 and by warranty deed from Gene H.
Isom and wife, Regina S. Isom to Charles Aaron
Howard as recorded in Book 2187, page 27, all in
the Register's Office Bradley County, Tennessee.
SUBJECT to restrictions as set out in Deed Book
122, page 399, and Deed Book 228, Page 333 in the
Register's Office of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
SUBJECT to easements, setbacks and Bradley Co.
Health Dept. Requirements and regulations as set
out in Plat Book 26, page 1, in the Register's Office
of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
Tract 2: M-050B-B-001.11
Located in the 4th Civil District of Bradley Co.,
Tennessee in the 2nd Ward of the City of Cleveland,
Tennessee, to-wit:
LOT TWENTY-TWO (22), HUNTINGDON SPRINGS
SUBDIVISION as set out in Plat Book 16, page 78,
in the Register's Office of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
BEING THE SAME property conveyed by special
warranty deed from FSG Bank to Charles Aaron
Howard and wife, Stefanie Howard as recorded on
Sept. 4, 2009 in Book 1905, page 400, in the Register's Office of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
SUBJECT to restrictions as set out in Book 1390,
page 548, in the Register's Office of Bradley Co.,
Tennessee.
SUBJECT to easements, setbacks, requirements
and conditions as set out in Plat Book 16, page 78,
in the Register's Office of Bradley Co., Tennessee.
SUBJECT to any applicable governmental zoning
ordinances or subdivision regulations in effect
thereon.
The address of the above described properties are
6933 North Lee Hwy, Cleveland, Bradley County,
Tennessee 37312 and 3214 Huntingdon Trace,
Cleveland, Bradley County, Tennessee 37312. The
above described properties will be sold subject to
any and all unpaid taxes, restrictions, easements
and building setback lines, and to any prior or superior liens, judgments or deeds of trust, including,
without limitation, 2013, 2014, 2015 county property taxes which are a lien and due and payable and
2016 county property taxes which are a lien but are
not yet due and payable and 2016 city property
taxes which are a lien but are not yet due and payable. The proceeds of the sale will be applied in accordance with the terms and provisions of the
above named Deed of Trust. Said sale is being made
upon the request of United Community Bank, the
owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by
said Deed of Trust due to the failure of the maker
to comply with all provisions of said Deed of Trust.
Should the highest bidder fail to comply with the
terms of the bid at the public sale, then the Trustee
shall have the option of accepting the second highest bid, or the next highest bid with which the
buyer is able to comply. The right is reserved to reject all bids as insufficient. Interested parties may
be Bradly County Trustee, Sterling Jewelers, Inc.
d/b/a Kay Jewelers and Branch Banking and Trust
Company.
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE:
/s/ Mary D. Miller
Mary D. Miller
August 9, 16, 23, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
2. Special Notices
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISEmENTS
at Your Convenience!
24 Hours A Day!
Email your AD to us!
[email protected]
or fax to 423-476-1046
Include the following information:
• Name with address
& phone number
• Person to contact if a business
• Requested start date
& classification
• We will contact you for prepayment. We accept Visa, Mastercard,
Discover, and American Express
• If you are a billing customer,
please confirm your current billing
address.
Deadline for ads:
2pm Monday for Tuesday ad
2pm Tuesday for Wednesday ad
2pm Wednesday for Thursday ad
2pm Thursday for Friday ad
11am Friday for Sunday ad
4pm Friday for Monday ad
For Personal Assistance
CALL 423-472-5041
CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER
Classified Department
***SPECIAL BONUS***
All Ads Are Published On Our
Website At No Additional Cost!
SChoLARShIPS guARANTEED or
your money back! Beware of scholarship “guarantees.” Before you pay
for a search service, get the refund
policy in writing. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-hELP to learn how to
avoid scholarship scams. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
ThE PChS Class of 1986 will be
having their 30 year class reunion on
Saturday, 10/08/16 at 6pm at the hiwassee Farm Venue, 533 Dentville
Road, Delano, TN 37325. The cost
is $15 per person and should be
mailed to P.o. Box 112, Benton, TN
37307 by September 15, 2016.
Please
call
423-584-0786
or
423-715-4061 for more info.
5. Lost And Found
LoST YouR pet? Check daily at the
Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 hill
Street.
7. Personals
AL-ANoN oFFERS help for families
of alcoholics. For meeting information call 423-284-1612.
DoMESTIC VIoLENCE support
group for abuse victims. Meets Mondays. Call 479-9339, extension 15 or
25 for location.
IF You want to drink that's your
business…If you want to quit, call Alcoholics Anonymous. Call 499-6003.
14. Want To Buy
IF you are searching for a product
or service AND do not want to use
loads of time searching everywhere,
WHY NOT Advertise your need under the heading: 014 WANT To
BuY in ThE CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER!!
16. Antiques For Sale
ANTIquE BEDRooM suite for sale.
Solid oak wood. Full size headboard
and frame, chest of drawers and
dresser with mirror. Must see $500.
423-665-3426.
18. Articles For Sale
LoSE 30 lbs. in 30 days! Medical
doctors say the only way to lose
weight is to eat less and exercise
more.
Learn
how
to
avoid
weight-loss scams. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-hELP. A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
FTC. or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
PALLETS!!!
FREE WHILE THEY LAST!
Cleveland Daily Banner
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
BECkY'S ShoES is seeking part
time Sales Clerk. 2767 keith Street,
Cleveland. Approximately 15- 20
hours weekly. Must be honest, dependable, friendly and team player.
Must be available Evenings and
Every Saturday. Must be 18 years of
age. Must be able to pass drug test
and background check. No PhoNE
CALLS PLEASE!
BuSY CLEVELAND dental practice
seeking a registered dental assistant. 3+ years of experience preferred, but not required, 24-28 hours
per week. Must be outgoing, a team
player, maintain a friendly, positive
attitude, and have good communication skills. Experience with Patterson
Eaglesoft is a plus. Must be available for a standard and working interview. If you meet these requirements, please send a copy of your
resume to: 3909 Adkisson Drive
NW, Cleveland, TN 37312.
LoCAL ChICkEN Farm, must be
able to lift 50 lbs., be mechanically
inclined, honest, trustworthy, dependable & teachable. We random
drug & alcohol test. This is drug free
facility. 423-650-0483.
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
CARPENTERS NEEDED for scaffold and concrete work. MuST
PASS drug screen and background
check. Must be willing to travel and
have own transportation and tools.
Long term work $26 plus per hour.
Benefit package included. Must have
working knowledge of systems scaffolding and gang forms. Call
423-322-7003.
CLASS A Drivers needed! Cleveland based company needing regional drivers with Class- A endorsements, home most every
night, we offer health insurance/
paid vacation, holiday pay, quarterly safety bonuses, 2 years over
the road experience required. Contact us at 423-559-0771.
Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016—17
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
40. General Services Offered
49. Apartments For Rent
56. Houses For Sale
66. Auto Parts
CNA/ CAREgIVER – Seeking caring
aides to assist elderly or disabled
with daily living activities in their
home. Part time or full time hours
available. Valid driver license, automobile insurance, pass a criminal
background check and drug screen
required. Call quality of Life home
Care (423) 458-2800 to schedule an
interview.
Bo’S TREE SERVICE: over 30
years experience. Insured, free estimates.
Bucket
Truck.
423-284-9814 or 423-544-2249.
CLEVELAND SuMMIT Apartments
Rent is based on income for persons
62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. Equal housing opportunity 44
Inman Street 479-3005
FoR SALE by owner. 3 Bedroom, 2
bath, large lot in the city. $119,900.
owner financing. 423-650-5874.
FoR SALE by owner: Remodeled 2
bedroom, 1 bath, in city. $79,900.
423-472-3961 or 423-310-0706.
NEW: 3 & 4 Bedroom homes
William Eilf, Realtor. RE/MAx ExPERIENCE
423-790-3086
office,
423-813-9800 cell. Each office independently owned and operated.
REMoDELED hoME, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, den, basement. owner/
Agent financing. SToNY BRookS
REALTY 423-479-4514.
MoPAR SLANT Six 225 Engine with
Pg Automatic Transmission. Excellent running condition. $1200 o B o.
Contact Mike at 423-599-1509.
CoMMERCIAL kITChEN CLEANINg/ grease Removal position, odd
hours, physically challenging job.
References. Call 423-476-3606 for
appointment; leave message, serious inquiries only.
EARN ThouSAND$ from home. Be
careful of work-at-home schemes.
hidden costs can add up, and requirements may be unrealistic.
Learn how to avoid work-at-home
scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission. 1-877-FTC-hELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
ExPERIENCED FRY/
wanted.
Shake
423-472-2200.
grill
cook
Shack
FuLL AND part time dump truck
drivers wanted. Must have 5 years
experience and references. Call
423-580-1205.
FuLL TIME positions
Need restaurant hood
Valid drivers license
Please call 423-472-7055
an application during the
9am-5pm.
available:
cleaners.
required.
to fill out
hours of
gRouNDSkEEPER,
MAINTENANCE personnel and experienced
backhoe operator needed at Sunset
& hilcrest Memorial gardens. Must
be available for weekends. Apply at
7180 North Lee highway, Cleveland.
LABoRERS WANTED: A-1 handyman & Lawn. Call 423-458-4104.
LoCAL SPoTTERS needed with
CDL.
Call
423-506-0938
or
423-506-1043.
mEmBER SERVICE/
Administrative Assistant
Business office in Cleveland seeking a full- time Member Service/
Administrative Assistant.
Must
have professional appearance, and
excellent computer skills; including
Microsoft Word, Excel, and Publisher. Experience in accounts payable, accounts receivable and
quickBooks recommended. highly
motivated individual with excellent
communication skills, well organized, able to work independently as
well as a team player. Please submit resume and references to:
[email protected] or fax to
423-478-5964.
MILLWRIghT- WANT to learn a
new trade? Sign Installation and
Maintenance. Pay based on experience as Millwright. Apply in person
2009 Blythe Avenue, Cleveland.
NoW hIRINg: Newly Weds Foods,
Inc. Starting Pay $11 hour. Apply in
person at 187 Industrial Lane SW
Cleveland TN 37311.
PERSoNAL CARE Choices, a
non-medical
home
healthcare
company is seeking to hire caregivers. We have a variety of hours
available in the Cleveland area.
Applicants must be at least 21
years old, have a high school diploma or gED, reliable transportation with proof of insurance. For
more information please call
865-681-0999.
PETROLEUm DRIVER: Class A
with Hazmat/ Tanker- Clean M V R,
2 year tractor- trailer experience.
Call: united Petroleum Carriers
423-476-8667.
Email [email protected].
NEED ExPERIENCED Furniture
Sales Person. Apply in person,
Scott's Furniture, 1650 South Lee
highway.
SERVPRo/ FoWLERS Construction
is looking to hire an office administrator. quickBooks and Clerical experience is required. Must be able to
multi task and pass a background
check. Please call for more information at 423-745-4165.
SIgN INSTALLATIoN and maintenance, will train. Must have valid
drivers license. Apply in person 2009
Blythe Avenue, Cleveland TN.
STARS, INC. is hiring Personal Assistant,
wage
$8.50.
Call
423-447-2590 ext. # 1
WANTED INDIVIDuALS
seeking a career.
Immediate opening for full time over
head Crane Technician trainee. (not
a Crane operator) in the Charleston,
TN area.
Electrical and Mechanical
experience a plus.
Start pay is $14 per hour based on
experience.
Call 423-336-7752, or 423-599-9493
ask for Shane or send resume to
[email protected] or fax
423-336-7749.
33. Business Opportunities
INVESTIGATE BEFORE
YOU INVEST!
Always a good policy, especially for
business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer
Affairs at (800) 342-8385 or the Federal Trade Commission at (877)
FTC-hELP for free information. or
visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov
PRoCESS MEDICAL claims from
home? Chances are you won’t make
any money. Find out how to spot a
medical billing scam. Call the Federal Trade Commission,
1-877-FTC-hELP.
A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
Federal Trade Commission. or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
34. money To Lend
* LoANS up to $1,250 *
quick Approval
423-476-5770
NEED CA$h fast but can’t get a
loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a
loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-hELP to learn
how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. A message from Cleveland
Daily Banner and the FTC. or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
40. General Services Offered
* AAA house PAINTINg: InteriorExterior, Pressure Washing, FREE
estimates,
References.
423-284-9652.
*BRADFoRD TREE SERVICE*
TRIMMINg/ REMoVAL Bucket
truck/ Chipper FREE estimates.
Insured. 423-421-4049
DANNY'S TREE SERVICE: Tree removal, shrubbery trimmed/ planted.
Senior Discounts. 30 years experience. 423-244-6676.
DEBBIE’S CLEANING SERVICE
{HOmE OR BUSINESS}
Are you in need of cleaning
services?
We have the services you are
looking for. We offer a one- time
cleaning service or daily,
weekly, bi-weekly and monthly
cleaning plans. We also offer
carpet cleaning, window
cleaning and pressure washing
services.
SELLING YOUR HOmE?
WE WILL GET YOUR HOmE IN
TIP TOP SHAPE TO SELL
QUICKLY!
Cleveland Business, Family
owned & operated…
Call us today for a FREE
estimate.
423-593-1525
ExTREME MAINTENANCE home/
Mobile home Commercial, residential, Painting (interior/ exterior).
Decks, plumbing, electrical, roofing,
siding, all work! 30 years experience.
Free
estimates.
423-331-7045.
IF You need dirt spread, bush hogging, driveway scraped, and mowing. Just contact me for a free estimate and low rates 423-650-6768.
Cleveland, Chattanooga, Dalton Areas. ARC Tractor & Lawn Service.
PoWER WAShINg, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
gREAT LoCATIoN. Walk to Publix,
Starbucks. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths,
townhome. 3 ceiling fans, 1,000
square feet, Nicely decorated. No
pets ever! Must have rent references
and verifiable income. $625 monthly,
$500 deposit. 423-479-9891.
SPACIouS 2 bedroom duplex: Convenient location. Appliances, central
heat/ air, washer/ dryer hookups.
$595 monthly plus $450 deposit. No
smoking/
no
pets.
Call
423-475-9077.
STEEPLEChASE: 2 Bedroom, 1.5
bath duplex. good condition, all appliances, washer/ dryer hookup,
$525 monthly, $200 deposit. Call
423-476-5283 or 423-336-3267.
50. mobile Homes For Rent
CoLLEgEToWN
MoBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
53. Houses For Rent
$750: 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, with carport, carpet and laminate flooring,
new paint. PRoVISIoN REAL ESTATE AND PRoPERTY MANAgEMENT, LLC 423-693-0301.
$800 MoNThLY, deposit, 3 bedroom 2 bath, large den. Northwest
area. Must have good credit.
423-472-6062.
41. Professional Services
DENTuRE CENTER of Northwest
georgia
Locations Chatsworth & Tunnel hill
georgia
August Special (CASh oNLY)
5% off Economy (SET) - Reg. $795
NoW $755.25
10% off Premium (SET) - Reg.
$1000 NoW $900.
10% off Master Class (SET) - Reg.
$1350 NoW $1215.
Call today schedule your FREE consult or appointment!
Chatsworth 706-695-2721 Tunnel
hill 706-673-8100.
Partials, Relines, Repairs, & MoRE!
SELF DEFENSE Instruction for
adults, kids & youth in a safe,
clean, family friendly environment.
Contact
Rick
Fowler
at
423-473-6000 or check out
selfdefense.solutions.com.
WILL CARE for the elderly in my
home. If you're paying 24 hour caregivers in a nursing home or assisted
living, I have a more affordable alternative. I am a nurse and will provide
one on one care. 423-827-8843 or
423-336-6772.
45. Vacation Rentals
2 RIVERS CAMPINg: RV Park,
Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
at junction of hiwassee and ocoee
Rivers. 423-338-7208.
BEAR PAW CoTTAgES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
46. Storage Space For Rent
CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent:
georgetown Pike, Spring Place
Road and highway 64. Call
476–2777.
FoR RENT - under new ownership.
Mull Road Mini Storage. 177 Mull
Road, Benton. Behind Burgess
Feed. Call 423-368-1495.
TEMPSAFE SToRAgE
Climate Controlled
& outside units
Downtown Location
& georgetown Road
614-4111
48. Office Space For Rent
BRoAD
STREET:
freestanding
building, 1860 square feet, parking
lot, separate offices, lobby. $1500
rent, $1000 deposit, minimum one
year lease. owner/ agent SToNY
BRookS REALTY. 423-479-4514.
59. mobile Homes For Sale
WE BuY used homes! Call for details. 423-337-5992.
62. Boats & marine Equipment
2006 TRIToN Bass Boat, low hours,
$30,000. 423-476-9101.
65. Campers And Equipment
MuST SEE to appreciate 2007 Winnebago Adventure 38', 3 slides, low
mileage,
good
condition.
423-961-3129
52. Sleeping Rooms
BREEzEWAYExTENDEDSTAY.CoM
WEEkLY rate paid in advance, averages $46.43 nightly plus tax.
423-584-6505.
PuBLIShER'S NoTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal housing opportunity, M/F.
72. Cars For Sale
1997 ChRYSLER Convertible, white
exterior, gray interior. 1 owner, excellent condition. Priced when seen.
423-618-8579.
2002 CoRVETTE z06, 21,000
miles, red, $27,000. 423-476-9101.
CLEAN OUT YOUR
CLOSETS....
HAVE A SUCCESSFUL YARD
SALE...
BY ADVERTISING IT IN THE
BANNER!
CALL 472-5041
2013 ChRYSLER 200 - 6 cylinder,
air conditioning, automatic transmission. 44,000 miles. 618-7770.
LLoYD'S uSED CARS
423-476-5681
5526 Waterlevel highway
Cleveland, TN
www.lloydsusedcars.com
2010 Chevy hhR, 2009 Chrysler
Sebring 4 door, 2008 Chrysler Sebring Convertible, 2006 Chrysler
Pacifica, hyundai Santa Fe, 2005
Buick Rendezvous, Pontiac g6,
2004 Buick Rendezvous, Chevy
Blazer, 2003 Ford Explorer, gMC
Sonoma, 98/99 honda Civics.
PART TIME HELP WANTED
Mail Room/Circulation Dept.
Fast Paced Work. Varying Hours/Days
(Includes Saturday Nights)
Must Be Able To Lift 50 lbs.
Must Be 18 Years or Older
Apply In Person 9am-4pm Monday-Friday
No Phone Calls, Please
Cleveland Daily Banner
1505 25th St. NW
EOE
2 BEDRooM, central heat and air,
stove and refrigerator, $700 month.
423-472-7816.
3 BEDRooM, 2 bath. off Spring
Place.
$725
monthly,
Call
423-650-5027.
4 BEDRooM 2.5 bath house for rent
in Bowman hills Subdivision, Cleveland. Fireplace, hardwood flooring,
kitchen appliances, fenced backyard, screened porch and much
more. $1,400 monthly. Schedule an
appointment call 423-421-7091.
4 BEDRooM, 2 bath, hardwood
floors, garage, deck. $900 monthly.
$1,000 deposit. No pets. Close to
North
Lee
Elementary.
423-280-9333.
56. Houses For Sale
CALL TODAY TO GET QUALIFIED
ON THE THDA PROGRAm
PURCHASE YOUR HOmE WITH
“NO” DOWN PAYmENT
CALL mE TODAY FOR DETAILS!
HERB LACY
CELL: 423-593-1508
AFFILIATE BROKER
CENTURY 21 1ST CHOICE
REALTORS
2075 OCOEE ST
CLEVELAND, TN 37311
478-2331
[email protected]
MuLTIPLE RooM office. Reception
area, bathroom, convenient in
Cleveland.
$350
monthly.
423-991-4984.
49. Apartments For Rent
PuBLIShER'S NoTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal housing opportunity, M/F.
1 BEDRooM apartment, $175
weekly, $200 deposit. No pets/
smoking. Call 423-227-9146.
2 BEDRooM behind Ace hardware
on Peerless Road. ground level,
walk to shopping. Stove, refrigerator,
water furnished. For information, call
between 9am-6pm. No pets/ smoking. 423-479-5570.
2 BEDRooMS, on Wildwood, near
downtown Cleveland. All utilities included, $290 every two weeks. Partially
furnished
if
requested.
423-763-8922.
3 BEDRooM, 2.5 bath townhome,
fireplace,
wood/
tile,
balcony,
wooded,
$895
monthly,
423-584-3903.
BLYTHEWOOD- STEEPLECHASE
APARTmENTS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($389- $579); 2
Bedroom ($429- $609). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
CLEAN oNE bedroom, one bath
apartment. No pets. No smoking.
$450 rent, $400 deposit, one year
lease.
owner/ Agent
SToNY
BRookS REALTY 423-479-4514.
Adoption
Help Wanted
ADOPT: ACTIVE WOMAN WISHES to
complete her family through adoption.
Lifetime of love, opportunity and
learning awaits. Call Anne-Michele
877-246-1447 Text 516- 305-0144,
www.amadopt.info. (TnScan)
PLEASE CONSIDER BUILDING
INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSHIPS.
You can begin by hosting one of our
exchange students for the 2016-2017
school year. These teens will arrive
soon and spots are filling up quickly at
your local high school. You select which
of our students your family would like to
host. Students have their own spending
money and medical insurance. You treat
them as your son or daughter and
provide them with love and support as
you would your own teen. The
experience will enrich your family’s life,
as well as give a foreign exchange
student the opportunity of a lifetime! By
hosting, you learn about other countries
and cultures and see the world through
a fresh perspective. Learn a new
language and make life-long friends.
Empty nesters, retired couples, single
parents, families with young or older
children all make excellent host families.
For more information call toll free at
855-704-3342 or visit our website at
www.smokymountains.iseusa.org.
(TnScan)
Announcements
BECOME DIETARY MANAGER
(average annual salary $45,423)
in eight months in online program
offered by Tennessee College of
Applied Technology Elizabethton.
Details www.tcatelizabethton.edu,
423-342-3977 or email
[email protected].
(TnScan)
Business Opportunity
OPPORTUNITY TO GET PAID DAILY,
Great Home Business, Please call
832-225-5005 first. Ask about $100
cash referral! Lee 423-987-9805,
Fred 423-331-7175,
[email protected],
LegalShield, Independent Associates
(TnScan)
Cable/Satellite TV
DISH TV 190 channels plus Highspeed
Internet Only $49.94/mo! Ask about 3
year price guarantee & Netflix included
for 1 year! CALL 1-800-423-6015
(TnScan)
Help Wanted - Drivers
NOW HIRING!!! COACH DRIVERS
NEEDED! Get Paid to see the U.S.
Requirements: must be 25 yrs. old,
1 yr. exp. preferred, CDL w/P
endorsement, Current DOT physical.
Call Toll Free: 888-816-2796, Email:
[email protected],
www.GentryTrailways.com (TnScan)
Divorce Services
DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT
children $125.00. Includes name
change and property settlement
agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and
easy. 1-888-733-7165, call us Toll Free
24/7 (TnScan)
25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW
at Steven’s Transport! No Experience
Needed! Earn $900 Per Week! Paid
CDL Training! All costs covered! 1-877649-3153 drive4stevens.com (TnScan)
ROGERS PETROLEUM SEEKING
Driver Applicants. operate transport
truck local deliveries-Morristown/
Knoxville Area. clean driving record;
2yrs exp; Class A CDL X
endorsement. Competitive pay/
benefits. EOE. Send resume:
[email protected] or fax:
(423) 714-1164 (TnScan)
RECRUITING HEADACHES? WE
CAN Help! Advertise your job opening
in this newspaper + 99 newspapers
across the state - One Call/Email for
All! Contact our classified dept. or
email [email protected] (TnScan)
Land for Sale
DEVELOPER FORECLOSURE SALE
8/20 only. 10+ Acres with River
Access only $34,900. 45 Mins to
Nashville. Was $180,000, wooded,
Close to I-40, private lake. 5+ Acre
$24,900. Call 877-584-3510 WEPBroker (TnScan)
Miscellaneous
SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $4,397.00Make & Save Money with your own
bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension.
In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD:
www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800578-1363 Ext.300N (TnScan)
Sporting Goods
GUN SHOW AUGUST 20-21 Sat.
9-5 & Sun. 9-4 Knoxville Expo Center
(Exit 108 Off I-75N) 5441 Clinton Hwy.
Buy-Sell-Trade Info: (563) 927-8176
(TnScan)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WORKS!
ONE call & your 25 word ad will appear
in 100 Tennessee newspapers for
$275/wk or 35 East TN newspapers
for $120/wk. Call this newspaper’s
classified advertising dept. or go to
www.tnadvertising.biz. (TnScan)
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Tuesday, August 16, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
423-961-8025
182 Old Mouse
Creek Road, NW
Cleveland, TN
Larry Simpson, BC-HIS
Board Certified Hearing
Instrument Specialist