CLEvELAND, TN 18 PAGES

Transcription

CLEvELAND, TN 18 PAGES
M O N D AY
JUNE 6, 2016
162nd YEAR • No. 31
CLEvELAND, TN 18 PAGES • 50¢
Codes enforcement removes
illegally placed road signs
Inside Today
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Djokovic finally
wins French Open
Serbia’s Novak Djokovic
broke his French Open drought
and won his fourth consecutive
major by defeating Andy Murray
Sunday in Paris. The Los
Angeles Dodgers played long
ball to dominate in a win over
the Atlanta Braves. Due to rain,
the Sunday NASCAR race in
Long Pond, Pa., was rescheduled for today at noon. See
Sports, Pages 11-13.
Cleveland may look just a little
less cluttered today after Cleveland
Codes Enforcement removed illegally placed signs last week.
The sign sweep removes signs
from the road right of ways and
utility poles, which are listed as off
limits for yard sale, political advertisements and all other signs in the
city ordinance.
Codes Enforcement Officer Joel
Prince said the city gives a warning
on the first offense, but the second
offense carries a hefty fine of $141
per sign.
He said utility poles usually
mark the right of way on a road.
Right of way is a portion of land
near a road owned by the city,
county or state.
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOvE
Prince said the four codes offiALLEN JOHNSON removes a sign from the road right of way during a Codes Enforcement sweep of the area for illegally placed signs. cers are always on the lookout for
sign violations as they respond to
issues and patrol, but specific
times are set aside to search the
entire city for sign violations about
eight to 10 times a year.
Signs that are confiscated can be
picked up a the Codes Enforcement
Office at 474 Second St. S.E.
“That is when they will receive a
copy of the ordinance, so th they
understand where they can place
the sign, and we tell them if they
need help, our help, we will come
out and show them proper placement of a sign,” Prince said.
Some larger signs also require a
permit from the city building
department.
Prince said signs are prohibited
on the utility poles “for the safety of
the utility workers.”
“Everything really needs to be on
private property with the property
owner’s permission,” Prince said.
He emphasized the city will not
go on to private property to remove
a sign.
“We are really out here for the
safety of the motorists. We don’t
want a sight obstruction,” Prince
said.
Those who put out yard sale
signs need to make sure they are
placing them in legally permitted
places and take them down once
the yard sale is over.
Each time a sign is found in the
road right of way, the officer takes
a photo of it. When possible, a letter
is sent to the individual or business
listed on the sign letting them know
they can go get their sign.
Prince said the office usually
keeps the signs for three to six
months.
The first time this happens, the
person receives a copy of the ordinance and is asked to sign something saying they received one. If it
happens again, the person will be
issued a citation.
Prince said the fines can be contested in city court.
Marriott
construction
gives permit
revenue lift
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Schools Rule!
With the end of the school
year, the Schools Rule page
offers its last page of photos
prior to the summer break.
See who received awards on
Page 4.
Piano Festival
Lee University’s School of
Music will present its 12th
Annual International Piano
Festival and Competition June
12 through 18. Nineteen young
pianists from nine states and
one from China will be competing. See story, Page 3.
Forecast
A new hotel in the Marriott brand is
planned for Cleveland.
TownePlace Suites is a long-term stay
hotel option and a part of the Marriott
Rewards program system.
“There is a need for extended stay in
Cleveland,” said Bob Bhagat, chief financial officer for Dynamic Group. “It is top
of the line. We thought it was a good
brand, and it is doing well all over the
country.”
The Chattanooga-based management
company has two other locations in the
area and is scoping out a fourth.
He said this style of hotel is popular
with people who are a part of the incentive program.
Construction of the Cleveland location
on Bernham Drive has already begun,
Contributed photo
THE REMEMBER THE REMOvAL Bike Ride passed through Red Clay State Historic Park on Sunday evening. The
riders, members of the Cherokee Nation, began their journey along the northern route of the Trail of Tears in New Echota,
Ga., and will arrive at their final destination in Tahlequah, Okla., on June 23. Tahlequah became the Cherokee Nation’s
capital after 16,000 Cherokees were forced from their homes in the summer of 1838 as a part of the Indian Removal Act,
which was passed by Congress in 1830. As a result, 4,000 Cherokees died along the Trail of Tears due to starvation, disease and exposure. The Removal Riders are to visit the historic Blythe Ferry area and the Cherokee Removal Memorial
Park in Birchwood today.
See PERMIT, Page 6
In Charleston
Today’s forecast calls for partly
sunny skies and a slight chance of
showers or thunderstorms, with a
high near 85. Tonight should be
mostly clear, with a low around 61.
Tuesday looks to be sunny, with a
high near 84. Tuesday night should
be mostly clear, with a low around
56. Wednesday calls for sunny
skies, with a high near 82.
Wednesday night should be clear,
with a low around 57.
Index
Classified.....................................17
Comics........................................14
Editorial.......................................16
Horoscope...................................14
Mini-Page ....................................5
Obituaries......................................2
Sports.....................................11-13
TV Schedule...............................15
Weather........................................9
Around Town
Diane Hampton buying her
employees super-large drinks on
a recent hot day ... Gwendalin
Henry and her teammates on the
“Ladyheat” gearing up for a big
tournament this weekend ...
Madison Moore learning how to
swim ... Emmerson Brumfiel accidentally calling 911 with her
Grandma Darlene’s phone ...
Mac Burrell becoming a toy car
collector just like his Papaw
Randy Headrick ... Jake Smiley
being the proud owner of his first
house.
6 89076 75112 4
Police have very visible
presence, low crime rate
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
With only three officers, the
Charleston Police Department
depends on assistance from other
law enforcement agencies when
major events occur. However, for
its size, the department can say
Charleston’s crime rate in the
northern most city in Bradley
County is very low.
“We are probably between 800 to
1,000 citizens. We are about a mile
wide and a mile long,” explained
Police Chief Johnny Stokes. “We
are on the road every day, monitoring the city.”
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
Stokes said he works mainly five
THE CHARLESTON POLICE DEPARTMENT consists of Chief Johnny Stokes, center, and Officers days a week, while the other two
Lewis Johnson, left, and David Spandau. They posed for a recent photo in front of the department officers — David Spandau and
offices.
Lewis Johnson — work 14 days a
FOURTH
IN A SERIES
month, on 12-hour shifts.
Even though there are only three
officers, they say people see them
on the road all the time.
“[Even] with just the three of us,
we do have a high visibility in our
city,” said Stokes.
“We stay in constant contact
with our citizens, and that is very
important in knowing what is going
on,” the police chief said. “It’s us
stopping and talking with our citiSee POLICE, Page 6
Kinsey combines love of music, work with kids
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
As diehard a Georgia Bulldog
fan as you will ever meet, it is
odd that a song Derrick Kinsey
helped
write
is
about
Tennessee.
Kinsey, chief executive officer
at the Boys & Girls Clubs, has
been with the club for 22 1/2
years, and though he thoroughly enjoys working with the kids
and the staff, he still keeps
involved in songwriting.
“I started writing with people
around town. I started writing
with Joe Joe Collins and helped
with one that he still plays —
PERSONALITY PROFILE
‘Tennessee Lullaby.’”
Kinsey laughs when he talks
about the song Collins wanted
to compose about how he met
his wife, Holli.
“A Georgia guy writing a
Tennessee song. Kind of
strange, huh?” he said. “I couldn’t believe I was writing a song
about Tennessee.”
Kinsey is originally from
Rome, Ga., and his family now
lives in Calhoun, Ga.
Music was not something that
permeated the Kinsey household, so Kinsey had to get
involved in music on his own.
He plays piano, guitar and saxophone.
“I was in a band called
Patmos, from the book of
Revelations,” he said. “I had the
long hair and looked like
(Nirvana’s) Kurt Cobain.”
He said people said the band
was playing “funky punk country,” which he had never heard.
Kinsey said he grew up not real-
ly caring for country music, but
has found his songwriting turns
to that genre now more than
any other.
“I have always enjoyed songwriting,” he said. “I guess my
biggest influences are Coldplay,
Jason Aldean and Zac Brown,
though I like anything from
Peabo Bryson to today’s music.”
Kinsey, 46, said he gets extra
enjoyment from songwriting
when someone is touched by his
music.
“I had one person who listened to a song of mine. While
he said the song needed some
work, he was touched with how
See KINSEY, Page 6
Kinsey
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Submitted photo
Bradley County
Fire-reSCue recently
celebrated the graduation of its newest members. From the left,
front, are new recruit
firefighter Dakota
Ream, new recruit firefighter Shawn Lewis,
Chief Troy Maney, and
Chaplain William Lamb.
Back row left to right:
Training Director Lt.
Cory Davis, Lt.
Donovan DiCola,
Battalion Chief Ronnie
Goss, Polk County
Chief Steve Lofty
and Training
Officer/Inspector
Arron Hicks.
Saturday
shooting
investigated
OBITUARIES
Mary Bagley
Franklin lawson
TENNESSEE
Cash 3 Evening: 3-2-1, Lucky
Sum: 6
Cash 4 Evening: 4-5-9-3,
Lucky Sum: 21
Local 1676 UAW retirees will
meet at Michigan Avenue Baptist
Church Wednesday at noon.
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
Charlsie Blankenship
Charlsie
“Jack”
J.
Blankenship, 70, a resident of
Cleveland, passed away Friday,
June 3, 2016, at a local hospital.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Judy Blankenship; and
parents: Hoyt and Edith
Blankenship.
He is survived by two daughters: Jennifer and Megan
Blankenship; three sisters:
Wanda Patrick and husband,
George, Jo Crye, Charlene
Geren and husband, Ronnie;
and many special nieces and
nephews.
He was a retired machine
operator at Starkey Printing
Company in Chattanooga, and
was a member of the South
Cleveland Church of God. He
also attended and was a clerk at
the West Cleveland Church of
God.
The funeral will be held today,
June 6, 2016, at 2 p.m. at Ralph
Buckner Funeral Home with the
Rev. Carl Hobbs officiating.
Interment will follow at Sunset
Memorial Gardens.
Pallbearers will be Andrew
Ross, Micheal Moses, Matt
Godbee, Eric Faulkner, Jon
Hooker and Gary Blankenship.
The family will receive friends
and family from noon until 2
p.m. today at the funeral home
prior to the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Blankenship family guestbook at www.ralphbuckner.com.
Frances Price, April Humphrey,
Rick Sullivan, Jerry Green, Linda
Boyd, Bryce Copeland, Melissa
Pate, Rick Owens and Sandy
Dunn, who are celebrating birthdays today ... Camden Ross, who
turned 1 on Sunday ... Lynnae
and Richard Roberts, who are celebrating their anniversary ...
Jerry and Debbie Layne, who John Paul douglas
recently celebrated their 44th
John Paul Douglas, 79, of
anniversary.
Cleveland, died Sunday evening,
Reuse
the News
Recycle this newspaper
Linda K. Johnson, 63, of
Cleveland, died Sunday, June 5,
2016, at her home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
James Price
James Price, 96, of Athens,
died Sunday morning, June 5,
2016, at his home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced later by
Companion Funeral Home.
Harry Don Bivens, 84, of
Cleveland, died this morning,
Monday, June 6, 2016, at his
home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
(AP) — These lotteries were
drawn Sunday:
I SEE BY THE
BANNER
linda K. Johnson
Harry don Bivens
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
GEORGIA
5 Card Cash: 2C-8C-7H-9H10H
All or Nothing Day: 03-04-0608-09-11-12-17-19-20-22-24
All or Nothing Evening: 03-0405-06-09-10-13-16-17-21-22-24
All or Nothing Morning: 01-0304-05-06-14-15-17-19-20-22-23
All or Nothing Night: 01-03-0406-07-11-13-14-19-22-23-24
Cash 3 Evening: 7-5-6
Cash 3 Midday: 2-3-8
Cash 4 Evening: 2-5-9-4
Cash 4 Midday: 5-5-7-8
Fantasy 5: 02-21-30-34-37
Georgia FIVE Evening: 9-7-9-42
Georgia FIVE Midday: 8-3-5-17
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
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The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
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Mary Bagley, 72, of Cleveland,
died Sunday, June 5, 2016, at a
From Staff Reports
Chattanooga care center.
Survivors and funeral arrangeCleveland Police are investigating the shooting of a man at a ments will be announced by FikeBerry Street location early Randolph & Son Funeral Home.
Saturday morning.
Police identified the victim as
Larry Bennett. No other information on the victim, such as age or
place of residence, was available
this morning.
According to reports, the shooting incident occurred in the 800
block of Berry Street.
Police responded to the scene
around 3:15 a.m. Bennett was
transported to Erlanger Hospital
in Chattanooga for treatment,
and was released from the facility
a short time later.
Investigators with the police
department do not have any suspects in custody in connection
with the shooting, nor do they
have a motive.
While they are conducting
interviews with people in the
vicinity, they ask anyone with any
information to contact the
Cleveland Police Department’s
Criminal Investigations Division.
(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
June 5, 2016, at his home.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home.
Franklin Jr. “Bug” Lawson, 48,
a lifelong resident of this area,
passed away on Thursday night,
June 2, 2016, at the Hanover
Medical Center in Willington,
N.C.
He was born in Cleveland on
May 30, 1968.
He was of the Baptist faith and
worked for several years at
Cleveland Chair. “Bug” enjoyed
fishing.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Hubert F. “Peanut”
Lawson; grandmother, Alta
Lawson; and grandfather, Ralph
Lawson.
He leaves behind to cherish
his memory his sister, Tammy
Lawson; mother and stepfather,
Gail and Ronnie Prater; aunt,
Ann Adcock (Danny); special
nephew, Torrey Lawson; uncle,
Tommy Lawson (Janice); greataunt, Widdie Morris; nieces:
Rhonda Cheek and Karen
Lawson; step-siblings: Ronnie
and Veronica; and numerous
other extended family members
and a host of special friends.
A celebration of his life is
planned for today, June 6, 2016,
at 7 p.m. in the chapel of
Companion Funeral Home, 2419
Georgetown Road N.W., with the
Rev. Ronnie Ledford officiating.
The family will receive friends
in the funeral home parlor today
from 5 p.m. until the 7 p.m. service time.
You are encouraged to share a
memory of Lawson and/or your
personal condolences with his
family by visiting his memorial
web page and guestbook at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Michael ryne thornburg
Michael Ryne Thornburg, 24,
of Riceville, went to be with Lord
way too soon on, Friday, June 3,
2016.
Ryne was a lifelong resident
of Riceville, born on Nov. 13,
1991, to Mike and Vicki Wright
Thornburg.
He is survived by both of his
parents; as well as two older
sisters: Mitzi Mew and her husband Ashley, of Lawrenceville,
Ga., and Dana Coffman and her
husband, Justin, of Riceville.
He was “funcle” (fun uncle) to
Bryce,
Marshall,
Charlie,
Spencer, and Kenadee. He was
never happier than when surrounded by family.
He had a wonderful family at
Calhoun First Baptist Church,
where he was loved by all. Born
and raised there, he knew this is
where he would always attend.
He was a 2010 graduate of
McMinn County High School.
He attended Lee University and
was a current employee of
Resolute Forrest Products. To
say Ryne was an avid sports fan
would be an understatement.
He never missed an opportunity
to watch his nephews play ball.
As a season ticket holder he
stood by the VOLS through the
good and the bad and was looking forward to their upcoming
season #VFL.
While checking his fantasy
baseball, Ryne would be serenading us all. People loved to
hear Ryne sing whether it be
making a sandwich in the
kitchen, praising the Lord at
church, or walking the aisles at
Walmart. Ryne’s infectious
smile and sweet personality
made everyone want to be
around him. This has been evident by the outpouring of love
by all who knew him. He will be
greatly missed.
The funeral will be held at 7
Cynthia K. Mitchell
p.m. Tuesday, June 7, 2016, at
Cynthia K. Mitchell, 59, of Calhoun First Baptist Church
Cleveland, died Sunday morning, with Pastor Kevin Cheatham
June 5, 2016, in a local health officiating. The committal service will be at 11 a.m.
care facility.
in
Calhoun
Survivors and arrangements Wednesday
will be announced by Companion Cemetery.
The family will receive friends
Funeral Home.
from 4 to 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, at
the church prior to the service.
Pallbearers will be Chris
Reedy, Josh Parker, Matt
Nichols, David Ricks, Andrew
Sorah, Steven Brown, Austin
Cardin and Taylor Thompson.
Condolences may be offered
through sending flowers or supronald lee oran
porting Calhoun First Baptist
Ronald
Lee
Oran,
of Church’s Building Fund, 107
Sweetwater, died Sunday, June Church Street, Calhoun, TN
5, 2016, in Santee, S.C.
37309.
Survivors and arrangements
If you are unable to attend
will be announced by Companion this service or visitation you
Funeral Home.
may sign the guest register at
www.smithfuneral&cremationservicesofathens.com.
Smith Funeral & Cremation
Services of Athens is honored to
serve the family of Michael
Ryne Thornburg.
Tempers likely to soar
during 6-week summer
congressional session
WASHINGTON (AP) — Both
temperatures and tempers are
likely to run hot as lawmakers
return to Washington for an
abbreviated 6-week summertime
session featuring a handful of
must-do legislation and the rollout of a House GOP campaign
agenda that’s a pet priority for
House Speaker Paul Ryan.
The spring was a little bumpy
for the Wisconsin Republican, yoyoing between his role as the top
elected Republican in the country
in the era of Donald Trump and
manager of the difficult-to-control House.
Both roles have placed Ryan in
difficult spots. He’s openly struggled with the Trump phenomenon — endorsing the New York
billionaire as the GOP’s presumptive nominee on Thursday
despite “our differences” — and
he’s found it difficult to corral
wayward conservatives, just as
his predecessor John Boehner,
R-Ohio, did.
Summertime in presidential
election years is often a time
when Congress lowers its sights
and focuses more on what it has
to do rather than testing the limits of what the political thicket
will allow.
This summer, that must-do list
is short and achievable: Helping
Puerto Rico through its fiscal crisis; funding the battle against the
Zika virus; and reauthorizing the
Federal Aviation Administration.
Ryan has fulfilled promises for
more open House debates, deference to committee chairmen, and
a lighter touch with tea party
conservatives. But the return to
“regular order” has also led to
failure on the budget, delays on
the Puerto Rico and Zika measures, and a small-bore legislative
agenda that’s been overshadowed
by the presidential campaign.
Ryan will begin to roll out his
“agenda project” — a monthslong effort to devise a positive
vision, message and platform for
the party — this week, starting
with a speech and proposal on
poverty.
“We can keep doing the same
things and getting the same
results,” Ryan said Friday in a
video message. “Or instead of
trapping people in poverty, we
can get them on the ladder of
opportunity, reward work, open
our economy so everyone can
make the most of their lives.”
Ryan has a penchant for lofty
rhetoric, but his new job also
demands a focus on the nuts and
bolts of lawmaking, where there
are limits to what he can control.
For instance, it’s taken weeks
for Ryan and others to forge compromise legislation on Puerto
Rico that would establish a control board to oversee a limited
restructuring of the commonwealth’s debt. Puerto Rico missed
a May 1 debt payment and a larger July 1 obligation is looming,
but the hard-won Puerto Rico
legislation appears teed up to
pass the House after a bipartisan
committee vote last month; the
Senate, both Democrats and
Republicans say, is likely to
deliver the House bill to Obama
without any changes.
“That’s a real test for the
speaker. He’s invested a lot of
effort and time in (the Puerto
Rico legislation),” said Rep. Tom
Cole, R-Okla. “I think he’s wise to
have done so and I think he will
ultimately be successful. You
certainly wouldn’t want to go
home for July break not having
got that done. You would certainly like to get Zika done by the
July break as well.”
However, resolving legislation
to fight the Zika virus, passed by
both House and Senate in substantially different form, is more
complicated. A bipartisan $1.1
billion Senate measure is acceptable to the White House and its
Democratic allies, while a $622
million House measure that
passed along party lines has
attracted a veto threat from the
White House as insufficient to
fight the virus, which can cause
severe birth defects.
Not long ago, a logical splitthe-differences compromise to
the Senate’s spending level,
accompanied by spending cuts
demanded by House GOP conservatives, might have been a
slam dunk. That’s still a possible
solution, but it could bleed support from both Democrats and
Republicans, and presents Ryan
with a difficult balancing act. A
move by the House to attach an
unrelated measure on pesticides
permitting requirements is a
complicating factor as well.
Meanwhile, a battle over gay
rights has upended the appropriations process in the House,
which involves 12 annual spending bills for federal agencies. Last
month, Democrats succeeded in
winning an amendment defending an Obama executive order
protecting lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender people against
discrimination by federal contractors. That scuttled the
underlying energy and water
measure and may lead Ryan to
adopt a more closed approach in
order to avoid a repeat.
Lawmakers must also pass a
measure to reauthorize the FAA.
A battle over a House plan to spin
off responsibility for air traffic
control operations to a private,
nonprofit corporation has the
House and Senate at an impasse.
With the two key House and
Senate committee chairmen at
loggerheads over the issue, it’s
commonly assumed that lawmakers would opt to pass a
short-term extension of FAA
authority that would kick the
problem into next year.
In the Senate, Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has generally played it safe and has had
the Senate plug away on bipartisan legislation such as a measure to combat opioid abuse and
an effort to revive the moribund
process for appropriating annual
agency budgets. The opioid legislation is in a House-Senate conference committee and could be
ready for final votes before lawmakers leave Washington for the
political conventions in July.
4 dead in New Hampshire apartment fire
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — A
fire that started on the porch of a
three-story apartment building
early Monday left four people
dead, fire officials said.
Two people were pronounced
dead at the scene and two others
were taken to a hospital, where
they were pronounced dead, the
fire department said. No additional information was released
on the victims.
One firefighter suffered a nonlife-threatening injury. No other
information was released.
Firefighters said they started
getting 911 calls on the building
fire on Wilson Street at about
5:10 a.m. They arrived to find
heavy fire at the building.
The building is in Manchester’s
east side.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—3
Lee University International Piano Festival
and Competition planned for June 12-18
Lee University’s School of Music
will present its 12th Annual
International Piano Festival and
Competition June 12 through 18.
The event, which began in 2005
as a competition for high school
students, was expanded in 2011 to
include opportunities for non-competitors to also study with internationally acclaimed artists.
At the same time, it offers the
public a chance to take in some
brilliant performances. This year,
for the second time, the competition will be divided into two levels:
pre-college and college.
This year’s festival has attracted
19 outstanding young pianists to
the Lee campus. The participants
come from nine different states in
the U.S. and one from People’s
Republic of China, and range in
age from 11 to 26.
Highly praised performers and
teachers Mack McCray, Enrico
Elisi and Shen Lu are the guest
artists for this year’s festival.
Lee faculty Ning An and Cahill
Smith will also contribute to the
festival, which is chaired by Lee’s
Phillip Thomas.
One feature of this annual event
is that the guest artists offer concerts to the community. Lu and
Elisi will present a recital on
Monday evening, June 13, and An,
Smith, and McCray will perform
on Friday evening, June 17. Both
recitals will take place at 7:30 p.m.
in Squires Recital Hall of the
Humanities Center on Lee's campus.
Concerts on Tuesday and
Wednesday evening will feature
selected festival participants. All of
the festival concerts will begin at
7:30 p.m. in Squires Recital Hall
and are free and open to the public.
Festival participants have the
opportunity to learn from faculty
and guest artists in masterclasses
during the day. Faculty and guest
artists will also offer private lessons.
The competition will begin
Thursday, June 16, at 10 a.m.
Winners will be presented on the
morning of Saturday, June 18, following the competition’s final
round which begins at 10 a.m.
McCray, a faculty member of the
San Francisco Conservatory of
Music since 1972, also serves as
artistic director of the Zephyr
International Chamber Music
Festival in Courmayeur, Italy. He
has performed with the Japan
Philharmonic in Tokyo, on the allSchubert series at famed Trinity
Church in Manhattan, at the
Carmel Bach Festival, and at the
Los Angeles County Art Museum,
as well as in Alaska and across the
United States. McCray was the top
prize winner of the International
Enesco Competition in Bucharest
and of the International Liszt
Competition in Boston.
Elisi is described by La Nueva
España as “a true musician and a
master of elegance, refinement and
fantasy.” He has performed solo
recitals and has been featured as
soloist with several orchestras in
the United States and abroad. Elisi
leads a large class of international
students as an associate professor
of piano at the Eastman School of
by Dr. Paul Grayson Smith, Jr., D.O., P.C.
and Dr. Paul Grayson Smith, III, D.O.
Both Physicians Are Certified by the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians.
SCLERODERMA
Scleroderma is a condition that part of the stomach. In rare cases,
causes the skin and connective tis- the heart, lungs, or kidneys can be
sues to harden. The severity and affected.
The treatment and management
symptoms vary according to which
part of the body is affected. of scleroderma focus on relieving
Sometimes, only the outer skin is symptoms and limiting damage.
affected and may appear as shiny Because it can affect many differor purplish oval patches of skin ent organs and organ systems, you
with a whitish center. This form of may have several different doctors
the condition can make movement involved in your care. For more
quite restricted. Some sufferers information, or to schedule an
experience Raynaud’s phenome- appointment, please call 472non, a severe response to cold in 6548. Our office is located at
which the fingers or toes change Ocoee Premiere Park, Suite 101, at
color and become painful. Acid 2121 North Ocoee. We are availreflux and trouble digesting nutri- able Monday through Friday, 8:00
ents can occur when the damage to 5. We Treat Our Patients Like
takes place near the esophagus or We Would Like to be Treated.
P.S. Scleroderma is an autoimmune disease that causes the
body to make too much collagen.
McCray
An
Smith
Thomas
Music. An active chamber musician, he began a collaboration with
violinist Federico Agostini, a former leader of I Musici.
Elisi has performed in such
prestigious venues as La Fenice
Theatre in Venice, the Palazzo
Vecchio in Florence, and the
Bibbiena Theatre in Mantua,
among others. Elisi has given master classes, workshops, and lectures at colleges and conservatories throughout the world, held a
guest professorship at the China
Zhejiang Art School in Hangzhou,
China, and taught at Penn State
University and University of
Nevada. He also founded “Musica
Domani Prize,” an international
composition competition he currently directs.
A native of Jiangsu, Lu is a multiple award-winning pianist,
acclaimed on four continents for
his artistry, diverse repertoire and
quietly charismatic performance
style. Lu has appeared with
orchestras and in concert halls
around the world; has been a featured artist at the China
International Piano Festival in
Beijing, Piano Texas International
Academy & Festival, and New
York’s PianoSummer at New Paltz;
and has collaborated with the
Sydney Trio and the Aurora and
West Edge string quartets.
Lu was awarded the gold medal
of the 2014 Hilton Head
International Piano Competition
and the first prize from the 2002
Hong Kong Asia Open Piano
Competition. Most recently, he was
awarded The French Music Prize
for the best performance of a
French work at the 2015 Dublin
International Piano Competition.
An has been hailed as a musician who “combines a flawless
technique and mastery of the
instrument with an expressive
power that is fueled by profound
and insightful understanding”
(New York Concert Review). His top
prizes from the Queen Elizabeth,
Cleveland, and William Kapell
Piano Competitions led to performances from Carnegie’s Weill Recital
Hall, Salle Verdi (Milan), to the
Great Hall of the People in Beijing,
China.
An has also been a top prize
winner of the Paloma O’Shea
Santander Competition, the Tivoli
International Piano Competition,
the Rachmaninoff International
Piano Competition and the Alfred
Cortot Prize winner of the
International Chopin Piano
Competition. A frequent guest lecturer, Mr. An has given masterclasses throughout the United
States and Asia. Currently he
serves as the artist-teacher on the
piano faculty of California State
University, Fullerton and as a visiting artist at Lee.
Smith, who started playing
piano at age 10, earned his doctorate of musical arts in piano performance at the Eastman School of
Music. He has performed in
recitals at Carnegie Hall’s Weill
Recital Hall and been featured as
soloist with the National Ukranian
Symphony Orchestra in Kiev.
Smith’s programming of works by
Russian composer Nikolai Medtner
seniorDAY
If you’re 55 & older, it’s your day to save!
TUESDAY, JUNE 7
IN STORE ONLY
SENIOR DAY
TUESDAY, JUNE 7
WITH YOUR BELK
REWARDS CARD
OR ANY OTHER FORM OF PAYMENT
EXTRA
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If you’re 55 or older, take an extra 20% off storewide, or
15% off in our home & shoes departments, with your Belk
Rewards Card or any other form of payment, on your sale
purchases. *Excludes Red Dot, Clearance, Earlybirds, Night Owls,
Doorbusters, Bonus Buys, Super Buys, Everyday Values, All Clad,
Angelica, Antelope, Armani Exchange watches, Assets, Baby
Gear, Better & Designer Intimates, Birkenstock, Breville, Brighton,
Brooks Brothers, Buffalo, Casio, COH Man, Clarisonic, Coach,
Columbia, cosmetics/fragrances, Dansko, Denim & Supply Ralph
Lauren, designer handbags, designer sunglasses, Diane Von
Furstenberg, Diesel watches, Dockers, Donald J Pliner, Dooney
& Bourke, Eileen Fisher; Fine Jewelry watches and service plans;
Fitbit, Fossil & Fossil Q watches, Free People, Furla, Gear For
Sports, Herend, Hugo Boss, Jack Rogers, Johnston & Murphy,
Joy & Mario, Kate Spade accessories & shoes, Keen, Kensie Girl,
kitchen/novelty electrics/coffee, Lacoste, ladies better swim,
ladies designer & contemporary sportswear & dresses; ladies,
kids & men’s designer shoes; ladies designer accessories, Le
Creuset, Levi’s, Lilly Pulitzer, Lucky, lucy, Marc by Marc watches,
Mattel, Merrell, Michael Kors shoes, handbags, jewelry & watches;
Minnetonka Moccasin, Miss Me, Monster Headphones, Munro,
Nautica, Nike, Orthaheel/Vionic, Polo Sport, Ralph Lauren/Polo,
Roberto Coin, Seven for All Mankind, Skagen watches, Southern
Proper, Southern Tide, Spanx, Sperry Gold Cup, Stuart Weitzman,
Swarovski, Tommy Bahama, Tommy Hilfiger apparel, TOMS, Trina
Turk apparel, Tumi, Ugg, Under Armour, Vera Bradley, Versus
watches, Victorinox, Vietri, Vineyard Vines, Vintage 1946, Vitamix,
Wusthof; non-merchandise depts., lease depts., salon services
and Belk gift cards. Not valid on prior purchases, phone or
special orders, trunk shows or on belk.com. Cannot be redeemed
for cash, credit or refund, used in combination with any other
discount or coupon offer. Valid Tuesday, June 7, 2016. All Belk
Rewards Card purchases are subject to credit approval.
Elisi
has attracted the attention of audiences and critics.
He has performed at numerous
venues including the Royal Dublin
Society’s concert hall and the
Aspen Music Festival’s Harris Hall.
Smith currently serves as an assistant professor of piano at Lee.
While at the Eastman School of
Music, where he earned his doctorate of musical arts, he held
three graduate teaching assistantships and was awarded the Prize
for Excellence in Teaching.
Thomas has served as chair for
the festival since its inception. He
has studied piano, music history,
and conducting at some of the
world’s finest institutions and has
also served as adjudicator for a
variety of competitions on the
local, regional, and international
levels.
He currently serves as the chair
for
the
Department
of
Musicianship Studies at Lee and
has appeared as harpsichord
soloist with the Chattanooga
Symphony Orchestra. Thomas is
listed in Who’s Who Among
American Teachers.
GOLD &
DIAMONDS
5301 BRAINERD ROAD
(423) 499-9162
WE PAY
THE MOST!
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Schools rule!
Larry C. Bowers
Education reporter
Phone: 472-5041 Fax: 614-6529
E-mail:
[email protected]
Contributed photo
ESL TEACHER Andrea Moore recognized ESL students Jonathan Alejandro, Dallanary Velasquez,
Isaac Soto and Rubi Romero at this year’s Stuart Elementary Awards Night.
Contributed photo
STUART ELEMENTARY School recently closed out the year with a presentation of honors to deserving students. Principal Richelle Shelton awarded this year’s Principal Awards to, from left, Elijah Herrera,
Mia Bracero and overall winner Ella Lipscomb.
Contributed photo
THE STUDENTS in Ronda Phillips’ classroom at Cleveland’s Yates Primary School received an
end-of-year gift from their teacher recently when they were escorted on a tour of nearby E.L. Ross
Elementary School. The students were excited to be able to visit the school they will be attending
next school year.
Travels 10,662 miles
Contributed photo
WINNERS OF THIS year’s Citizenship Awards at Stuart Elementary School included from left, Aubree
Tullier, Ariyah Howard and Lauren Grace Choplin. They were joined by teachers Nancy Cooke, Chris
Reid and Joy Fleming.
McQueen meets goal
Special to the Banner
NASHVILLE
—
Tennessee
Education
Commissioner Candice McQueen recently surpassed
her goal of connecting with 10,000 Tennessee teachers through a statewide tour of classroom visits.
The commissioner, who initiated the tour as a way
to listen and learn from Tennessee educators, committed to this goal shortly after being sworn in to her
position in late January 2015.
Over the course of the past year and a half,
McQueen has visited more than 74 districts, 121
schools, and has observed classrooms in every region
of the state, from Johnson City to Memphis. After logging 10,662 miles on the road, she has spent time
with teachers, students, and administrators, listening to stories of their successes and challenges while
sharing her experiences across the state on the
department’s Classroom Chronicles blog.
“I’ve learned invaluable feedback from listening to
teachers this past year and seeing first hand how
state policies play out at the classroom level,”
McQueen said. “My biggest takeaway is that we must
continue to elevate and incorporate educators’ and
students’ voices into what we do at the department
and how we make policy decisions.”
McQueen is committed to incorporating the feedContributed photo
back
she has heard and the needs she has seen into
PHYS ED teacher Cindy Newman presented the top awards from her classroom to Mia Bracero,
the decisions made at the department, pledging to
Madison Lamb, Ariyah Howard, Kaden Lemon, Noah Jones and Garrett Choate.
Contributed photo
Contributed photo
continue the Classroom Chronicles Tour during the
2016-17 school year.
This second leg of the Classroom Chronicles tour
will focus on college and career readiness, focusing
“I’ve learned invaluable feedback
from listening to teachers this past year
and seeing first hand how state policies
play out at the classroom level.”
— Education Commissioner
Candice McQueen
on how educators are shifting cultures and expectations throughout K-12 to prepare their students for
life after graduation. During these future visits, the
commissioner will aim to hear from not just teachers,
but from students as well.
“We are eager to continue these conversations, and
I look forward to visiting more of our schools in this
next year,” McQueen said.
The Tennessee Department of Education has a
complete list of the schools and districts visited on
tour. You can check the organization’s blog,
Classroom Chronicles, for highlights, photos, and
videos from the commissioner’s tour: http://tnclassroomchronicles.org/.
Contributed photo
WINNING THE TOP Library Awards at Stuart Elementary School
TEACHER CHRIS REID congratulates Cody Guthrie and Callie
THE OVERALL Physical Education awards at Stuart Elementary
Pierce for their Perfect Attendance Awards at Stuart Elementary School this year went to Kevin Osorio and Layla Higgins. PE teacher this year were students Noah Jones, Nick Jauregui and Ellie
Christmann. Librarian Edie May presented the awards.
School.
Cindy Newman presented the awards.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—5
Next Week:
Father’s
Day!
F
ather’s D
ay!
Founded by Betty
etty Debnam
M
Mini
in i F
Fact:
ac t :
Useful plants
All cacti are
succulents, but
there are some
succulents that
are not cacti.
Succulent
means “full of
juice.”
Cacti
Cacti may
may llook
ook prickly,
prickly, but
they’re
but they’re
iimportant
mportant tto
od
esert a
nimals. B
ats, b
desert
animals.
Bats,
birds
irds
a
nd iinsects
nsects ccollect
ollect tthe
he n
ectar ffrom
rom
and
nectar
fl
owers a
nd h
elp p
ollinate tthe
he fl
owers to
to
flowers
and
help
pollinate
flowers
p
roduce sseeds.
eeds. T
heir ffruits
ruits contain
contain seeds
seeds
produce
Their
tthat
hat a
re eeaten
aten b
yb
irds a
nd mammals,
mammals,
are
by
birds
and
iincluding
ncluding ccoyotes.
oyotes.
Woodpeckers,
Woodpeckers,
h
awks a
nd o
ther
hawks
and
other
b
irds m
ake n
ests
birds
make
nests
iin
n llarge
arge ccacti.
acti.
When
weather
W
hen tthe
he w
eather
dry,
iiss eextremely
xtremely d
ry,
deer,
jackrabbits
d
eer, ja
ckrabbits
This northern flicker
and
bighorn
a
nd b
ighorn ssheep
heep has made a nest in a
o get
get saguaro cactus.
will
w
ill eeat
at cacti
cacti tto
inside.
water
tthe
he w
ater sstored
tored inside.
mericans h
ave u
sed tthe
he fruit
fruit
Native
Americans
have
used
Native A
off ccacti
o
acti tto
o make
make
wine,
w
ine, jjelly,
elly, ssyrup
yrup
or
and
a
nd ccandies
andies ffor
many
m
any ccenturies.
enturies.
Prickly
pear
P
rickly p
ea r
pads
ccactus
actus p
ads
This girl uses tongs to
with
w
ith tthe
he sspines
pines
harvest the fruit of a
bee prickly pear cactus.
rremoved
emoved ccan
an b
eeaten
aten ffresh,
resh, ffried
ried
orr g
grilled.
o
rilled.
photo by Linda Tarry
a
Many, but not all,
cacti:
• have spines, or
needles.
• don’t have leaves.
Harsh
environment
The arid, or dry, conditions in the desert
allow about 90 percent of sunlight to reach the
ground, compared to 40 percent in a humid,
or wet, area such as a jungle. We
We know
w that
ultraviolet radiation from the sun can be
dangerous for human skin. But it can harm
the tissues of plants and animals, too.
Plants such as cacti that live in deserts have
adapted, or changed, to survive. For example:
• Cacti have shallow roots that can quickly
take up water from rain.
• They can hold a large amount of water.
• Their spines capture less sunlight than
leaves, making the plant grow more slowly.
* A horticulturist is a scientist who studies the
growth of plants.
Showing off
The cacti you probably think of most are
called saguaros
(sah-W
WAH-rohs).
They are tall,
straight plants that
look like they have
arms. Saguaros
grow only in the
Sonoran Desert of
Saguaro cacti
southern Arizona
and northern Mexico. They can grow to 60 ffeeet
tall, but they don’t begin producing branches,
or arms, until they’rre 50 to 70 years old!
Cacti produce flowers of many different
colors, including white, yellow
and bright pink. The small,
fuzzy bumps you see on a
cactus’s skin are called areoles
(AIR--ee-ohls). They produce
spines, flowers and branches.
Tall cacti that look like
Areoles
columns have a woody skeleton
on the inside that supports their height.
Surrounding the skeleton is tissue that can
expand and contract depending on how much
water is stored. Some cacti have a pleated
outer skin, or epidermis, that can also expand
or contract to cover the tissue.
photo courtesy NPS
What is a cactus?
Spines also shade the cactus and protect it ffrrom
predators.
• Their skin may have a waxy surface that
protects them from the sun’s radiation.
Resources
photo by William Warby
Have you ever pricked your finger on a
cactus? These thorny plants grow in deserts —
regions that get less than 10 inches of rainfall
per year, or where water evaporates quickly.
They also grow in other environments.
The Mini Page visited the Arizona-Sonora
Desert Museum near Tu
Tucson, Arizona,
recently and spoke with a horticulturist* there
to learn more about cacti. (Cacti is the plural
word for cactus.)
photo courtesy NPS
Issue 23, 2016
On the Web:
• 1.usa.gov/1MIkZTG
• desertmuseum.org/kids
• bit.ly
y/
/23K7Wsv
At the library:
• “Correctamundo: Prickly
Pete’s Guide to Desert Facts &
Cactifracts” by David Lazaroff
• “Let’s Explore the Desert Family
Go Guide!” by Doris Evans
The
The Mini
Mini P
Page®
age® © 2016
2016 Universal
Universal Uclick
Uclick
Tr
Try
y ’n’ Find
Mini Jokes
Words that remind us of cacti are hidden in this puzzle.
y,, and
Some words are hidden backward or diagonally
some letters are used twice. See if you can find:
Cook’
Cook’s
s Corner
Corner
Cactus Fruit Sorbet
You’ll need:
• 2 1/2 pounds prickly pear fruit (about
7-9 fruits), skinned and chopped
• 1/2 cup sugar
U
O
E
A
N
I
M
A
L
S
R
T
F
L
A
R
I
D
P
V
F
E
L
S
U
T
C
A
C
S
P
L
O
Z
R
C
C
W
Z
T
R
E
W
E
A
G
C
U
D
H
I
K
E
P
R
I
R
U
N
G
C
S
R
I
E
N
D
D
S
I
K
L
S
D
O
S
E
I
P
L
L
T
C
E
L
E
S
M
I
N
Y
P
N
R
E
C
E
U
N
U
T
A
I
M
L
T
R
H
E
S
S
D
R
I
B
S
T
D
Q
Y
H
A
V
S
H
A
L
L
O
W
Cacti conserve water from
You
ou
scarce rains in the desert. Y
can catch waterr, too. Make a rain barrel
to catch rainwater. Use a large plastic
trash can or a wooden barrel. Then use
the water you collect to water your lawn
or garden, or to wash your parents’ carr..
Check here for help: rainbarrelguide.com
Find prickly pear fruit
at Hispanic markets or
grocery stores.
adapted with permission from “The New 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the
Earth” by The Earthworks Group, Andrrews
ewsmcmeel.com)
ews McMeel Publishing (andrrewsmcmeel.com)
• 1/2 cup water
• Pinch of salt
• 2 tablespoons lemon
juice
What to do:
1. Place cactus fruits in a blender and pulse until smooth.
2. Combine sugar, water and salt in a small saucepan to make a simple syrup. Warm
mixture over medium heat until sugar is dissolved.
3. Add simple syrup and lemon juice to fruit and blend until smooth.
4. Pour mixture into a bowl through a sieve. Chill at least 4 hours or overnight.
5. Freeze using an ice cream machine according to manufacturer ’s instructions. Let
set completely in freezer. Makes 3 cups.
7 Little W
Words
ords for Kids
Use the letters in the boxes to make a word with the same meaning as
the clue. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of letters in
the solution. Each letter combination can be used only once, but all letter
combinations will be necessary to complete the puzzle.
1. valuable metal (4)
2. it circles the Earth (4)
3. shake in the cold (6)
4. large bear (7)
5. jumping insect (11)
6. cookie man (11)
7. the color of mud (5)
Eco Note
SSHO
GO
SHIV
ERB
LD
MO
LY
ON
ER
WN
GRA READ
BRO GING GRIZZ PPER
Thank Y
You
ou
T
The
he M
Mini
ini Page®
Page® © 2016
2016 Universal
Universal Uclick
Uclick
I
N
L
L
A
F
N
I
A
R
* You’ll need an adult’s help with this recipe.
T
E
T
A
N
I
L
L
O
P
©2016 Blue Ox T
Te
echnologies L
Lttd. Download the app on Apple and Amazon devices.
ADAPT
T, ANIMALS,
AN
AREOLE, ARID, BIRDS,
CACTUS, DESERT,
EPIDERMIS, FLOWERS,
HUMID, INSECTS,
FRUIT
T, HUM
POLLINA
ATE,
T PRICKL
LY
Y,
RAINFALL, SHALLOW,
SKELETON, SPINE,
SUCCULENT
NT
T, SUNLIGHT.
Sandra: What eye gets
hit the most?
Saul: The bull’s-eye!
The Mini Page thanks
Jason W
Wiley,
iley, horticulturis
horticulturistt with the
Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in
Arizona-Sonora
Tucson, Arizona,
Arizona, for help with this issue.
Tucson,
Teachers:
For standards-based activities to
accompany this feature, visit:
bbs . amuniversal.com/teaching _ guides .html
Answers: gold, moon, shiver, grizzly, grasshopper, gingerbread, brown.
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
14 CSCC ‘welding boot camp’
participants become certified
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
Fourteen
students
and
recent graduates from two local
high schools became certified
welders after attending a new
welding camp offered by
Cleveland State Community
College.
Juniors and seniors from
Bradley Central High School
and Walker Valley High School
were given the opportunity to
take part in a “welding boot
camp” at the college in late
May.
The camp took place in
Cleveland State’s new welding
lab, which was officially introduced with a community open
house that same month.
“It’s nice to see all this hard
work being utilized,” Cleveland
State
welding instructor
Jonathan King said. “This boot
camp was great for the students. It mimicked some reallife situations. ... They were
doing real welds throughout.”
After a week’s worth of
instruction on gas metal arc
welding (GMAW) and metal
inert gas (MIG) welding, students were given the opportunity to test to become an
American Welding Society
Certified Welder.
The tests were offered on May
31, and King said all 14 students passed their certification
tests and now have a credential
which could help them find
employment in welding.
The camp was made available
to Bradley Central and Walker
Valley High School students
only because of a partnership
between Cleveland State and
Bradley County Schools.
Some of the 14 young men
had just graduated from high
school before starting the
camp, but others were able to
become certified welders before
even reaching their high school
graduation day.
Arlette Robinson, career and
technical education supervisor
for Bradley County Schools,
said she is glad high school
students now have a local place
where they test for professional
welding certifications.
She explained both Bradley
Central and Walker Valley have
already allowed students to
gain experience in welding.
Bradley Central offers a track
of four welding courses students can take. Both Bradley
Central and Walker Valley also
offer agriculture mechanics
courses which cover welding.
Through those classes, students can test for student-level
certification
in
welding.
However, Robinson stressed
this is the first time local high
school students have gotten to
test for their professional certifications while still in high
school.
“This is an opportunity high
school students rarely have,”
Robinson said. “No one in
Bradley County
has
ever
offered this. It’s really a big
thing.”
The AWS certification is considered an industry standard
for entry-level welding jobs.
While these students may still
need to gain additional certifications to do certain types of
welding, Robinson said the
basic certification could be
enough to help the recent graduates “get a foot in the door.”
Both King and Robinson said
certified welders are very much
in demand by manufacturing
companies in this area. Both
said their respective departments have been known to
receive calls from area companies looking to hire welders.
This demand, King said, is
why Cleveland State is excited to
not only have a welding lab but
to be able to be adding to the
training it can offer in that field.
The college has offered welding courses for a few years as
part of its electro-mechanical
concentration in its industrial
technology associate’s degree
program. Soon, it is hoping to
offer a standalone certificate
program in welding, which
would give students a college
credential while helping them
test for various industry certifications.
The new program could begin
as soon as this fall, provided
the Tennessee Board of Regents
approves it during its quarterly
meeting June 23.
“We’re hoping to, in the
future, also add an AAS [associate of applied science] degree
in welding,” King said.
In the meantime, the instructor said it was nice to see the
lab being utilized by a group of
students for the first time.
The welding camp included
both classroom and lab
instruction time, and King said
the
students
ultimately
received 30 hours of “handson” experience.
Using individual welding
booths in the lab, students
spent much of that working in
teams of two to complete welds.
Later, they would check others’
work to ensure the metal pieces
they had welded together had
strong enough connections.
Students also learned about
the importance of safety while
dealing with searing torches
and melting metal, using proper equipment like face shields,
gloves and protective jackets.
They also had the chance to
take a field trip to Heatec, Inc.,
a Chattanooga company which
makes heating equipment and
asphalt mixing tanks. There,
students watched the welders
work and received some tips for
their own welding.
“This was a great opportunity,” said Tanner Kincaid, a
recent Walker Valley graduate.
“It’s been great practice.”
He added he was happy to be
getting his AWS certification
and said he now feels better
prepared to begin working as a
professional welder.
Austin Crisp, who will be a
senior at Bradley Central this
fall, said it was “really fun” to
visit Heatec and see profession-
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
FOURTEEN STUDENTS from two local high schools became certified welders during a “boot camp”
held at the new welding lab at Cleveland State Community College. The students are seen here with
instructors Jonathan King, at the left end of the front row, and Chad Laxton, on the opposite end.
Contributed photo
HEATEC INC. Vice President John Clayton gives students from Cleveland State Community College
Welding Boot Camp a tour of the Chattanooga facility. The company allowed students to see its welders
in action, and has also helped equip the college’s new welding lab.
als in action.
Though he still has a year of
high school to go, Crisp also
said he was grateful for the
opportunity to get a jump start
on his professional credentials.
“It’s a good field to get into,
so I am looking foward to getting started in it,” Crisp said.
Students also noted they
were glad to be able to attend
the camp and take the certification test at a relatively low cost.
Students were only charged
$35 to receive their certifications.
Robinson said the remainder
of the instruction and testing
costs
were
covered
by
Cleveland
State,
Bradley
Police
Permit
From Page 1
From Page 1
zens and them letting us know
about things.”
“I think our rapport with the citizens mean the most,” Stokes
added. “The citizens here are just
wonderful, and tell us how pleased
they are we are here.”
He said the Charleston Police
Department works well with other
agencies whenever they call for
assistance. They also respond
when Charleston calls needing
help.
“We have to work together, and
we do that very well,” Stokes said.
A situation earlier this year is
proof. The Piggly Wiggly supermarket in Charleston was broken into,
and a safe was stolen from the
business. Several law enforcement
agencies responded to assist the
Charleston team with the investigation. One of those allegedly involved
in the incident was arrested in
Texas and charged with the crime.
There are few crimes that occur
in Charleston, and the officers said
it is because they are seen monitoring the city every hour.
“We don’t have a [measurable]
crime rate in Charleston,” Spandau
said. “As far as thefts, burglaries
and things like that, they are few
and far between.”
Stokes is a former resident of the
city, and not only works with the
Charleston Police Department, but
with Bradley County Fire-Rescue.
Spandau has been with the
Charleston Police Department for
just over four years, and this is the
first year for Johnson. None see the
department as a steppingstone to
get them to a larger department.
“I am happy to be here in
Charleston,” Johnson said. “I just
like the people here.”
Spandau said there is a connection with the residents of
Charleston that you might not see
in a larger city.
“We are proud to work here. We
love our citizens and they are
pleased to have us here,” Stokes
said.
All three of the Charleston officers have gone through the Law
Enforcement Training Academy at
Cleveland State Community
College, and each is certified.
Stokes said along with the support of the community, the
Charleston City Commission and
Mayor Walter Goode have been
helpful in keeping the police
department up-to-date.
“We couldn’t do it without everyone’s help and support,” he
stressed.
with completion expected in
spring 2017.
The location was chosen
because “a lot of business is
developing in that area,” Bhagat
said.
A similar hotel has just been
completed in Chattanooga.
Cleveland already has one
Marriott hotel, Fairfield Inn &
Suites.
Expansion of the hotel industry has been driven by an
increase in tourism to the area
in recent years.
In addition to tourists staying
in Cleveland for rafting trips on
the Ocoee River and other
leisure, Lee University graduations, sporting events, corporate meetings and ministry
events contribute to the number of hotel stays.
Cleveland has also seen an
increase in hotel stays as construction projects have brought
in specialized employees.
“I think residents just don’t
realize how much traffic we
have in our hotels,” Melissa
Woody, vice president for
tourism development for the
Cleveland/Bradley Chamber of
Commerce, said in a past interview. “I am really of the mind
that a rising tide lifts all ships. I
like to think that the more
brands and the more quality
places we have to stay at our
exits, the more people will stop.”
The TownePlace Suites project received a building permit in
April, and was one of five com-
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
DERRICK KINSEY, chief executive officer for the Boys & Girls Clubs, has been with the organization
for over 22 years, and has seen many children go through the programs there, such as this group of girls
who were all too pleased to have their photographs made with Kinsey.
Kinsey
From Page 1
I wrote about my life in that
song, and he said he was very
sorry about my loss, even
though I had not lost anyone,”
Kinsey said. “The song, though,
was not about me, but the way
it touched him — well, that’s
what music and songwriting are
all about.
“You can become someone
you are not, and that’s what I
hope I bring out in my songwriting,” Kinsey said.
Kinsey ended up being
brought for a visit to Lee
University by his youth pastor.
He eventually graduated with
degrees in business and music.
Music remains important to
Kinsey, but something else that
he experienced at Lee University
was bigger. It was there he met
his better half, Beth. The two
dated for five years and ended
up getting married on Nov. 9,
1996.
The Kinseys work together at
the Boys & Girls Clubs, and he
said “Beth keeps me in line.”
The two have two boys — Gage,
13, and Ian, 11 — both of whom
are into music, with Ian playing
saxophone and Gage the trumpet.
They are also heavy into
sports, on teams at Ocoee
Middle School.
“I guess if I wasn’t at the club,
I would like to be either a songwriter or coach for a living,”
Kinsey said. “I thought at one
time I would get into youth
music ministry, but the Boys &
Girls Clubs expanded and I was
offered a job here.”
Along with the Boys & Girls
Clubs, Kinsey is involved with
recording and event planning
with Adam Lowe at the Venue at
Creekside. He and his wife have
been involved with music at
First Baptist Church, which he
said they have enjoyed.
He does get to participate in
sports at the club, but not as
much as he wishes he could, as
his job leads him more in an
administrative direction. He has
served in many different roles
with the club, with his last position as director of operations.
“I stayed in that role until
(former executive director)
Charlie (Sutton) moved on to
another position within the
club,” Kinsey said. “I have been
in this position for a year.”
Kinsey said with the success
of the seven club locations,
there have been others who
have wanted to emulate that
success.
“We have been approached by
the Copper Basin area that
wants a Boys & Girls Clubs, as
well as Athens, which surprisingly does not have a club,” he
said.
Kinsey said the success of
the clubs is due to “a great
board of directors” and “a very
conscientious staff.”
“It’s a group effort,” he said.
“And we have a great relationship with the local schools and a
great relationship with the
YMCA.”
Kinsey said all of the support
from the community for the
Boys & Girls Clubs is what lets
it run so smoothly and efficiently.
“I am just the overseer of the
clubs’ position, guide and problem solver,” he said. “They make
it go.”
County Schools’ CTE budget
and the Youth CareerConnect
grant, a $4.5 million grant the
school system received in 2014.
Though this first camp was
for Bradley County students
only, King said the college may
be open to partnering with
other school systems for future
events.
mercial permits approved. This
is a jump from recent months,
which have seen little to no new
commercial construction.
These projects represent
$10.3 million in project value
and generated $23,635 in revenue for the city’s general fund.
Other projects included the
Cook Out Restaurant on 25th
Street, renovations at Life Care
Centers of America, a sales
office on South Lee highway
and a storage building on
Michigan Avenue Road.
The Cook Out Restaurant is
taking shape near the corner of
25th and Keith Street. It will be
a double drive-through serving
barbecue, chicken sandwiches,
hamburgers, milkshakes, etc.
The project should be complete
in two to three months.
While the largest value in
projects was in commercial
building permits, there were
more residential permits than
commercial permits approved
in April.
There were seven permits
approved, three for single-family homes and four for townhouses. The projects represent
$822,000 in value and generated $3,789 for the city. This is a
decrease from the 25 residential projects approved last
month
There were also six permits
approved for additions or alterations. These projects included
a deck, two carports, a garage
and a covered porch.
Obama designates 9
new promise zones
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Obama administration has added
nine communities to its effort to
ease access to federal aid and cut
red tape for areas beset by joblessness, hunger, crime and poor
housing.
The newly selected so-called
Promise Zones include neighborhoods in Nashville, south Los
Angeles, the west side of Atlanta,
parts of Evansville, Indiana; San
Diego, eastern Puerto Rico and
southwest Florida. The Spokane
Indian Reservation and communities near Spokane, Washington,
and the Turtle Mountain Band of
Chippewa Indians and their communities around Rolette County,
North Dakota also were selected.
The list brings to 22 the number of urban, rural and Indian
communities that carry the
Promise Zone designation, a cornerstone of President Barack
Obama’s anti-poverty and urban
development agenda. The designation comes with no guaranteed
new federal money but gives communities an advantage in applying for grants, as well as special
access to federal employees who
act as liaisons and guides
through federal bureaucracy.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—7
House primaries
in Ga., Calif.,
show pressures
buffeting GOP
WASHINGTON (AP) — In two
House Republican strongholds —
a Georgia district sprawling from
Atlanta’s exurbs to the Alabama
line and another in California’s
Central Valley — upcoming elections illustrate the anti-establishment mood faced by GOP candidates.
Dentist and former local mayor
Drew Ferguson is vying for the
Republican nomination in a July
runoff for the open Georgia seat,
calling himself “a conservative outsider” and boasting of spurring
economic development. He sometimes sounds like presumptive
GOP presidential nominee Donald
Trump, saying that border fences
are “not mean-spirited” and supporting halting refugees from
nations “whose populations mean
us harm.”
Yet many religious conservatives
and Washington-based conservative groups such as the Club for
Growth prefer state Sen. Mike
Crane. His opposition to narrow
tax breaks led him to vote against
lowered state levies for filmmakers
— even though television’s “The
Walking Dead” films in the area —
and he’s taken hard-line views
against gay marriage and for making English Georgia’s official language.
In California, House Majority
Leader Kevin McCarthy should
easily dominate Tuesday’s primary, in which candidates of all
parties compete for two spots on
November’s ballot. The $6.4 million that McCarthy amassed for
his own campaign — he’s also provided plenty more for GOP colleagues — crushes the $31,000
raised by his best-financed opponent, conservative Republican Ken
Mettler.
McCarthy aides say he travels
home most weekends anyway and
scheduled a half-dozen Memorial
Day events. Unforgotten is 2014,
when the congressional career of
the previous majority leader, GOP
Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, ended
after a primary ambush by an
unknown, underfunded college
professor, Dave Brat, who’s now in
the House.
Republicans are virtually
assured of keeping the Georgia
and California seats in November’s
general elections, but these preliminary battles underscore the
stakes for the party. Races like
Georgia’s will help determine
whether a fresh influx of ideological rebels will make the already
rambunctious House GOP even
harder for its leaders to steer,
while McCarthy’s contest shows a
lingering unease from Cantor’s fall.
“When you’re head of an organization that has a 15 percent
approval rating, you worry,” said
Tom Davis, a former Virginia congressman and head of the House
GOP campaign committee.
Not one House GOP incumbent
has been ousted this year in primaries, even as the public seems
intensely
unhappy
with
Washington. Their survival has
surprised some, just eight months
after conservatives drove House
Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio,
into retirement, and as Trump
vanquished political rivals.
At least one Republican incumbent will lose Tuesday: Redrawn
lines pit Reps. Renee Ellmers and
George Holding against each other
for the nomination in one North
Carolina district. With congressional primaries remaining in
more than half the states, other
incumbents in Colorado, Kansas
and Oklahoma could tumble too.
And groups from competing ends
of the party’s ideological spectrum
are engaging.
The American Action Network
and Congressional Leadership
Fund, aligned with party leaders,
helped House Transportation
Chairman Bill Shuster of
Pennsylvania and Ways and
Means Chairman Kevin Brady of
Texas survive primary scares.
According to figures from the
nonpartisan Center for Responsive
Politics, the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce spent $1.8 million
helping Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala.,
defeat a tea party challenger in a
March primary and helped an ally
win the nomination for an open
Kentucky seat.
On the other side, the Club for
Growth spent $1.1 million to help
conservative businessman Warren
Davidson capture the GOP nomination for Boehner’s vacated seat,
a symbolic triumph, and disbursed $800,000 against Ellmers,
according to the center. The House
Freedom Fund — run by conservatives in the rebellious House
Freedom Caucus — spent more
than $100,000 to help businessman Jim Banks win a Republican
primary in Indiana.
Potentially vulnerable GOP
incumbents have survived primaries in Texas, Pennsylvania, Illinois,
Alabama and Georgia.
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AP Photo/Ben Fox
A detAinee Cell in Camp 6 is seen inside the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Running out of time and options to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center, the Obama administration is scrambling to release as many prisoners as it can and considering novel legal strategies that
include allowing some men to strike plea deals by video-teleconference and sending others to foreign
countries to be prosecuted.
Obama administration rushing
to shrink ranks at Guantanamo
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Obama administration is running out of time and options to
close the Guantanamo Bay
detention center in Cuba, so officials are scrambling to release as
many prisoners as possible and
considering novel legal strategies
that include allowing some men
to strike plea deals by video-teleconference.
Another option would be to
send others to foreign countries
to be prosecuted. But it still
looks to be too late to close the
prison before President Barack
Obama leaves office in January,
denying him the chance to fulfill
a campaign pledge.
There’s the difficulty in transferring prisoners from the U.S.
base in Cuba, questions about
the legality of plea deals and
solid opposition in Congress to
anything that might help Obama
achieve that promise.
“The clock has struck midnight and the American people
have won,” said Sen. Cory
Gardner, R-Colo., who has said
he would oppose any effort to
move detainees to prison facilities in his state. “The president
needs to admit that.”
Later this month, lawmakers
are on track to extend a ban on
moving detainees to U.S. soil.
That would leave the president
with no way to make the January
2017 deadline, barring an unexpected reversal in Congress or a
politically explosive executive
order.
The White House increasingly
is pointing to a parallel strategy:
trying to shrink the number of
detainees in hopes of persuading
lawmakers that Guantanamo is
too expensive to sustain as a
prison.
Of the 80 remaining detainees,
30 have been cleared for an overseas transfer. Most will leave
starting in late June and continuing into July, according to a
U.S. official. Those prisoners will
go to a number of countries,
including at least one in Europe,
said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the
administration had not authorized public release of the information.
Seven additional detainees are
facing trial by military commission, including five charged with
planning and supporting the
Sept. 11 attacks. Three others
have been convicted. But commission proceedings have gone
on at a glacial pace. In April, the
Pentagon put forward fresh proposals for Guantanamo, but
none has been incorporated into
defense legislation moving
through Congress.
The remaining 40 were either
at one time considered for prosecution or held as indefinite “law
of war detainees” until the end of
hostilities in the fight against terrorism that began after the 2001
attacks. The United States started using Guantanamo for suspects in January 2002; at its
peak, the facility held about 680
prisoners.
U.S. officials have chipped
away at those numbers through
the Periodic Review Board, a
multiagency task force that conducts parole-style hearings for
men once deemed too dangerous
to release.
The board did not hold a hearing until November 2013, but
recently it has picked up its pace,
holding more than 20 so far this
year. Outcomes are leaning heavily in prisoners’ favor. If the government keeps up its current
pace of about two per week, it
wouldn’t complete hearings,
much less arrange for transfers,
until December.
The U.S. also is working with
other governments to prosecute
some detainees overseas, the official said. These could be prisoners accused of conduct outside
the U.S. involving offenses
against citizens of other countries. It would otherwise be difficult or impossible to prosecute
these men in an American court.
One possible example would
be Mohammed Abdul Malik
Bajabu, a 42-year-old Kenyan
accused of involvement in plots
in Mombasa in November 2002:
an attack on an Israeli-owned
hotel, in which 13 people died,
and an unsuccessful attempt to
shoot down an Israeli airliner.
The official declined to identify
any specific cases but said there
could be five to 10 in all.
The defense bill up for debate
in the Senate soon includes a
provision that would allow
detainees to enter guilty pleas —
via video teleconference — in federal civilian courts. If a judge
accepts the plea, the detainee
would be sentenced and transferred to serve that sentence in a
foreign prison.
In conversations with advocates, White House officials have
said the Justice Department has
reservations about such guilty
plea proposals. Chief among the
concerns is whether the judge
could accept the guilty pleas as
entered by the defendant knowingly and voluntarily — a
bedrock principle of the
American criminal justice system
— while there is no mechanism
in place to stand trial. The prisoner’s only other choice is continued, indefinite detention.
The White House has not
taken a position, but suggested it
is receptive to the idea. The president believes it is “important
that we have available to us a
variety of tools at our disposal,”
National
Security
Council
spokesman Myles Caggins said
in a statement, which also noted
that federal courts have an “outstanding record” of handling terrorism cases.
Ramzi Kassem, a lawyer who
has
represented
many
Guantanamo prisoners over the
years, including three still held,
said the ability to strike a plea
deal in federal court would bene-
SEATTLE (AP) — Dozens of
residents of a Columbia River
town in northern Oregon have
been given the all clear to return
home, after crews made progress
in repairing damage caused by
the derailment of an oil train that
sparked a fire.
About a hundred people — a
quarter of Mosier’s population —
were evacuated Friday from after
several cars carrying the volatile
oil went off the tracks.
But officials said late Sunday
night that the Wasco County
Sheriff’s office lifted the evacuation order, after progress was
made in cleaning up the derail-
ment and restoring essential
services, including a waste water
treatment plant.
A statement by incident
spokeswoman Judy Smith of the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency said 10,000 gallons of oil
had been removed from the
plant. She said water and sewer
services were usable, but a boil
water order remains in effect.
“We’re doing everything we
can to get you back home, but
we’re not going to risk your safety,” Union Pacific Railroad official Raquel Espinoza said
Sunday, before the all-clear was
signaled.
Oregon residents return home
following oil train derailment
fit relatively few detainees. He
said the renewed administration
interest in closing the prison is
hard to take seriously now.
“Those efforts and that kind of
resolve should have been shown
over the course of the eight years
of the Obama administration and
not in its final moments,” said
Kassem, a law professor at the
City University of New York.
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8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Tropical Storm Colin heading toward Florida’s Gulf coast
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) —
Tropical Storm Colin was gaining
speed and strength Monday on
its way to strike Florida, threatening rains forecasters said
could cause some serious flooding along much of the state’s
Gulf coast.
A large portion of Florida’s
western and Panhandle coast
was already under a tropical
storm warning when the
National Hurricane Center
announced that a quickly moving depression
The center said it is the earliest that a third named storm has
ever formed in the Atlantic basin.
Colin’s maximum sustained
winds Monday morning had
increased to near 50 mph (85
kph) with some slow strengthening possible during the next two
days.
The storm was centered about
360 miles (580 kilometers) westsouthwest of Tampa and moving
north-northeast near 14 mph (22
kph).
Tropical storms carry wind
speeds of between 39 mph (63
kph) and 73 mph (117 kph).
“It’s going to impact most of
the state in some way,” Gov. Rick
Scott said in a phone interview.
“Hopefully we won’t have any significant issues here, but we can
have some storm surge, some
rain, tornados and some flooding.”
The center of Colin is expected
to approach the coast of the
Florida Big Bend area Monday
afternoon or evening, forecasters
said.
Colin is expected to produce
rainfall amounts of 3 to 5 inches
and forecasters said up to 8
inches possible across western
Florida, eastern Georgia, and
coastal areas of the Carolinas
through Tuesday.
Scott postponed a political
meeting
with
presumptive
Republican presidential nominee
Donald
Trump
scheduled
Monday in New York so he can
remain in the state capital to
monitor the weather.
It is the latest in a series of
severe whether events across the
country, from record-breaking
heat in the West, flooding in
Texas and storms that are
expected to cause problems in
the nation’s capital and midAtlantic region.
Scott warned residents not to
simply look at the center of the
storm, saying the heaviest rain
will be to the east and west of it.
The National Weather Service
in Mobile, Alabama, issued a
flood warning for the Shoal River
near Crestview and warned of
possible widespread flooding in
streams, creeks, and canals.
Wind gusts threatened to bring
down trees and branches and
cause power outages.
The Georgia coast and the
north Florida Atlantic coast were
placed under a tropical storm
watch Sunday evening.
Sand bags were being distributed to residents in St.
Petersburg, Tampa and nearby
cities.
—ARIZONA HEAT
The National Weather Service
said Phoenix hit 113 degrees on
Sunday, making it the third day
in a row setting record high temperatures in Arizona’s Urban
Heart. Sunday’s high beat the
previous record of 112 degrees in
1990.
Much of Southern Arizona,
from Phoenix to Nogales, is
under an excessive heat warning.
Other western and southwestern U.S. states are experiencing
above-normal temperatures in
the triple-digits.
Officials are warning residents
to stay hydrated and avoid the
outdoors between 10 a.m. and 4
p.m., when temperatures are
highest.
—POWER OUTTAGES IN NEW
JERSEY
Strong storms swept through
the state downing trees and
power lines and leaving thousands without power.
South Jersey was the hardest
hit Sunday night.
NJ.com reports about 19,000
Atlantic City Electric customers
were without power at the height
of the storm.
The utility say most customers
should expect to have their
power restored by late Sunday
night.
The National Weather Service
had issued thunderstorm watches and warnings for the state.
No major damage or injuries
were reported.
—DAMAGING WINDS IN OHIO
Thunderstorms in parts of
Ohio have brought powerful
winds that have caused some
reported damage.
Many counties in northeast
Ohio were under a severe thunderstorm watch or warning
Sunday as a front moved
through the state.
A spokesman for Cedar Point
amusement park in Sandusky
says traffic there was diverted
after a nearby roadway was
closed as a result of downed
power lines and debris from the
storm.
The spokesman says Cedar
Point will be closed Monday as
utility crews work to repair the
downed power lines. The park
plans to reopen Tuesday.
The Sandusky Register reports
the storm also downed trees and
power lines in the city’s downtown area.
—TEXAS TRAGEDY
Fort Hood officials have identified the last of nine soldiers who
died in Texas floodwaters during
a training exercise as a 25-yearold Army specialist from
California.
Army officials on Sunday said
Spc. Yingming Sun enlisted in
2013 and first arrived at Fort
Hood nearly two years ago.
He and eight others who were
previously identified died when
fast-moving waters washed a 2
½-ton vehicle from a low-water
crossing Thursday.
Three others soldiers survived
and have returned to duty.
Heavy and persistent storms
the past two weeks have dumped
more than a foot of rain in parts
of Texas.
The rain is expected to diminish this week and dry out areas
such as Southeast Texas, where
officials gave evacuation order to
about 2,000 homes.
—INDIANA TORNADO
The National Weather Service
said a tornado touched down in
eastern Indiana when a weekend
storm passed over the area.
The
weather
service’s
Wilmington, Ohio, office said
Remains of New
York sailor killed at
Pearl Harbor ID’d
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)
— The remains of a central New York sailor
killed in the attack on
Pearl Harbor nearly 75
years ago have been
identified and will be
buried in his hometown
The Defense POW/MIA
Accounting Agency says
Machinist’s Mate 1st
Class Alfred Wells of
Syracuse was aboard the
battleship
USS
Oklahoma when the
Japanese launched their
surprise attack on the
U.S. fleet in Hawaii on
Dec. 7, 1941.
veterans hospitals.
“I think that a lot of the topics
that they discuss isn’t as important,” she said in a glittering
gold gown.
Barber’s not the only contestant who had to address the election and the Republican candidate, who had a public break-up
with the beauty pageant organization last year.
Trump offended Hispanics
when he made anti-immigrant
remarks in announcing his bid
for the White House last June.
He at the time co-owned The
Miss Universe Organization with
NBCUniversal, but the network
and the Spanish-language
broadcaster Univision quickly
cut ties with him, refusing to air
the show. Trump sued both networks, eventually settling and
selling off the entire pageant to
talent management company
WME/IMG.
Miss Hawaii, who came in
second Sunday night, punted
during the question-and-answer
AP photo
segment when asked who she
MIss DIstRIct of coluMbIA Deshauna Barber is crowned
would vote for among the likely Miss USA by Miss USA 2015 Olivia Jordan during the 2016 Miss
presidential candidates, Trump USA pageant in Las Vegas on Sunday.
or Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Chelsea Hardin acknowledged
that there was no way to cor- ing a question about social and takenly named Colombia’s
rectly answer the question dur- economic inequality. The 20- Ariadna Gutierrez Arevalo the
year-old model, who is the winner before correcting himself
ing the beauty pageant.
The question was framed with daughter of the 1990s one-hit- on the stage. Pia Alonzo
Clinton’s likely status of being wonder singer Gerardo, known Wurtzbach of the Philippines
the first woman nominated by a for “Rico Suave,” had also talked was then given the crown.
major political party in the race about suffering from anorexia Officials later said it was due to
for the White House. The 24- and wanting to promote body human error.
The talk show host said he
year-old college student from confidence earlier in the show.
The beauty pageant organiza- had re-read the card and
Honolulu responded that gender
doesn’t matter when deciding tion also didn’t shy away from noticed it said “first runner-up”
addressing another controversy next to the Colombia contestthe next commander in chief.
The other women in the top from last year — Miss Universe. ant’s name before clarifying
Steve Harvey made a cameo in with producers his mistake.
five were asked about voting
He took to Twitter after Miss
a
video
at the start of the Miss
rights, income inequality and
the recent death of sports icon USA show to poke fun of the USA Sunday night to mock himMiss Universe crowning that he self again by highlighting the
Muhammad Ali.
similarity of the two locations,
Fan favorite Miss California, botched in December.
the District of Columbia and the
Harvey
was
hosting
Miss
Nadia Grace Mejia, had stumcountry of Colombia.
Universe
last
year
when
he
misbled and paused when answer-
Ohio prosecutor to decide on
charges in Cincinnati Zoo case
CINCINNATI (AP) — An Ohio
prosecutor plans to release his
decision Monday on whether he
will pursue charges against the
family of a 3-year-old boy who got
into the Cincinnati Zoo’s gorilla
exhibit, leading to the fatal shooting of an endangered gorilla to protect the child.
Hamilton County Prosecutor
Joe Deters has scheduled an afternoon news conference, in which
he’s expected to discuss his conclusions after a review into the
family’s actions.
Legal experts have said that
prosecution on child endangerment or similar charges seems
unlikely. The family has declined
to comment.
Sunday that a tornado with wind
speeds of up to 85 mph cut a 1¼
mile path Saturday near
Richmond, Indiana. No one was
injured by the EF0 tornado,
which is the weakest tornado
designation the weather service
assigns.
Evacuations canceled for
Southern California brush fire
New Miss USA is from
D.C.; to take a break
from U.S. Army Reserves
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The newly
crowned Miss USA is a 26-yearold Army officer from the
District of Columbia who gave
perhaps the strongest answer of
the night when asked about
women in combat.
“As a woman in the United
States Army, I think ... we are
just as tough as men. As a commander of my unit, I’m powerful, I am dedicated,” Deshauna
Barber said. “Gender does not
limit us in the United States.”
The winner of Sunday’s 2016
Miss USA competition held at
the T-Mobile Arena off the Las
Vegas Strip will go on to compete in the Miss Universe contest.
Barber is the first-ever military member to win Miss USA.
In a press conference following
the event, the 26-year-old lieutenant from Northeast DC said
she plans to take a break from
the Army Reserves and had
already discussed with superiors the possibility of going inactive for a couple of years should
she win the title. She said she
currently serves two days per
month.
“My commander should be
watching right now,” Barber
said. “Two days a month is definitely not active duty. It is an
obligation that I signed up for
but they are very flexible in the
United States Army Reserves.”
Barber said she plans to use
the pageant’s spotlight and her
title to support veteran’s causes
and tackle the issue of suicide
and post-traumatic stress disorder among military members.
When asked what message she
had for the presidential candidates — including former pageant owner and presumptive
Republican nominee Donald
Trump — Barber said they
should focus more on veteran’s
issues, including the backlog at
AP Photo/David J. Phillip
HoRses suRRouNDeD by floodwaters are shown in this aerial
view Saturday in Rosharon, Texas. Parts of Texas have been inundated with rain in the last week, and more than half of the state has
been under flood watches or warnings.
The zoo says it was the first
such breach in Gorilla World’s 38
years of existence, but the exhibit
will reopen Tuesday with a higher,
reinforced barrier. The boy apparently climbed over the barrier May
28 before falling about 15 feet into
a shallow moat.
A special response team shot
and killed the gorilla, 17-year-old
Harambe, after concluding the
boy’s life was at stake.
A Cincinnati police report identifies the boy’s mother as Michelle
Gregg, 32, who works at a preschool near Cincinnati. The child’s
father isn’t named in the report,
and it’s unclear whether he was at
the zoo at the time of the incident.
The boy’s family has said he is
doing well at home after being
treated at a hospital. Police said he
had scrapes on his head and knee.
Police released 911 tapes last
week that highlighted the confusion and panic in the moments
when the boy plunged into the
gorilla exhibit.
“He’s dragging my son! I can’t
watch this!” a woman says in the
911 call. As she pleads for help,
she shouts at her son repeatedly:
“Be calm!”
The police report states that witnesses said the gorilla initially
appeared to be protecting the
child, but after onlookers began
screaming, he became “agitated
and scared” and began dragging
the child.
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Thousands of people driven from
their homes in the hills northwest of Los Angeles were allowed
to return Sunday night after
crews working in steep canyons
took advantage of cooler temperatures and calmer winds to beat
back a brush fire.
The fire near the prosperous
and semi-rural neighborhoods of
Calabasas was 80 percent contained by sunset — up from 30
percent at daybreak.
Firefighters using aircraft
made water drops along the eastern and southern edges of the
blaze, which was held to just over
500 acres, Los Angeles County
Deputy Fire Chief John Tripp
said.
He said the fire was hung up
on the mid-slope of steep
canyons, making a direct attack
difficult.
“The fire was not down against
a road, it was up against a cliff,”
Tripp said. “So firefighters had to
hike up.”
All the evacuations, most of
them in Calabasas but some in
nearby Topanga, were canceled
starting at 6 p.m.
At the height of the fire, about
3,000 homes were threatened
and about 5,000 residents were
under evacuation orders.
It was sparked by a car crash
that downed power lines.
The fire destroyed one commercial building, Tripp said.
Officials had previously said
three homes had been damaged,
but closer examination as the fire
calmed showed that was not the
case, he said.
Fifty-foot-high flames erupted
on ridges, and embers turned
trees into torches Saturday afternoon.
The fire flared as Southern
California sweltered under temperatures that hit the 90s in
many places.
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Center-right economist narrowly ahead in Peru election
AP photo
in this MAy 25 Photo, Mao Yushi writes calligraphy as his wife Zhao Yanling prepares the ink at
their home in Beijing. Targeted by radical Red Guards during China’s tumultuous Cultural Revolution,
Mao Yushi saw his family home ransacked, underwent hard labor and was lashed bloody with copper
wires along with his father. Fifty years later, Mao’s campaign to document China’s turbulent past and hold
the ruling Communist Party accountable continues to win him enemies among die-hard acolytes of Mao
Zedong, who unleashed the Cultural Revolution in 1966 in a bid to revive his radical egalitarian agenda.
Critic of Mao persists in documenting
China’s turbulent and violent past
BEIJING (AP) — As China’s
Cultural Revolution descended
into mob violence, teenage Red
Guards dragged Mao Yushi and
his father, two proud and bookish engineers, out of their home
to sweep a boulevard as a crowd
watched and jeered. The pair
were then lashed with a copperflecked whip until their backs
were flayed. When Mao later
stumbled into work, he didn’t
know blood was still seeping
through his shirt until colleagues
pointed it out.
“I was whipped through my
skin, but I didn’t feel pain
because in my heart I was so
scared I would be beaten to
death,” Mao recalls. “Every day
they pulled dead bodies through
... the market on flat-bed tricycles. A piece of cloth covering
every tricycle, just like that.”
Fifty years later, the prominent
economist’s campaign to document China’s turbulent past and
hold the ruling Communist Party
accountable continues to win
him enemies among die-hard
acolytes of Mao Zedong, who
unleashed
the
Cultural
Revolution in 1966 in a bid to
destroy his political foes and
revive his radical egalitarian
agenda.
The life and career of the 87year-old economist, who is not
related to the late leader, traces
the twists of modern China’s
tumultuous history. He survived
near starvation in the late 1950s
and persecution during the
Cultural Revolution only to battle
a concerted campaign by neoMaoists to vilify him today.
“The one who brought calamity
to an entire nation still hangs in
Tiananmen Square and is still
found on the banknotes we use
every day,” Mao wrote in a 2011
essay that placed him firmly in
the crosshairs of the neoMaoists. “China’s tragicomedy
still hasn’t had its curtain call.”
Mao’s ordeals have only
emboldened his criticism of a
restrictive political system that
gave rise, he says, to a climate in
which rampaging teenagers
could publicly whip him into a
bloody heap five decades ago,
and which continues to impose
one-party authoritarian rule over
an increasingly prosperous and
diverse society.
A former scholar with the
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences and co-founder of freemarket think-tank Unirule,
Mao’s arguments for market
reforms and individual rights
have brought him an international following, and won him
accolades including the 2012
Milton Friedman Prize from the
libertarian Cato Institute in
Washington, D.C.
Yet, interviewed one recent
afternoon in their west Beijing
home, Mao and his wife, Zhao
Yanling, said they are still paying
the price for his widely circulated
2011 online column criticizing
Mao Zedong as a power-obsessed
sociopath whose legacy continues to warp Chinese society.
Neo-Maoists have left death
threats on his voicemail, held
protest rallies outside his public
lectures and signed petitions
seeking his arrest. One man
threw a shoe at him at a lecture
in eastern China; another barged
into a speech in Washington to
denounce him as a traitor to the
Chinese people. The government
has warned him to be less outspoken but has not employed
harsher methods it has used on
others critical of the leadership.
With this year marking the
Cultural Revolution’s 50th
anniversary, the couple feels particularly under siege. In recent
weeks police have intercepted
suspected Maoists seeking to
confront them at home, said
Zhao, who dreads the sound of
her own doorbell.
“She lives in a state of constant
fear,” Mao said. “So do I.”
Mao was born in 1929. His
father and an uncle were engineers trained at Purdue
University in the United States.
Mao moved 13 times in a dozen
years as he followed the work
assignments of his father, a highranking railway planner.
Although a strong supporter of
the Communist Party following
its violent 1949 takeover, Mao
began openly questioning the
planned economy while pursuing
his own career as a railway engineer. Amid a far-reaching crackdown on dissent, he was labeled
a rightist in 1957 and lost several
pay grades.
Worse was to come. In 1960,
he was sent to rural Shandong
province to be re-educated,
where he discovered the horror of
the massive famine that resulted
from Mao Zedong’s headline
drive to collectivize agriculture
and build up industry. Mao
Yushi and others survived by eating insects and birds, while all
but one in a family of 12 in his
village succumbed to starvation.
An estimated 30 million or more
are believed to have died over
three years in an event that
remains little discussed in the
country.
Eventually reinstated to a
comfortable life in Beijing, Mao’s
existence was again upended on
a steamy August evening in 1966
soon after the start of the
Cultural Revolution. A neighbor
directed a band of Red Guards to
the Mao home, denouncing the
family as capitalists and intellectuals who were ripe targets for
class struggle.
“Don’t speak,” one of the boys,
no older than 16, warned as he
led the family outside, adding
ominously: “If you speak, I’ll dig
another hole in the ground.”
The thuggish youths carted
away furniture, jewelry and
clothes and burned the family’s
ration coupons, leaving just
enough cash for a handful of
meals. In the following weeks,
they returned to whip both the
father and son and shave the
head of Zhao, Mao’s wife, as a
particularly bitter form of humiliation.
Mao Yushi was soon banished
to a locomotive factory in distant
Shanxi Province while Zhao
stayed in Beijing, leaving a portion of their monthly salary in a
milk box outside to fend off the
roving gangs. Mao’s father managed to keep his position in
Beijing.
Mao returned to visit his wife
and two children a few times a
year until Mao Zedong’s death in
1976 finally put an end to the
decade-long paroxysm of violence
and chaos, in which an estimated 1 million Chinese died from
persecution, execution or by
killing themselves.
Amid the 1980s economic
reforms instituted under Deng
Xiaoping, Mao turned to economics. He grew increasingly critical
of the party following the bloody
crackdown on the 1989 studentled pro-democracy protests
focused on Beijing’s Tiananmen
Square.
Armed with his laptop and several blogs , Mao continues to give
his opinions on everything from
state enterprise reforms to efforts
to regulate the housing market.
“All of the mistakes this country has made have been because
there is no freedom of thought or
freedom of expression,” he said.
Ukraine arrests Frenchman for plotting
attacks on Euro 2016 soccer tournament
MOSCOW (AP) — Ukraine’s
intelligence agency has thwarted a
plot to attack the European
Championship soccer tournament
in France by arresting a heavilyarmed Frenchman who wanted to
cross into the European Union,
officials said Monday.
The Ukrainian Security Service,
or SBU, said it had followed the
man since December and allowed
him to purchase five machine
guns,
two
rocket-propelled
grenade launchers, 125 kilograms
(275 pounds) of TNT, 100 detonators and other weapons. He also
bought 20 balaclavas before he
was arrested at the Yahodyn border crossing between Ukraine and
Poland last month, authorities
said.
The SBU “has managed to foil a
series of 15 terrorist attacks which
were planned to target France
before and during” Euro 2016,
said Vasyl Hrytsak, the security
agency’s chief.
The SBU didn’t identify the man
but said the suspect wanted to
protest against his government’s
migration policies and the spread
of Islam. It said he planned
attacks on bridges, railways and
other infrastructure for Euro
2016.
Extremist attacks are a major
concern for French authorities as
they prepare to host the monthlong tournament at stadiums in
the Paris area and eight other
cities from Friday through July
10. Islamic State extremists have
threatened France during the
tournament, but authorities
haven’t confirmed specific dangers.
France is deploying a 90,000strong security force for the tournament, and President Francois
Hollande said Sunday night that
the threat of attacks won’t stop it
from being successful.
The Paris police prefect, Michel
Cadot, declined to comment on
the information from Ukraine,
saying only that “there is no specific threat against any (Euro
2016) site.”
Ukraine’s intelligence agency
had initially planned to keep a lid
on the investigation, but decided
to go public about the arrest after
reports in international media,
Hrytsak told national television.
French regional newspaper
L’Est republicain identified the
man as Gregoire Moutaux and
said investigators raided his home
in Nant-le-Petit near the eastern
city of Nancy in late May. The
source for the man’s identity
wasn’t cited. French television network M6 reported that investigators found T-shirts of an extreme
right group.
However, the Paris prosecutor’s
office, which handles terrorism
cases at a national level, said no
investigation had been opened yet.
Ukrainian authorities released
photos of a fair-haired man, with
his face blurred, holding various
weapons, as well as a video of the
arrest which showed SWAT officers dragging the man out of a
white minivan and putting him on
the ground of what looked like a
parking lot with his face down.
The SBU said the Frenchman
became known to the agency last
year during his stay in eastern
Ukraine, and where he was “trying
to establish ties with Ukrainian
troops under the guise of volunteering.”
Ukrainian troops and Russiabacked separatists have fought in
the east since April 2014, killing
nearly 9,400 people. It wasn’t
immediately clear which side of
the conflict the Frenchman had
stayed with.
LIMA, Peru (AP) — Economist
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski had a
razor-thin lead over the daughter
of an imprisoned former president
in Peru’s presidential election, as
Peruvians nervously awaited
results still trickling in from
remote parts of the Andean nation.
With about half of polling stations counted late Sunday night,
the 77-year-old Kuczynski had
50.6 percent of the votes compared
to 49.4 percent for his rival Keiko
Fujimori, the daughter of jailed former strongman Alberto Fujimori.
While votes from Peru’s hinterland, where support for Fujimori is
strongest, could take days to come
in, Kuczynski supporters were
optimistic they’d prevail after two
unofficial quick counts showed
him winning by at least 1 percentage point. While that is within the
statistical margin of error of the
counts, the pollsters have a track
record of accuracy.
Addressing cheering supporters
from the balcony of his campaign
headquarters, the former World
Bank economist urged them to be
vigilant against fraud at the ballot
box but otherwise sounded as if he
had already been declared the winner.
“We’re going to have a government built on consensus. No more
low blows or fights,” said the econ-
AP photo
PeruviAn PresidentiAl cAndidAte Pedro Pablo Kuczynski
celebrates from the balcony of his headquarters in Lima, Peru on
Sunday. Early exit polls show the candidate with a slight lead over his
rival Keiko Fujimori in Peru's runoff presidential election.
omist, who supported fellow conservative Fujimori in the 2011
runoff won by President Ollanta
Humala.
But Fujimori showed no sign of
conceding defeat.
“We’re going to wait with prudence because all night votes will
be coming in from the provinces,
from abroad and from the rural
voters of deep Peru,” she said while
dancing to her campaign theme
song on a campaign truck parked
outside the Lima hotel where she
awaited results. Many see the election as a referendum on her
father’s iron-fisted rule in the
1990s.
With 52 percent of voting stations counted late Sunday night,
Kuczynski had 4,724,897 votes
compared to 4,613,861 for
Fujimori.
A potential swing vote in a close
race could be the 885,000
Peruvians eligible to vote abroad —
about 3.8 percent of the electorate.
It would be a stunning turnaround for Kuczynski, who managed to narrow Fujimori’s lead by
abandoning his above-the-fray,
grandfatherly appeal and attacking
her as a risk to Peru’s young
democracy.
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SportS
MONDAY
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Home-run happy Dodgers
rout Braves, sweep series
Auburn beats
Florida State
to earn berth
in WCWS
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) —
Auburn regained its composure
late to move within two wins of a
national title.
Pinch-runner Morgan Podany
beat a tag at the plate in the bottom of the eighth inning, and the
Tigers edged Florida State 8-7 on
Sunday night in the Women’s
College World Series to advance to
the best-of-three championship
round.
Auburn (57-10) reached the
championship series for the first
time and set a school record for
wins.
“It wasn’t as pretty as we would
have liked,” Auburn coach Clint
Myers said. “It wasn’t as easy as
we would have liked. But I think
you saw the fight. I think you saw
the heart.”
Myers, who won national
championships at Arizona State
in 2008 and 2011, has Auburn in
position to win it in his third year
at the school.
“I believed in the people I work
with, that if they buy in, which
we’ve proven that they have, and
if they work and commit, great
things happen,” he said. “I mean,
we’ve still got softball to play, but
having the opportunity to play for
a national championship is something that we’ve talked about
since we got there, and again, it’s
them buying in.”
Florida State’s Cali Harrod tied
it with a three-run homer in the
seventh.
Auburn’s Madi Gipson singled
in the bottom of the eighth, then
advanced to third on Florida
State left fielder Alex Kossoff’s
fielding error. Auburn’s Whitney
Jordan made solid contact and
sent the ball back to Florida
State’s Jessica Warren, whose
throw home was a bit too late to
get Podany.
Florida State committed three
errors that produced three
unearned runs and left the bases
loaded in the bottom of the sixth
and seventh innings. The
Seminoles (55-10) left 12 runners
on base overall. Alex Powers, one
of Florida State’s best hitters, was
the final out in both the sixth and
seventh innings
“We had our chances,” Florida
See AUBURN, Page 13
AP photo
AubuRn first baseman Jade
Rhodes (8) celebrates her home
run over Florida State in the third
inning of their Women’s College
World Series playoff game
Sunday, in Oklahoma City.
AP photo
novAk DjokoviC returns a shot in the final of the French Open against Britain’s Andy Murray
Sunday, at Roland Garros stadium in Paris.
Fourth major in a row
Djokovic finally gets
win at French Open
PARIS (AP) — A French Open champion at has won 28 Grand Slam matches in a row, from
long last, and the first man in nearly a half-cen- Wimbledon and the U.S. Open last year, to the
tury to win four consecutive major champi- Australian Open in January, and now, after
onships, Novak Djokovic grabbed a racket and quite a wait, the French Open.
etched a heart in the very red
“This is something that is so
clay that had given him such
rare in tennis,” said Murray,
heartache in the past.
who is now 2-8 in Grand Slam
Then, when he finally was
finals. “It’s going to take a long
“It’s really a very
handed the La Coupe des
time for it to happen again.”
special moment. Perhaps
Mousquetaires — the one troThe last man to hold all four
the greatest moment of
phy he truly yearned for, the
major titles simultaneously
my career.”
one he needed to complete a
was Rod Laver in 1969, when
— French Open winner
career Grand Slam — Djokovic
he earned a calendar-year
Novak Djokovic
held it overhead, his eyes shut,
Grand Slam. Djokovic now can
before kissing it, exhaling and
set his sights on that ultimate
smiling
broadly.
Later,
tennis achievement; he’s the
Djokovic’s father and friends sipped champagne first man since Jim Courier in 1992 to get
from it.
halfway.
In his 12th appearance at Roland Garros,
Djokovic, a 29-year-old from Serbia, owns six
and fourth final, the top-seeded Djokovic titles from the Australian Open, three from
earned that elusive title with a 3-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6- Wimbledon and two from the U.S. Open for a
4 victory over No. 2 Andy Murray on Sunday, Grand Slam total of 12. Among men, only Roger
buoyed by a supportive crowd that repeatedly Federer (with 17), Rafael Nadal (14) and Pete
chanted his nickname, “No-le!”
Sampras (14) have more. Djokovic is also one of
“It’s really a very special moment,” Djokovic eight men with at least one championship at
said. “Perhaps the greatest moment of my each major.
career.”
Since losing the 2015 final in Paris, Djokovic See DJOKOVIC, Page 13
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Corey
Seager’s compact swing is carrying the Los Angeles Dodgers while
the veterans try to find their
offense.
Seager homered twice — his
second multihomer game in three
days — and Yasmani Grandal hit
a three-run shot in a 12-6 victory
over the Atlanta Braves on
Sunday that completed a sweep
with the Dodgers’ seventh win in
a row at home.
“It’s one of those things that
you try and do every day, but it’s
working right now,” Seager said.
He went 3 for 5, drove in a
career-high four runs and scored
twice two days after hitting three
homers in Friday’s 4-2 win in the
series opener. The 22-year-old
rookie shortstop edged ahead of
Adrian Gonzalez (.284) as the
team’s top hitter with a .286 average.
“He is the perfect No. 2-hole
hitter for them,” Braves veteran
Jeff Francoeur said. “I can’t
believe how tall he is (6-foot-4)
and he’s got some pop and not
many shortstops have that. He’s
going to be an All-Star for a long
time.”
Scott Kazmir (5-3) overcame a
rocky first inning in which he
gave up two runs before settling
down and allowing three runs
and seven hits in five-plus
innings. He struck out five and
walked one before leaving early
because of cramping in his left
quadriceps.
“Even in warmups it felt like
my quad was tight,” said Kazmir,
who felt worse running the bases
after he went 2 for 3 with a run
scored. “Using my legs a little bit
more it shut down some things.
They got me out of there out of
precaution. I think I’ll be fine.”
Matt Wisler (2-6) took the loss
for the last-place Braves, who
dropped their fourth in a row and
were outscored 20-8 in the series.
“It was a tough series for us
considering that we played pretty
well in San Francisco and then
we get here and these guys are
swinging the bats well at home,”
interim manager Brian Snitker
said. “We just got to keep fighting.”
Wisler gave up eight runs and
nine hits in four innings — his
shortest outing so far — in his
first start at Dodger Stadium. The
right-hander struck out five and
walked three.
“I was pretty bad,” he said. “I
got behind in a lot of counts and
they made me pay for it. I have to
learn how to fight through it. It
See BRAVES, Page 13
AP photo
L.A. DoDgeR Enrique
Hernandez rounds third after hitting a solo home run as Atlanta
Braves starter Matt Wisler stands
on the mound in the second
inning Sunday, in Los Angeles.
Rain postpones sunday’s
sprint Cup race at Pocono
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — Jeff
Gordon found only greatness,
not boredom, in Martin Truex
Jr’s record run at Charlotte
Motor Speedway.
In the broadcast booth
Sunday, the retired four-time
NASCAR champ said Truex’s
dominant feat last weekend
should be rewarded, not decried
as bad for the sport because of
the way he cruised against no
true competition in the CocaCola 600.
Truex’s record romp was one
of the stock car ages — he led
392 of 400 laps, set a Sprint Cup
record for miles led in a race with
588, and his 160.655 mph run in
the No. 78 Toyota made the race
the fastest one in Coke history.
Let the critics moan.
Truex was too busy celebrating his career renaissance.
“Definitely a great week,”
Truex said. “One of the best I’ve
ever had.”
Even better for Truex, he was
headed to Pocono Raceway, site
of his lone victory in 2015. Truex
dominated off late restarts down
the stretch to snap a 69-race
winless streak last June and
earn a berth in the Chase.
“I think typically past experience at a track is definitely a
good thing,” Truex said.
Truex and his Furniture Row
Racing team had to wait one
more day to aim for a repeat.
Rain washed out the NASCAR
Sprint Cup race and it will now
run at noon Monday. Brad
Keselowski is on the pole and
Truex starts 17th in Pocono’s
first Monday race since 2009.
The 2012 rain-shortened race at
Pocono was marred by lightning
strikes that killed one fan and
injured nine others.
This was the first postponed
race of the season and ninth
since 2011.
Truex’s win in Charlotte
earned him a spot in the Chase
for the Sprint Cup championship
— a spot he parlayed last year
into the four-driver field in the
finale to race for the title.
Truex has proved this season
that his success was no fluke.
His 809 laps led through the first
13 races are 242 more than his
total all of last season and his
two top-five finishes and six top10s aren’t far removed from his
2015 pace.
One a middling driver for two
other teams, Truex has watched
his career blossom at single-car
operation Furniture Row.
“I feel like I’m a better driver
than I’ve ever been,” he said.
“But you (need) a great team and
all the things around you it takes
to be competitive at this level
See SPRINT CUP, Page 13
Gurley set and ready to thrive
in Rams’ Hollywood spotlight
OXNARD, Calif. (AP) — Todd
Gurley has lost more than 10
pounds since his rookie season
with the Rams ended, and he
isn’t exactly sure how it happened.
It wasn’t for a lack of burgers,
though.
Gurley’s new television commercial for the Carl’s Jr. fast
food chain is his boldest step yet
into the magnified spotlight on
him ever since the Rams went
Hollywood.
Alongside No. 1 pick Jared
Goff at quarterback, Gurley
could be the breakthrough star
of their move to Los Angeles —
but the franchise running back
realizes the Rams need to win,
too.
“This is my first offseason,
and I’m in Cali,” Gurley said on
a picture-perfect summer day
after participating in organized
team activities at the Rams’ temporary offseason home in coastal
Ventura County. “We just moved
here. I’m excited (to be) back
doing football and enjoying a
new city. It’s definitely been
exciting, for sure.”
The move to sunny Southern
California has been welcomed by
most players, and Gurley even
got here early: He started working out in Los Angeles shortly
after the Rams missed the playoffs in St. Louis.
That’s a big change from last
summer. While the months
before his rookie season were
devoted to recovery from a serious knee injury, Gurley is fully
healthy and determined to build
on the promising start to his
NFL career.
“He’s not missed a day, and
he’s running extra after practice,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher
said. “He looked pretty good
running a straight line a year
ago at this time. He’s doing
everything (this year) to the
point where you almost say,
‘Let’s back down a little bit.’ He’s
had an impressive offseason.”
Gurley feels confident in his
second year in the Rams’
offense, which has been tweaked
by new chief offensive assistant
Rob Boras. Gurley is also
adjusting well to new running
backs coach Skip Peete, praising
See GURLEY, Page 13
AP photo
Los AngeLes RAms running back Todd Gurley catches passes from a throwing machine during
practice Friday, in Oxnard, Calif.
12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
ON Air
sports on tV
monday, June 6
AUtO rAciNG
Noon
FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Axalta We Paint Winners
400, at Long Pond, Pa.
cOlleGe sOFtbAll
8 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA World Series, Championship, Game 1,
Auburn vs. Oklahoma, at Oklahoma City
cYcliNG
2 a.m. (tuesday)
NBCSN — UCI World Tour, Dauphine Libere, stage 1, Cluses
to Saint-Vulbas, France (same-day tape)
mlb bAsebAll
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
NHl HOcKeY
8 p.m.
NBC — Stanley Cup Final, Game 4, Pittsburgh at San Jose
sOccer
7 p.m.
FS1 — Copa America Centenario, group stage, Panama vs.
Bolivia, at Orlando, Fla.
10 p.m.
FS1 — Copa America Centenario, group stage, Argentina vs.
Chile, at Santa Clara, Calif.
ON tAP
monday, June 6
sWimmiNG
Aqua Tigers at Stuart Heights, 5:30
Ridgeside at Waterdogs, 6
thursday, June 9
sWimmiNG
Ooltewah at Aqua Tigers, 6
Waterdogs at Cumberland, 6
bAsKetbAll
NbA Playoff Glance
FiNAls
(best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Golden state 2, cleveland 0
Thursday, June 2: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89
Sunday, June 5: Golden State 110, Cleveland 77
Wednesday, June 8: Golden State at Cleveland, 9 p.m.
Friday, June 10: Golden State at Cleveland, 9 p.m.
x-Monday, June 13: Cleveland at Golden State, 9 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 9 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 8 p.m.
WNbA Glance
eAsterN cONFereNce
W
l
Atlanta
6
2
New York
4
3
Chicago
4
4
Indiana
4
4
Washington
3
6
Connecticut
1
7
WesterN cONFereNce
W
l
Los Angeles
7
0
Minnesota
7
0
Dallas
3
4
Seattle
3
5
Phoenix
2
5
San Antonio
1
5
saturday’s Games
Los Angeles 74, San Antonio 61
Minnesota 80, Dallas 63
sunday’s Games
Indiana 88, Connecticut 77
Washington 86, Atlanta 79
New York 86, Seattle 78
monday’s Games
No games scheduled
tuesday’s Games
Phoenix at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
New York at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.
Pct
.750
.571
.500
.500
.333
.125
Gb
—
1½
2
2
3½
5
Pct
1.000
1.000
.429
.375
.286
.167
Gb
—
—
4
4½
5
5½
bAsebAll
National league
east Division
W
l
Pct Gb
Washington
34
23 .596 —
New York
31
24 .564 2
Miami
30
27 .526 4
Philadelphia
28
29 .491 6
Atlanta
16
40 .286 17½
central Division
W
l
Pct Gb
Chicago
39
16 .709 —
Pittsburgh
30
26 .536 9½
St. Louis
30
27 .526 10
Milwaukee
26
31 .456 14
Cincinnati
21
36 .368 19
West Division
W
l
Pct Gb
San Francisco
35
24 .593 —
Los Angeles
31
27 .534 3½
Colorado
25
31 .446 8½
Arizona
25
34 .424 10
San Diego
23
35 .397 11½
saturday’s Games
Chicago Cubs 5, Arizona 3
Milwaukee 6, Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh 8, L.A. Angels 7
Cincinnati 6, Washington 3
N.Y. Mets 6, Miami 4
St. Louis 7, San Francisco 4
L.A. Dodgers 4, Atlanta 0
San Diego 4, Colorado 3
sunday’s Games
Washington 10, Cincinnati 9
Miami 1, N.Y. Mets 0
L.A. Angels 5, Pittsburgh 4
Philadelphia 8, Milwaukee 1
Arizona 3, Chicago Cubs 2
L.A. Dodgers 12, Atlanta 6
St. Louis 6, San Francisco 3
Colorado 10, San Diego 3
monday’s Games
Chicago Cubs (Lester 6-3) at Philadelphia (Morgan 1-4), 7:05
N.Y. Mets (Matz 7-1) at Pittsburgh (Niese 5-2), 7:05
Tampa Bay (Archer 3-7) at Arizona (Ray 2-4), 9:40
Atlanta (Perez 2-1) at San Diego (Friedrich 2-1), 10:10
Colorado (Chatwood 6-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Bolsinger 1-2),
10:10
tuesday’s Games
Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 4-4) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 2-8),
7:05
N.Y. Mets (deGrom 3-1) at Pittsburgh (Nicasio 4-4), 7:05
St. Louis (Leake 4-4) at Cincinnati (Lamb 1-3), 7:10
Miami (Conley 3-3) at Minnesota (Dean 1-2), 8:10
Oakland (Manaea 2-3) at Milwaukee (Davies 3-3), 8:10
Washington (Ross 5-4) at Chicago White Sox (Latos 6-1), 8:10
Tampa Bay (Moore 2-3) at Arizona (Greinke 7-3), 9:40
Atlanta (Blair 0-4) at San Diego (Rea 3-2), 10:10
Colorado (Butler 2-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Urias 0-1), 10:10
Boston (Porcello 7-2) at San Francisco (Suarez 1-1), 10:15
Patrick Reed (80), $246,500
Kevin Streelman (80), $246,500
Byeong Hun An, $158,667
Roberto Castro (58), $158,667
Tony Finau (58), $158,667
Marc Leishman (58), $158,667
Charl Schwartzel (58), $158,667
John Senden (58), $158,667
Emiliano Grillo (58), $158,667
Adam Hadwin (58), $158,667
Webb Simpson (58), $158,667
Matt Jones (48), $88,643
Smylie Kaufman (48), $88,643
Phil Mickelson (48), $88,643
Kyle Reifers (48), $88,643
Brendan Steele (48), $88,643
Soren Kjeldsen, $88,643
Robert Streb (48), $88,643
Zac Blair (42), $59,075
Scott Brown (42), $59,075
Jason Day (42), $59,075
David Hearn (42), $59,075
John Huh (42), $59,075
David Lingmerth (42), $59,075
Jason Dufner (36), $45,900
Lucas Glover (36), $45,900
Brian Harman (36), $45,900
Russell Henley (36), $45,900
Geoff Ogilvy (36), $45,900
Bud Cauley (30), $34,000
Bryson DeChambeau, $34,000
Patton Kizzire (30), $34,000
Ben Martin (30), $34,000
George McNeill (30), $34,000
Ryan Ruffels, $34,000
Daniel Summerhays (30), $34,000
Hudson Swafford (30), $34,000
Jonas Blixt (25), $25,500
Hiroshi Iwata (25), $25,500
Kevin Chappell (22), $21,930
Jason Gore (22), $21,930
Charles Howell III (22), $21,930
Ryan Moore (22), $21,930
Rafa Cabrera Bello, $19,822
K.J. Choi (17), $19,822
Jim Furyk (17), $19,822
Danny Lee (17), $19,822
Jamie Lovemark (17), $19,822
Alex Cejka (13), $18,955
Spencer Levin (13), $18,955
Jordan Spieth (13), $18,955
Harold Varner III (13), $18,955
Jason Bohn (9), $18,360
Anirban Lahiri (9), $18,360
Rod Pampling (9), $18,360
Russell Knox (7), $18,020
Camilo Villegas (6), $17,765
Bubba Watson (6), $17,765
Daniel Berger (4), $17,510
Luke Donald (3), $17,340
Ken Duke (1), $16,915
Freddie Jacobson (1), $16,915
Scott Piercy (1), $16,915
Brian Stuard (1), $16,915
George Coetzee, $16,490
Si Woo Kim (1), $16,235
Kevin Na (1), $16,235
68-71-69-68—276
67-68-69-72—276
71-70-69-67—277
70-70-71-66—277
70-69-70-68—277
69-71-69-68—277
68-69-72-68—277
69-70-68-70—277
67-66-70-74—277
70-66-67-74—277
69-70-66-72—277
71-68-68-71—278
71-67-71-69—278
68-69-69-72—278
71-67-71-69—278
65-67-75-71—278
71-69-64-74—278
68-73-64-73—278
69-67-68-75—279
69-67-69-74—279
66-71-68-74—279
66-73-72-68—279
69-69-67-74—279
68-73-68-70—279
68-70-70-72—280
70-67-73-70—280
68-70-69-73—280
68-70-69-73—280
68-69-70-73—280
69-73-66-73—281
72-67-69-73—281
73-67-70-71—281
69-71-69-72—281
71-71-69-70—281
67-71-70-73—281
72-67-70-72—281
66-71-69-75—281
71-69-69-73—282
75-67-70-70—282
71-70-70-72—283
72-67-71-73—283
72-70-72-69—283
70-67-70-76—283
69-73-71-71—284
68-69-69-78—284
69-70-72-73—284
66-75-68-75—284
69-72-70-73—284
70-72-68-75—285
73-69-70-73—285
70-68-74-73—285
68-67-71-79—285
67-71-71-77—286
70-72-69-75—286
72-70-73-71—286
73-69-70-75—287
69-72-72-75—288
72-70-74-72—288
69-73-76-71—289
67-73-78-72—290
72-70-72-77—291
72-68-77-74—291
70-71-75-75—291
69-72-77-73—291
71-69-77-75—292
71-69-80-73—293
71-71-74-77—293
PGA champions
Principal charity classic Par scores
sunday
At Wakonda club
Des moines, iowa
Purse: $1.75 million
Yardage: 6,831; Par: 72
Final
Scott McCarron, $262,500
68-68-65—201
Billy Andrade, $140,000
71-63-68—202
Miguel Angel Jimenez, $140,000
68-67-67—202
Joe Durant, $93,625
69-65-71—205
Duffy Waldorf, $93,625
71-67-67—205
Tom Lehman, $66,500
67-68-71—206
Rocco Mediate, $66,500
69-67-70—206
Tom Byrum, $50,167
69-70-68—207
Jeff Sluman, $50,167
71-68-68—207
John Inman, $50,167
65-71-71—207
Bart Bryant, $38,500
69-71-68—208
Tom Pernice Jr., $38,500
70-70-68—208
Fran Quinn, $38,500
70-70-68—208
Gary Hallberg, $31,500
67-70-72—209
Greg Kraft, $31,500
71-71-67—209
Jerry Smith, $31,500
68-71-70—209
Tommy Armour III, $21,016
72-68-70—210
Scott Dunlap, $21,016
69-75-66—210
David Frost, $21,016
70-73-67—210
Paul Goydos, $21,016
72-69-69—210
Jay Haas, $21,016
72-70-68—210
Jeff Hart, $21,016
71-70-69—210
Skip Kendall, $21,016
70-70-70—210
Sandy Lyle, $21,016
71-71-68—210
Wes Short, Jr., $21,016
71-69-70—210
Grant Waite, $21,016
73-68-69—210
Todd Hamilton, $21,016
67-67-76—210
shoprite lPGA classic Par scores
-12
-12
-11
-11
-11
-11
-11
-11
-11
-11
-11
-10
-10
-10
-10
-10
-10
-10
-9
-9
-9
-9
-9
-9
-8
-8
-8
-8
-8
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-6
-6
-5
-5
-5
-5
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-1
E
E
+1
+2
+3
+3
+3
+3
+4
+5
+5
-15
-14
-14
-11
-11
-10
-10
-9
-9
-9
-8
-8
-8
-7
-7
-7
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
sunday
At stockton seaview Hotel and Golf club (bay course)
Galloway, N.J.
Purse: $1.5 million
Yardage: 6,179; Par: 71
Final
Anna Nordqvist, $225,000
64-68-64—196 -17
Haru Nomura, $138,191
65-66-66—197 -16
Karine Icher, $100,248
68-62-69—199 -14
Christina Kim, $77,549
69-66-65—200 -13
Jing Yan, $62,419
67-69-66—202 -11
Annie Park, $39,116
67-73-63—203 -10
Mika Miyazato, $39,116
70-69-64—203 -10
Brittany Lang, $39,116
69-70-64—203 -10
In-Kyung Kim, $39,116
69-66-68—203 -10
Christel Boeljon, $39,116
66-68-69—203 -10
Danielle Kang, $26,555
67-69-68—204 -9
Jacqui Concolino, $26,555
68-66-70—204 -9
Na Yeon Choi, $26,555
67-64-73—204 -9
Charley Hull, $19,577
73-66-67—206 -7
Jennifer Song, $19,577
Sakura Yokomine, $19,577
Beatriz Recari, $19,577
Kim Kaufman, $19,577
Samantha Richdale, $19,577
Jodi Ewart Shadoff, $19,577
Mariajo Uribe, $19,577
69-70-67—206
67-72-67—206
66-72-68—206
68-69-69—206
68-68-70—206
66-69-71—206
69-65-72—206
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
-7
HOcKeY
NHl Playoff Glance
stANleY cUP FiNAls
(best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Pittsburgh 2, san Jose 1
Monday, May 30: Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 2
Wednesday, June 1: Pittsburgh 2, San Jose 1, OT
Saturday, June 4: San Jose 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT
Monday, June 6: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 8 p.m.
Thursday, June 9: San Jose at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 12: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 15: San Jose at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.
NAscAr
NAscAr-sprint cup
Axalta “We Paint Winners” 400 lineup
After Friday qualifying; race monday
(Race was postponed Sunday due to rain)
At Pocono raceway
long Pond, Pa.
lap length: 2.5 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 181.726 mph.
2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 181.400.
3. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 181.316.
4. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 181.192.
5. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 180.759.
6. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 180.563.
7. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 180.047.
8. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chevrolet, 179.605.
9. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 179.472.
10. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 179.451.
11. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 178.941.
12. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 178.827.
13. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 179.444.
14. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 179.379.
15. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 179.151.
16. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 178.980.
17. (78) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 178.763.
18. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 178.391.
19. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 178.370.
20. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 178.363.
21. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 178.235.
22. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 178.140.
23. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 178.123.
24. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 178.108.
25. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 177.267.
26. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 177.207.
27. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 177.204.
28. (95) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 176.974.
29. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 176.929.
30. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 176.640.
31. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 176.450.
32. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 176.298.
33. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 175.709.
34. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 175.466.
35. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 174.659.
36. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 173.157.
37. (55) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 173.117.
38. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 169.157.
39. (32) Jeb Burton, Ford, 166.664.
40. (98) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 164.087.
NAscAr xfinity
Pocono Green 250 results
saturday
At Pocono raceway
long Pond, Pa.
lap length: 2.5 miles
(Starting position in parentheses)
1. (4) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 53 laps.
2. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, 53.
3. (8) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 53.
4. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 53.
5. (5) Joey Logano, Ford, 53.
6. (6) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 53.
7. (7) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 53.
8. (14) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 53.
9. (3) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 53.
10. (10) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 53.
11. (16) Aric Almirola, Ford, 53.
12. (13) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 53.
13. (11) JJ Yeley, Toyota, 53.
14. (17) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 53.
15. (12) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 53.
16. (40) Darrell Wallace Jr, Ford, 53.
17. (19) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 53.
18. (22) Dakoda Armstrong, Toyota, 53.
19. (29) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 53.
20. (30) Mario Gosselin, Chevrolet, 53.
21. (26) Ray Black Jr, Chevrolet, 53.
22. (25) BJ McLeod, Ford, 53.
23. (34) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 53.
24. (35) Alex Guenette, Chevrolet, 53.
25. (36) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 53.
26. (27) Brandon Gdovic, Chevrolet, 52.
27. (24) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 52.
28. (38) Todd Peck, Ford, 52.
29. (15) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 51.
30. (39) Mike Harmon, Dodge, 50.
31. (18) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, accident, 39.
32. (32) TJ Bell, Dodge, 39.
33. (23) Ryan Reed, Ford, accident, 38.
34. (31) Jeff Green, Toyota, header, 30.
35. (28) Morgan Shepherd, Chevrolet, vibration, 29.
36. (20) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, rear gear, 23.
37. (37) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 22.
38. (33) Carl Long, Toyota, brakes, 21.
39. (9) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, accident, 20.
40. (21) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, transmission, 6.
Cleveland
Kansas City
Chicago
Detroit
Minnesota
Texas
Seattle
Houston
Los Angeles
Oakland
east Division
W
32
33
31
26
25
central Division
W
31
30
29
28
16
West Division
W
34
31
28
26
25
saturday’s Games
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — William
McGirt thought he hit it big when
he won the Cabarrus Classic and
pocketed $16,000, the secondlargest prize on the Tar Heel Tour.
That was in 2007, and it felt
like a lifetime ago compared with
the perks from winning the
Memorial on Sunday.
The victory was worth $1.53
million and a three-year exemption for a guy who once dreamed
of simply having a PGA Tour
card.
Waiting to congratulate him
was tournament host Jack
Nicklaus, who raved about the
bunker shot on the 18th hole
that kept McGirt in the playoff at
Muirfield Village, and the flop
shot from behind the 18th green
that led to a 6-foot putt and his
first PGA Tour victory in his
165th try.
U.S. Open qualifying? Take the
day off.
McGirt moves up to No. 43 in
the world and was assured a spot
in his first national championship.
“It will all sink in at some
point,” McGirt said.
This was a long time coming.
McGirt couldn’t count all the
mini-tours he played and the
self-doubts he ignored, including
a four-month stretch in which he
only saw his wife for four days.
But on Sunday against the
strongest field of the year for a
regular PGA Tour event, McGirt
made his first victory one to
remember.
He played the final 22 holes at
Muirfield Village without a bogey.
His final par in regulation was
the most important, a two-putt
from 65 feet for a 1-under 71 that
allowed him to join Jon Curran
(70) in a playoff at 15-under 273.
McGirt won the way Nicklaus
said he captured so many of his
73 times on the PGA Tour.
“I won half of my golf tournaments watching everyone else
self-destruct,” Nicklaus said.
“And that’s the way you win. I
saw him coming down the
stretch. I saw Jon coming down
the stretch. The two of them
played great. I felt that either one
of them could have won.”
Dustin Johnson dropped three
shots in four holes to start the
back nine, and a fourth bogey on
the 16th ended it for him. Matt
Kuchar was tied for the lead
when he returned from a 90minute rain delay and promptly
hit the lip of a fairway bunker
and made double bogey. He never
recovered. Emiliano Grillo had a
share of the lead until starting
the back nine with four straight
bogeys. Gary Woodland couldn’t
get up-and-down behind the
17th green and made bogey.
Curran, who knows Nicklaus
from being a member at his
Bear’s Club in south Florida,
looked like a winner when he hit
bAsebAll
brADleY bAsebAll cAmP
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23
24
27
30
30
Pct
.582
.579
.534
.464
.455
Gb
—
—
2½
6½
7
l
24
26
28
28
40
Pct
.564
.536
.509
.500
.286
Gb
—
1½
3
3½
15½
l
22
25
30
30
32
Pct
.607
.554
.483
.464
.439
Gb
—
3
7
8
9½
Photo by Dennis Norwood (the chattanoogan.com)
FOrmer cleVelAND HiGH standout TJ Constant (5), of the
Tennessee squad, zeroes in on Georgia quarterback Will Swantic
(11) of Southeast Whitfield, in the 2016 Stump on Sports All-Star
Game Saturday night, at Chattanooga Christian’s David Stanton
Field. Former Blue Raider Ben Wyrick also participated in the fifth
straight win for the Tennessee team, this one by a 21-10 tally.
The Bradley Baseball Camp will be held June 13-15 from
9a.m. until noon each day. The cost is $60 with sign ups at
8:30 on the morning of June 13. The camp is for grades K-5
participants.
lee YOUtH cAmPs
Lee University baseball will offer a couple of camp sessions for area youth this summer. The first session will take
place June 6-9. The day camp for ages 5-15 will be held at
Olympic Field. The cost for the camp is $110 ($190 for two
brothers). Special team rates are available. the second session for ages 8-17 will be held July 5-7. The camp will be an
advanced hitting, pitching and catching camp. The 9 a.m.noon sessions will be on hitting. From 1-3 p.m. instructions
will be given on pitching and catching. The cost of the camp
is $70 for hitting, $55 for pitching or catching and $110 for taking part in both sessions. Coach Mark Brew and staff will be
conducting the camps and each campers will receive a Tshirt. For more information, contact coach Mark Brew 6148638 or email [email protected].
cscc sUmmer cAmPs
Cleveland State Baseball Coach Mike Policastro will
conduct the following summer Baseball Camps: Youth skills
camp, June 6-9 for ages 5–12. Camp hours will be 9 a.m.
until noon. Campers will participate in group instruction and
participate in a game each day. The cost is $80 and includes
a camp T-shirt. Youth Pitcher/catcher camp, June 13-15
from 9-11:30 a.m., and a Youth Hitting camp, June 20-22
from 9-11:30 a.m. Both camps will be for ages 8–16. The
camps will consist of advanced instruction on the fundamentals of pitching, catching and hitting. The cost will be $60 per
session and includes a camp T-shirt. There will be a $5 discount per camp registration if a participant registers for more
than one of the camps. For registration information, contact
Mike Policastro at (423)478-6219, or go to:
http://www.cscougars.com/x/7g1yb.
bAsebAll iNstrUctiON
Cleveland State Community College assistant baseball
coach Ryne Foster will be offering baseball instruction and
lessons for individuals or small groups. Lessons will be
offered on weeknights and weekends for hitting, catching,
infield play, outfield play and pitching. For times and pricing,
contact coach Foster at (317) 650-1064 or email
[email protected].
Boston 6, Toronto 4
Pittsburgh 8, L.A. Angels 7
Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 4
Houston 6, Oakland 5, 12 innings
Tampa Bay 7, Minnesota 4
Cleveland 7, Kansas City 1
N.Y. Yankees 8, Baltimore 6
Texas 10, Seattle 4
sunday’s Games
Cleveland 7, Kansas City 0
Detroit 5, Chicago White Sox 2
Baltimore 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
L.A. Angels 5, Pittsburgh 4
Toronto 5, Boston 4
Houston 5, Oakland 2
Tampa Bay 7, Minnesota 5
Texas 3, Seattle 2
monday’s Games
Kansas City (Duffy 1-0) at Baltimore (Worley 2-0), 7:05
L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 3-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 3-1),
7:05
Toronto (Happ 6-2) at Detroit (Fulmer 5-1), 7:10
Houston (Fiers 3-3) at Texas (Lewis 5-0), 8:05
Tampa Bay (Archer 3-7) at Arizona (Ray 2-4), 9:40
Cleveland (Bauer 3-2) at Seattle (Paxton 0-1), 10:10
tuesday’s Games
Kansas City (Ventura 4-3) at Baltimore (Jimenez 2-6), 7:05
L.A. Angels (Tropeano 3-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 2-6), 7:05
Toronto (Sanchez 5-1) at Detroit (Boyd 0-1), 7:10
Houston (Keuchel 3-7) at Texas (Hamels 5-1), 8:05
Miami (Conley 3-3) at Minnesota (Dean 1-2), 8:10
Oakland (Manaea 2-3) at Milwaukee (Davies 3-3), 8:10
Washington (Ross 5-4) at Chicago White Sox (Latos 6-1), 8:10
Tampa Bay (Moore 2-3) at Arizona (Greinke 7-3), 9:40
Cleveland (Carrasco 2-0) at Seattle (Miley 5-2), 10:10
Boston (Porcello 7-2) at San Francisco (Suarez 1-1), 10:15
bAsKetbAll
GOlF
PGA tour
memorial tournament Par scores
sunday
At muirfield Village Golf club
Dublin, Ohio
Purse: $8.5 million
Yardage: 7,392; Par 72
Final
(x-won on second playoff hole)
William McGirt (500), $1,530m
70-68-64-71—273 -15
Jon Curran (300), $918,000
68-67-68-70—273 -15
Dustin Johnson (190), $578,000 64-71-68-71—274 -14
J.B. Holmes (109), $334,688
71-68-67-69—275 -13
Matt Kuchar (109), $334,688
66-66-70-73—275 -13
Rory McIlroy (109), $334,688
71-66-70-68—275 -13
Gary Woodland (109), $334,688 68-65-69-73—275 -13
Keegan Bradley (80), $246,500
68-69-70-69—276 -12
AP photo
WilliAm mcGirt celebrAtes winning the Memorial in a
playoff Sunday, in Dublin, Ohio.
7-iron out of a fairway bunker on
the 17th hole to 7 feet for birdie
to join McGirt at 15 under.
McGirt was battling his swing
and trying to hang on. He saved
par from a bunker on the 17th.
He had the long two-putt for par
on the 18th hole. And he was in
trouble on the 18th in a playoff,
facing a deep bunker shot to a
back pin.
He expertly used the slope
behind the hole and watched his
shot roll back to a few feet to stay
alive.
“That was a long bunker shot,”
Nicklaus said.
“I don’t want to hit it again,”
McGirt replied.
Playing the 18th for the third
time, Curran misjudged the
strong wind at his back and went
into the gallery above the green,
and his pitch ran down the slope
well past the hole, leading to
bogey. McGirt also went long and
played a perfect flop shot to 6 feet
for the winner.
“Surprisingly, I felt no nerves
standing over that putt and
poured it right in the middle,”
McGirt said.
Johnson finished alone in third
— his fifth finish in the top 5 this
season — while Rory McIlroy (68)
tied for fourth with Kuchar (73),
Woodland (73) and J.B. Holmes
(69).
Jason Day, a Muirfield Village
member and No. 1 in the world,
got to within two shots of the lead
until he tumbled to a 74 and tied
for 27th, matching his best result
at the Memorial. Jordan Spieth
shot 73 and finished 12 shots
behind in a tie for 57th.
McGirt became the third
straight Memorial champion to
become a first-time PGA Tour
winner, and it was the third
straight playoff at Muirfield
Village.
In his 12 years as a pro, he has
played only one major, the 2012
PGA Championship. That was
meaningful, even though he
missed the cut, because he was
coming off a close call at the
Canadian Open in which he
didn’t look at the leaderboard the
final round. He ran into Tiger
Woods, told him what he did, and
he said Woods told him he was
foolish for not looking. McGirt
didn’t make that mistake twice.
And when it was over, his
name was at the top.
The U.S. Open is now on his
schedule. So is the PGA
Championship at the end of July,
and the Masters next April.
“I wondered for years if I would
ever get to the PGA Tour,” McGirt
said. “And then once you get out
here, OK, you’ve played 160
events. Are you ever going to win?
But I think you have to get your
nose bloodied some to learn how
to handle it, and I definitely had
my nose bloodied a few times.”
LOCAL NOTES
American league
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
William McGirt wins
Memorial in a playoff
contributed photo
Alex WilliAms landed this nice bass while fishing with Pawpaw
Mike Williams below the Interstate 75 bridge on the Hiwassee River
recently.
cHs cAmP
The Cleveland High School Individual Camp for boys in
second-eighth grades will he held June 15-17 from 9 a.m.-1
p.m. in the new Raider Arena. The camp will focus on fundamental and team concepts. The cost is $55 with a brother
rate of $85 and includes a free T-shirt. Concessions will be
available. For more information, contact Jason McCowan at
(423)618-2703 or email [email protected].
mArtY rOWe sKills & Drills cAmP
The Marty Rowe Skills & Drills Basketball Camp will be
held at Lee University’s Walker Arena June 27-July 1st: 9
a.m.–4 p.m. (Early drop off, late pick up available, Friday the
1st ends at noon). The camp is for girls ages 5-16 at a cost
of $135 and includes camp instruction, daily lunch, t-shirts,
and prizes. Sibling discounts available, Contact
[email protected] or [email protected] or call
423-614-8452 for more information.
lADY FlAmes elite cAmP
The Lady Flames Elite Camp (www.ladyflameselite.com)
will be held at Lee University’s Walker Arena, July 2 from 9
a.m. until 4 p.m. Advanced skill instruction and high level
competition as well as exposure to numerous college coaches. Camp is for upcoming sophomores, juniors and seniors
serious about playing college basketball. The cost is $100.
For more information and to register go to www.ladyflameselite.com. Contact [email protected] with any
questions.
teAm POWer
Team Power is looking for seventh-grade girls interested
in playing travel basketball. For more information, contact
Nathan Cox at (423) 618-0942.
KilbY iNDiViDUAl iNstrUctiON
Individual basketball instruction for male and female elementary, middle school, high school and post graduate athletes is being offered by former Junior College and University
coach L.J. Kilby. Coach Kilby brings 10 years of head coaching experience as well as 30 years experience in junior college, NAIA and NCAA Division I basketball. For more information, contact Coach Kilby at (423) 596-2515.
FOOtbAll
brADleY FOOtbAll meetiNG
The Bradley Central football team will be holding a parents meeting Tuesday, June 7 at 6 p.m. in the Jim Smiddy
Arena.
GOlF
liVe WiDe OPeN tOUrNAmeNt
The Dustin Ledford Live Wide Open golf tournament
will take place June 11 at Chatata Valley Golf Course. Tee
time is 8 a.m. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the
Dustin Ledford Scholarship for athletes from all three local
high schools. The cost for the 4-person, select shot tournament is $50 per golfer. Lunch will be provided. Mulligans wil
also be available for purchase and a 2016 vehicle will be
offered for a hole-in-one on a select hole. For more information, contact Kim Ledford at (423)715-3157 or email [email protected].
brADleY cOUNtY JUNiOr GOlF
The Bradley County Junior Golf Clinic for boys and girls
ages 5-17 will take place June 6, 13, 20, 27 at Cleveland
Country Club. Ages 5-10 will go from 8-9:30 a.m. and ages
11-17 will go from 9:45-11:15 a.m. There will be a final tournament on July 11. All tournament participants must attend
three of the four instructional clinics to be eligible for the tournament. For more information, call (423)321-2779.
sOccer
cleVelAND FUtbOl clUb
Tryouts for the Cleveland Futbol Club 2016-17
season will take place June 6 from 6-9 p.m. for birth
years 1998-2004. For more information, contact
Josh
Crispin
at
(423)580-8845
or
[email protected] or visit www.grcsafc.com.
lee sOccer cAmP
Registration under way for the annual Lee University
Soccer Camp for boys and girls ages 5-14 to be held at the
Lee Soccer Field June 20-23. Each camper will receive a
“Lee Camp Ball.” For more information or to register, go to
http://www.readysetregister.com, or contact coach Furey or a
member of his staff at (423) 614-8158.
lee iD/HiGH scHOOl cAmP
The Lee women’s soccer coaching staff has announced
plans for the ID/High School Camp for women soccer players
in grades 8-12 grades interested in the Lee University
women’s soccer program. The camp will offer an opportunity
to showcase abilities to Lee and several other college coaches who will also be in attendance. The dates for the camp are
July 13 and 16. The cost of the camp is $375 including all
room and board The cost for commuting players is $275. For
registration and payments, visit www.leesoccer.com For
more information, contact Luidgi Beauzille at [email protected] or Amy Cooley at [email protected].
sOFtbAll
cscc cAmP
Cleveland State Community College softball coach Katie
Willingham will conduct a Youth Softball Skills Camp, June
13-15, for ages 8-14. Camp hours will be 9 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Campers will participate in group instruction and fundamental
drills. Campers will be divided by age and ability during
games and group activities. The cost for the camp will be $55
and includes a camp T-shirt. A discount will be given for siblings or teams with five or more participants. To register online
visit
http://www.cscougars.com/sports/sball/201516/CSCC_Lady_Cougars_Softball_Camp_2016__Registration_Form. For more information, contact Katie
Willingham at (423)473-2263 or [email protected].
WVHs cAmP
The Walker Valley High School Lady Mustangs Softball
Camp will be held June 6-8 at Larry Haney Field on the campus of WVHS. Sessions will run daily from 9 a.m.-noon for
upcoming second through fifth graders and from 1-4:00 p.m.
for upcoming sixth through eighth graders. Fundamental hitting, pitching, fielding, and catching instruction will be taught
by Walker Valley coaches and Lady Mustangs players. The
cost of the camp is $50 and will include a free T-shirt. For
more information, contact coach Lauren Limburg at [email protected] or (423)336-1383.
WVHs sOFtbAll trYOUts
Tryouts for the 2016-17 Walker Valley Lady Mustangs
softball team will be held July 11, and July 18 from 5-6:30
p.m. at Larry Haney Field on the campus of WVHS. Young
ladies interested in playing for Walker Valley need to be at
one of these dates. Participants must bring proof of having
passed a physical to participate. For more information, contact
coach
Lauren
Limburg
at
[email protected] or (423)336-1383.
Oms sOFtbAll trYOUts
Tryouts for the 2016 Ocoee Middle School Lady Colts
softball team will be held July 11, and July 18 from 6:30-8:30
p.m. at Larry Haney Field on the campus of WVHS. Tryouts
are closed. Parents are welcome to pick up their daughter at
8:30 p.m. Young ladies interested in playing for Ocoee Middle
need to be at one of these dates. Participants must bring
proof of having passed a physical to participate. For more
information, contact coach April Richards at [email protected] or (423)476-0630.
teNNis
KAY mcDANiel Free teNNis cliNics
The annual Kay McDaniel Tennis Clinic will take place
June 6-10 at the Lee University tennis courts. The clinic is for
girls and boys of any skill level ages 6-13. The girls will go
from 8-10 a.m. and the boys will go from 10:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. The clinic is free to all participants. Only 10 spots remain
for boys and girls sessions. For more information or to register, visit www.kaymcdanieltennisclinics.com.
ccc sUmmer teNNis cAmPs
Cleveland Country Club Tennis Pro Grace Caruthers will
be directing the CCC Summer Tennis Camps for members
and non-members alike. The six-week sessions will run on
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from June 6 through
July 29. Group 1 is for ages 4-6 and will meet from 9-9:45
a.m. each day, while Group 2 will go from 10 a.m. until noon
for ages 7-10. The middle and high school age participants
will have a 1-3 p.m. session each of the 18 days. To register
or to get more information on the cost and camps got to
www.clevelandcountryclub.org/tennisschedule.
VOlleYbAll
lADY rAiDer cAmP
The 12th annual Lady Raider Volleyball Camp for
upcoming girls in grades 4-8 will take place June 13-15 from
9 a.m.-noon in the Cleveland High School Raider Arena. The
cost for Early registration is $50, $60 the first day of camp. A
Cleveland City Schools and sibling discount is available. A
concessions bank will also be available. For more information, or to register, contact coach Patricia Flowers at [email protected] or text (423)400-8733.
WVHs VOlleYbAll cAmP
The 2016 Walker Valley Lady Mustangs Volleyball Camp
for girls entering third through eighth grades will be held July
25-27 from 12-2 p.m. At Ocoee Middle School. The cost is
$30 per camper. The camp will provide students the opportunity to learn and play volleyball in an informative and fun environment. For more information, contact Judy Pruett at
(423)715-3483.
bcHs VOlleYbAll cAmP
The Bradley Central Volleyball Camp will be held July 1214 at Jim Smiddy Arena for ages 7-14. The cost of the camp
is $50 with a sibling discount offered. Registration will be held
at 8:30 a.m. on the first day of the camp. Daily sessions will
run from 8:30-noon. For more information contact Christie
McElhaney
at
(423)
309-8760
or
email
[email protected].
WrestliNG
lOGsDON AND JAcKsON beGiNNer’s cAmP
The Steve Logsdon and Turner Jackson Beginner’s
Wrestling Camp for any youth aged wrestler or any elementary child interested in the sport will be held June, 13-16 from
6-7:30 p.m. in the wrestling room at Bradley Central High
School. There is NO COST for the camp. Former BCHS
coach Steve Logsdon, coach of more than 20 state championship teams at BCHS and Turner Jackson, two-time national champion at UTC will be directing the camp. For more
information, contact coach Lee Varnell at (423)650-2142 or
email [email protected].
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—13
Warriors whip Cavaliers,
take 2-0 NBA Finals lead
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) —
Draymond Green emphatically
flexed his bulging biceps with big
plays on both ends of the floor,
and these Golden State Warriors
might just be far too strong for the
Cleveland Cavaliers.
That repeat title Golden State
has spoken of since the very start
more than eight months ago is
suddenly two wins from reality.
It will be the only way the
Warriors’ record-setting season
ends right. For now, they sure
seem unstoppable.
Green had 28 points with five 3pointers, seven rebounds and five
assists, while MVP Stephen Curry
scored 18 points despite foul trouble, and Golden State thoroughly
overwhelmed Cleveland 110-77 in
Game 2 of the NBA Finals on
Sunday night.
“There’s no point in celebrating
or jumping up and down saying,
‘Look at us.’ We’re two games
away from winning a championship, but we still have to go out
and get the job done,” Curry said.
“It’s a trap to think that we’ve figured things out, that we have the
perfect formula to beat Cleveland
and they have no chance in the
series. That’s not how we’re supposed to think.”
The 33-point win was the
Warriors’ most lopsided ever in a
finals game — and they have won
the first two by a combined 48
points.
“They just beat us,” LeBron
James said. “We didn’t win anything. No points of the game did
we beat them in anything.”
Once the Splash Brothers
found their shooting touch,
Cleveland couldn’t keep up. Klay
Thompson got hot after halftime
to finish with 17 points as Golden
State became the first team to go
AP photo
Golden StAte WArriorS forWArd Harrison Barnes, center, drives the lane against Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron
James (on floor) and guard Kyrie Irving in the first half of Game 2 of
the NBA Finals Sunday, in Oakland, Calif.
Djokovic
From Page 11
“He’s there, for sure — one of
the best now,” said Marian
Vajda, Djokovic’s co-coach with
Boris Becker, one of the many
stars of the sport who never won
the French Open. “Hard to say
who’s the greatest.”
Of Djokovic’s 11 career losses
at Roland Garros, six came
against Nadal, one against
Federer. Three came in finals,
against Nadal in 2012 and 2014,
and against Stan Wawrinka a
year ago, when Djokovic’s eyes
welled with tears and the arena
feted him with an unusually long
ovation as he accepted his runner’s-up plate.
Djokovic’s 2016 path was
unencumbered by any member
of that trio: Federer withdrew
before the tournament and Nadal
before the third round, both citing injury; Wawrinka lost to
Murray.
Still, Djokovic’s most imposing
adversary might very well have
been the knowledge that the
tournament that meant the most
to him was the only tournament
he couldn’t conquer.
Until now.
“Winning it, you know, I felt
it,” Djokovic said. “I felt the tension and excitement. All the emotions. You name it.”
When Djokovic sketched a
valentine to his fans and then
laid down on his back, it repeated a gesture made famous by
three-time French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten.
“He asked me (for) permission,” Kuerten said with a laugh.
On Sunday — the weather
overcast but dry, unlike so much
of the rainy past two weeks —
the first choruses of “No-le! Nole!” accompanied Djokovic’s
entrance to the court. They
echoed when he skipped to the
baseline for the opening game —
and, louder still, when he broke
to start.
It sounded as if this were
Belgrade, rather than a neutral
site, and Murray complained
that spectators were calling out
between serves.
They really raised a ruckus
when a Murray serve was called
a fault by a linesman, immediately overruled by chair umpire
Damien Dumusois. Because
Djokovic’s return was out,
Dumusois declared Murray led
30-love. Djokovic wanted the
point replayed. Loud boos and
whistles from the stands delayed
play for a full minute.
Murray, trying to become
Britain’s first male champion in
Paris since 1935, soon closed the
opening set. Djokovic was off —
“Nerves kicked in,” he acknowledged afterward — and his forehand offered up seven unforced
errors before Murray made one.
Maybe Murray exhaled after
grabbing the set. Djokovic clearly
found a reserve of resolve. The
dynamic shifted completely.
Murray’s first-serve percentage
dipped and he quickly fell behind
3-0.
“No-le! No-le!”
Now Djokovic was the domineering one, yanking an increasingly exhausted Murray this way
and that with just the right shot
at just the right moment, creating a 24-6 edge in winners over
the middle two sets.
“Flawless tennis,” Djokovic
called it.
Murray’s take?
“He started,” Murray said, “to
free up a little bit more.”
When Djokovic slid to reach a
drop shot and somehow crafted a
cross-court backhand winner at
an impossible angle to go up 4-1
in the third, he raised his right
index finger.
“No-le! No-le!”
Djokovic broke again to begin
the fourth set and, although he
had a few missteps in the closing
games, his arduous journey to
history was soon complete.
Auburn
From Page 11
State coach Lonni Alameda said.
“We had the right people up with
the bases loaded. We had our
chances. That was the game.”
Auburn was in control early.
Carlee Wallace hit a three-run
homer in the first inning, Jade
Rhodes hit a three-run shot in
the third, and Kasey Cooper had
a solo homer in the fourth for the
Tigers.
Auburn led 7-4 in the sixth,
and Florida State had two on and
one out when Auburn center
fielder Victoria Draper stretched
out and robbed Morgan
Klaevemann of what looked like a
sure double.
“Well, when I saw it go off the
bat, I thought, ‘This is going to do
some damage,’” Wallace said. “I
was kind of thinking, ‘Oh, no,’
and she’s like a golden retriever
out there. It’s ridiculous.”
Alameda said there was no
shame in going out in a game
that was so competitive.
“Tip your hat to Auburn,” she
said. “They’re a great ballclub.
They’ve done a great job there,
and it’s just fun to play a competitive game like that. Of course,
you want to come out on the winning side, but it is so fun to be in
those moments, and that’s what
you train for.”
ahead 2-0 in the finals since the
Lakers in 2009 against Orlando.
Now, the series shifts to
Cleveland, and James and the
Cavs must show up for Game 3 on
Wednesday in front of their titlestarved fans down 2-0 to the
defending champs and with forward Kevin Love dealing with a
head injury.
“We’ve got to be tougher,” Cavs
coach Tyronn Lue said.
The NBA said Love experienced
dizziness early in the second half
and left for the locker room to be
re-examined, then was placed in
the NBA’s concussion protocol. He
hadn’t exhibited any symptoms
before then, even after taking an
elbow to the back of the head from
Harrison Barnes in the second
quarter and going down for several minutes before returning following a timeout. He immediately
made a baseline 3-pointer for the
Cavs’ first basket in nearly 5½
minutes.
After a scoreless first quarter
when he missed all five shots but
had five assists, James scored 14
of his 19 points in the second and
also finished with nine assists and
eight rebounds, but seven
turnovers — and he took the
blame. James’ teams had won
nine straight postseason Game 2s
after losing the series opener dating back to a loss in the 2008
Eastern Conference semifinals to
Boston.
“I’m definitely surprised at the
margin of victory tonight,”
Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “It
happens in the NBA, sometimes
things get away from you.
Sometimes shots go in, sometimes
they don’t. ... Everything changes
when we go to Cleveland, we know
that.”
After Curry and Thompson
combined for only 20 points in
Thursday’s 104-89 Game 1 win
on 8-for-27 shooting and the
bench carried the load, they each
hit four 3-pointers and went 13
for 24. And Curry got a postgame
treat: He exchanged jerseys with
Barcelona and Brazil soccer star
Neymar.
Green shot 11 for 20 and made
5 of 8 3-pointers, sparking a suggestion he might apply to be a
Splash Brother alongside fellow
All-Stars Curry and Thompson.
“Stop it,” Green said with a
chuckle.
“Tonight, he’s one of us,”
Thompson said.
The Warriors’ 87 victories
matched the 1995-96 Chicago
Bulls, the team Golden State
topped for the most regular-season victories in NBA history with
73.
Andrew Bogut had four of his
five blocks — Golden State had
nine overall — in the first 7:15
and received a standing ovation
when he came out with 3:50 left in
the first. He went to the locker
room late in the quarter after having hit his hand on the rim early
and grimacing in pain.
Green credited the defense for
holding down James and Co.
While the outspoken swingman
insists he just wants rings and
isn’t yet ready to consider the
Warriors among the best of all
time, the typically quiet
Thompson let loose a little.
“We’re better than the
Showtime Lakers,” he quipped, a
friendly jab at former power forward father, Mychal.
In 10th NBA Finals, ‘Coach’ Van
Gundy clearly a broadcaster
(AP) — Jeff Van Gundy was riding a bus bound for the border, far
from the glamorous side of NBA
life.
Teams take charter flights to
ritzy hotels, and Van Gundy
craves the right opportunity to
run one again. But he also likes
the job he has, providing time for
friends and family that coaching
never could.
So there he is, still sitting courtside at ABC’s NBA Finals broadcast table, far longer than colleagues expected and longer than
anyone else in his role ever has.
“The good part is I enjoy what I
do, more so I enjoy who I do it
with, and I’m really blessed,” Van
Gundy said.
This is his 10th finals, the most
for a TV analyst. Before Van
Gundy and teammate Mark
Jackson, working his eighth,
nobody had done more than six.
Jackson played for Van Gundy,
calls him Coach, and is surprised
Van Gundy is still sitting there
next to him. So is play-by-play
commentator Mike Breen, his
longtime friend who notes just
how long it’s been since that
coach title actually fit.
“It’s now his career, he’s now a
broadcaster,” Breen said. “As
much as he doesn’t want to admit
it, he’s a member of the media and
he’s a full-time broadcaster now
for a decade, which makes me
delighted because he can’t weasel
out of it anymore and say that
he’s not a member of the media.”
Braves
From Page 11
was a bad overall effort by me.”
Grandal broke the game open
in the third with his three-run
blast for a 7-2 lead after Joc
Pederson’s RBI single.
Seager led off the fourth with a
solo shot on Wisler’s first pitch to
make it 8-2. In the fifth, he sliced
a two-out, RBI single to shallow
left, extending the Dodgers’ lead
to 9-2.
“Anytime we got the ball up in
the zone against him, he put a big
swing on it,” Wisler said. “I know
he’s a rookie, but he’s a great hitter.”
Seager wasn’t done yet.
He slammed a two-run homer
— his team-leading 14th — with
two outs in the seventh to make it
12-3. It was Seager’s third multihomer game of the season.
“It keeps happening every day
and I can get used to it,” Dodgers
manager Dave Roberts said. “He
has a short, sound swing, power
to all fields. It starts with his
pitch recognition.”
Unsung players stepping up
big time in Stanley Cup Final
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) —
This is a Stanley Cup Final
filled with stars who have won
the Hart Trophy, Olympic gold
medals and numerous other
awards.
With players like Sidney
Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Joe
Thornton and Joe Pavelski,
the final features some of the
biggest names in hockey.
The one place where those
players haven’t showed up so
far is on the goal-scoring
sheet. In a series that has featured three straight one-goal
games all decided either in the
final three minutes of regulation or overtime, some of the
lesser-known players have
delivered the goals.
“You look through these
playoffs
and
third-line,
fourth-line guys have stepped
up for both teams and scored
big goals,” Sharks center
Logan Couture said Sunday.
“It’s not necessarily that the
big guns have scored the huge
goals for both teams. You
need that when you get to this
point.”
Sharks rookie Joonas
Donskoi was the latest to get
on that list when he scored
the overtime winner in San
Jose’s 3-2 victory in Game 3
on Saturday night that cut
Pittsburgh’s series lead to 2-1.
Game 4 is Monday night in
San Jose.
Donskoi matched the overtime goal scored just one
game earlier by Penguins
rookie Conor Sheary. Before
that, it had been 30 years
since a rookie had scored in
overtime in the final when
Montreal’s Brian Skrudland
did it in Game 2 against
Calgary.
But Donskoi and Sheary
are far from the only unusual
suspects to score in the first
three games. Sharks defenseman Justin Braun has two
goals in the past two games,
matching his total from the
previous 40 contests.
“I’m happy I can finally chip
in offensively,” Braun said. “A
lot of other guys have done a lot
of heavy lifting to get us here.
I’m just trying to do my part.”
Pittsburgh defenseman Ben
Lovejoy, who has 15 goals in
334 career regular season
games, scored one of the
Penguins’ goals in Game 3
and set up the other that was
deflected in by Patric
Hornqvist.
Nick Bonino got the Game 1
winner for Pittsburgh when
the other goals were scored by
rookies Sheary and Bryan
Rust.
And after three games,
After Atlanta took a 2-0 lead in
the first on a RBI double by
Francoeur and a RBI single by
Nick Markakis, the Dodgers tied
the game at 2 in the bottom of the
inning. Gonzalez had a RBI double and Howie Kendrick added a
RBI single, both with two outs.
Hernandez put the Dodgers
ahead for good in the second,
homering for a 3-2 lead.
Braves defensive replacement
Brandon Snyder hit a solo homer
in the ninth, his first since July
29, 2013, with Boston.
Thompson went 1 for 3 with
two runs scored. He’s scored at
least one run in a career-high
four straight games and is batting
.345 in 23 home games so far.
UP NEXT
Braves: RHP Williams Perez (21, 3.86 ERA) starts the opener of
a three-game set at San Diego.
Dodgers: RHP Mike Bolsinger
(1-2, 4.20) starts the opener of a
three-game
series
against
Colorado.
From Page 11
players like Crosby, Malkin,
Thornton, Pavelski, Kris
Letang, Logan Couture and
Brent Burns are all still looking for their first goals.
“You just try to worry about
yourself and make sure you’re
doing your job and as a team
you’re doing the things necessary to give yourself a chance
to win games,” Crosby said.
“It’s tight. Like I keep seeing
year after year, there’s a small
margin of error. Just make
sure you’re competing and
give yourself a chance to create and ultimately produce.”
It hasn’t been like those
players haven’t performed
well. Crosby was dominant
the first two games and set up
a pair of goals that helped
Pittsburgh take the 2-0 lead.
But he got much less generated on the road when the
Sharks were able to match top
defensive pair Marc-Edouard
Vlasic and Justin Braun
against him consistently.
Even a few shifts with Malkin
couldn’t generate many
chances for Pittsburgh.
“We’re playing against good
defensemen,” Malkin said.
“They play so close and so
tight, it’s tough to shoot sometimes.”
Thornton had a few good
chances late, especially after
Couture joined him and
Pavelski on San Jose’s top
line. But Pavelski, who leads
the NHL with 13 playoff goals,
has been mostly silent with no
points and only four shots on
goal through three games.
“It’s tough this time of
year,” Sharks coach Peter
DeBoer said. “Every round,
he’s getting a lot of attention,
just like Brent Burns is getting a lot of attention, just like
Jumbo is getting a lot of
attention. That’s not an easy
role to play. I have no doubt
he’s going to break through
here. He has all year for us.
It’s just a matter of time.”
One of the factors limiting
Pavelski’s effectiveness has
been Pittsburgh’s propensity
to block shots. The Penguins
blocked 38 shots alone in
Game 3, including 12 from
Burns. With fewer point shots
getting to the net, Pavelski
has been unable to utilize his
elite hand-eye coordination to
deflect pucks like he was so
successfully the first three
rounds.
“We’re
creating
some
chances,” Pavelski said. “It’s
just that end result hasn’t
been there. You just stay with
it, keep trying to have the
puck and play with it and get
open. Try to get a few more.”
Gurley
Sprint Cup
From Page 11
against these drivers against
these teams. You’ve got to have it
all.”
The June 2015 Pocono race
was replayed on Fox Sports 1 —
spoiler alert, Truex won — on
Sunday and showed him breaking through for his first Sprint
Cup victory in two years.
The win was particularly emotional for Truex. He slapped the
top of the No. 78, thrust his right
fist toward the sky and bounded
straight into his girlfriend’s
arms. He hugged and kissed
Sherry Pollex and lifted her into
the air, a needed celebration for
the couple as she fought ovarian
cancer.
Pollex, diagnosed with Stage 3
ovarian cancer in August 2014,
is in remission.
“I went through a lot,” Truex
AP photo
SAn JoSe ShArkS right wing Joonas Donskoi scores the
winning goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins in overtime of
Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Finals in San Jose, Calif., Saturday.
said. “We went through a lot.”
Truex is a hunting buddy with
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his easygoing personality has made him
a popular driver in the garage.
Rival drivers, owners, crew members popped by for high-fives and
congratulatory greetings on pit
road last year.
After Charlotte, it was even
more texts and tweets to read
after claiming his little slice of
history.
“I still just can’t believe how
many laps we led, and just the
miles,” he said. “Just thinking
about all the greats that have
come and gone through NASCAR
— all of our heroes, my heroes —
to think that I’ve led more laps in
a race than anyone ever has or
more miles is just a really cool
thing for me.”
the veteran assistant’s style.
“It feels good being back out
here,” Gurley said. “Last year
this time, I wasn’t.”
Indeed, Gurley’s 2015 rise to
become the Offensive Rookie of
the Year began with several
months in which he couldn’t
practice regularly with his teammates.
He was limited largely to
straight-line running in the
months of offseason workouts
after the Rams risked the 10th
overall pick on his game-breaking talent. Gurley stood on the
sidelines with the Rams’ athletic
trainers while his teammates
practiced, and he didn’t play in
their first two regular-season
games.
After a quiet start in their
third game, Gurley literally hit
his stride and quickly captivated
the league with his elusiveness
and speed. He had four straight
100-yard games before settling
into a steadily productive groove,
finishing with 1,106 yards rush-
ing — 4.8 yards per carry — and
10 touchdowns.
Gurley doesn’t turn 22 years
old until August, and he feels
he’ll be more useful as a vocal
leader in the weight room than
on the field. He is focused on
refining his technique while
increasing his role in the Rams’
passing offense, which was the
NFL’s worst last season.
Gurley has already secured a
few endorsements beyond the
Carl’s Jr. deal, including a sponsorship with a candy company.
More deals are undoubtedly
coming in a city that loves a
charismatic winner — and just
lost Kobe Bryant to retirement.
And Gurley isn’t looking to
increase his intake of cheeseburgers and candy to recoup
that lost weight, either.
“It’s probably just having the
first offseason not doing anything for about a month or two,”
Gurley said of his diminished
bulk. “I feel fine how I am. I’m
not going to add weight.”
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2016
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Iggy Azalea, 26; Michael Cera,
28; Bill Hader, 38; Liam Neeson, 64.
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Happy Birthday: You need to take
more time out for yourself. Focus on
any personal changes you want to
make. Stepping back from situations
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
that are less than satisfactory will help
you see clearly and allow you greater
freedom to rethink and restart. Protect
against indulgence and letting others
influence you. Be the master of your
own life and determine what's best for
you. Your numbers are 4, 17, 24, 27,
31, 37, 45.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take
care of personal matters on your own.
Interference will leave a sour taste in
your mouth. The more self-sufficient
you are, the easier it will be to make
decisions that will benefit you. A physical change is best handled cautiously.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Observe
and respond. A partnership has the
potential to grow into a successful collaboration. Share your plans with
friends, relatives and those who will be
affected by your decisions. An opportunity to advance is heading your way.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don't
count on receiving help from others.
Prepare and organize how you want to
execute your future plans and do so on
your own. Someone you know will be all
talk and no action. Look out for your
own best interests.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The
more cooperative you are, the easier it
will be to manufacture the scenario you
want to see unfold. Speak from the
heart and others will take notice. A
unique look at an old idea will spark an
opportunity to forge ahead.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take care of
your personal interests and responsibilities. If you leave your affairs to someone else, you will be disappointed.
Bring about personal changes that will
enable you to gain better control of
future prospects.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Get
involved in group endeavors or situations that will provide you with the information necessary to make quality
moves. Refuse to let anyone control
your life or dominate your time. Take
responsibility for your own actions, not
someone else's.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Strive for
personal perfection in all that you do,
and you'll make it impossible for anyone
to make you look bad. A serious
approach will enable you to make personal choices that are in your best interests. Romance is on the rise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Listen
and learn. Take part in community
events or other cultural activities that
will open your eyes to how others live.
Residential changes will bring about
positive changes and inspiration. Share
your plans with someone you love.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
You will have to watch your spending
and avoid sharing personal information
with people who may wish to pry into
your affairs. Don't mistake snooping for
gestures of friendliness. Size up situations based on facts. Romantic encounters are best handled carefully.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Keep life lively. Speak up, share
thoughts and express what's on your
agenda. You can make a difference in
your personal and professional dealings if you strive for equality, understanding and cooperation. Set guidelines and stick to them.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Do
what you enjoy most. Concentrate on
home, family and turning something
you do into a moneymaking pastime. A
change in the way you make a living will
lift your spirits and help build your confidence. Romance is encouraged.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Helping others is an act of kindness, but
before you offer assistance, find out
what's required. Someone is likely to
take advantage of you if you don't ask
questions or understand what is being
offered. Protect your assets.
Birthday Baby: You are astute and
versatile. You are a flirt and a risk-taker.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—15
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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 Å
The Kelly File
Caligula: 1400 Days of Terror New theories about Caligula. ››› “Gladiator” (2000, Historical Drama) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. ’ Å
Barbarians Rising Hannibal builds a rebel alliance. (N)
(:03) Barbarians Rising Hannibal builds a rebel alliance.
Genius
Genius
Genius
Genius
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Genius
Genius
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
The First 48 “Hale Storm”
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Ringside Seat” The First 48 ’ Å
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:03) The First 48 Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Street Outlaws ’ Å
Street Outlaws ’ Å
Street Outlaws: Full Throttle Street Outlaws “Episode 8”
Fat N Furious: Rolling
(:03) Street Outlaws Å
Fat N Furious: Rolling
Port Protection
Mygrations
Mygrations “Lion’s Den”
Port Protection
Mygrations “Lion’s Den”
Mygrations “Animal House”
Port Protection (N)
Mygrations “Animal House”
Port Protection
Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Delicious
Delicious
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Hotel Impossible (N) Å
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Cake Wars “Nintendo”
Cake Wars “The Simpsons”
Cake Wars “Lego”
Cake Wars “Star Wars”
Kids BBQ Championship (N) Cake Wars
Chopped
Chopped “Wild Ride”
Cake Wars
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Hunters
Hunters Int’l Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House
North Woods Law ’ Å
North Woods Law: Hunt
North Woods Law ’ Å
Yukon Men “Hunt or Starve” Yukon Men ’ Å
(:01) Yukon Men ’ Å
(:02) Yukon Men ’ Å
(:03) North Woods Law ’
(12:04) Yukon Men ’ Å
›››› “Forrest Gump” (1994, Comedy-Drama) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright. ’
(:15) ››› “Meet the Parents” (2000, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. ’
Monica the Medium (N) ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
Lizzie
So Raven
Backstage ’ Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Austin & Ally Stuck/Middle Bunk’d Å
K.C. Under. Liv-Mad.
››› “The Princess and the Frog” (2009)
Stuck/Middle (:10) Bunk’d Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Jessie Å
“Mom’s-Date”
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Harvey Beaks Alvinnn!!! and Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Game
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
We Bare
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Gunsmoke Å
Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) George Lopez Å
George
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Sherlock
››› “The Hunt for Red October” (1990, Suspense) Sean Connery. ‘PG’ Å
››› “Gran Torino” (2008, Drama) Clint Eastwood. Premiere. ‘R’ Å
TURN: Washington’s Spies TURN: Washington’s Spies ››› “Gran Torino” (2008)
Cat-Roof
››› “Key Largo” (1948) Å (DVS)
(:15) ›››› “The Maltese Falcon” (1941) Å (DVS)
›› “Chasing Rainbows” (1930)
› “The Divine Lady” (1929) Victor Varconi
(:15) ››› “The Patsy” (1928, Comedy)
Tillie’s
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
My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” (2003) Å
›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” (2003) Å
Sex-City
Sex-City
Real Housewives-Dallas
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm (N)
Real Housewives-Dallas
Southern Charm
Real Housewives-Dallas
› “Land of the Lost” (2009) Will Ferrell, Anna Friel. Å
›› “John Carter” (2012, Science Fiction) Taylor Kitsch, Lynn Collins, Willem Dafoe. Å
12 Monkeys “Lullaby” (N)
(:01) › “Land of the Lost” (2009) Will Ferrell. Å
(12:01) Hunters “Promise”
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops ’
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
(3:46) Archer (:17) Archer (4:48) Archer Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
Trevor Noah: African
South Park
South Park
(3:40) Teen Mom 2 ’
(4:50) Teen Mom 2 ’
Teen Mom 2 ’
Teen Mom 2 ’
Teen Mom 2 ’
Teen Mom 2 ’
Teen Mom 2 “Gone Fishing” Scream “Psycho” (N) ’
Teen Mom 2 ’
Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (N) Black Ink Crew (N) ’
Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Black Ink Crew ’
Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ››› “Erin Brockovich” (2000, Drama) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney, Aaron Eckhart.
Reba Å
Roseanne
(2:30) ›› “Deliver Us From Eva” (2003) LL Cool J. Å
Fresh Prince (:35) Martin ’ Å
(:18) Martin › “Obsessed” (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles. Å
Husbands
Husbands
Husbands
The Wendy Williams Show
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
Destruction Destruction How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
(3:00) U.S. Senate Coverage ’
Communicat Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Rosary
Chaplet Kids Catholicism Bookmark
EWTN News Coming to
Daily Mass - Olam
The Journey Home (N)
EWTN News Holy Rosary World Over Live
Saints
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “The Return” Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “The Caller” Criminal Minds “Bully” ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “200” ’
Penn Zero
Pickle-Peanut Star-For.
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Lab Rats
BattleBots ’ Å
Wander
Walk the
Walk the
Walk the
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Ultimate
Star-Rebels Wander
Gravity Falls
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Unwrapped Unwrapped Unwrapped Unwrap2.0
Best- Made
Best- Made
Best Thing
Best Thing
Best Thing
Best Thing
Unique Eats Unique Eats Unwrapped
Good Eats
Good Eats
Best Thing
Best Thing
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Legal” Å
CSI: Miami “Hell Night” ’
CSI: Miami Speed-dating. ’ CSI: Miami “Crime Wave” ’ CSI: Miami “Pirated” Å
CSI: Miami “After the Fall”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Legal” Å
Vivan los Niños
Vivan los Niños
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Vecinos
Vecinos
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
Noticiero Con Joaquin
La Familia
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Eva la Trailera (N) ’ (SS)
La Esclava Blanca (N) (SS) El señor de los cielos (N) ’ Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
La Esclava Blanca ’ (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Sueño de Amor (N) ’
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
Yago (N) ’
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
Babe W.
Classic Car NASCAR America (N) Å
NHL Live (N) ’ (Live)
2016 Stanley Cup Final Pittsburgh Penguins at San Jose Sharks. Game 4. (N) Å
NHL Overtime (N) ’ (Live)
Mecum Auto Auctions
Sin City ER ’ Å
Sin City ER ’ Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Hoarding: Buried Alive
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Monday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WDEF)
Mom
Having apparently helped Jodi (guest star
Emily Osment) get her life back on track,
Christy and Bonnie (Anna Faris, Allison
Janney) eagerly — maybe too eagerly —
seek another person they can assist in
“Mozzarella Sticks and a Gay Piano Bar.”
Judy Greer (“Married”) guest stars as their
next candidate. Mimi Kennedy and Jaime
Pressly also star.
9 p.m. on (LIFE)
Devious Maids
“Once More Unto the Bleach,” the Season
4 premiere, opens in the aftermath of the
inferno that destroyed the Powell mansion
in the Season 3 finale. That tragedy leaves
Evelyn Powell (Rebecca Wisocky) devastated as her previous life of privilege literally
goes up in smoke before her eyes. Marisol
(Ana Ortiz) somewhat cautiously lends her
support to this woman who once was her
nemesis. Carmen’s (Roselyn Sanchez)
nascent singing career hits another speed
bump.
9 p.m. on (TNT)
Rizzoli & Isles
The premiere of the seventh and final season of this police procedural picks up the
action in the aftermath of a shooting that
figured in the Season 6 cliffhanger, as the
team tries desperately to find Alice Sands
(guest star Annabeth Gish) and bring her to
justice before she destroys Jane’s (Angie
Harmon) life with her twisted obsession in
“Two Shots: Move Forward.” The story continues in another new episode that immediately follows. Sasha Alexander also stars.
10 p.m. on (LIFE)
UnREAL
Since it’s been taken a lot more seriously
than many of Lifetime’s series and movies,
it’s no surprise that this Peabody-winning
drama returns for Season 2. The show
again targets actual dating competition
programs — and you can name them as
fast as we can — with an African American
bachelor at the center of the fictional “Everlasting” this time. Shiri Appleby and Constance Zimmer are back as producers Rachel and Quinn. Craig Bierko still co-stars.
10:01 p.m. on (WTVC)
Mistresses
Harry (Brett Tucker) gets a visitor — and
the series gets a new cast regular — as
Tabrett Bethell plays his sister, Kate, in the
new episode “Mistaken Identity.” Her arrival
complicates Harry’s relationship with Joss
(Jes Macallan), especially when Kate reveals problems in her marital engagement.
April (Rochelle Aytes) gets a big professional chance, while Karen (Yunjin Kim) debates her own occupation. Jerry O’Connell
and Tia Mowry-Hardrict guest star.
TUESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
WELFTBN
WTNB
WFLICW
WNGHPBS
DAYSTAR
WTVCABC
WTCIPBS
WDSIFOX
WDEFCBS
QVC
CSPAN
WGN-A
HSN
E!
ESQTV
LIFE
TLC
TBS
TNT
USA
FX
ESPN
ESPN2
FSTN
SEC
GOLF
FS1
FSSE
WEA
CNBC
MSNBC
CNN
HDLN
FNC
HIST
TRUTV
A&E
DISC
NGC
TRAV
FOOD
HGTV
ANPL
FREE
DISN
NICK
TOON
TVLND
AMC
TCM
HALL
OXYGEN
BRAVO
SYFY
SPIKE
COM
MTV
VH1
CMTV
BET
SCIENCE
CSPAN2
EWTN
WPXA ION
DISXD
GSN
COOK
WE
GALA
TELE
UNIV
NBCSP
DLC
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4:30
5 PM
5:30
JUNE 7, 2016
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Ent. Tonight Inside Edition America’s Got Talent “Auditions” The auditions continue.
Maya & Marty (N) ’ Å
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Prophecy
Praise the Lord Å
Max Lucado Supernatural Potters
Trinity Family Everyday
Prince
Bil Cornelius Praise the Lord Å
War &
Journey-Faith World Impact
Artist Bio / Music Special
WTNB Today
Body
Book
Tennova Talk Unity
Rise Up
Spirit Fest
Around Town
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
The Flash An evil speedster. Containment ’ Å
Tosh.0 Å
Crazy Talk
Hollywood
Paid Program Anger
Paid Program
Martha Speak Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Rhythm and Blues 40: A Soul Spectacular ’ Å
“The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution -- Independent Lens”
Eat to Live With Joel Fuhrman, MD Å
Reflections
Bill Winston Love a Child Jewish Voice Guillermo
Creflo Dollar Jerry Savelle John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni: Table
Marcus and Joni
Joel Osteen Å
Walking/Faith K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) The Bachelorette (N) ’ Å
20/20 (N) ’ Å
News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Ready Jet
Odd Squad
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Carol Burnett’s Favorite Sketches ’ Å
The Age Fix With Dr. Anthony Youn, MD ’ Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You ’ Å
›› “The Devil’s Disciple” (1959) Burt Lancaster. Å
››› “Mystery Date” (1991) Ethan Hawke. Å
› “Teen Wolf Too” (1987, Comedy) Jason Bateman. Å
›› “The White Buffalo” (1977) Charles Bronson. Å
›› “Swamp Thing” (1982)
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith NCIS “Incognito” ’
NCIS: New Orleans ’
Person of Interest (N) Å
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
A Host of Beauty Favorites Gemstone Jewelry Gala
Tuesday Night Beauty “Caj” (N)
The Deal Spot
Judith Ripka Jewelry
(12:00) U.S. House of Representatives Legislative Business ’
US House of Representatives Special Orders ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods “Bad Company” Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Payback” ’
›› “Tears of the Sun” (2003, Action) Bruce Willis, Monica Bellucci. Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Lawn & Garden (N)
Joyful Discoveries-Joy
Cottage Collection (N)
Brenda DyGraf Fitness (N)
Lawn & Garden (N)
Coin Collector (N)
Coin Collector (N)
Outdoor Solutions (N)
Fitbit Innovations (N)
Botched Å
Botched Å
Botched “Pinched Perfect”
E! News (N) Å
Botched “Double D-isaster”
Botched “Super Fupa” (N)
Botched “Super Fupa”
E! News (N) Å
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
NCIS: Los Angeles “Tuhon” NCIS: Los Angeles ’
American Ninja Warrior “Los Angeles Qualifier” ’
Boundless (N) Å
American Ninja Warrior “Los Angeles Qualifier” ’
Grey’s Anatomy ’ Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
Celebrity Wife Swap Å
(:02) Celebrity Wife Swap ’ (:02) Celebrity Wife Swap ’ (12:02) Celebrity Wife Swap
My Giant Life ’ Å
My Giant Life ’ Å
My Giant Life: Supersized
Little People, Big World ’
Little People, Big World
Little People, Big World (N) (:01) My Giant Life (N) Å
(:02) Little People, Big World (12:02) My Giant Life Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Separation Anxiety (N)
Conan (N) Å
Angie Tribeca (:29) Conan
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle “Hollander’s Woods”
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle “Nanny McDead” ’
Castle ’ Å (DVS)
Castle City councilman dies. Castle ’ Å (DVS)
CSI: NY “Officer Blue” Å
CSI: NY “Night, Mother” ’
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Chrisley
Impressions Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ›› “The Hangover Part II” (2011) Bradley Cooper.
››› “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues” (2013) Will Ferrell.
››› “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues” (2013) Will Ferrell.
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
College Softball NCAA World Series Championship, Game 2: Teams TBA.
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
The Jump
SportsNation Questionable ESPN FC (N) Around/Horn Interruption MLB Baseball New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates. From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (Live)
WNBA Basketball New York Liberty at Los Angeles Sparks. Baseball Tonight (N) Å
UFC Main Event
Bob Redfern Destination UFC Insider Cardinals Pre MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Cincinnati Reds. (N) (Live)
Postgame
UFC
World Poker Tour
Tennis
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show Paul Finebaum discusses all things SEC. (N) (Live)
SEC Inside
SEC Now (N) College Football From April 16, 2016. Å
SEC Inside
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Now
SEC Inside
LPGA Tour Golf
Golf Central Special (N)
Golf Central (N) (Live)
Inside PGA
Learning
›› “Caddyshack” (1980, Comedy) Chevy Chase.
›› “Caddyshack” (1980, Comedy) Chevy Chase.
Golf Central
World Poker Drag Racing NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) NHRA Drag Racing
Copa America Pregame
2016 Copa America Centenario: Team USA vs. Los Ticos
Pregame
2016 Copa America Centenario Colombia vs. Paraguay. (N) Postgame
(3:00) MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres.
Golf America XTERRA Adv. Driven
Driven
Braves Live! MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres. From PETCO Park in San Diego. (N)
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
Weather Center Live (N) Å
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
23.5 Degrees (N)
American Supernatural
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money (N)
Mad Money (N)
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
West Texas Investors Club Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
MSNBC Live (N)
MTP Daily (N)
With All Due Respect (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
Super Tuesday 5
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 Host Sean Hannity. The O’Reilly Factor Å
The Kelly File
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Cars
Top Gear “Postal” (N) ’
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Car Hunters Car Hunters Cnt. Cars
Cars
Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Life Snatched” The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Shattered” ’
The First 48 “Kiss of Death” ›› “Walking Tall” (2004, Action) The Rock. ’ Å
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:03) The First 48 Å
Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch “Cold War” Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch ’ Å
Deadliest Catch: On Deck
Deadliest Catch “Raw Deal” (:02) Dark Woods Justice ’ (:03) Deadliest Catch Å
(12:05) Dark Woods Justice
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Inside Cocaine Wars
Inside Cocaine Wars
Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia Airport Security: Colombia
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Conqueror
Conqueror
Bizarre Foods (N) Å
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods Å
Chopped “Time & Space”
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped Junior (N)
Chopped “Healthy Rivalry”
Chopped (N)
Chopped
Chopped “Healthy Rivalry”
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
Killer Hornet Invasion ’
Lair of the Killer Crocs ’
Grizzly Uprising ’
Attack of the Killer Dragons Killer Swarms ’
Urban Predator: Lion
9-1-1
9-1-1
(:03) Rabid ’
Urban Predator: Lion
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
››› “Meet the Parents” (2000, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. ’
(:15) ›› “Meet the Fockers” (2004) Robert De Niro. Future in-laws clash in Florida. ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
Lizzie
So Raven
››› “The Princess and the Frog” (2009)
Descendants Liv-Mad.
Best Friends (:05) Bunk’d K.C. Under. Stuck/Middle Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Bunk’d Å
Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Jessie Å
“Den Brother” (2010) ‘NR’
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Harvey Beaks Alvinnn!!! and Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Game
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
We Bare
King of Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Gunsmoke Å
(:09) The Andy Griffith Show Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) George Lopez Å
George
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Dinner-Schm › “Mr. Deeds” (2002) Adam Sandler. Premiere. ‘PG-13’
››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith, Eva Mendes. Premiere. ‘PG-13’ Å
Feed the Beast “Pilot Light”
Feed the Beast (N) Å
Feed the Beast Å
››› “Hitch” (2005) Å
“Johnny Doesn’t Live Here” ›› “A Kiss in the Dark” (1949) Å
›› “The Murderer Lives at Number 21”
›› “Jigsaw” (1961, Suspense) Jack Warner. Premiere.
››› “Brighton Rock” (1947) Richard Attenborough. Å
“The Gay Divorcee” (1934)
Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Virtually in Love
Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Douglas
Bad Girls Club: Chicago
Bad Girls Club
Virtually in Love (N)
Bad Girls Club: Chicago
Virtually in Love
Bad Girls Club: Chicago
Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Southern Charm
Tour Group (N)
››› “The Fifth Element” (1997) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman. Å
›› “The Time Traveler’s Wife” (2009) Rachel McAdams, Eric Bana. Å
›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. Å
››› “Frequency” (2000, Fantasy) Dennis Quaid. Å
(2:00) “The Book of Eli”
›› “Out of Time” (2003) Denzel Washington, Eva Mendes. ’
›› “Four Brothers” (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. ’
›› “The Book of Eli” (2010, Adventure) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. ’
(3:46) Tosh.0 (:17) Tosh.0 (4:48) Tosh.0 Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ (7:52) Tosh.0 (:24) Tosh.0 Daniel Tosh: People Pleaser Tosh.0 (N)
Not Safe With Tosh.0 Å
Not Safe With Daniel Tosh: People Pleaser
(3:40) Catfish: The TV Show (4:50) Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Scream ’
Scream ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
K. Michelle
K. Michelle
K. Michelle
K. Michelle
Black Ink Crew ’
Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ››› “Purple Rain” (1984, Musical) Prince, Apollonia Kotero. ’ Å
› “Graffiti Bridge” (1990) Prince. ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ›› “Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit” (1993) Whoopi Goldberg, Kathy Najimy.
Reba Å
Roseanne ’
(3:00) › “Obsessed” (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba. Å
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (6:46) Martin (:23) Martin The BET Life of “Usher” (N) Inside the Label (N)
Chasing Destiny “All of Us” Chasing Destiny “All of Us” The Wendy Williams Show
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files
Space’s Deepest Secrets (N) (:02) What on Earth? Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files
(2:15) U.S. Senate Coverage ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Cat Chat (N) With Jesus
Super Saints Choices
EWTN News Coming to
Daily Mass - Olam
Mother Angelica Live
EWTN News Holy Rosary Threshold of Hope (N)
Catechism
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “Fatal” ’
Criminal Minds “Angels”
Criminal Minds “Demons”
Criminal Minds “X” ’
Saving Hope Å (DVS)
Saving Hope “Little Piggies”
Penn Zero
Pickle-Peanut Star-For.
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Lab Rats
Gamer’s G.
Gravity Falls Spider-Man Guardians
Wander
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Ultimate
Star-Rebels Star-For.
Wander
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest (N)
Idiotest (N)
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Buddy’s Vac. Buddy’s Vac. Man Fire Food
BBQ Brawl
BBQ Brawl
Good Eats
Good Eats
Buddy’s Vac. Buddy’s Vac.
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Blood” Å
Law & Order “Shadow” ’
Law & Order “Burned” ’
Law & Order “Ritual” Å
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Expert” Å
Vivan los Niños
Vivan los Niños
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Vecinos
Vecinos
María
María
María
María
La Familia
Vecinos
Cásate
Noticiero Con Joaquin
María
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Eva la Trailera (N) ’ (SS)
La Esclava Blanca (N) (SS) El señor de los cielos (N) ’ Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
La Esclava Blanca ’ (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Sueño de Amor (N) ’
Un camino hacia el destino Tres Veces Ana (N) ’
Yago (N) ’
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
Outdoors
Babe W.
NASCAR America (N) Å
World Series of Fighting 5 From Atlantic City, N.J.
World Series of Fighting 5 From Atlantic City, N.J.
World Series of Fighting 2 From Atlantic City, N.J.
World Series of Fighting 24
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
You can agree or not: We live by God’s grace
Sometime back I ran across a very
interesting quote about death by the
famous American actor Joseph Jefferson
(1829-1905), who said, “We are but tenants — and shortly the great Landlord
will give us notice that our lease has
expired.”
To be sure, that's a novel way of looking at death, but it's true; at some point
in time our lease will be up and we will
all die.
One of the disadvantages of getting old
is that, as the years pass, many of our
best friends will die before we do. You
know, in one way death is a funny thing,
not laughing funny, but peculiar or hard
to understand. One day you are with
someone and even make plans for the
future, but they die and you never see
them again, unless you see them in
Heaven.
One of the reasons death is on my
mind is because over the past few years
we have witnessed more death and
GUEST
ColUmniST
Jim
Davidson
destruction, all across the world and
here in our country, than I can ever
remember in my lifetime. We have lost
some close friends to death here in our
community. Also the tragedy of the
World Trade Center, war in the Balkans,
Afghanistan and Iraq, the tsunami in
Southeast Asia, the earthquake in
Pakistan and the major hurricanes that
hit the Gulf Coast, especially the city of
New Orleans, have all taken a great toll
in human life.
What this says to me, and I hope it's
something that you will at least think
about if you have not already, is that we
live by God's grace. In addition to being
a feminine name, the word grace means
"unmerited favor" or something we didn't
do anything to earn.
From the moment we were born, we
have no guarantee that we will live
another hour, day, week, month or year.
We just live by God's grace. To me, and
this is something you will have to decide
on your own, we should be grateful for
each day we have, and do our best to
make the most of it.
There are a couple of verses in the
Bible that talk about this, and if you are
not familiar with these verses I hope you
will take a few minutes and look them
up. In James 5:13-14, it says, "Yet you
do not know what your life will be like
tomorrow. You are just a vapor that
appears for a little while and then vanishes away. Instead, you ought to say, 'If
the Lord wills, we shall live and also do
this or that.’”
I heard one of the announcers during
the 2005 Sugar Bowl game make a statement that really hit the nail on the head.
The Sugar Bowl has been played in New
Orleans every single year, without exception, since 1935, but Hurricane Katrina
changed that and the 2005 game was
played in Atlanta. The announcer said,
"Next year, God willing, we will be back in
New Orleans." The announcer understood
that if God had other plans, the game
would be played somewhere else, if it
would be played at all.
Now I am not saying that we should
make the statement “if God wills" every
time we say something or make a statement about our future plans, but we
should always have an awareness that
God is the One in control, and we only
live by His grace. When it comes to
death, it's hard for me to understand
why He takes godly, righteous people
and leaves those behind who are vile
and evil. The only thing I have ever been
able to come up with is He is leaving
them behind to give them a chance to
repent, and come to Him before it's too
late.
Every so often I get letters from atheists and agnostics who do not believe in
God and I always respect their views and
respond in kindness. However, all the
polls I have seen indicate that more than
85 percent of the American people do
believe in God. We are people of faith.
That's our heritage and also where our
hope comes from.
While this is personal, and you do not
have to agree, when it comes to my
hope, these words to a song say it all:
"My hope is built on nothing less, than
Jesus’ blood and righteousness."
———
(Editor’s Note: Jim Davidson is a motivational speaker and syndicated columnist. He may be contacted at 2 Bentley
Drive, Conway, AR 72034. To support literacy, buy his book “Learning, Earning &
Giving Back.”)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
Viewpoint
Hillary Clinton in need of
crash course, and quickly
I
shown anything, it’s that attacks
against him don’t work. Clinton
should leave the Trump bashing
to Warren and other surrogates,
as needed.
Clinton must also take Bernie
It must be beyond sobering to Sanders and his supporters serithe Clinton forces that Donald ously. Don’t just pay him lip servTrump has gone from can’t-be- ice; start actually praising him.
nominated to could-be-elected, The guy can’t win the nominaall within weeks. He trails Clinton tion, right, so why not boldly
by just 3 percentage points in the state in interviews that, “Bernie
latest Wall Street Journal-NBC Sanders is a great American
News poll. And [we’re barely from whom we can all learn a
into] June.
lot.”
The most radical thing Clinton
Give Sanders a prime slot at
should do to get her campaign the convention and incorporate
back on track is compel her husas many of his
band to step back — way back.
ideas as possiBill Clinton is a plus among votble in the
ers who will vote for Hillary no
Democrats’
matter what. But, among those
platform.
who have pushed her “unfavorAnd then,
able” rating off the chart, Bill is a
work with a
negative.
speaking
Even those who admired his
coach
and
Funt
presidency believe enough is
fashion stylist
enough. They don’t want a co- immediately. Yelling from the
presidency. They don’t want podium doesn’t work for everyClinton’s foundation muddying one — Sanders, yes; Clinton,
up global affairs. And they don’t no. So be more conversational
want to think about Bill trolling and let the microphone do the
through the West Wing looking work.
for interns to befriend.
Start dressing like a business
The Clintons should announce person. It’s not sexist to say that
publicly that Bill will have no role appearance counts; it’s a fact.
in Hillary’s administration. In fact, The dowdy outfit Clinton wore
say he’ll divide his time, living in recently on “Meet the Press” set
Chappaqua and visiting the an all-time low. Clinton should let
White House on weekends.
her ideas stand out, not her
Next, Hillary Clinton should wardrobe.
stop declaring herself the nomiFinally, get a new slogan, and
nee, even if math and logic indi- not necessarily “We Are Stronger
cate so. It’s part of the “entitle- Together,” which has been
ment” scenario that has many kicked around. Something like,
voters angry. Wait until the con- “America Matters.” Short, sweet
and focused entirely on the votvention confirms it in July.
She should name Elizabeth ers.
Months ago it was thought that
Warren as her running mate. It’s
a somewhat flawed choice in Hillary Clinton was the Democrat
governance, but necessary to who could most easily defeat
win over Bernie Sanders’ sup- Trump. Now, it seems she might
actually be the one he could
porters.
Then, stop attacking Trump. If most easily beat. Unless she
Trump’s incredible rise has changes her act. Fast.
———
(About the writer: Peter Funt is a writer and speaker. His book,
“Cautiously Optimistic,” is available at Amazon.com and
CandidCamera.com. © 2016 Peter Funt. Columns distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons Inc., newspaper syndicate. Peter Funt can
be reached at www.CandidCamera.com. Opinions expressed in
guest “Viewpoints” do not necessarily reflect the views of the
Cleveland Daily Banner.)
f Hillary Clinton wants to be
president — and for nearly a
decade that hasn’t been in
doubt — she’s got to change
her act in a very major way.
Cleveland Daily Banner
– Established in 1854 –
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Stephen L. Crass
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Alabama landfill activists seek
dismissal of $30M slander suit
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) —
Four activists from one of
Alabama’s poorest communities
have asked a federal judge to dismiss a $30 million slander suit
filed by Georgia companies that
claim they were maligned by
complaints about a landfill that
accepted tons of coal ash from a
Tennessee Valley Authority spill.
The American Civil Liberties
Union filed court documents saying the four Perry County residents — Esther Calhoun,
Benjamin Eaton, Ellis B. Long
and Mary B. Schaeffer — were
only exercising their First
Amendment rights in protesting
Arrowhead Landfill at Uniontown.
The four argued that some
claims cited by Canton, Georgiabased landfill operator Green
Group Holdings and a subsidiary,
Howling Coyote LLC, concern
nothing more than posts on a
Facebook page. They also argued
that no one has knowingly made
false claims about the landfill’s
safety.
The companies filed suit in federal court in Mobile in April
claiming they were being slandered by false allegations and
protests over 4 million tons of
coal ash waste shipped from
Tennessee.
The activists compared the
lawsuit to one filed against the
National Association for the
The American Civil
Liberties Union filed
court documents saying
the four Perry County
residents
— Esther Calhoun,
Benjamin Eaton, Ellis B.
Long and Mary B.
Schaeffer — were only
exercising their First
Amendment rights in
protesting Arrowhead
Landfill at Uniontown.
Advancement of Colored People
by white-owned businesses seeking to end a civil rights boycott
that began in Mississippi in
1966.
“Unfortunately, this is far from
the first time that a for-profit corporation has sued black citizens
for having the temerity to organize against businesses that they
believe perpetuate racial injustice,” the four argued.
Landfill attorney Michael
Smith said he was reading the
motion and would respond later.
For years, the companies have
defended the landfill as a safe
location to dispose of wastes
including coal ash that polluted
two rivers and hundreds of acres
of land when a dike failed at
TVA’s Kingston Fossil Plant in
2008.
Activists contend coal ash
shipments and pollution from the
landfill have harmed surrounding
Perry County, where unemployment is typically high. The county
was in the heart of the cotton belt
in the antebellum South, and
nearly 70 percent of its 10,500
residents are black.
Opponents have blamed the
landfill for environmental contamination for years and have
compared the landfill operators to
slave owners, claiming the operation is desecrating a cemetery
that dates from the 1800s.
The companies contend the
landfill is safe and approved by
the Environmental Protection
Agency, and they dismiss claims
that coal ash shipped on trains to
Perry County contaminated the
area. In March, the owners
agreed to donate land and help
protect the old cemetery, which
borders the landfill.
The lawsuit contends a group
called Black Belt Citizens
Fighting for Health and Justice
has spread misinformation and
untruths including claims that
the landfill is polluting water in
the area. The group’s website lists
Calhoun as president; Eaton as
vice president; Long as secretary
and Schaeffer as treasurer.
TODAY IN HISTORY
(AP) Today is Monday, June 6,
the 158th day of 2016. There are
208 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On June 6, 1944, during World
War II, Operation Overlord, aimed
at liberating German-occupied
western Europe, commenced as
Allied forces stormed the beaches
of Normandy, France, on “D-Day.”
On this date:
In 1799, American politician
and orator Patrick Henry died at
Red Hill Plantation in Virginia.
In 1816, a snowstorm struck
the northeastern U.S., heralding
what would become known as the
“Year Without a Summer.”
In 1844, the Young Men’s
Christian Association was founded in London.
In 1925, Walter Percy Chrysler
founded the Chrysler Corp.
In 1939, the first Little League
game was played as Lundy
Lumber defeated Lycoming Dairy
23-8
in
Williamsport,
Pennsylvania.
In 1955, the U.S. Post Office
introduced regular certified mail
service.
In 1966, black activist James
Meredith was shot and wounded
as he walked along a Mississippi
highway to encourage black voter
registration.
In 1968, Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy died at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Los Angeles, a day
after he was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan.
In 1978, California voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition
13, a primary ballot initiative calling for major cuts in property
taxes.
In 1985, authorities in Brazil
exhumed a body later identified
as the remains of Dr. Josef
Mengele, the notorious “Angel of
Death” of the Nazi Holocaust.
In 1994, President Bill Clinton
joined leaders from America’s
World War II allies to mark the
50th anniversary of the D-Day
invasion of Normandy. A China
Northwest Airlines passenger jet
crashed near Xian, killing all 160
people on board.
In 2001, Democrats formally
assumed control of the U.S.
Senate after the decision of
Vermont Republican James
Jeffords to become an independent.
Ten years ago: Veterans Affairs
Secretary Jim Nicholson acknowledged a stolen computer contained personal data on about 2.2
million active-duty military,
Guard and Reserve personnel —
not just 50,000 as initially
believed. Iran and the United
States had a rare moment of
agreement, using similar language to describe “positive steps”
toward an accord on a package of
incentives aimed at persuading
Tehran to suspend uranium
enrichment. Soul musician Billy
Preston died in Scottsdale,
Arizona, at age 59.
Five years ago: After days of
denials, New York Democratic
Rep. Anthony Weiner confessed
that he had tweeted an inappropriate photo to a woman and
admitted
to
inappropriate
exchanges with six women before
and after getting married; Weiner
apologized for lying but said he
would not resign (which he ended
up doing). Former Pennsylvania
Sen. Rick Santorum, popular
among social conservatives,
plunged into the 2012 Republican
presidential
sweepstakes.
(Santorum suspended his campaign in April 2012.)
Dear Annie: My wife and I are
expecting our fourth child. She is
a firm believer in breastfeeding
and plans to do so when our baby
arrives. Our oldest child, “Travis,”
was 3 years old when his first sibling was born. My wife continued
to breastfeed him along with the
baby, and continued to do so
through the birth of our third
child, born when Travis was 5. I
thought it was a little odd, but I
did not object.
Travis is now 13 years old. A few
weeks ago, he asked his mom if he
could breastfeed like he did when
he was little. He told her he
remembers it and loved how safe
he felt. He said he wants to feel
that closeness with her again.
When she told me, I thought she
was joking. But she was dead serious and had already told him
“yes.” I do not agree with this and
have expressed my concerns.
Travis is a boy in the middle of
puberty who has suddenly become
girl crazy. I cannot help but feel
there is a sexual component to
this. I had hoped her obstetrician
would side with me, but we asked
about it, the doctor replied, “I
admit it is unusual to breastfeed a
child at that age, but it is not likely
it will harm him.”
Am I unreasonable to think a
teenage boy doesn’t belong anywhere near his mom’s breasts?
Please help me learn to accept this
or to get my wife to rethink it. She
has agreed to listen to your advice.
— An Unreasonable Husband
Dear Husband: The obstetrician
was undoubtedly responding solely to the nutritional benefits of
breastfeeding. No, the milk will not
harm him. But emotionally and
psychologically, your wife is setting Travis up for years of psychotherapy.
It’s not like your wife has been
breastfeeding Travis for the past
13 years. This is a recent
request. Yes, of course, there is a
sexual component, even if it’s
subconscious and unintentional.
The boy is 13. Girls are on his
mind. We guarantee female
breasts are on his mind. Mom
should not let him practice on
her. It can create all kinds of
physical sensations and attachments, not only for him, but also
for Mom, none of which is emotionally healthy. Mom - if you’re
listening, please put your child
first. Indulging this request doesn’t do either of you any good. It’s
OK to say “no.” Simply tell Travis
that he’s too old to do what
babies do. Surely, you can help
him feel safe and loved in a more
age-appropriate way. You also
can discuss this with Travis’
pediatrician, who might have a
better handle on a teenage boy’s
emotional health.
Dear Annie: When I eat out, am
I supposed to cut a hamburger in
half before eating? I have done
this, but it makes it so messy to
eat. — M.
Dear M.: Sandwiches (especially hamburgers) can be eaten
whole, unless doing so would
require a bib or a larger mouth.
Most folks would cut a grilled
cheese sandwich, for example, but
if cutting a hamburger makes it
too sloppy, then by all means,
don’t do it.
———
(About the writers: Annie’s
Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions to
[email protected], or
write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St.,
Hermosa Beach CA 90254. You
can also find Annie on Facebook at
Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To find
out more about Annie’s Mailbox
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and
cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate website at www.creators.com.)
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016—17
7,==4140/ / $:74.C
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
Tennessee Health Department has
tips for summer activity
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee Department of Health
is reminding residents about
steps to take as they spend more
time outdoors and in the sun
with summer approaching.
The department says preventing tick and mosquito bites is
always important but especially
so this year with concerns about
Zika virus, which can cause birth
defect. The agency says apply
insect repellant after sunscreen
and repeat often. Also wear loose
and light-colored clothing and
tuck in pants legs and shirts to
form a barrier.
To avoid overexposure to the
sun, use a broad-spectrum sunscreen with SPF rating of 30 or
higher, wear a hat and sunglasses and remember the sun is
strongest between 10 a.m. and 4
p.m.
And to avoid dehydrating,
drink cold water when you feel
thirsty and limit caffeinated and
sugary drinks.
Ruling awaited in Tennessee bank
extortions case
KNOXVILLE (AP) — The FBI
and a Pennsylvania man accused
in a series of bank extortions are
awaiting a ruling in federal court
on the legality of search warrants
in the case.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Clifford
Shirley hasn’t said when he
might rule in the case against 43year-old Michael Benanti of Lake
Harmony, Pennsylvania. The
Knoxville News Sentinel reports
Shirley said after a hearing last
week that finding the first search
warrant bad would make all of
them bad.
Benanti is charged in a 23count indictment accusing him of
kidnappings, carjackings, bank
robbery and extortions. The
charges arise from an alleged plot
with co-defendant Brian Witham
to kidnap bank executives and
their families and forcing them to
withdraw money from their
banks.
One of the kidnappings
occurred in Knoxville, one in Oak
Ridge and one in Elizabethton.
Authorities investigating Bledsoe
County Jail inmate’s death
PIKEVILLE (AP) — Tennessee
authorities say they are investigating the weekend death of an
inmate at the Bledsoe County
Jail.
Media outlets report the
Tennessee
Bureau
of
Investigation identified the
inmate
as
33-year-old
Christopher Axmacher. He was
found unresponsive in his cell
Saturday.
The TBI says efforts to resuscitate him were unsuccessful, and
he was pronounced dead at a
hospital.
Autopsy will be performed
in Memphis officer’s death
MEMPHIS (AP) — A man suspected in a downtown Memphis
shooting that left three people
injured fled in a stolen vehicle
that fatally struck a police officer,
police said Sunday.
Justine Welch, 21, faces multiple charges that include firstdegree murder, vehicular homicide, attempted first-degree murder, evading arrest and theft of
property over $10,000, police
spokeswoman
Sgt.
Karen
Rudolph said in a news release.
The release did not disclose
Welch's hometown.
Welch was being held at the
Shelby County Jail. Jail records
didn't indicate whether Welch
has an attorney.
Officer Verdell Smith, 46, was
pronounced dead from his
injuries at 10:43 p.m. Saturday,
Memphis Police Department
Director Mike Rallings said during a news conference.
Police said two people were
taken to the hospital after being
shot at about 10 p.m. Saturday
by the suspect, who then ran to a
retail complex and shot a male
employee.
Memphis police spokeswoman
Sgt. Karen Rudolph said Sunday
the 21-year old employee has
been released from a hospital,
while the other two victims, ages
39 and 57, remained in critical
condition. Their names weren't
released.
Police said the suspect then
fled in a vehicle and later struck
Smith, who had been working
with other officers to clear the
area. The suspect then fled
briefly on foot but was apprehended by police and taken to a
hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Rudolph said the vehicle driven by the suspect was reported
stolen earlier in the day. She said
four incident reports were filed by
police due to the multiple locations, and an investigation is
ongoing.
Rallings said Smith was an 18year police veteran who is survived by a father, fiance, son and
two daughters.
Rallings said the department
mourned the loss not just of
Smith but of other officers killed
in the line of duty, including
Officers Sean Bolton in 2015 and
Martoiya Lang in 2012. In addition, off-duty Memphis officer
Terence Olridge was fatally shot
last October.
NPR journalist David Gilkey,
translator killed on assignment
WASHINGTON (AP) — David
Gilkey, a veteran news photographer and video editor for National
Public Radio, and an Afghan
translator, Zabihullah Tamanna,
were killed while on assignment
in southern Afghanistan on
Sunday, the network says.
Gilkey and Tamanna were
traveling with an Afghan army
unit near Marjah in Helmand
province when the convoy came
under fire and their vehicle was
struck, the network’s spokeswoman, Isabel Lara, said in a
statement. Two other NPR journalists, Tom Bowman and producer Monika Evstatieva, were
traveling with them and were not
hurt.
Secretary of State John Kerry
called the attack that killed
Gilkey and Tamanna “a grim
reminder of the danger that continues to face the Afghan people,
the dedication of Afghan national
defense and security forces to
securing their country, and of the
courage of intrepid journalists —
and their interpreters — who are
trying to convey that important
story to the rest of the world.”
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani
condemned the attack, calling it
cowardly and “completely against
all the principles and values of
Islam and humanity, and against
all international laws.”
In a statement issued by the
presidential palace Monday,
Ghani was quoted as saying the
Taliban ignored the differences
between military, civilians and
journalists, killing Gilkey and
Tamanna as they prepared their
reports on the war.
Ghani on Monday visited
Helmand province, where the
fatal attack on Gilkey and
Tamanna’s their vehicle took
place, offering his condolences to
their families.
Legal Publications
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LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice
Notice of Garage Keeper's Lien, on 1998 Peterbuilt
D/ Truck, VIN # 3BPNLD9X6WF456468. By Jimmy
Sanders for unpaid bill.
June 2, 6, 2016
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• Director of Nutritional &
Environmental Services: At
least 3 years experience as a
manager/director in a health
care facility. Experience must
include fiscal management,
staffing, regulatory
compliance and clinical
experience with patient
nutrition. Certified Dietary
Manager preferred.
• RN – Med/Surg (FT Night
Shift 7 pm – 7 am)
• RN – Med/Surg (PRN)
• RN/Paramedic – Emergency
Department (PRN):
Paramedics must be enrolled
in RN program or willing to
obtain RN degree.
• Patient Care Technician –
Med/Surg (PRN)
• Radiologic Technologist (FT
– Dayshift & 2nd Shift)
• Phlebotomist – PRN
Apply online www.r heamedical.org
Click on Career Opportunities
Rhea Medical Center
9400 Rhea County Hwy.
Dayton, TN 37321
Equal Opportunity Employer
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, June 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
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