Start your engines - Creative Circle Media Solutions

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Start your engines - Creative Circle Media Solutions
F R I D AY
MAY 27, 2016
162nd YEAR • NO. 24
CLEVELAND, TN 22 PAGEs • 50¢
Dyer named new city schools director
Education veteran comes to Cleveland from Collierville
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Dr. Russell Dyer
Inside Today
Cleveland Board of Education members
were in complete agreement Thursday on
the selection of a new director of schools.
Board Chair Dawn Robinson, Peggy
Pesterfield, Charlie Cogdill, Tom Cloud,
Steve Morgan and George Meacham all
voted for Collierville Schools Chief of Staff
Dr. Russell Dyer to take over the
Cleveland City Schools at the start of the
2016-17 school year July 1.
The only board vote Dyer did not receive
was from Dr. Murl Dirksen, who was out
of the country and unable to cast his ballot.
Dyer was selected by the board over
Knox County Assistant Superintendent
Dr. Elizabeth Alves. They were the final
two candidates from 26 applicants in the
director search, which began three
months ago with the assistance of a
Tennessee School Board Association
search committee.
Dyer, who has spent his 20-year career
in Shelby County, will replace former
director Dr. Martin Ringstaff, who was
fired in February for conduct unbecoming
a school system official. Assistant Cathy
Goodman has since served as interim
director.
Cogdill made the motion to select Dyer
on Thursday afternoon, with a second
from Pesterfield.
Following Thursday’s vote, the board
also approved a contract proposal for the
new director. They also voted to utilize the
legal services of School Board Attorney
Chuck Cagle in contract negotiations.
Cagle will review the contract proposal,
with which he is familiar. The guideline
was the contract approved for Ringstaff.
Cagle will then forward the proposal to
Dyer (and his legal adviser) for approval or
a submission of possible changes or
amendments.
Board members are hopeful the contract can be approved as soon as possible,
since by state law the contract must be
signed by June 19 due to time restrictions
in an election year.
Once an agreement is reached, Dyer will
take over the school system at the start of
See DYER, Page 6
Bradley
jobless
figure
at 3.6%;
lowest in
15 years
‘Jane Doe’
motion by
American
Atheists
headed for
U.S. court
County says ID
a ‘moot’ point
Johnson dashes to
sixth-place finishes
Cleveland speedster Tiyanna
Johnson reached the podium
twice Thursday evening at the
Spring Fling track and field finals
in Murfreesboro, finishing sixth in
both the 100-meter dash and the
200-meter dash. Bradley
Central’s Spencer Goode is seeking to stand atop the podium with
a first-place medal in the shot put.
See Sports, Pages 13-15.
National parks
get sponsors?
Facing an $11 billion backlog in
unfunded maintenance projects,
the National Park Service is tinkering with the definition of philanthropy. It is granting corporate
sponsors the opportunity to
prominently display logos and
gain limited naming rights at the
nation’s 411 national parks, monuments and conservation areas.
For one person’s perspective, see
the guest “Viewpoint” on Page 16
of today’s edition.
Forecast
Today’s outlook is for mostly
sunny skies, but there is also a
slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. The high should be
around 87. Tonight should be partly
cloudy, with a low around 64.
Saturday looks to be mostly sunny,
with a high near 86. Saturday night
should be partly cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Index
Church........................................8-9
Classified................................20-21
Comics.........................................17
Editorials......................................16
Horoscope....................................17
Obituaries.......................................2
Stocks............................................4
Sports......................................13-15
TV Schedule...........................18-19
Weather........................................11
Around Town
John Sheehan celebrating the
completion of a project ... D. Gary
Davis having his “eye” on a problem ... Trina Norton excited about
the long-awaited arrival of a threeday weekend ... Gary Farlow
assisting with the spelling of a
name ... Barry Currin saying to a
friend, “That’s a joke, right?” ...
Cameron Fisher talking about his
appreciation, and showing it, for
public art along the
Cleveland/Bradley County
Greenway.
6 89076 75112 4
In May 2001,
rate was 2.9%
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
The parties involved with the
lawsuit by American Atheists Inc.
and “Jane Doe” against Bradley
County and Sheriff Eric Watson
will go before a U.S. District Court
Magistrate judge on June 8, to
argue their positions on the issue
of proceeding with one of the
plaintiff’s names remaining withheld.
But, Bradley County is saying
the unintended release of a document with the apparent “Jane
Doe” identified makes the entire
matter moot.
Magistrate Judge Susan Lee
signed the order Tuesday which
will allow, at the request of both
parties, for all concerned to
“await ruling on the motion” until
after a June 8 injunction hearing.
That will leave in place the
order to maintain the status quo
in the public entity’s ability to
release information about “Jane
Doe.”
As reported in the Cleveland
Daily Banner in the newspaper’s
May 15 edition, an error by the
plaintiff’s attorney allowed a
county phone log with the apparent “Jane Doe” identified.
The event happened as the
Banner had submitted a Freedom
of Information request for those
By RICK NORTON
Associate Editor
Banner file photo, HOWARD PIERCE
feels like the police didn't do the right thing.
He can take out a self-warrant or prepare a
case file and take it to a grand jury. These
are safeguards that are in place for the citizens."
Smith added that in this case the BCSO
stands behind the decision of the officers
involved "100 percent."
BCSO Director of Communications James
Bradford described the steps that were
taken at the Young Road incident.
"The Sheriff's Office responded. The
investigators talked to witnesses which validated everybody's statements as far as the
Anchored by increased hiring
in construction, retail trade,
tourism and temporary services,
Bradley County’s unemployment
rate in April dipped to its lowest
mark in 15 years.
At 3.6 percent, the local figure
plunged another two-tenths of 1
percent from the March tally of
3.8.
Larry Green, labor market analyst
for
the
Tennessee
Department of Labor and
Workforce Development, told the
Cleveland Daily Banner on
Thursday his research indicates
the local jobless mark hasn’t been
this low since May 2001, when
the figure plummeted to 2.9 percent.
“Based on what I can find, I
don’t believe Bradley County has
been down this low in a long, long
time,” he said.
Green called his findings “unofficial,” and pointed out seasonal
patterns can be partially credited.
However, it’s also indicative of a
strengthening economy; at least,
from the perspective of the
employment base, he said.
Bradley’s rate notches it in a
two-way tie with Johnson County
for the 15th lowest unemployment rate among Tennessee’s 95
counties. The mark compares
favorably to the statewide figure
of 4.3, and the national rate of 5
percent.
“It’s just another really good
report on employment for Bradley
County, as well as for surrounding counties,” Green stressed.
“Bradley is looking very good
compared to other counties ... but
then, they’re looking strong, too.”
A year ago Bradley County’s
jobless rate was strong, but it
pales in comparison to 2016.
“In April 2015, the rate was 5
percent in Bradley County,”
Green said. “As good as that was,
the county is now down to 3.6.”
See COMMITTEE, Page 6
See JOBLESS, Page 6
INTERsTATE 75 can become more congested than usual as travelers make their way to
Memorial Day weekend activities and/or summer vacation destinations. As seen here in an Exit 20
file photo, the Bradley County stretch of the busy roadway stays busy throughout the year. The
Memorial Day weekend will be even worse.
‘Start your engines’
Law enforcement patrols set
for heavy roadway presence
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Officials expect this
Memorial Day holiday weekend
to be the second-highest as far
as travel on record since 2005.
Nationwide, law enforcement
is planning on high traffic volume. Locally, local enforcement is also prepared for an
influx of motorists, both to
and through the area.
Memorial Day is the unofficial start of summer, and is
one of the most heavily trav-
eled times of the year.
“This weekend officially
kicks off the start of summer
vacation season, and it will
produce a high volume of vehicles on roadways,” said
Bradley County Sheriff’s Office
Public Relations Director
James Bradford. “In 2015,
eight people were killed in traffic accidents across the state
of Tennessee during the
Memorial Day weekend.
Fortunately, Bradley County
didn’t experience any fatal
accidents during that time,
See COURT, Page 6
and we want to be proactive in
preventing accidents from
occurring.”
Bradford said that the
BCSO will have extra patrols
on the roadways throughout
the weekend, especially in
areas that have higher incidents of traffic accidents and
reckless driving.
“The Sheriff’s Office will be
highly visible having a ‘zero
tolerance’ for violators driving
impaired or reckless,”
See ENGINES, Page 7
Law committee hears resident’s complaints
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
Members of the Bradley County
Commission’s Law Enforcement committee
told a county resident Thursday his complaints are those for the ears of a judge.
Josh Ptak had addressed the
Commission on Monday expressing his concerns over how Bradley County deputies
handled a situation on Young Road where a
resident was reportedly in his yard with a
rifle and had threatened himself along with
his vehicle passenger and those in another
vehicle.
He said at that meeting he felt the BCSO
"was not taking us seriously" and said the
man with the rifle should have been arrested on the spot.
"The whole issue with this situation is we
weren't brought into this situation," Ptak
told the committee. "We were on the scene
the whole time. But, they take [the statement] of bystanders who weren't even at the
scene. They scattered over there to take
their reports and we had to beg several
times for them to take ours."
"Our officers have to make discretionary
decisions every day and they make thousands every year," said BCSO Chief Deputy
Brian Smith. "There are avenues in place for
citizens like this gentleman right here, if he
Wacker’s Bachhuber
gets a local farewell
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
A special reception was held
Thursday
at
the
Cleveland/Bradley Chamber of
Commerce for the changing of
the guard at Wacker Polysilicon
North America.
Dr. Konrad Bachhuber, who
has been at the Charleston plant
since 2011, will be succeeded as
site manager by Mary Beth
Hudson, who comes to the local
facility from a similar plant in
Calvert City, Ky.
“We have a great team,” said
Bachhuber, who will be moving
to a global position within
Wacker. “The entire team is
proud of what we have in
Charleston. We started with a
greenfield, and we have successfully built an organization and
trained an organization, and it is
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
now up and producing.”
RETIRING CLEVELAND CITY MANAGER Janice Casteel, right,
The plant produces hyper- speaks with new Wacker Site Manager Mary Beth Hudson and the
pure crystalline polysilicon for
See BACHHUBER, Page 7
outgoing Dr. Konrad Bachhuber, during a reception Thursday for the
two held at the Cleveland-Bradley Chamber of Commerce.
Alex Womack
funeral slated
for Saturday
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Services will be
held Saturday for
the Cleveland man
who died earlier
this week in a
motorcycle accident in Hamilton
County.
Alex Womack, Womack
21, was a lifelong resident of
See WOMACK, Page 6
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
Ronald Clyde Allen
Ronald Clyde Allen, 49, a resident of Cleveland, passed away
Thursday, May 19, 2016, in a
local hospital.
He was a member of Trinity
Chapel.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Clyde Allen; and
grandfather, Eugene Dosier.
He is survived by his mother,
Nan Dosier Clark; stepfather,
Richard Clark, of Cleveland; two
children: Kristen Mulligan of
Prattville, Ala., and David Allen of
Cleveland: one grandchild,
Madelyn Mulligan; grandmother,
Jessie Dosier of Selma, Ala.; one
sister, Beverly Tate and husband,
Bruce Tate, of Decatur; several
nieces and nephews, and one
great-nephew.
A memorial service will be held
at 3 p.m. Sunday, May 29, 2016,
with Pastor Ronnie Bishop officiating at Trinity Chapel, 2779 APD
40.
The family will receive friends
and family from 2 to 3 p.m.
Sunday at Trinity Chapel prior to
the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Allen family guestbook at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
Ralph Buckner Funeral Hines
and Crematory has the arrangements.
Nannie Clayton Bradshaw
Nannie B. Clayton Bradshaw,
95, a lifelong resident of
Georgetown, passed away on
Thursday morning, May 26,
2016.
She was born on April 10,
1921, a daughter of Johnny and
Lona McDowell.
She was well known in the
Georgetown and Cleveland
areas for selling strawberries
and tomatoes at her home.
She and her late husband,
Horace, also sold and delivered
them to many local grocery
stores including the Red Food
Store
warehouse
in
Chattanooga.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
first husband, Horace Clayton;
second
husband,
H.L.
Bradshaw; two sons: Horace
Brownie Clayton and Terry
Clayton; two brothers: J.B.
McDowell and Charles A.
McDowell; and two sisters:
Marie Millard and Margaret
Talley.
She leaves behind to cherish
her memory her daughter and
son-in-law, Brenda and Rodney
Bacon of Georgetown; four
grandchildren: Greg Bacon
(Lori), Keith Clayton, Kendall
Clayton (Sheila), and Kina Orr;
and great-grandson, Bradley
Bacon (Jessica Malone), who
were Nannie’s caregivers until
she was forced to go into a care
facility; several other greatgrandchildren; three sisters:
Hazel Womac of Cleveland,
Ruby Matthews of Riceville and
Nell Ingram of Cleveland; her
best friend, Nomie Smith of
Georgetown; and numerous
other extended family members
and a host of special friends.
The family extends appreciation to Jessica Malone, Shirley
Lawson, Nomie Smith and niece
Gayla Bancroft for being wonderful caregivers to Nannie.
A celebration of her life is
planned for Sunday, May 29,
2016, at 3 p.m. in the chapel of
Companion Funeral Home with
the Rev. David Evans and the
Rev Ray Edwards officiating.
Interment will follow in the
Sunset Memorial Gardens with
her family and friends serving as
pallbearers.
The family will receive friends
in the funeral home parlor from 1
p.m. until the 3 p.m. service
time.
You are encouraged to share
a memory of Nannie and/or your
personal condolences with her
family by visiting her memorial
web page and guestbook at
www.companionfunerals.com.
To submit an obituary, have the funeral home or cremation
society in charge of arrangements e-mail the information to [email protected] and fax to 423-614-6529, attention
Obits.
North Ocoee Chapel with Pastor
Gary Sears officiating.
The interment will follow in Fort
Hill Cemetery with grandsons:
Raymond, Ben, Alan, Chris,
Andy, Lyndon, Bryan, Nicholas
and John Craft serving as casketbearers. Honorary casketbearers will be her great-grandsons.
The family will receive friends
Saturday, May 28, 2016, from
noon until 4 p.m. at the funeral
home.
We encourage you to share
your memories and or condolences with the family by going to
www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
Betty Jane Faile
Betty Jane Faile, 87, a resident
of Cleveland, passed away on
Thursday, May 26, 2016, in a
local health care facility.
She was born in Akron, Ohio,
on Oct. 16, 1928.
She was of the Baptist faith
and a member of West Cleveland
Baptist Church.
She and her late husband, the
Rev. Jason Faile, served in ministry for many years after coming
to Cleveland in the early 1950s.
She enjoyed crocheting and listening to the Gaithers. She will
always be remembered for her
smiling face.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
beloved husband, the Rev. Jason
Faile; and two sons: Larry Faile
and Tommy Faile.
She leaves behind to cherish
her memory her daughter-inlove, Doris Ann Near and husband, Danny; two grandchildrenin-love: Summer Stephens and
husband, Kevin, and their children, Tori and Keely and Erik
Near and his daughter, Linda;
several grandchildren and greatgrandchildren; and several other
extended
family
members,
church family and a host of special friends.
A graveside service is planned
for Saturday, May 28, 2016, at 2
p.m. in Sunset Memorial
Gardens with the Rev. J.W. Kirk
officiating. Family and friends will
serve as pallbearers.
You are encouraged to share a
memory of Jane and/or your personal condolences with her family by visiting her memorial web
page
and
guestbook
at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion Funeral Home and
the Cody family are honored to
assist Jane’s family with her
arrangements.
Glenda Johnson-Bishop
Glenda L. Johnson-Bishop, 69,
of Cleveland, passed away
Thursday, May 26, 2016, at a
Chattanooga health care facility.
She was of the Christian faith.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Thomas Abraham
Young and Ford and Catherine
Young Cross; grandson, James
White III; and several brothers
and sisters.
Survivors include her daughter,
Tara Ruth, and husband,
Dewayne, of McDonald; grandson, Taylor White and wife,
Christina, of McDonald; sisters:
Linda Bishop of Cleveland and
Brenda Eversole and husband,
Jerry, of Kentucky; and several
nieces and nephews, including
special nieces, Sue Caywood
and Darlene Longley.
The funeral will be held at 2
p.m. on Saturday, May 28, 2016,
in the chapel of Fike-Randolph &
Son Funeral Home with Terry
Caywood officiating.
The interment will follow in Red
Hill Cemetery with Taylor White,
Shawn Vandergriff, Dewayne
Ruth, Bobby Patton, Criss
Caywood and Snooks Beaty
serving as pallbearers.
A white dove release ceremony will conclude the service.
Her family will receive friends
from 12 noon until 2 p.m. on
Saturday at the funeral home
prior to the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Johnson-Bishop family guestbook at www.fikefh.com.
friends. He will be missed by all
those that had the opportunity to
meet him.
He was preceded in death by
two
grandparents;
Gerry
Womack and Jerry Womack; and
a
special
friend,
Colby
Stansberry.
He leaves behind his parents,
Chris and Suzanne Womack, to
cherish his memory; his sister,
Marly Murphy and her husband,
Michael; grandparents, Jr. and
Ann Johnson; aunts and uncles:
June Johnson, Greg and Mary
Womack, Kim Womack, Janet
Johnson, Linda Hensley, Hope
Officer and Steve Earnest;
cousins: Wesley Earnest, Julie,
Mary, Katie and Callie Earnest
and Cutter and Kenadee
Womack; best friends: Keith
Gregg, Brandon Weathers,
Danyelle Holt and Matt Harden;
and several other extended family members, church family, coworkers and a host of friends.
A celebration of his life is
planned for Saturday, May 28,
2016, at 1 p.m. in the sanctuary
of Mount Olive Ministries, 3522
Harrison Pike in Cleveland, with
Pastor Gary Sears officiating.
Interment will follow in the
Mount Olive Cemetery with
Alex’s family and friends serving
as pallbearers.
The family will receive friends
at the church today from 6 until 9
p.m., and also one hour prior to
the 1 p.m. service time on
Saturday.
You are encouraged to share a
memory of Alex and/or your personal condolences with his family
by visiting his memorial web
page
and
guestbook
at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion Funeral Home and
the Cody family are honored to
assist the Womack family with his
arrangements.
Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600)
in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday
and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
Phone (423) 472-5041.
Stephen L. Crass
Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin
herein. All rights of all other material herein are as reserved. ©2014 Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
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Alexander Womack
Alexander Christian Blake
“Alex” Womack, 21, a lifelong
resident of Cleveland, passed
away on Tuesday, May 24, 2016.
He was born on July 7, 1994,
the son of Chris and Suzanne
Womack.
He was a 2012 graduate of
Walker Valley High School. Alex
was a member of the Mount
Olive Church of God. He was
employed
at
Wingard
of
Chattanooga, where he served
as a team leader.
He had a gift for working on
cars and enjoyed helping his
friends out. He recently enjoyed
riding his motorcycle and spent
many hours riding with his
Tennessee gets top rankings from
all 3 bond rating agencies
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
Haslam used private email server
for official state business
NASHVILLE (AP) — Gov. Bill
Haslam and top aides have used
the Republican’s personal email
server to communicate about
official business.
A records request by WTVF-TV
in Nashville found that the email
accounts are linked to the governor’s
personal
website,
BillHaslam.com.
WTVF found that the governor
was briefed by budget officials on
his personal account and that
the server was also used by his
then-chief of staff Mark Cate,
who had used the server to email
the state’s education commissioner also apparently using a
private account.
The governor’s office responded that the use of the private
email server for public business
was rare and inadvertent and
that the private server would be
subject to open records requests
if it was used for public business.
Georgia
5 Card Cash: KC-KS-8C-3D-4S
All or Nothing Day: 01-02-0304-07-08-09-10-19-20-22-24
All or Nothing Evening: 02-0405-08-09-10-12-13-14-15-18-21
All or Nothing Morning: 02-0305-07-10-11-13-14-15-17-22-24
All or Nothing Night: 01-03-0405-07-08-09-12-13-15-20-24
Cash 3 Evening: 4-2-1
Cash 3 Midday: 3-9-9
Cash 4 Evening: 1-7-6-7
Cash 4 Midday: 9-3-1-3
Fantasy 5: 18-21-24-29-42
Mother of shooting
Estimated jackpot: $150,000
Georgia FIVE Evening: 1-9-7-1- victim fatally shot
CHATTANOOGA (AP) — The
9
mother
of a 1-year-old shooting
Georgia FIVE Midday: 5-8-4-4victim
has
been fatally shot in
2
Chattanooga.
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 04-07-14News organizations report that
19-29-30
26-year-old Bianca Horton was
found dead on the side of a road
Wednesday morning.
Horton had been a witness in
the case against the man accused
of shooting her daughter, Zoey
Duncan, in Jan. 2015. Duncan
was left paralyzed after the shooting.
Chattanooga police Chief Fred
A memorial program will be
Fletcher
says Horton’s death was
held at the Polk County
Courthouse, Benton, on Saturday likely gang-related. He says
at 11 a.m., to recognize our veter- authorities are concerned Horton’s
ans who gave their lives for our shooting may be related to her
daughter’s shooting.
nation.
The suspect in Duncan’s shoot———
Volunteer Energy Cooperative’s ing, Cortez Sims, has a trial schedcustomer service centers and cor- uled for Sept. 27, 2016 in connecporate office will be closed on tion with the 2015 shooting.
Melydia Clewell, a spokesMonday, in observance of
woman
for District Attorney
Memorial Day. As usual, the
Dispatch Center and on-call General Neal Pinkston, did not
crews will be available to respond comment on what Horton’s role
to reports of problems requiring might have been in the case.
IT’S A SPECIAL DAY FOR ...
Schonna
Goodman-Linn,
Sheena Corbett, Mitzi Johns,
Dustin Hicks, Fran Bible, Alexis
Powers, Cheryl Lee, Jacqueline
Miller and Jerry Cannon, who are
celebrating birthdays today ...
Willie Ledford, who is celebrating
his 75th birthday today ... Bryson
Gregory, who celebrated his fourth
Daily
$8.95
$1.95
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
NASHVILLE (AP) — Tennessee
has received the top ranking from
all three major credit rating agencies.
The state had held top ratings
from Moody’s Investor Services
and Fitch since 2010, but has
now added a AAA rating from
Standard and Poor’s after a midyear upgrade.
Standard and Poor’s cited the
state’s improving economy, growing reserves and sound management of liabilities in bumping up
the rating.
Better bond ratings make it
cheaper for the state to borrow
money.
Republican Gov. Bill Haslam in
a statement Thursday called the
top ratings a “historical accomplishment” that reflects the state’s
conservative fiscal strategy.
Tennessee last held top ratings
from all three agencies in 2000.
Haslam in last year’s meetings
with ratings agencies touted his
plans to privatize more mainte(AP) — These state lotteries nance work at state buildings.
were drawn Thursday:
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 0-3-7, Lucky
Sum: 10
Cash 3 Midday: 7-2-7, Lucky
Sum: 16
Cash 3 Morning: 4-7-0
Cash 4 Evening: 9-9-0-2,
Lucky Sum: 20
Cash 4 Midday: 5-8-1-5, Lucky
Sum: 19
Cash 4 Morning: 7-7-7-1
Cash4Life: 04-13-26-34-43,
Cash Ball: 3
Monthly
$6.75
Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041
I SEE BY THE
BANNER
Bertha G. Frady
Bertha G. Moreland Poole
Frady, 93, a resident of
Cleveland,
passed
away
Thursday, May 26, 2016, at the
family residence.
She was preceded in death by
her first husband, William Henry
Poole; her second husband,
Abner Frady; her daughter,
LaWanda Ingram; her brother,
J.C. Moreland; and her grandchildren: Tim Jones and Adrienne
Johnson.
She was a member of Bethel
Baptist Tabernacle.
She was survived by her
daughter, Robbie Jones, and her
husband, Bobby, of Cleveland;
her sons: David Poole and his
wife, Deb, of Diamond Springs,
Calif., and Danny Poole and his
wife, LeAnn, of Cleveland; her
stepchildren: Jimmie Dunn and
her husband, Gary, Janis Ross
and her husband, Eddie, Judy
Queen and her husband, R.L.,
Johnny Godfrey and his wife,
Judy, and Jerry Frady; several
grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren; her brother, Joe Lynn
Moreland; and several nieces
and nephews.
A Remembrance of Life service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday,
May 29, 2016, at Jim Rush
Funeral and Cremation Services,
(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
birthday Thursday ... Tanner
Flowers, Linda White, Lidia Dotson,
Mary York, Sandra Holcomb,
Keshia Martin, Jon Lovingood,
Gayle Dotson, Kelvin Page, Stacey
Swafford, Glenda Watson, Jackie
(Rominger) Giordano and Caden
Pettit, who will celebrate birthdays
Saturday.
TDOT halts road construction
during Memorial Day weekend
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee
Department
of
Transportation is halting road
construction on the state’s highways over the Memorial Day
weekend.
The state expects nearly
700,000 drivers to be on
Tennessee roads over the threeday weekend. Road work will be
suspended beginning at noon on
Friday and resume at 6 a.m. on
Tuesday.
There may still be some lane
closures and restrictions in areas
where long-term construction
projects are underway, and
reduced speed limits will still be
in effect in work zones.
The AAA auto club estimates
that more than 38 million
Americans will be traveling during
the Memorial Day weekend, a
nearly 2 percent increase over last
year and the second-highest travel volume since 2005.
East Tennessee man sentenced
in ex-lawmaker’s death
KINGSPORT (AP) — An East
Tennessee man has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for
the drunken-driving death of a
former state representative.
The Kingsport Times-News
reports James D. Hamm Jr. of
Kingsport
was
sentenced
Thursday in Sullivan County. He
was convicted in February of
vehicular homicide by intoxication, driving under the influence,
leaving the scene of a fatal collision, reckless endangerment and
failure to exercise due care.
Former Rep. Mike Locke was
placing campaign signs for Bud
Hulsey in his primary election
race when he was hit in 2014 by a
vehicle driven by Hamm. Hamm
stopped on the shoulder of an exit
ramp, where a passing motorist
took his keys until police arrived.
Locke briefly served as representative after the 2002 death of
Keith Westmoreland.
Hulsey last year sponsored a
bill in Locke’s name pertaining to
vehicular homicide cases.
Appeals court rules service dog
can comfort witness in trial
MEMPHIS (AP) — A state court
has rejected the claim of a convicted rapist who filed an appeal arguing a trial court was wrong for
allowing a service dog to be present
while his victim testified.
The Commercial Appeal reports
that the Tennessee Court of
Criminal Appeals made their ruling
this week.
According to court record, in
2014 the 10-year-old victim in the
case had been anxious about testifying. After spending time with
Murch, a 5-year-old trained
Labrador retriever, the boy calmed
down and was able talk.
Defedant Jose Reyes argued that
the presence of the dog would be
“overly prejudicial” to him, but the
trial court allowed Murch to be by
the victim’s side while he testified.
Judge Alan Glenn says the
Court of Criminal Appeals didn’t
believe the trial court abused its
discretion in permitting Murch
during the trial.
Shelby County man convicted of
2nd rape; more cases pending
MEMPHIS (AP) — Prosecutors
say a Shelby County man charged
in a series of rapes has been convicted for a second time.
The Shelby County district
attorney’s office says 37-year-old
Michael Richardson was convicted this week of aggravated rape in
a July 2012 attack.
Richardson, of Rossville, was
identified through his DNA from
the victim’s rape evidence kit. He
faces 15 to 25 years in prison with
no parole when he’s sentenced in
June.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—3
Government set to release
hurricane season outlook
Los Angeles Police Department via AP
In thIs unDAteD frame from video provided by the Los Angeles Police Department, LAPD officers
and others dance beneath the iconic Hollywood Sign in Los Angeles. In a now-viral sensation, police officers across the U.S. are dancing an updated version of the running man to a catchy 1990s hip hop song,
"My Boo" by Ghost Town DJ's, in videos that have included professional sports mascots, cheerleading
squads and at least one explosion. The videos started with the New York Police Department and are getting more elaborate and popular, with even some police chiefs joining in.
Online dance craze sweeps
police departments across U.S.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — In an
online sensation, police officers
across the U.S. are dancing an
updated version of the running
man to a catchy 1990s hip hop
song in videos that have included professional sports mascots,
cheerleading squads and at least
one explosion.
The videos, set to “My Boo” by
Ghost Town DJ’s, began in early
May after police in New Zealand
issued the Running Man
Challenge to the New York Police
Department. The meme started
with two teenagers in New Jersey
and became viral after college
basketball teams picked it up.
The police videos posted on
the Internet have been steadily
getting more elaborate and more
popular, with even some police
chiefs joining in.
Los Angeles officers filmed
themselves dancing inside the
Dodgers baseball stadium and at
a popular hiking spot in the
shadow of the Hollywood sign.
Detroit officers did their dance
after spilling out of a heavy-duty
SWAT truck in front of a General
Motors building, and Miami’s
men and women in blue threw in
some salsa moves to Gloria
Estefan’s “Conga.”
The videos are about more
than officers cutting loose. They
come as police departments
across the U.S. are facing
increased scrutiny and public
criticism in the wake of a series
of officer-involved deaths of
young, unarmed black people.
Many departments have been
working to become more community-friendly and improve
their image. That includes turning to the power of social media.
“Across this nation, there’s a
lot of anti-police rhetoric,”
Detroit police Chief James Craig
told reporters this week. “Do you
believe this might have a profound impact on reducing that? I
mean, you talk about how many
shares so far? People like it, they
appreciate it, and this is a move
in the right direction.”
In his department’s video, one
of the most popular with seven
million views since Tuesday,
Craig busted moves underneath
the city’s iconic Joe Louis fist. In
a move parodying a mic drop,
Craig then dropped a police belt
and
challenged
Chicago,
Philadelphia and Cincinnati,
Ohio. He has also challenged
New York and Los Angeles, indicating their videos aren’t good
enough.
Police departments are smart
to take on the challenge, said
Robert Thompson, a Syracuse
University professor and a leading authority on American pop
culture.
“This is a rhetorical act of public relations. No question about
it,” he said. “Having the police
force, uniformed police especially, smiling and dancing with peo-
ple within the context of these
communities, is certainly a positive message.
“It’s what a Coca Cola ad does,
what a propaganda film does,
what a public relations campaign does — try to make us
think differently about something,” he said.
The videos have drawn criticism from some who question
the use of police resources.
Mostly, the response has been
positive.
“Just when I thought my faith
in the police was over,” Los
Angeles resident Trayvon Walker
commented on the LAPD’s video.
“They do a video like this that
puts a smile on my face and
makes me look at them and say,
‘They’re not so bad of people
after all.’”
As a young, black man, Walker
said he has experienced police
discrimination and his view of
officers has eroded in recent
years. But he said the video
reminded him that there are
plenty of good cops.
“It doesn’t change my perception of the police, but I do think
more of them in the community
doing positive things will lead to
more positive outcomes,” the 29year-old court clerk said in a
phone interview. “To be able to
see LAPD, or just police in general, doing something that is good
for our community — it’s pleasant to see.”
U.S. economic growth in first quarter
is revised up to 0.8 percent rate
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S.
economy’s slowdown in growth at
the beginning of the year wasn’t
quite as bad as first thought,
thanks to a bigger boost from
housing and less drag from business investment and trade.
The gross domestic product,
the broadest measure of economic output, grew at an annual rate
of 0.8 percent in the first quarter,
the Commerce Department said
Friday. That’s slightly better than
the initial estimate of 0.5 percent
but is still the weakest pace in a
year.
It was the second lackluster
quarter in a row, following a modest 1.4 percent gain in the fourth
quarter. At the beginning of this
year, the economy was held back
by turbulence in financial markets and global economic problems.
Economists are forecasting a
rebound in the current quarter to
growth of around 2 percent. They
expect employers to keep adding
jobs at a solid pace, which in turn
should support increased consumer spending.
Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, said
even though the revised growth
rate for the first quarter was still
modest, the result was less worrisome given that “more recent
incoming data point to a big pickup in second-quarter growth.”
Ian Shepherdson, chief economist
at
Pantheon
Macroeconomics, said GDP
growth in the current quarter
could be as strong as 3 percent.
For the first quarter, consumer
spending, which accounts for 70
percent of economic activity, grew
at a 1.9 percent rate. That was
the weakest performance in a
year, reflecting a sharp slowdown
in auto sales.
The growth revision reflects a
weaker drag from business
investment in structure and
equipment, primarily because of
new-found strength in construction of commercial structures
such as shopping centers. In
addition, the trade deficit did not
widen as much as previously estimated and businesses did not
slow their restocking of store
shelves as much as first thought.
Capital investment fell at an
8.9 percent rate in the first quarter, better than the 10.7 percent
drop first reported. The plunge in
spending on oil and gas exploration has been a major source of
weakness.
While business investment
remained weak, investment in
residential construction was
growing at a sizzling 17.1 percent
rate, the strongest advance in
more than three years.
In the second half of the year,
economists are forecasting that
overall growth will strengthen further to around 2.5 percent.
Employers added another
160,000 jobs in April, a solid gain
even if it was down from an average increase of 243,000 in the
prior six months. The unemployment rate remained at a low 5
percent, down by half from the 10
percent high hit in the fall of 2009
when the economy was struggling
to emerge from the worst economic downturn since the 1930s.
The U.S. economic expansion
will celebrate its seventh birthday
next month, making it the fourth
longest recovery since World War
II. But it has also been the slowest, averaging modest annual
growth of 2.1 percent.
“While that growth is nothing to
write home about, we are relatively better off than many of our
trading partners,” said Sung Won
Sohn, an economics professor at
California State University,
Channel Islands.
MIAMI (AP) — The U.S. government will release its forecast
Friday for how many hurricanes
and tropical storms are expected
to form over Atlantic and
Caribbean waters in the next six
months.
It’s an annual reminder from
the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration that
coastal living comes with significant risks.
The Atlantic hurricane season
officially starts June 1, but tropical weather got a head-start this
year: Hurricane Alex made an
unseasonable debut in January
over the far eastern Atlantic, and
the National Hurricane Center
says an area of low pressure
between Bermuda and the
Bahamas could be brewing into
something bigger Friday or
Saturday.
The long-term season averages
are 12 named storms, with six
hurricanes and three “major”
ones with winds topping 110
mph.
—2015 TALLY
The 2015 season was slightly
below average with 11 named
storms, including two tropical
storms that made landfall and
caused flooding in South
Carolina and Texas. Hurricane
Joaquin, one of two storms to
reach major hurricane strength,
killed all 33 mariners aboard a
cargo ship that sank off the
Bahamas in October.
A U.S. Coast Guard panel is
investigating the sinking of the El
Faro, which was sailing from
Jacksonville, Florida, to Puerto
Rico when it got caught in
Joaquin. Testimony since midMay has shown the ship’s captain received outdated storm
information the day before the
ship sank. Initial forecasts for
Joaquin also were wildly inaccurate.
—-
ADVANCED
SEAMLESS GUTTERING
COASTAL RISKS
The last major hurricane to
strike the U.S. mainland was
Hurricane Wilma, which cut
across Florida in 2005. Since
then, the population in the 185
coastline counties most threatened by hurricanes has grown
8.7 percent to 59.2 million people, according to U.S. Census
estimates.
Overall, 143.6 million people
— 44.7 percent of the U.S. population — from Maine to Texas
could be living in harm’s way.
Other Census figures hint at the
potential financial risks throughout those states: 60.1 million
housing units and 3.3 million
business establishments with
52.3 million paid workers.
Storm winds can reach frightening speeds, but they aren’t the
deadliest threat. According to the
National Hurricane Center in
Miami, storm surge and rainfall
flooding combine for three-quarters of all U.S. deaths from hurricanes, tropical storms or tropical
depressions.
—MAJOR DAMAGE
In the Bahamas, Joaquin
caused over $60 million in damage, according to the hurricane
center. The islands reported
widespread flooding that contaminated drinking water, cut off an
airport and swamped a local fishing fleet.
Even “minor” storms can leave
misery behind. After Tropical
Storm Erika swept through the
Caribbean last year, damage estimates on the island of Dominica
ranged up to $500 million for
homes, roads, bridges and infrastructure, and Puerto Rico
reported $17.4 million in agricultural losses for plantains,
bananas and coffee.
These lessons have hit home in
the Northeast, wracked by catastrophic flooding first from
Hurricane Irene in 2011 and
again from Superstorm Sandy in
2012. Damage estimates tallied
in the tens of billions of dollars.
Due to the financial hardships
left in Sandy’s wake, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
said Monday that it’s overhauling
its appeals process for flood
insurance claims with more
transparency and oversight.
Homeowners will be able to take
disputes directly to FEMA
instead of first going through the
insurance companies they’re
fighting.
—CLIMATE CHANGE
Rising sea levels are expected
to increase the vulnerability of
coastal communities to flooding
from tropical systems. While
some aspects of hurricane development still aren’t fully understood, recent research indicates
climate change is likely to make
hurricanes more intense in the
future.
Improved computer models
show that warming atmospheric
conditions may hinder tropical
cyclone development worldwide,
says David Nolan, a University of
Miami professor of atmospheric
sciences.
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4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
LifestyLes
William Wright
Lifestyles Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Mushroom hunting heating up in wake of Northwest wildfires
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — From
flames come fungi.
That means mushroom hunters
are checking maps outlining last
year’s many Northwest wildfires
before heading into forests this
month searching for the easily
identifiable and woodsy-tasting
morels.
“It’s going to be a good season
for finding morel mushrooms,
there’s no doubt about that,” said
Brian Harris, spokesman for the
Payette National Forest in Idaho.
The spongey-looking delicacies
have defied commercial cultivation and can retail for $20 a
pound.
“They’ve got a kind of cult following,” Boise Co-op North End
produce manager Tommy West
said. “When they do come into
season they usually move pretty
good.”
Nearly a million acres of U.S.
Forest Service land burned last
year in Idaho, Oregon and
Washington,
the
National
Interagency Fire Center said.
Maps of specific wildfire perimeters are available online at the
Forest Service’s InciWeb.
On the Payette National Forest,
harvesters who want the mushrooms for personal use can gather
up to 5 gallons a day without a
permit. A 21-day commercial permit from the U.S Forest Service
allowing more than 5 gallons costs
$200.
While the tastiness of morels is
well understood, the difficulty of
studying them in the wild makes
them something of a mystery and
pinpointing where they might
appear difficult.
Mushroom spores by the mil-
AP photo
THIS PHOTO shows a morel mushroom in a blackened forest near
Conconully, Wash. From flames come fungi. That means mushroom
hunters are checking maps outlining last year’s many Northwest
wildfires before heading into forests this month, searching for the
easily identifiable and woodsy-tasting morels.
lions can spread over an area. The
spores germinate and create delicate underground growths that
look like spider webs. The growths
eventually include nutrient storage areas. Experts say these formations, called sclerotia, can exist
for years, but the fruiting bodies
desired by mushroom pickers
only appear when conditions are
right, and that might not be for
decades.
“After a moderate fire moves
through an area these ‘ready to
go’ sclerotia form fruiting bodies
referred to as post-fire morels,”
said Merlin White, a Boise State
University assistant professor, in
an email to The Associated Press.
“Post-fire morels commonly start
fruiting a few weeks after a fire
and continue to fruit for about
two years before seemingly disappearing from the landscape.”
Prime picking areas can be
hard to identify even with a good
understanding of morel reproduction. Some scouting could pay off,
especially if a small flower called
the western white trillium is spotted, an early indicator morels
might pop up, Harris said.
“It’s kind of a telltale sign,”
Harris said.
Last year the Payette National
Forest had one of Idaho’s largest
wildfires when the Tepee Springs
fire burned 150 square miles.
Getting away from roads and hiking into the forest is a good strategy to find more mushrooms,
Harris said. Also, don’t procrastinate.
“If you wait too long and the
commercial pickers move through
the area before you get there,
you’re not going to find any,”
Harris said.
Another problem mushroom
hunters sometimes confront is
getting caught up in the thrill of
the hunt, resulting in the need for
searches by local authorities.
“You can get so absorbed in
what you’re doing that you can
lose track of where you’re at, lose
track of time, and the next thing,
you can look up and go, ‘OK,
where’s the car?’ “ Intermountain
Region Forester Nora Rasure said.
—This story has been corrected
to clarify that prices are for
Payette National Forest and to
correct that Merlin White is an
assistant professor.
Florence exhibits examine the art-fashion dynamic
FLORENCE, Italy (AP) — Italy’s
Renaissance capital, Florence, is
reclaiming its centuries-old role
as an incubator of the interplay
between fashion and art.
The new director of the Uffizi
gallery has announced plans to
transform the Costume Gallery at
Pitti Palace, which is also under
his control, into a full-fledged
fashion museum, while the
Ferragamo Foundation this week
opens a city-wide exhibit exploring the links between art and
fashion.
Under the banner “Across Art
and Fashion,” the exhibits
opened Thursday at the Salvatore
Ferragamo Museum with linked
events at four other venues.
The complementary exhibits
are the first in Italy to comprehensively explore the relationships between two of the nation’s
most significant cultural contributions, according to Ferragamo
museum director Stefania Ricci,
who served as the driving force
behind the ambitious exhibition
project.
In Florence’s Renaissance heyday, the connection between art
and fashion was even tighter
than it is today.
“In the 15th century, there was
no difference between artisan
and artist,” Ricci said, citing
Raphael’s designs for hand fans
and Pollaiuolo’s textile designs.
“Then slowly the two worlds separated, because fashion was
functional, the reality. Art
became always more conceptual.
But what is interesting is they
always kept an eye one on the
other.”
Artists were demonstrably
inspired by fashion in the 1800s,
as is evident in the linked event
at the Modern Art Gallery of Pitti
Palace. Ricci said featuring fashion of the day was a way for
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
4,920
Close: 4,901.77
Change: 6.88 (0.1%)
4,780
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
10 DAYS
17,600
4,800
16,800
4,500
16,000
4,200
15,200
52-Week
High
Low
18,229.75 15,370.33
8,540.44 6,403.31
672.40
539.96
11,197.60 8,937.99
5,231.94 4,209.76
947.85
809.57
2,132.82 1,810.10
1,551.28 1,215.14
22,537.15 18,462.43
1,296.00
943.09
J
M
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
Name
Dow Industrials
Dow Transportation
Dow Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 100
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Last
17,828.29
7,722.69
655.29
10,439.60
4,901.77
926.16
2,090.10
1,480.65
21,602.68
1,139.75
A
M
Net
YTD
Chg
%Chg %Chg
-23.22
-.13 +2.31
-21.02
-.27 +2.85
+6.98 +1.08 +13.41
-6.98
-.07 +2.92
+6.88
+.14
-2.11
-.14
-.02 +1.62
-.44
-.02 +2.26
-.55
-.04 +5.87
-10.95
-.05 +2.05
-1.27
-.11
+.34
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
MinervaN
FlexionTh
PeakRsts
BarrettB lf
ErinEn rs
AdvSemi
Gogo
NII Hldg n
Pavmed un
PhaseRx n
F
Last
11.80
17.23
4.28
36.50
2.48
5.77
11.21
3.60
11.25
5.64
Chg %Chg
+8.26 +233.3
+5.78 +50.5
+.91 +27.0
+7.37 +25.3
+.38 +18.1
+.88 +18.0
+1.58 +16.3
+.50 +16.1
+1.50 +15.4
+.71 +14.4
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
IonisPhm 21.36 -13.90 -39.4
Tidwtr
3.90 -2.21 -36.2
OvaScience 6.93 -2.85 -29.1
BristowGp 11.49 -3.99 -25.8
Menus n
8.35 -1.87 -18.3
ParaShp 21 4.09 -.91 -18.2
GtBasSci rs 2.00 -.38 -16.0
AberFitc 21.15 -3.93 -15.7
PureStrg n 12.46 -2.26 -15.4
Hailiang n 8.00 -1.37 -14.6
Dow Jones industrials
17,920
Close: 17,828.29
Change: -23.22 (-0.1%)
17,620
17,320
18,400
5,100
D
Florence, and the Textile
Museum in nearby Prato.
The art and fashion exhibits,
more than a year in the making,
highlight a budding synergy in
Florence. The city’s role as the
genius loci of modern fashion
also caught the attention of Uffizi
director Eike Schmidt, a German
who last year became the first
foreigner to run the highly prized
state museum system in Florence
including the Pitti Palace collections.
Schmidt is quietly expanding
the costume collection and
intends to make it a fashion
museum in its own right, focusing on fashion from anywhere on
the globe, not just Italy. At the
moment, the collection is
strongest in the 19th and early
20th Century, with a smattering
of 1960s and 1970s pieces. The
last big collection is a donation
from Gianfranco Ferre in 2000.
DAILY DOW JONES
4,640
5,400
artists to convey modernity in
their works, and curators have
paired garments from the
Costume Gallery with paintings
that feature similar, if not identical, looks.
At the Ferragamo Museum,
the connections are even more
entwined. The shoemaker modeled his atelier after a
Renaissance craftsman’s studio,
and the shoe molds on display
alongside original footwear
emphasize their artistic nature.
More than a dozen brands are
represented in the museum,
including a Schiaparelli skirt
suit with buttons made for her
by friend Alberto Giacometti and
a Vionnet silken tunic dress
from 1922 featuring geometric
motifs, on a rare loan from the
Louvre.
The itinerary continues at the
National Central Library and the
Marino Marini Museum, both in
12-mo
%Chg
-1.64
-7.71
+11.49
-6.23
-3.85
-.68
-1.45
-3.50
-3.52
-9.05
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
BkofAm
634593 14.70 -.22
Apple Inc 548046 100.41 +.79
ChesEng 451202 4.23 -.12
FrptMcM
301190 11.34 -.31
HP Inc
297067 13.04 +.84
US FdsHl n 283856 24.91
...
MinervaN 277352 11.80 +8.26
Petrobras 273315 6.06 -.13
IonisPhm 266189 21.36 -13.90
Alibaba
261524 78.35 +2.76
Name
Hints from Heloise
The social media deal
Dear Heloise: I’m on SOCIAL
MEDIA much more than my husband is. One Saturday, he asked
me how I know whether a “deal”
on the Internet is a good one to
consider.
I told him that if I’m remotely
interested in something, the first
thing I do is read through many of
the comments from people who
did make the investment. They
give me a pretty good idea about
the item.
After reading through many of
the comments for an item he was
considering, he told me that the
consumer comments helped him
decide against it. In short, the customer comments are a good place
to start when considering “deals”
offered on the social-media network. — Ivy P. in New York
SEND A GREAT HINT TO:
Heloise
P.O. Box 795000
San Antonio, TX 78279-5000
Fax: 1-210-HELOISE
Email: [email protected]
Securing powered makeup for
traveling
Dear Readers: I travel a lot,
and one of the hardest things to
travel with is powdered makeup
like blush, eye shadow, pressed
powder and face powder. No matter how I transported it, something always ended up cracked
and crumbly.
What I finally learned, after
many miles of travel and trial and
error, is to cut a cotton pad or fold
a tissue the size of the container
and put it inside. This holds the
powder down and acts as an extra
barrier if it does break. — Heloise
Thinking outside the box
Dear Heloise: Whenever I go
J
4.9
...
2.3
3.0
1.4
...
...
3.1
2.4
...
...
4.2
3.7
1.9
...
3.8
2.1
2.5
...
1.2
1.4
M
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
AT&T Inc 1.92
Alibaba
...
Apple Inc 2.28
BB&T Cp 1.08
BkofAm
.20
B iPVixST
...
ChesEng
...
CocaCola 1.40
CocaCE 1.20
CmtyHlt
...
CSVixSh rs ...
DukeEngy 3.30
Eaton
2.28
FstHorizon .28
FrptMcM
...
HP Inc
.50
HomeDp 2.76
iShEMkts .84
IonisPhm
...
Kroger s
.42
Lowes
1.12
F
16
31
11
13
11
...
...
25
21
9
...
18
15
16
...
9
24
...
...
17
22
YTD
Chg %Chg
38.84 +.22
78.35 +2.76
100.41 +.79
36.13 -.24
14.70 -.22
13.96 -.15
4.23 -.12
44.69 +.31
50.86 -.43
12.88 -.24
2.59 -.07
77.96 +1.01
61.52 -.09
14.48 -.13
11.34 -.31
13.04 +.84
134.05 +.85
33.09 +.22
21.36 -13.90
35.59 +.65
80.16 +.22
+12.9
-3.6
-4.6
-4.4
-12.7
-30.5
-6.0
+4.0
+3.3
-41.0
-58.6
+9.2
+18.2
-.3
+67.5
+10.1
+1.4
+2.8
-65.5
-14.9
+5.4
Name
A
M
Div Yld PE Last
MinervaN
...
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
PaneraBrd ...
Petrobras
...
Pfizer
1.20
PUVixST rs ...
RegionsFn .26
S&P500ETF4.13
Scotts
1.88
SiriusXM
...
SouthnCo 2.24
SPDR Fncl .46
SunTrst
.96
Target
2.24
US FdsHl n ...
UtdCmBks .28
Vale SA
.29
VanEGold .12
WalMart 2.00
Whrlpl
3.60
...
2.8
3.6
...
...
3.5
...
2.7
2.0
2.7
...
4.6
1.9
2.2
3.3
...
1.4
7.1
.5
2.8
2.1
...
15
30
36
...
18
...
14
...
18
36
18
...
12
12
...
17
...
...
15
14
11.80
83.83
22.50
217.49
6.06
34.43
11.49
9.73
209.34
69.17
3.98
49.22
23.65
43.34
68.91
24.91
20.08
4.06
22.95
70.85
172.25
YTD
Chg %Chg
+8.26
+.52
+.09
+2.30
-.13
+.08
-.25
-.12
+.06
+.11
-.02
+.67
-.14
-.40
-.37
...
-.21
-.01
-.08
+.37
-2.14
+94.4
-.9
+30.4
+11.7
+40.9
+6.7
-59.5
+1.4
+2.7
+7.2
-2.2
+5.2
-.8
+1.2
-5.1
...
+3.0
+23.4
+67.3
+15.6
+17.3
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.
lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at
least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt =
Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge,
or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s
net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Dear Heloise: Here’s how I
make homemade funnels: I take
an empty plastic ketchup bottle,
cut off the bottom and use it
whenever I need one outdoors.
Putting the cap back on the
bottle comes in handy when the
liquid is thin and not clumpy like
pancake batter. If I need to make
the hole in the cap larger, my utility knife works perfectly.
This funnel is versatile and
comes in handy whenever I am
camping. I recycle it when the trip
is over. — Thomas K., Bozeman,
Mont.
Waxing floors
Dear Readers: If you are looking for an easy way to wax floors,
try using a long-handled, clean
paint roller to do the job. It’s easier
to get under furniture and other
hard-to-reach places. — Heloise
© 2016 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
NEW YORK (AP) — McDonald’s
says it’s testing fresh beef at 14
restaurants in Dallas, but that
it’s too early to say whether fresh
beef could replace its frozen patties nationally.
The Oak Brook, Illinois company says the test is limited to its
quarter pounder patties.
“Like all of our tests, this one
too is designed to see what works
and what doesn’t within our
restaurants,” said Lisa McComb,
a McDonald’s spokeswoman, in a
statement.
McComb said the test began
this past November, and is
intended to gauge the “operational experience,” feedback from
workers and prices. She said the
restaurants are not currently
advertising that the beef is fresh,
but asking customers for feedback on the taste.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Last
Name
D
Recycled ketchup bottles
McDonald’s testing fresh beef
at 14 Dallas restaurants
Pvs Wk
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds FnInvA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds NewPerspA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity Contra
Fidelity ContraK
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard DivGr
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
Vanguard MuIntAdml
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
Vanguard STGradeAd
Vanguard TgtRe2025
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotIntl
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard WellsIAdm
Vanguard WelltnAdm
Vanguard WndsIIAdm
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.3895
1.4717
1.3042
.8961
110.10
18.4355
.9907
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
MA
IH
WS
LB
LG
AL
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LG
LG
LB
CA
FB
LG
LB
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
CA
MA
LV
51,809 24.57 +0.2
70,737 58.30 +0.5
52,285 44.01 -0.5
45,313 52.24 +0.4
72,281 41.55 +0.7
72,509 20.99 +0.4
56,748 35.13 -0.3
36,252 35.68 -0.2
50,716 39.75 +0.1
44,854 13.62 +0.4
55,225 36.01 -2.4
54,581 162.64 -0.7
75,984 98.28 +0.4
30,539 98.24 +0.4
53,642 73.71 +0.2
44,611
2.17 +0.5
37,164 60.83 -1.0
36,652 51.41 +0.6
158,540 193.45 +0.2
29,031 23.21 -0.7
36,845 86.46 +0.2
40,782 24.48 -1.6
45,142 14.43 +0.3
37,496 102.99 +0.2
35,024 10.70 +0.3
30,326 16.07 -0.2
66,292 10.90 +0.6
81,272 14.64 -1.6
131,914 52.03 0.0
97,313 52.00 0.0
31,729 62.10 +0.7
69,785 65.70 +0.1
31,069 61.64 -0.7
+3.1/A
+9.5/A
-0.9/A
+6.4/A
-5.4/C
+6.3/B
+2.1/A +10.6/C
0.0/B +11.2/B
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-3.1/B
+8.0/A
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-18.3/E +1.9/C
-4.5/D +10.7/A
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-4.8/E
+4.9/B
-11.3/D +1.9/C
-1.9/C +12.5/A
+1.5/A +11.9/A
+5.0/A +12.0/A
-4.7/A +17.3/B
-10.9/D +1.1/D
+5.6/B
+4.5/B
-0.4/B +12.6/A
+2.1/A
+2.2/A
-1.6/C
+6.8/A
+3.0/A +3.3/C
-10.9/D +1.0/D
-0.1/B +11.4/B
-0.2/B +11.2/B
+5.1/A
+7.6/A
+2.0/A
+8.8/A
-2.1/C +10.3/B
MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW,
Suite 1
472-6814
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
0
10,000
1,000
50,000
2,500
10,000
3,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
1,000
10,000
3,000
10,000
3,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.3859
1.4662
1.2987
.8936
109.72
18.4562
.9893
Prime Rate
3.50
3.50
Discount Rate
1.00
1.00
Federal Funds Rate
.25-.50 .25-.50
Treasuries
1.35
1.38
5-year
1.83
1.85
10-year
2.64
2.64
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1220.10 $1254.20
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot) $16.338 $16.479
10 DAYS
“junking,” I like to think creatively
when it comes to common household items; I try to think of other
ways to reuse them. Recently, I
found an old, rusted baby swing at
a garage sale that was dirt-cheap
in price. It was calling out to me,
saying: “Take me home. Make me
useful again!”
Needless to say, I purchased it,
brought it home, cleaned it up,
and now it sits in one corner of my
garden. I’ve placed hanging plants
on it and added some wire for the
vines that grow in my garden. It
now has a useful place in my garden. — Taryn G., Little Rock, Ark.
Taryn, thanks for your hint on
recycling your garage-sale find
and thinking outside the box on
this one! Anyone else have a similar recycling think-outside-thebox story? I would love to hear
them! — Heloise
112 Stuart
Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
3575 Keith
St. NW
Suite 201
476-0190
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—5
Many opt to take Social Security before full retirement age
CHICAGO (AP) — Taking
Social Security benefits early
comes with a price, yet more
than 4 in 10 Americans who are
50 and over say they’ll dip into
the program before reaching full
retirement age.
An Associated Press-NORC
Center for Public Affairs
Research poll released Thursday
found that 44 percent report
Social Security will be their
biggest source of income during
their retirement years.
Full benefits begin at 65 or 66
for those born between 1943 and
1954. Americans can begin collecting as early as age 62, but
with benefits reduced by up to
30 percent, according to the
Social Security Administration.
“One thing we know for certain is that claiming early can
have long-term repercussions on
your fiscal security as you age,”
said Gary Koenig, vice president
of Financial security at the AARP
Public Policy Institute.
Koenig said benefits increase
significantly for those who wait,
rising around 8 percent more for
each additional year past age 66
and up to 70, when benefits max
out.
“So we encourage people to
delay as long as possible,” he
said.
But waiting is a luxury many
Americans don’t have.
Ken Chrzastek of Chicago
began drawing Social Security
benefits at age 62 and pulled
$50,000 out of an IRA after losing a retail job two years ago. He
has been unable to find even
part-time work. “Hiring a 62year-old is a liability for a company,” he said.
The poll found that Americans
50 and over have multiple
sources of income for retirement
but that Social Security is the
most common by far. Eighty-six
percent say they have or will
have Social Security income.
More than half had a retirement
account such as a 401(k),
403(b), or an IRA. Slightly less
had other savings. About 43 percent had a traditional pension.
The average age at which people expect to start or have started collecting Social Security benefits is 64. Just 9 percent said
they would wait until after they
turned 70.
While the retirement age has
been rising in recent years, particularly for women, the average
American still retires relatively
early, at age 64 for men and age
62 for women, according to the
Center for Retirement Research
at Boston College.
Charles Jeszeck, director of
education,
workforce
and
income security for the
Government
Accountability
Office, said there is no one right
answer to when people should
take Social Security, especially
since increases in life expectancy
are not spread out evenly
between the rich and poor, or
between ethnic groups.
Included in any discussion
about Social Security are lingering questions about its solvency.
The Social Security trust fund
has been running a surplus
every year since 1984. Those
surpluses are forecast to stop
sometime around 2020, as more
boomers start claiming benefits.
The
Social
Security
Administration says interest
income from the fund should be
able to bridge this gap until
2034. At that point, without
changes, payments could shrink
but not disappear.
Gary Burtless, a Brookings
Institution economist, said that
people taking benefits early — or
late — should have no impact on
the trust fund. “It costs the government roughly the same
amount,” he said.
Among the presidential candidates, both Bernie Sanders and
Hillary Clinton have called for
an expansion of Social Security.
Donald Trump said during a
debate in March, “It’s my
absolute intention to leave
Social Security the way it is.”
Many Americans worry that
they won’t have enough to live
on once they stop working, the
poll said.
Among those with incomes
under $50,000, 58 percent say
they feel more anxious than
secure about the amount of savings they have for retirement.
People with higher incomes
appear less anxious, but still 40
percent of those with incomes of
$100,000 or more worry
whether their savings will be
sufficient.
Alison Cowen, 57, said she
doesn’t see any path for her to
retire-ever. “Not unless a miracle
happens,” she laughed sarcastically. “I just don’t have enough
to live on for the rest of my life.”
The poll said a quarter of
workers over 50 say they never
plan to retire, a sentiment more
common among lower-income
workers.
Cowen, a saleswoman from
Albuquerque, New Mexico, said
she didn’t save that much when
she was younger, and a messy
divorce 10 years ago meant she
had to start over. “I’ve got
$20,000 in the bank, but I
would need to figure out a way
increase that substantially
before I could ever think of retiring,” she said.
—The AP-NORC Center survey
was conducted March 8-27 by
NORC at the University of
Chicago, with funding from the
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. It
involved online and telephone
interviews with 1,075 people
aged 50 and older nationwide,
most of whom are members of
NORC’s
probability-based
AmeriSpeak panel. Results from
the full survey have a margin of
sampling error of plus or minus
3.9 percentage points.
Automakers recall over 12M vehicles
DETROIT (AP) — Eight
automakers are recalling more
than 12 million vehicles in the
U.S. to replace Takata air bag
inflators that can explode with
too much force.
Documents detailing recalls
by Honda, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota,
Mazda, Nissan, Subaru, Ferrari
and Mitsubishi were posted
Friday by the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration.
They’re part of a massive
expansion of Takata air bag
recalls announced earlier this
month. Seventeen automakers
are adding 35 million-to-40 million inflators to what already
was the largest auto recall in
U.S. history.
Friday’s recalls include passenger air bags mainly in older
models in areas along the Gulf
Coast with high heat and
AP photo humidity.
Takata uses the chemical
Rescued PeoPle walk out of the entrance to Hidden River Cave after officials said over a dozen
ammonium
nitrate to create a
people exploring the cave were trapped by rising water Thursday, in Horse Cave, Ky. The group waded
small
explosion
that inflates the
through neck-deep water to get out, authorities said Thursday.
air bags in a crash. But the
chemical can deteriorate over
time when exposed to high heat
and humidity and burn faster
than designed. That can blow
Cave escape: Rushing water,
sucking mud and pitch black
HORSE CAVE, Ky. (AP) —
Gary Russell was a mile deep in
a Kentucky cave, leading a
group of geology students on a
five-hour tour, when he turned a
corner and saw water rushing by
where water wasn’t supposed to
be.
He had no way to communicate with the outside world
Thursday afternoon. He had no
idea that a flash flood was pouring through the cave’s passages
toward them, or that dozens of
rescuers were already gathering
at the entrance to begin a perilous hours-long journey to rescue them.
All he knew was that water
wasn’t supposed to be this deep
in the cave and that meant trouble.
Russell and his group were
among 19 people who escaped
the flooded Hidden River Cave.
They navigated neck-deep water,
rushing currents and mud so
thick it sucked off the police
chief’s boot. It was pitch black.
“It was shooting waterfalls out
of the ceiling. The walls were
thundering, there was so much
water moving through it,” said
David Foster, the executive
director of the American Cave
Museum at Horse Cave and a
guide for 30 years, who rushed
into the darkness to help with
the rescue. “You just don’t know
what Mother Nature is capable
of. There’s only so much cave,
and there’s way more water.”
The group that spent more
than six hours inside the cave
included Clemson University
students, four tour guides and
two police officers who got
trapped when they tried to rescue the group, Kentucky State
Police Trooper B.J. Eaton said.
There was no communication
between the stranded cavers and
the more than 150 emergency
personnel at the scene.
Authorities didn’t know exactly
where the missing cavers were
underground, and the only light
the group had came from headlamps they wore.
Heavy rains began pouring
down hours after the group ventured inside, Foster said. The
storm hit earlier and harder
than expected, and Foster grew
so worried that he decided to call
authorities and trek inside to get
them.
The cavers were a group of
college students from Clemson
University in South Carolina on
a field trip to explore the water
system in the cave. Russell led
four of them on what was supposed to be a five-hour trip
beginning at 10 a.m., and another guide had a dozen. Until
Russell noticed the water, they
were unaware of the rising
waters threatening to block the
cave’s entrance, which is the
lowest point and first to flood.
Hidden River Cave begins at a
sinkhole, 150-feet deep, in the
center of downtown Horse Cave.
It has two subterranean rivers
that flow more than 100 feet
below ground.
As Russell tried to lead his
group out, the mist grew so
thick it kept fogging up one student’s glasses. He could barely
see and kept stumbling.
“Just imagine going hiking in
the mountains at night during a
rainstorm and a mudslide,”
Russell said. “That’s what this
feels like. The water was so loud,
it was like a jetliner; it was roar-
ing.”
Russell and his group were
surprised to find the rescuers at
the cave’s mouth. But the other
guide’s group was still unaccounted for.
Foster and Police Chief Sean
Henry began working their way
deeper into the cave. The water
was waist high in places and rising. There’s only one way out,
and they knew they’d have to
come back out the way they
came in. At one point, Henry
said he saw the water closing in
behind him and wondered if he’d
ever leave. He held his flashlight
in one hand and radio in the
other, though his radio stopped
picking up a signal shortly after
they entered.
They could hear nothing over
the roar of the water. Foster
started to doubt he’d come down
the right passage. He said anxiety built like a rock in his stomach. Then they heard it: “We’re
here. We’re OK!” The students
had shouted after seeing their
flashlights.
The way out was the most precarious, when they had to wade
and swim through high water,
Foster said. But they all made it
through. They emerged about
4:30 p.m. Everyone lost was
accounted for and uninjured.
“When they came out of the
cave, they were neck-deep in
water,” Hart County Emergency
Management Director Kerry
McDaniel said.
“I’ve never been more happy to
see the sunlight,” Foster said.
“It’s such a good feeling when
you get around the corner and
you see the light, and you know
you’re going to make it out.
What a relief.”
Mudslide slogs travel on Glacier National Park route
WEST GLACIER, Mont. (AP) —
For tourists trying to get to some
sights in Glacier National Park,
it’s been a dam inconvenience.
Travel along part of a popular
route through the Montana landmark was limited for the third
straight day Thursday after
heavy rains caused a large
beaver dam to fail and wash
debris down a hillside, rangers
said.
The mudslide dragged dozens
of trees and debris onto the scenic Going-to-the-Sun Road on
the west side of the park, close to
some heavily used sights such as
Lake McDonald, Lake McDonald
Lodge, Apgar Visitor Center,
Apgar Campground and various
hiking trails.
Park officials hope to have the
section of road fully cleared for
the Memorial Day weekend, The
Missoulian newspaper reported.
“We’re at Mother Nature’s
whim, and this is what we’re
being dealt,” park spokes woman
Margie Steigerwald said.
Flooding and mudslides also
closed the road Monday and
Tuesday.
Normally at this time of year,
visitors can drive 16 miles of
Going-to-the-Sun Road from the
west entrance. Due to the recent
slides, just one lane of the road
was open Thursday with flaggers,
so visitors could experience
delays of about 20 minutes.
About 13 miles of the road also
was open on the eastern side of
the park.
The middle portion of the 50mile Going-to-the-Sun Road typically opens in late June or early
July, once the plows have cleared
all the snow. They are not able to
work in the area because of high
avalanche danger expected over
the next few days, Steigerwald
said.
Reuse the News
Recycle this newspaper
apart a metal canister designed
to contain the explosion, spewing hot shrapnel into vehicles.
The inflators are responsible
for 11 deaths and more than 100
injuries worldwide. Two additional deaths are under investigation in Malaysia and may have
been caused by the inflators.
The recalls are among the first
to be unveiled by automakers
since Takata agreed to the recall
expansion. They are being
phased in by the government
due to a lack of available
replacement parts. Models that
are from 2011 or older in high
heat and humidity areas will get
first priority, followed by 2008
and older models in Southerntier states, then 2004 and older
models in the rest of the country.
Honda had the biggest recall
total on Friday with more than
MullinaxLincolnOnline.com
(423) 476-6501
550 1st Street NW
4.5 million inflators, while Fiat
Chrysler reported 4.3 million.
The Honda total even includes
about 2,700 Gold Wing motorcycles with optional front air bags.
Honda says the latest recall
covers only about 2.2 million
additional Honda and Acura
vehicles. The other 2.3 million
vehicles were recalled previously
for other Takata air bag problems.
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Jobless
From Page 1
In truth, the good news is not
limited to Bradley. Continued
drops are being reported across
the state.
“Of the 95 counties in
Tennessee, 62 have rates
beneath 5 percent,” Green said.
“That is remarkable.”
Local hiring sprees in construction and tourism (called
leisure and hospitality within the
state labor department) were
expected. Warming spring weather brings out the hammers and
nails, and recreationists begin
waxing their kayaks and pumping up their rafts and inner tubes
for excursions down the Ocoee
and Hiwassee rivers.
Coming to the aid of Bradley
County’s numbers even more
were hiring increases in retail
trade and temporary services,
Green noted.
“The only area where Bradley
County lost [in hiring] was a
small decline in manufacturing,”
he said. “And that was nothing
really significant.”
A mild slowdown in hiring also
came in private education and
health services, and financial
activities (banks and real estate),
Green pointed out.
In Bradley County’s neighboring jurisdictions, the news was
just as promising.
Rates among some of Bradley’s
border
partners
included
Hamilton, 3.8, down from 4 in
March; McMinn, 4.5, down from
4.7; Meigs, 6, up from 5.9;
Monroe, 4.3, down from 4.6;
Polk, 4.7, down from 4.9; and
Rhea, 6, down from 6.3.
Across the state, the jobless
rates decreased in 90 counties,
increased in two and stayed the
same in three.
Not only was the jobless mark
less than 5 percent in 62 counties, it ranged from 5 percent to
9.9 in 33 counties. No counties
recorded rates exceeding 10 percent.
Some of the lowest unemployment rates in Tennessee for April
were Williamson County, 2.7 percent; Moore, 2.9; Davidson and
Rutherford, 3; Wilson, Sumner,
Knox and Cheatham, 3.2; and
Giles and Lincoln, 3.3.
The state’s highest marks were
found in Houston County, 6.8
percent;
Lauderdale,
6.7;
Hancock, 6.6; Jackson, 6.4;
Scott, 6.3; Lake, 6.2; Meigs and
“The way it’s going
now, I don’t trust any
seasonal trends because
of the strength of hiring
[that we’re still seeing
across Tennessee and in
Bradley County].”
— Larry Green
Benton, 6; and Henderson and
Campbell, 5.9.
Green said seasonal trends
would indicate May could be
another strong month, but the
June rate will include temporary
layoffs of nonteaching personnel
within the Cleveland City and
Bradley County school systems,
as well as private education institutions.
“May normally stays within the
range of April,” Green said. “We
don’t normally see a lot of fluctuations between those two
months. But we probably will see
it in June because of schools letting out.”
Of course, Bradley County’s
unemployment — as well as
many other Tennessee counties
— has bucked tradition over the
past few months, leading Green
to believe he doesn’t know what
to believe.
“The way it’s going now, I don’t
trust any seasonal trends
because of the strength of hiring
[that we’re still seeing across
Tennessee and in Bradley
County],” he suggested.
Asked if an excessively low
unemployment rate could make
it difficult for prospective
employers to find qualified workers, Green said it depends on the
type of work.
“It will depend on the particular industry you’re in,” he
explained. “Retail trade, for
instance in the summertime, can
usually find workers without a
whole lot of difficulty.”
He added, “With leisure and
hospitality (restaurants, hotels
and motels), you can usually find
workers thanks to all the high
school kids.”
He stressed a point that is
always on the tongues of education professionals at Cleveland
State Community College, and
now in area high schools.
“The difficulty in hiring [when
the unemployment rate is so low]
sometimes comes when you need
people more educated in technology and within those areas,”
Green said.
He pointed to a system once
used in determining hiring
trends.
“We used to look at the ‘Help
Wanted’ section in the Cleveland
Daily Banner to see how many
ads were in there,” Green
stressed. “Usually, the more ads
you saw meant the more hiring
there was going on.”
He added, “When the unemployment rate gets low, you’re
assuming there’s not that many
people out there looking for work
... that it looks like those eligible
to work are employed.”
Difficulties in hiring during
periods of low unemployment are
especially prevalent in the professional ranks, Green said.
“Logic tells you the lower the
unemployment rate gets, the
fewer the workers out there looking for work,” he noted. “If you’re
looking for experienced workers
[such as in companies that don’t
have training programs], that
really puts a limit on how many
people you can find.”
Although low unemployment
rates would be considered good,
there’s an ironic twist. It could
potentially discourage new businesses from coming in who fear
the labor pool is too shallow.
“New companies who look at
areas look at the unemployment
rate,” Green said. “Is there a
labor supply for moving into that
county ... in that county or within a commuting distance?”
It’s a catch-22.
“There’s not a hard, definite
answer to this,” Green stated.
As for the short term, the labor
market analyst will watch May’s
performance with the expectation that June will bring a rise in
jobless rates.
Based on established patterns,
the rate should continue to stabilize through the summer and
drop slightly in early fall as
schools reopen. And then, the
holiday season — under normal
patterns — would be expected to
drop the rate even further.
Other influential factors
include the U.S. economy, the
ongoing saga of minimum wage
and unexpected layoffs ... primarily in the manufacturing sector.
Court
From Page 1
logs.
Perry Craft, attorney for
American Atheists, in his emergency motion to keep the document from being made public,
posted the document on the U.S.
District Court website.
He was unsuccessful in
attempting to keep that information from being made public.
The judge did rule the document sealed at that point, but the
constitutional rule of “prior constraint” allowed the publishing of
the apparent identity of the “Jane
Doe” which was on the phone
logs as Lois Crawford.
That unintentional document
release forms the basis of the
county’s response to the motion
at hand.
“In her motion, the individual
Plaintiff requests that the Court
allow her to proceed under the
pseudonym ‘Jane Doe’ and to
have her name and identity
remain confidential and not publically disclosed without further
order of the Court,” wrote
Thomas LeQuire, who is serving
as a counsel for Bradley County
in this case.
“In reliance upon the informa-
“Upon information and belief, certain pleadings which
may have disclosed the individual plaintiff’s identity
were filed and publicly available for a period of time
prior to being placed under seal by Order of the Court.
Subsequently, news reports appeared which purport to
disclose the individual plaintiff’s identity. As a result, the
individual Plaintiff’s motion to proceed under a
pseudonym rather than having to disclose her identity
has been rendered moot.”
— Thomas LeQuire motion response
tion submitted by the individual
Plaintiff in support of her motion,
Defendants do not object to the
individual Plaintiff proceeding
under a pseudonym. However,
the individual Plaintiff’s name
and identity should be disclosed
to Defendants and their counsel
to allow a full and proper defense
of the claims asserted against
them in this case,” the response
continued.
“Although Defendants do not
object to the individual plaintiff
generally proceeding under a
pseudonym in order to protect
her identity, it appears that
events occurring subsequent to
the filing of the Complaint may
have rendered the individual
Plaintiff’s request for anonymity
moot,” LeQuire wrote.
“Upon information and belief,
certain pleadings which may
have disclosed the individual
plaintiff’s identity were filed and
publicly available for a period of
time prior to being placed under
seal by Order of the Court,” he
continued. “Subsequently, news
reports appeared which purport
to disclose the individual plaintiff’s identity. As a result, the
individual Plaintiff’s motion to
proceed under a pseudonym
rather than having to disclose
her identity has been rendered
moot.”
Committee
an arrest warrant or criminal
summons.
"They have been served. The
Sheriff's Office served that yesterday," Bradford said. "We
believe in the criminal justice
system. All we're saying is we
stick by our officers. They made
their decision."
Officer finds 911 caller, now both lost in woods
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — A
police officer dashed into the
woods alone to search for a man
who called 911 saying he ran into
forest to escape two armed men.
The gunmen were never found,
and the officer soon located the
distress caller, but now neither of
them could find their way back to
the street.
And so it went for three hours
in the forest in Birmingham,
Alabama, where it took a police
K9 unit to track them down.
Birmingham media reported
Friday that police would not
identify the rescued officer. A
spokesman tried to defend him.
Lt. Sean Edwards said “the
woods are very difficult to walk
through ... The officer was trying
to clear a path here, clear a path
there, and got turned around a
little bit.”
Dyer
From Page 1
the new school year.
Board members were extremely complimentary of the search
process, and the assistance of
the state’s school board association, business and community
leaders, school administrators,
and faculty. They also praised
comments received (about Dr.
Dyer) when five board members
visited the communities of the
final two candidates.
“We thoroughly reviewed all 26
applications we received, and we
were fortunate 26 people were
interested in our school system
and our community,” said
Robinson. “We looked at the
strengths of all the candidates,
as we were looking for the best fit
for our school system. We wanted
someone who will love and
embrace Cleveland.”
“The (search) process was long,
but pleasant,” she added.
“Each of the candidates had so
many nice things to say about
our
community,”
added
Pesterfield. “Both of the finalists
were excellent, and TSBA’s help
was excellent.”
“The process was great, and I
hope we’ve put the complaints to
rest,” said Morgan. He was referring to a request from State Sen.
Mike Bell of Tennessee on behalf
of a couple of his constituents,
seeking an opinion from
Tennessee Attorney General
Hubert Slattery III on the legality
of using TSBA as a search
engine.
Slattery opined that the TSBA
is governed by the sunshine law
regarding open meetings. But,
the state organization made no
decisions for the Cleveland
board, only providing a list of five
candidates who seemed to meet
the criteria for a new director.
TSBA also provided the school
board with all 26 resumes from
candidates.
“I hope the community realizes
we did the best we could do,”
added Morgan.
“We had two good visits and
got a lot of good input,” said
Cloud of the trips to Knoxville
and Memphis.
“We received a lot of input from
the people in the other communities,” continued Cogdill, adding it
provided a lot of help in the selection process.
Meacham, who like Dirksen
was unable to make the two outof-town trips, agreed with the
Ptak retorted that for one of
the deputies to tell him that the
resident who allegedly pointed
the rifle "was doing nothing
wrong was incorrect" and "he
treated us like a nuisance."
Smith said there is a process
by which county residents can
file a complaint against an officer.
"I need one of those forms,"
Ptak said. "There should have
been more done."
Committee Chairman Jeff
Yarber said there was "nothing
we can do to undo what you
thought was a wrong feeling."
"We've tried to give you an
avenue for your voice to be
heard," Yarber said. "But, sometimes you have to agree to disagree and move on."
He said the only thing the
Commission can do is "to allow
your voice to be heard."
Freed-Hardeman University in
Henderson, and with a bachelor’s
from Lambuth University in
Jackson, Dyer has spent his 20year career in Shelby County.
He has been a high school
principal, middle school principal, human resource specialist,
assistant principal and classroom teacher.
He is a Rotarian, youth mentor
at Collierville United Methodist
Church, a mountain bike enthusiast, and a Tennessee Promise
mentor.
The contract being offered
Dyer has few changes from the
old
Ringstaff
agreement,
although there are a few sections
which could be negotiated.
The base salary being offered
is $132,500, paid in 12 monthly
installments. A paragraph on
step increases is open to discussion, since Ringstaff came to
Cleveland from Virginia, and
Dyer has been in Tennessee
throughout his career.
Board members are hopeful
progress can continue on the
contract next week, but there
could be a slight delay since the
West Tennessee educator is
headed to Florida as a chaperone
on a youth trip.
Robinson anticipates little difficulty in getting an agreement on
a contract before the June 19
deadline.
comments of his fellow board
members.
Pesterfield concluded the
selection process Thursday by
saying she wrote down some of
the references to Dyer board
members received in Shelby
County. She said Morgan asked
several people what word they
would use to describe Dyer.
“The word I heard the most
was integrity,” she said. Other
comments board members
received were loves to work with
kids, vision, cool under pressure,
a servant and leader and disciplined.
“I believe he will be good to
help us (Cleveland Schools) move
forward,” added Morgan. “We can
now say the face of the school
system is new.”
Robinson also praised Dyer’s
involvement and experience in
the establishment of the new
Collierville School System, one of
the new systems founded from
the old Shelby County School
System.
In the cover letter on his application, Dyer expressed the opinion it was a great opportunity to
serve as an adviser and confidant
to Collierville Superintendent
John S. Aiken. He also served as
a spokesman for the local media
and the community.
A graduate of Trevecca
Nazarene University in Nashville,
Womack
From Page 1
Cleveland, a graduate of Walker
Valley High School and a member of Mount Olive Church of
God. His funeral will be held at
the church Saturday at 1 p.m.,
with visitation at the church
this evening from 6 to 9, and
also on Saturday, one hour prior
to the funeral.
Womack, an avid motorcyclist, was killed in the accident
that occurred on South Lee
Highway near the intersection
with Pine Hill Road and White
Oak Valley Road. According to
the
Collegedale
Police
Department, which investigated
the accident, the wreck happened around 9:45 p.m.
Tuesday.
Tonya Sadler, Collegedale
Police Department public infor-
mation officer, said that when
emergency personnel arrived on
the scene, they found Womack
had been involved in a crash
with another vehicle. He was
pronounced dead on the scene,
while the occupant of the other
vehicle was reportedly transported to a local hospital with
non-life threatening injuries.
Authorities did not release the
name of the occupant of that
vehicle.
Womack leaves behind a large
family and many friends. One of
his special friends, according to
his obituary, was Colby
Stansberry.
Stansberry was 18 years old
when he was killed in a Frontage
Road traffic accident in
November 2006.
Blood Assurance drive offering
wristbands to Riverbend Festival
Special to the Banner
From Page 1
property owner [was concerned]," Bradford said. "I'm
glad there are other avenues
where they can go to General
Sessions court to do a criminal
summons."
Ptak confirmed he and the
others with him had filed affidavits of complaint to support
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
INTERIM DIRECTOR of Schools Cathy Goodman, left, was busy Thursday afternoon as school board
members Dawn Robinson, Charlie Cogdill and Peggy Pesterfield gathered (in background). Board members voted unanimously on a new director of schools at the called meeting.
Nonprofit regional blood center Blood Assurance is offering
members of the community an
entry to win one of 18
Riverbend Music Festival wristbands when donating blood
Monday through Saturday,
June 4.
Area residents can donate at
a local donor center or bloodmobile.
Presently, Blood Assurance is
in critical need of types O negative, O positive, B negative and
A negative blood, as well as A
positive and B positive plasma.
The donor center will be
open on Monday, Memorial
Day, from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. at
the downtown Chattanooga
center and at the North
River/Hixson center.
Donations are often low during the summertime, due to
summer vacations and college
students heading home for the
summer as well.
The organization asks the
community to make a blood
donation before summer vacation.
The Riverbend Festival is the
official kickoff to summer in the
Tennessee Valley, with more
than 80 artists during nine
days on five stages. The annual
festival draws roughly 500,000
people to the banks of the
Tennessee River in the heart of
Chattanooga.
A festival wristband allows
guests to attend each day of the
festival, and the full artist lineup is listed online. In addition
to the Riverbend wristband
entry, all blood donors will
receive an “American Blood
Donor” T-shirt as a thank you
for helping save lives across the
region.
More than 540 volunteer
blood donors are needed every
day in order to adequately supply the demand of local hospitals, and just one donation can
save up to three lives across the
region.
A list of Blood Assurance’s
donor center locations can be
found online, along with the
scheduled public blood drives.
To be eligible to donate blood,
you must be at least 17 years
old (16 years old with parental
consent), weigh 110 pounds or
more and be in good health.
Donors are asked to drink
plenty of fluids — avoiding caffeine — and eat a meal rich in
iron prior to donating.
For more information on
Blood Assurance, donating
blood or hosting a blood drive,
please visit www.bloodassurance.org or call 1-800-9620628.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—7
Engines
From Page 1
Bradford said. The BCSO Public
Safety Unit will also participate
in events across the county,
encouraging drivers to wear
their seat belts and ensuring
children are properly secured in
car seats.
Cleveland Police Sgt. Evie
West said that the department
will also be looking for impaired
motorists and those who do not
follow traffic laws.
“We have a saturation patrol
on Friday, May 27,” she said.
“On this night, we will focus on
moving violations on and
around the 25th Street area.
“We will be assisted by the
(10th Judicial District) Drug
Task Force and the Bradley
County Sheriff’s Office,” West
added.
Contributed photo
The Tennessee Highway Patrol
THE BRADLEY COUNTY Sheriff’s Office Public Safety Unit will be out and about over the Memorial Day holiday weekend, watching for will also be highly visible over
traffic violators on the highways and also on and around the Hiwassee River. Working with the unit this weekend are, from left: Sgt. Mario the holiday weekend, which
Santos with K-9 Max, Deputy Earl Pike, Deputy Brandon Warren, Sheriff Eric Watson, Deputy Brandon Coffel, Deputy Steve McCullough, actually began on Thursday.
Deputy Paul Allen and Deputy Angie Whittemore.
Interstate 75 will be a heavily
traveled highway, so increased
patrol is expected there.
AAA projects more than 38
million Americans will travel
over the holiday weekend.
Lower gas prices are expected
to be a factor in increased travel.
AAA expects most U.S. drivers
will pay the “lowest Memorial
Day gas prices since 2005,”
according to AAA’s Don Lindsey.
“The national average price for a
gallon of gasoline on Memorial
Day 2015 was $2.74, and it was
$3.66 the year before.
“Gas prices peak in most
years before Memorial Day,
which means we could see ...
prices decline later this summer,
if normal trends apply,” said
Lindsey. “The big wild card is
the cost of crude oil, and no one
has a good idea of where crude
oil prices are headed later this
year. If crude oil keeps going up,
then we would see higher gas
prices, but if crude remains flat,
then most drivers should pay
the cheapest summertime gas
prices in 11 years.”
Many Memorial Day travelers
will head to warm weather destinations and historic American
cities to kick off their summer
travels. The top destinations
this Memorial Day weekend,
based on AAA.com and AAA
travel agency sales, are:
Orlando, Fla.; Myrtle Beach,
S.C.; Washington, D.C.; New
York
City,
Miami,
San
Francisco, Boston and Los
Angeles.
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Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
CLEVELAND/BRADLEY Chamber of Commerce staff hosted a reception for Wacker Polysilicon Charleston plant’s Dr. Konrad Bachhuber
and Mary Beth Hudson on Thursday. Several community leaders were also in attendance at the reception.
APPLY ONLINE NOW:
IntegrityTNClevelandBanner.com
OR WALK FOR YOUR INTERVIEW:
6227 Lee Highway, Ste A, Chattanooga, TN 37421
Mon-Sat 8AM-5PM
Or Bradley Square Mall
200 Paul Huff Pkwy, Cleveland, TN 37312
Mon-Sat 9AM-5PM
Bachhuber
From Page 1
solar cells.
Chamber President Gary
Farlow said that he hates to see
Bachhuber go, as he has been at
Wacker through most of the construction and planned expansion, but looks forward to working with Hudson.
“And I look forward to working
with the group at Wacker here,
and getting acquainted with the
Chamber of Commerce, the community and the people,” Hudson
said.
She said the first order of business for her is to get acclimated
to the site, and to the people
there.
“We are still in the start-up
phase, and are not up to full
capacity just yet, so that is the
first official thing I will be
involved in,” she said.
Along with getting better
acquainted with the Charleston
plant, Hudson said that she has
been impressed with the people
in the area.
“It’s a great area and a beautiful area, and the people are so
nice,” Hudson said. She was told
of the Cowpea Festival in
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
NEW WACKER SITE MANAGER Mary Beth Hudson, left, will be
officially moving into her new position at the Charleston plant on July
1, the same day site manager Dr. Konrad Bachhuber, right, will be
moving on to a global position within Wacker.
Charleston, and though not sure
at first what a cowpea is, learned
about it at the reception.
“I am used to festivals like this.
We celebrate the sweet potato
where our plant is in Kentucky,”
she said.
She is also a kayaker, so she is
very interested in testing the
Ocoee River.
She said that she is looking
forward to being a part of the
community, but especially to getting to know her Wacker group.
“It’s a great team and getting
accomplished what they have so
far, that is the foundation of
growth and increased production, because we plan on being
here for a long time,” Hudson
said.
“I knew of her, and know her
track record,” Bachhuber said of
Hudson. “She has been a great
leader and is perfect for taking us
from where we are now into the
future.”
Bachhuber’s last day at the
Charleston plant will also be
Hudson’s first — July 1.
“We are transitioning so I am
here now and trying to get as
much knowledge from Konrad as
I can,” she said.
Bachhuber said that he has
mixed feelings about the move, as
he has become connected with
the local Wacker employees and
the Charleston and Bradley
County community.
“From the very beginning, it
has been a pleasure to work with
the Chamber of Commerce and
the community, and everyone
was happy to have us here,”
Bachhuber said. “It has worked
out perfectly.”
When you apply: Please have ID proving
your eligibility to work in the U.S. All
job offers contingent on a background
check/drug screen. EOE.
2017
Elantra
HMF LOW
0.9% APR PLUS $1,000
for up to 60 moths**
HMF Bonus Cash**
OR
HMF LOW
0.9% APR PLUS No Payments
for up to 60 months**
NEW
ALL-NEW
VERY-NEW
BRAND-NEW
BRAND-SPANKING NEW
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UNEXPECTEDLY-NEW
HOW ABOUT BETTER?
for 6 months
The 2017 Elantra
Not just new. Better.
**APR Effective May, 3, 2016 - May 31, 2016 Special Low 0.9% APR (up to 36 months) at $28.16per $1,000 financed for qualified buyers. Special
Low 0.9% APR (up to 48 months) at $21.22 per $1,000 finance for qualified buyers. 0.9% Annual Percentage Rate (APR) up to 60 months. 2.9%
Annual Percentage Rate (APR) up to 72 months. APR financing available, subject to credit approval by Hyundai Motor Finance to very well qualified
buyers and not available on balloon financing. Only a limited number of customers will qualify for advertised APR. Down payment will vary
depending on APR. Bonus Cash must be applied as a down payment. Must take delivery from a participating dealer and from retail stock from May
3, 2016 - May 31, 2016. New vehicles only. This incentive is for a limited time offer on eligible Hyundai vehicles and may not be combined with
other special offers except where specified. Dealer contribution may vary and could affect actual monthly payment. See your participating Hyundai
dealer for more details on these special offers. Finance contract must be signed and dated no later than May 31, 2016. 6 MONTHS NO PAYMENT
3 payments on Us (up to $1,500) PLUS Optional 90-Day Deferred Payment )offer available from May 4 through July 5, 2016) Hyundai Motor
Finance (HMF) will pay a buyer’s first 3 scheduled monthly payments (up to a total of $1,500) for qualified buyers that purchase a new 2017MY
Elantra from retail stock (excluding the PHEV and Hybrid) at an authorized Hyundai dealer through July 5, 2016 and obtain financing through HMF
(subject to credit approval by HMF to qualified buyers). The buyer must pay any portion of the first 3 scheduled monthly payments that exceeds
$1500. PLUS, the buyer may elect to defer payments under the finance contract for 90 days. If deferred payment option elected, the first scheduled
monthly payment to be paid by HMF, is due 90 days from the date the purchase contract is executed, with buyer’s first payment due 180 days from
the date the purchase contract is executed. Interest begins to accrue from the contract date. Maximum of 90 days to first payment. Buyer
responsible for all remaining payments, including any deferred payments, per finance contract terms following the first 3 scheduled monthly
payments. 90 days of first payment in Pennsylvania only available on 0% interest rate finance contracts. Buyer is required to complete and sign
Program acknowledgment documentation form at the Dealership at the time the purchase contract is executed. This offer may not be combined
with other special offers except the HMF Conquest tier upgrade, the HMF Loyalty tier upgrade, the HMA College Graduate Program and the HMA
Military Offer. VALUED OWNER COUPON If you are currently a registered owner of a vehicle distributed by the Hyundai Motor America, you can
receive and additional $500 off a new 2017 Hyundai Elantra. TERMS AND CONDITION See your participating Hyundai dealer for more details on
these special offers. Special limited time annual percentage rate (APR) available to qualified buyers on approved credit through Hyundai Motor
Finance. May not be combined with other special offers except where specified. Only a limited number of customers will qualify for advertised APR
or lease offer. Not all buyers will qualify. Finance contract or lease agreement must be signed no later than May 31, 2016.
*Based on total package of warranty programs. See Gray Epperson Hyundai for LIMITED WARRANTY details.
grayeppersonhyundai.com
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
ChurCh
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614--6529
Religion e-mail:
[email protected]
[email protected]
Convention for The Churches of Jesus
Effective prayer needs compassion
Christ International begins on June 1
The 89th General Convention
of The Churches of Jesus Christ
International will be held June
1 through 5 at The Church of
Jesus Christ, 800 Benton Pike
in Cleveland.
The convention will bring delegates from around the world.
“Our theme for this year is
Philippians 2:5 (KJV) — ‘Let this
mind be in you, which was also
in Christ Jesus’,” a spokesman
said.
“We need to maintain the relevance in perilous times by having a mind like Jesus to serve
regardless of what it might
cost.”
Breakfast will be served each
day from 7:30 to 9:454 a.m. The
Garden prayer will be held from
10 to 10:45 a.m. Morning service begins at 11 a.m. There will
be a lunch break at 1 p.m.
The evening service starts at 7
p.m. There will be a time after
PREPARING FOR the 89th annual convention of The Churches of
the service for snacks and meet
Jesus Christ International are, from left, Elder Russell Robinson;
and greet.
There will be a nursery avail- Bishop Boyd C. Lawson, president and founder; Bishop Dennis W.
able nightly.
Hicks Sr., host pastor; and Dennis Hicks Jr.
CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Care 365 at Shiloh Missionary
Baptist Church, 3406 Blair Road
N.W., is Sunday at 11 a.m.
———
First Presbyterian Church,
433 North Ocoee St., will present
Cave Quest Vacation Bible
School 2016 June 6 through
June 10, from 5 to 8 p.m., for 4
years old through fifth grade. For
further questions, call 423-4765584 or 423-790-4116. Register
your child today.
———
Homecoming will be held at
Sunrise Baptist Church, Spring
Place Road, Sunday, with servic-
es starting at 10:30 a.m. Special
singing will be by Recognized.
———
Center Point Baptist Church,
Lower River Road in Charleston,
will have a singing Sunday at
10:30 a.m. Bobby Lewis will be
the featured singer. Lunch will be
served after the service.
———
The 2x2 Quartet will sing in
the 11 a.m. service Sunday at
Bethel Baptist Church, 2514 Old
Chattanooga Pike.
———
Shiloh Missionary Baptist
Church, Blair Road, will have a
gospel concert with various
choirs from the community celebrating our Lord in singing and
praise dancing on Sunday,
beginning at 3 p.m.
———
Old-Fashion Sunday will be
held at New Liberty Baptist
Church, 900 King St. on APD 40,
Sunday. There will be dinner
after the service.
———
Evening
Light
Gospel
Tabernacle, 200 20th St., will
have a singing Sunday at 6 p.m.
Featured singers will be Christian
Gospel Heirs and Joyful Sounds.
We
The other night as I was
saying good night to the Lord,
suddenly I was hit with something that jarred my innermost being. The realization
that I was not “filled” with
compassion struck me in the
heart. Something in a person
is definitely missing when
compassion is not present and
I felt that intensely. How can
one pray effectively if compassion is not present?
I knew I could pray that God
would grant me compassion
for others, but what I needed
first was the willingness to
accept the burden and to suffer the agony that goes along
with compassion.
Many times, our heartstrings are tugged by seeing
needs, and our sympathy
“goes out to them.” But if that
sympathy is not expressed in
a tangible way, that’s all it is
— just a fleeting feeling.
Compassion is deeper.
Compassion moves to action.
In the Gospels, the compassion of Christ is mentioned 14
times. In the Old Testament,
compassion was a definite factor in some 27 instances.
What is it that digs down
and draws a person into the
anguish of another soul?
Paul said that “when one
suffers, all suffer. And
whether one member suffers,
all the members suffer with it;
or one member be honoured,
all the members rejoice with
it” (1 Corinthians 12:26).
I read this which is a perfect
illustration of the contrast
between unfeeling and compassion:
A man fell into a pit and
couldn’t get himself out.
A SUBJECTIVE person
came along and said: “I FEEL
for you, down there.”
An OBJECTIVE person
came along and said: “It’s logical that someone would fall
down there.”
A PHARISEE said: “Only
BAD people fall into a pit.”
A MATHEMATICIAN calculated HOW he fell into the pit.
A NEWS REPORTER wanted the exclusive story on the
pit.
A JUDGMENTALIST said:
You DESERVE your pit.”
A REALIST said: “That’s a
PIT.”
A SCIENTIST calculated the
pressure necessary (lbs./sq.
in.) to get him out of the pit.
A GEOLOGIST told him to
appreciate the rock strata in
the pit.
AN EVOLUTIONIST said:
“You are a rejected mutant
destined to be removed from
the evolutionary cycle.” In
other words, he is going to DIE
in the pit, so that he cannot
produce any “pit/falling” offspring.
The COUNTY INSPECTOR
asked if he had a permit to dig
a pit.
A PROFESSOR gave him a
lecture on: “The Elementary
Principles of the Pit.”
Cedar SpringS
BapTiST ChurCh
Care 365
The Marketplace
Mt. CArMel BAptist ChurCh
SHILOH
Saturday, June 4, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
7619 Blue springs roAd (2 Miles north of red ClAy stAte pArk)
Alfred B. Johnson Sr., pastor
Mark Pollard, associate minister
James Haupo, minister
Christ Watterson, minister
Genesis Patton
$5 Brown
Bag Special
Bettie
Marlowe
An EVASIVE person came
along and avoided the subject
of his pit altogether.
A SELF-PITYING person
said: You haven’t seen anything until you’ve seen MY
PIT!!”
A CHARISMATIC said: “Just
CONFESS that you’re not in a
pit.”
An OPTIMIST said: Things
COULD be worse.”
A PESSIMIST said: Things
WILL get worse!!”
But JESUS, seeing the man,
had compassion on him, took
him by the hand and LIFTED
HIM OUT of the pit.
A commercial on TV shows
a robbery in action. Two people are lying on the floor face
down and a security guard is
standing nearby. He tells
them he is a security monitor
and only reports if there is a
robbery. He turn to look, then
tells the people on the floor,
“There’s a robbery.”
So many times, Christans
are quick to only assesss
someone’s situation. But
that’s not what Christ told us
to do. Compassion moves a
person to action. It may be
correct to tell a person he is in
a pit, but it’s something else to
lift him out. That’s what Jesus
does and He is our example —
in love, in compassion, in
humility.
I heard this song when I
was a child and it’s still true:
“When My Savior reached
down for me; When He
reached way down for me. I
was lost and undone, Without
God or His Son; When He
reached down His Hand for
me.”
Information for Church Activities or the church page should be sent to Mary Matthews at
[email protected], mailed to Church Activities Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN
37320-3600 or dropped at the office, 1505 25th St. Information should be in by noon the day prior to publication.
Come worship
with us Sunday,
11 a.m.
A rts & C rAfts
Lifelines
723 Cedar Springs Church Road
FIFTH SunDay
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MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
CHURCH
featuring
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Sunday School ....................... 9:30 a.m.
Lunch following the morning service
3406 Blair Road n.W., Cleveland, Tn 37312
Phone: 423-479-5755
THIS PAGE SPONSORED IN THE INTEREST OF ALL BRADLEY COUNTY CHURCHES
126 Keith St.
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95 Second Street, N.E., Cleveland
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—9
The Book
in Heaven
The Bible and
Current Events
Clyne W.
Buxton
The Book of Life, located in
heaven, is a register containing the names of every committed follower of our Lord.
Christ placed great emphasis on our name being there.
You may recall the incident. He had sent out the Seventy
to preach; God gave great revivals, and they returned elated
with their success.
Jesus responded: “Do not rejoice that the spirits submit to
you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven” (Luke
10:20).
God promises ultimate victory to the persecuted Jews during the Tribulation, if their name is in the Book of Life, as
follows:
“At that time Michael, the great prince who protects your
people, will arise. There will be a time of distress such as has
not happened since the beginning of nations until then. But at
that time your people — everyone whose name is found written in the book — will be delivered” (Daniel 12:1).
In several other places in Scripture the Book of Life is discussed. Just what kind of book it is, we do not know.
Nonetheless, God, who gave man the ability to build the
computer, is certainly capable of recording and storing the
name of every person who belongs to Him.
This stirring story is told about a dying soldier and the
Book of Life:
Thousands of young men died at Gettysburg, one of the
bloodiest battles of the American Civil War. At the close of
the battle, an army surgeon came looking for the wounded
and suffering, searching for somebody still alive.
Presently he saw a man down in a ditch on his back. The
surgeon stopped his horse, looked at the man and thought,
I’m too late, He is evidently gone. But then he saw a slight
smile come to the face of the dying soldier. The doctor dismounted and knelt down by him.
Every few seconds a smile played upon the dying face and
the lips parted and the soldier whispered, “Here! Here! Here!”
The surgeon shook him gently, bringing him back to consciousness. “Why are you saying ‘Here?’” he asked the dying
man.
The soldier replied: “Oh, Doctor, they were calling the roll
in heaven and I was answering to my name, for long ago I
gave my heart to Christ.”
Are we ready for the roll call? Will we answer, “Here?”
(Column 6 of a series on Heaven)
Gates leaves Boy Scouts
presidency, defends gay policy
DALLAS (AP) — Robert Gates
became the Boy Scouts of
America’s president facing deep
divisions within the organization’s membership over whether
to let gays serve openly in its
ranks.
On Thursday, Gates finished
his two-year term by arguing the
Scouts had overcome that challenge and were ready to reverse
years of membership declines.
In a speech to Scouting leaders, the former U.S. secretary of
defense defended the compromise last year to allow openly gay
adult leaders to serve in the
Scouts, but give churches sponsoring troops the right to use sexual orientation as a guideline for
selecting leaders.
Gates called the move a “difficult decision,” but one that has
been accepted by “the overwhelming preponderance of
sponsoring institutions and volunteer leaders,” according to prepared remarks released by the
Scouts.
“Most importantly, through
these challenges we have maintained our unity as a movement,”
Gates said. “Significantly, membership in recent months has
begun to move in a positive direction for the first time in many
years.”
An Eagle Scout during his
childhood in Kansas, Gates
became Scouting president in
2014 after a long career in public
service, including leading the
Department of Defense under two
presidents. He took over an
organization facing steep membership declines and a split
between its core membership —
churches and religious groups,
many of which opposed allowing
gays — and corporate sponsors
and local councils that wanted to
see Scouting’s membership policies changed.
As defense secretary, Gates
had overseen the end of the
“don’t ask, don’t tell” policy
regarding gays in the military. In
his first speech as Scouting president, Gates told BSA leaders
that had he been with the organization during the 2013 vote
allowing openly gay youth, he
would have pushed for gay adults
to be included, too. He said he
would not revisit that decision
during his term, though.
But that proved impossible as
several local Scouting councils
flouted the ban on openly gay
adults and anti-discrimination
laws in many states opened the
Scouts to possible lawsuits,
Gates said Thursday.
Gates argued that last year’s
compromise has allowed the
Scouts to begin reversing membership declines. He said that
membership was down 2.8 percent this year, after a nearly 4
percent decline last year, but that
there were positive signs in Cub
Scouts and that new corporate
sponsors were joining Scouting.
“Contrary to what you hear
from some politicians, we continue to live in a great country,”
Gates said, in an apparent reference to the “Make America Great
Again” catchphrase of presumptive Republican presidential
nominee Donald Trump.
“America needs Scouting to
remind all of their duty to our
country,” Gates added.
Gates will be replaced by AT&T
CEO Randall Stephenson.
Zach Wahls, spokesman for the
advocacy group Scouts for
Equality, said Thursday that he
hoped Stephenson and other
leaders could continue to help
the organization grow.
Average 30-year mortgage
rate rises to 3.64 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) — Longterm U.S. mortgage rates rose
this week but remained at low
levels that could entice purchasers amid the current home
buying season.
Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac
said Thursday the average 30year
fixed-rate
mortgage
increased to 3.64 percent from
3.58 percent last week. It’s far
below its level a year ago of 3.87
percent.
The average rate on 15-year
fixed-rate mortgages advanced to
2.89 percent from 2.81 percent.
The Federal Reserve last week
gave a clear signal that an interest-rate increase is likely next
month if the economy keeps
improving. The disclosure of minutes of the Fed policymakers’
most recent meeting in late April
tipped U.S. government bond
prices sharply lower, raising
long-term bond yields.
Long-term bond yields tend to
influence mortgage rates. The
yield on the 10-year Treasury
note rose to 1.87 percent
Wednesday from 1.86 percent a
week earlier. It dipped to 1.85
percent Thursday morning.
With low loan rates as an
inducement, Americans signed
more contracts to buy homes in
April for the third straight month,
driving pending home sales to the
highest level in more than a
decade. The National Association
of Realtors reported Thursday
that its seasonally-adjusted
index of pending home sales
surged 5.1 percent last month to
116.3, the highest since 117.4 in
February 2006. Pending sales
contracts are a barometer of
future purchases.
To calculate average mortgage
rates, Freddie Mac surveys
lenders across the country at the
beginning of each week. The
average doesn’t include extra
fees, known as points, which
most borrowers must pay to get
the lowest rates.
The Church of God
Bible Training Institute begins Sunday
Special to the Banner
The Church of God Bible
Training Institute is scheduled
to begin Sunday at the church’s
general headquarters on Tillie
Road.
Registration begins on Sunday
afternoon.
The 2016 school is a two-week
course consisting of four terms.
Terms 1 through 3 consist of
general Bible knowledge as well
as Church history and polity.
The fourth term — Leadership
Pastoral Development — is
geared more toward those called
into ministerial leadership. Each
term completes five class subjects.
Ray Dupree, the BTI director,
has chosen “Higher Heights and
Deeper Depths” as the theme for
the 2016 school.
Morning devotions begin each
day at 8, followed by a morning
assembly from 8:35 to 9:15. All
devotions are open to the public.
This morning assembly class
will be taught by Jonathan
Smith of Andrews, Texas, on
“The King James Bible vs. New
Age Versions” and also “The
Creator of All Things.”
Teachers/staff from the
Cleveland area include General
Overseer
Oscar
Pimentel;
Principal James Cox; Devotional
coordinator and instructor,
Allene Cox; secretary, Vicki
Smith; and class instructors:
Bettie Marlowe, E. Roger
Ammons, Robert J. Hawkins and
Harvey Anders.
Other staff members and
helpers from Cleveland include
Kryss and Wendy Barick,
Shanna Weekes, Grayson Kent
and David Cox.
On Sunday evening at 6,
David F. Risch of Cleveland will
speak on “Present Truth.”
Jonathan Smith will speak on “A
Great Work” at 7 p.m. on June 3;
Brian O’Dell of Bessemer,
Alabama, will speak on “The
Depth of Perfection” at 7 p.m. on
Saturday.
“To Make All Men See” will be
the subject Robert Strong of
Smithfield, North Carolina, on
June 5 at 6 p.m. Strong is the
general Sunday school coordinator for The Church of God.
On June 10, at 7 p.m., Cox
will speak on “O, the Depth.” The
final session will be Heritage
Day, with commencement at 2
p.m. on June 11. James Horne
of Bessemer will be the commencement speaker.
In addition to the morning
devotions each weekday, visitors
are welcome, also, to all evening
services on Sunday, Friday and
VATICAN CITY (AP) — The archbishop of Dublin is hoping Pope
Francis will visit Northern Ireland
as well as Dublin to mark the next
edition of the Catholic Church’s
big family rally.
While Francis hasn’t committed
to attending the August 2018
World Meeting of Families, popes
have attended all but two of the
past editions and Francis has
made family ministry a priority.
Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid
Martin told reporters Thursday
that Irish bishops hoped Francis
would complete the Irish tour St.
John Paul II began in 1979, when
he became the first pope to visit
the Catholic country. The Vatican
called off the Northern Ireland leg
for security reasons.
Martin said while it’s too early to
start trip planning so far in
advance, he assumed Francis
would make a symbolic “gesture of
reconciliation.”
Creditors: Minnesota archdiocese
is sitting on $1.7 billion
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Attorneys
have accused a Minnesota archdiocese of sheltering more than $1
billion in assets to avoid big payouts to abuse survivors.
They say the Archdiocese of St.
Paul and Minneapolis has some
$1.7 billion in assets — far more
than the $49 million it lists in a filing this week. In court papers,
they accuse the archdiocese of
undervaluing assets and tucking
money away in corporations to
shield it from creditors.
Jeff Anderson, an attorney for
hundreds of people claiming sexual abuse by priests, said the
church had schemed to defraud
creditors and deny fair resolution
of claims.
The archdiocese filed bankruptcy in January 2015 as it faced an
onslaught of new abuse claims
after Minnesota lawmakers
opened a three-year window for
claims that had previously been
barred by a statute of limitations.
Dover church to host ceremony
ahead of its demolition
DOVER, N.H. (AP) — An 83year-old New Hampshire church
will hold a closing ceremony this
weekend ahead of its upcoming
demolition to make room for a
housing development.
Foster’s Daily Democrat reports
the ceremony on Sunday will celebrate the history of St. Charles
Church and allow the Dover community to say goodbye.
The church and its rectory will
be torn down this summer to
make room for a housing development dubbed Bradley Commons.
The church was built in 1933 following a fire that destroyed the
previous house of worship a year
earlier.
U.N. decries church worship limit in
Cyprus’ breakaway north
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — A U.N.
envoy has expressed “deep concern” over a newly-imposed limit
on worship in Orthodox Christian
churches inside ethnically divided
Cyprus’ breakaway Turkish
Cypriot north.
Espen Barth Eide said he has
asked Turkish Cypriot leader
Mustafa Akinci to help “rectify” the
new policy that reportedly limits
worship in any church to once a
year.
Eide, who is mediating ongoing
reunification talks, said Thursday
that the move runs “directly counter to the bi-communal spirit” that
has been built up in recent years.
Cyprus’ Christian and Muslim
leaders have over the last few
years taken great strides in promoting religious freedom, especially in the north where derelict
churches have remained unused
for decades.
Cyprus was split in 1974 when
Turkey invaded after a coup by
supporters of union with Greece.
Inflatables, Food,
Games and a Movie
Shiloh is located at 358 Hwy 64 in Ocoee, TN.
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Two
board members of the scandalmarred Vatican bank have
resigned over disagreements about
the management and mission of
the institution.
Under Pope Francis, the
Institute for Religious Works has
sought to be less a profit-at-all cost
investment vehicle for the church
and more a service-oriented foundation that helps religious orders,
in particular, and Vatican officials
manage their money.
The Vatican said Wednesday
that the resignation of Clemens
Borsig and Carlo Salvatori from
the bank’s board “can be seen in
light of legitimate reflections and
opinions” about the management
of such an unusual institution.
The final His Hands Extended
Devotional for the summer will be
Tuesday. The devotions will
resume on Tuesday, Aug. 2.
Jeff Mowery will be the speaker
Tuesday at 7 a.m. at Garden
Plaza, 3500 Keith St. N.W.
The devotionals are a time of
music, Scripture, intercessory
prayer and fellowship from 7 to
7:30 a.m.
Maxine Hughes will be the
speaker when the devotionals
resume on Aug. 2.
Saturday.
The public is invited to watch
the broadcast of BTI online at
www.thechurchofgod.org.
Morning devotions and evening
services will be broadcast.
Shiloh Baptist Church in Ocoee, TN
will have Community Movie Night
on Sunday, May 29th, @ 6:00pm.
2 Vatican bank board members
resign over disagreements
Jeff Mowery
to be HHE
speaker
Dupree
FAMILY
MOVIE
NIGHT
RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Irish church eyes 2018 papal visit,
reconciliation gesture
Pimentel
SUNDAY SCHOOL
9:30 AM
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:30 AM
NO SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT CLASSES 6:30 PM
CHURCH DIRECTORY
Serving Cleveland for
over 175 years
Farmland Community Church
Meeting at the Cleveland Family YMCA
Sanctuary - Traditional Worship - 8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Fellowship Hall - Informal Worship - 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Nursery available for all worship services
Randy Martin, Senior Pastor Skip White, Associate Pastor
155 Central Ave., NW
423-476-5586
http://www.bsumc.org
220 Urbane Road NE
Sunday Morning Worship Service 10 AM
Office Phone: 473-9891
“Come See The Difference”
REV. CHIP HAMMONDS
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH United Christian Church
3425 Ocoee St. N 476-4504
www.ClevelandUMC.com
Pastor: Rev. Tim Bracken
Sunday Worship....8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School..............................9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Night Together...........5:30 p.m.
(Supper Reservations Required) - (Nursery Provided)
OPEN HEARTS, OPEN MINDS, OPEN DOORS...
The People of The United Methodist Church
Wesley Memorial United
Methodist Church
3405 Peerless Road NW
Cleveland, TN 37312 • 472-9578
www.wesleymemorialchurch.com
Email: [email protected]
Rev. Ramon Torres
Sunday Worship – 8:30, 11:00, 6:00
Where Everybody is Somebody, & Jesus Christ is Lord
First Lutheran Church
“Building on His Promise”
“Scripture-Based”
8:15 & 10:45 Service
9:30 Sunday School
Reverend Robert Seaton, Pastor
-C)NTIRE3TREET.%s#LEVELAND4.
#HURCH/FlCEs0ARSONAGE
Pastors Charles & Margie Poteat
2200 Peerless Rd
Cleveland, TN
423.479.4277
A Full-Gospel Fellowship
Everyone Welcome
Service Times: Sunday 11 AM & 6 PM, Wed. 7 PM
´ of Lisieux
St. Thérese
Catholic Church
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday 6 p.m. (Vigil)
Sunday: 8 a.m. (Spanish), 9:30 a.m., 12 p.m.
1st & 3rd Sunday, 3 p.m. (Latin)
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday: 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday: 5:30 p.m.
SACRAMENT OF PENANCE Saturday 4:45-5:45 p.m.
900 CLINGAN RIDGE DR. NW • 476-8123
sttheresecatholicchurch.org
ATTEND A
CHURCH OF
YOUR CHOICE
THIS WEEKEND
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
West Bank outpost’s impending
evacuation is a test for Israel
AP photo
U.S. PreSident BArAck OBAmA, right, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands
after laying wreaths at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western, Japan on Friday. Obama
became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world's first atomic bomb attack, bringing
global attention both to survivors and to his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons. The
Atomic Bomb Dome is seen in the background.
In Hiroshima, Obama honors
‘silent cry’ of bombing victims
HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) —
President Barack Obama paid
tribute Friday to the “silent cry”
of the 140,000 victims of the
atomic bomb dropped 71 years
ago on Hiroshima, and called on
the world to abandon “the logic
of fear” that encourages the
stockpiling of nuclear weapons.
Obama’s trip to Hiroshima
made him the first U.S. president to visit the site of the
world’s first atomic bomb attack,
and he sought to walk a delicate
line between honoring the dead,
pushing his as-yet unrealized
anti-nuclear vision and avoiding
any sense of apology for an act
many Americans see as a justified end to a brutal war that
Japan started with a sneak
attack at Pearl Harbor.
“Death fell from the sky and
the world was changed,” Obama
said, after laying a wreath, closing his eyes and briefly bowing
his head before an arched stone
monument in Hiroshima’s Peace
Memorial Park that honors those
killed on Aug. 6, 1945. “The flash
of light and a wall of fire
destroyed a city and demonstrated that mankind possessed the
means to destroy itself.”
In a carefully choreographed
display, Obama offered a somber
reflection on the horrors of war
and the danger of technology
that gives humans the “capacity
for unmatched destruction.”
With Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe standing by his side
and an iconic bombed-out
domed building looming behind
him, Obama urged the world to
do better.
“We stand here in the middle
of this city and force ourselves to
imagine the moment the bomb
fell,” Obama said. “We force ourselves to feel the dread of children confused by what they see.
We listen to a silent cry.”
A second atomic bomb,
dropped on Nagasaki three days
after Hiroshima, killed 70,000
more. Japan surrendered on
Aug. 15, 1945, ending a war that
killed millions.
Obama hoped Hiroshima
would someday be remembered
not as the dawn of the atomic
age but as the beginning of a
“moral awakening.”
He renewed his call for a world
less threatened by danger of
nuclear war. He received a Nobel
Peace Prize early on in his presidency for his anti-nuclear agenda but has since seen uneven
progress.
“Among those nations like my
own that hold nuclear stockpiles, we must have the courage
to escape the logic of fear and
pursue a world without them,”
Obama said.
Abe, in his speech, called
Obama’s visit courageous and
long-awaited. He said it would
help the suffering of survivors
and he echoed the anti-nuclear
sentiments.
“At any place in world, this
tragedy must not be repeated
again,” Abe said.
Critics believe Obama’s mere
presence in Hiroshima would be
viewed as an apology for what
they see as a bombing that was
needed to stop a Japanese war
machine that had brutalized
Asia and killed many Americans.
But Obama’s decision also
drew praise from those who see
it as a long overdue gesture for
two allies ready to bury a troubled past.
Obama’s remarks showed a
careful awareness of the sensitivities. He included both South
Koreans and American prisoners
of war in recounting the death
toll at Hiroshima — a nod to
advocates for both groups who
publicly warned the president
not to forget their dead.
Obama spoke broadly of the
brutality of the war that begat
the bombing — saying it “grew
out of the same base instinct for
domination or conquest that had
caused conflicts among the simplest tribes” — but did not
assign blame.
After his remarks, he met with
two survivors. Although he was
out of ear shot of reporters,
Obama could be seen laughing
and smiling with 91-year-old
Sunao Tsuboi. He embraced
Shigeaki Mori, 79, in a hug.
Later, Tsuboi told reporters he
was struck by how Obama held
his hand and listened carefully.
He told the U.S. president he will
be remembered as the one who
“listened to the voice of survivors
like us.”
“You should come visit
Hiroshima from time to time and
meet lots of people. That is what
is important,” Tsuboi said.
Obama’s visit, which lasted
just under two hours while most
Americans were sleeping, was
crafted for close scrutiny in Asia,
a region he’s tried to put at the
center of his foreign policy legacy. Obama and Abe strode
together along a tree-lined path,
past an eternal flame, toward a
river that flows by the domed
building that many associate
with Hiroshima.
They earlier went to the lobby
of the peace museum to sign the
guest book: “We have known the
agony of war. Let us now find the
courage, together, to spread
peace, and pursue a world without nuclear weapons,” Obama
wrote, according to the White
House.
The president’s call for a
nuclear-free world was a long
way from the optimistic rallying
cry he delivered as young, newly
elected president. Obama did not
employ his campaign slogan —
“Yes, we can” — as he did in a
speech in Prague in 2009.
Instead, the president spoke of
diligent, incremental steps.
“We may not realize this goal
in my lifetime but persistent
effort can roll back the possibility of catastrophe,” he said. “We
can chart a course that leads to
the destruction of these stockpiles.”
Obama touched down in
Hiroshima after completing talks
with world leaders at an international summit in Shima, Japan.
He was accompanied by Caroline
Kennedy, the U.S. ambassador
to Japan.
Hiroshima’s peace park is a
poignant place, with searing
images of the burnt, tattered
clothing of dead children and the
exposed steel beams on the iconic A-bomb dome.
The skeletal remains of the
exhibition hall have become an
international symbol of peace
and a place for prayer.
Han Jeong-soon, the 58-yearold daughter of a Korean survivor, was also at the park
Friday.
“The suffering, such as illness,
gets carried on over the generations — that is what I want
President Obama to know,” she
said. “I want him to understand
our sufferings.”
CAIRO (AP) — A French vessel
that joined the search for the
EgyptAir plane which crashed
last week killing all 66 people on
board arrived Friday in the crash
area, as Egyptian officials said
search
teams
in
the
Mediterranean have picked up a
beacon believed to be from the
doomed aircraft.
According to Egyptian security
officials, the French ship is carrying equipment that can find
flight data and cockpit voice
recorders — the so-called “black
boxes.” French officials could not
be immediately reached to confirm the ship’s whereabouts.
Meanwhile, the chief investigator in Egypt said search teams in
the Mediterranean have picked
up a beacon believed to be from
the EgyptAir Flight 804.
Locating a beacon has narrowed the search to a 5 kilometer
(3 mile) radius, said Ayman alMoqadem, stressing that this
doesn’t mean the black boxes
have been found, which he said
requires highly sophisticated
technology.
The signal that was picked up
came from one of the devices on
the plane transmitting its location, said al-Moqadem, who
spoke to reporters on Thursday.
Eight days after the plane
crashed off Egypt’s northern
coast on a Paris to Cairo flight,
the cause of the tragedy still has
not been determined. Ships and
planes from Egypt, Greece,
France, the United States and
other nations have been searching the Mediterranean north of
the Egyptian port of Alexandria
for the jet’s voice and flight data
recorders, as well as more bodies
and parts of the aircraft.
Small pieces of the wreckage
and human remains have
already been recovered while the
bulk of the plane and the bodies
of the passengers are believed to
be deep under the sea. A Cairo
forensic team has received the
human remains and is carrying
DNA tests to identify the victims.
Egypt’s civil aviation minister
Sherif Fathi has said he believes
terrorism is a more likely explanation than equipment failure or
some other catastrophic event.
But no hard evidence has
emerged on the cause, and no
militant group has claimed to
have downed the jet.
Earlier, leaked flight data indicated a sensor detected smoke in
a lavatory and a fault in two of
the plane’s cockpit windows in
the final moments of the flight.
The French air accident investigation agency, the BEA, said in
a statement that the Laplace ship
left Thursday from Corsica for
the zone of the crash, with two
BEA investigators aboard. The
Laplace is equipped with three
detectors made by the Alseamar
company designed to detect and
localize signals from the flight
recorders, believed about 3,000
meters (3,280 yards) underwater.
France may also send an
unmanned submarine and deepsea retrieval equipment, the
statement said. The BEA is
involved in the search because
the crashed plane was an Airbus,
manufactured in France.
Because of the difficulties in
finding the black boxes, Egypt
has contracted two foreign companies to help locate the flight
data recorders of the plane.
One of the companies is
Alseamar, which has equipment
aboard the French vessel.
Egyptian official have said the
second company is called Deep
Ocean Search. Also, Egyptian
President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi
said earlier that a submarine
would join the search for the
plane’s data recorders.
However, al-Moqadem told
reporters that the submarine is
not equipped to detect signals
from the black boxes.
All Egyptian officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized to
release the information.
Official: Beacon from Egypt crash
detected as the search narrows
AMONA OUTPOST, West Bank
(AP) — The fate of 50 white caravans perched atop a West Bank
hill in the Amona settler outpost
is emerging as a key test for
Benjamin Netanyahu’s newlyexpanded hard-line government.
Under a Supreme Court order,
the government must tear down
the outpost by the end of the year
— a move expected to face
staunch opposition from within
the coalition and pit security
forces against the wishes of leading members of the Cabinet.
Amona is the largest of about
100 unauthorized outposts —
built without permission but
generally tolerated by the government — that dot the West Bank.
The outpost became a symbol of
settler defiance after a partial
evacuation a decade ago sparked
violent clashes between residents
and security forces. The impending evacuation, ordered in 2014,
could lead to another showdown.
In a surprise move last week,
Netanyahu sacked Defense
Minister Moshe Yaalon to make
way for Avigdor Lieberman, the
hawkish leader of the Yisrael
Beitenu party — and a settler
himself — to take the post, which
oversees the settlements. The
addition of Yisrael Beitenu buttresses the nationalist, pro-settler camp in Netanyahu’s government and could increase the
pressure on the Israeli leader to
find a way to wriggle out of the
Amona evacuation.
“The goal is to keep the settlement in its place,” said Bezalel
Smotrich, a lawmaker with the
pro-settler Jewish Home party, a
coalition member. “We are in a
right-wing coalition that wants to
develop the settlements, really
doesn’t want to demolish Amona
and is ready to make an effort (to
keep it).”
Critics say that Netanyahu’s
support for settlements, regardless of who makes up his
Cabinet, means Amona’s evacuation may not proceed smoothly.
“I think that the prime minister would do all he can to prevent
an evacuation one way or another,” said Hagit Ofran, from the
settlement watchdog group Peace
Now. She said Israel must comply with the court order but that
the government typically “looks
for ways to delay it, to change it,
to devise new schemes that can
stop the evacuation.”
In a statement, the Defense
Ministry said it “operates in
accordance with the law and with
court decisions.” Netanyahu’s
office declined comment.
Aside from the rogue outposts,
the West Bank is home to another 120 settlements that Israel
considers legal. The Palestinians
and the international community
consider both settlements and
outposts illegal or illegitimate
and an obstacle to the creation of
a Palestinian state. In a position
that is widely backed internationally, the Palestinians want
the West Bank, along with the
Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem,
for their hoped-for state.
Amona was established in the
mid-1990s, when a small group
of settlers, quietly beckoned by
government-funded infrastructure, erected caravans on the
rugged knoll that has since blossomed to house some 50 families, or about 250 people.
In 2008, a group of
Palestinians, represented by the
Israeli rights group Yesh Din,
petitioned Israel’s Supreme
Court, claiming Amona settlers
had encroached on their land
and demanded the entire outpost
be dismantled.
The court petition set off a protracted legal battle that saw a
number of proposed evacuation
dates missed and repeatedly
delayed until a final ruling in
2014 ordered the state to demolish the outpost by Dec. 25, 2016.
The state also agreed to compensate the landowners with about
$75,000.
While the state legally must
comply with the court order, the
constant delays mean the
Palestinian landowners remain
deeply skeptical.
“We don’t believe that
Netanyahu will remove this settlement. We won’t believe it until
we see it happen with our own
eyes,” said Issa Zayed, who used
to cultivate olives, almonds and
figs when he last had access to
his land nearly 20 years ago. He
stares longingly at his 40-acre
(16-hectare) plot from a nearby
hilltop.
Amona residents and their
supporters in government vow
not to bow down easily and are
pushing to have the government
find a loophole that would allow
the settlers to stay put and legalize the outpost.
“You don’t uproot someone
from his home,” said Avichay
Buaron, who heads the campaign to keep Amona intact.
“There are many politicians and
many Israeli leaders who want to
solve the problem and that is the
big question. Will they succeed in
the next half a year to solve it or
not? We are hoping and praying
that the answer is yes.”
Asked if Amona could descend
into the kind of violence seen in
2006, Buaron said he hopes not,
but that he won’t hesitate to
round up supporters to protest
any evacuation.
Signs of permanence flourish
in Amona, which has paved
roads, rows of vineyards and a
basketball court. Prominent banners at West Bank intersections
read: “Recognize Amona, save the
settlements.”
The government has proposed
building a new settlement to
house the Amona evacuees,
according to the Israeli daily
Haaretz, a step that has settled
previous disputes. Buaron said
Amona residents refuse to accept
the offer, determined to stay in
their homes, where they say they
have planted roots and raised
their children.
While the court ruling to evacuate Amona was welcomed as a
great success for the Palestinian
landowners, the resettlement
proposal has struck Palestinians
and rights groups as counterproductive because it does not
decrease the ballooning number
of settlers in the West Bank,
which now stands at around
400,000 people.
Shlomy Zachary, a lawyer with
Yesh Din, said the Amona case
shows that the Supreme Court is
“nearly the only defense” for
Palestinians with claims against
the settlements.
He said that since the 2006
evacuation, Amona continues to
symbolize a lack of law enforcement in the West Bank.
“I don’t know what the government is planning. I know that
there is a final judgment and
everyone is bound to this judgment, including the government,” he said.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—11
NATIONAL BRIEFS
Firefighters replace WWII vet’s
stolen American flag, pole
NASHUA, N.H. (AP) — Just in
time for Memorial Day, a 91year-old World War II veteran
from New Hampshire has an
American flag flying in his yard
once again thanks to local firefighters.
WMUR-TV reports members of
the Nashua Fire Department
took up a collection and
replaced the flag and flag pole
stolen six weeks ago from
Richard Chasse’s property on
Thursday.
Chasse had told some firefighter friends about the theft.
Assistant Chief Brian Rhodes
says the fire company felt that
they couldn’t let a member of the
greatest generation commemorate Memorial Day without a
flag, especially since Chasse was
in the fire department for 36
years.
Firefighter Cy Hebert says
that although no one in the
department
worked
with
Chasse, they are all very close
with him.
Video shows Florida trooper
jump onto hood, fire into car
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) —
A video clip from a gas station
surveillance camera shows a
Florida Highway Patrol trooper
pull his motorcycle next to a car
during a traffic stop, and then
jump onto its hood before firing
through the windshield.
The 33-second video shows
the car driving away Wednesday
morning, flinging Trooper Miseal
Diaz to the road.
Spokesman Joe Sanchez says
department policy allows troopers to fire into a vehicle if they
fear for their lives and that Diaz
was in fear during the confrontation in Miami Gardens.
The Miami Herald reports the
driver, who’d been shot twice in
the arm and once in the chest,
crashed head-on into a SUV
about a mile away. He was dead
when paramedics arrived. His
name and race haven’t been
released. The trooper is
Hispanic.
NYC man gets prison for calling
in 50 fake emergencies to 911
NEW YORK (AP) — A New York
City man has been sentenced to
six years in prison for calling
911 more than 50 times to
report fake emergencies.
Ronald DeShields was sentenced Thursday.
The calls, made between
January and February 2014,
included false claims of policeinvolved shootings, law enforcement in need of assistance and
fires with people trapped.
DeShields had the phone used
for the calls when he was arrested.
Queens District Attorney
Richard A. Brown says his
actions put lives at risk by preventing rescuers from responding to real emergencies.
DeShields was convicted in
April on charges of falsely
reporting an incident and reckless endangerment.
Navy investigating cause of
training mission jet crash
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Four
Navy aviators ejected from two
fighter jets “at a high rate of
speed” after their aircraft got
into trouble in the air and
plunged into the Atlantic Ocean
off the North Carolina coast, one
of the rescuers said.
The F/A-18 Super Hornet jet
fighters, based in Virginia
Beach,
crashed
Thursday
around 10:40 a.m. off the coast
of Cape Hatteras, following an
“in-flight mishap” that happened
during a training exercise, said
Lt. Cmdr. Tiffani Walker, a
spokeswoman for Naval Air
Force Atlantic. Walker did not
have any further details.
The four crew members suffered only minor injuries.
“In my opinion, the guys got
pretty lucky,” Derick Ansley, an
aviation survival technician with
the Coast Guard who helped
rescue two of the aviators, told
WTKR-TV. “Everything happened exactly the way it should
have in that situation and somebody was looking over their
shoulder when it was happening. For people to walk away
from that is a pretty amazing
thing,” he said.
Claude Morrissey, another
Coast Guard rescuer, told WTKR
the aviators ejected from the jet
“at a high rate of speed.” Ansley
said some wreckage from one of
the jets was still on the surface
of the water when they got to the
men.
Two of the aviators were rescued by the crew of the commercial fishing vessel Tammy, and
the other two survivors were
hoisted out of the water by a
Coast Guard helicopter, the
Coast Guard said in a state-
ment. A second Coast Guard
helicopter picked up the aviators
from the fishing vessel and all
four survivors were taken to
Norfolk
Sentara
General
Hospital.
Search for California teen girl
goes on after suspect killed
SOLVANG, Calif. (AP) —
Authorities were searching
across a wide area in California
for a teenage girl with hopes of
finding her alive after the man
suspected of abducting her was
killed in a shootout with
deputies.
Fernando Castro, 19, whose
car had been the subject of an
Amber Alert for 15-year-old
Pearl Pinson, exchanged gunfire
with deputies at a Santa
Barbara County mobile home
park Thursday about 300 miles
south of where she was taken a
day earlier, Solano County
Sheriff Thomas Ferrara said.
Pinson had still not been
found several hours after the
shootout,
Ferrara
said.
Authorities have been frantically
searching for her since a witness
reported hearing a girl screaming for help as a man dragged
her across a freeway overpass in
Vallejo on Wednesday morning.
Authorities described the two
teens as acquaintances, but
emphasized that they believe
Pinson was taken unwillingly.
Churchgoer charged in Sunday
service slaying headed to trial
NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — A
suburban Philadelphia church
member has been ordered to
stand trial on charges that he
shot a fellow churchgoer to
death after the victim became
verbally disruptive during
Sunday services and punched
the man in the face.
A Montgomery Township
judge on Thursday ordered Mark
Storms to stand trial in July on
charges
of
voluntary
manslaughter and reckless
endangerment.
The 46-year-old Lansdale man
is charged with killing 27-yearold Robert Braxton III during
church services in North Wales
late last month.
Investigators say Storms
ordered Braxton to leave after
showing him a concealed
weapons permit badge and a
handgun. Court documents say
Braxton punched Storms, who
then shot Braxton twice.
A judge ordered Storms’ bail
to remain at $250,000.
Defense attorney, Vincent
DiFabio, says he’ll argue the
killing was in self-defense.
Rapper facing charges
in T.I. concert shooting
NEW YORK (AP) — A rapper
who police say was seen on surveillance footage firing a gun
inside a crowded New York City
concert venue is facing attempted murder and weapons
charges.
Police say they arrested 30year-old Roland Collins on
Thursday, a day after the deadly
shooting at Irving Plaza, where
hip-hop artist T.I. was set to perform.
Family members say the man
who died, 33-year-old Ronald
McPhatter, was a member of
Collins’ entourage and had been
there to provide security. Police
say Collins suffered a gunshot
wound to the leg.
There were nearly 1,000 people in the venue when the
shooting began late Wednesday
night.
Police say one of the victims,
34-year-old Christopher Vinson,
was shot in the chest on the
venue’s ground level after a bullet traveled through the floor.
Another bystander, 26-year-old
Maggie Heckstall, was shot in
the leg.
Students disciplined in Florida
bathroom sex incident
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) —
Sixteen students in southwest
Florida have been disciplined
after they were found to be
involved in sexual activity inside
a high school restroom.
The News-Press reports that
Lee County School District
spokeswoman Amity Chandler
said Wednesday that the punishment ranged across several
levels. She didn’t specify what
punishments were handed
down.
The discipline followed the
discovery that multiple male
students had engaged in sexual
activity with a female student in
a restroom May 17.
Chandler says no further disciplinary actions are pending.
She also said that when the incident occurred, after regular
school hours, some adults were
in the hallway where the bathroom was.
The Lee County Sheriff’s
Office is checking into a cellphone video of the incident.
Man accused of plotting to join
Islamic State testifies
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A
Minnesota man on trial for plotting to go to Syria to join the
Islamic State group testified
Thursday that he thought about
leaving the United States
because he could feel the government closing in, but said he
had no real plan and believed a
scheme to get fake passports for
the journey was a bad idea.
Guled Ali Omar, 21, is one of
three men on trial in U.S.
District Court in Minnesota on
multiple counts. The most serious is conspiracy to commit
murder outside the United
States, which carries the possibility of life in prison. He is the
only defendant to testify.
Prosecutors have said the men
were part of a larger group of
friends in Minnesota’s Somali
community who recruited and
inspired each other to go to
Syria. Six other men who were
part of the alleged plot have
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to
support a foreign terrorist
organization. A 10th man is atlarge, believed to be in Syria.
During the trial, which is in
its third week, prosecutors
played secretly recorded conversations in which the men discussed travel plans, including
the possibility of obtaining fake
passports to go to Syria via
Mexico.
Omar testified that he and his
friends held regular study
groups to discuss the Quran. He
said that after one man left for
Syria, the group began discussing the political situation
there, but the group was not like
the government portrayed it and
he knew of no legitimate plans
for anyone to travel.
More severe weather and
tornadoes roil Plains; no injuries
CHAPMAN, Kan. (AP) — Severe
weather spawning numerous tornadoes roiled large stretches of
Kansas for a second day
Thursday, prompting residents
to anxiously watch the skies but
causing only scattered damage in
rural areas and no injuries or
deaths.
A late afternoon tornado warning in the Kansas City area
prompted a brief precautionary
evacuation of Kansas City
International Airport in Missouri,
forcing travelers and other visitors into parking garage tunnels,
local media reported. The airport
was back in operation by early
evening.
The area was on high alert a
day after a half-mile-wide tornado stayed on the ground for
about
90
minutes
near
Chapman, Kansas, Wednesday
night and traveled 26 miles.
The National Weather Service
began issuing tornado warnings
early Thursday afternoon, with
the first sighting of a tornado
near the tiny northeast Kansas
town of St. George in Riley
County about 2 p.m.
An hour later, five tornadoes
were reported in a cluster of
counties in northeast Kansas,
where law enforcement reported
baseball-size hail that damaged
cars and homes in Meriden
northeast of Topeka.
At the same time, several
southwestern Kansas counties
were under tornado warnings,
but no twisters had touched
down.
Early Thursday evening, the
weather service said a tornado
knocked down tree limbs and
damaged some outbuildings near
the 4,400-resident northeastern
Kansas town of Wamego, though
the intensity of that twister
would not be assessed until
Friday.
In neighboring Missouri, an Air
Force worker at the Whiteman
base roughly 70 miles southeast
of Kansas City reported a tornado had touched down.
The tornado on Wednesday
night
near
1,400-resident
Chapman, 140 miles west of
Kansas City, Kansas, damaged or
destroyed about 20 homes but
edged past Chapman’s southern
side after forecasters declared a
“tornado emergency” for the
town. “Numerous” miles of power
lines were extensively damaged,
along with a set of railroad
tracks, Kansas officials said
Thursday.
A survey team from the
National Weather Service office at
Topeka rated the tornado as an
EF4 on a scale of tornado
strength — EF5 is the highest —
with estimated peak winds of 180
mph.
In Kansas’ Dickinson County,
a tornado Wednesday was
blamed for destroying eight
homes and heavily damaging as
many as 20 others and farmsteads.
“It’s amazing how this tornado
missed those centers of population,” said Paul Froelich, a
Dickinson County fire district.
“And we had outstanding early
warning on this. ... People knew
well in advance of this storm.
Consider also, this is Kansas.
This is Tornado Alley.”
Man admits kidnapping, raping
teenage girl; gets 45-90 years
LACONIA, N.H. (AP) — A man
who kidnapped a 14-year-old
girl when she accepted his offer
of a ride home from school
because her feet were sore, held
her captive for nine months and
raped her repeatedly at his trailer acknowledged his crimes on
Thursday and apologized. The
girl, who was in court to hear his
admission, thanked him for
eventually letting her go.
Nathaniel Kibby pleaded
guilty to seven counts including
kidnapping, aggravated felonious sex assault and criminal
threatening. He was sentenced
to 45 to 90 years in prison.
Kibby, who had pleaded not
guilty after his arrest, had been
scheduled to go on trial next
month on nearly 200 felony
charges related to the girl’s
October 2013 disappearance
and the months that followed.
But he changed his pleas to
guilty at a hearing on Thursday.
Before the 35-year-old Kibby
entered his new pleas, a prosecutor said Kibby had kidnapped
the girl by offering her a ride
home from her school and then
brandishing a gun when she
tried to get out of his car.
Prosecutor Jane Young said
the girl and Kibby didn’t know
each other and she accepted the
ride because she’d worn boots to
school that day and her feet were
blistered. Young said when the
girl tried to get out of the car in a
parking lot Kibby pulled out the
gun and threatened to “blow her
brains out” and slit her throat.
Last week, a judge ruled
Kibby’s lawyers could not question the girl before his trial
about her exposure to media
coverage of the case and the
amount of freedom she was
given to move about his trailer in
Gorham, where prosecutors say
he used a stun gun, zip ties and
a shock collar to control her.
Kibby was charged with kidnapping the girl on Oct. 9, 2013, as
she walked home from her high
school in Conway. The girl
returned to her home in North
Conway the night of July 20, 2014.
Spy getting posthumous medal,
70 years after nomination
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — A
woman who was an American
spy in post-World War II Poland
is posthumously receiving the
Legion of Merit, 70 years after
her nomination.
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Virginia,
announced Thursday that the
Army will confer the award on
Stephanie Rader of Alexandria,
who died in January at age 100.
While the award is seven
decades late, it comes in time for
Rader’s scheduled burial June 1
at Arlington National Cemetery.
Rader, from Poughkeepsie,
New York, was the daughter of
Polish immigrants and served in
the Women’s Army Auxiliary
Corps. Her Polish fluency caught
the attention of the Office of
Strategic Services, forerunner to
the CIA.
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473-2620
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GOP conservatives scuttle spending bill over gay rights
WASHINGTON (AP) — Angry
House conservatives voted down
a routine spending bill Thursday
in a fight over gay rights, underscoring the passions surrounding
a social issue that is dividing the
Republican Party and the nation
in this election year.
The 305-112 vote killed a
spending bill for energy and
water projects, and may imperil
GOP efforts to pass any more of
the 12 annual appropriations
bills for the upcoming budget
year, work that is the most basic
function of Congress.
Last year, the appropriations
process derailed in similar fashion in a fight over the Confederate
flag. Both outcomes illustrate
that even as Speaker Paul Ryan
tries to focus the House on producing a governing agenda and
taking care of essential work like
funding the government, social
issues can sidetrack lawmakers
and produce uncomfortable
clashes within the GOP.
The implosion Thursday came
a day after Democrats added an
amendment to the energy and
water bill protecting lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender people
from discrimination by federal
contractors. The amendment,
which passed on a 223-195 vote,
was aimed at upholding an
Obama administration executive
order. But Republicans argued it
represented an assault on religious liberties, since contractors
might be required to make
accommodations for gay or transgender people in violation of their
own religious beliefs.
When the underlying bill came
up for final passage Thursday,
more than half of House
Republicans went against their
own leadership and voted “no.”
“We have to protect the free
exercise of religion. We didn’t
intend for this fight to be added
to
this
appropriation.
Nevertheless, it was,” said Rep.
Steve Russell, R-Okla. “Obviously
you saw the result. We need to go
back to the drawing board.”
Democrats saw it differently.
“House Republicans’ thirst to
discriminate against the LGBT
community is so strong that they
are willing to vote down their own
appropriations bill in order to
prevent progress over bigotry,”
said Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif. “In turning
against a far-reaching funding
bill simply because it affirms protections for LGBT Americans,
Republicans have once again lain
bare the depths of their bigotry.”
Democrats
overwhelmingly
opposed the bill over a GOP provision they said defends North
Carolina’s transgender bathroom
law and thus allows discrimination against the LGBT community. The Obama administration
has filed suit against the North
Carolina law and has threatened
to take away federal funding for
the state, and Republicans muscled through a provision to
ensure that federal dollars are
not taken away.
Ryan blamed Democrats for
the outcome Thursday, even as
other Republicans acknowledged
that as the majority party they
have the responsibility to get
spending bills across the finish
line. Several Republicans also
suggested that Ryan’s commitment to open floor procedures
might have to be revisited.
“Early on I stood up here ...
and said that some bills might
fail because we’re not going to
tightly control the process and
predetermine the outcome of
everything around here. We’ll,
that’s what happened here
today,” Ryan said.
“What we learned today is that
the Democrats were not looking
to advance an issue but to sabotage the appropriations process,”
he said.
Ironically, a Confederate flag
amendment similar to the one
that stopped the process last year
was added to a different spending
bill last week with little fanfare,
but no sooner did Ryan dispense
with that controversy than the
gay-rights issue arose. Some of
the more pragmatic-minded
Republicans expressed frustration at finding themselves once
again sidetracked onto a social
issue.
“I’ve said it many times that I
don’t think it’s on our party’s best
interests to get distracted by very
contentious social and cultural
issues. I would prefer to leave
them alone,” said Rep. Charlie
Dent, R-Pa. “I guess what disturbs me most is that these types
of issues distract us from the
underlying objective.”
The gay rights amendment, by
Democratic Rep. Sean Patrick
Maloney, New York’s first openly
gay congressman, caused chaos
on the floor last week when it
looked like it was going to pass
on a different spending bill before
Republicans started switching
their votes against it amid cries
of, “Shame! Shame!” from
Democrats.
Several House Republicans
and aides said the issue was
proving divisive and emotional
within
their
conference.
Thursday morning, House
Republicans began a regular
closed-door meeting with the
reading of a prayer, as usual. But
this time, Rep. Rick Allen of
Georgia quoted from the biblical
book of Romans, including passages that seemed to listeners to
relate to those who had supported the Maloney amendment,
such as: “Men committed shameful acts with other men, and
received in themselves the due
penalty for their error.”
Lawmakers and aides present
said some people were intensely
uncomfortable and some walked
out.
Allen’s
spokeswoman
Madison Fox said the congressman made no reference to the
amendment or the bill.
First drug-oozing
implant to control
addiction OK’d
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal
health officials on Thursday
approved an innovative new option
for Americans struggling with
addiction to heroin and painkillers:
a drug-oozing implant that curbs
craving and withdrawal symptoms
for six months at a time.
The first-of-a-kind device,
Probuphine, arrives as communities across the U.S. grapple with a
wave of addiction tied to opioids,
highly-addictive drugs that include
legal pain medications like
OxyContin and illegal narcotics
like heroin. Roughly 2.5 million
Americans suffer from addiction
disorders related to the drugs,
according to federal estimates.
The implant from Braeburn
Pharmaceuticals is essentially a
new, long-term delivery system for
an established drug, buprenorphine, which has long been used to
treat opioid addiction. But its
implantable format could help
patients avoid dangerous relapses
that can occur if they miss a medication dose.
The matchstick-size implant
slowly releases a low dose of
buprenorphine over six months.
Previously the drug was only available as a pill or film that dissolves
under the tongue. It is considered a
safer, more palatable alternative to
methadone, the decades-old standard for controlling opioid addiction.
Probuphine is intended for
patients who have already been
stabilized on low-to-medium doses
of buprenorphine for at least a half
year. Braeburn estimates that one
fourth, or 325,000, of the 1.3 million patients currently taking
buprenorphine meet that criterion.
The FDA previously rejected
Probuphine in 2012, judging the
drug’s dose was too low to reliably
help the broad range of opioidaddicted patients. Braeburn and
partner Titan Pharmaceuticals
resubmitted the product with additional data and it received a positive endorsement from federal
advisers earlier this year.
The FDA said Thursday that
Probuphine should be used as part
of a multipronged addiction treatment program that includes counseling and other forms of support.
Doctors who implant the device
must also receive special training
to safely insert and remove the
device.
FDA officials are spotlighting
new treatment options for opioid
abuse, after weathering heavy criticism for not acting faster to combat the epidemic of addiction and
overdose tied to the drugs.
“We must do everything we can
to make new, innovative treatment
options available that can help
patients regain control over their
lives,” said Dr. Robert Califf, who
became FDA commissioner in
February.
Heroin and opioid painkillers
caused 28,650 fatal overdoses in
2014, the highest number on
record in the U.S. Despite those
numbers, experts say buprenorphine remains underused due to
federal limits on how many prescriptions each doctors can write,
gaps in insurance and a lack of
acceptance by doctors.
Along with increasing compliance, Probuphine has the potential to address other problems
associated with the oral buprenorphine, including illegal diversion
and accidental poisoning in children.
The implant comes with significant safety risks, including nerve
damage and punctured skin if it
accidentally moves after implantation. Patients should be seen during the first week after the procedure and at least once a month
afterward for counseling and follow-up care.
The Valley View Ruritan Club, along
with volunteers from Cedar Springs Baptist
Church, adorned the Cedar Springs
Cemetery with U.S. flags honoring fallen
veterans. “We are proud of our veterans
that gave so much to this great country. To
our veterans we salute and thank you,” a
representative said. Volunteers included
Arnold Truelove, Randy Truelove, Billy and
Jean Pierce, Jerry Dale, Sally Ogle, Jerry
Vincent and Dennis Vincent.
Dump Trump? Some millennials aren’t so sure
COSTA MESA, Calif. (AP) —
Brendan De Regla drove three
hours and waited in line for half a
day to see Donald Trump speak
at a rally in Southern California.
Dozens of college-aged protesters shouted on the other side of a
police line, but De Regla, 22,
stood unwaveringly in support of
Trump.
“I just fell in love with him
immediately,” he said, sporting a
“Make America Great Again” Tshirt. “Since day one, I’ve loved
him. But I knew it would take
some time for people to figure out
what he was about and what he
was going to do and it’s finally
happening.”
While most polls show Bernie
Sanders is the overwhelming
favorite of millennials — voters
between the ages of 18 and 35 —
some young voters are taking a
serious look at Trump as the primary season rolls on. In a
Harvard Institute of Politics poll
out this spring, 25 percent of peo-
ple under 30 said they would vote
for Trump if he faced off against
Hillary Clinton in the fall.
Sanders still has the clear
advantage among millennials,
and the same Harvard poll shows
80 percent of young people with a
very favorable opinion of Sanders
would vote for Clinton if he drops
out.
But young voters are united in
their anger and disillusionment,
having come of age during the
Great Recession. Trump has
tapped into that subset of those
voters in the same way as
Sanders, despite their radically
different policy proposals, said
Morley Winograd, a senior fellow
at the University of Southern
California who has authored
books on millennials.
Young voters think: “‘The system is rigged, I need somebody to
totally overthrow the system’ and
that’s what Trump says he’s going
to do and that’s what Sanders
says he’s going to do,” he said.
“You can understand where there
might be those commonalities.”
Millennials are also deeply suspicious of corporate power and
bureaucracy, in part because
many watched their own families
suffer during the economic meltdown. That leads to a greater distrust of Clinton, who is seen as
part of the establishment; 53 percent of those under 30 say they
dislike Clinton, according to the
Harvard IOP poll.
“Right now, their disapproval of
her is kind of hard to watch in
some ways,” said Kei KawashimaGinsberg, director of the Center
for Information and Research on
Civic Learning and Engagement
at Tufts University, which has
studied millennial voting patterns
in this election. What seems to be
missing is party loyalty among
young people who are voting,
Kawashima-Ginsberg said. “It
seems to be a mistake to assume
that because there’s a Democratic
Party nominee that they will vote
for that person.”
That’s already been the case for
28-year-old Newport Beach voter
Kevin Morton.
Morton, who is black, voted for
Barack Obama in 2008, but then
he lost his house to foreclosure
during the recession and was
unemployed for a year.
Now a self-employed small
business owner, Morton said he
began to follow politics more
closely and studied up on what
caused the economic collapse and
world politics.
He briefly considered Sanders
for his honesty, but ultimately
settled on Trump because
Sanders is “too hippyish.”
“I’m going to vote Republican
this election but that doesn’t
mean I’m Republican. ... This is a
choice we’re making for the next
four years.”
Even some of the youngest millennials who didn’t suffer the
brunt of the recession see promise in Trump.
Jeremy Wiggins, 20, is a junior
at the University of Missouri and
a delegate to the Republican
National Convention.
He plans to vote for Trump at
the convention although he, too,
respects Sanders for his message,
he said.
“You have an honesty (with)
Sanders or Trump, an honesty
with your candidate,” he said.
“But for why you’d choose Trump
over Sanders, for somebody my
age you’re going to be in the job
market very soon, starting your
first job, getting health insurance
and ... we want the jobs to be
there.”
Trump is still a long way from
cementing the support of these
voters, who “grew up with this
cultural norm of not bullying,
being inclusive and with diversity
being seen as a strength, not a
weakness,” said Thad Kousser, a
professor of political science at
the University of California, San
Diego.
Origin of key Clinton emails from report are mystery
WASHINGTON (AP) — Since
her use of a private email server
was made public last year,
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has insisted
she turned over all work-related
emails to the State Department to
be released to the public.
But after 14 months of public
scrutiny and the release of tens of
thousands of emails, an agency
watchdog’s discovery of at least
three previously undisclosed
emails has renewed concerns
that Clinton was not completely
forthcoming when she turned
over a trove of 55,000 pages of
emails. And the revelation has
spawned fresh criticism from presumptive Republican presidential
nominee Donald Trump.
The three messages — which
appear to have been found
among electronic files of four former
top
Clinton
State
Department aides — included
Clinton’s own explanation of why
she wanted her emails kept private. In a November 2010, email,
Clinton worried that her personal
messages could become accessible to outsiders.
Two other messages a year
later divulged possible security
weaknesses in the home email
system she used while secretary
of state. The Clinton campaign
has previously denied that her
home server was compromised.
On Thursday, Clinton, who has
called her use of a private email
server “a mistake,” said she had
been forthcoming with her personal emails and said she
believed her use of a private email
account was allowed.
“I have provided all of my workrelated emails, and I’ve asked
that they be made public, and I
think that demonstrates that I
wanted to make sure that this
information was part of the official records,” Clinton said,
according to an interview transcript provided by ABC News.
Most of Clinton’s emails have
been made public by the State
Department over the past year
due to both a court order and
Clinton’s willingness to turn
them over. But hundreds were
censored for national security
reasons and 22 emails were completely withheld because the
agency said they contained top
secret material — a matter now
under investigation by the FBI.
Clinton said in March 2015
that she would turn over all
work-related emails to the State
Department after removing private messages that contained
personal and family material. “No
one wants their personal emails
made public and I think most
people understand that and
respect their privacy,” she said
after her exclusive use of private
emails to conduct State
Department business was confirmed by media reports.
Senate investigators have
asked for numerous emails about
Clinton’s server as part of their
own inquiry into Clinton’s email
practices in recent months, but
they didn’t get copies of key messages made public by the State
Department’s own watchdog this
week, a senior Republican senator said Thursday.
“It is disturbing that the State
Department knew it had emails
like this and turned them over to
the inspector general, but not to
Congress,” said Iowa Sen.
Charles Grassley, the chair of the
Senate judiciary committee that’s
been probing Clinton’s use of a
private server.
The emails appear to contain
work-related passages, raising
questions about why they were
not turned over to the State
Department last year. The
inspector general noted that
Clinton’s production of workrelated emails was “incomplete,”
missing not only the three emails
but numerous others covering
Clinton’s first four months in
office.
The inspector general also
found Clinton’s email set up vio-
lated agency policies and could
have left sensitive government
information vulnerable. It also
complicated federal archiving of
her emails, in turn making it
more difficult to obtain them
under
the
Freedom
of
Information Act.
On Thursday, Clinton told ABC
News her use of the personal
email was “allowed,” saying that
“the rules have been clarified
since I left.” In a later interview
Thursday with CNN, Clinton said
she “believed it was allowed.”
A spokesman for the Clinton
campaign did not respond to
emailed questions Thursday. An
inspector general’s spokesman
declined to discuss the report.
The report said the inspector
general was able to reconstruct
some of Clinton’s missing emails
by searching the email files of
four former Clinton aides who
had turned over thousands of
pages of communications in 2015
at the request of the State
Department, which is defending
itself in multiple public records
lawsuits, including one filed by
The Associated Press. The four
aides who turned over those files,
according to the report, were
Clinton’s former chief of staff,
Cheryl Mills, and top aides Huma
Abedin, Jake Sullivan and
Philippe Reines.
Clinton
Abedin was the aide who
authored the key email in
November 2010 that provoked
Clinton’s concerns about outsiders obtaining her personal
emails.
After
the
State
Department’s computer spam filters apparently prevented Clinton
from sending a message to all
department employees from her
private server, Abedin suggested
that she either open an official
agency email or make her private
address available to the agency.
Clinton told Abedin she was
open to getting a separate email
address but didn’t want “any risk
of the personal being accessible.”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—13
FRIDAY
SportS
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Goode hopes to ‘put’ his
name on winner’s list
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
Bradley Central’s track and
field team saw its fair share of
success during the season, but
it’s junior Spencer Goode who
has emerged as the program’s
hope for TSSAA State Track
and Field Championship success.
“He’s one of 16 people left in
the shot put and discus in the
state, and that’s an accomplishment in itself. We can’t
really worry about those other
15, we’re just going to take care
of what we can take care of and
let the chips fall,” said Bradley
track and field coach Eddie
Frazier.
“It’s a stage he’s never been
on before, so that’s exciting.
We’ll see how he responds —
everyone over there is good.
He’s excited, we’re excited, so
we’re hoping for a PR (personal
record) and possibly seeing
him get on the podium and get
All-State.”
Coming into the state meet,
Goode is seeded fifth in the
shot put with a distance of 50
feet, 1/2 inch, and eighth in
discus throw with a distance of
134 feet, 4 inches.
To finish with All-State honors and reach the podium,
Goode must finish in the top
eight in each event.
Goode has shown promise in
both shot put and the discus
throw all season, but really
began to come into his own in
late April at the Bradley
County Championships.
There, he set a new personal
record in the shot put and also
grabbed first place with a
throw of 44 feet, 4.5 inches. He
finished second in the discus
throw with a distance of 112
feet, 7 inches.
His distances have only
increased with each meet
since.
On May 6, Goode competed
in the Chattanooga Little
Caesars
Individual
Championships. He placed secSee GOODE, Page 15
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
CLEvELAND SPRINTER Tiyanna Johnson, center, runs toward the finish line during the 200-meter dash Thursday in the Spring Fling.
Johnson finished with a new personal record and school record of 25.19, which earned her sixth place in the state.
Johnson dashes way to pair of
sixth-place finishes at state
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
Banner file photo, SARALYN NORKUS
BRADLEY CENTRAL junior Spencer Goode will be representing the Bears in the field portion of the TSSAA State Track
and Field Championships today in Murfreesboro. Goode is
competing in the shot put and discus throw.
MURFREESBORO — The
TSSAA Girls State Track and
Field championships are in the
books.
Cleveland saw sophomore
sprinter Tiyanna Johnson reach
the podium twice Thursday
evening, finishing sixth in both
the 100-meter dash and 200meter dash.
“I thought our kids came out
and competed well. Tiyanna had
a good day and has had a big
year,” Cleveland coach Adam
Renshaw stated. “She broke the
school record again — her own
record, which is pretty cool.”
Prior to coming up to Middle
Tennessee, Johnson had set a
goal of running the 200 in 25.30.
She blew past her goal and finished in 25.19.
“I’m pretty proud of myself and
glad that I met one of my goals,”
Johnson declared. “I did good for
my first time being here.”
Cleveland was represented at
the state meet in three other
events, the 4x100-meter relay,
400-meter dash and 300-meter
hurdles, which did not earn AllState honors. The 4x100-meter
relay team consisted of Mikayla
Horton, Courtney Hamilton, Lele
Enalls and Johnson, who finished 13th in the state with a
time of 50.39. Narissa Riley competed in the 400-meter dash, finishing 16th with a time of 1:01.77
and Elizabeth Owens competed
in the 300-meter hurdles, coming
in 14th with a time of 50.24.
Walker Valley did not see any
girls reach the podium on
Thursday, but did see improvements in some events.
Coming into the triple jump
ranked 16th with a jump of 32
feet, 10 inches, senior Megan
Holmes covered a distance of 33
feet, 5.25 inches to finish 14th
overall.
Freshman Kendall Harris also
improved her time in the 3,200meter race. Coming into
Birmingham, Ala. — The Gulf South Conference
announced its 20th annual GSC “Top Ten” Award
winners Thursday, and Lee baseball standout Ben
Holland is a member of the “Top Ten” while softball’s
Lexie Dean was also among those nominated.
These awards, based on athletic, academic and
extracurricular achievement during the 2015-16 academic year, recognize the top five male and top five
female student-athletes as the cream of the GSC
crop. The top male and female receive the
Commissioner’s Trophy, the Conference’s most prestigious honor.
The presentations will be made at the GSC’s
Annual Awards Banquet, Thursday, June 2, at the
Hilton Pensacola Beach in Pensacola Beach, Fla.
starting at 6:30 CDT. The entire ceremony will be
streamed live.
The five male Top Ten winners are seniors: Dallas
Dickey (West Georgia, Football, Carrollton, Georgia),
Greg Gardner (Alabama Huntsville, Basketball,
Indianapolis, Indiana), Mitch Holgate (West Alabama,
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
BRADENTON, Fla. — Lee University’s Adrian Martin narrowly missed
advancing to Saturday’s 100-meter dash final with a ninth-place finish
in the preliminary round at the NCAA Division II National
Championships.
The finish was good enough to earn Martin All-American honors. The
top eight finishers in the final will be first team All-Americans, while
positions 9-12 earn spots on the second team.
Martin was fourth in her heat, with a time of 11.86. The top two athletes in each of the three heats and the next two fastest times advanced
to the final.
Mayah Edwards of Johnson C. Smith University claimed the final
spot with a mark of 11.83. Nikia Squire (Queens University of Charlotte)
was the overall top finisher at 11.42.
Lee junior Martin will now turn her attention to the 200-meter. Event
preliminaries are scheduled for 5:50 p.m. today. Martin is in the first
heat and enters with the fourth-quickest time in her heat, and No. 11
overall. There will be three heats with the top two from each heat, plus
the next two best times advancing to the final Saturday evening.
Baseball, Windsor, Ontario, Canada) and Luke Wingo
(North Alabama, Football, Tuscaloosa, Alabama), and
Ben Holland (Lee, Baseball, Murfreesboro,
Tennessee.
The Lee first baseman is a Business
Administration major (emphasis on finance) with a
3.6 Overall GPA. Holland earned 2016 Gulf South
Conference Player of the Year honors this season,
after hitting .424 with 23 doubles, 18 home runs and
54 RBIs.
The big first baseman strung off a season-best 22game hitting streak (3/6-4/16) this season in which
he racked up eight multihit performances, including,
14 RBIs, 11 doubles and three home runs over that
span. He helped guide his the Flames to its first-ever
GSC Baseball Tournament and to a league-leading
60 team home runs.
Lee University photo
He ranked fifth in all of NCAA Division II with an
LEE
SENIOR
Ben
Holland
was
honored
as
a
Gulf South
.859 slugging percentage and 10th with a .533 onbase percentage. He also topped the GSC in home Conference Top Ten Award winner. These awards, based on athletic,
runs and total bases (175), was second in batting academic and extracurricular achievement during the 2015-16 acaSee HOLLAND, Page 15
demic year, recognize the top five male and top five female GSC student-athletes.
Brewers complete sweep of Braves
AP photo
BRAvES third baseman
Gordon Beckham throws to first
base after fielding a ground ball
against the Milwaukee Brewers
Thursday, in Atlanta.
ATLANTA
(AP)
—
The
Milwaukee Brewers are starting to
play better on the road.
Manager Craig Counsell saw
the trend start to change as his
team was getting swept last weekend in New York.
Milwaukee lost three games to
the Mets by a combined four runs.
“To rebound from it and to
continue to play well is big,”
Counsell said.
Ryan Braun and Jonathan
Villar homered and the Brewers
earned their first sweep in
Atlanta with a 6-2 victory over
the Braves on Thursday night.
The Brewers began the threegame series with a 6-14 road
record, but they found the right
matchup at Turner Field.
Atlanta is 2-20 at home, worst
in the majors. The Braves’ 12-34
record ties the 1906 and 1911
teams for the worst start in franchise history.
Rain delayed the game 1 hour,
17 minutes in the seventh
inning.
Milwaukee took a 3-2 lead in
the fifth on Braun’s ninth homer.
Braun, who left the game for precautionary reasons during the
rain delay, has hit safely in 17 of
his past 18 games for a .383
average, four homers and 13
RBIs.
Villar’s second homer of the
season came off reliever Ian Kroll
in the seventh, right before the
rain arrived, to put the Brewers
up 4-2. Pinch-hitter Hernan
Perez added a two-run triple for a
6-2 lead in the ninth.
Carlos Torres pitched the last
two innings to earn his second
save.
“I gave up some shots today,
and our guys were running down
balls in the gap,” Torres said.
“Our team’s playing hard, and
good things happen.”
Braves starter Matt Wisler (24) had a tough fourth, intentionally walking Martin Maldonado
with two outs to get to pitcher
Wily Peralta, whose two-run
bloop single made it 2-2.
“I just was hoping that he left
something over the plate,”
Peralta said. “I didn’t want to
strike out.”
Wisler guessed wrong by
throwing a slider instead of a
fastball.
“That was the biggest mistake
See JOHNSON, Page 15
Martin turns focus to 200-meter
Holland chosen as GSC ‘Top Ten’
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
Thursday, Harris was ranked
16th with a time of 12:19.52. She
of the game right there,” Wisler
said. “Besides that, I thought I
threw the ball pretty well.”
Wisler allowed six hits, three
runs, two walks and struck out
seven in six innings. The righthander, one of the few bright
spots for the last-place Braves,
has a 2.25 ERA in six starts this
month.
Tyler Flowers hit a two-run
homer in the first to give the
Braves a 2-0 lead, but Atlanta
missed a chance to do damage in
the sixth and the seventh,
stranding five runners against
Brewers reliever Jhan Marinez.
Peralta (3-5) gave up seven
hits, two runs, two walks and
struck out four in 5 1-3 innings.
See BRAVES, Page 15
Tennessee
plans to bring
back Serrano
for 6th season
KNOXVILLE
(AP)
—
Tennessee baseball coach
Dave Serrano will have
another year to try getting
the Volunteers back up the
Southeastern Conference
standings.
Athletic director Dave Hart
said Thursday that Serrano
will return next season.
Serrano’s contract, which
pays him $450,000 per year,
was set to expire June 30.
Hart said he planned to
extend Serrano’s contract by
one year, likely at the same
terms.
“Very simply stated, I still
believe in Dave Serrano,”
Hart said at a news conference. “I still think there is
hope for us to turn the corner with our baseball program.”
Hart said he decided earlier this week to bring Serrano
back. Serrano said Thursday
he was “very grateful” for the
opportunity.
Serrano, who took UC
Irvine and Cal State
Fullerton to the College
World Series earlier in his
career, hasn’t matched that
success
at
Tennessee.
Serrano is 130-138 in five
seasons at Tennessee and
419-278-1 in 12 seasons
overall.
Serrano said Thursday
that “the winning is going to
happen, I’m very confident
See TENNESSEE, Page 15
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
STRIKEOUTS-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 95; Fernandez,
Miami, 90; Strasburg, Washington, 86; Scherzer,
Washington, 84; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 77;
Syndergaard, New York, 76; Nola, Philadelphia, 70; Arrieta,
Chicago, 67; Cueto, San Francisco, 67; Samardzija, San
Francisco, 62.
SAVES-Gomez, Philadelphia, 17; Familia, New York, 16;
Melancon, Pittsburgh, 16; Ramos, Miami, 15; Jansen, Los
Angeles, 14; Papelbon, Washington, 13; McGee, Colorado,
13; Casilla, San Francisco, 12; Jeffress, Milwaukee, 12;
Rodney, San Diego, 10.
american league
east division
w
l
Pct gB
29
18 .617 —
26
19 .578 2
24
25 .490 6
22
24 .478 6½
21
24 .467 7
Central division
w
l
Pct gB
Chicago
27
21 .563 —
Cleveland
25
20 .556 ½
Kansas City
24
22 .522 2
Detroit
23
23 .500 3
Minnesota
12
34 .261 14
west division
w
l
Pct gB
Seattle
28
18 .609 —
Texas
27
20 .574 1½
Los Angeles
21
26 .447 7½
Oakland
20
28 .417 9
Houston
20
28 .417 9
Thursday’s games
Miami 9, Tampa Bay 1
Toronto 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Colorado 8, Boston 2
Houston 4, Baltimore 2
Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, ppd.
Friday’s games
Boston (Kelly 2-0) at Toronto (Sanchez 4-1), 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore (Wright 2-3) at Cleveland (Bauer 3-2), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 2-0) at Tampa Bay (Archer 3-5), 7:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Niese 4-2) at Texas (Hamels 5-0), 8:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Gonzalez 0-1) at Kansas City (Duffy 00), 8:15 p.m.
Detroit (Fulmer 3-1) at Oakland (Manaea 1-2), 10:05 p.m.
Houston (Fiers 3-2) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 2-5), 10:05
p.m.
Minnesota (Dean 0-1) at Seattle (Hernandez 4-3), 10:10
p.m.
Saturday’s games
Boston (Porcello 7-2) at Toronto (Stroman 5-1), 1:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Rodon 2-4) at Kansas City (Ventura 43), 2:15 p.m.
Detroit (Pelfrey 0-4) at Oakland (Hahn 1-2), 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Jimenez 2-5) at Cleveland (Salazar 4-3), 4:10
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 2-5) at Tampa Bay (Moore 1-3), 4:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Nicasio 4-3) at Texas (Darvish 0-0), 7:15 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 2-6) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-3), 10:05
p.m.
Minnesota (Hughes 1-7) at Seattle (Miley 5-2), 10:10 p.m.
aMeRiCan leagUe leadeRS
BATTING-Bogaerts, Boston, .347; Bradley Jr., Boston, .341;
Martinez, Detroit, .338; Ortiz, Boston, .337; Castellanos,
Detroit, .337; Cabrera, Detroit, .322; Reddick, Oakland,
.322; Mazara, Texas, .320; Trout, Anaheim, .318; Lindor,
Cleveland, .318.
RUNS-Betts, Boston, 41; Kinsler, Detroit, 40; Altuve,
Houston, 39; Donaldson, Toronto, 37; Bogaerts, Boston, 37;
Machado, Baltimore, 35; Desmond, Texas, 34; Pedroia,
Boston, 34; Davis, Baltimore, 32; Trout, Anaheim, 32.
RBI-Ortiz, Boston, 45; Cano, Seattle, 43; Encarnacion,
Toronto, 35; Betts, Boston, 35; Bautista, Toronto, 34;
Bradley Jr., Boston, 34; Frazier, Chicago, 34; Cruz, Seattle,
32; Trumbo, Baltimore, 32; Trout, Anaheim, 32; Shaw,
Boston, 32.
HITS-Bogaerts, Boston, 67; Altuve, Houston, 59; Escobar,
Anaheim, 58; Lindor, Cleveland, 57; Betts, Boston, 57;
Trout, Anaheim, 56; Cabrera, Detroit, 56; Machado,
Baltimore, 56; Pedroia, Boston, 56; Bradley Jr., Boston, 56;
Kinsler, Detroit, 56; Cano, Seattle, 56.
DOUBLES-Ortiz, Boston, 22; Altuve, Houston, 18;
Machado, Baltimore, 17; Shaw, Boston, 16; Bogaerts,
Boston, 16; Lawrie, Chicago, 14; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 13;
Pillar, Toronto, 13; Cano, Seattle, 13; Castellanos, Detroit,
12; Beltran, New York, 12; Seager, Seattle, 12; Escobar,
Anaheim, 12; Bradley Jr., Boston, 12; Bautista, Toronto, 12.
TRIPLES-Ellsbury, New York, 4; Bradley Jr., Boston, 4;
Eaton, Chicago, 4; Betts, Boston, 3; Burns, Oakland, 3;
Andrus, Texas, 3; Aoki, Seattle, 3; Swihart, Boston, 2; Marte,
Seattle, 2; Escobar, Kansas City, 2; Chisenhall, Cleveland,
2; Gose, Detroit, 2; Miller, Tampa Bay, 2; Torreyes, New
York, 2; Moya, Detroit, 2; Naquin, Cleveland, 2; Castro,
Houston, 2; Cabrera, Chicago, 2; Seager, Seattle, 2; Perez,
Kansas City, 2; Shaw, Boston, 2; Jackson, Chicago, 2.
HOME RUNS-Cano, Seattle, 14; Frazier, Chicago, 14;
Trumbo, Baltimore, 14; Machado, Baltimore, 13; Davis,
Oakland, 13; Ortiz, Boston, 12; Cabrera, Detroit, 11;
Donaldson, Toronto, 11; Springer, Houston, 11; Beltran, New
York, 10; Trout, Anaheim, 10; Kinsler, Detroit, 10; Bautista,
Toronto, 10; Semien, Oakland, 10; Martinez, Detroit, 10;
Davis, Baltimore, 10; Cruz, Seattle, 10.
STOLEN BASES-Altuve, Houston, 15; Burns, Oakland, 12;
Davis, Cleveland, 11; Escobar, Kansas City, 10; Santana,
Minnesota, 10; Desmond, Texas, 9; Lindor, Cleveland, 9;
Ellsbury, New York, 9; Betts, Boston, 8; Gardner, New York,
8; Correa, Houston, 8; Dyson, Kansas City, 8; Nunez,
Minnesota, 8; Martin, Seattle, 8.
PITCHING-Sale, Chicago, 9-1; Zimmermann, Detroit, 7-2;
Hill, Oakland, 7-3; Porcello, Boston, 7-2; Price, Boston, 7-1;
Tomlin, Cleveland, 7-0; Happ, Toronto, 6-2; Latos, Chicago,
6-1; Ramirez, Tampa Bay, 6-2; Tillman, Baltimore, 6-1.
ERA-Hill, Oakland, 2.18; Hernandez, Seattle, 2.21;
Quintana, Chicago, 2.22; Sale, Chicago, 2.26; Salazar,
Cleveland, 2.32; Zimmermann, Detroit, 2.52; Wright,
Boston, 2.52; Tillman, Baltimore, 2.61; Walker, Seattle, 2.70;
Estrada, Toronto, 2.76.
STRIKEOUTS-Price, Boston, 76; Verlander, Detroit, 70;
Sale, Chicago, 69; Smyly, Tampa Bay, 67; Kluber,
Cleveland, 67; Salazar, Cleveland, 67; Hill, Oakland, 65;
Archer, Tampa Bay, 65; Hamels, Texas, 62; Quintana,
Chicago, 60.
SAVES-Rodriguez, Detroit, 14; Britton, Baltimore, 12; Davis,
Kansas City, 12; Robertson, Chicago, 12; Kimbrel, Boston,
12; Cishek, Seattle, 12; Colome, Tampa Bay, 12; Madson,
Oakland, 11; Allen, Cleveland, 11; Tolleson, Texas, 11.
Boston
Baltimore
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
Contributed photo
The new Cleveland high SChool Raider Arena hosted the
largest wrestling freestyle dual tournament in the South on May 21.
With 13 teams from four different states, the Flight Time Duals welcomed some of the toughest competition in the South. Higher
Calling’s All-star team, Team Cash, won the event over The Alabama
Wrestling Club. Team Cash is a traveling team sponsored by Allan
Jones and Check Into Cash. “Allan has always provided our athletes
with every opportunity to be successful. We couldn’t do it without
him,” said head coach Josh Bosken, above.
on aiR
Sports on Tv
Friday, May 27
aUTo RaCing
11 a.m.
NBCSN — IndyCar Series, Indianapolis 500, Carb Day
practice, at Indianapolis
noon
NBCSN — Indy Lights Freedom 100, at Indianapolis
1 p.m.
NBCSN — IndyCar Series, Indianapolis 500, Carb Day, at
Indianapolis
College SoFTBall
5 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 2,
Florida vs. Georgia, at Gainesville, Fla.
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 2,
Oklahoma vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, at Norman, Okla.
9 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 1,
Washington vs. Alabama, at Tuscaloosa, Ala.
golF
5 a.m.
GOLF — European PGA Tour, BMW PGA Championship,
second round, at Surrey, England
1 p.m.
GOLF — Champions Tour, Senior PGA Championship, second round, at Benton Harbor, Mich.
4 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, Dean & DeLuca Invitational, second
round, at Fort Worth, Texas
7 p.m.
GOLF — LPGA Tour, Volvik Championship, second round,
at Ann Arbor, Mich. (same-day tape)
MlB BaSeBall
7 p.m.
MLB — L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Mets OR St. Louis at
Washington
7:30 p.m.
FSSE — Miami at Atlanta
nBa BaSKeTBall
8:30 p.m.
ESPN — Playoffs, Eastern Conference, finals, Game 6,
Cleveland at Toronto
SoCCeR
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — Men’s national teams, International friendly, England
vs. Australia, at Sunderland, England
wnBa BaSKeTBall
8:30 p.m.
NBA — Atlanta at Dallas
Saturday, May 28
aUTo RaCing
8 a.m.
NBCSN — Formula One, Monaco Grand Prix, qualifying, at
Monte Carlo
10 a.m.
FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Coca-Cola 600, practice, at Concord, N.C.
11 a.m.
FS1 — NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Hisense 4K TV 300, qualifying, at Concord, N.C.
1 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Coca-Cola 600, final
practice, at Concord, N.C.
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Hisense 4K TV 300, at
Concord, N.C.
BoXing
10 p.m.
FS1 — Felix Diaz vs. Miguel Vazquez, super lightweights, at
San Antonio
College laCRoSSe
noon
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Men's Championship, first semifinal, at Philadelphia
2:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Men's Championship, second
semifinal, at Philadelphia
College SoFTBall
noon
ESPN — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 2, teams
TBA
3 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 3, teams
TBA (if necessary)
4:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 2,
teams TBA
5:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 2, teams
TBA
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 1,
teams TBA
7:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 3, teams
TBA (if necessary)
8:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 3,
teams TBA (if necessary)
9:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Division I, Super Regionals, Game 1, teams
TBA
golF
7:30 a.m.
GOLF — European PGA Tour, BMW PGA Championship,
third round, at Virginia Water, Surrey, England
1 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, Dean & DeLuca Invitational, third round,
at Fort Worth, Texas
3 p.m.
GOLF — LPGA Tour, Volvik Championship, third round, at
Ann Arbor, Mich.
2:30 p.m.
NBC — Champions Tour, Senior PGA Championship, third
round, at Benton Harbor, Mich.
3 p.m.
CBS — PGA Tour, Dean & DeLuca Invitational, third round,
at Fort Worth, Texas
MlB BaSeBall
1 p.m.
MLB — Boston at Toronto
4 p.m.
MLB — N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay OR Baltimore at
Cleveland
FSSE — Miami at Atlanta
6 p.m.
FOX — Regional coverage, L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Mets, St.
Louis at Washington or Pittsburgh at Texas
10 p.m.
MLB — Houston at L.A. Angels OR Minnesota at Seattle
nBa BaSKeTBall
9 p.m.
TNT — Playoffs, Western Conference, finals, Game 6,
Golden State at Oklahoma City (if necessary)
SoCCeR
2:30 p.m.
FOX — UEFA Champions League, final, Atlético Madrid vs.
Real Madrid, at Milan
5 p.m.
FS1 — Men's national teams, International friendly, Mexico
vs. Paraguay, at Atlanta
8 p.m.
FS1 — Men's national teams, International friendly, United
States vs. Bolivia, at Kansas City, Kan.
TenniS
noon
NBC — French Open, men's & women's third round, at
Paris
TRaCK & Field
3:30 p.m.
NBC — Prefontaine Classic, at Eugene, Ore.
5 p.m.
NBC — Prefontaine Classic, at Eugene, Ore.
on TaP
Friday, May 27
TRaCK & Field
TSSaa Spring Fling
(Boys Running events finals begin at 4)
Boys Field events
at MTSU
Long Jump, 10 a.m.
Shot Put, 10 a.m.
Discus, 12:30
BaSeBall
national league
east division
w
l
Pct gB
29
19 .604 —
27
19 .587 1
26
21 .553 2½
25
22 .532 3½
12
34 .261 16
Central division
w
l
Pct gB
Chicago
31
14 .689 —
Pittsburgh
27
19 .587 4½
St. Louis
24
24 .500 8½
Milwaukee
21
26 .447 11
Cincinnati
15
32 .319 17
west division
w
l
Pct gB
San Francisco
30
19 .612 —
Los Angeles
25
23 .521 4½
Colorado
22
24 .478 6½
Arizona
21
28 .429 9
San Diego
19
29 .396 10½
Thursday’s games
Pittsburgh 8, Arizona 3
Miami 9, Tampa Bay 1
Washington 2, St. Louis 1
Colorado 8, Boston 2
Milwaukee 6, Atlanta 2
Friday’s games
Philadelphia (Morgan 1-2) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 4-3),
2:20 p.m.
St. Louis (Garcia 3-4) at Washington (Scherzer 5-3), 7:05
p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Urias 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 3-1), 7:10
p.m.
Miami (Conley 3-3) at Atlanta (Perez 2-1), 7:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Niese 4-2) at Texas (Hamels 5-0), 8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Lamb 0-2) at Milwaukee (Davies 1-3), 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Cain 1-5) at Colorado (Chatwood 5-3), 8:40
p.m.
San Diego (Friedrich 0-1) at Arizona (Ray 2-3), 9:40 p.m.
Saturday’s games
Philadelphia (Eickhoff 2-6) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 24), 2:20 p.m.
Cincinnati (Simon 1-5) at Milwaukee (Anderson 2-6), 4:10
p.m.
Miami (Chen 3-2) at Atlanta (Kelly 0-2), 4:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 6-2) at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 3-3) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 5-2),
7:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Nicasio 4-3) at Texas (Darvish 0-0), 7:15 p.m.
St. Louis (Wainwright 4-3) at Washington (Gonzalez 3-2),
7:15 p.m.
San Diego (Vargas 0-2) at Arizona (Greinke 5-3), 10:10 p.m.
naTional leagUe leadeRS
BATTING-Murphy, Washington, .394; Braun, Milwaukee,
.361; Zobrist, Chicago, .346; Prado, Miami, .339; Ozuna,
Miami, .333; Diaz, St. Louis, .329; Herrera, Philadelphia,
.327; Piscotty, St. Louis, .326; Yelich, Miami, .320; Fowler,
Chicago, .319; Harrison, Pittsburgh, .319.
RUNS-Polanco, Pittsburgh, 35; Zobrist, Chicago, 34;
Bryant, Chicago, 33; Arenado, Colorado, 33; Diaz, St. Louis,
32; Piscotty, St. Louis, 32; Fowler, Chicago, 32; Ozuna,
Miami, 31; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 31; Rendon,
Washington, 31.
RBI-Cespedes, New York, 36; Arenado, Colorado, 35;
Bryant, Chicago, 35; Rizzo, Chicago, 35; Story, Colorado,
33; Pence, San Francisco, 33; Carpenter, St. Louis, 32;
Harper, Washington, 32; Zobrist, Chicago, 31; Carter,
Milwaukee, 31.
HITS-Murphy, Washington, 69; Segura, Arizona, 63;
Piscotty, St. Louis, 60; Ozuna, Miami, 59; Prado, Miami, 58;
Marte, Pittsburgh, 55; Zobrist, Chicago, 54; Herrera,
Philadelphia, 54; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 54; Fowler, Chicago,
53; Braun, Milwaukee, 53.
DOUBLES-Polanco, Pittsburgh, 18; Parra, Colorado, 15;
Diaz, St. Louis, 15; Marte, Pittsburgh, 15; Fowler, Chicago,
15; Piscotty, St. Louis, 14; Villar, Milwaukee, 14; Lamb,
Arizona, 14; Murphy, Washington, 14; Cozart, Cincinnati,
14.
TRIPLES-Owings, Arizona, 4; Story, Colorado, 4; Ozuna,
Miami, 4; Blanco, San Francisco, 4; Segura, Arizona, 3;
Panik, San Francisco, 3; Peralta, Arizona, 3; Bruce,
Cincinnati, 3; Dietrich, Miami, 3; Belt, San Francisco, 3.
HOME RUNS-Cespedes, New York, 15; Arenado, Colorado,
14; Carter, Milwaukee, 13; Story, Colorado, 13; Stanton,
Miami, 12; Harper, Washington, 12; Walker, New York, 11;
Rizzo, Chicago, 11; Bryant, Chicago, 10; Kemp, San Diego,
10.
STOLEN BASES-Villar, Milwaukee, 15; Marte, Pittsburgh,
14; Upton Jr., San Diego, 9; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 8;
Polanco, Pittsburgh, 7; Harper, Washington, 7; Harrison,
Pittsburgh, 7; Duffy, San Francisco, 7; Owings, Arizona, 6;
Span, San Francisco, 6; Segura, Arizona, 6; Fowler,
Chicago, 6; Taylor, Washington, 6; Gordon, Miami, 6;
Heyward, Chicago, 6; Herrera, Philadelphia, 6; Myers, San
Diego, 6; Smith, Atlanta, 6.
PITCHING-Arrieta, Chicago, 9-0; Strasburg, Washington, 80; Cueto, San Francisco, 7-1; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 7-1;
Samardzija, San Francisco, 7-2; Fernandez, Miami, 7-2;
Matz, New York, 7-1; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 6-2;
Hammel, Chicago, 6-1; Greinke, Arizona, 5-3.
ERA-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.48; Pomeranz, San Diego,
1.70; Arrieta, Chicago, 1.72; Syndergaard, New York, 1.94;
Hammel, Chicago, 2.17; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 2.17;
Matz, New York, 2.36; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.38; Ross,
Washington, 2.52; Cole, Pittsburgh, 2.53.
Washington
New York
Philadelphia
Miami
Atlanta
BaSKeTBall
nBa Playoff glance
ConFeRenCe FinalS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
eaSTeRn ConFeRenCe
Cleveland 3, Toronto 2
Tuesday, May 17: Cleveland 115, Toronto 84
Thursday, May 19: Cleveland 108, Toronto 89
Saturday, May 21: Toronto 99, Cleveland 84
Monday, May 23: Toronto 105, Cleveland 99
Wednesday, May 25: Cleveland 116, Toronto 78
Friday, May 27: Cleveland at Toronto, 8:30 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 29: Toronto at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m.
weSTeRn ConFeRenCe
oklahoma City 3, golden State 2
Monday, May 16: Oklahoma City 108, Golden State 102
Wednesday, May 18: Golden State 118, Oklahoma City 91
Sunday, May 22: Oklahoma City 133, Golden State 105
Tuesday, May 24: Oklahoma City 118, Golden State 94
Thursday, May 26: Golden State 120, Oklahoma City 111
Saturday, May 28: Golden State at Oklahoma City, 9 p.m.
x-Monday, May 30: Oklahoma City at Golden State, 9 p.m.
golF
Pga-Colonial Par Scores
at Colonial Country Club
Fort worth, Texas
Purse: $6.7 million
Yardage: 7,166; Par: 70 (35-35)
First Round
Bryce Molder
29-35—64
Anirban Lahiri
31-34—65
Patrick Reed
32-33—65
Webb Simpson
33-32—65
Jason Dufner
34-32—66
Ryan Palmer
33-33—66
Kyle Reifers
34-32—66
Martin Piller
30-36—66
Sean O’Hair
34-33—67
David Toms
32-35—67
Harris English
34-33—67
Seung-Yul Noh
33-34—67
Jim Herman
33-34—67
David Hearn
33-34—67
Jonas Blixt
32-35—67
Bill Haas
33-34—67
Jordan Spieth
33-34—67
Colt Knost
34-34—68
Adam Hadwin
36-32—68
Ben Martin
35-33—68
Marc Leishman
33-35—68
Jason Bohn
32-36—68
Kevin Chappell
34-34—68
Tony Finau
35-33—68
Brandt Snedeker
34-34—68
Ricky Barnes
33-35—68
Troy Merritt
32-37—69
Nick Taylor
38-31—69
Emiliano Grillo
37-32—69
Chad Collins
32-37—69
Hunter Mahan
34-35—69
Jason Kokrak
30-39—69
Brett Stegmaier
36-33—69
Tyrone Van Aswegen
32-37—69
Tyler Aldridge
34-35—69
Chez Reavie
32-37—69
Derek Fathauer
33-36—69
Chad Campbell
35-34—69
Chris Stroud
35-34—69
Mark Hubbard
34-35—69
Steven Bowditch
35-34—69
William McGirt
31-38—69
Jeff Overton
35-34—69
Zac Blair
32-37—69
Scott Langley
36-34—70
Kevin Na
36-34—70
Steve Flesch
35-35—70
Jimmy Walker
34-36—70
Matt Jones
37-33—70
Vijay Singh
36-34—70
Robert Streb
35-35—70
J.J. Henry
35-35—70
Chris Kirk
35-35—70
Cameron Tringale
33-37—70
Shawn Stefani
34-36—70
Ben Crane
36-34—70
Johnson Wagner
33-37—70
Tom Hoge
34-36—70
Bryson DeChambeau
37-33—70
Brendon de Jonge
34-37—71
Aaron Baddeley
36-35—71
Tim Wilkinson
37-34—71
Danny Lee
36-35—71
Kevin Kisner
34-37—71
Hiroshi Iwata
38-33—71
Sung Kang
35-36—71
Hudson Swafford
36-35—71
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aP photo
TenneSSee TiTanS tight end Anthony Fasano (80) catches a pass as he is defended by safety
Daimion Stafford (39) during practice Thursday, in Nashville.
LeBeau speaking up
again now that he’s
running Titans ‘D’
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee Titans are back to
just one man running their
defense, and Dick LeBeau is
ready to speak up once again.
LeBeau
worked
as
Tennessee’s assistant head
coach in charge of the defense
last season, deferring to coordinator Ray Horton who called
the plays. Horton left to be
defensive
coordinator
in
Cleveland after the Titans name
Mike Mularkey head coach
hours after Horton interviewed
for the same job. Mularkey kept
LeBeau as assistant head coach
and defensive coordinator.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame
cornerback didn’t speak up
much last season, believing a
defense needs to hear one voice.
LeBeau said Thursday he is
excited to be able to talk much
more.
“I’m very used to doing all the
talking, and I didn’t want to do
that to Ray, so I didn’t,” LeBeau
said. “I don’t have any problem
talking all the time now, and
I’m much more comfortable in
that environment.”
With LeBeau working with
Horton, the Titans took a big
leap in several areas defensively. Tennessee went from 27th in
total yards allowed to 12th and
from 31st against the run to
18th. The Titans even led the
NFL allowing the fewest pass
attempts and went from 15th
against the pass to seventh.
But the Titans ranked 27th
in points allowed, giving up an
average of 26.4 points per
game.
Asked about what philosophical changes LeBeau might
make, the coach who turns 79
in September noted he drafted
Horton out of college with
Horton working for him three
different times.
“Coach Horton’s defense was
Dick LeBeau’s defense, I think
so I guess that’s bragging ...,”
LeBeau said. “That’s one of the
big reasons I was hoping I got to
stay here was the players so
they’d have continuity in what
we’re doing.”
The Titans made sure to give
LeBeau plenty of depth through
free agency and the draft. New
general manager Jon Robinson
signed veteran safety Rashad
Johnson from the Cardinals,
cornerbacks Brice McCain and
Antwon Blake and brought
back defensive tackle Al Woods
with a new deal. They also used
six of 10 draft picks on defense,
including three of the first 64.
Linebacker Kevin Dodd, the
No. 33 pick overall at the beginning of the second round, had
surgery on his right foot
Thursday and won’t be back
until training camp. But
LeBeau said the Titans’ depth is
appreciably better, a sentiment
shared by several of the veterans.
LeBeau also has some veterans back from injuries, a group
led by veteran cornerback
Jason McCourty who was limited to four games by an injured
groin and linebacker Derrick
Morgan whose season was
ended early by an injured
shoulder.
Linebacker Brian Orakpo
also is excited to have LeBeau
running the defense, expecting
much more blitzing.
“Everybody’s a bit more
involved with coming after the
quarterback,” Orakpo said. “I
think we’re really going to get
after it. Horton did a great job
with getting us over the hump.
Now we’ve got to get better and
be a No. 1 unit like we feel like
we’re capable of.”
The Titans tied for 12th with
39 sacks in 2015, a number
that certainly sounds likely to
grow if LeBeau has anything to
say about that.
And the man considered the
designer of the zone blitz does.
“I like to err on the side of
pressure, so we’re going to be
coming there’s no question
about that,” LeBeau said. “But
we were pretty much a pressure
team last year also. You may
not notice too many differences,
but there’s quite a few in there.”
Charleston angler headed to Kentucky
From FLW FISHING
CADIZ, Ky. — Local angler
Thomas Helton of Charleston will
be among the 49 anglers competing at the 33rd annual FLW Bass
Fishing League All-American on
Barkley Lake in Cadiz, Ky., June
9-11.
The tournament will feature
the top boaters and co-anglers
from across the nationwide 24division BFL circuit casting for
cash prizes of up to $120,000 in
the Boater Division and $60,000
in the Co-angler Division, plus an
opportunity to compete in the
world championship of professional bass fishing, the Forrest
Wood Cup.
Helton punched his ticket to
the event via his fifth place finish
at the BFL Wild Card event on
Lake Hartwell last season. The
top six boaters and co-anglers
from each of the six regional
championships advanced to the
All-American, along with six qual-
ifiers from the annual Wild Card
tournament and seven from the
TBF National Championship. The
event will be internationally televised on the NBC Sports Network,
the Pursuit Channel and the
World Fishing Network this fall.
“I took an early retirement 10
years ago to pursue a fishing
career,” said Helton, who has 25
top-10 career finishes with FLW.
“The BFL All-American is the
hardest tournament in the world
to qualify for, and earning my way
there for the second time in my
life has been the highlight of it so
far.”
Anglers will take off from Lake
Barkley State Resort Park in
Cadiz at 7 a.m. CDT each morning. Weigh-ins will be begin at 3
p.m. on the first two days of competition. Saturday’s final weigh-in
will begin at 4 p.m.
Fishing fans that can’t make
the trek to Kentucky can still follow along with all of the tournament action at FLWFishing.com.
Updates, photos and videos will
be posted throughout the three
days of competition as well as a
live streaming video feed of the
weigh-in each day.
Coverage of the 2016 BFL AllAmerican will premiere in highdefinition on NBC Sports Network
Oct. 5, from 1-2 p.m. EDT. The
Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs on NBCSN, the
Pursuit Channel and the World
Fishing Network and is broadcast
to more than 564 million households worldwide, making it the
most widely distributed weekly
outdoors-sports television show
in the world.
For a full schedule of events,
complete details and updated
information,
visit
FLWFishing.com. For regular
updates, photos, tournament
news and more, follow FLW on
Facebook
at
Facebook.com/FLWFishing and
on
Twitter
at
Twitter.com/FLWFishing.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—15
Molder shoots 64 to take
1-stroke lead at Colonial
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —
Bryce Molder was joking around
with playing partner Scott
Langley as the sky darkened over
Colonial.
“It was almost like they were
about to blow the horn for darkness,” Molder said.
Except it was early in the
morning after Molder — the
leader after a 6-under 64— and
Langley began play in the first
group off the 10th tee Thursday
in the Dean & Deluca Invitational
at Colonial.
“It wasn’t dark to where you
can’t see the ball flight, but
you’re kind of reading putts looking a little funny at it,” Molder
said. “It was dark. It was weird. It
was almost like late, late, late in
the day.”
They were on the 16th green
next to the clubhouse when play
was stopped because of rain and
lightning in the area. After the
75-minute delay, when clouds
thinned considerably, Molder
had six birdies in his last nine
holes and the 64 held up for a
one-stroke lead over Patrick
Reed, Anirban Lahiri and Webb
Simpson.
Ryan Palmer, the Colonial
member whose caddie James
Edmondson is the four-time club
champion, joined Jason Dufner,
Martin Piller and Kyle Reifers in a
tie for fifth at 66.
“It’s a golf course I can step on
to each tee and don’t even need
my yardage book,” Palmer said.
“To shoot 4-under out here on a
Thursday, you’re not hurting.”
Jordan Spieth, the world’s No.
2-ranked player, was among nine
players at 67 after his breezy
afternoon round when he missed
the first six fairways. But he hit
eight of the first nine greens and
14 overall while carding only one
bogey — at the 244-yard, par-3
fourth hole.
“It was so tough to gauge the
wind correctly and get the ball
close to the hole,” Spieth said.
“On a day like this, you’re just
really looking to hit greens in regulation, be as stress-free as possible, and it felt like we were out
there.”
Seventh-ranked Adam Scott,
who in 2014 won at Colonial to
cap his first week at No. 1, had
an opening 72 with four birdies,
four bogeys and a double bogey.
Jason Kokrak was at 6 under
and tied with Molder for the lead
when he hit a drive in the center
of the 18th fairway. But his
AP photo
JordAn SPieth lines up a shot on the first green during the first
round of the Dean & Deluca Invitational Thursday, at Colonial
Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.
approach went into the water to
the right of the green, as did the
next shot after his drop. His
quintuple bogey 9 ended a round
of 69.
Kevin Chappell (68) had the
shot of the day with an eagle on
the 387-yard 10th hole when his
8-iron approach from 158 yards
went into the hole on the fly.
Molder, with one win in 251
career PGA Tour starts, had his
first 18-hole lead since the 2002
Byron Nelson. He finished
Thursday with four consecutive
birdies — all from at more than
10 feet, including a 20-footer at
No. 7 after his drive into a fairway bunker on the 438-yard
hole.
His only non-birdies on the
front nine were at Nos. 3-5,
known as the Horrible Horseshoe
because of the layout and difficulty of that trio. He had pars of
each of those holes, the 452-yard
dogleg left 3rd hole, the long par
3, and the 465-yard 5th hole
parallel to the Trinity River.
“I hit a lot of greens early, 20,
30 feet, and just kind of rolled it
up close,” Molder said. “And then
all of a sudden hit a couple close
when I made the turn, Nos. 1 and
2, got some close birdies. ...
Maybe (the delay) just kind of
helped me wake up. Actually, I
went back out on the range and
just kind of one little tinker here
or there and found a little groove
for the rest of the 12 holes.”
Langley had a 70.
Briles built Baylor brash, bold; leaves tarnished legacy
(AP) — A brash Texan with a
bold approach, Art Briles made
Baylor football relevant after years
of wallowing in the basement of
the Big 12 Conference.
The Bears became one college
football’s cool teams under Briles,
winning league titles and earning
lofty rankings with one of the
most exciting and prolific offenses
in the history of the sport. The
new, $250 million stadium on the
banks of the Brazos River doesn’t
have Briles’ name on it but there
is no one more responsible for its
existence.
That era is over now in Waco,
Texas.
Everything Briles accomplished
has been tarnished and it would
be surprising if he ever becomes
the head coach of a big-time program again.
Briles is on his way out at
Baylor after the school released
details Thursday of a sweeping
investigation into allegations that
the football program and other
school leaders failed to take action
after complaints of sexual assault
and violence by players.
Baylor regents said the 60year-old Briles had been suspended “with the intent to terminate
according to contractual procedures” — an extraordinary and
rare decision in a sport where
coaches often survive scandals.
Briles has eight years left on a 10year contract that runs through
2023 and paid him $4 million per
year.
The Bears went 65-37 in eight
seasons under Briles and won two
Big 12 titles. In Waco and among
Baylor fans, Briles was revered
like Bear Bryant was at Alabama
and Bo Schembechler was at
Michigan. He was a savior.
Baylor booster Mike Holman,
61, said he is very disappointed in
Briles but added that the regents
made the right choice.
“Very sad day and a very sad
situation,” Holman said.
As a coach, Briles made a name
Tennessee
From Page 13
about that.”
Tennessee’s season likely
ended Tuesday with a loss to LSU
in the first round of the
Southeastern Conference tournament that dropped the
Volunteers’ record to 29-28.
Tennessee is expected to miss the
Johnson
From Page 13
shaved seconds off of her time to
end up 14th overall with a time of
11:55.52.
“We were pleased with her in
that race because 11:55 was the
best she had done,” Walker Valley
coach Drew Nunnelly commented.
CyCy White finished 15th overall in the high jump after clearing
4 feet, 8 inches.
The Lady Mustangs young
4x800-meter relay team, which is
made up of junior Hali Lowe,
sophomores Emily Anderson and
Goode
From Page 13
ond in the shot put with a throw
of 44 feet, 10 inches and came in
fourth for discus with a throw of
134 feet, 2 inches, also a PR.
Goode hit another PR just four
days later at the subsectional
meet at Walker Valley High
School, where he took first place
in the shot put with a throw of 45
feet, 3 1/2 inches.
He advanced to the sectional
meet at Riverdale High School in
both the shot put and discus. At
the sectional, Goode once again
PR’d in both events, punching his
ticket to the Spring Fling.
Goode had a throw of 50 feet,
for himself by pushing limits and
conventions on the field. He
climbed the ranks as a high
school coach in Texas and became
known for innovative spread
offenses that played fast and
aggressive. After winning state
championships at Stephenville
High School he got a shot as an
assistant at Texas Tech and after
just three years he was named the
head coach at Houston. He took
over in Waco in 2008 and has
been the face of Baylor football
ever since — never shy about
sticking up for the Bears.
When Baylor was left out of that
first playoff, passed over for Ohio
State and forced to share a conference title with a TCU team it
had beaten, Briles lobbied loudly
for his program in that deep Texas
drawl. He went after Big 12
Commissioner Bob Bowlsby for
the conference’s lack of a
tiebreaker and called out the
selection committee, suggesting
there weren’t enough folks from
Texas on it.
But the program had become
insulated to a fault, according to
the investigation by the Pepper
Hamilton law firm. It said football
coaches hindered investigations
while dealing on their own with
NCAA Tournament for an 11th
straight year.
“This program needs to get
there,” Serrano said. “It’s been a
long time since this program’s
been there. For not only our fans, From Page 13
but for players, for the alumni,
we need to do that.”
The right-hander began the game
with a 6.99 ERA and a .363 opponents’ batting average in nine
starts this year, and he was 1-8
with a 5.77 ERA in his past 13
road starts.
But against the weak-hitting
Braves, Peralta commanded his
Bailey Mullett and Harris, strug- mid-90s mph fastball with relagled at the state level. They fin- tive ease in his last four-plus
ished 14th with a time of innings to improve to 2-1 with a
10:28.16
“We were disappointed with
how the 4x800 performed. They
were 17 seconds slower than they
had run at the sectional and it
just wasn’t good enough,” From Page 13
Nunnelly stated. “We congratulated them on getting there, but not average and doubles, third in RBIs
for their performance. We told and total walks (38) and fourth in
them to use this as a learning total hits (75).
experience and to get back next
Holland served as an on-camyear and do better.”
pus volunteer for the baseball program’s
annual
Military
Appreciation Day and also helped
move students in as part of the
school’s ‘Helping Hands’ Program.
His off-campus contributions
include volunteering abroad with
Dominican Republic orphanages
1/2 half inch to claim first place and youth camps, the ‘Feed-Ain the shot put and then finished Village’ Program in Haiti and
second in discus with a throw of Matthew 25 Ministries.
134 feet, 4 inches.
He is also a finalists for the D2
“He had a significant PR in the Baseball News 2016 Tino Martinez
sectionals and we’ve been work- Award. The 10 exceptional stuing every day since. We’ve been dent-athletes named comprise an
trying to fine tune technique up elite list of top players at the DII
to this point and not adding any- level. The annual honor is named
thing really new. We’re trying to after the former University of
clean things up and make sure Tampa Spartan, Olympian and
we’re in the right place,” Frazier MLB All-Star, Tino Martinez.
commented.
The winner of the 2015 Tino
“Anything can happen, but cer- Martinez Award will be named
tainly our goal is for him to go Monday, June 6 following the
over there, PR and get on the Division II World Series which will
podium.”
held in Cary, N.C.
accusers and parents of accusers,
and failed to provide information
to university officials. Football
coaches at Baylor doled out insufficient discipline and shielded
players from the punishments
that would have been handed out
to other students, the report said.
“The football program failed to
identify and maintain controls
over known risks, and unreasonably accepted known risks,” the
Pepper Hamilton report stated.
Baylor and Briles could also
face NCAA discipline for some of
the actions outlined in the report.
NCAA punishment alone could
make Briles untouchable for
another school, though the
scathing report is likely enough to
cripple a career that has been
ascending for more than two
decades.
Will he ever be hired again by a
major program?
“The likelihood is no,” said Rick
Neuheisel, a former UCLA and
Washington coach and current
CBS analyst. “And hate to say
that. It’s just a very difficult thing
for another university to bring Art
in even though he’s had tremendous success on the field of play
with the baggage that’s associated
with this.”
Braves
1.65 ERA in five starts against
Atlanta.
The Braves rank last in the
majors in homers, RBIs and runs
scored.
With the Braves moving to a
new suburban stadium next
year, the Brewers played their
last game at Turner Field. They
went 27-41 at the Braves’ 20year-old ballpark.
AP photo
oklAhomA City thunder guArd Russell Westbrook,
center, tries to get off a shot as Golden State Warriors guard
Klay Thompson (11), center Andrew Bogut (12), guard Stephen
Curry (30) and forward Draymond Green converge in the first
half of Game 5 of the finals of the Western Conference on
Thursday, in Oakland, Calif.
Defending champion
Warriors stave off
elimination with win
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — “We
ain’t going home! We’re not
going home!” Stephen Curry
screamed at the top of his
lungs.
No, his Golden State
Warriors are going back to
Oklahoma City, after keeping
their title reign and the winningest season in NBA history
alive for at least one more
game.
Curry scored 31 points,
raising his arms in the early
moments to fire up Golden
State’s raucous crowd, and
the defending champions
staved off elimination with a
120-111 victory over the
Thunder on Thursday night in
Game 5 of the Western
Conference finals.
“We just did what we’re supposed to do. We’re supposed to
win at home,” Curry said. “We
know what we still have to do
going forward. ... We knew if
we didn’t win we were going
home. There’s no other motivation you need.”
For all the speculation
about the current state of
Curry’s beat-up body — that
troublesome ankle, sore knee
or tender elbow — he did it all.
“I thought he looked like 91
percent,” coach Steve Kerr
cracked. “He came out and
played a really good game.
That’s all I can tell you. He’s
going to compete every night.
He had an excellent night and
helped us get it done.”
Led by Curry, the Warriors
looked like their old winning
selves again.
The MVP made a snazzy
layup late and dished out six
assists, while Klay Thompson
added 27 points as Golden
State sent the best the best-ofseven series back to Oklahoma
City for Game 6 on Saturday
night. The Warriors trail 3-2
and are trying to become just
the 10th team to rally from a
3-1 deficit.
“None of us want to go
home,” Thompson said. “We’re
having too much fun out
there.”
Kevin Durant scored 40
points and Russell Westbrook
added 31 points, eight assists,
seven rebounds and five steals
for the Thunder, trying for the
fifth NBA Finals appearance in
franchise history and first
championship since moving
from Seattle.
The record-setting, 73-win
Warriors, coming off their first
back-to-back defeats all season, had been blown out in
two losses at Oklahoma City
by a combined 52 points.
“We have to take that game
and travel,” Curry said of
keeping momentum.
Durant’s 3-pointer with
4:34 left got the Thunder within 103-98, then Curry
answered with a three-point
play.
Curry scored seven points in
a 58-second stretch of the second quarter and hit more big
shots late, but the Thunder
didn’t go away easily.
“I liked our will, I liked our
fight,” Kerr said. “We were
embarrassed in OKC the last
couple games.”
Trailing 58-50 at halftime,
Oklahoma City came out of the
break with a 9-2 run.
Westbrook’s 3-pointer with
6:06 left in the third put
Oklahoma City ahead 68-67
for its first lead of the night.
But Golden State led 81-77
going into the fourth and
began the final period with an
8-0 burst.
“We didn’t shoot a particularly good percentage when we
got into the lane and got into
the deep paint,” Thunder
coach Billy Donovan said. “We
had our opportunities.”
Curry shot 9 for 20 and also
had five steals, while
Thompson had his 11th 20point game for the second
straight postseason despite
shooting 2 for 9 from 3-point
range. After struggling the
past two games, Draymond
Green had 11 points and 13
rebounds a day after receiving
some encouraging words from
Kobe Bryant on the phone.
“We really relied on the
entire team tonight, which is
when we’re at our best,” Curry
said.
Kerr figured his Warriors
might have an edge against
the percentages of teams having trailed 3-1 because they’re
the defending champs and
were playing at home, where
they have been nearly unbeatable.
Holland
Holland has registered a long
list of awards and there are likely
more to come: ABCA All-South
Region; NCBWA All-South Region
1st Team; D2CCA All-South
Region 1st Team; All Gulf South
Conference 1st Team; and named
to the GSC Baseball AllTournament Team.
Lee baseball coach Mark Brew
said, “Ben had tremendous season in 2016. He came up with
multiple big hits for our team, and
put on an offensive display that
will not be soon forgotten.
However, what makes Ben a perfect candidate for the GSC Top
Ten Award is his ability to combine excellence on the field to
excellence in the classroom and
our community.
“He posted a 4.0 semester in his
final semester to graduate with
honors, and was at the forefront of
our community service, both in
and out of the community. This is
great recognition for the type of
person and player Ben is, and I
couldn’t be more proud of him.”
Cason Still
Congratulations to Bradley Central’s Cason Still for being
named the Check Into Cash Player of the Week.
The junior center fielder made several key defensive play for the District 5-AAA and Region
3-AAA champion Bears this past baseball season, plus was a catalyst as the leadoff hitter in
the Bradley batting order. Despite missing more than a week early in the season due to a
pull hamstring, the speedy right-handed batter had four doubles and a triple in his 31 hits
for an .834 slugging percentage. Along with posting a .360 batting average and a .404 on
base percentage, Still was 8-for-8 in stolen base attempts, plus scored 27 runs. Bradley went
28-7 on the season an advanced to the TSSAA Sectional playoffs.
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Painting the true picture of a valuable employee
Though rare, it’s always refreshing
when a situation works out better than
it looks like it is going to work out.
I recently needed to match some
interior wall paint.
I had a significant amount of touchup to do after a tenant left, because
apparently, removing a flat-screen TV
from the wall is a violent activity.
Since I am not the world’s best
spackler or the world’s best painter, I
needed to give myself every advantage.
So, I decided to go to a paint store —
not the paint department inside a hardware store, mind you — but a store
entirely devoted to all things paint.
I peeled a nickel-size paint sample off
the wall and headed out. I needed an
expert.
I needed a veteran paint mixer with a
couple of paint-mixing certificates in
dusty frames hanging on the wall. He
would be a gray-haired, 60-year-old
named Marvin who had never missed a
STorieS of
a world
gone mad
Barry Currin
day of mixing paint since 1976.
Marvin would be the veteran I needed. Marvin would be able to do the job
right.
Instead of Marvin, the person behind
the counter was 25 or so.
“Is Marvin here?”
“Who?”
OK, I really didn’t say that, but I
thought it.
I needed a veteran. I got a rookie,
and suddenly my hopes weren’t all that
high.
I handed her my paint sample, which
now looked more microscopic than it
did when I was peeling it off the wall.
The rookie took it over to a selection
of about a million swatches and picked
out the exact match in under 10 seconds.
Hmmm.
We had a brief discussion about what
sheen it might be.
“It’s either eggshell or satin,” she
said.
She held it up to the light, and as I
was trying to spit out that I thought it
was eggshell, she said, “It’s satin.”
OK, so obviously it wasn’t her first
day on the job, but I was still concerned about the paint in the can
matching the paint on the wall. Maybe
Marvin was on his way back from
lunch.
She punched around on a computer
keyboard, and like magic, a couple of
colors squirted into a can of white
below it. She pounded the lid on with a
mallet and put the can in the shaking
machine like it was second-nature.
When it came out, she took off the
lid with the precision of a NASCAR pit
crew. Then she dipped her finger in it,
rubbed some on a card and put it
under a dryer.
I was amazed at the way she manipulated all her tools. I felt like I was
watching a tennis match as she went
back and forth working on my project,
answering the phone and talking to
other customers.
When the sample was dry, she compared it to my sample and shook her
head.
She took off the lid, went back to the
computer and repeated the process.
Unsatisfied still, she did it again.
Then she did it a third time.
After that rendition dried, I said, “It
looks pretty clo—”
“I can get it closer.” She wasn’t talking to me. She was talking to the paint
gods. I don’t even think she knew I was
there. She was in the zone.
When it was a perfect match, she
smiled. Then she told me if it was too
thick I could thin it with water.
Her first impression with me as a
painter obviously was right up there
with my first impression of her as a
paint mixer.
I’m glad I was wrong about her. I
have a long collection of stories where I
talk about ineptitude and indifference
in the workplace. It’s refreshing to see
someone take pride in a job.
So, Marvin, we still need you. But, if
you ever do decide to take a day off, the
paint store will run just fine until you
get back.
I don’t guess I need to tell you it
matched perfectly.
———
(About the writer: Barry Currin runs
BeaverDamUSA.com, a humor, sports
and entertainment website. “Stories of a
World Gone Mad” is published weekly.
Email the writer at [email protected].)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
Viewpoint
“There is a Law that man should love his neighbor as himself. In a few hundred
years it should be as natural to mankind as breathing or the upright gait; but if he does
not learn it he must perish.”
— Alfred Adler, Austrian psychoanalyst (1870-1937)
Should our corporations
sponsor national parks?
W
hether I was a pre- their time to fundraising. I can
schooler hiking in just imagine park rangers using
Great
Smoky a tranquilizer gun on a potential
Mountains National Park, a sponsor. (“Now, now — slow
young adult spelunking in down and let’s talk this over
Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave or before you give all your money
a father introducing his son to to PBS.”)
Yes, park officials will be
Shiloh National Military Park, I
always felt I could enjoy tempted to give up on studying
America’s treasures without the mating rituals of migratory
too much intrusion from birds and start studying the
mating rituals of CEOs.
Madison Avenue.
According to the Washington (“Couldn’t help but notice you
Post, things are about to and the showgirl getting out of
Motel 6. Perhaps for a small
change.
donation this
Facing an $11 billion backlog
photo could
in unfunded maintenance projdisappear
ects, the National Park Service
before it reachis tinkering with the definition of
es your wife
philanthropy. They’re granting
...”)
corporate sponsors the opporNPS officials
tunity to prominently display
hope
corporate
logos and gain limited naming
sponsorships
rights at the nation’s 411
Tyree
will help attract
national parks, monuments
a younger, more ethnically
and conservation areas.
You say you want to know diverse class of tourists. Right.
why Congress hasn’t come to (“Shoot! My posse and I were
the rescue? Hey, those human- planning a road trip to the allitarian snowplows for Tahiti’s star hip-hop festival, but if a
national monuments don’t company that has been crankcome cheap, pal. And it’s not ing out consumer goods for a
that congressmen don’t have century and a half is interested
national treasures on the brain. in the Rosie the Riveter historiOr is it they have a Grand cal park, it just HAS to be cool!”)
Maybe instead of accepting
Canyon between their ears?
corporate tie-ins, we could
Something like that.
Observers fear that corpo- redesign some of the sites to
rate sponsorship/meddling will attract millennials. Instead of
ruin the beauty, simplicity and Lincoln’s childhood home, we
tranquility of our parks. The could have Lincoln’s Parents’
rules as written do not allow Basement He Had To Crash In
any actual advertising or mar- While Paying Off Student
keting slogans, but watch for Loans.
There will be tremendous
such blemishes to creep in. Old
Faithful geyser would seem an pressure on both park officials
irresistible icon for the Acme and corporate executives to
Bidet Company. Out West, strike the best deals. And,
campaigns will proclaim, there will be mistakes.
“Johnson, I expected our
“Home, home on the range,
where the deer and the ante- huge investment to get us the
lope play ... Laser Tag!” War of naming rights for the Coke
1812 buffs should not be sur- Amphitheater and Coke Zero
prised if loudspeakers at Fort Amphitheater.”
“Well, yes, but ...”
McHenry blare, “Oh, say can
“And you got us the Emma
you see ... who’s behind those
Amphitheater and the Noah
Foster Grants?”
Don’t get me started on the Amphitheater?”
“But they’re both such POPUsleazy advertising possibilities
LAR
names. I couldn’t resist ...”
for Valley Forge. (“The Father
“We’re
reassigning you to
of Our Country ... on dollar
the
Siberian
territory. Just keep
bills. Dollar bills ... in G-strings.
your
nose
to
the grindstone
What could be more natural?”)
Other concerned citizens and don’t mess with the U.S.worry more that park managers supplied humanitarian beach
will be devoting too much of blankets.”
———
(About the writer: Danny Tyree welcomes email responses at
[email protected] and visits to his Facebook fan page,
“Tyree’s Tyrades.” His weekly column is distributed exclusively
by Cagle Cartoons Inc. newspaper syndicate. © 2016 Danny
Tyree. Opinions expressed in guest “Viewpoints” do not necessarily reflect the views of the Cleveland Daily Banner.)
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The Banner welcomes letters to the editor. The
guidelines call for letters to be in good taste and no more than 300
words. Some minor editing, not affecting the meaning, may be
required. All letters must include the author’s signature, address
and a telephone number for confirmation. Since letters must have
a signature, they cannot be emailed. Letters reflect the opinion of
the writer. Letters may be sent to Letters to the Editor, Cleveland
Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600.)
TODAY IN HISTORY
(AP) Today is Friday, May 27,
the 148th day of 2016. There are
218 days left in the year.
Today’s
Highlights
in
History:
On May 27, 1941, the British
Royal Navy sank the German
battleship Bismarck off France
with a loss of some 2,000 lives,
three days after the Bismarck
sank the HMS Hood with the loss
of more than 1,400 lives. Amid
rising world tensions, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed
an “unlimited national emergency” during a radio address
from the White House.
On this date:
In 1896, 255 people were killed
when a tornado struck St. Louis,
Missouri, and East St. Louis,
Illinois.
In 1929, Charles A. Lindbergh
Jr. married Anne Morrow in
Englewood, New Jersey.
In 1933, the Chicago World’s
Fair, celebrating “A Century of
Progress,” officially opened. Walt
Disney’s Academy Award-winning animated short “The Three
Little Pigs” was first released.
In 1935, the U.S. Supreme
Court, in Schechter Poultry Corp.
v. United States, unanimously
struck down the National
Industrial Recovery Act, a key
component of President Franklin
D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal” legislative program.
In 1936, the Cunard liner RMS
Queen Mary left England on its
maiden voyage to New York. The
first Aer Lingus flight took place
as a de Havilland Dragon carried
five passengers from Dublin to
Bristol, England.
In 1937, the newly completed
Golden Gate Bridge connecting
San Francisco and Marin
County, California, was opened
to pedestrian traffic (vehicles
began crossing the next day).
In 1942, Navy Cook 3rd Class
Doris “Dorie” Miller became the
first African-American to receive
the Navy Cross for his “extraordinary courage and disregard
for his own personal safety”
during Japan’s attack on Pearl
Harbor.
In 1944, Jean-Paul Sartre’s
existentialist play “Huis clos”
(known in English as “No Exit”)
was first performed in Paris.
In 1962, a dump fire in
Centralia, Pennsylvania, ignited
a blaze in underground coal
deposits that continues to burn
this day.
In 1964, independent India’s
first prime minister, Jawaharlal
Nehru, died.
In 1985, in Beijing, representatives of Britain and China
exchanged instruments of ratification for an accord returning
Hong Kong to Chinese control in
1997.
In 1998, Michael Fortier, the
government’s star witness in the
Oklahoma City bombing case,
was sentenced to 12 years in
prison after apologizing for not
warning anyone about the deadly
plot. (Fortier was freed in
January 2006.)
Ten years ago: A 6.3-magnitude earthquake in central
Indonesia killed some 5,800 people. Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt,
daughter of Brad Pitt and
Angelina Jolie, was born in
Namibia, where the family had
traveled for privacy.
Five years ago: Astronauts
Mike Fincke and Gregory
Chamitoff made history as the
final spacewalkers of NASA’s 30year shuttle program, completing
construction of the International
Space Station with the smooth
addition of an extension pole.
Rich countries and international
lenders said at a Group of Eight
summit in Deauville, France,
they were aiming to provide $40
billion in funding for Arab
nations trying to establish
democracy, starting with Egypt
and Tunisia. President Barack
Obama, visiting Poland, honored
the memories of those slain in
the Warsaw Ghetto uprising
against Nazis. Gil Scott-Heron,
62, widely considered one of the
godfathers of rap music, died in
New York. Actor Jeff Conaway
died at a hospital in Encino,
California; he was 60.
One year ago: The U.S. government launched an attack on
what it called deep-seated and
brazen corruption in soccer’s
global governing body, FIFA,
indicting 14 influential figures on
charges of racketeering and taking bribes. Former Pennsylvania
Senator Rick Santorum, an
aggressive advocate for conservative family values, launched a
2016 Republican White House
bid. Nebraska’s Legislature abolished the death penalty over the
objections of Gov. Pete Ricketts,
a Republican supporter of capital
punishment.
Today’s Birthdays: Pulitzer
Prize-winning novelist Herman
Wouk is 101. Former Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger is 93.
Former FBI Director William
Sessions is 86. Author John
Barth is 86. Actress Lee
Meriwether is 81. Musician
Ramsey Lewis is 81. Actor Louis
Gossett Jr. is 80. Rhythm-andblues singer Raymond Sanders
(The Persuasions) is 77. Country
singer Don Williams is 77. Actor
Bruce Weitz is 73.
Dear Annie: Like “Fed Up
Sister,” my brother was also a
braggart. From his teenage
years on, he always tried to oneup everyone. He was the
youngest of six and didn’t realize that the rest of us compared
notes about his stories. We felt
the bragging must be important
to him, so we never let on. He
was always the life of the party
and fun to be around. He went
through three marriages, had
five children and still his claims
of grandeur continued. We
always believed that his bragging stemmed from not feeling
as successful as his siblings.
When his last marriage dissolved, he didn’t bounce back
like he always had before. We
received a call from the police
one day that he had shot himself. He was dead at age 48. His
life had been a series of stories
about how great things were
and how wonderfully he was
doing. In reality, we learned
that he was an insecure and lost
person.
I wish we had been able to see
through his stories to the insecurities underneath. But we
loved him and didn’t want to
hurt his feelings. Maybe if we
had called him on those stories,
things might have different. We
will never know. I want to tell
“Fed Up” and everyone else in
this position to just love your
siblings while you can. You
never know how long they will
be here. — Still Grieving Sister
Dear Sister: You have given
kind advice. Please stop blaming yourself for not doing
enough for your brother. You
knew he was insecure, but confronting him about the bragging
may have pushed him away
from you altogether. You were
loving and tolerant, which is
what siblings should be. Our
deepest condolences.
———
(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 Web page at
www.creators.com.)
Daily Banner
Taiwan is hoping to work Cleveland
– Established in 1854 –
with China: health issues
GENEVA (AP) — Taiwan hopes
to work with China to help
improve the health of people “on
both sides of the Taiwan Strait”
and is engaging more with the
world to fight viruses like Zika,
MERS, Ebola and dengue, the
Taiwanese health minister said in
an interview Wednesday.
Attending an annual World
Health Organization gathering
amid questions about future
China-Taiwan relations, Lin Tzouyien said he shook hands with his
Chinese counterpart, Li Bin, a day
earlier during “good meetings” at
the conference in Geneva.
The minister’s visit comes
against the backdrop of a highly
charged atmosphere between
China and Taiwan after independence-leaning President Tsai Ingwen took office Friday. Separately
Wednesday, a member of China’s
body for relations with Taiwan
wrote in a newspaper opinion
piece that Tsai’s politics were
“extreme” because she is an
unmarried woman lacking the
emotional balance provided by
romantic and family life.
Lin’s attendance at the WHO
World Health Assembly has generally been considered a positive
sign for the new administration’s
relations with China. Beijing only
recently began letting Taiwan
attend the meeting and could easily have blocked its attendance by
citing Tsai’s refusal so far to
explicitly endorse the “OneChina” policy.
“I am very happy to be here to
have the continuous participation
in the WHA especially after the
political transition on May 20,”
Lin said told The Associated
Press.
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
Stephen L. Crass
GENERAL MANAGER
Jim Bryant
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR
Herb Lacy
OFFICE MANAGER
Joyce Taylor
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Rick Norton
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Gwen Swiger
LIFESTYLES EDITOR
William Wright
SPORTS EDITOR
Richard Roberts
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Jack Bennett
RETAIL SALES MANAGER
Sheena Meyer
PRESS SUPERVISOR
Richard Yarber
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—17
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
SATURDAY, MAY 28, 2016
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Carey Mulligan, 31; Kylie
Minogue, 48; Christa Miller, 52; Gladys
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Knight, 72.
Happy Birthday: Good fortune is
within reach. Your insight and desire to
finish what you start will help you
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
maneuver your way to the top. Think
big, but look for ways to carry out your
plans on a budget. Doing as much as
you can in an affordable way will put you
ahead of any competition you meet.
Your numbers are 4, 15, 23, 24, 30, 38,
47.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Share
your thoughts and feelings and you will
find the help you need to improve whatever situations you face. Bringing about
the necessary personal changes in your
life will help to ease your stress.
Romance looks promising.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A
fundraising event will be tedious and
demanding. Before you offer help, consider the people who really need your
assistance. Charity begins at home, and
that is where your focus should be if you
don't want to disappoint someone you
love.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Stick to
the truth and work hard to fulfill your
promises. Don't be sideswiped by
someone who is offering the impossible.
Consider your options and make choices based on what will help you build a
relationship with someone who counts.
Love is in the stars.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Check
out the possibilities around you. Make
unique changes at home that will allow
you to spend more time with someone
you love. Expanding your interests, surroundings or friendships will bring positive results. Choose your own path.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You don't
have to explain your actions. Own what
you do and make it clear that you are
following the path that suits you best.
Express your feelings and make the
changes that will bring high returns. A
gain is in sight.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You'll be
torn between what you should do and
what you want to do. Preparation and
careful planning will help you deal with
your responsibilities so that you can
enjoy downtime with friends. Avoid
physical altercations.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Travel,
explore and find information that will
give you the knowledge you need to
pursue something you enjoy. Make
physical changes that give you confidence. Enjoy the attention you receive.
Romance is encouraged.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Don't
let annoyances strip away your chances
to have fun. Lighten up and make this a
day to remember. Visit a place you've
never been before. Expand your interests and your knowledge, and explore
new possibilities.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Deal with people cautiously. You'll be
misunderstood and could end up in an
uncomfortable emotional situation. Do
what you can to bring about the
changes to your personal life that will
make you happy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Bring the past into the present. Reunite
with old friends or colleagues and share
memories. Joy will spring from collaborating, and renewed friendships will help
bring life to old dreams. A proposal will
be too good to turn down.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Old
emotions will surface. Use this energy to
bring about positive changes at home.
Don't discuss matters that cannot be
resolved without time and space. Your
strength will come from self-improvement, not from trying to change others.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don't
be fooled by what others tell you. An
emotional situation will arise if you are
too gullible or accommodating. Use your
intelligence and make decisions that will
benefit you. Only offer help to those who
have something to offer in return.
Birthday Baby: You are unique,
inventive and insightful. You are unpredictable and entertaining.
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
GLAAD responds to #GiveCaptainAmericaABoyfriend Review: ‘Alice Through
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Captain
America snags a kiss from
Sharon Carter in the latest
Marvel pic, “Captain America:
Civil War,” but many fans are
wishing it was from someone
else — specifically, a man.
On Tuesday, the hashtag
#GiveCaptainAmericaABoyfrien
d became a top trending topic on
Twitter, which advocacy group
GLAAD says is a sign that audiences are eager for significant
LGBT characters in their superhero movies. This comes less
than a month after GLAAD
issued its annual studio responsibility index , which found that
Walt Disney Studios, which
owns Marvel, included zero
LGBT characters in its films last
year.
“It’s getting increasingly difficult to ignore that LGBT people
remain almost completely shut
out of Hollywood’s big budget
comic films that have dominated
the box office over the past couple of years,” said Megan
Townsend, GLAAD’s entertainment media strategist, who
noted there are LGBT characters
in both the source comics and in
television adaptations, but not
on the big screen.
Tuesday’s trending was powered by both advocates and dissenters. Scores of Twitter users
suggested
that
Steve
Rogers/Captain America (Chris
the Looking Glass’
is curious sequel
By LINDSEY BAHR
AP Film Writer
Disney/Marvel via AP
This iMAge released by Disney shows Elizabeth Olsen, left, Chris Evans and Sebastian Stan in a
scene from Marvel's "Captain America: Civil War." The film is poised to become the highest grossing film
of the year in a matter of days, and has already earned over $1 billion worldwide.
Evans) be paired up with his old
friend Bucky Barnes/The Winter
Soldier (Sebastian Stan), who
has been a significant player in
all three “Captain America”
films. But other tweets decried
the rallying call, stressing that
the character has never been
gay in the comic book source
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material.
Townsend disagrees. In fictional worlds, she said, there’s
“room for established characters
to have backstories built out
that we weren’t aware of.”
Beyond Captain America, too,
Townsend noted that there are
LGBT characters in Marvel
comics, like a pair of lesbians in
“Guardians of the Galaxy,” who
she hopes audiences might meet
in “Guardians’” next film version
out next year.
“Captain America: Civil War”
is poised to become the highest
grossing film of the year in a
matter of days, and has already
earned over $1 billion worldwide. That sort of worldwide visibility is invaluable in fostering
greater acceptance, GLAAD
says.
“We’ve met with several
activists who have (noted) the
power of U.S. media in their
country and how the conversations have changed there,”
Townsend said. “They really do
have an opportunity.”
The
#GiveCaptainAmerica
ABoyfriend movement follows
another social media ruckus earlier in the month with the hashtag #GiveElsaAGirlfriend, referring to the character from
Disney’s “Frozen.”
“Frozen” was also a smash
success at the worldwide box
office, but the inclusion of an
LGBT character in the sequel
could have even a bigger impact
because it’s an animated film.
Townsend said that LGBT representation in all-ages media is
especially important.
“Alice Through the Looking
Glass ,” like its predecessor,
owes very little to Lewis
Carroll.
Textual adherence is somewhat beside the point when
serving as a sequel to something that also cherry picked.
But, lest you think that a sixyear gap and the absence of
Tim Burton in the director’s
chair might have allowed for a
return to the gleeful absurdity
of Carroll, it doesn’t.
Screenwriter
Linda
Woolverton (“Beauty and the
Beast”) has again disposed of
the source material in favor of
something more linear — a
story about Alice (Mia
Wasikowska) looking for
Hatter’s (Johnny Depp) family.
Director James Bobin’s (“The
Muppets”) film trudges on
through the lushly designed
world answering questions we
never asked, like, “What was
the Mad Hatter’s childhood
like?” And, “why does the Red
Queen have such a large
head?” In other words, it’s an
Underland origin story.
We meet Alice some years
after the first film faced again
with the prospect of losing her
independence. Last time she
was fleeing a proposal. This
time her livelihood is in jeopardy (she’s a sea captain now,
and a good one). So when life
gets frustrating in the real
world, Alice climbs through a
mirror and is transported back
to Underland. Her old friends
have been waiting for her to fix
another problem: The Mad
Hatter.
The nightmarish Hatter, who
has developed a more pronounced (and annoying) lisp, is
wallowing in life-threatening
depression (manifested in
combed hair, a sicklier pallor
and a grown up wardrobe)
because he’s found an object
that makes him believe his
family is alive. This was not
See ALICE, Page 20
Friday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WFLI)
Masters of Illusion
David Copperfield hasn’t done magic on
television in a while, and David Blaine’s
specials are only occasional — but illusions continue to have a home on the small
screen in this series. In “Spinning the Classics,” former TV “Superman” Dean Cain
returns as host as magicians who have a
variety of acts and techniques show their
stuff. Among those featured here: Greg
Frewin and the teams of Barry & Stuart and
Sos & Victoria. Another episode follows.
9 p.m. on (WFLI)
Penn & Teller: Fool Us
“Penn’s Favorite Card Trick” leaves little
doubt as to one of the main illusions in this
hour — and Penn Jillette and Teller certainly have performed enough card tricks themselves that if they’re fooled here, that really
will be saying something. Kostya Kimlat,
Frederick Falk, Chris Funk and Nate Dendy
are the contenders who try to land a spot in
the title duo’s Las Vegas show. Jonathan
Ross is the hour’s host.
9 p.m. on (WTCI)
American Masters
Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Waylon
Jennings and Willie Nelson surely had their
own careers and fame when they formed
a country-music supergroup. Producerdirector Jim Brown’s new documentary “The
Highwaymen: Friends Till the End” recalls
the quartet’s tandem success through a
bounty of concert footage — some of it
previously unseen — and interviews with
surviving members Nelson and Kristofferson as well as Jennings’ widow Jessi Colter
and others.
9 p.m. on (WDEF)
Hawaii Five-0
It’s one thing to be wealthy, but to be found
deceased while carrying a sizable chunk
of riches — and counterfeit ones, at that
— is another. That’s the main mystery for
McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) and the team
in “Ka Papahana Holo Pono” (Hawaiian
for “Best Laid Plans”). As if he didn’t suffer
enough right after his wedding, Adam (Ian
Anthony Dale) is abducted again, this time
by the Yakuza. Football legend Jerry Rice
guest stars as himself.
10 p.m. on (WTCI)
Willie Nelson: The Library of Congress
Gershwin Prize for Popular Song
The country-music icon was on the road
again, for good reason, in November 2015:
He was awarded this honor in Washington,
D.C., as seen in this special. In being cited
for the impact of his work on pop culture,
he’s feted by friends and peers including
past Gershwin Prize honoree Paul Simon
and the latter’s wife, Edie Brickell. Others
featured include Neil Young, Alison Krauss,
Rosanne Cash, Jamey Johnson, Buckwheat Zydeco and Leon Bridges.
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4:30
5 PM
MAY 27, 2016
5:30
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 Caught on Camera
Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee The Bible
Praise the Lord Å
Creation
Supernatural! Potters
Trinity Family Hal Lindsey End/ Age
Perry Stone Praise the Lord Å
The Bible
F.K. Price
Spirit
Country Fix Nashville Un WTNB Today
Body
Southern-Fit Crook & Chase
Bluegrass
Duggar
Music City Tonight ’
Around Town Texas Music Around Town
Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle
Masters of
Masters of
Penn & Teller: Fool Us ’
Tosh.0 Å
Crazy Talk
Hollywood
Look Sexy
Anger
L King Report
Martha Speak Odd Squad Wild Kratts Wild Kratts PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
GPB Favorites
Sam Adeyemi Bill Winston Love a Child Jewish Voice Zola Levitt... Creflo Dollar Jewish Voice John Hagee Rod Parsley Bethel Conference “Kris Vallotton” (N)
J. Van Impe Jewish Jesus Hour of Sal K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil (N) ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) 500 Questions (N) ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
(:01) 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
Washington Chattanooga American Masters (N) Å
Willie Nelson: The Library of Congress
World News Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å
›› “The Fortune” (1975, Comedy) Jack Nicholson. Å
›› “Bigger Than the Sky” (2005) Marcus Thomas. Å
›› “Charlie Bartlett” (2007) Anton Yelchin. Å
››› “Primal Fear” (1996) Richard Gere, Laura Linney. Å
To Die For
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith Undercover Boss ’ Å
Hawaii Five-0 ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Backstabbers” News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Shawn Says, Accessorize! Swim Style
Earth Brands Footwear
Destination Gold Jewelry
Inspired Style
Friday Night Beauty
Calista Tools Hair Care
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest “Nautilus” Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
›› “Man on Fire” (2004) Denzel Washington. Å
Martino Hair Bty. Solutions Ready to Wear Beauty (N)
Lawn & Garden (N)
Coin Collector (N)
Coin Collector (N)
Lawn & Garden (N)
Lawn & Garden (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
E! News (N) Å
›› “No Strings Attached” (2011) Natalie Portman.
The Kardashians
E! News (N) Å
American Ninja Warrior “Las Vegas National Finals” Å
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior Competitors face 10 obstacles. ’
American Ninja Warrior “Dallas Qualifying” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior ’
Grey’s Anatomy “Six Days” Movie
Movie
(:02) Movie
(12:02) Movie
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes to the Prom Å
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
ELeague “Week 1: Group Play of Valve’s Counter-Strike: Global Offensive” (Live)
Bones ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
Bones ’ Å
›› “Alice in Wonderland” (2010, Fantasy) Johnny Depp.
(:15) ›› “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters” (2013) Logan Lerman.
›› Hulk
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
››› “Air Force One”
Two Men
Two Men
››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011) Chris Evans, Hayley Atwell. ’ Å
››› “The Avengers” (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo. ’ Å
››› “The Avengers” (2012) ’ Å
SportsNation Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
NBA Countdown (N) (Live) NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Toronto Raptors. (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
The Jump
SportsNation College Softball
College Softball
College Softball
NFL Live (N) Å
30 for 30 Å
College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game 10: Teams TBA. Halls of Fame Cardinals Pre MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Washington Nationals. (N) (Live)
Postgame
The Panel
College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game 11: Teams TBA.
College Baseball SEC Tournament, Fourth Round: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
College Baseball SEC Tournament, Fourth Round: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Now
Baseball
PGA Tour Golf Dean & Deluca Invitational, Second Round. (N) (Live)
LPGA Tour Golf Volvik Championship, Second Round. (N)
Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Dean & Deluca Invitational, Second Round.
Senior PGA
Soccer: International Friendly NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) Untold Stories: Daytona
MLB Whiparound (N) Å
UFC Reloaded (N) Å
Sports Live Sports Live TMZ Sports Best I Herd
(3:00) MLB Baseball Milwaukee Brewers at Atlanta Braves.
ACC Access Future Phen. Braves Live! MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball: Marlins at Braves
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
(5:59) Weather Underground (N)
Secret Earth Secret Earth Weather Caught on Camera Weather Caught on Camera Weather Caught on Camera Weather Caught on Camera
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money Option Action Mad Money (N)
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss “ADT” ’
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss “PostNet” Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ 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 Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
››› “Blackfish” (2013) Tilikum, John Hargrove.
The Seventies
The Seventies
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
››› “Blackfish” (2013)
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
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens (N) ’ Å
(:03) Ancient Aliens Å
(:03) Ancient Aliens Å
(12:03) Ancient Aliens Å
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
(:01) truTV Top Funniest
(12:02) truTV Top Funniest
The First 48 “River’s Edge”
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:06) The First 48 Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush: Off Grid
Alaskan Bush People (N) ’ The Last Alaskans: Land
(:01) Alaskan Bush People The Last Alaskans: Land
Southern Justice
Southern Justice
Wicked Tuna
Brain Games
Geo Bee 2016 (N)
Gerald R. Ford
Real George Washington
Gerald R. Ford
Real George Washington
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Kids Baking Championship Kids Baking Championship Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Buddy’s Vac. Buddy’s Vac. Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives
Caribbean
Caribbean
Island Life
Island Life
Island Life
Island Life
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Hunters
H Hunt. Int’l Hunters
Hunters
Love It or List It Å
River Monsters Searching for a modern-day “Jaws.” Å
River Monsters ’ Å
Killer Hornet Invasion (N) ’ Killer Swarms (N) ’
Urban Predator: Lion
(:02) River Monsters: Monster-Sized Special Urban Predator: Lion
River
(2:45) ››› “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” (2001, Fantasy) ’
››› “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” (2002) Daniel Radcliffe. A malevolent force threatens the students at Hogwarts. ’
The 700 Club ’ Å
›› “Smart House” (1999)
(:15) “Lemonade Mouth” (2011) Bridgit Mendler. ‘NR’ Å
(:15) “Zapped” (2014, Comedy) Zendaya. ’ Å
›› “High School Musical 2” (2007) Zac Efron. ‘NR’ Å
(9:55) “The Cheetah Girls 2” (2006) Raven. (:45) ›› “Zenon: The Zequel” (2001) Å
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob Henry Danger Game Shakers ’ Å
School
HALO Effect Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends “The Last One” ’
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ. King of Hill Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Rick, Morty Family Guy Family Guy Childrens
Aqua Teen
Gunsmoke “Shadler” Å
Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith ›› “Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit” (1993) Whoopi Goldberg. Premiere.
King
King
King
King
Lopez Å
(3:30) ›› “Con Air” (1997, Action) Nicolas Cage. ‘R’ Å
››› “The Matrix” (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. ‘R’ Å
››› “The Matrix Reloaded” (2003, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves. ‘R’ Å
“The Matrix Revolutions” ‘R’
(:15) ›› “Down to Their Last Yacht”
›› “Marry the Girl” (1937) (:45) ›› “Nothing but Trouble” (1944)
››› “Battle of the Bulge” (1965, War) Henry Fonda, Robert Shaw, Robert Ryan. Å
››› “The Longest Day” (1962, War) John Wayne.
Little House: New Beginning Little House: New Beginning Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Home Imp.
Home Imp.
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Top Model
America’s Next Top Model America’s Next Top Model America’s Next Top Model Douglas
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
Housewives/NYC
› “Coyote Ugly” (2000) Piper Perabo, Adam Garcia.
› “Coyote Ugly” (2000) Piper Perabo, Adam Garcia.
(3:00) ›› “Blade” (1998) Wesley Snipes.
›› “Blade: Trinity” (2004) Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson. Å
WWE Raw (N) Å
Wynonna Earp (N) Å
›› “The Core” (2003) Aaron Eckhart, Hilary Swank. Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Jail ’ Å
Workaholics Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park ››› “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” (2008) Jason Segel.
(:15) Ridiculousness ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous.
(2:40) ›› “She’s Out of My League” ’
(:20) ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. ’
››› “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” (1982) ’
››› “Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story” (2004)
“Fast Times at Ridgemont”
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Jim Gaffigan Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ››› “My Cousin Vinny” (1992, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Marisa Tomei, Ralph Macchio.
Last-Standing Reba Å
Reba Å
Jim Gaffigan
(1:14) ››› “Inside Man”
(:04) › “Waist Deep” (2006) Tyrese Gibson. A man’s son is inside his hijacked car.
BET Awards 2015 BET Awards’ 15th anniversary. Å
The Wendy Williams Show
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science
(3:00) U.S. Senate The Senate assembles for a legislative session. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Catholic
Cross
Discerning
Crossing
EWTN News Pope John
Daily Mass - Olam
Life on the Rock
EWTN News Holy Rosary The Church First/Love
Justin Fatica Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “The Pact”
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “The Fallen” Saving Hope Å (DVS)
Saving Hope ’ Å
Penn Zero
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Star-For.
›› “Ice Age: The Meltdown” (2006) John Leguizamo
Counter
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Gravity Falls 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 Skin Wars Å
Family Feud Family Feud
Grandmother Eat St. Å
Unique Eats Unique
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Good Eats
Good Eats
Cutthroat Kitchen
Marriage- Reality Stars
Marriage- Reality Stars
Marriage
(:23) Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars
››› “A League of Their Own” (1992, Comedy-Drama) Tom Hanks, Geena Davis.
››› “A League of Their Own” (1992) Tom Hanks.
Vivan los Niños
Vivan los Niños
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
El Chavo
El Chavo
El Chavo
Familia Diez Familia Diez Familia Diez Hotel Todo
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Aguilares
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones Noticiero
››› “Madagascar” (2005) Voices of Ben Stiller. ’ (SS)
›› “The Expendables 2” (2012) Sylvester Stallone. ’
Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
›› “Colombiana” (2011)
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)
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
(3:30) NASCAR America (N) NASCAR America (N) Å
Mecum Auto Auctions (N)
NHL Live (N) ’ (Live)
NHL Hockey San Jose Sharks at St. Louis Blues. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live)
NHL Overtime (N) ’ (Live)
To Be Announced
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Save My Life: Boston
Save My Life: Boston
Boston EMS Boston EMS Emergency Emergency Save My Life: Boston
Boston EMS Boston EMS
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—19
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SATURDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
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WTNB
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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
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GALA
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UNIV
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2:30
3 PM
3:30
Eyewitness News: Weekend Today (N) ’ Å
Chica Show Noodle
The Floogals Nina’s World Ruff-Ruff,
Astroblast! 2016 French Open Tennis Men’s and Women’s Third Round. (N) Å
2016 Senior PGA Championship
VeggieTales Dr. Wonder Kids Club
Animated St. RocKids TV Auto B. Good Paha. Is.
VeggieTales Monster
Mary-Hopkins Lassie Å
Goliath
Ishine Knect Insp. Station Praise the Lord Å
Around Town
Dragon
Pancakes
Real Life 101 Mouse in the Think Big
Real Life 101 Dog Tales
Raceline
Shotgunners Outdoorsman Shooter
Outdoors
Houston
J. Houston
Fishin’ 4 Fun Big Deal
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dog Town
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Save-Shelter Dream Quest Hatched (N) Cherry Blossom Festival
Best Pan Ever!
›› “National Treasure” (2004, Adventure) Nicolas Cage.
Daniel Tiger Daniel Tiger Curious
Nature Cat
Arthur (N)
Wild Kratts Edison’s Lab Odd Squad GPB Favorites
(6:30) “The Pledge” (2011) Emily Capehart Word Alive
Dr. Wonder My Destiny Gospel Bill
Maralee
Donkey Ollie Adventures Ishine Knect Scaly
Kerry Pharr Hillsong TV Guillermo
Gospel Music JP Jackson Ron Carp.
Good Morning America (N) Good Morning Weekend
Jack Hanna Ocean Mys. Sea Rescue Wildlife Docs Rock-Park
Born-Explore Beauty
Why Pressure Cooker?
Paid Program Paid Program Look Sexy
Paid Program 30 for 30 (N)
Arthur ’ (EI) Wild Kratts Curious
Sewing
Love Quilting Joy/Painting Gardener
Live Green
Test Kitchen New Orleans Lidia Kitchen Sara’s
Garden Home Martha Bakes Cooking
Pépin
Old House
This Old H’se
››› “Avanti!” (1972, Comedy) Jack Lemmon, Juliet Mills, Clive Revill. Å
››› “Irma La Douce” (1963, Comedy) Shirley MacLaine, Jack Lemmon. Å
›››› “The Apartment” (1960) Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine. Å
Some Like It
Lucky Dog
Dr. Chris-Vet Innovation
Inspectors
CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å
Hidden
Gme Chngers Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program PGA Tour Golf
AM Style With Leah Williams “Calista” Spotlight on fashion and accessories.
Saturday Morning Q “Calista” (N)
LOGO by Lori Goldstein
Calista Tools Hair Care
Washington Journal Live call-in program with officials. ’
Washington This Week ’
(:15) Washington This Week ’
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Person of Interest “Pilot” ’ Person of Interest “Ghosts” Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest “2 Pi R”
Person of Interest “Liberty”
Outdoor Solutions (N)
Clever Solutions (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
Diane Gilman Fashions (N) Diane Gilman Fashions (N) Samsung Electronics (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
Outdoor Solutions (N)
Botched “Foreign Bodies”
Botched “Man Boobs”
Botched “Pinched Perfect”
E! News Weekend (N) Å
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
American Ninja Warrior “Denver Qualifying” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior The finals course in Venice, Calif.
American Ninja Warrior “Dallas Finals” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior The finals course in St. Louis. ’
American Ninja Warrior ’
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Devious Maids Å
Devious Maids Å
Devious Maids Å
Devious Maids Å
Devious Maids Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL 1st Home
1st Home
1st Home
1st Home
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
›› “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides” (2011) Johnny Depp.
(:45) ›› “Alice in Wonderland” (2010, Fantasy) Johnny Depp. (DVS)
Friends ’
Friends ’
Law & Order “Positive” ’
Law & Order “Kingmaker”
Law & Order “Hindsight” ’
Law & Order “Invaders” ’
Law & Order “Fame” ’
›› “The Librarian: Quest for the Spear” (2004) Å
››› “The Librarian: Return to King Solomon’s Mines”
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Chrisley
››› “Air Force One” (1997) Harrison Ford, Gary Oldman. Å
NCIS “Honor Thy Father” ’
NCIS “Semper Fortis” ’
NCIS “Check” ’
NCIS “Cadence” ’
Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Anger
Anger
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
›› “Underworld: Awakening” (2012) Kate Beckinsale. ’
››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011) ’
SportsCenter Å
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College Softball
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30 for 30 Å
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College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game 11: Teams TBA. Game 365
Golf Life
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The Panel
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Golf Life
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SEC Now
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Morning Drive European PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Third Round. From Wentworth Club in Surrey, England. (N) (Live)
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Paid Program Paid Program Hook Future Nuts & Bolts CIZE Dance Bass Dr.
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Pawn Stars Houdini The early years of the escape artist. Å
Houdini ’ (Part 2 of 2) Å
Hatfields & McCoys A Hatfield murders a McCoy. Å
Hatfields & McCoys The McCoys murder Anse’s brother.
Hatfields & McCoys Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program truTV Top Funniest
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Genius
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Hack My Life Hack My Life
Operation
Tiny House Tiny House Nation ’ Å
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Criminal Minds “JJ” Å
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The First 48 ’ Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
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Fast N’ Loud A ’60 Bel-Air.
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Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Alaska State Troopers
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Unabomber: Secret History Howard Hughes Revealed
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Expedition Unknown Å
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Pl.- Chowdown
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Best- Made Brunch at
Daphne D.
Southern
Trisha’s Sou. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse The Kitchen
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Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
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Fixer Upper Å
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Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Uncovering Aliens ’
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Monsters and Mysteries
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››› “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” (2001, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. ’
(:45) ››› “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” (2002) Daniel Radcliffe. A malevolent force threatens the students at Hogwarts.
“Harry Potter-Azkaban”
(6:25) ››› “You Wish!”
(:05) “The Proud Family” (2005) Voices of Kyla Pratt. Å
(9:50) ›› “Quints” (2000) ’ Å
(:25) ››› “Horse Sense” (1999) ’ Å
(:10) ››› “Cow Belles” (2006) Alyson Michalka. ’ Å
(2:50) ››› “Twitches” ’
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Rangers
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Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Uncle Gra.
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Gumball
We Bare
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Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Steven Univ.
(:12) The Nanny ’ Å
The Nanny
The Nanny
The Nanny
The Nanny
(:12) The Nanny ’ Å
(10:48) Reba (:24) Reba ’ Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman ››› “Hondo” (1953, Western) John Wayne. ‘PG’ Å
››› “Dr. No” (1962, Action) Sean Connery, Ursula Andress. ‘PG’
For Your
(6:15) ›› “Bombardier”
›› “Behind the Rising Sun” (1943) Å
›› “Marine Raiders” (1944) Pat O’Brien.
(:15) ›› “Flying Leathernecks” (1951, War) John Wayne.
››› “They Were Expendable” (1945) Robert Montgomery. Å (DVS)
Caine Mutiny
I Love Lucy I Love Lucy The Middle
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Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls ››› “The Wish List” (2010) Jennifer Esposito. Å
“Just the Way You Are” (2015) Candace Cameron Bure.
“Surprised by Love” (2015)
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›› “The Lake House” (2006) Keanu Reeves. Å
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped: Killer Couples
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Million Dollar Listing
Top Chef Å
Top Chef “Magic Hour”
Top Chef “Finale” Å
Real Housewives/Beverly
Vanderpump Rules Å
Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean
Paid Program Paid Program The Twilight Zone ’ Å
Twilight Zone › “Piranha DD” (2012) Danielle Panabaker. “Bait” (2012, Action) Xavier Samuel, Phoebe Tonkin. Å
››› “Big” (1988, Comedy) Tom Hanks, Elizabeth Perkins. Å
The Core
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Cops Å
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Cops ’
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Cops Å
Paid Program Paid Program Com. Central South Park (:02) ›› “Police Academy” (1984) Steve Guttenberg. Å
(:15) › “The Benchwarmers” (2006) David Spade. Premiere. Å
(:25) ›› “Bad News Bears” (2005, Comedy) Billy Bob Thornton. Å
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. (:10) Catfish: The TV Show ’
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Catfish
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
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Hot 20 Countdown Videos from Somewhere On A Beach Tour. (N) Å
Instant Jam “Dierks Bentley” ››› “My Cousin Vinny” (1992, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Marisa Tomei, Ralph Macchio.
Paid Program Paid Program Martin Å
(:37) Martin (:15) Martin ’ Å
(9:52) Martin Martin Å
(:07) Martin (:45) Martin ’ Å
(:22) Martin Fresh Prince Fresh Prince The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
What on Earth? ’ Å
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Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Book TV ’
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St. Michael
Holy Rosary Daily Mass - Olam
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Spider-Man Yo-Kai Watch Yo-Kai Watch Yo-Kai Watch Yo-Kai Watch ›› “Ice Age: The Meltdown” (2006) John Leguizamo
Pickle-Peanut Pickle-Peanut Pickle-Peanut Pickle-Peanut Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Newlywed
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The Chase Å
Skin Wars Å
Unique Eats Unique Eats Unique
Unique
Korean Food Siba’s Table Eat This Now Kelsey’s Ess. Kelsey Home. Simply Laura Brunch at
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Crónicas de Sábado
Lo Mejor de Aquí y Ahora
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Mojoe
Chapulín
Chespirito
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Pagado
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Raggs ’
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Noodle
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LazyTown ’ LazyTown ’ Pagado
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SOS: Salva Mi Casa (SS)
La Voz Kids ’ (SS)
›› “Machete” (2010) ’
Pagado
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Pocoyo (SS) Sesame
Mickey
Mickey
Handy Manny Handy Manny Pagado
Pagado
La Rosa de Guadalupe
LAnzate!
Sabadazo
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Charlie
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Into the Blue Silver Kings Motorsports Hour (N)
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RacerTV (N) DRIVE ’
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Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
4:30
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MAY 28, 2016
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Nightly News Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ ››› “King Kong” (2005, Adventure) Naomi Watts. A beauty tames a savage beast. Å
News
(:29) Saturday Night Live ’ Å
Max Lucado News
Praise the Lord Å
The Bible
Precious Memories
In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour Power: Schuller
Graham Classic Crusades
›› “Facing the Giants” (2006, Drama) Alex Kendrick.
Reflections Paid Program Country
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Country Music Today
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Texas Music First Baptist Church
Around Town Around Town
Around Town
››› “Cliffhanger” (1993, Action) Sylvester Stallone.
Person of Interest ’ Å
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Big Bang
Big Bang
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Ring of Honor Wrestling
Two Men
Two Men
GPB Favorites
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Christian
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Supernatural Huch
Jewish Jesus Israel News “The Pledge” (2011) Barrett Carnahan, Emily Capehart.
Kenneth W. Sekulow
In Touch W/Charles Stanley Perry Stone Green Room Hillsong TV Joel Osteen
(3:30) 30 for 30 (N)
Top Blower New Shark! News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! ’ 500 Questions (N) ’ Å
Madoff Investment adviser Bernie Madoff. Å
News
Outdoorsman Paid Program Entertainers
Chattanooga Tennessee
Weekend
Southern
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Wait for God Wait for God Keeping Up Keeping Up As Time...
As Time...
Call the Midwife ’ Å
Sun Studio Songs Center Austin City Limits ’ Å
(3:30) ›››› “Some Like It Hot” (1959) Tony Curtis.
› “Wild Bill” (1995) Jeff Bridges, Ellen Barkin. Å
The Young Riders ’ Å
The Young Riders ’ Å
The Young Riders ’ Å
Dead Man’s Gun ’ Å
Dead Man’s Gun ’ Å
PGA Tour Golf DEAN & DELUCA Invitational, Third Round. Paid Program CBS News
Best Pan Ever!
NCIS: Los Angeles ’
48 Hours ’ Å
48 Hours ’ Å
News
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Facets of Diamonique Jewelry “All Easy Pay Offers” (N)
Beauty We Love “Calista”
Total Gym Experience
Calista Tools Hair Care
A Host of Beauty Favorites “Calista” (N)
Carolyn Pollack
(2:15) Washington This Week ’
Communicat Washington This Week ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Person of Interest ’ Å
››› “The Negotiator” (1998, Suspense) Samuel L. Jackson, Kevin Spacey. Å
›› “Man on Fire” (2004, Crime Drama) Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning. Å
Parks
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Silver Designs/Nicky Butler Silver Designs/Nicky Butler Samsung Electronics (N)
Diane Gilman Fashions (N) Diane Gilman Fashions (N) Samsung Electronics (N)
Samsung Electronics (N)
Joyful Discoveries
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The Kardashians
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››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne. Å
››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne. Å
The Kardashians
American Ninja Warrior ’
American Ninja Warrior The Denver finals course. Å
American Ninja Warrior Competitors face the finals course. American Ninja Warrior The finals course in Las Vegas. ’
American Ninja Warrior The finals course in Las Vegas. ’
UnREAL
“The Good Mistress” (2014) Annie Heise.
“Stranger in the House” (2016) Emmanuelle Vaugier. Å
Movie
(:02) “Not With My Daughter” (2014) Ally Sheedy. Å
(12:02) Movie
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline on TLC (N) Å
Dateline on TLC (N) Å
To Be Announced
Dateline on TLC ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Full Frontal The Detour Separation Anxiety (DVS)
›› “The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice” (2008)
›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008) Å
NBA Tip-Off (N) (Live) Å
NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Oklahoma City Thunder. (N)
Inside the NBA (N) Å
Wrecked (N)
NCIS “The Artful Dodger” ’
NCIS A dead thief turns up.
NCIS “No Good Deed” ’
NCIS “Lost in Translation”
NCIS “Troll” Å (DVS)
NCIS “The Lost Boys”
NCIS “Neverland”
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
“Captain America-Avgr”
›› “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006) Hugh Jackman. ’
›› “The Wolverine” (2013, Action) Hugh Jackman, Hiroyuki Sanada. ’ Å
›› “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” (2009, Action) Hugh Jackman. ’ Å
Mike & Molly
College Softball
NCAA Update College Softball
College Softball
College Softball
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
Lacrosse
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SEC Storied Å
E:60
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Milwaukee Brewers. From Miller Park in Milwaukee. (N)
Postgame
College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game 14: Teams TBA. (N)
Driven
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College Baseball ACC Tournament, Game 14: Teams TBA.
College Baseball SEC Tournament, Second Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
SEC Now (N) College Baseball SEC Tournament, Second Semifinal: Teams TBA.
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Now
(3:00) LPGA Tour Golf Volvik Championship, Third Round.
Golf Central (N) (Live)
PGA Tour Golf Dean & Deluca Invitational, Third Round. From the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.
Golf Central
Euro PGA
NASCAR Racing
Empty Cup Soccer International Friendly -- Mexico vs Paraguay. (N)
U.S. Pregame Soccer International Friendly -- United States vs Bolivia. (N) Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. (N) (Live) Å
UFC Weigh-In Å
MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! Driven
MLL Lacrosse Boston Cannon at Denver Outlaws. (N) (Live)
MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Atlanta Braves.
Why Planes Crash
Why Planes Crash
Why Planes Crash
Tornado Alley
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Tornado Alley Å
Oklahoma: Tornado Target Strangest Weather on Earth Strangest Weather on Earth
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
MSNBC Live (N)
Caught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Lockup
Lockup
Lockup “Inside Kern Valley”
CNN Newsroom
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Smerconish
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The Eighties
The Eighties VCRs; remote controls; family sitcoms.
The Eighties
The Eighties
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Smerconish
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The Eighties
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Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
America’s News HQ
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FOX Report (N)
Stossel
Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) Red Eye With Tom Shillue
Justice With Judge Jeanine
(3:00) Hatfields & McCoys
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers “Big Moe” American Pickers ’
American Pickers ’ Å
American Pickers ’
American Pickers ’
(:03) American Pickers ’
(12:03) American Pickers ’
Hack My Life Hack My Life Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Carbonaro
Carbonaro
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Dead Wrong”
(:03) The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48: Gangland ’
The First 48: Gangland (N) The First 48: Survivors
(12:06) The First 48 Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud Å
The Real Bonnie and Clyde Skyjacker That Got Away
CIA Secret Experiments
Area 51: The CIA’s Secret
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Pl.- Chowdown
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures Å
The Dead Files (N) Å
The Dead Files Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Chopped Junior “Grill It!”
Chopped
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Property Brothers Å
Property Brothers Å
House Hunters Renovation Big Sky
Big Sky
Property Brothers Å
Monster Squid: The Giant Is Real ’ Å
Mermaids: The Body Found ’ Å
9-1-1
9-1-1
(:01) Rabid (N) ’
(:02) River Monsters: Monster-Sized Special (:19) Rabid ’
River
(3:15) ››› “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” (2004) ’
››› “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. ’
(:15) ››› “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe. ’
Twitches Å ›› “The Even Stevens Movie” (2003) ’
(:15) ››› “Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie” ‘NR’
› “Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam” (2010) Demi Lovato. ’
(9:50) ›› “Princess Protection Program”
›› “The Cheetah Girls: One World” ‘NR’
SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House School
Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Lost in the West (N) Å
Thundermans Thundermans Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Dragon Ball Z King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Champloo
Champloo
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Raymond
Raymond
George
George
King
King
King
King
(3:30) ››› “For Your Eyes Only” (1981, Action) Roger Moore. ‘PG’
››› “GoldenEye” (1995) Pierce Brosnan. A weapon’s theft sends Agent 007 to Russia.
››› “Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green. ‘PG-13’ Å
Dr. No (1962)
(3:30) ››› “The Caine Mutiny” (1954)
(:45) ››› “The Hill” (1965, Drama) Sean Connery, Harry Andrews. Å
›››› “The Bridge on the River Kwai” (1957) William Holden, Alec Guinness. Å
››› “A Bridge Too Far” (1977, War) Dirk Bogarde. Å
(3:00) “Surprised by Love” “All Yours” (2016, Comedy) Nicolette Sheridan. Å
“Date With Love” (2016, Romance) Shenae Grimes. Å
“Harvest Moon” (2015) Jessy Schram, Jesse Hutch. Å
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Snapped
Snapped
Snapped: Killer Couples
Snapped
Snapped
She Made Me Do It (N)
Snapped
Snapped
House ’ Å
Below Deck Mediterranean Southern Charm
Southern Charm
›› “Cheaper by the Dozen 2” (2005) Steve Martin.
›› “Cheaper by the Dozen” (2003) Steve Martin.
›› “Cheaper by the Dozen” (2003) Steve Martin.
(3:30) ›› “The Core” (2003, Action) Aaron Eckhart, Hilary Swank. Å
›› “Deep Impact” (1998, Drama) Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni. Å
› “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra” (2009, Action) Channing Tatum. Å
›› “A Nightmare on Elm Street” (2010)
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
Cops Å
Cops Å
Vegas
Vegas
(:10) ›› “National Lampoon’s Vacation” (1983) Chevy Chase. Å
(:31) ›› “Step Brothers” (2008, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly. Å
››› “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” (2008) Jason Segel, Kristen Bell. Å
(:40) ›› “Step Brothers” (2008) Å
(3:40) Catfish: The TV Show (4:50) Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
Catfish: The TV Show ’
›› “Scream 4” (2011, Horror) Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox. ’
› How High
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
Dating Naked ’
››› “Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story” (2004) ’
› “Big Daddy” (1999, Comedy) Adam Sandler. ’
›› “P.C.U.” (1994) ’
›› “Legally Blonde” (2001) Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson. Å
›› “The Proposal” (2009) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds.
Instant Jam “Dierks Bentley” ››› “Walk the Line” (2005, Biography) Joaquin Phoenix, Reese Witherspoon.
Fresh Prince The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Fresh Prince ›› “National Security” (2003) Martin Lawrence, Steve Zahn. Å
To Be Announced
Husbands
Husbands
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
What on Earth? ’ Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files NASA’s Unexplained Files (:02) What on Earth? Å
NASA’s Unexplained Files
(3:00) Book TV ’
After Words ’
Book TV ’
Book TV ’
Web of Faith 2.0 (N) Å
The World
Bookmark
Worth Living Church Poor Mother Angelica Live
St. Rita The life of Saint Rita of Cascia.
Living Right With Dr. Ray
Saint Mariana of Jesus
Daily Mass - Olam
Law & Order: SVU
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Wander
Wander
Wander
Wander
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Fangbone
Walk the
Walk the
Walk the
Marvel’s Av. Marvel’s Av.
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest
Idiotest
Idiotest
Idiotest
Skin Wars Å
Suppers
Suppers
Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off Donut
Sugar
Rachael - Guy Kids Cook-Off
CSI: Miami “Simple Man” ’ CSI: Miami “Dispo Day” ’
CSI: Miami “Double Cap” ’ CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Spring Break”
CSI: Miami “Tinder Box” ’
CSI: Miami Addict’s home.
CSI: Miami “Simple Man” ’ CSI: Miami “Dispo Day” ’
Recuerda y Gana
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
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La Rosa de Guadalupe
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(3:00) ›› “Machete” ’
Noticiero Tel. Videos Asom. America’s Funniest Videos ·Qué Noche! Con Angélica ›› “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” (2009) Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox. ’ (SS)
T. Telemundo Videos Asom. La Reina del Sur ’ (SS)
Hotel Todo
Durmiendo Fútbol
Fútbol International Friendly -- México vs Paraguay. (N)
Noticiero
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Track and Field
Mecum Auto Auctions
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“APEX: The Story of the Hypercar” (2015, Documentary)
Indy 500 Festival Parade (N)
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Trauma
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The World’s Fattest Man ’ The World’s Fattest Man ’ The Man with the 80lb Groin The Man With No Penis ’
The World’s Fattest Man ’ The Man with the 80lb Groin
20—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
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AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin
NihAr JANgA, 11, of Austin, Texas, and Jairam Hathwar, 13, of Painted Post, N.Y., hold up the trophy
after being named co-champions at the 2016 National Spelling Bee, in National Harbor, Md., on
Thursday.
National Spelling Bee ends
in its unlikeliest tie to date
OXON HILL, Md. (AP) — If not
for his high-pitched voice, there
would be no way to peg Nihar
Janga as the youngest-ever winner of the Scripps National
Spelling Bee.
The 11-year-old breezed up to
the microphone with confidence,
and most of his words, he knew
right away. He looked like the
strongest
speller
onstage,
stronger even than his eventual
co-champion,
13-year-old
Jairam Hathwar, a blue-chip
speller whose older brother
hoisted the trophy two years
ago.
At his best, Nihar turned the
tables on bee pronouncer
Jacques Bailly by shouting out
the definitions of his words as
soon as they were announced.
“Biniou,” Bailly said.
“Is this the Breton bagpipe?”
Nihar said.
After the crowd quieted, Bailly
asked Nihar if he wanted the
word used in a sentence. Nihar
just shook his head.
But Nihar wasn’t perfect, and
he stumbled at just the wrong
time — or perhaps the right time.
Twice, Jairam missed a word, giving Nihar a chance to seal the
title. Both times, Nihar followed
up with his own flub. After each
nailed his final two words, Nihar,
from Austin, Texas, and Jairam,
from Painted Post, New York,
were declared co-champions. It
was the third year in a row that
the bee ended in a tie.
Bee organizers insisted they’d
be OK with another tie, but they
changed the rules to make it less
likely. Instead of a pre-determined list of 25 “championship
words” for the final three spellers,
the bee instead forced the top
three to go through up to 25
rounds. And the difficulty of the
words could be adjusted as necessary.
Third-place finisher Snehaa
Kumar of Folsom, California,
bowed out in the first champi-
onship round. Nihar and Jairam
had to spell 24 words apiece
before it was over.
Nihar and Jairam have grown
close over the past year, communicating mostly online. They
chatted while others were
spelling, high-fived after their
words and embraced after they
won. The timing of Nihar’s misses
was almost too perfect to believe,
and Nihar denied afterward that
he misspelled on purpose. He
said he just didn’t know the
words.
“I wanted to win, but at the
same time, I felt really bad for
Jairam,” he said.
Both were inspired by their
favorite athletes. As the confetti
fell, Nihar crossed his arms in
homage to Dez Bryant’s touchdown celebrations. The Dallas
Cowboys receiver responded with
a congratulatory tweet.
Jairam, whose dad takes him
to play golf when he’s had enough
spelling practice, channeled his
favorite player, Jordan Spieth.
“When he hits a bad shot, he
always bounces back, on the next
shot or the next hole,” Jairam
said. “When I missed those two
words, I didn’t let them get to my
head, and I just focused on the
next word.”
It was the second straight year
that a sibling of a past champion
won the bee. Jairam’s brother,
Sriram, was a 2014 co-champion.
Sriram, too, got a reprieve when
his co-champion Ansun Sujoe
missed a chance at the solo title.
“Deja vu,” Sriram said. “I
thought it was over, because
Nihar is so strong, such a great
speller.”
The words were as tricked-up
as ever. Because the best spellers
become fluent in Latin and Greek
roots, the bee went to words from
languages with less infiltration
into English, including Afrikaans,
Danish, Irish Gaelic, Maori and
Mayan.
Jairam’s winning word was
Alice
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From Page 18
something that seemed to afflict
Hatter in the first film, but maybe
he’s just really good at compartmentalizing.
Alice decides be a noble friend
and take on Time to get to the
bottom of what really happened
on the day when the Red Queen
(Helena
Bonham
Carter)
unleashed her Jabberwocky on
their village. Time, you should
know, is part clock, part man
(Sacha Baron Cohen) and sounds
a lot like Werner Herzog. His
sequences, and his little steampunk companions are actually a
high point. It’s the one time
Bobin can really get out from
under Burton’s suffocating
precedent.
Time talks a big game and can
also decide when someone’s time
is up, but his own command is
dependent on a larger than life
clock that’s powered by another
device which also functions as a
time travel machine. That’s what
Alice steals to careen back
through time to try to correct the
original sins of Underland — a
quest she continues even after
she learns of the possibly catastrophic consequences of her
actions.
While it might sound intriguing
on paper, on the screen it’s less
than enchanting and the plot
gets less and less compelling as it
goes on. Aside from Depp’s
descent into grating ghoulishness, the acting of the returning
characters remains mostly the
same. Bonham Carter and Anne
Feldenkrais, which is derived
from a trademark and means a
system of body movements
intended to ease tension. Niram
won with gesellschaft, which
means a mechanistic type of
social relationship.
Among the words they got
right: Kjeldahl, Hohenzollern,
juamave, groenedael, zindiq and
euchologion.
Hathaway (The White Queen)
continue to do their affected,
scenery-chewing shticks, while
the host of Underland creatures
and their famous voices (including the late Alan Rickman) look
more dated than ever — beholden
to Burton’s CGI renderings from
six years ago.
There are some inspired visuals, like a landscape of glimmering pocket watches suspended in
air, but many of the set pieces are
executed with too much remove.
Alice, for instance, must walk
across the enormous hands of a
ticking clock to gain entry to
Time’s headquarters. It’s a great
idea and looks wonderful, but it’s
just airless and void of suspense
in execution.
Excitement and wonder are
fairly hard to conjure up when
your Mad Hatter is consumed
with daddy issues, your protagonist is nonchalant about everything, and the oddities of this
world are suddenly getting scientific explanations and backstories
that really only show how awfully
ordinary everything once was.
It’s a shame, too, because the
Alice stories could be so wonderful on the big screen. It might be
time to scrap it all and try again.
“Alice Through the Looking
Glass,” a Walt Disney Pictures
release, is rated PG by the Motion
Picture Association of America
for “fantasy action/peril and
some language.” Running time:
113 minutes. One and a half
stars out of four.
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LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SALE
9:(:, "(2,9
The following vehicles are being held at North and
)0 ,-+ - BJ@4A "<??F South Towing, 2862 South Lee Hwy, Cleveland, TN
E<74L 4A7 ,4GHE74L
4@
C@ 37311. Anyone who has proof of ownership must
,B94 E86?<A8E 8A7 G45?8F 4A7 ?BGF reclaim the vehicle. Owner or Lien Holder must pay
@BE8
all storage and towing charges, Failure of the Owner
#(' ( ,GE88G 'BA74L E<74L or Lien Holder to exercise their rights to reclaim
4@ C@ 8FG4G8 F4?8 L4E7 F4?8
94@<?<8F ,GBI8F @<6EBJ4I8F E89E<: the vehicle within the time allowed shall be deemed
8E4GBEF @<F68??4A8BHF <G8@F 6?BG; a waiver of all rights, title and interest in the vehi<A: G45?8F 587F
6BH6;8F I8EL cle and consent to sale of the vehicle at public aucG;<A: @HFG :B
tion.
YR
MAKE
MODEL
VIN
*+)/ ( (
,- - ,4?8
1989 Merz
30E WDBEA30D6KBO58644
*8BC?8 ,GE88G
E<74L ,4GHE74L
UEX 4TIBG22K8YU963436
4@ C@ 8;<A7 &88 .A<I8EF<GL A 2000 Toyt
2002 Pont
SFG
1G2JD12F427237282
G<DH8F 6B??86G<5?8F HEA<GHE8 4EG
@BE8
May 20, 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016—21
34. Money To Lend
40. General Services Offered
45. Vacation Rentals
49. Apartments For Rent
54. Lots For Sale
72. Cars For Sale
* LOANS up to $1,250 *
Quick Approval
423-476-5770
BOBCAT FOR Rent or Hire with
trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with
boxscrape
or
bushhog.
423-478-2724.
BEAR PAW COTTAGES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
RIVER LOT, Pinhook Estates,
gated, dock permit, year around water, $90,000 will finance 10 % down.
707-208-5990.
LOOKING
FOR
A
NEW
EMPLOYEE? LET CLASSIFIED
ADS HELP! CALL 472-5041.
HOME OR BUSINESS
CLEANING SERVICE
CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent:
Georgetown Pike, Spring Place
Road and Highway 64. Call
476–2777.
CLEVELAND 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
440 2nd Street. Laundry on site. No
smoking or pets allowed. One year
lease. $225 deposit, $450 a month.
For
more
information
call
423-715-3180.
CLEVELAND SuMMIT Apartments
Rent is based on income for persons
62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. Equal Housing Opportunity 44
Inman Street 479-3005
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath Condo, upgrades, 55 + community, fantastic
view, $220,000. View by appointment only 423-584-2186.
486 MARINA Hills completely renovated, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, large
screen porch, great room with gas
log fireplace, granite counter tops,
stainless appliances, 1/4 mile from B
& B Marina. Two additional lots included with the house. $150,000.
423-472-4000.
39. Services And Repairs
BEST PRICES... Lawn mowing,
weeding, trimming, edging, bush
trimming, landscape projects, clean
ups, powerwashing and much more!
One time jobs or regular scheduled
maintenance. Quality and dependable work at the best prices in the
area. Call Mitchell Harris of Triple H
Lawn Care @ 423-715-4480. Free
estimates!
40. General Services Offered
* AAA House PAINTING: InteriorExterior, Pressure Washing, FREE
estimates,
References.
423-284-9652.
BO’S TREE SERVICE: Over 30
years experience. Insured, free estimates.
Bucket
Truck.
423-284-9814 or 423-544-2249.
BOX TRAILERS, 40' goose neck
trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for
rent. 423-478-2724.
COMPLETE LAWNCARE
Commercial and Residential
Landscaping, Aerating and over
seeding
mowing,
trimming,
mulching, pressure washing, yard
clean- up, leaf service.
Licensed and insured.
Free Estimates
Very reliable
Offering the Best Rates in Town!
Call Saylors Outdoor Services
423-432-7167
DANNY'S TREE SERVICE: Tree removal, shrubbery trimmed and
planted, firewood. Senior Discounts.
30 years experience. 423-244-6676.
EXTREME MAINTENANCE Home/
Mobile Home Commercial, residential, Painting (interior/ exterior).
Decks, plumbing, electrical, roofing,
siding, all work! 30 years experience.
Free
estimates.
423-331-7045.
Are you in need of cleaning
services?
We have the services you are
looking for. We offer a one- time
cleaning service or daily,
weekly, bi-weekly and monthly
cleaning plans. We also offer
carpet cleaning, window
cleaning and pressure washing
services.
SELLING YOUR HOME?
WE WILL GET YOUR HOME IN
TIP TOP SHAPE TO SELL
QUICKLY!
Cleveland Business, Family
owned & operated…
Call or email us today for a
FREE estimate. 423-593-1525
[email protected]
MAKE YOuR house beautiful! Professional Pressure washing, exterior
painting.
Free
estimates.
423-598-3421.
MATTHEWS DuMPSTERS:
Dumpster rental, roofing, clean out,
remodel, haul off. 423-506-7600.
POWER WASHING, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
TOMMY'S STuMP Grinding and
Tree Removal: Free estimates.
423-244-3991.
46. Storage Space For Rent
TEMPSAFE STORAGE
Climate Controlled
& Outside units
Downtown Location
& Georgetown Road
614-4111
47. Business Property For
Rent
3,750 SQuARE foot building available, office/ warehouse space.
Owner/ Agent. 423-987-9232.
OFFICE/ RETAIL- Star Vue Square
7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly.
Owner/ Agent 423-987-9232.
48. Office Space For Rent
OFFICE/ RETAIL Space Available,
short and long term lease. Several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
49. Apartments For Rent
$1,800: LuXuRY Apartment, fully
furnished, utilities paid. Located on
quiet side street. Contact Jones
Properties 423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz
$600/ MONTH, deposit $400- 2 bedroom, 2 full bath. Washer/ dryer
hook- up. 3494 Hedge Drive NE,
Steeple Chase. 423-476-2000.
Dad (dad’s name if desired), you are the
greatest! Thanks for all you do! Your names(s).
Daddy, Happy Father’s Day! We love you!
Your names(s).
It’s as easy as 1-2-3
1) Write your special message below.
2) Count the words in your message (minimum 12
words). Multiply by 25¢ per word.
3) Enclose check, money order, Visa, Discover, American
Express or Mastercard number. All messages must be prepaid.
4) Add $1.70 for border.
5) Deadline is Wednesday, June 15th at 4 p.m.
6) Look for your message to appear in the Cleveland Daily
Banner on Sunday, June 19th.
Message:
PuBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
1 BEDROOM apartment 6300 North
Lee Highway. $395 monthly. $395
deposit. 618-9844.
1 BEDROOM Dalton Pike area. utilities paid. No pets. $170 week, $300
deposit. 653-4862.
1 OR 2 bedroom available. No pets,
no smoking in house. For more information call 423-227-9146.
2 BEDROOM apartment, updated,
close- in, $700 monthly, plus security deposit. 423-476-9101.
2 BEDROOM behind Ace Hardware
on Peerless Road. Ground level,
walk to shopping. Stove, refrigerator,
water furnished. For information, call
between 9am-6pm. No pets/ smoking. 423-479-5570.
2 BEDROOM duplex like new, off
Freewill Road $575 monthly, $500
deposit. No pets! No smoking. Credit
check. 423-667-3551.
AS GOOD as it gets luxury condo,
fully furnished, plus washer and
dryer, utilities and cable paid.
$1,550. 423-618-6383.
AVAILABLE NOW: Large 1 bedroom
apartment, $475 monthly, $350 deposit.
Call
for
appointment
423-310-1171.
BEST PLACE for Living! 3 bedroom,
2 bath. Master bedroom on main
level. $850/ month. 423-667-4967.
Name:
Address:
Phone:
City:
Zip:
Credit Card:
BLYTHEWOOD- STEEPLECHASE
APARTMENTS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($389- $579); 2
Bedroom ($429- $609). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
BRECKENRIDGE- $860: 2 Bedroom, 2 bath. Contact Jones Properties 423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
CC Expiraton:
E-mail or bring your message to:
Father’s Day Tribute
Cleveland Daily Banner
P.O. Box 3600
Cleveland, TN 37320
Phone: (423) 472-5041
[email protected]
NICE, CLEAN, large 1 bedroom, lots
of closet space, central heat/ air, appliances included. Water furnished.
One small pet considered. $475
monthly. 423-710-0169.
NORTHWEST, CLEAN, large, 2
bedroom apartment. $650 monthly,
$650 deposit. Call 423-774-7686.
50. Mobile Homes For Rent
COLLEGETOWN
MOBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
MOVE IN today! 2 bedrooms at
$460+. 3 bedrooms at $535+. Nice
community in Georgetown. Call
423-529-0588.
www.georgetownmhp.com
$149 PLUS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
45. Vacation Rentals
SUNDAY,
JUNE 19
MCDONALD AREA- Duplex: 2 bedroom, 1 bath, central heat/ air, stove,
refrigerator, washer/ dryer hookup,
$550 monthly, $300 deposit. NO
pets. Call 423-479-2477.
52. Sleeping Rooms
TOP CuT Lawn Care: Professional
service, affordable prices, honest
and dependable. Credit cards accepted. 423-593-9634.
2 RIVERS CAMPING: RV Park,
Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee
Rivers. 423-338-7208.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 full baths, Townhome, 1,400 square feet. Master
bedroom suite, walkin closet, separate laundry room, $850 monthly. No
tobacco products, no animals.
678-357-7771.
CENTRAL AVENuE: $600, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, water included.
Contact Jones Properties.
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
CLEAN ONE bedroom apartment,
$450 rent, $400 deposit, year lease.
No pets. No smoking. Owner/ Agent
STONY
BROOKS
REALTY
423-479-4514.
Joy
BREEzEWAYEXTENDEDSTAY.COM
WEEKLY rate paid in advance, averages $46.43 nightly plus tax.
423-584-6505.
53. Houses For Rent
$1,195: BEAuTIFuL! 3 bedroom, 2
bath, 1970 square feet with hardwood flooring throughout, Fenced
backyard with sun room. PROVISION REAL ESTATE AND PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT,
LLC
423-693-0301.
PuBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
56. Houses For Sale
GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO
PURCHASE YOUR HOME
WITH “NO”
DOWN PAYMENT
CALL ME TO GET APPROVED!
HERB LACY
423-593-1508
AFFILIATE BROKER
CENTURY 21 1ST CHOICE
REALTORS
2075 OCOEE ST
CLEVELAND, TN 37311
[email protected]
478-2331
REMODELED HOME, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, den, basement. Owner/
Agent financing. STONY BROOKS
REALTY 423-479-4514.
TOWNHOuSE, 3 large bedrooms,
2.5 baths, with bonus room, 1,900
square feet, $140,000 will finance
10 % down. 707-208-5990.
LOOKING FOR
AN AFFORDABLE
PLACE TO LIVE
Are You 62 Years or Older?
• Conveniently Located
• Activities Provided
• Utilities Included in Rent
North Cleveland
Towers
70. Vans For Sale
Call (423) 479-9639
HONDA ODYSSEY EX-L 2007 mini
van, blue, DVD player, floor mats.
No rust. Gray interior. Front/ rear air
conditioner. Non-smoker. $5,850.
Sunroof, heated seats, leather interior, power locks, power seats, tilt
steering. 184,xxx. 423-505-7833.
1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311
72. Cars For Sale
Efficiency Apartments
Accepting
Applications For
1 Bedroom Apartments
$540.00 Per Month*
*Income Restrictions Apply
1988 FORD MuSTANG Convertible,
4 cylinder automatic, fully loaded, restored, too many new parts to list.
$4,250. 423-715-6940 or 284-9774.
Rent Based On Income
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
North Cleveland Towers does not discriminate on the basis of
handicapped status in the admission or access to, or treatment or
employment in its federally assisted programs and activities.
BRADLEY COUNTY SCHOOLS
Black Fox Elementary Flooring Bid
Bradley County Schools is accepting proposals from
qualified vendors for materials and labor for flooring in
the hallway of Black Fox Elementary School.¬¬ Bids will
be publically opened and read on June 8th, 2016.
A copy of the proposal¬specifications may be seen by
visiting the Bradley County Schools web site at
www.bradleyschools.org/bids¬or by visiting the Central
Office located at 800 South Lee Highway.
Bradley County Schools is an equal
opportunity employer.
WANTED
“The Best and Brightest” Guys and Girls
4 BEDROOMS, large family room,
office, 1.5 baths. Near Ross. $950.
479-4614.
CHARMING, CLEAN 1.5 story, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, located near
downtown. $1,050 lease, $1,050 deposit. Call 423-774-7686
COMING SOON: $1,100. 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom house for rent off
Mouse Creek Road. Contact Jones
Properties 423-472-4000. www.jonesproperties.biz.
SHARE A house with use of one
bedroom, others are used as office
for owners. Completely finished and
utilities included in rent payment of
$550 per month. Must share with
two cats. If interested, call 423
715-1225.
SALES and STOCKERS!
Think Ahead! Apply Now!
Nice People, Positive Environment!
54. Lots For Sale
BIRCHWOOD, 3.06 acres in gated
community on Tennessee River. Includes covered slip at community
dock. $79,500. 423-894-9446.
I-75 Exit 20 Beside the Exxon
career goals, personal dreams,
success with Amazon and beyond.
in the
Journey
Now Hiring:
FT Associates
Apply in person:
6227 Lee Highway, Ste A, Chattanooga, TN 37421
Mon-Sat 8AM-5PM
LPN position available
We are looking for a dedicated state-licensed practical nurse to join our compassionate
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Or Bradley Square Mall
200 Paul Huff Pkwy, Cleveland, TN 37312
Mon-Sat 9AM-5PM
We offer competitive pay in a supportive, team-oriented environment. Apply in person
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423.479.4447
73748
3500 Keith Street NW
Cleveland, TN 37312
Visit us: centurypa.com/employment.html • Equal Opportunity Employer
423-476-5518
Online Rental Payment Available
ASK ABOUT SELECT “SPECIALS”
www.bender-realty.com
or come by office
425 25th Street
57. Farms & Acreage For Sale
CALHOuN TN, private, 1400 square
feet on 11 acres, gated community.
$190,000. 423-322-3559 www.facebook.com/calhountnhouseforsale.
3 BEDROOM 1.5 bath, fully remodeled, 5 minutes or less from downtown Cleveland. $700 month, $700
deposit. No pets. No smoking.
423-716-7742.
4 BEDROOM, 2.5 bath, double garage, central heat/ air, range, fridge,
dishwasher, zoned for Ross- Yates,
$1,195 rent, $1,000 deposit, year
lease, no pets, no smoking. STONY
BROOKS REALTY 423-479-4514.
APARTMENTS &
HOMES FOR RENT
Amazon is an Equal Opportunity-Affirmative Action Employer – Minority /
Female / Disability /Veteran / Gender Identity / Sexual Orientation
22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, May 27, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
Senior Center hosts ‘A Night to Remember’
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
Decked out in fancy dresses
and suits, the dancers twisted
and twirled to the music that
made them feel young and alive.
It was the night of the annual
Senior Prom, and the event’s
organizers had promised them “A
Night to Remember.”
However, these were not high
school seniors; they were senior
citizens enjoying an event hosted
by the Bradley Cleveland Senior
Activity Center on Thursday.
“Our people can dance all day
every day, if you let them,” said
Sharon Westfield, senior services
and outreach coordinator. “It’s
always a fun time.”
The local senior center has
hosted a prom for seven or eight
years now, said Westfield. What
started as just an idea for a onetime party has since turned into
an event some local seniors keep
marked on their calendars.
Local music act Reeves and
Swan played the music of
decades past, from fast-moving
Elvis Presley songs to slow,
romantic ballads.
The seniors were encouraged
to dance, then time was set aside
for refreshments and the crowning of a prom king and queen.
This year’s prom king was Carl
Parker, and the queen was
Carolyn Lynn.
Several of those who attended
the event said it lived up to the
promise of it making for “A Night
to Remember.”
“It’s really nice,” said attendee
Jeanette Parker. “The music is
great, and it’s a great atmosphere.”
Jerry Stevenson, a former
prom king who has attended the
event four years in a row,
described it as a “special time.”
He added he always welcomes
an opportunity to dance, and he
thinks “something like this
should be offered at least once a
week.”
Several attendees cut loose to
the livelier songs with their
spouses, dates or friends, injecting some extra fun into the
evening. The slow dances that
followed gave them time for some
quiet nostalgia.
Though it has been quite a few
years since they might have
attended their high school senior
proms, many seniors smiled and
whispered in each other’s ears
like they still had plenty of love
and dreams to share.
The Senior Activity Center is a
local, publicly funded facility
which offers activities for those
age 55 and older.
It is open weekdays between 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. For more information, call 423-559-2171.
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
STAFF of the Bradley
Cleveland Senior Activity Center
gathered for a photo as they
eagerly awaited more festivities
at the center’s Senior Prom.
From left are Nicky Westfield,
Delois McCleary, Sharon
Westfield, Patsy Pressley, Rosa
Cox and Demetrius Ramsey. Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
THIS YEAR’S Senior Activity
Center Senior Prom King and
Queen, are Carl Parker and
Carolyn Lynn.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
PROM QUEEN Carolyn Lynn and Prom King Carl Parker have the dance floor to themselves for the
prom king and queen dance.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
PROM QUEEN Carolyn Lynn glows with happiness as she dances with King Carl Parker, at the
2016 Senior Activity Center Senior Prom. DEMETRIUS RAMSEY assists Sharon
RICO BLAIR and John Borgia made it look
Westfield in the selection for the Senior Prom
good and turned some heads in these slick
2016 Prom King and Queen.
threads during the Senior Activity Center Senior
Prom 2016.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
THE SCHWENGLERS, Kurt
and Bettie, cut a rug at the Senior
Activity Center Senior Prom
2016.
A PAIR OF couples, left, sit
out a song and relax with some
good conversation during the
Senior Activity Center Senior
Prom 2016. From left are
Jeanette Parker, Richard
Ashmore, Charles Smith and
Oteen Smith.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
THE SENIOR PROM was only the third time
Benny Hooper and Kathy Graston have visited the
Bradley Cleveland Senior Activity Center, but they
plan to keep coming back.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
THE 2016 SENIOR
Activity Center Senior
Prom was a wonderful
time of fellowship for
these lovely ladies, from
left: Hazel Ramsey, Mae
Bradford, Lamon Capron
and Glenda Queener.
JOHN GILLILAND and Nola Field danced most
of the night, but did stop for just a moment to take
this photo during the 2016 Senior Activity Center
Senior Prom. Banner photos, HOWARD PIERCE
REEVES AND SWAN performed a great assortment
of songs including swing music, rock and roll, rhythm
and blues, and more for the 2016 Senior Activity Center
Senior Prom. Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
THERE’S NEVER A DULL moment at the Bradley Cleveland Senior Activity Center. It was a packed
house Thursday night as the center held its 2016 Senior Prom. The evening included live music, dancing,
fellowship, lots of laughs, a few tears of joy, dinner and some cake.
MICHAEL YORK, left, gives all the credit to his wife of
42 years, Creedia York, for making them look so good on
the dance floor during the 2016 Senior Activity Center
Senior Prom.