history meets modern - Chattanooga Times Free Press

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history meets modern - Chattanooga Times Free Press
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Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Vol. 143, No. 104 • • •
Evolution
bill goes
to Haslam
■ Scientists say lawmakers are
“attempting to roll the clock
back to 1925.”
By Andy Sher
Staff Writer
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
Daryl Black, executive director at the Chattanooga History Center, speaks about ways the museum will offer visitors information
when it opens next year. He is sitting in his office looking onto the Tennessee Aquarium.
HISTORY MEETS MODERN
‘WE DIDN’T WANT THIS TO BE
YOUR GRANDFATHER’S MUSEUM.’
By Cliff Hightower
Staff Writer
T
he scene is very clear to Daryl Black.
He sits at a desk that overlooks the
Tennessee Aquarium plaza, and day in
and day out watches tourists and schoolchildren milling around below him, hundreds of them. To him, they are potential customers when the new Chattanooga History Center
opens early next year.
“It’s right in the middle of the entertainment
district,” said Black, the museum’s executive director.
The vision for the new Chattanooga History Center is not one of relics and artifacts with
descriptions of particular eras of history. Instead,
the new model will be about topics, storytelling
and interactive media.
“We didn’t want this to be your grandfather’s
museum,” Black said. Visitors will see the difference through use of high and low technology,
he said. They will use interactive touch screens
and audio storytelling to spur conversation and
learning about regional history. There also will
be an option for visitors to interview and record
stories about their own loved ones who live in
Chattanooga.
Three main topics addressed in the center are
the Cherokee Nation, the Civil War and blacks
and segregation. But the stories highlighting those
issues won’t just be retreads of history looking at
specific events and people, Black said.
“We’re thinking through a new model on how
we can do a history museum,” he said.
The designers of the renovation see the center
as a unique part of Chattanooga.
Rick Sobel, project director for New York Citybased Ralph Applebaum Associates Inc., said the
new center will be a “museum for the people.”
The company designed the journalism-oriented
Newseum and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, both in Washington, D.C.
See HISTORY, Page A5
CHATTANOOGA
HISTORY CENTER
■ Chattanooga Regional
History Museum began
in 1978 to preserve local
artifacts.
■ Original museum was
in the former Missionary
Ridge Elementary School,
then moved to the corner of
Fourth and Chestnut streets.
■ In 2000, the city donated
adjacent building at 401
Broad St. for expansion.
■ In 2007, name changed
to the Chattanooga History
Center.
■ In 2008, museum
properties sold; center
moved to temporary location
at 615 Lindsay St.
■ In June of 2011, history
center offices moved to new
space at 2 Broad Street on
the Aquarium Plaza.
■ In 2013, new center
expected to open.
Source: chattanoogahistory.org
NASHVILLE — A controversial bill that protects teachers who discuss with students
“weaknesses” in evolution and
other scientific theories is on its
way to Gov. Bill Haslam, who is
under pressure from prominent
scientists to veto it.
Scientists in Tennessee and
across the nation charge the measure is a “backd o o r ” attem p t
to allow discus- Tennessee
sions of religion- Legislature
based views such
as “creationism”
and “intelligent
designs” in sci- INSIDE
ence classrooms. Teachers
T h e H o u s e want
approved the bill evaluation
Monday night on data private,
a 72-23 vote that B3
included changes
made last week
by the Senate bill’s sponsor, Bo
Watson, R-Hixson. There was no
debate.
Watson has said he tried to
address scientists’ concerns with
new language that directs science
teachers to discuss evolution,
climate change and other areas
within the state’s science education “framework.”
The bill’s thrust, said Watson, who majored in biology at
the University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga, is that “students
should be encouraged to challenge current scientific thought
and theory. Students should be
encouraged to debate, to improve
their critical thinking skills and
to improve their communications skills.”
The measure bars the Tennessee Board of Education and local
education officials from prohibiting public school teachers from
“helping students understand,
analyze, critique and review in
an objective manner the scientific strengths and scientific
weaknesses of existing scientific
theories.”
See BILL, Page A5
Local marchers
call for justice in
Florida shooting
Studies: Surgery
can put diabetes
into remission
By Marilynn Marchione
By Steve Hardy
The Associated Press
Staff Writer
CHICAGO — New research gives clear proof
that weight-loss surgery can reverse and possibly
cure diabetes, and doctors say the operation should
be offered sooner to more people with the disease
— not just as a last
resort.
The two studies, released Monof U.S. adults of U.S. adults
day, are the first to
have diabetes
are obese
compare stomachreducing operations to medicines alone for “diabesity” — Type 2
diabetes brought on by obesity. Millions of Americans have this and can’t make enough insulin or use
what they do make to process sugar from food.
Both studies found that surgery helped far more
patients achieve normal blood-sugar levels than
Hundreds of black, white, young and old Chattanoogans marched Monday afternoon in a crowd
that spread over two blocks down Market Street and
called for justice on the month
anniversary of the shooting of an
INSIDE
Trayvon Martin’s unarmed black teen in Florida.
“[The community] needs to
supporters on
step
up our game and have more
the defensive,
of a say in the democratic proA6
cess,” said event organizer AshLee Woodard Henderson.
After high schooler Trayvon Martin was fatally
shot in the Orlando area last month by neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, many have
called the homicide racially motivated and an abuse
of Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law. Several ChatSee MARCH, Page A6
Today’s poll
Staff Photo by Angela Lewis
Mark Shaffer carries a sign and a pack of Skittles during a rally to
find justice for Trayvon Martin.
SIGNS SEEN AT THE RALLY
■ “We can’t live with the violence of the status quo”
■ “2012, not 1912”
■ “Quakers Seek Justice”
■ “Justice for All,” with “All” written in Skittles
■ “Dear Mr. Zimmerman: Would Trayvon Martin have seemed so
suspicious if he looked like this [indicating an altered photo in which
Martin is white] instead of this [indicating Martin’s actual photo]?”
VOTE ONLINE
as of 9 p.m. Monday
Do county workers deserve a
raise?
Q
Should
insurance
cover weight-loss
surgeries?
© 2012 Chattanooga Publishing Co.
Yesterday’s results
Q
timesfreepress.com
Yes: 58 percent No: 42 percent
INDEX
Business . . . . . . C1
Classified . . . . . . F1
Comics . . . . . .E2-3
Editorials . . . . .B6-7
33% 8%
See OBESITY, Page A5
Life . . . . . . . . . . . E1
Metro . . . . . . . . . B1
Movies . . . . . . . . E6
Newsmakers . . . A2
Obituaries . . . .B2-3
Puzzles . . . . E2, F3
Region . . . . . . . . B4
Sports . . . . . . . . D1
Television. . . . . . E5
Weather . . . . . . . C4
A2 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
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METRO/
REGION
■ PARK STEWARDS A
new city program hopes to
inspire residents to take a
larger ownership of Chattanooga’s 65 parks, 35 miles
of trails and 4,800 acres
of land. Brian Smith, the
city’s Parks and Recreation
Department spokesman, said
a Park Stewards program
will be launched this week
with an emphasis on getting
more people into the parks
to be the eyes and ears for
the department.
■ SEX CHARGES A 46year-old Chattanooga businessman will begin serving a
six-month jail sentence after
pleading guilty to having sex
with a teenager. Gregory B.
Austin will serve his time
while he awaits charges
in a similar, but separate
Georgia case. On Monday,
Hamilton County Criminal
Court Judge Don Poole sentenced Austin to a two-year
sentence on two charges of
aggravated statutory rape.
EARLY EMAIL
Start your day with the
latest news. Sign up for
the Times Free Press
morning update at www.
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inbox.
Austin pleaded guilty earlier
this year to the two rape
counts that stemmed from
an April 2010 incident in
which police said he had sex
with a 14-year-old girl at an
East Ridge hotel.
■ TAX VOTE The Cleveland
City Council voted 4-3 Monday to appeal a 1967 agreement with Bradley County
on how local option sales tax
revenue is shared. “That’s the
most important vote we as a
City Council will ever make,”
said Councilman David May,
casting an approval vote. He
was joined by Avery Johnson,
Charlie McKenzie and Bill
Estes. “We’ve been fighting
with the county too long,”
said Councilman Richard
Banks. He and George Poe
and Dale Hughes voted
against filing an appeal with
the Tennessee Court of
Appeals.
BUSINESS
160.90
54.65
Dow
13,241.63
Nasdaq
3,122.57
■ AMAZON JOBS Amazon
has added about 100 more
full-time jobs to its Bradley
County distribution center as
it expands the operation, officials said Monday. Michael
Thomas, general manager of
the 1.2 million-square-foot
facility, said the company
moved 100 of its temporary
workforce to full-time slots.
IN LIFE
■ PERSON TO WATCH He’s
more at home in spikes and
a cap tugged tightly over his
forehead, but Chattanooga
State Community College
baseball coach Greg Dennis
is also the school’s popular social dance instructor.
Although he disdained high
school dances at Notre
Dame High School, he
picked up the skill in community college in Texas,
took additional classes at
Baylor University and has
been adept at it since.
IN SPORTS
■ BAYLOR POUNDS LADY
VOLS Brittney Griner had
23 points, 15 rebounds and
nine blocks before being
ejected with less than a
minute left and top-seeded
Baylor rolled over Tennessee 77-58 Monday night to
advance to the Final Four.
Shekinna Strickland had 22
points for Tennessee (27-9),
whose seniors became its
first four-year class not to
reach a Final Four. The Lady
Vols now face an uncertain
future, as Pat Summitt has
yet to say if she’ll return for
a 39th season as Tennessee
coach. She announced in
August she’d been diagnosed
with early onset dementia.
NEWSMAKERS
Tests show aging
of da Vinci work
Superman check
up for auction
WARSAW, Poland — Bark
beetles and old age have damaged Leonardo da Vinci’s 15thcentury painting “Lady with an
Ermine,” but the masterpiece
is still holding up well, according to a conservationist at the
Polish museum where it is displayed.
Recent tests show the chestnut board on which Leonardo
painted his masterpiece has
weakened after being nibbled
at by beetles over the centuries,
and the painting also has suffered from a dense network of
cracks, said Janusz Czop, the
chief conservationist at the
National Museum in Krakow.
One of only four existing
female portraits by Leonardo,
the oil painting shows a young
woman in three-quarter profile
wearing a sumptuous low-cut
red and blue dress as she holds
a white ermine, an animal also
known as a stoat. Historians
believe the subject was Cecilia
Gallerani, the mistress of the
Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza,
when she was 16 or 17. Leonardo
painted it around the year 1490.
“The painting is 500 years
old and has been subject to all
the processes of aging,” including journeying between Poland,
France and Germany through
the wars and uprisings of the
19th and 20th centuries, Czop
said Monday.
“Still, all things considered,
it is in very good condition,
thanks to the technology that
da Vinci used,” Czop said,
noting the master painted on
durable wood.
More state-of-the art and
noninvasive tests — such as
computer tomography — are to
be performed to help experts
decide what kind of maintenance the masterpiece requires,
Czop said. For the past 100
years the painting has belonged
to the Czartoryskis, an aristocratic Polish family.
PHILADELPHIA — Seven
decades after it was cut by DC
Comics, the check sent to Jerry
Siegel and Joe Shuster for their
creation of Superman is up for
auction.
Written for $412 and made
out to the duo, the check
includes a line item for $130
showing that DC paid for full
ownership and rights to the man
from Krypton and paved the
way for comic books, TV, radio
and films. But, a legal dispute
over creator’s rights to the character still is far from settled.
Stephen Fishler, co-owner
of ComicConnect.com, says
the check went up for auction
Monday for three weeks.
He said the check represents
the launching of the comic
book industry’s Golden Age of
superheroes.
Art conservators Janusz Czop, left, and Janusz Walek present to journalists the Leonardo da Vinci painting “Lady with an
Ermine” at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Poland.
Man pleads guilty
in email hacking
LOS ANGELES — An
unemployed Florida man faces
up to 60 years in prison after
pleading guilty on Monday to
hacking into the email accounts
of such celebrities as Christina Aguilera, Mila Kunis and
Scarlett Johansson, whose nude
photos eventually landed on the
Internet.
Christopher Chaney, 35, of
Jacksonville, Fla., entered his
plea in federal court to nine
counts, including unauthorized
access to a computer and wiretapping. He was immediately
taken into custody with his
head hung low and his hands in
his pocket.
Sentencing was scheduled
for July 23.
Chaney was arrested in
October as part of a yearlong
investigation of celebrity hacking that authorities dubbed
“Operation Hackerazzi.”
Prosecutors said Chaney
illegally accessed the email
accounts of more than 50 people in the entertainment industry between November 2010
and October 2011.
Nude photos Johansson had
taken of herself later were posted on the Internet. Johansson
told Vanity Fair for its December issue that the photos were
meant for Ryan Reynolds, now
her ex-husband.
Chaney mined through publicly available data to figure out
password and security questions for celebrity accounts.
Once he had control of their
email account, he also went
through their contact lists to
find email accounts of fellow
stars.
Jennifer Lopez plans
concerts in Brazil
NEW YORK — Jennifer
Lopez is in Brazil this week for
her show “Q’Viva,” but she’s
never performed in the country.
That will soon change when
she headlines a music festival
there this summer.
The “American Idol” judge
announced in a statement Monday that she would be performing at the Pop Music Festival in
Sao Paulo on June 23 and in Rio
de Janeiro on June 27.
Lopez was in Brazil to
promote “Q’Viva,” the Latinfocused talent show that she
hosts with her ex, Marc Anthony. It airs on Univision and also
Fox, which also airs “American
Idol.”
Actress and singer Jennifer Lopez arrives at the Vanity Fair
Oscar party in West Hollywood, Calif.
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Singer Bobby Brown, former
husband of the late Whitney
Houston, performs with New
Edition at Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Conn.
Singer Bobby Brown
faces DUI charge
LOS ANGELES — Singer
Bobby Brown was arrested in the
San Fernando Valley on suspicion of driving under the influence, law enforcement officials
said.
The arrest occurred at 12:20
p.m. Monday, according to California Highway Patrol officer
Mike Harris. Officers pulled
him over for talking on his cellphone but then administered a
field sobriety test, Harris said.
The arrest comes four days
after the Los Angeles County
Coroner’s office released the
results of its autopsy of Brown’s
ex-wife, Whitney Houston.
Houston appears to have
used cocaine “in the time
period just immediately prior
to her collapse in the bathtub
at the hotel,” said LA County
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The Associated Press
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Correction
A story in Sunday’s editions
should have said that Mayfield
Dairy, beginning in 2007, cut
more than 250 jobs as milk
sales declined.
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • A3
timesfreepress.com
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body found?
ST. JOHNSBURY, Vt.
— Vermont authorities say
they have found a body they
believe is that of a missing
boarding school teacher.
An SUV belonging to 33year-old Melissa Jenkins was
found Sunday night with her
unharmed 2-year-old inside.
State Police Maj. Ed Ledo
said Monday evening that
authorities found a woman’s
body in a nearby town.
The Associated Press
take the lead and the foreign
KABUL, Afghanistan forces can go home. The suc— Afghan security forces cess of that partnership is
shot and killed three inter- key to the U.S.-led coalition’s
national troops Monday, one strategy to withdraw most
of them an American, in two foreign combat forces by the
attacks. They were the latest end of 2014.
U.S. Marine Gen. John
in a rising number of attacks
in which Afghan forces have Allen, the top commander
turned their weapons on of U.S. and NATO forces in
Afghanistan, told reporters at
their foreign partners.
The killings reflect a spike the Pentagon that these types
The Associated Press in tensions between Afghan of attacks are characteristic
Protesters, for and against the health care law, demonstrate outside the Supreme
and international forces that of any warfare involving
Court in Washington on Monday.
follow an American soldier’s insurgents.
SAN FRANCISCO
“We experienced these in
alleged massacre of Afghan
— The suspect in the slaycivilians, the burning of Iraq. We experienced them
ings of five people in a San
Muslim holy books at a U.S. in Vietnam,” Allen said. “On
Francisco home that police
base, and uncertainty about any occasion where you’re
initially thought might
Afghanistan’s fate as foreign dealing with an insurgency
have been a murder-suicide
and where you’re also growtroops prepare to pull out.
served nearly a decade
They also come at a time ing an indigenous force ... the
in prison for robbery and
when international troops enemy’s going to do all that
assault with a deadly weaphave stepped up training they can to disrupt both the
on, records show.
and mentoring of Afghan sol- counterinsurgency operaState records indicate
care law’s individual mandate first Monday.
By Adam Liptak
New York Times News Service
that Binh Thai Luc, 35, was
do not kick in until 2014, and
He was followed by Solici- diers, police and government tions” and the developing
convicted in 1998 of the
WASHINGTON — The they must be paid on federal tor General Donald B. Verril- workers so that Afghans can nation’s security forces.
armed robbery of a Chinese Supreme Court on Monday tax returns in April 2015.
li Jr., arguing for the Obama
restaurant in San Jose in
appeared ready to clear away
The justices appeared to administration, and Gregory
1996. He was in prison from the last remaining obstacle to agree, and they seemed ready G. Katsas, who represents the
1998 to 2006, then served
a historic ruling on President to proceed to the main ques- private parties challenging
two years of parole before
Barack Obama’s health care tion, rather than to announce the law. Verrilli will return
McClatchy Newspapers
divided between the major
being released from state
overhaul law.
in June that it would avoid today, arguing against two
W A S H I N G T O N parties, unwilling to rally to
custody in 2008.
At the opening of three giving an answer. It remains lawyers with more colorful — Months into a bruis- the Democratic incumbent
Police booked Luc on
days of arguments, the jus- possible, though, that the approaches: Paul D. Clem- ing primary campaign, and refusing to cast aside the
five counts of murder and
tices’ questions suggested that Anti-Injunction Act will play ent, representing the 26 Republican presidential front-runner for the Republisaid he knew the victims.
they were receptive to a point a role in the case, as it could states challenging the law, front-runner Mitt Romney can nomination after a dark
The medical examiner
on which both supporters and provide at least some of the and Michael A. Carvin, who is still neck and neck with hour of attacks and sniping
has not released a cause of
opponents of the law agree: justices with a way to avoid is representing the private President Barack Obama in inside his party.
death for any of the five and The court should decide the a decision.
challengers.
Rick Santorum, the other
a hypothetical general elecsaid it could take several
case now rather than waiting
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court
Outside the court building, tion matchup, according to m a j o r G O P c a n d i d ate,
weeks to determine.
until the law’s penalties for of Appeals, in Richmond, Va., about 100 supporters of the a new McClatchy-Marist remains close to Obama
not having health insurance ruled last year, in interpreting law walked in a circle hold- poll.
as well. The poll finds the
become due.
the 1867 law that courts are ing signs that read, “Protect
Obama leads Romney president leading him 48Today, the court will turn for now powerless to decide my healthcare,” and chanting, 46-44 percent, suggesting a 43 percent in a possible fall
to the central question in the the health care law’s consti- “Care for you, care for me, country that remains closely matchup.
case, the constitutionality of tutionality.
care for every family.” A halfHARDY, Ark. —
the law’s requirement that
The Obama administra- dozen opponents shouted,
Searchers were holding out most Americans obtain insur- tion pressed this argument in “We love the Constitution!”
hope Monday of finding a
ance or pay a penalty.
trial courts but abandoned it
Republican presidential
4-year-old boy who went
The argument Monday on appeal. The challengers to candidate Rick Santorum
missing at a northeastern
was a sort of appetizer to the law have always said the was there, too, declaring
Arkansas Boy Scouts camp
today’s main course, a 90- 1867 law poses no obstacle to anew that GOP front-runner
over the weekend, shoutminute debate over whether immediate review.
Mitt Romney has no standing his name, Caleb, as they the court has the authority to
In the Supreme Court, the ing to challenge Obama on
walked through the woods
hear the case at all given an administration suggested that the law since Massachusetts
along the riverbank where
1867 law, the Anti-Injunction the justices appoint an out- passed a somewhat similar
he was last seen.
GOLD & DIAMONDS
Act, which says taxpayers may side lawyer to argue that the version when Romney was
More than 150 people
not challenge taxes until they 1867 law bars the challenges. governor.
5301 Brainerd Rd.
turned out Monday to
become due. The first penal- The justices asked Robert A.
The Associated Press con5 Years
Complaint Free
search the Kia Kima Boy
ties for violating the health Long to do so, and he went tributed to this story.
RickDavisGoldandDiamonds.com
Scout Camp for Caleb Linn,
who was last seen Saturday at the end of a bridge
where he and several other
children were clearing away
storm debris, Fulton County
The Associated Press
said. “Those of the young
Sheriff Buck Foley said.
SANTIAGO,
Cuba — and the elderly, of adolesThe children, who are
Pope Benedict XVI arrived cents and children, of the
related and who are not
in Cuba on Monday in the sick and workers, of prisonaffiliated with the Boy
footsteps of his more famous ers and their families, and of
Scouts, were staying in
predecessor, saying he holds the poor and those in need.”
cabins with Caleb’s aunt,
In his own remarks, the
great affection for Cubans
Rhonda Wright, who was
watching the grounds while on both sides of the Flori- Cuban leader assured BeneSiding
da Straits and has heartfelt dict his country favors comits caretaker was away.
as
plete religious liberty and
hopes for reconciliation.
low
President Raul Castro has good relations with all
as
per sq.ft.
warmly greeted the pope, religious institutions. He also
who said he was coming as criticized the 50-year U.S. eco“a pilgrim of charity” as he nomic embargo and defended
ABUJA, Nigeria — The arrived at the sweltering air- the socialist ideal of providing
port in Santiago, Cuba’s sec- for those less fortunate.
U.S. Embassy in Nigeria’s
“We have confronted scarcapital says there were gun- ond largest city.
The pontiff, who last city but have never failed
shots fired near its offices,
though no one was injured. week said Marxism “no lon- in our duty to share with
ger responds to reality,” gave those who have less,” Castro
A statement from the
a more gentle tweak to his said, adding that his counembassy Monday said it
hosts by expressing sympa- try remains determined to
“believed there were shots
thy for all islanders, includ- chart its own path and resist
fired” and that police
efforts by “the most forceful
ing prisoners.
arrested two people after“I carry in my heart the power that history has ever
ward. Abuja police spokesjust aspirations and legiti- known” — a reference to the
man Jimoh Moshood said
mate desires of all Cubans, United States — to thwart the
he had no information
wherever they may be,” he island’s socialist model.
about any shooting in the
area, nor any knowledge of
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Suspect held
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Justices moving to heart
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— President Barack Obama
on Monday made a direct
appeal to the leaders of
North Korea and Iran, urging them to “have the courage” to step away from their
nuclear weapons programs,
rather than allow their countries to follow a path toward
greater isolation and economic distress.
“You can continue down
the road you are on, but
we know where that leads,”
Obama said in a speech that
balanced notes of diplomatic
persuasion with hard-edged
pressure.
Addressing new leaders in
Pyongyang, Obama warned
that their current path would
lead to “more broken dreams,
more isolation and ever more
distance between the people
of North Korea and the dignity and opportunity they
deserve.”
To Tehran, he said that
“time is short” for diplomacy
to defuse a standoff over its
nuclear program.
Obama made the remarks
on the second day of a visit
to Seoul, where he is attending a nuclear terrorism summit.
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WASHINGTON
— With a potential shutdown of federal highway
and transit programs looming, House Republican
leaders abruptly canceled
a vote Monday on a threemonth extension bill aimed
at keeping aid flowing
to states while Congress
debates an overhaul of
transportation policy.
Republicans had planned
to bring the extension bill
to the floor under rules that
require a two-thirds vote
for passage. In order to do
that, they needed the votes
of about 50 Democrats. But
Democratic leaders urged
their members to oppose
the extension in an attempt
to pressure GOP leaders
to permit a vote on a $109
billion bill recently passed
by the Senate. The Senate
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History
Support for Afghan
war drops, poll finds
Bill
• Continued from Page A1
It also removed the
bill’s original language that
referred to the theories as
“controversies.”
Three prominent Tennessee scientists who are members of the National Academy
of Sciences charged Monday
in a letter published in the
Tennessean newspaper that
state lawmakers are “doing
the unbelievable: attempting
to roll the clock back to 1925
by attempting to insert religious beliefs in the teaching
of science.”
That is a reference to
a 1925 Tennessee law that
banned the teaching of evolution and led to the infamous
“Monkey Trial” in Dayton,
Tenn., in which teacher John
Scopes was tried and convicted for violating the law.
The state was widely ridiculed over the matter.
The scientists charged the
bill is “misleading, unnecessary, likely to provoke unnecessary and divisive legal proceedings, and likely to have
adverse economic consequences for the state.”
“Although there are minor
differences between the bills,
it seems that the only barrier now to their passage
and enactment is the veto
of Gov. Bill Haslam,” the letter continues. “Will he heed
the informed opinion of the
scientific community and of
Tennessee’s science teachers? Or are we in for a repeat
of the Scopes trial?”
The letter was signed by
Dr. Roger D. Cone, chairman
of Vanderbilt’s department
of molecular physiology
and biophysics; Dr. Robert
G. Webster, at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in
“Every week we’re having
one-on-one meetings with
potential donors,” he said.
Black said the Chattanooga History Center wants to
lay a foundation to help map
Chattanooga’s future with
community input.
“We’ve tried to do three or
four years of work in a year
and a half,” he said. “We’ve
got to make sure we do this
right.”
Contact staff writer Cliff
Hightower at chightower@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6480. Follow him at
twitter.com/cliffhightower or
facebook.com/
hightowerTFP.
Weight-loss surgery “has
proven to be a very appropriate and excellent treatment
for diabetes,” said one study
co-leader, Dr. Francesco
Rubino, chief of diabetes surgery at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell
Medical Center. “The most
proper name for the surgery
would be diabetes surgery.”
The studies were published online by the New
England Journal of Medicine,
and the larger one was presented Monday at an American College of Cardiology
conference in Chicago.
More than a third of
American adults are obese,
and more than 8 percent
have diabetes, a major cause
of heart disease, strokes and
kidney failure. Between 5
million and 10 million are
like the people in these studies, with both problems.
For a century, doctors
have been treating diabetes
with pills and insulin, and
encouraging weight loss and
exercise with limited success.
Few very obese people can
drop enough pounds without surgery, and many of the
medicines used to treat diabetes can cause weight gain,
making things worse.
Surgery offers hope for a
long-term fix. It costs $15,000
to $25,000, and Medicare covers it for very obese people
with diabetes. Gastric bypass
is the most common type:
Through “keyhole” surgery,
doctors reduce the stomach
to a small pouch and recon-
nect it to the small intestine.
One previous study tested
stomach banding, a less drastic
and reversible procedure for
limiting the size of the stomach.
This technique lowered blood
sugar, but those patients had
mild diabetes. The new studies
tested permanent weight-loss
surgery in people with longtime, severe diabetes.
At the Cleveland Clinic,
Dr. Philip Schauer studied
150 people given one of two
types of surgery plus standard medicines or a third
group given medicines alone.
Their A1c levels — the key
blood-sugar measure — were
over 9 on average at the start.
A healthy A1c is 6 or below.
One year after treatment
began, only 12 percent of
those treated with medicines
alone were at that healthy
level, versus 42 percent and
37 percent of the two groups
given surgery.
Use of medicines for high
cholesterol and other heart
risks dropped among those
in the surgery groups but
rose in the group on medicines alone.
Jon Diat is a success story.
Diat, 50, who works at Citigroup and lives in New York,
had been piling on pounds
and pills for cholesterol and
high blood pressure. After
he needed an artery-opening
procedure he was diagnosed
with diabetes, but medicines
for that failed to keep his disease under control and worsened his obesity.
“I was maxed out on the
medications. It was very
grim,” he said. Two years
ago, he had weight-loss surgery from Rubino.
“They told me, ‘You’re
going to see rapid results,’
but it was amazing. I literally lost 70 pounds in the
first three months,” he said.
“I was off insulin within less
than 72 hours of surgery. I am
in complete, total remission
of diabetes. My blood sugars
are normal.”
Now he eats right, plays
tennis and hockey, walks the
two miles home from work
and takes 12 flights of stairs
to his apartment.
“I look at this as a second
chance at life,” he said. “It’s
been liberating.”
Tamikka McCray, 39, who
also lives in New York and
works for the city’s Human
Resources Administration,
also had success from her
surgery a year and a half ago.
When she left the hospital,
her diabetes had disappeared
before any major weight loss
had a chance to occur.
Memphis; and Dr. Jon Kaas, a
Vanderbilt professor of psychology, an associate professor of cell and developmental biology and professor of
radiology and radiological
science.
Family Action Council of
Tennessee President David
Fowler, the former Republican senator from Signal
Mountain who brought
Watson the original bill last
year, said he approves of his
changes.
“Actually, I think the bill
passed by the Senate makes
it even more clear that the
misrepresentations about
the bill are indeed misrepresentations,” Fowler said.
“That creationism, intelligent design cannot be taught
because the material in the
bill only includes material
allowed by the Department
of Education. The other side
wants to ignore the facts.”
Speaking to reporters last
week, Haslam said he talked
with Watson, whose point,
the governor said, “was
should people have the right
to talk about why they believe
that’s true versus other ideas.
And he thinks that freedom
of discussion about ideas is a
good thing.”
Asked whether he agreed
with that, Haslam said, “I
think Thomas Jefferson
had a statement one time ...
something to the effect that
here we’re not afraid to follow the truth wherever it
may lead. And I think that’s
a pretty good principle for us
throughout government and
throughout education.”
He also said the only questions he has gotten about the
bill is from reporters.
According to the Library
of Congress, Jefferson’s full
quote, taken from a letter discussing the University of Virginia, which he founded, says
“this institution will be based
on the illimitable freedom of
the human mind.”
“For here we are not afraid
to follow truth wherever it
may lead, nor to tolerate any
error so long as reason is left
free to combat it.”
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WASHINGTON — After
a series of violent episodes
and setbacks, support for
the war in Afghanistan has
dropped sharply among both
Republicans and Democrats,
according to the latest New
York Times/CBS News poll.
The survey found that
more than two-thirds of those
polled — 69 percent —thought
that the United States should
not be at war in Afghanistan.
Just four months ago, 53 percent said that Americans
should no longer be fighting
in the conflict, more than a
decade old.
The increased disillusionment was even more pronounced when respondents
were asked their impressions
of how the war was going.
The poll found that 68 percent thought the fighting was
going “somewhat badly” or
“very badly,” compared with
42 percent who had those
impressions in November.
The latest poll was conducted by telephone from
March 21-25 with 986 adults
nationwide. It has a margin
of sampling error of plus or
minus 3 percentage points.
The Times/CBS News poll
was consistent with other surveys this month that showed a
drop in support for the war. In
a Washington Post/ABC News
poll, 60 percent of respondents said the war in Afghanistan had not been worth the
fighting, while 57 percent in
a Pew Research Center poll
said the United States should
bring home U.S. troops as
soon as possible. In a Gallup/
USA Today poll, 50 percent
of respondents said the U.S.
should speed up the withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Negative impressions of
the war have grown among
Republicans as well as Democrats, according to the Times/
CBS News poll. Among
Republicans, 60 percent said
the war was going somewhat
or very badly, compared with
40 percent in November.
Among Democrats, 68 percent said the war was going
somewhat or very badly,
compared with 38 percent
in November. But the poll
found that Republicans were
more likely to want to stay in
Afghanistan for as long as it
would take to stabilize the situation: 3 in 10 said the United
States should stay, compared
with 2 in 10 independents and
1 in 10 Democrats.
Republicans themselves
are divided, however, over
when to leave, with a plurality, 40 percent, saying the
U.S. should withdraw earlier
than the end of 2014, when
under an agreement with the
Afghan government all U.S.
troops are to be out of the
country.
34265871
tually led to such things as
the opening of the Tennessee Aquarium and the 21st
Century Waterfront.
Rick Montague, co-chairman of the History Center’s
funds campaign committee,
said so far $7.75 million has
been raised for the History
Center.
34253741
• Continued from Page A1
medicines alone did.
The results were dramatic: Some people were able to
stop taking insulin as soon as
three days after their operations. Cholesterol and other
heart risk factors also greatly
improved.
Doctors don’t like to say
“cure” because they can’t
promise a disease will never
come back. But in one study,
most surgery patients were
able to stop all diabetes drugs
and have their disease stay
in remission for at least two
years. None of those treated
with medicines alone could
do that.
“It is a major advance,”
said Dr. John Buse of the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, a leading diabetes
expert who had no role in the
studies. Buse said he often recommends surgery to patients
who are obese and can’t control their blood-sugar through
medications, but many are
leery of it. “This evidence will
help convince them that this
really is an important therapy
to at least consider,” he said.
There were signs that
the surgery itself — not just
weight loss — helps reverse
diabetes. Food makes the gut
produce hormones to spur
insulin, so trimming away
part of it surgically may
affect those hormones, doctors believe.
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
Daryl Black, executive director of the Chattanooga History Center, walks through the
space that is under construction.
34300730
Obesity
New York Times News Service
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• Continued from Page A1
Overall, the world of
museums is changing, he
said.
“They are different animals now,” Sobel said.
“They’re not a place for dirty,
old artifacts.”
Kim White, president of
River City Co., the downtown
development group, said she
learned details about plans
for the center a few months
ago. The new approach fits in
with the flair of downtown.
“To me it was a ‘Wow!’
factor,” she said. “I don’t
think it will be your typical
history center.”
The $10.5 million museum is located in the old
Chattanooga Visitor’s Center on Market Street. It will
have 24,000 square feet of
space, with 10,000 square
feet devoted to exhibits and
11,000 square feet devoted to
teaching labs and community
meeting space.
The center also will devote
an area to Vision 2000, the
community visioning process
held in 1984 that mapped out
dozens of projects and even-
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • A5
Breaking News: [email protected]
A6 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Fight claims, pot put Florida teen’s side on defense
By Mike Schneider
and Curt Anderson
The Associated Press
SANFORD, Fla. — The
family and supporters of
slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin found themselves
on the defensive Monday
following revelations he had
been suspended for marijuana before he was shot
to death by a neighborhood
watch volunteer. Police also
confirmed a report that the
watchman claimed Martin
was the aggressor, punching
him in the nose and smacking his head on a sidewalk.
Martin, 17, was suspended by Miami-Dade County
schools because traces of
marijuana were found in a
plastic baggie in his book
bag, family spokesman Ryan
Julison said. Martin was serving the suspension when he
was shot Feb. 26 by George
Zimmerman, who was patrolling the neighborhood that
Martin was visiting with his
father.
The Associated Press
The Rev. Al Sharpton, center, listens as the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, not seen, leads a prayer during a community
forum Monday at Macedonia Baptist Church in Eatonville, Fla.
Martin’s mother, Sybrina
Fulton, and family attorneys
blamed police for leaking
the information about the
marijuana and Zimmerman’s
claim about the attack to the
news media to demonize the
teenager.
“They killed my son, and
now they’re trying to kill
his reputation,” Fulton told
reporters.
T h e S a n fo rd Po l i c e
Department insisted there
was no authorized release
of the new information but
acknowledged there may
have been a leak. City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr.
said it would be investigated,
and the person responsible
could be fired.
Martin family attorney
Benjamin Crump said the
link between the youth and
marijuana should have no
bearing on the probe into
his shooting death. State and
federal agencies are investigating, with a grand jury set
to convene April 10.
“If he and his friends
experimented with marijuana, that is completely irrelevant,” Crump said. “What
does it have to do with killing
their son?”
The state Department of
Juvenile Justice confirmed
Monday that Martin does
not have a juvenile offender record. The information
came after a public records
request by The Associated
Press.
Zimmerman, 28, claimed
he shot Martin in self-defense
and has not been arrested.
Because Martin was black
and Zimmerman has a white
father and Hispanic mother,
the case has become a racial
flashpoint that has civil rights
leaders and others leading a
series of protests in Sanford
and around the country.
Civil rights leader Al
Sharpton warned commissioners that Sanford risked
becoming a 21st century version of civil rights struggle in
the South during the 1960s.
Sharpton said Martin’s parents endured “insults and lies”
Monday over reports that their
son attacked Zimmerman.
Outside the commission
meeting, several thousand
people carried signs, rallied
and marched in Martin’s support. Organizers said some 2
million signatures had been
collected on an online petition demanding Zimmerman’s arrest.
“It seems like the police
did not do the normal things
they should have done. But
that’s going to have to take
its own process now,” said
the Rev. Marilyn Beecher,
a Methodist minister who
came from Daytona Beach to
attend the rally. “It’s important that we all stand for justice and that the community
leaders know that this is not
going to be overlooked.”
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Amanda Archibald, left, and Jennifer Hayes participate in a moment of silence during
a rally to find justice for Trayvon Martin.
March
• Continued from Page A1
tanooga demonstrators even
marched in the 82-degree
heat wearing hoodies like
the one Martin wore when
he was killed, a symbolic gesture adopted by protesters
across the nation.
Participant Fanesa Brewer
said bringing her sons to the
rally to learn about the Florida shooting is important.
Her son, she said, attends
Ooltewah High School and
wears a red hoodie as part of
his uniform.
Others also expressed
concern for the area’s black
youths.
“Parents need to know ...
how to protect their families, and kids need to know
how to protect themselves,”
said Courtlund Henderson,
who addressed the crowd at
Miller Park after the march.
“[The Martin shooting]
teaches us to protect ourselves, and the justice system isn’t going to do anything to protect us.
“I am Trayvon Martin!”
Henderson said, “And you
are, and you, and you!”
He pointed out members
of the crowd, urging them
to take the issue personally
because, as one sign read,
“Could be Yours Tomorrow.”
At least one Chattanooga
elected official was watching. City Councilman Russell Gilbert was among the
attendees at the post-march
rally.
Event organizer Mark
Gilliland said the Florida
shooting is only one face of
systematic problems of racial
profiling and racial injustice, which he says leads to
“devaluation of the lives of
black people.”
But many attendees said
their primary concern is
injustice, not racism.
“Every race should be
offended,” Brewer said.
“Murder is murder, and
wrong is wrong — black,
white, red, yellow or blue,”
added participant Riley
Shaw.
While the march, the
speakers, the rappers and
the vigil stirred the crowd,
where the event’s energy will
lead is unclear.
Henderson addressed
participants before they had
taken a single step, noting
that the black community
is sometimes criticized for
holding lots of marches and
then never talking about their
problems. However, she said
that they do discuss important issues in their neighborhoods and hoped that the
rally would be a stepping-off
point for further talk of justice in Chattanooga.
At this time, questions
remain about specific issues
the community wants to
focus on, how they will organize and if they can retain
the same energy of the march
moving forward.
Participant Lucilla Nash
said, “This is a start. We need
to have a conversation.”
“Otherwise things will
just stay the same,” her
friend Cassandra Tucker
concluded.
Similar rallies were held
in other cities: Thousands
gathered on the steps of
the Georgia state Capitol in
Atlanta in memory of the
unarmed, 17-year-old Martin;
hundreds met at the location
where Martin Luther King Jr.
was slain in Memphis to call
for the arrest of Zimmerman;
and Memphis-area activists
and Mayor A C Wharton,
who is black, spoke at a rally
at the National Civil Rights
Museum.
Contact staff writer Steve
Hardy at shardy@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6476.
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RICK DAVIS
Election Commission debates primary night meeting
By Ansley Haman
Staff Writer
The Hamilton County
Election Commission on
Monday certified the March
6 presidential primary results
and discussed a meeting they
held the night of it.
In a meeting, commissioners first certified the election, which went smoothly,
according to an outside precinct audit.
Also on election night,
commissioners voted 3-2 to
Panel to file brief in Chattanooga mayor recall appeal
file a brief in connection with
an appeal of a judge’s ruling
against the commission.
Chattanooga Mayor Ron
Littlefield filed a lawsuit
against the commission after
it certified a recall petition
against him in November and
set a date for a recall election. In his February ruling,
Circuit Court Judge Jeff Hol-
lingsworth halted the recall
election.
Citizens to Recall Mayor
Littlefield, one of the groups
that began the recall effort,
is appealing Hollingsworth’s
decision.
The election commission’s attorney, Chris Clem,
said the brief being filed by
the panel will ask the court
to decide what law applies
and explain the commission’s
actions. The brief will likely
be due in April, he said.
Election Commissioner
Jerry Summers questioned
why members of the recall
effort knew the matter was
going to be discussed at the
commission’s March 6 meeting when the Chattanooga
Times Free Press had been
repeatedly told that no special items had been added to
the election night agenda.
“When it’s something
important, particularly, I
think the public has the right
to know,” Summers said.
Clem and Election Commission Chairman Mike
Walden said the matter came
up unexpectedly because
Citizens to Recall Mayor
Littlefield had filed its appeal
of Hollingsworth’s decision
that day. Walden defended
his record for transparency
and public notice, saying
his first act as chairman had
been to set regular election
commission meetings.
In another item discussed
at Monday’s meeting, Democratic Party Chairman Paul
See RECALL, Page B8
Cleveland
wants a
new sales
tax deal
Kling rings in 50 years on television
■ The agreement with
the county dates to 1967.
By Randall Higgins
Staff Writer
Staff Photo by Dan Henry
“Miss Marcia” Kling, left, speaks to Don Welch, producer of “This & That,” on Monday during a special commemorating Kling’s 50th
anniversary with WTVC NewsChannel 9.
Man faces Georgia sex charges after Tennessee sentencing
By Todd South
Staff Writer
A 46-year-old Chattanooga businessman will begin
serving a six-month jail sentence after pleading guilty to
having sex with a teenager.
Gregory B. Austin will
serve his time while he
awaits charges in a similar,
but separate Georgia case.
On Monday, Hamilton
County Criminal Court Judge
Don Poole sentenced Austin
to a two-year sentence on
two charges of aggravated
statutory rape. Austin will
begin serving six months in
jail today, with his remaining
sentence served on probation.
Austin pleaded guilty earlier this year to the two rape
counts that stemmed from an
April 2010 incident in which
police said he had sex with
a 14-year-old girl at an East
Ridge hotel.
Austin’s attorneys, Lee
Davis and Bryan Hoss,
declined to
comment
following
Monday’s
sentencing
hearing.
W h i l e
Austin was
awaiting a
Greg Austin trial on the
Hamilton County charges,
police in Catoosa County,
Ga., arrested him on charges
he solicited a girl under 18 to
perform sex with him, then
met her at a Fort Oglethorpe
motel.
The same police report
stated he had sex with a
17-year-old girl at the hotel
while a 13-year-old girl
watched. He faces a charge
of pandering in that case.
Following the Georgia
indictment, Hoss told the
Chattanooga Times Free Press
that the Catoosa grand jury
refused to indict Austin on the
most serious allegations.
Catoosa County Magistrate
Judge Vic Wells revoked Austin’s bond on the pandering
charge shortly after he was
released, citing the Hamilton
County case. Austin served
46 days in the Georgia jail.
Davis asked Poole if he
would credit the Georgia
time toward the six months
Austin faced in Tennessee.
Poole said he would consider
it but did not rule Monday.
Contact staff writer Todd
South at tsouth@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6347.
Chattanooga calls for volunteers to assist in parks
CLEVELAND, Tenn.
— The Cleveland City
Council voted 4-3 Monday
to appeal a 1967 agreement
with Bradley County on
how local option sales tax
revenue is shared.
“That’s the most important vote we as a City Council will ever
make,” said
Councilman David
May, casting
an
approval
vo t e . H e
was joined
by Avery David May
Johnson,
Charlie McKenzie and Bill
Estes.
Councilman Richard
Banks, who with George
Poe and Dale Hughes voted
against filing the appeal
with the Tennessee Court
of Appeals, said city officials have “been fighting
with the county too long.”
The dispute does not
involve the half-cent sales
tax increase approved by
city voters in 2009 for capital projects such as roads
and school construction.
Like everywhere else in
Tennessee, the first half of
local sales tax revenue goes
See TAXES, Page B8
Weston
Wamp hits
age to serve
in House
By Chris Carroll
Staff Writer
fying themselves as a park steward.
They also will be given cards to give
to park visitors.
One thing they will not be is a
policing agency, Smith said.
Angelia Stinnett, volunteer coordinator for the program, said that
was important to her. She wants the
stewards to be a positive presence in
the parks, she said, and the hope is
that, with the stewards in the parks,
it also will help with safety.
“What will help in the parks is
more people and lighting,” she said.
The Parks and Recreation Department already is working on the lighting, she said, so now it’s time to get
the people.
See PARKS, Page B3
See WAMP, Page B8
IF YOU GO
By Cliff Hightower
Staff Writer
A new city program hopes to
inspire residents to take a larger
ownership of Chattanooga’s 65 parks,
35 miles of trails and 4,800 acres of
land.
Brian Smith, the city’s Parks and
Recreation Department spokesman,
said a Park Stewards program will be
launched this week with an emphasis on getting more people into the
parks to be the eyes and ears for the
department.
With the city owning 4,800 acres
of park land, it’s tough to cover for a
department that has 70 park employees and 10 rangers, he said.
“We’re glad to have all that land,
but we can’t be there all the time,”
he said.
The Park Stewards program will
kick off at 6 p.m. Thursday with a
meeting at Finley Stadium, he said.
The Parks and Recreation Department is looking for volunteers to
participate.
The goal is to have people in all
parks throughout the city, helping to
keep them clean, aiding visitors who
have questions and informing the
department of any problems such as
For most Americans,
the milestones of youth
happen at 16 (driving), 18
(voting) and 21 (drinking).
For Weston Wamp, 25 is a
bigger deal.
Federal law requires
members of the U.S. House
to live at least a quarter-century before
taking office, ELECTION
so the son of
former U.S.
Rep. Zach Wamp celebrated
his 25th birthday Monday
with a fundraiser designed
to bankroll his quest to win
his father’s old seat.
“This kind of lays to rest
the question of whether
I’m too young because the
Constitution says you’ve
got to be 25, and today I’m
25,” Weston Wamp said in
an interview.
Starting in 1994, Zach
Wamp served eight terms
in Tennessee’s 3rd Congressional District before
unsuccessfully running for
governor in 2010. Weston
■ What: Chattanooga Parks
Steward meeting
■ Where: Stadium Club, Finley
Stadium
■ When: 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday
■ Information: Contact Brian
Smith, Parks and Recreation
spokesman, at 423-643-6096 or
[email protected].
Staff Photo by Tim Barber
Chattanooga employee Tara Tomas uses a leaf blower to clear the
floor of debris inside the pavilion at East Lake Park on Monday.
fences broken, trees down or graffiti,
Smith said.
It’s an idea that has been implemented in other cities across the
U.S., Smith said, and there are friends
of parks groups in Knoxville and
Nashville.
“The majority of cities this size
have this program,” he said.
The stewards program is not
meant to make it easier to downsize
the Parks and Recreation staff, he
said.
“It’s not to create any cuts,” he
said. “It’s just to have more people
out and create visibility.”
Everyone who joins the stewards
program will be given a vest identi-
■ To contact Local News • Phone: 423-757-6317 • Fax: 423-668-5062 • Email: [email protected]
B2 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • •
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
OBITUARIES
HAMILTON COUNTY
Armen Abernathy
Armen Edwin Abernathy, 63,
passed away Saturday, March 24,
2012.
He was a 1966 graduate of Red
Bank High School and a graduate of University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga. Armen was a member of the Red Bank Lions Club.
He was preceded in death by
his son, Kenneth Brian Abernathy.
Survivors include his wife,
Pamela Abernathy; daughter,
Stephanie (Brian) Caudill, DVM;
grandson, Evan Caudill; mother,
Armena Abernathy; sister, Marcia
Abernathy; and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Lane
Funeral Home, Ashland Terrace,
with Dr. Gary Phillips officiating.
Interment will follow in Chattanooga Memorial Park.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
Wally’s Friends at www.wallys
friends.com or a favorite charity.
Visit www.lanefh.com to share
condolences.
Visitation is from 4 to 8 p.m.
today at Lane Funeral Home, 601
Ashland Terrace.
Alyne Burris
Alyne Smith Burris, 96, of
Soddy-Daisy, passed from this life
to her eternal home in Heaven on
Monday, March 26, 2012.
She was born May 21, 1915, to
the late Sam and Ethel Barnes
Smith. Alyne also was preceded
in death by her husband of 71
years, Ulyess Ray Burris; brothers,
Claude, James
and Homer
Smith; and
sisters,
Hazel Gallant, Mamie
Flerl, Gladys
Newman
and Gertrude
Morgan.
Mrs. Burris was a charter member of Soddy Community
Chapel Assembly of God.
She is survived by four children, Eulene (Gene) Smith, Raycelle (Joe) Johnson, Jim (Sara)
Burris and Sharon (Winford)
McGehee, all of Soddy-Daisy; six
grandchildren, Stanley Mayberry,
Marquita Barker, Eddie Johnson,
Ray Johnson, Jimmy Burris and
Brett Burris; 11 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren; two sisters-in-law, Louise
Smith and Marie Burris; as well as
many nieces and nephews.
The family would like to
express their appreciation to
the entire staff at Soddy-Daisy
Healthcare for their loving care
of Mrs. Burris.
Funeral services will be at 1
p.m. Wednesday, March 28, 2012,
at Williamson & Sons Funeral
Home with the Rev. Jeff Holt and
the Rev. Edward Stotts officiating.
Interment will follow in Hamilton Memorial Gardens.
The family will receive friends
from 3 to 8 p.m. today and after
11 a.m. Wednesday at the funeral
home.
Her grandsons will be serving
as pallbearers.
Condolences and memories
may be shared at www.williamson
andsons.com.
Arrangements are by Williamson & Sons Funeral Home,
8852 Dayton Pike Soddy-Daisy,
TN 37379.
Arrangements are by Chattanooga Funeral Home East Chapel, 404 S. Moore Road, Chattanooga.
Clinton Fitten
Clinton Fitten, 56, passed
away Monday, March 26, 2012,
in Chattanooga.
Arrangements are by John
P. Franklin Funeral Home, 1101
Dodds Ave., 622-9995.
Joseph Anthony “Tony” Ellis,
51, of Tunnel Hill, Ga., died Saturday, March 24, 2012, in a local
hospital.
He was born in Tucker, Ga., to
the late William and Shirley Ellis.
He worked at Abra Body Shop.
He was preceded in death by his
parents and a granddaughter,
Rhylie Joyce.
Survivors
include his
w i fe, L o r rie Ellis; two
sons, Joseph
A. Ellis Jr. and
Brian Anthony Ellis Swafford; four
daughters,
Brandy Starr
Ellis, Amanda Sue Ellis, Heather
Lashay Ellis and Carla Nichole
Ellis; two stepchildren, Diana
Lynn White and Christopher
Michael Hanson; eight grandchildren, Crystal, Xylie, Adden,
Kenya, Kaylie, Neaveh, Aaron,
Stephen, Logan and Chloe; four
brothers, William H. Ellis, Arthur
Clarence Ellis, Robert B. Ellis and
Tracy L. Ellis; one sister, Margaret Ellis; six nieces; and eight
nephews.
Funeral services will be at
11:30 a.m. Wednesday March 28,
2012, in the East Chapel of Chattanooga Funeral Home.
Burial will be in Head Springs,
Valley Head, Ala.
The family will receive
friends from 4 to 8 p.m. today at
the funeral home.
Please share your thoughts and
memories at www.chattanooga
eastchapel.com.
Armen Abernathy
Alyne Burris
Tony Ellis
Clinton Fitten
Roscie Geter
Alice Hicks
Nancy Lee
John Miller Sr.
Pete Neyman
Leon Phillips
Marjorie Prince
Valerie Ray
Randall Wilkey
Tennessee
Roscie Geter
Roscie Geter, 93, passed away
Monday, March 26, 2012, in a local
health care facility.
Arrangements are by John
P. Franklin Funeral Home, 1101
Dodds Ave., 622-9995.
Alice Hicks
Alice Faye Stinnett Hicks, 76,
of Chattanooga, died Saturday,
March 24, 2012.
She was a dedicated 50-year
member of Riverside Baptist
Church. She loved unconditionally and was loved by many.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Robert Hicks.
Survivors include sons and
daughter-in-law, Bill and Jan
Hicks, of Huntsville, Ala., and
Doug Hicks, of Chattanooga;
daughter and son-in-law, Kim and
Larry McCarthy, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; grandchildren, Michael
McCarthy and Caroline McCarthy, Michele McCarthy, Sarah
Hicks, Jessica Hicks and Quentin McCoy; and great-grandchild,
Mikayla McCarthy.
Visitation is from 4 to 6 p.m.
today, March 27, 2012, at Riverside Baptist Church in Tiftonia.
The Rev. Anthony Baker will
conduct the service at 6 p.m. in
the church.
Interment will be in Sweetwater Valley Memorial Park.
Send condolences at www.
CovenantFuneral.com.
Arrangements are by Covenant Funeral & Cremation
Service, Crox family owned and
operated.
Nancy Lee
Nancy Irene Lee, 58, of
Soddy-Daisy, passed away Sunday, March 25, 2012, in an area
hospital.
Nancy was formerly employed
with Olan Mills as a printer.
She was preceded in death
by her mother, Martha Frye, and
sister, Peggy Jean Rogers.
Survivors include her husband, Garry Lee; sons, Sidney
(Jill) White and Corey (Carly)
Littles; brothers, Tony and David
White; sisters, Charlotte Lovelady and Carolyn Shaw; and grandchildren, Jonathan, Brandon and
Breanna White.
Service will be private at Nancy’s request.
Share your memories, stories
and photos at www.legacyfuneral
home.com.
Arrangements are by Legacy
Funeral Home & Cremation Center, Soddy-Daisy.
John Miller Sr.
Tony Ellis
Hamilton County
John Forest Miller Sr., 81, of
Chattanooga, passed Monday,
March 26, 2012, in a local health
care facility.
Arrangements entrusted to
Advantage Funeral & Cremation
Services Franklin-StricklandPinkard-Bryan-Smith Funeral
Directors, 1724 McCallie Ave.,
423-265-4414.
Pete Neyman
H.K. “Pete” Neyman, 84, of
Apison, beloved husband and
father, passed away Saturday,
March 24, 2012, after a brief illness.
Pete was a local businessman,
most recently having owned
Parker-Allison Co. in Cleveland,
Tenn. He was a member of the
C h u rc h o f
Christ and
worshipped
with the
Tyner congregation.
Survivors
include his
wife of 62
years, Mary
Pleasant
Neyman; his
daughter, Susan (James) Hood;
his son, Parker (Debra) Neyman;
a “special daughter,” Susan Birdwell; a brother, Marcus Neyman;
and a sister, Edith Nelson.
Funeral services will be held
at noon Wednesday in the Valley View Chapel of Chattanooga
Funeral Home with John Cupp
officiating.
Burial will be private.
The family will receive friends
from 5 to 8 p.m. today and from
11 a.m. to noon Wednesday at the
funeral home.
Katrina Blondin
Patricia Cook
Frances Monroe
Louella Mooneyham
Willard Smith
Alice Wagoner
Georgia
Clara Arthur
Mamie Fricks
JoAnn Nelms
Ralph Randle
Lloyd Wooten
Alabama
Jim Anderson
Rhonal Blackwell
Hayleigh Brown
Betty Downer
John Otten Jr.
Other Areas
Elizabeth Tryon
EDITOR’S NOTE: Obituaries printed in today’s edition
are submitted by funeral homes. The newspaper prints
the notices as provided. The first 50 words are free.
A charge of 50 cents per word is made for each word
after that. The photo charge is $25. For information on an
individual obituary, contact the appropriate funeral home.
The deadline for obituaries is 3 p.m. daily.
■ For more information about obituaries or to order a
laminated memorial bookmark, call 423-757-6348 or go
to memorialbookmarks.netfirms.com/chattanooganew.
■ To place an In Memory ad, contact the classified
advertising department at 757-6200.
His family is grateful to the
team who worked so aggressively
on Pete’s behalf and with such
tenderness: Dr. Charles Portera
Jr., Dr. Glenn Newman, Dr. Robin
Barnett, Vickie Demers and the
Memorial MICU.
In lieu of flowers, Pete would
no doubt prefer that donations
be made to the India Missions/
Church of Christ, P.O. Box 1448,
Hamilton, AL 35570; or to Wally’s
Friends or the Pet Placement
Center in Chattanooga. His love
and compassion for animals was
legendary.
Please share your thoughts
and memories online at www.
Chattanooga ValleyViewChapel.
com.
Arrangements are by Chattanooga Funeral Home, Crematory
& Florist, Valley View Chapel,
7414 Old Lee Highway.
Leon Phillips
Roy “Leon” Phillips, 68, of
Soddy-Daisy, passed away Friday, March 23, 2012, surrounded
by his loving family.
Leon was a retired member
of Plumbers and Steamfitters
Local 43, a member of Daisy
Lodge #706 F&AM and Alhambra Shrine, a graduate of Hixson
High School and served in the
U.S. Navy during the Vietnam
era. He was a devoted brother,
husband, father and grandfather who loved his family and
friends.
Leon was preceded in death
by his parents, Fred Berlin and
Opal Mildred Layne Phillips;
and his beloved son, Christopher
Leon Phillips.
He is survived by his wife
of nearly 40 years, Rita DuPree
Phillips; son, Kevin Lee (Jessica)
Phillips; grandchildren, King and
Ruby Phillips; daughter-in-law,
Rebekah Wilson Phillips, of
Chattanooga; stepgrandchildren,
Britni and Bailey; sisters, Peggy
Phillips Dill, of Cleveland, Tenn.,
Betty Phillips (Wayne) Vinson,
of Chattanooga, and Carolyn
Phillips Hawkins Smith, of Hixson; brother, Bobby Phillips,
of Calhoun, Ga.; niece, Cristy
Hawkins (Charles) Milsaps, of
Hixson; several other nieces,
nephews and cousins; and one
aunt.
Funeral services with military
honors was at 6 p.m. Monday,
March 26, in the Legacy Funeral
Home chapel, with family friend
Clay Whitfield officiating.
Masonic services will be
performed by Daisy Lodge #706
F&AM.
The family requests that, in
lieu of flowers, memorial contributions be made to Alhambra
Shrine (Children’s Hospital).
Share your memories, stories
and photos at www.legacyfuneral
home.com.
Arrangements are by Legacy
Funeral Home & Cremation
Center, Soddy-Daisy.
Survivors include daughter, Abigail (Prince) Miller;
and sons, Raymond, John and
David Prince; grandchildren,
Jessica (Miller) Sellers, Caroline
Prince, Ruth (Prince) LeGere,
David Prince, Daniel Prince,
Candace Prince, Nathaniel
Prince and Ian Prince; greatgrandchildren, Abigail Sellers,
Julia LeGere and Aiden Nelson
Prince; brother, Voss Moore Jr.;
sisters-in-law, M.E. Moore and
Caroline (Prince) Anderson;
and a multitude of other admirers whose lives also were made
richer by the wit, warmth, class
and indomitability that was Marjorie.
Mrs. Prince was preceded
in death by her grandson, Graham Miller; and by her husband,
Graham William Prince, who
died in 1958. Mrs. Prince never
remarried, and she died on what
would have been her beloved
Graham’s 92nd birthday.
The funeral service will be
held at Wann Funeral Home at 1
p.m. Thursday, March 29.
Interment will follow at Forest Hills Cemetery.
Visitation at Wann Funeral
Home will take place from 6 to 8
p.m. Wednesday, March 28.
Valerie Ray
Valerie Ray, 59, passed away
Saturday, March 24, 2012, at a
local hospital.
Arrangements are by John
P. Franklin Funeral Home, 1101
Dodds Ave., 622-9995.
Randall Wilkey
Randall DeWayne Wilkey, 44,
of Hixson, died Tuesday, March
20, 2012, at his home.
Randall was a lifelong resident of Chattanooga and was a
son of the late Vernon L. Wilkey.
He also was preceded in death
by three brothers, Alfred, Wesley and James Lloyd Wilkey.
He was of the Baptist faith.
Survivors include his mother, Luvenia Wilkey; daughter,
Brandy Wilkey; two sons, Junior
Wilkey and Justin Wilkey; six
brothers, Willard Wilkey, Clifton Wilkey, Lebron Wilkey,
Raymond Wilkey and Ronald
Wilkey, all of Chattanooga, Lee
Wilkey, Lexington, N.C.; two sisters, Imogene Martin and Abbie
Manseill, Chattanooga; and several nieces and nephews.
Services were at 2 p.m. Saturday in the funeral home chapel with the Rev. Don Ferguson
officiating.
Arrangements were by Hamilton Funeral Home & Cremation
Services, 4506 Hixson Pike.
TENNESSEE
Katrina Blondin
Marjorie Prince
Marjorie Elizabeth Moore
Prince, 85, died Friday, March
23, 2012.
The daughter of Voss and
Irene Kington Moore, she was
born Aug. 13, 1926. All but she
acknowledged there was no one
like her.
Possessed of an unmatched
verbal facility
and incisive
intellect, Mrs.
Prince was,
in 1944, the
first woman
to win the
Chattanooga
Times full
scholarship
to the University of
Chattanooga. After being widowed, she entered the workforce
with TVA as a part-time typist
and retired 30 years later as affirmative action coordinator in the
division of purchasing.
TULLAHOMA — Katrina
“Katherine” Malesh Kruger
Blondin, 91, passed away Saturday, March 24, 2012.
Visitation: 10 a.m. until 11 a.m.
CDT today at St. Paul’s Catholic
Church.
Services are at 11 a.m. CDT
today at St. Paul’s Catholic
Church.
Burial will be in Franklin
Memorial Gardens.
Arrangements are by Tullahoma Funeral Home, www.
tullahomafuuerathome.com.
Patricia Cook
MANCHESTER — Patricia
R. Tucker Cook, 93, died Sunday, March 25, 2012, in Medical
Center of Manchester.
S e r v i ce s : 1 1 a . m . C DT
Wednesday in the funeral home
chapel with the Rev. Clayton
Jones officiating.
Burial will be in Morrison
Cemetery.
Arrangements are by Cumberland Funeral Home, 207
Mabee Ave., Monteagle, Tenn.
Frances Monroe
DECATUR — Frances Delphene Monroe, 79, died Sunday, March 25, 2012, at her residence.
Funeral service is at 1 p.m.
today, March 27, in the Bowers
Funeral Home chapel.
Interment will be in Walnut
Grove Cemetery.
Please go to www.bowersfh.
com.
Arrangements are by Bowers
Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Decatur, 423-334-3661.
Louella Mooneyham
PIKEVILLE — Louella Angel
Mooneyham, 86, went home to
be with the Lord on Monday,
March 26, 2012.
She was a member of Calvary
Freewill Baptist Church. She was
retired from Taft Youth Center.
Louella was preceded in
death by her husband, N.J.
Mooneyham; parents, William
and Ola Mae Angel; three brothers, W.D., Dion and Cecil Angel;
and a sister, Francis Mooneyham.
She is survived and will be
missed by her children, Glenn
(Pamela) Mooneyham, Dunlap,
Tenn., Barbara (Bob) Swafford
and Carol (Schawn) Brown,
both of Pikeville, Tenn.; brother,
Norman (Willie Grace) Angel;
sisters, Betty Selby and Mary
Tollett; 10 grandchildren; and 11
great-grandchildren; one greatgreat-grandchild; several nieces
and nephews; and many special
friends.
A celebration of her life will
be held in the funeral home chapel at 2 p.m. CDT Wednesday,
March 28, 2012, with Brother
Doyle Ashburn and Freddie Savage officiating.
The family will begin receiving friends starting at 2 p.m.
CDT today.
Burial will be in Blackburn
Cemetery.
Please share your thoughts
online with the family at www.
pikevillefuneralhome.com.
Pikeville Funeral Home
entrusted with arrangements.
Ledford Smith; and his brother,
Herschel Smith.
Willard is survived by his
beloved son, W. Alan (Karen)
Smith; and precious granddaughter, Kyla Marie Smith, of
McDonald, Tenn.; and his sister, Wilma Smith, of Crossville,
Tenn. He will be missed by many
friends, especially Gene Myers
with whom Willard had a long
and caring father and son relationship.
A military memorial service
will be held at Chattanooga
National Cemetery at 9:30 a.m.
Friday, March 30, 2012, with the
Rev. Kevin McNelly officiating.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Family
Home Hospice of Cleveland, TN,
175 24th St., Cleveland, TN 37311.
Funeral arrangements have
been entrusted to Advantage
Funeral and Cremation Services, Franklin-Strickland-PinkardBryan-Smith Funeral Directors,
1724 McCallie Ave., Chattanooga,
423-265-4414.
Alice Wagoner
JASPER — Alice Cunningham
Wagoner, passed Sunday, March
25, 2012.
She was a homemaker. When
she was young, she traveled to
several different states singing.
Mrs. Wagoner husband of 60
years, Marvin Edward Wagoner,
preceded her in death in 2009;
and sisters, Pearl Sherrill and
Aliene Hodges.
She is survived by her sons,
Billy J. Wagoner, Edward D. Wagoner and Dannie W. Wagoner;
sister, Beatrice Rust; and several
grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be conducted from the funeral home
chapel at 1 p.m. CDT Wednesday, March 28, 2012, with Brother
Gene Fuller officiating.
Entombment will follow in
Sequatchie Valley Memorial
Gardens.
The family will receive friends
from 5 until 8 p.m. CDT today,
March 27, 2012.
To send online condolences
visit www.tatefh.com.
Arrangements are by Tate
Funeral Home, Jasper, 423-9429500.
See OBITUARIES, Page B3
Willard Smith
CLEVELAND — Willard Robert Smith, 80, a native of Chattanooga, went home to be with the
Lord on Saturday, March 24, 2012.
He died peacefully at his home in
Cleveland.
Willard was an Army veteran
who was proud to have served
his county in the U.S. and Germany. As a truck driver, he traveled
over a million miles of America’s
highways and back roads, and
delighted his family and friends
with his many experiences. He
loved the outdoors especially
fishing and camping.
Willard was preceded in
death by his wife, Doris Carroll Smith; his parents, Marion
Herbert Smith and Ruby Mae
IN MEMORY
CORRINE F. GILMORE
JUNE 17, 1911MARCH 27, 2011
It’s been a year today since
you left us. We love you,
but God loves you best.
God saw the road was getting rough, the hill was hard
to climb, and healed your
pain but broke our hearts.
Sadly missed by your son,
daughters, grandchildren,
great-grandchildren
and family.
IN MEMORY
IN MEMORY
VINCENT “REDMAN’’
MIKES
MARCH 27, 1964
Some birthdays should
always be celebrated.
Remembering you on this
special day.
Happy Birthday!
Love,
your family
CARD OF THANKS
JACKIE DABBS-BURSON
The family of Jackie
Dabbs-Burson would like to
thank everyone for taking the
time to come and visit with us
at the funeral home.
Thanks for the most beautiful
flowers, cards and food that
was sent by family and friends.
You will never know how
much it is appreciated. Jackie
would be so honored to know
how many friends and family
came to see her.
She was and is the love of
our lives and will be greatly
missed by so many.
For everything that you’ve
done for us, thanks. The entire
family thanks you from the
bottom of their hearts. Please
keep us in your prayers.
A special thanks also is given
to Joe and Len and all the
special people at Lookout
Mountain Presbyterian Church.
You are loved by all.
Gary and Teresa; Deanie and
Crystal; Richard; Ethan; Pat;
Clyde; her “second mom” and
granny, Maw Maw Dabbs;
Penny and Marty; all of her
special friends; cousins;
nieces and nephews;
and aunts and uncles.
The family of
Jackie Dabbs-Burson
LORRAINE PARMES
1924-2009
Hi, Mom, it’s us again.
Just came to say hello.
We miss you, Mom,
so very much,
more than you’ll ever know.
We see your face
almost every night,
in every twinkling star.
We feel that you’re still with us,
whether it be near or far.
We know you didn’t want to die,
but part of us died, too.
It will never be the same again
because we don’t have you.
So, Happy Birthday,
from us to you.
Love,
all of us
Simple
Extractions
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Expires March 31, 2012
Aspire Economy
Denture & Dental Care
423-521-3550
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Gil&Curt
tremont
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• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • B3
Breaking News: [email protected]
Virus blamed for absences
at Clifton Hills Elementary
University speaker
to discuss parrots
By Kevin Hardy
Staff Writer
Staff Report
Irene Pepperberg, an internationally known animal
behaviorist who holds faculty
positions at Harvard University and Brandeis University,
is coming to the University of
Tennessee at Chattanooga.
She will present “Alex and
Me: Can African Grey Parrots
Understand What They Say?”
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the
Raccoon Mountain Room of
the UTC University Center.
This event is free and
open to the public.
Pepperberg specializes
in the thinking and language ability of birds that
have demonstrated they can
count, acquire large meaningful vocabularies and even
have conversations.
Her research in raising
parrots Alex, Griffin and
Wart and studying their cognitive and communicative
abilities has been featured on
Staff Photo by Tim Barber
PBS’s “Nova,” the Discovery City of Chattanooga employee Michael Wood takes a
Channel, Animal Planet and bag of trash to a trash bin Monday at East Lake Park.
the BBC.
ownership of its recreation
For more information,
center, using it as a place to
visit alexfoundation.org or
provide food to neighborcontact H. Lyn Miles at lynhood children, he said.
[email protected]
“I think the communities
• Continued from Page B1
C o u n c i l m a n Ru s s e l l would take more ownership,”
Gilbert, chairman of the he said. “A lot of them are
council’s Parks and Recre- doing it now.”
Contact staff writer Cliff
ation Committee, said it’s
important for the public Hightower at chightower@
to be involved with their timesfreepress.com or 423parks.
757-6480. Follow him at
In the Washington Hills twitter.com/cliffhightower or
Under recent changes to
state law, half of teachers’ community, the neighbor- facebook.com/hightower
assessments must derive hood association has taken TFP.
from testing data, while the
rest comes from classroom
observations.
Parks
Teachers union wants
evaluation data private
Obituaries
• Continued from Page B2
GEORGIA
Clara Arthur
ROSSVILLE — Clara Delores
Arthur, 77, went home to be with
her Lord and Savior, Jesus, on
Sunday, March 25, 2012.
She was a lifelong resident
of Rossville and was a member
of Oakwood Baptist Church for
over 30 years. Clara made several
trips overseas with missionaries
to help teach children, supported
local charities, Boys Town, Jewish Center and local animal shelters, and loved spending time in
her garden with her flowers.
Clara was preceded in death
by her parents, Lloyd Earl Morgan and Mildred Ethel Roberson;
brother, Robert Clough; nephew,
Michael E. Howard; and best
friend, Betty Jo McGuyre.
She is survived by her sisters, Barbara Howard and Glynda Womack, both of Rossville;
brothers, Albert Lebron Clough,
of Rossville, and Earl Morgan,
of Apison; nieces, Shirley Nichols, Carmen Richey, Diane Collins and numerous others; and
nephews, Ricky Howard, Jeff
Wooldridge, Michael Howard
and many others.
The funeral service will be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, March
28, 2012, at Oakwood Baptist
Church.
Interment will follow at
Lakewood Memorial Gardens,
South.
The family will receive
friends from 1 to 8 p.m. today
and prior to leaving for the
church on Wednesday.
Arrangements are by W.L.
Wilson & Sons Funeral Home,
Fort Oglethorpe.
Mamie Fricks
RINGGOLD — Mamie J.
Queen Keener Fricks, 69, passed
away Saturday, March 24, 2012.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Wednesday from the chapel
of Bernhardt Funeral Home.
Interment will be in Flat
Creek Baptist Church Cemetery
in Ellijay, Ga.
Visitation all day today until
9 p.m. at the funeral home, www.
bernhardtfh.com.
JoAnn Nelms
TUNNEL HILL — JoAnn
Marie Clayton Nelms, 83, went
home to be with the Lord on
Sunday, March 25, 2012.
A resident of the Tunnel Hill
area for the
past 58 years,
s h e wa s a
homemaker
and a member of Hillcrest Baptist
C h u rc h i n
Ooltewah.
She was
preceded in
death by her
son, the Rev. John C. Clayton;
parents, George and Lilly Beshears Gilbert; and five siblings.
She is survived by five chil-
HOUSE REBUFFS
CHILD LABOR RULES
The House on Monday
passed a bill declaring that
Tennessee wouldn’t enforce
federal regulations governing child labor on family
farms.
The chamber voted 70-24
to approve the bill sponsored
by Republican Rep. Jeremy
Faison, of Cosby, in response
to rules being considered by
the U.S. Labor Department.
“I believe it’s incumbent
on us as legislators to stand
up against big D.C., big government and say enough
is enough,” Faison said in
remarks on the House floor.
“And I’m hoping other state
will join in and say you’ve
gone far enough.”
dren, Katy Clayton, of Apison,
Beverly Ann (Wayne) Ackerman,
of Tunnel Hill, Patricia (Billy)
Vaughn, of Chattanooga, Sheliah
(Danny) Honeycutt, of Etowah,
Tenn., and Doug Clayton, of
Dalton, Ga.; 13 grandchildren; 22
great-grandchildren; five greatgreat-grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at noon Wednesday in the funeral home chapel with the Rev.
James Langston officiating.
Interment will follow at Nellie Head Baptist Church Cemetery.
The family will receive
friends from 3 to 9 p.m. today
and Wednesday until funeral
time at the funeral home.
An online register book may
be signed at www.wilsonfuneral
home.com.
Arrangements are by Wilson
Funeral Home, Wallis-Stewart
Chapel, Ringgold, Ga.
Ralph Randle
CRANDALL — Ralph A.
Randle, 87, met Jesus on Monday, March 26, 2012.
Mr. Randle was a World
War II Air Force veteran and
was retired from Combustion
Engineering after 25 years of
service.
He was preceded in death by
his first wife,
Diane Randle; parents,
Thomas and
Maude Randle; and several brothers
and sisters.
He is survived by his
wife, Allie
Randle; son,
Allen (Claire) Randle; daughters, Michel Randle and Sherry
(Danny) Burgess; stepson, Brian
(Tiffany) Born; stepdaughters,
Myrna Bryson and Pam Barton; 10 grandchildren; 18 greatgrandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at
Heritage Funeral Home chapel
with Brother Harold McClure
officiating.
Interment will follow at
Chattanooga National Cemetery.
Visit www.heritagefh.com to
share words of comfort to the
family and view the memorial
tribute.
The family will receive
friends from 4 to 8 p.m. today
at Heritage Funeral Home, 7454
East Brainerd Road, Chattanooga, TN 37421.
Lloyd Wooten
CHICKAMAUGA — Lloyd
“Big Daddy” Wooten, 74, formerly of Rainsville, Ala., died
Sunday, March 25, 2012, at his
residence.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. CDT Wednesday, March 28,
from Rainsville Funeral Home
chapel.
Burial will be in Town Creek
Cemetery www.rainsvillefuneral
home.com.
Visitation is from 6 to 8 p.m.
CDT today, March 27, and from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. CDT Wednesday.
Georgia Senate approves Man sentenced to 20 years
changed anti-abortion bill in vehicular assault case
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Senate
lawmakers eased a major
restriction Monday on a bill
that would ban women from
getting abortions f ive
months into Georgia
a pregnancy, Legislature
opening a rift
with House
lawmakers
who backed a
more stringent proposal.
The original legislation
from Rep. Doug McKillip is
part of a national campaign
to ban abortions starting 20
weeks after conception when
abortion opponents say a fetus
can start feeling pain — a point
ALABAMA
Jim Anderson
POWELL — Jim Billy Anderson, 59, passed away Sunday,
March 25, 2012.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. CDT today from W.T.
Wilson Funeral Chapel with
burial to follow in Kirk Memorial Gardens.
Brother Terry Futral, Brother
Jim Hawkins and Brother Jack
Lynch will be officiating.
Rhonal Blackwell
RAINSVILLE — Rhonal
Blackwell, 90, died Sunday,
March 25, 2012, at Shepherd’s
Cove.
Funeral services are at 2 p.m.
today, March 27, from Antioch
Baptist Church.
Burial will be in Antioch
Baptist Church Cemetery with
Rainsville Funeral Home Inc.
directing, www.rainsvillefuneral
home.com.
Visitation is today from 1
to 2 p.m. from Antioch Baptist
Church.
Hayleigh Brown
FORT PAYNE — Hayleigh
Elazabeth Elexis Brown, infant,
passed away Friday, March 23,
2012, at DeKalb Regional Hospital.
Funeral service: 2 p.m. CDT
Friday, March 30, 2012, from W.T.
Wilson Chapel with burial in
Walnut Grove Cemetery.
Family will receive friends
from 5 to 7 p.m. CDT Thursday.
Betty Downer
FLAT ROCK — Betty F.
Downer, 75, passed away Saturday, March 24, 2012.
She was a loving wife, mother
and grandmother who enjoyed
life and lived it to the fullest. She
was of the Methodist faith.
Mrs. Downer was preceded
in death by her parents, W.C.
and Doris Penland, and brother,
Tommy Penland.
Survivors include husband,
Doug Downer; daughters, Kim
Schwam and Doris Bell; sons,
Steve, Russ and Tony Freeman,
and Mike Downer; seven grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. EDT today in the Bryant Chapel.
Burial will follow in Payne
Gap Cemetery.
Visitation is from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. EDT today.
Arrangements are by Moore
Funeral Home, Bryant, Ala.
disputed by doctors.
The Republican’s bill made
exceptions for pregnancies
that threaten the life or health
of the mother. It would not
permit abortions after the
deadline to protect a mother’s
mental health.
In a major shift, the Senate
adopted a last-minute change
that would allow women to get
an abortion even after the fivemonth mark if a doctor determined a fetus has a fatal congenital or chromosomal defect.
Critics of the bill have said that
many abortions performed so
late in a pregnancy are sought
by parents who learn their
unborn child will not survive
outside the womb.
family, wife, Mary Otten; daughters, Christina Jean (Rusty)
Whited and Hailey Sierra
Ann Otten; sons, John Joseph
(Angela) Otten and Michael
Anthony Otten III; sisters, Pearl
Dinkelackor, Hazel Otten, Jane
Otten; brothers, Tom Otten,
Mike Otten and Roger Otten;
five grandchildren, Jonathon
Otten, Justin Otten, Savanah
Mahan, Emily Otten and Megan
Mahan; and dog, Sadie.
Funeral services will be held
noon EDT Wednesday, March
28, 2012, in the chapel of Moore
Funeral Home.
Interment with military honors will be held at 2 p.m. EDT
Wednesday at Chattanooga
National Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 5
to 9 p.m. EDT today and from 11
a.m. to noon EDT Wednesday.
Arrangements are by Moore
Funeral Home, Bryant, Ala.
Staff Report
A 57-year-old Chattanooga
man has been sentenced to
two decades in prison for
plowing his van into the back
of a car, seriously injuring
five family members.
Danny Ray Dunn was
given the maximum time
on each of the five counts
against him and Hamilton
County Criminal Court
Judge Rebecca Stern chose
to run the sentences consecutively.
She made the decision based on prosecutor
Kate Lavery’s argument for
enhanced sentencing related
to Dunn’s criminal record
theater, movies and travel.
Julie is survived by her
husband, Cory L. Tryon; and
daughter, Genevieve, of Leesburg; maternal grandmother,
Catherine Midkiff, of Georgia;
great-aunt, Darcus Dunlap, of
Georgia; brothers, Everette
Wayne Ingram Jr., of Ecuador,
and Elliot Wayne Ingram, of
Texas; and many extended family members whom she loved
and cherished.
The family will receive
friends at Chattanooga Funeral
Home, 404 S. Moore Road, East
Ridge, TN 37412, from noon to 1
p.m. Friday, March 30, 2012.
Funeral services will be held
directly after the visitation in
the chapel.
The interment will be held
at Chattanooga National Cem-
and disregard for his reckless behavior.
Chattanooga police
arrested Dunn after a May
20, 2011, wreck in which he
rear-ended a silver Ford Taurus with his black Dodge van,
forcing the car into the back
of a tractor-trailer.
At the time of the wreck,
Dunn was on probation for
his second DUI conviction.
He has a criminal history dating back to 1987
in Hamilton County with
more than 17 guilty pleas to
charges including patronizing prostitution, domestic
assault, assault and battery
and vehicular assault.
etery.
In lieu of flowers, by family
requests contributions in memory of Julie may be made to the
American Cancer Society, P.O.
Box 22718, Oklahoma City, OK
73123-1718; Pi Beta Phi, 1154
Town & Country Commons
Drive, Town & Country, MO
63017; or Loudoun Country Day
School, 20600 Red Cedar Drive,
Leesburg, VA 20175.
Condolences may be left
at www.colonialfuneralhome.
com.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Colonial Funeral
Home of Leesburg, 201 Edwards
Ferry Road, NE, Leesburg, VA
20176.
IN MEMORY
IN MEMORY
OTHER AREAS
Elizabeth Tryon
LEESBURG, Va. — Elizabeth
J. “Julie” Tryon, 47, of Leesburg,
passed away Friday, March 23,
2012, at Loudoun Hospital.
Julie was born Feb. 4, 1965,
in Atlanta and lived most of her
childhood in Chattanooga. She
received her bachelor of arts
from the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga and master of
science in administration information resources management
from Central Michigan University. She served in the U.S. Navy
as a (CTR) cryptologic technician from 1991 to 2001.
She was the middle child of
three children of the late Everette Wayne Ingram and the
late Carolyn Jean Midkiff from
Chattanooga.
She married Cory L. Tryon
in July 4, 1997. Mother of Genevieve born Nov. 21, 2002.
Julie’s passion was being a
loving mother supporting Genevieve’s many activities.
She loved her sorority sisters from Pi Beta Phi, as well as
IN MEMORY
CASSANDRA SUE EVANS
(CAMERON)
MAR. 27, 1954-AUG. 14, 2001
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Your brothers, sisters and I
and your mother miss you
very much.
We all love you, and we will
see you again.
JAIRUM DURAN DOUGLAS
JULY 20, 1980-MAR. 27, 2002
Just when his days
seemed brightest,
Just when his hopes
seemed best,
God called him Home
to his Eternal Rest.
Sadly missed by
Johna, Michael, Jakenya
and Jadarron.
MRS. BETTY
GREER SETTLES
JULY 14, 1889MARCH 27, 1988
Like His mountains
He made her a fortress;
From His rivers
He gave her sweet tears.
He rooted her feet in
Eternal Soil,
And blessed her
with many long years.
We love you and still miss you.
Your dear family and friends
SPRING
C LE ANING?
Remember to donate to
the Salvation Army!
John Otten Jr.
FLAT ROCK — John Louis
Otten Jr., 54, passed away Sunday, March, 25, 2012.
He was born Aug. 30, 1957.
He was a self-employed
heating and air technician. A
loving husband, father, brother
and grandfather, he was veteran
of U.S. Army and member of
American Legion Local #106.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, John and Betty
Otten.
Survivors include his loving
New shipment of
34335257
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — Tennessee Education Association lobbyist Jerry Winters
said Monday that he favors
a proposal to close public
access to teacher evaluation
data because of the lack of
confidence many educators
have in the new evaluation
system.
The measure is headed for
a full Senate
Tennessee vote, and the
Legislature c o m p a n i o n
bill is awaiting a vote in
the House
State and Local Government
Committee today.
Sponsors say access to
the data should be limited to
school officials and not available to the general public.
Winters spoke to reporters Monday after hearing a
presentation from a Tennessee Department of Education
official on the implementation of the evaluation system.
A mild virus is to blame
for a rash of absences early
this month at Clifton Hills
Elementary School.
About one-fifth of the
school’s students were absent
or sent home on March 9 and
11, along with several teachers. After investigating the
outbreak, Chattanooga-Hamilton County Health Department officials say nothing
serious occurred.
“Kids were not ill for very
long and not severely ill,”
said Margaret Zylstra, epidemiology manager at the
health department.
The health department
used a telephone triage system
to contact students and gather
information on their illnesses. While some were out for
other reasons, many showed
similar symptoms, including
sore throat, headache, fever,
diarrhea and vomiting.
Zylstra said such viral illnesses are typical for this
time of year, though such an
outbreak is usually distributed across schools.
“That would not be an
unusual amount of absences
during a time when the flu is
circulating,” she said. “It was
a little bit unusual in that we
did not see that occurring to
that extent in other schools.”
Sheryl Rogers, director of
health services for Hamilton
County Schools, said an outbreak like the one at Clifton
Hills is the reason school
officials want sick children
to stay home. Sending the ill
to school only exacerbates
the problem, she said.
“The problem is that a lot
of kids were sick and parents
still sent them to school,”
Rogers said.
Zylstra said schools serve
as a bellwether of the overall
health of the community.
“We do use the schools as
a good kind of indication of
what’s going on in the community,” she said.
Contact staff writer Kevin
Hardy at khardy@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6249.
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. timesfreepress.com
B4 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
REGION
REGION
DIGEST
Questioned LaFayette officer to be reinstated
By Joy Lukachick
Staff Writer
Girl, 16, killed
in Bradley crash
A single-car crash in
Bradley County Saturday
morning resulted in the
death of a 16-year-old girl.
The car driven by Christina Hope Gargala, of Benton,
Tenn., slid off Benton Pike
around 6:30 a.m. Saturday
while rounding a small curve
near the intersection of
Gatlin Road, sheriff’s office
spokesman Bob Gault said.
The vehicle went
through a barbed-wire fence
before crashing into a tree.
Although the crash is still
under investigation, wet
pavement from early rain
appears to have been a contributing factor, Gault said.
Gargala died Sunday
morning at Erlanger hospital in Chattanooga after
being transferred by air
ambulance from SkyRidge
Medical Center.
A LaFayette, Ga., police
officer who accused his
supervisors of trying to fire
him out of retaliation will
be suspended for two weeks
without pay, then return to
work, authorities said.
Officer Denny Reyes,
a nine-year employee, was
cited for a procedural violation, meaning he could have
handled an investigation that
led to an arrest differently,
said City Manager Frank
Etheridge.
Reyes hasn’t
Tommy Freeman
admitted that he did
requested his termianything wrong durnation March 5 after
ing the arrest, but
he arrested an “influhe has now decided
ential” person and
not to appeal the
was then pressured
suspension, said his
to drop the charges.
attorney Theodore
The charges were
Salter.
later dropped.
The decision to
But Etheridge
suspend Reyes was Franklin
said he didn’t find
made by Etheridge Etheridge
t h a t a ut h o r i t i e s
on Monday afterasked the officer to
noon after he investigated drop the charges, but the
the circumstances.
family of the defendant asked
Reyes claimed that LaFay- that the charges against him
ette Public Safety Director be withdrawn.
Last week, Freeman
declined to comment on the
accusations until Etheridge
decided if Reyes would keep
his job. Freeman didn’t return
calls seeking comment on
Monday afternoon.
Reyes, who referred all
questions to his attorney,
also filed a grievance against
Freeman alleging the director used racial slurs in a past
argument, Salter said.
But Etheridge said he
dropped the grievance on
Monday, saying the alleged
incident on which Reyes
■ Applications for
superintendent have
come from as far away as
Texas and Alaska.
Searches ended
for missing men
Urban forest
benefits hailed
A study by the U.S. Forestry Service finds that trees
in Tennessee’s urban areas
provide the state with environmental benefits valued at
nearly $640 million a year.
According to the study’s
findings reported by
WPLN-FM, shade trees
save the state about $66
million a year. That’s mostly
savings in heating and cooling expenses as the trees
protect rooftops from the
summer sun and block cold
winds in winter.
The state’s urban trees
also store and remove from
the air more than $570 million worth of pollutants each
year, the study concluded.
The study is meant to set
a baseline for measuring the
future health of the state’s
urban forest.
Tim Phelps of the state
Forestry Division says
knowing the economic
value of trees helps make
the case for planting and
protecting them.
— Staff and Wire Reports
REGION CONTACT
■ Region editor:
Alex Chambliss
423-757-6306
achambliss@timesfreepress
.com
By Ben Benton
Staff Writer
Staff Photo by Tim Barber
Fort Oglethorpe has plans to construct a launching ramp on West Chickamauga Creek behind businesses on Battlefield Parkway. The Logan’s Roadhouse restaurant is seen, top left.
Canoe channel
‘Blueway’ in works for West Chickamauga Creek
restroom near
[from Chickaa natural canoe
mauga], which
l a u n c h at t h e
would put you
historic Lee and
right at lunchGordon’s Mill.
time,” Goulart
Fort Oglethosaid.
rpe’s canoe launch
Or, canoeists
will be installed
simply could
this summer
put in and putter
behind a cluster
around.
of restaurants Ron
“It’s slow
— O’Charley’s, Goulart
water. There’s
Logan’s Roadvery small curhouse and Panera Bread rent in it,” Public Works
— on Battlefield Parkway Director Jeff Long said.
west of Dietz Road. ResIn about 18 months,
taurant officials are inter- Fort Oglethorpe plans to
ested in installing tables build a paved trail leadoutside near the creek, ing to the launch using a
Fort Oglethorpe City Man- $100,000 recreational trail
ager Ron Goulart said.
grant the city recently
“It would take about received from the Georfour hours to float to here gia Department of Natural
By Tim Omarzu
Staff Writer
How would you like to
rent a canoe in Chickamauga, Ga., float down
West Chickamauga Creek
past historical markers at
Chickamauga Battlefield
showing where Confederate troops forded the
water, stop for a creekside
lunch in Fort Oglethorpe
and then pull out at Camp
Jordan?
That daylong canoe
trip is drifting closer to
reality.
Fort Oglethorpe and
East Ridge have concrete
canoe launches on order,
and Chickamauga will
start construction this
week on a wood-sided
75
24
27
GA
41
Chickamauga
Creek
2
Camp
Jordan
75
Fort
Oglethorpe
Future
canoe
launch
Chickamauga
27
Chickamauga
Battlefield
IjW\\=hWf^_YXoBWkhWM$CYDkjj
Resources.
A grant of $33,000 to
fund the canoe launch
came from the Chattanooga-based Lyndhurst Foundation, which has its roots
in the Coca-Cola bottling
See CANOE, Page B5
Grundy County Schools
netted 13 applicants to
replace retiring Director of
Schools Jody Hargis.
Officials in the system’s
central office said the number of applicants jumped by
11 last week, with responses
from as far away as Texas
and Alaska, while four were
from within the county.
Board of Education member Willene Campbell said
she was pleasantly surprised
by the response.
“I thought it was a good
turnout, and I was surprised
at how far away applicants
came from,” Campbell said
Monday. “You know, the old
saying is the more the merrier.”
Campbell said school
board members have not
yet seen application documents.
“We have a meeting
[tonight] to go over them and
to see what we’ve got,” she
said, adding that she was not
sure how the board will want
to proceed.
Grundy’s school director
seat has been the center of
controversy in recent years
as it shifted from Hargis to
former classroom teacher
Clay Newsome for about six
See GRUNDY, Page B5
Students’ mock crash program puts focus on driving safety
By Kimberly McMillian
Correspondent
EVENSVILLE, Tenn. — Rhea
County High School student Alec
Smith said he’s had several friends
who have “gotten lucky too many
times” after driving irresponsibly.
A crowd of 650 juniors and seniors
assembled outside the school Monday morning and watched Smith
and Katie Etherton’s re-enact a fatal
crash. Smith portrayed Etherton’s
prom date, who survived, while
Etherton’s character died.
Members of the Rhea County
Sheriff’s Office, the county health
council’s anti-drug coalition and
other sponsors joined the assembly
to promote awareness of the dangers
of driving while texting or drinking.
The program, called “Every 15
Minutes,” refers to how often statistics show a person in the United
States is killed in a car crash related to drinking or texting, officials
said.
The program, the first in Rhea
County, took place only days before
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watched.
For Lauren Keck, witnessing the
“death” of fellow student and friend
Evan Roddy Smith was difficult.
“He’s been a really close friend,”
Keck said, considering the possibility
of losing her friends in such a way.
The students chosen for the mock
funeral service had black shrouds
covering their heads as they entered
the school gymnasium for the assembly.
Parent Kim Ledford recounted
the details surrounding her son
Dustin’s death in a crash off APD
40 in Cleveland, Tenn., and the devastation of her first Mother’s Day
without him.
The school’s Junior ROTC
Photo by Kimberly McMillian members escorted a coffin with
“victim” Preston Opperman to the
Restoration Counseling Services volunteer Brenda Thomas portrays
front of the gymnasium as a video
the “Grim Reaper,” with black-shrouded victims in the “Every 15 Minplayed of Opperman’s pleas and
utes” program on Monday morning at the Rhea County High School
regrets about his irresponsible
gymnasiumin in Evensville, Tenn.
decisions.
Kimberly McMillian is based
this weekend’s high school prom.
10:50 a.m. the “Grim Reaper” strolled
After students settled into their through classrooms and chose “vic- in Rhea County. Contact her at
morning classes, from 8:15 a.m. until tims” as unsuspecting classmates [email protected].
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GATLINBURG, TENN.
Rangers in the Great
Smoky Mountains National
Park have suspended searches for two missing men.
Park spokeswoman
Molly Schroer said Monday
morning that the searches
were called off after no
clues had been found,
beyond discovery of the
men’s vehicles.
Up to 60 searchers
looked for about a week
after Derek Lueking’s
vehicle was found at the
Newfound Gap overlook.
Lueking is 24 years old and
lives in the Blount County
community of Louisville.
The search was on for
Lueking when rangers
found a car belonging to 23year-old Michael Giovanni
Cocchini, of Nashville.
Park Superintendent
Dale Ditmanson said it was
disheartening to searchers
to look for so long and not
find either man.
based the complaint was
four years old and no longer
timely. He said the complaint
was about an abusive atmosphere and he didn’t believe
it had anything to do with
racial discrimination.
Etheridge also said that,
after investigating the complaint, he discovered someone already had filed a complaint against Freeman for
the incident with Reyes and
former City Manager Johnnie Arnold had verbally rep-
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. timesfreepress.com
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • B5
Breaking News: [email protected]
Fill out those SBA forms
to get disaster assistance
By Ellis Smith
MORE INFO
Staff Writer
Andrew Wordes moves his animals around an enclosure in his yard in Roswell, Ga.
An explosion Monday rocked the suburban Atlanta home of a man known for his
fight to keep chickens on his property.
Explosion destroys home
of Georgia ‘Chicken Man’
ROSWELL, Ga. — An
explosion on Monday rocked
the suburban Atlanta home
of a man known for his fight
to keep chickens on his property, and emergency officials say a body was found
inside.
The house belonged to
Andrew Wordes, who was
known as the “Chicken Man”
for his attempts to turn his
Roswell house into a makeshift farm. He told a local
reporter to warn the marshals
who were trying to evict him
to back off. Moments later,
fire officials say someone
poured gasoline in the house
and set it on fire.
Firefighters found a body
inside the house that was
in foreclosure, but had not
identified it by late Monday. The body was taken to
the Fulton County medical
examiner, said Capt. Paul
Piccirilli of the Roswell Fire
Department.
Canoe
• Continued from Page B4
fortune of Thomas Cartter
Lupton. Lyndhurst, which
aims to enhance the natural
environment, also is helping fund East Ridge’s canoe
launch.
Chickamauga City Manager John Culpepper said markers are proposed at Chickamauga Battlefield that would
show where troops crossed
the creek.
“To me, it’s a historical
trail,” said Culpepper, a Civil
War buff who serves as chairman of the Georgia Civil War
Commission.
Culpepper said
there’s
space at the
city-run Lee
and Gordon’s Mill
for a canoe
John
rental and
Culpepper
outf itting
business,
and he’s open to having a
vendor there.
“I’ve had two or three
[vendors] ask me about it,”
Culpepper said. “I would be
willing to work with someone to develop a business to
complement the blueway.”
The “blueway” is a name
for a water path developed
specifically for canoeists and
kayakers.
Culpepper and Walker
County Attorney Don Oliver were inspired to push for
a West Chickamauga Creek
blueway after they attended
a seminar in Chattanooga
several years ago about blueways elsewhere.
“It’s just another outdoor
activity that people can take
advantage of,” Culpepper
said.
Blueways are an economic
boon for communities, too,
he said.
Contact staff writer
Tim Omarzu at tomarzu@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6651.
timessfr
time
freepr
eepre
eepr
ess.com
om
Wordes, 53, earned notoriety for his long fight with
the city over the right to have
livestock on his property.
Along the way, he alienated
neighbors but earned the support of the city’s mayor and
others who read about him
online. He even convinced
former Gov. Roy Barnes to
represent him in court.
The chickens were long
gone by Monday, but he was
still fighting eviction. A bank
foreclosed on his house after
he apparently stopped paying his mortgage while in jail.
Court records show he filed for
bankruptcy on July 4, 2011, and
neighbors say he was asking the
courts to block the eviction.
Neighbors who gathered near his home Monday laughed as they recalled
some of his antics, like naming a stubborn chicken who
survived a gunshot wound
“Lucky” and the time he
spelled “FEMA PLEASE
HELP” on his roof after a
flood damaged his basement.
But some said they thought
he’d become overzealous in
his fight against authority.
“He was a nice guy, but
he was fighting a fight that
really didn’t exist,” said John
Cherok, a neighbor. “Sometimes you can go too far, and
Andy did.”
Wordes lived in the twostory home on a quiet street
for about 13 years and started raising poultry in 2005.
At first he had only a few
chickens, and most neighbors didn’t seem to mind. But
the complaints started pouring in after he got dozens
more chickens, roosters that
crowed day and night and
then pigs, goats and dogs.
“And that’s when we
noticed the coyote population exploded,” said Cherok.
“It was like a buffet over
there. It just spiraled out of
control.”
The city cited him for
raising livestock in 2009, and
Wordes made a splash on the
Internet.
APPLICANTS FOR SCHOOLS CHIEF
■ John Franklin Bruce, Manchester, Tenn.; retired
manager
■ Golda Colquette, Monteagle, Tenn.; retired Grundy
County director of Career, Technical Education
Department
■ Benjamin Copeland, Cypress, Texas; chief auxiliary
services officer with Fort Bend Independent School
District
■ Judy A. Fults, Altamont, Tenn.; teacher at Grundy
County Alternative School
■ Mary Ann Gemmill, Naples, Fla.; former chief
administrative officer, Collier County District School
Board
■ Donna Kirkendoll, Wetumpka, Ala.; retired from
State of Alabama Department of Education
■ Janet Layne, Tracy City, Tenn.; Monteagle
Elementary School principal
■ JeVon Marshall, Memphis; professor at University of
Mississippi
■ Greg Rockhold, Selawik, Alaska; principal at DavisRamoth Memorial School
■ James Rick Rust, Coalmont, Tenn.; Grundy County
High School principal
■ Thomas Sparks, Rock Hill, S.C.; retired
superintendent who works as a principal mentor
■ Darrell Treece, Columbia, Ky.; superintendent of
Adair County (Ky.) Schools
■ James Vibbart, Whitmore Lake, Mich.; various posts
at the University of Michigan
Source: Grundy County Board of Education
Grundy
• Continued from Page B4
months in 2010, then back
to Hargis as interim director
after Newsome was removed
from the post, newspaper
archives show. State auditors
hit Grundy hard in January
for a number of findings and
accounting problems for the
fiscal year ending June 2011.
Hargis started work on
some of the eight findings in
the audit, and other findings
will be addressed during the
transition to the new director, officials said.
Board member Anita
Meeks said during the application period that while officials hope to select a new
director this year to work
with Hargis through the
budget season, he has agreed
to stay on until 2013 if the
search continues.
Contact staff writer Ben
Benton at bbenton@times
freepress.com or 423-7576569.
■ Homeowners
— 1.875 percent loans
of up to $200,000 for
real estate, $40,000 for
personal property
■ Businesses — 4
percent loans of up to
$2 million
■ Nonprofit
organizations — 3
percent loans of up to
$2 million
Source: U.S. Small Business
Administration
to a news release.
“If you don’t fill out the
SBA application, assistance
stops there,” Jackson said.
If, on the other hand,
applicants are turned down
for a low-interest SBA loan,
Murder charge in Harrison
stabbing goes to grand jury
By Todd South
Staff Writer
A 20-year-old man now
faces the grand jury on
charges that he stabbed his
46-year-old roommate to
death.
Charges of criminal homicide and
theft against
defendant
J o s h u a
Stoltz were
sent to the
Hamilton
County
grand jury
Monday
morning
Joshua
by Sessions
Stoltz
Court Judge
Christie
Mahn Sell after a 15-minute
hearing.
The grand jury will decide
whether there is enough evidence to indict Stoltz on the
charges.
On Dec. 6, 2011, authorities found the body of David
L. Murray in a pool of blood
on the garage floor of his
Harrison home at 6422 Ware
Officer
• Continued from Page B4
rimanded Freeman at the
time.
Reyes has decided not
to appeal that decision, his
attorney said.
“We’re not going to appeal
it,” Salter said. “He has his
job back.”
Salter said the officer met
with Etheridge on Monday
afternoon and will be allowed
to go back to work on April
11. The city manager didn’t
cite any policies that the officer had broken, Salter said.
Reyes is the second disgruntled employee in the
last three weeks to accuse
Freeman of retaliation and
creating a hostile work environment.
Former firefighter Johnny
Stephens Jr., who was fired
for insubordination, accused
Freeman of getting him fired
after he asked why he was
being ordered to install a
radio in a Public Works
vehicle, a duty that was not
part of his job responsibilities.
■ Police say Joshua
Stoltz, 20, killed his
roommate and fled in his
pickup truck.
Branch Cove Drive. Murray’s
sister had called the sheriff’s
office after not seeing or
hearing from her brother in
several days.
An autopsy later showed
10 stab wounds all over
Murray’s body, including
one wound between his eyes
and one at the front of his
throat.
Hamilton County Sheriff’s
Office Detective Jeff Baker
testif ied Monday about
the wounds on Murray’s
body, including the slashed
throat.
Stoltz had been living with
Murray at the Harrison home
for several months at the
time of the victim’s death.
Shortly after finding Murray’s body, police issued a
nationwide alert with Stoltz’
description.
A sheriff ’s deputy in
Lowndes County, Ga., pulled
Stoltz over on Dec. 5, 2011,
near Valdosta, Ga. Stoltz was
driving Murray’s maroon
Ford F-150 pickup, and the
deputy also found oxycodone, marijuana and methamphetamine along with
stolen guns inside the truck,
according to reports.
The deputy arrested Stoltz
on drug and theft-related
charges and Stoltz was later
extradited to Hamilton
County to face a hearing on
the homicide charge.
Stoltz enlisted in the Tennessee Army National Guard
in March 2010 after graduating from Red Bank High
School, records show, and he
was discharged May 23, 2011.
A Guard spokesman said
he could not release details
of the discharge without a
Freedom of Information Act
request. The Times Free
Press filed that request in
December but has not yet
received the information.
Contact staff writer Todd
South at tsouth@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6347.
On March 20, Stephens
— a 14-year employee — told
LaFayette City Council members during a public hearing
that he had disagreed with
Freeman in the past about
another city policy, but that
the director had screamed
and cursed at him.
Freeman denied the allegations, saying Stephens was
just trying to retaliate for
being fired.
But several residents in an
angry crowd at the March 20
meeting questioned council
members on why Freeman
hasn’t been investigated for
similar allegations in the
past.
Mayor Neal Florence said
last week the city took note
of the complaints and officials are “looking into the situation” involving Freeman’s
actions.
Contact staff writer Joy
Lukachick at jlukachick@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6659.
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34249260
By Greg Bluestein
How much can I get in
disaster assistance?
34222361
The Associated Press
Don’t be scared if your
disaster relief application
says “Small Business Administration.”
Homeowners, renters,
businesses and nonprofit
organizations should fill out
the forms if they receive
them in the mail because, if
they don’t, they could lose
access to all disaster assistance, said Tamara Jackson,
a public affairs specialist
for the U.S. Small Business
Administration.
During disasters, the
agency makes loans direct
from the U.S. Treasury at
low interest rates to help
augment other disaster aid.
Rates for home repairs are
1.875 percent, business loans
are 4 percent and nonprofit
organizations can receive
loans at 3 percent, according
they may be referred back
to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency for
assistance, she said, which
wouldn’t otherwise happen.
Not everyone will receive
an SBA application, but that
doesn’t mean a person won’t
receive assistance, Jackson
said. Howeer, waiting too
long to file for assistance
could cause huge headaches.
Disaster assistance centers could be closing well
before the application filing
deadline for physical damage
on May 15, and long before
the deadline for economic
injury filings on Dec. 17.
“Don’t wait; we don’t
know how long those centers are going to be there,”
Jackson said.
Contact staff writer Ellis
Smith at esmith@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6315.
$GMDFHQWWR,DWH[LW
WK$YH‡&KDWWDQRRJD71‡ZZZOHHVPLWKFRP
B8 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
Taxes
• Continued from Page B1
to education. Bradley County
gets two-thirds of that revenue,
based on student population,
and the city gets one third.
It is the second half of that
revenue that is in dispute.
Everywhere else in Tennessee, that half is based on the
location of the purchase.
Locally, Cleveland would get
about 80 percent of that revenue. Instead, 45 years ago city
officials agreed to just reverse
the agreement that covers the
first half of the revenue. Thus,
Bradley gets a third and the
city gets two-thirds.
There is no termination
clause in the agreement.
City Finance Director Mike
Keith told the council that if
the 1967 agreement went away
it would be worth at least $2.2
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
million annually to the city.
In December 2011, Chancellor Jerri Bryant ruled in
the county’s favor.
“This is your last chance
to have 1967 overturned,”
City Manager Janice Casteel
told the council, “or we are
stuck with it forever.”
Opposing council members said appealing would
be taking a chance with the
$1 million being held by the
county trustee from the 2009
referendum that Bryant has
ruled belongs to the city.
It’s all taxpayers’ money,
Banks and Poe said.
“It means you are suing
yourself,” Poe said.
And, Banks said, the case
only has a 10 percent or less
chance of being accepted
by the state Supreme Court
from the court of appeals.
But those in favor of an
appeal argued that overturning the old agreement could
be the only way the city can
avoid a property tax increase.
The county formed its
own fire department, creating a $1.8 million annual hole
in the city budget, Casteel
said.
And Councilman Johnson
said city residents already
pay 55 percent of the county’s
property taxes.
The city has paid $77,316
to a Nashville attorney who
is a tax expert to examine the
matter. Council members said
that, because the groundwork
already has been done, there
won’t be much more cost in
legal fees to continue.
After the vote, Mayor Tom
Rowland said there would be
no veto from him.
“That would take the
place of a whole lot of property tax,” he said.
Contact Randall Higgins at
[email protected]
or 423-314-1029.
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Daniel J. Ripper, Attorney
Weston Wamp, right, talks with Stephanie Scioscia at his 25th birthday party Monday at Lindsay Street Hall.
Recall
• Continued from Page B1
Smith asked Clem for guidance on requirements for getting a term-limit referendum
for elected county officials
on the August or November
ballot.
In an email sent later in
the day to Smith, Clem said
the options are to seek a
change in the law from the
Tennessee General Assembly or work to create a charter form of government that
would allow the creation of
their choices are.
“We’ve got to have an outline of what the procedure is
if we’re going to be successful,” Smith said. “I wanted
to make sure our steps are
sequential or legal.”
Contact staff writer Ansley Haman at ahaman@
timesfreepress.com or 423757-6481.
Ripperlaw.com
CALL FOR DEALS
CAR RENTAL
876-7629
34332760
term limits.
Two of the state’s counties, Knox and Shelby, have
charter forms of government.
“We can either make it a
political issue when they’re
running for the Senate or the
House or we will start the
procedure for home rule,”
Smith said.
Smith said he’s not personally interested in a consolidated city and county
government, just a charter
for the county, and that the
Democratic Party wouldn’t
endorse any course of action
until members know what
423-756-5034
34273330
Wamp is one of four Republicans challenging his father’s
immediate successor, firstterm U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, R-Tenn.
In throwing the Lindsay
Street Hall birthday party and
“miniconcert,” which featured
country star John Rich, Weston
Wamp brought renewed attention to his youth even after he
attempted to downplay it earlier in the day.
“Grateful for all the [birthday] wishes, but this is my
favorite so far,” Wamp wrote
in a Monday morning Twitter
post. “‘Happy Birthday Weston,
now maybe everyone will chill
about the age thing.’”
Rich, half of country duo
Big & Rich and formerly
of Lonestar, wasn’t so chill
about the “age thing” — in
fact, he hammered it home.
Before launching into Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire,” he
told Wamp supporters the
1110 Market St., Ste 500 • Chattanooga, TN
Tenn., physician Mary Headrick and Chattanooga businessman Bill Taylor are fighting
for the Democratic nod. Their
fundraising totals are expected
to be available in April.
The 3rd Congressional
District stretches from Chattanooga to the Kentucky border, winding through parts or
all of 11 East Tennessee counties. The primary is Aug. 2.
Contact staff writer Chris
Carroll at [email protected] or 423-757-6610.
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• Continued from Page B1
eration faces to the women’s
suffrage movement and the
struggle for civil rights.
“I think that’s where we
are today,” he said. “Our leaders think somehow that it’s
acceptable and sustainable
to borrow money from the
younger generation just to pay
the bills of today’s overgrown,
inefficient government. That
requires a movement. It happens in rooms like this with
people like this.”
A Wamp campaign staffer instructed a Chattanooga
Times Free Press reporter
against talking to the crowd
of about 150 mostly college
students and twentysomethings — a Facebook invitation went to more than 2,000
people — and the campaign
declined to release a fundraising total for the evening.
Chattanooga real estate
investor Ron Bhalla, political
science professor Jean Howard-Hill and Athens, Tenn.,
dairy executive Scottie Mayfield are Fleischmann’s three
other Republican primary
opponents. Maynardville,
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Wamp
Washington establishment is
“scared” of their candidate.
“You know why?” he said.
“Because he’s 25 years old;
he’s full of piss and vinegar.
He’s a patriot. ... Last time
I checked this country was
built on 25-year-old badasses
like Weston Wamp.”
Rich appeared in political advertisements, hosted a
fundraising event and played
a rally during Zach Wamp’s
gubernatorial campaign. Rich
implored supporters to raise
$1 million this time around.
“You know what? We need
a million bucks,” he said. “We
need a million bucks, and
he’ll win. Not because he’s
going to buy the race, [but]
because a million bucks lets
everybody hear his message.
We all know that.”
According to the latest
totals, current as of Dec.
31, Fleischmann had about
$620,000 left in his campaign war chest while Wamp
reported about $285,000.
In a speech before Rich took
the stage, Wamp compared
the debt crisis he said his gen-
34253763
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
Staff Photo by Angela Lewis
34347479
..
timesfreepress.com ..
OPINION
B6 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
Established 1869 Adolph S. Ochs, Publisher 1878-1935
HARRY AUSTIN
Editorial Page Editor
WES HASDEN
Associate Editor
EDITORIALS
Tax breaks and racism
T
he Tennessee Legislature’s
Republican bent to favor the
wealthy and appease racists has
rarely been so obvious. Consider the
Legislature’s actions last week on two
specific bills — one to dismantle the
inheritance tax on estates of more than
$1 million, the other to block the merger and integration of Memphis City and
Shelby County school districts.
Helping Tennessee’s most affluent
residents by phasing out the state’s
inheritance tax was originally proposed
by Gov. Bill Haslam, but Republic lawmakers seem equally eager to please
the well-heeled crowd — no doubt, in
part, because that’s where the bulk of
their campaign donations originate.
Eager-beaver lawmakers
Haslam has proposed to terminate
the high-end inheritance tax over five
years beginning in 2013, with each
incremental step being paralleled by
minuscule deductions in the state’s
sales tax on food. Eager-beaver lawmakers in the House last week accelerated the phase-out schedule to four
years, which at that point would mean
the complete loss of a state funding
source that now amounts to $90 million a year.
This is malevolently misguided.
The state’s inheritance tax begins on
estates of $1 million, but the bulk of its
inheritance tax revenue comes from
far larger estates valued in the multimillions of dollars. The cut would
certainly boost the fortunes of Gov.
Haslam’s family, whose ownership of
the Pilot Oil empire is worth billions
of dollars.
Regressive taxation
In a state that relies more heavily
than any other state on sales taxes
— the most regressive form of taxation — this gratuitous tax break for the
wealthy and the super-rich would simply add insult to injury. The less that
average Tennesseans earn, the higher
the proportion of their income that
goes to state sales taxes. The regressive nature of the state’s tax system in
a state classified as a low-wage state is
already stunning. In a state that levies
no general income tax, taking away the
inheritance tax on high-income families makes Tennessee’s tax structure
even more regressive.
The inheritance tax should not be
eliminated. Revenue from it should
be channeled, for example, to keep
the Taft juvenile center open, and to
restore cuts in services for the intellectually challenged, and in TennCare.
A significant portion of Tennessee’s
lawmakers care as little for racial equity as for tax fairness. When the predominantly black Memphis city school
district began moving two years ago to
voluntarily dissolve its school district
into the richer Shelby County school
district by 2013, Shelby County’s legislators got the Legislature to consider a
bill to dissolve the state’s long-standing
ban on new municipal school districts.
Never mind that the ban was established years ago to promote racial equity by curtailing fragmentation of integrated countywide school systems.
Bill is stalled
The bill would have let Shelby
County racists in the small towns of
Arlington, Bartlett, Collierville, Germantown and Lakeland put a referendum on the May 10 ballot to create
their own municipal school systems
before the Memphis/Shelby school
merger. Fortunately, the bill was stalled
last week by two events. First, the state
attorney general ruled the bill would be
illegal before the Shelby County-Memphis school merger occurs. Second was
former House Speaker Jimmy Naifeh’s
impassioned plea to stop a bill clearly
designed to maintain racial segregation
in Memphis-area schools.
Both bills are now awaiting other
committee hearings. Transparency and
soul-searching in the cause of tax equity and racial fairness should prompt
their demise.
Rushed tax legislation in Georgia
Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has to be
overjoyed with the tax bill approved in
the General Assembly last week that
now awaits his expected signature
into law. The mixed bag of cuts and
increases matches what he promised
during his campaign and reiterated in
his State of the State speech. Not everyone should share his joy, though. In
their zeal to cut taxes, legislators created a bill that falls far short of useful
reform and one that decidedly favors
some constituencies over others.
The tax break bill rushed through
the GOP-controlled General Assembly
gives the appearance that taxpayers
will save money. It also allows legislators seeking re-election to truthfully
say that they voted to cut taxes. That’s
a popular mantra these days, but one
that often camouflages some uncomfortable truths.
Creates a deficit
The truth is that the tax package
will create a $49 million revenue deficit next year, according to those who
have read the bill. That’s just the initial cost. A nonpartisan estimate from
Georgia State University suggests that
the cost of the legislation over the
next three fiscal years will be at least
$200 million and perhaps far more
— much of it to local governments
that currently get funds from various
levies that will be reduced or eliminated. The loss in revenue, of course,
means that state and county officials
will have to replace it — or cut their
budgets.
Those who rushed to approve the
package now on Deal’s desk don’t
seem overly concerned about shortfalls. They say that the tax breaks it
contains will attract new businesses
and jobs to the state, and that it will
put a bit more money in people’s
pockets. That in turn should produce
new spending that will replace lost
revenue. Maybe. Maybe not. Truth is,
that explanation sounds suspiciously
like a variation on the now disproved
trickle-down economic theory that
inexplicably is still the darling of many
conservative policymakers.
The new legislation will benefit
some individuals and groups once it
becomes law.
Fatter bottom lines
Married couples will be able to
shield more money from the state
income tax. Those who own vehicles
will gain from a slow phase-out of
property tax on cars and trucks. Many
businesses and the agriculture industry will see fatter bottom lines as some
taxes expire and some tax credits
expand. Those benefits, though, will
reduce government revenues.
Legislators say not to worry, that
the new bill will balance the books
by collecting sales taxes from major
Internet retailers, by removing the
sales tax exemption for film producers and by capping a tax exception
on retirement pay for state residents.
That is an overly optimistic view. Less
biased sources say the tax package
will fall short of replacing lost revenue. The Internet tax, the largest
enhancer in the package, is the main
reason for that opinion. Other states
have tried the same tactic, but mostly
without success. The Internet giants
have fought back, filing lawsuits that
continue to delay collection of the
sales tax.
Need for reform remains
The real reason for approval of
the tax bill is self-preservation. One
Republican senator inadvertently
admitted as much when he urged his
colleagues to approve the plan since
they face re-election this fall. “I know
when you knock on doors this summer, the biggest question is jobs,” said
Don Balfour. “And this will help jobs
in our cities and counties and state.”
Legislators should have tackled a
broad range of issues related to tax
equity. Instead, they burnished their
tax-cutting resumes. Consequently,
the need for meaningful tax reform in
Georgia remains.
COMMENTARY
Grieving: A mother’s grace
MIAMI GARDENS,
Fla. — “They called him
Slimm.”
That is what Sybrina Fulton, the mother of slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin,
told me people called her son
because he was so thin.
I talked with her in a restaurant near
h e r h o m e,
four weeks
after George
Zimmerman, a
neighborhood
watch volunteer in a gated
community in
Charles Blow Sanford, Fla.,
shot Trayvon
in the chest
and killed him. Trayvon was
unarmed, carrying nothing
more than candy and a drink.
Fulton brought her own
mother with her, Trayvon’s
grandmother, and we talked
for nearly an hour over iced
tea and lukewarm coffee.
His mother lights up when
she shows me pictures of Trayvon on her phone, even managing an occasional smile that
lifts the shadow of grief and
brightens her face. He was a
gangly boy, all arms and legs
but little weight, nearly 6 feet 3
inches tall but only 140 pounds
and with the cherubic face of a
boy years younger.
She grows distant when she
talks about her loss, occasionally, seemingly involuntarily,
wrapping her hands gently
around her mother’s arm and
resting her head on her mother’s shoulder like a young girl
in need of comfort. The sorrow seems to come in waves.
She and her mother paint a
portrait of an all-American boy,
one anyone would be proud to
call their own. He was a smart
boy who had taken advanced
■ Trayvon was a real boy
with a family that really
loved him.
English and math classes, and
he planned to go to college.
He was a hard worker who
earned extra money by painting houses, and washing cars
and working in the concession of the Pee Wee football
league on the weekends. He
also baby-sat for his younger
cousins, two adorable little
girls ages 3 and 7, whom the
family called the bunnies, and
when he watched the girls he
baked them cookies.
The only fight his mother
could ever recall his having was
with his brother when Trayvon
was about 4 and the brother
was 8. They were fighting for
her attention, and it wasn’t even
a real fight. “They were wrestling. It was so funny,” she said
with a smile. This hardly fits
the profile of a menacing teen
who would attack a grown man
unprovoked, but that is exactly
what Zimmerman contends.
Zimmerman’s statement, as
relayed by police, says he was
following the boy but “he had
lost sight of Trayvon and was
returning to his truck to meet
the police officer when he says
he was attacked by Trayvon.”
Trayvon’s personal account
of who initiated the physical
encounter is forever lost to
the grave, but the initiation is
likely to be the central question in the case.
To believe Zimmerman,
you have to believe that Trayvon, an unarmed boy, a boy
so thin that people called him
Slimm, a boy whose mother said that he had not had
a fight since he was a preschooler, chose that night and
that man to attack. You have
to believe that Trayvon chose
to attack a man who outweighed him by 100 pounds
and who, according to the
Sanford police, was wearing
his gun in a holster. You have
to believe that Trayvon chose
to attack even though he was
less than 100 yards from the
safety of the home where he
was staying.
This is possible, but hardly
sounds plausible.
The key is to determine
who was standing his ground
and defending himself: the boy
with the candy or the man
with the gun. Who was winning the fight is a secondary
question.
That said, we’ll have to wait
for details of the investigation to
be revealed to know for sure. But
while we wait, it is important to
not let Trayvon the person be
lost to Trayvon the symbol. He
was a real boy with a family that
really loved him.
And now he is gone from
his mother forever, only able to
stare out at her as a shining face
on a cellphone. She doesn’t
even have voicemail messages
from him saved. The only way
she could hear Trayvon’s voice
now would be to call his phone
and listen to his answering message, but she dare not do it. “If I
hear his voice, I think I’m going
to scream.”
Every night she says she
dreams of him. Every morning
she says she thinks he’s going
to walk through the door and
say, “Mom, I’m here. You were
dreaming. It’s not true. I’m not
dead. I’m here,” and give her a
hug and a kiss.
And the bunnies — they
still don’t understand where
he is. They’re still asking for
Trayvon, the cousin who came
over and baked them cookies.
New York Times News Service
Lobbyists, guns and money
Florida’s Stand Your
Ground law, which lets you
shoot someone you consider
threatening without facing
arrest, let alone prosecution,
sounds crazy — and it is. And
it’s tempting to dismiss this law
as the work
of ignorant
yahoos. But
similar laws
have been
p u s h e d
across the
nation, not
by ignorant
yahoos, but
Paul
by big corpoKrugman
rations.
Specifically, language virtually identical to Florida’s
law is featured in a template
supplied to legislators in other
states by the American Legislative Exchange Council, a
corporate-backed organization that has managed to keep
a low profile even as it exerts
vast influence (only recently,
thanks to yeoman work by the
Center for Media and Democracy, has a clear picture of
ALEC’s activities emerged).
And if there is any silver lining to Trayvon Martin’s killing,
it is that it might finally place
a spotlight on what ALEC is
doing to our society — and our
democracy.
What is ALEC? Despite
claims that it’s nonpartisan,
it’s very much a movementconservative organization,
funded by the usual suspects:
the Kochs, Exxon Mobil and so
on. Unlike other such groups,
however, it doesn’t just influence laws, it writes them, supplying fully drafted bills to
state legislators. In Virginia,
for example, more than 50
ALEC-written bills have been
introduced, many almost word
for word. These bills often
■ In part it’s the same old
story — the exploitation
of public fears.
become law.
Many ALEC-drafted bills
pursue conservative goals:
union-busting, undermining
environmental protection, tax
breaks for corporations and
the wealthy. ALEC seems,
however, to have a special
interest in privatization — that
is, on turning the provision of
public services, from schools
to prisons, over to for-profit
corporations. Some of the
most prominent beneficiaries
of privatization, such as the
online education company
K12 Inc. and the prison operator Corrections Corporation
of America, are, not surprisingly, very much involved with
ALEC.
What this tells us is that
ALEC’s claim to stand for
limited government and free
markets is deeply misleading.
To a large extent the organization seeks not limited government but privatized government, in which corporations
get their profits from taxpayer
dollars, dollars steered their
way by friendly politicians.
In short, ALEC isn’t so much
about promoting free markets
as it is about expanding crony
capitalism.
And in case you were wondering, no, the kind of privatization ALEC promotes isn’t
in the public interest; instead
of success stories, what we’re
getting are scandals. Private
charter schools, for example,
appear to deliver a lot of profits but little in the way of educational achievement.
But where does the encouragement of vigilante (in)justice
fit into this picture? In part
it’s the same old story — the
exploitation of public fears,
especially those associated
with racial tension, to promote
a pro-corporate, pro-wealthy
agenda. It’s neither an accident nor a surprise that the
National Rifle Association and
ALEC have been close allies
all along.
And ALEC, even more than
other movement-conservative
organizations, is clearly playing a long game. Its legislative
templates aren’t just about
generating immediate benefits
to corporate sponsors; they’re
about creating a political climate that will favor even more
corporation-friendly legislation in the future.
Yet that’s not all; you have
to think about the interests of
the penal-industrial complex
— prison operators, bail-bond
companies and more. (The
American Bail Coalition has
publicly described ALEC as its
“life preserver.”) This complex
has a financial stake in anything that sends more people
into the courts and the prisons,
whether it’s exaggerated fear of
racial minorities or Arizona’s
draconian immigration law,
a law that followed an ALEC
template almost verbatim.
Now, ALEC isn’t singlehandedly responsible for the
corporatization of our political
life; its influence is as much
a symptom as a cause. But
shining a light on ALEC and
its supporters — a roster that
includes many companies,
from AT&T and Coca-Cola
to UPS, that have so far managed to avoid being publicly
associated with the hard-right
agenda — is one good way
to highlight what’s going on.
And that kind of knowledge is
what we need to start taking
our country back.
New York Times News Service
...
. timesfreepress.com
OPINION
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • B7
High-Priced Energy
Established 1936, Roy McDonald, Founder & Publisher, 1936-1990
Frank McDonald, President and Chairman, 1969-2000
LEE ANDERSON
Associate Publisher & Editor
EDITORIALS
Chickamauga Dam concerns
M
ost of us don’t often think
about the Chickamauga
Dam on the Tennessee
River, except when we’re boating,
swimming or fishing or when we
drive across the bridge spanning
the dam.
Of course, we enjoy the benefits
of the Tennessee Valley Authoritygenerated electricity the dam helps
provide.
The Chickamauga Dam lock was
built in the 1940s. The aging lock
is crumbling and very much needs
to be replaced. The existing 360foot by 60-foot lock is too small
for today’s large barges. It also has
structural concrete problems.
A new and expanded Chickamauga Lock is estimated to cost
$693 million, and work could be
finished by 2018, according to the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
So far, $186 million has been spent
on a bigger replacement lock.
But work on the new lock is on
hold because of a lack of money,
and President Barack Obama’s proposed budget for the 2013 fiscal
year does not include any funds to
maintain the existing lock.
The Corps estimates it will take
at least another $507 million to finish the new lock at the dam.
But funding for repairs and new
locks is inadequate because available funds are being absorbed by
costly dam and lock repairs to the
Olmsted Locks on the Ohio River.
Nevertheless, it’s important to
this region that we keep the lock
open. If it closes, 318 miles of river
upstream of Chattanooga would be
cut off from river traffic.
Not ‘news,’ but why ‘bad’ news?
It’s not really news that the leading cause of death among people
in this country involves heart disease.
It’s reported that nearly a million
people — actually about 935,000
Americans a year — suffer heart
attacks.
No one is immune, of course. But
some people obviously are more
susceptible to heart problems.
Lifestyle factors can put someone at risk for heart disease. Those
include stress-induced high blood
pressure, smoking, obesity and lack
of exercise.
Heart disease is the leading cause
of death for both men and women
in the United States, according to
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Coronary heart
disease is the most common type of
heart disease.
In 2010, coronary heart disease
was projected to cost the United
States $108.9 billion including
health care, medications and lost
productivity, the CDC reported.
Most heart attacks happen when
fatty deposits in an artery burst
open, and a blood clot forms to seal
the break, The Associated Press
reports. A clot that is too big blocks
off blood flow.
Dr. Eric Topol, director of California’s Scripps Translational Science Institute, told the AP: “We
don’t have a way to get at whether
an artery’s going to crack.”
Researchers say there still isn’t a
test that can predict with certainty
when that will happen.
And unfortunately, many of us
don’t do enough to head off heart
problems before it’s too late.
But living right, eating right, and
exercising right may help us avoid
suffering heart problems.
Santorum beats Romney, so ...
Well, we all know, of course, that
President Barack Obama is running
for a second term for the Democrats. That’s alarming to many
Americans.
But who’s the option?
Some enthusiastically (and some
with alarm) expect Mitt Romney to
be the eventual Republican nominee to challenge Obama.
But last Saturday in the Republican presidential primary in Louisiana, former Gov. Romney came in
second. The winner in Louisiana’s
Republican primary was Rick Santorum.
So do we still have a horse race
to choose the eventual Republican
presidential candidate? On April 3,
voters in Wisconsin, Maryland and
the District of Columbia will vote
in Republican presidential primaries.
Are you encouraged about the
prospects of either Romney or Santorum for the Republicans?
Is Obama encouraged by the
prospects of facing either one of
them?
Our November presidential election will be very important — and
the choice of our president for the
next four years surely will have tremendous effects on all Americans.
Decision on ‘your’ med care
What medical care you receive
and how you pay for it are huge
questions that the nine justices of
the U.S. Supreme Court will begin
to decide this week.
This week, the nation’s highest
court will hear arguments on health
care reform. The justices will decide
whether the health care law passed
in 2010 violates the U.S. Constitution.
Their decision will affect millions
of Americans, both medically and
financially, and set the future direction of American health care.
The court has scheduled six hours
of oral arguments over three days
— the longest number of hours set
aside to hear a case since 1966.
Under the law, Americans must
obtain health insurance, either
through private plans or public
programs. Those who don’t obtain
health insurance will pay a financial
penalty.
■ First, the Supreme Court will
decide whether current lawsuits are
premature, because of an 1867 law
that says people cannot sue over
federal taxes until they actually pay
those taxes. In this case, that would
mean the insurance tax penalty
for not buying health insurance, as
required under the law.
■ If the high court proceeds, as it
is expected to do, the justices will
wrestle with the question of whether you, as an individual American,
can be forced to buy medical insurance.
■ Then the court will consider
whether striking down one part of
the law, like the individual mandate, would make the whole law
invalid.
■ Finally, the court will consider
whether the health care law unconstitutionally coerces states into
expanding Medicaid. States that fail
to cover more people would lose
funding.
Will the high court decide that a
mandate that every American must
have health insurance is acceptable?
Will the justices render sweeping
orders that will affect us all medically, financially and personally?
Whatever their decision, there is
no question that the future of all
Americans’ medical care, our taxes,
and our national economy will be
enormously affected by whatever the
Supreme Curt ultimately decides.
Letters to the Editors
—— ❖ ——
Bo Watson’s bill
is necessary
Anyone who says “there
is no scientific evidence
against (evolution)” is ignorant or lying, no matter what
title he may have. Here’s
why:
Evolution violates the law
of biogenesis, which states
that “life only comes from
other life.”
A single cell is far more
complex than a computer,
with hundreds of interdependent processes that all
must work correctly. Mathematics proves the chance of
this happening is zero.
Evolution requires massive amounts of new DNA
information for every species, the generation of which
has never been observed.
Mutations are overwhelmingly damaging, and even
those considered beneficial
consist of loss of information.
Evolution requires huge
numbers of transitional species — all of which are missing. Darwin himself knew
this was a fatal flaw which he
hoped would be overcome
but has not.
The history of evolution
is one of hoaxes, lies, errors
and falsification: Piltdown
Man, peppered moths, the
evolutionary tree, embryo
drawings, spontaneous generation, etc.
This theory would have
been discarded long ago if
evolutionists did not desperately want it to be true.
Scientific inquiry and free
speech are threats to their
faith. This is — unfortunately — why Bo Watson’s bill is
necessary.
NATHAN SCHWENK
Spring City, Tenn.
Smith right choice
for school board
Our community needs a
school board representative
who has a long-term vision
for building a better school
system without losing focus
on meeting the educational
needs of all students in our
community.
Our community needs
a strong advocate on the
school board who understands the importance of
closing the achievement
gap while ensuring all children are ready to compete
in today’s competitive workforce and for the jobs of
tomorrow.
As a leading business
executive in Chattanooga,
Ken Smith knows how to
manage a budget while maximizing limited resources
to their fullest extent. As a
father of public school children and husband to a public
school teacher, Ken understands the challenges facing
our schools and teachers.
Ken also is the only candidate who campaigned for
the District 3 seat in 2010,
where he received more than
24 percent of the vote.
I encourage the commissioners to take the 2010 election and Ken’s background
into consideration when
making this decision rather
than appoint someone who
is not engaged in our schools
and has little understanding
of the complex issues facing
our schools.
Ken is the right choice
for our community and will
help strengthen the school
board.
VINCE AND
AMY BUTLER
Hixson
TO SUBMIT
LETTERS
■ Keep them topical,
short (200 words or
fewer), legible and not
more often than one
every 30 days. Letters
may be edited for
clarity and length and
should not previously
have been published
elsewhere.
■ Must be signed with
name, address and
telephone number.
■ Send to: Editorial
page editor (either
Times or Free Press),
P.O. Box 1447,
Chattanooga, TN 37401;
fax: 423-757-6383;
or email: letters@
timesfreepress.com.
TELL CONGRESS
Write c/o Senate Office
Building, Washington,
D.C. 20510, or House
Office Building,
Washington, D.C. 20515.
To email a senator or
representative go to
their Web page and
click on the “contact
me” section of their
homepage. Fill out the
form provided and click
submit to send an email.
Call or fax:
■ Sen. Lamar
Alexander (R-TN):
423-752-5337; 202-2244944; fax 202-228-3398.
■ Sen. Bob Corker
(R-TN): 423-756-2757;
202-224-3344; fax 202228-0566.
■ Sen. Saxby
Chambliss (R-GA):
202-224-3521; fax 202224-0103.
■ Sen. Johnny Isakson
(R-GA): 202-224-3643;
fax 202-228-0724.
■ Sen. Jeff Sessions
(R-ALA): 202-224-4124;
fax 202-224-3149.
■ Sen. Richard Shelby
(R-ALA): 202-224-5744;
fax 202-224-3416
■ Rep. Chuck
Fleischmann (R-TN):
756-2342; 202-2253271; fax 202-225-3494.
■ Rep. Scott
DesJarlais (R-TN): 202225-6831; fax 202-2265172.
■ Rep. John Duncan
(R-TN): 202-225-5435;
fax 202-225-6440.
■ Rep. Tom Graves (RGA): 202-225-5211; fax
202-225-8272.
■ Rep. Robert
Aderholt (R-ALA): 202225-4876; fax 202-2255587.
Ooltewah High
is simply the best
With all the East Hamilton rezoning fuss in the
news, I’d like to say I am a
proud parent of an Ooltewah
High School student. Several
have stated that OHS is substandard. I couldn’t disagree
more.
My child is an honor student at OHS and has been
blessed with great teachers
and educational opportunities. In fact, OHS has an
abundance of electives and
extra-curricular activities to
suit most any interest. The
new International Baccalaureate Diploma program,
Advanced Placement and
honors courses, and dual
enrollment opportunities are
just some of the many examples of OHS’s dedication to
academic excellence.
OHS has dedicated and
outstanding coaches who
have contributed to very successful athletic teams. The
dance team won TSSAA’s
state championship this year
for high kick. The basketball
team recently competed in
the state playoffs. There’s
an amazing JROTC program
and a band that has marched
in Disney’s Christmas Day
Parade and the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Parade. OHS
offers a wide gamut of athletic teams, clubs, and service
organizations — something
for almost any student.
OHS is not sub-standard
by any means. OHS leadership is top-notch and strives
for academic success. The
school motto, “Simply the
Best,” sums it up nicely.
SANDY BRADLEY
Harrison
R-rated ‘Bully’ is
film worth seeing
In reading about an R rating for the movie “Bully,” I
couldn’t understand the reasoning behind downgrading
it to a lower rating.
An R rating means anyone under 17 could not be
admitted without an adult. If
the child is accompanied by
an adult, they are allowed to
see the film.
Do the makers of the film
really believe a group of 15year-olds would choose to
see this film on their own?
Does anyone think an average 15-year-old is mature
enough to mentally process
the message of a film about
bullying?
Regardless of the rating,
parents should be taking
their children to this movie,
discussing it and reinforcing
the message.
ALEX FORDNEY
Rossville, Ga.
Say no to Healthy
Baby Contest
My therapy dog and I visit
Children’s Hospital monthly.
Every child who pets him
has a moment of “normal”
in their lives.
Our f irst experience
there was with a dying boy.
His grandmother put Toby’s
paw on the boy’s hand and
took a picture. What can
anyone say in that situation? My throat constricted
as I mumbled “You have a
beautiful child.” I have seen
a teenage boy’s face light up
as he reached over the nurse
who was drawing blood to
give my dog a treat.
At KidzExpo there is a
“Healthy and Happy Baby”
contest. I think it is so sad
that despite having sick and
injured kids in their care,
Children’s Hospital has chosen to sanction this contest.
I encourage all the sponsors to withdraw their support and cancel the contest
or for parents to boycott it.
Barring that, perhaps a child
with cancer, spina bifida or a
cleft palate could be named
the “Healthy and Happy
Baby.” Their parents are
proud of their child’s courage and admire their beauty,
despite the pain.
Please, this is no way to
honor someone who has no
choice about their health. It
is exploitation at its ugliest.
ROBBIE MOORE
Bible Wisdom
Have mercy upon me, O
God, according to thy loving
kindness: according unto the
multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions. Psalms 51:1
...
.
C
BUSINESS
timesfreepress.com/business
‘PINK SLIME’: Maker suspends work at three plants, C3.
q
q
GEORGIA ON ITS MIND: New bank owner seeks larger presence, C3.
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Cautious
Bernanke
sends
stocks up
STOCK
WATCH
DOW
13,241.63
NASDAQ
3,122.57
S&P 500
1,416.51
6-MO
T-BILLS
.15%
30-YR
T-BONDS
3.34%
CRUDE
OIL
$107.03
GOLD
$1,685.50
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
+160.90
+54.65
+19.40
By Martin Crutsinger
The Associated Press
+.01
+.04
+.16
+23.20
BUSINESS
BRIEFING
Wells Fargo
moving office
The Wells Fargo
Securities office in
downtown Chattanooga
will move to a new custom-built office this weekend. The nine-adviser,
4,400-square-foot office
will sit on the second
floor of Brabson Place at
412 Georgia Ave. The site
will have free parking.
Manager John Grzesiak
said he expects the space
will be easily accessible
for customers.
“It’s newer; it’s impressive,” he said, comparing
the new office to the current facility at 820 Broad
St. “It’s a better fit for us.”
TVA hires
communicator
The Tennessee Valley
Authority has
hired the
communications
director
from
NCR
Corp. in
Atlanta
Janet Brewer to serve
as vice president of communications.
Janet Brewer, who
has previously served in
key management posts
for LexisNexis and The
Reynolds and Reynolds
Co., fills the vacancy created last June when former communications vice
president David Mould
left TVA.
She will be based at
TVA’s headquarters in
Knoxville and be paid a
base salary of $235,000 a
year, TVA officials said.
Staff Reports
Staff Photo by John Rawlston
A worker walks among large items, including statues, at the Bradley County Amazon Fulfillment Services
facility Monday.
The other Amazon
Internet giant adding 100 jobs in Bradley expansion
general manager, said the 1.2 million-square-foot facility now has a
HARLESTON, Tenn. — little more than 450 full-timers.
Amazon’s distribution center
“It’s all based on customer
here, which already can hold demand,” he said.
enough goods to fill an
The world’s No. 1
estimated 67,000 full-size
Internet retailer last year
pickup truck beds, soon
opened the Bradley cenwill have space to handle
ter and another similarly
even more.
sized facility in Hamilton
Starting today, Amazon
County in a $139 million
will begin work to add
investment.
about 150,000 cubic feet
Work is under way at
Amazon’s Chattanooga
of storage as it tries to
facility to add on to an
meet growing demand at
Mike Thomas
existing mezzanine and
its massive facility, officials
said Monday. As part of the expan- boost floor space. That work is
sion, Amazon already has added expected to be done by midsum100 more full-time jobs, converting mer.
them from seasonal slots.
Michael Thomas, the center’s
See AMAZON, Page C4
By Mike Pare
Staff Writer
C
BRADLEY CENTER
■
■
■
■
20 football fields in size
6 miles of fiber-optic cable
28 miles of copper wire
196 wireless access points
Source: Amazon
AMAZON STATEWIDE
■ 5 distribution centers (3 existing, 2
opening this year)
■ 5 million square feet of space
■ Creating more than 3,300 full-time
jobs
■ $270 million investment
Source: Amazon
ONLINE
See a slide show of the new Amazon
complex at www.timesfreepress.com
See STOCKS, Page C4
Apps helping Comcast market its digital library
By Ellis Smith
Staff Writer
A group of developers at Comcast
is creating apps that turn events like
the Olympics and March Madness
from confusing to connected.
It’s part of an effort by the cable
giant to allow subscribers a “deeper
dive” into their favorite TV shows
and movies through mobile apps, as
Comcast fires a shot across the bow of
challengers such as Netflix and local
rival EPB.
In the past, a bevy of competitors
has put shows online, negating for
some the need for traditional cable TV.
Now, Comcast is joining the party in
a big way, marketing its digital library
and making it accessible from the same
spaces where competitors traditionally
have enjoyed free reign.
AT A GLANCE
■ Name: AnyPlay
■ Cost: Free to Comcast
subscribers
■ Where: Apple iPad, iPhone,
Android, Xbox 360
■ When: Available now for
mobile devices, coming soon
for Xbox 360
■ What: Allows users to watch
On Demand content and
specialized apps for live events
The company’s pay once, watch
everywhere philosophy opens its
digital library of nearly 75,000 titles,
making shows available on iPad and
computer the day after they’re broadcast on TV. The new content and apps
on new devices cost nothing for existing customers.
“AnyPlay gives you the ability to
watch the game even while you’re
grilling on the deck,” said Jim Weigert,
vice president and general manager
for Comcast in Chattanooga. “It’s great
for kids’ rooms, too, so you don’t have
to have a TV in every single room in
the house.”
Soon, all of Comcast’s On Demand
content also will be available on the
Xbox 360, which boasts 65.8 million
installed units. Two of the tech gurus
responsible for new technology brought
the as-yet-unreleased Xbox 360 app to
Chattanooga for a preview, saying it’s
just a taste of things to come.
They say it’s part of the company’s
answer for the so-called “cord cutters”
who cancel their cable subscription
SMALLBIZ
Education system gives companies control over training
■ Name: Woople
■ Age: Two-and-a-half
years
■ Location: The company
will move into its new
offices at 100 Tremont St.
on June 1. The North Shore
space already has caught
local attention for its murals
of famous scientists.
■ Contact information:
800-823-7698, Woople.com
■ Products/services:
Woople is a Web-based
e-learning platform that
allows users high levels
of customization. Clients
may upload their own
content, workbooks, tests
and videos or select
programs from Woople’s
library. Woople also offers
a number of training and
customer service programs.
■ Cost: The basic Woople
application costs $95 per
month
■ Startup investment:
About $500,000
■ Rapid success: The
Woople platform met
with success soon after
Major stock indexes
erased a week’s worth of
losses Monday, surging after
Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke signaled the
central bank is committed
to a policy that has helped
stocks rally for three years.
The Dow Jones industrial
average rose 160.90 points, or
1.2 percent, to 13,241.63. The
Nasdaq composite index
added 54.65 points, or 1.8
percent, to 3,122.57, which is
its highest close since midNovember 2000.
Bernanke said Monday
the U.S. job market remains
weak despite three months
of strong hiring and that the
Federal Reserve’s existing
policies will help boost economic growth. Many took
Bernake’s cautious words
about the economy to mean
the Fed is likely to stick to
its plan to hold short-term
interest rates at record lows
through 2014.
Though the hiring has
helped support consumer
confidence and incomes,
“we have not seen that in
a persuasive way yet,” Bernanke said. The Fed needs to
“remain cautious” in deciding what its next moves
should be, he said.
Further job gains likely
will require stronger consumer and business demand,
Bernanke said in a speech to
the National Association for
Business Economics spring
conference.
Some viewed the speech
as a signal that the Fed might
Staff Photo by Angela Lewis
Nicole Swank, left, and Stephanie Wharton, with
Woople, talk to a potential customer during a small
business expo at the Chattanooga Convention Center.
launching. A few local
Allstate Insurance offices
started using the program,
and Woople soon became
the training supplier for all
of the organization’s 12,300
offices. In its first year,
the company brought in
about $4 million. This year,
Woople is on track to hit
$20 million in revenue.
■ Inspiration: After 28
years in education, Woople
owner and founder Paul
Cummings noticed a trend
toward online learning. His
five kids helped persuade
him to start a Web service,
but he soon found the
content management
systems available were
overpriced and unfriendly
to users. “The fact of the
matter is people were being
overcharged for years,” he
said. “We had four simple
things; Woople has to be
simple, affordable, fun,
efficient.”
■ Goals: Cummings is
an educator at heart. He
already has started on
plans to record lessons with
top kindergarten through
12th-grade teachers, and
wants to make them an
affordable supplement for
all students. “We believe
we’ve got an affordableenough product that we can
put it in every household for
under five bucks,” he said.
— Compiled by Carey
O’Neil. If you have an idea
for a small business feature, contact reporter Carey
O’Neil at coneil@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6525.
Follow him at twitter.com/
careyoneil.
in favor of speedy Internet and video
streaming.
CONTENT
The answer is content.
As the No. 1 provider of video and
residential Internet service in the U.S.,
Comcast owns or has access to more
content than its competitors, especially
in light of its takeover of NBC Universal completed in early 2011, said Todd
Gold, executive editor for Xfinity TV.
“Our problem is more how when
you have access to everything, how
do you entertain your audience,” Gold
said.
Part of his job is pulling out hidden
gems of content to show consumers,
working through social media to make
See COMCAST, Page C3
BIGFIVE
CAR-DEER CRASHES
IN THE SOUTHERN U.S.
A car travels past deer
grazing in a
field in Cape
Girardeau, Mo.,
in January.
The Associated Press
Vehicle collisions with deer declined for the third
consecutive year last year, cutting such accidents
by 9 percent from 2008 to 2011. But there still were
1.09 million deer collisions with cars last year, or one
for every 193 motorists nationwide. West Virginia had
the highest rate of such accidents and Hawaii had
the fewest.
Carolina, 1 of every 140.1 motorists (U.S.
rank 17th)
1South
1 of every 150.1 motorists (U.S.
rank 18th)
2 Mississippi,
1 of every 154 motorists ((U.S. rank
20th)
3 Georgia,
1 of every 163.4 motorists (U.S. rank
23rd)
4 Alabama,
1 of every 223.4 motorists (U.S. rank
29th)
5 Tennessee,
Source: State Farm Insurance analysis of claims data for collisions
between deer and vehicles between July 1, 2010, and June 30, 2011
■ To contact Business • Phone: 423-757-6340 • Fax: 423-668-5085 • Email: [email protected]
.
timesfreepress.com ...
C2 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
THE MARKETS
NYSE
NASDAQ
AMEX
1,440
S&P 500
3,160
1,400
Close: 1,416.51
Change: 19.40 (1.4%)
3,060
1,360
MARKET DIARY
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
MARKET DIARY
MARKET DIARY
Yest.
2323
741
95
3159
179
13
Prev.
2143
874
112
3129
61
10
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Yest.
1950
604
96
2650
227
14
Prev.
1664
824
132
2620
71
19
Name
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Yest.
269
189
39
497
11
1
Prev.
289
167
30
486
8
3
1,500
3,200
1,400
3,000
1,300
2,800
1,200
2,600
1,100
1,000
VOLUME
2,889,579,714
506,077,175
37,325,824
3,432,982,713
Name
IndiaFd wd
ETSh1mVix
Primero g
PrShtVixST
CSVelIVSt s
Malaysa
CSVInvNG
NetQin n
FrankCov
E-TrcSilv
Last
21.10
174.82
2.62
107.01
13.36
10.35
75.49
11.54
9.77
46.96
Chg
+3.25
+16.22
+.23
+9.29
+1.12
+.81
+5.79
+.87
+.73
+3.46
%Chg
+18.2
+10.2
+9.6
+9.5
+9.2
+8.5
+8.3
+8.2
+8.1
+8.0
LOSERS
Name
PrUVxST rs
CSVS2xVxS
BiPNG
Vipshop n
BarcShtC
iP SER2K
iP SESPX
C-TrCVOL
CSVS2xVxM
Bar iPVix
MOST
1,268,309,742
303,340,031
8,128,867
1,579,778,640
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
Last
12.75
5.88
3.76
4.70
19.77
19.80
15.06
10.68
34.61
15.67
Chg
-2.91
-1.28
-.76
-.80
-3.29
-3.26
-2.40
-1.42
-3.91
-1.63
%Chg
-18.6
-17.9
-16.8
-14.5
-14.3
-14.1
-13.8
-11.7
-10.2
-9.4
Name
SigaTech h
ArenaPhm
Verenium
GravityCo
Galectin rs
ElbitImg
HackettGp
IndBkMI
Schmitt
StanlFrn
Last
3.49
3.01
3.69
3.41
5.14
2.76
5.89
2.08
3.47
4.96
Vol (00)
228,151,400
102,491,800
73,645,300
64,057,900
55,792,500
52,058,400
49,973,500
45,751,200
42,220,100
33,554,200
Last
9.93
141.61
15.98
43.66
31.79
15.67
84.40
2.86
20.05
39.33
Chg
+.08
+1.96
+.25
+.76
+.27
-1.63
+1.72
+.12
+.27
-.09
HIGH
Dow Industrials
13243.86
Dow Transportation 5289.13
Dow Utilities
457.01
NYSE Composite
8288.82
Amex Market Value 2451.61
Nasdaq Composite 3122.57
S&P 500
1416.58
S&P MidCap
1005.23
Wilshire 5000
14913.70
Russell 2000
846.31
2,400
O
N
D
J
F
2,200
M
O
N
D
J
F
M
Commodities
Commodity Exchange Unit
Oats
CBOT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Cocoa
ICE 10 metric tons- $ per ton
Coffee
ICE 37,500 lbs.- cents per lb.
Sugar
ICE 112,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Cotton
ICE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Wheat
CBOT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Rough rice
CBOT 2,000 CWT- dollars per CWT
Heating oil
NYMX 42,000 gal, cents per gal
Light sweet crude
NYMX 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl.
Gas blend
NYMX 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon
Natural gas
NYMX 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu
Chg
+.79
+.60
+.61
+.47
+.69
+.36
+.76
+.26
+.41
+.57
%Chg
+29.3
+24.9
+19.8
+16.0
+15.5
+15.0
+14.8
+14.3
+13.3
+13.0
Name
Timmins g
AvalonHld
GoldenMin
CheniereEn
MAG Slv g
Nevsun g
UraniumEn
VistaGold
SaratogaRs
AlexcoR g
Last
2.50
5.00
8.62
15.41
10.35
3.78
3.97
3.41
7.37
7.46
Chg
+.27
+.48
+.77
+1.02
+.67
+.24
+.25
+.20
+.42
+.41
%Chg
+12.1
+10.5
+9.8
+7.1
+6.9
+6.8
+6.7
+6.2
+6.0
+5.8
CATTLE
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Apr 12
124.45 125.37
Jun 12
120.97 121.75
Aug 12
123.02 123.75
Frisales 73867
Friopen int 351548 off-466.00
CORN
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 12
637.75 656
Jul 12
636
652.75
Sep 12
576
587.75
Dec 12
553
562.50
Frisales 181237
Friopen int 1319571 off-1,705.00
FEEDER CATTLE
50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Mar 12
153.45 153.67
Apr 12
152.37 153.20
May 12
153.45 154.45
Frisales 9381
Friopen int 49715 off-352.00
HOGS-Lean
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Apr 12
85.00
85.00
May 12
93.60
93.90
Jun 12
92.22
92.95
Jul 12
92.57
92.85
Frisales 39828
Friopen int 268697 up+608.00
LOSERS
Name
ReconT h
AudCodes
BroadVisn
EmmisC pf
HudsonTc
Cyclacel pf
DehaierMd
RecvE rsh
IridC wt15
USHmSy
MOST
63,105,925
17,993,855
2,725,718
83,825,498
GAINERS
LOSERS
ACTIVE
Name
BkofAm
S&P500ETF
SPDR Fncl
iShEMkts
AT&T Inc
Bar iPVix
iShR2K
SprintNex
GenElec
VerizonCm
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
GAINERS
GAINERS
Stock market indexes
Close: 3,122.57
Change: 54.65 (1.8%)
10 DAYS
VOLUME
VOLUME
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
2,960
10 DAYS
Nasdaq composite
Last
2.24
3.00
28.50
16.20
3.36
2.53
2.52
3.62
2.00
11.01
Chg
-.72
-.52
-4.63
-2.02
-.40
-.28
-.28
-.38
-.20
-1.03
%Chg
-24.3
-14.8
-14.0
-11.1
-10.6
-10.0
-10.0
-9.5
-9.1
-8.6
Name
Electrmed
FieldPnt
HMG
Bacterin
Univ Insur
DocuSec
NavideaBio
SDgo pfC
WellsGard
Arrhythm
MOST
ACTIVE
Name
ArenaPhm
SiriusXM
PwShs QQQ
Microsoft
MicronT
Intel
Oracle
Cisco
Apple Inc
Dell Inc
Vol (00)
57083400
51414100
38221600
35349400
34962700
31965100
28405200
28143300
20004500
17516800
Last Chg
3.01 +.60
2.24
-.01
68.11 +1.17
32.59 +.58
8.25
-.15
28.19 +.32
29.16 +.61
20.84 +.31
606.98 +10.93
16.70 +.23
Last
2.76
5.35
4.04
2.36
3.93
3.42
3.32
19.73
2.29
3.60
Chg
-.36
-.37
-.26
-.14
-.17
-.14
-.13
-.76
-.06
-.09
%Chg
-11.5
-6.5
-6.0
-5.6
-4.1
-3.9
-3.8
-3.7
-2.6
-2.4
ACTIVE
Name
NovaGld g
Rentech
CheniereEn
NwGold g
AntaresP
GoldStr g
VantageDrl
Rubicon g
YM Bio g
AbdAsPac
Vol (00)
5827800
5348300
5141700
3467200
2509700
1981800
1731600
1382700
1294100
1271700
Last
7.39
2.14
15.41
9.56
3.32
1.89
1.66
3.28
1.85
7.31
Chg
+.38
+.04
+1.02
+.18
+.05
+.12
+.02
-.07
-.06
+.05
124.15
120.75
122.85
124.55
121.10
123.12
+.05
637.25
635.75
576
551.75
637.75
636
576.50
553.25
-8.75
-8.50
-5.75
-4.25
153.22
152.20
153.00
84.32
93.20
91.77
91.95
-.08
153.65
152.55
153.72
84.87
93.90
92.90
92.75
+.35
+.13
+.25
-.15
+.15
+.68
+.25
Month Open Int.
May 12
6117
May 12
64035
May 12
77820
May 12
2637
May 12
88526
May 12
183952
May 12
11365
Apr 12
31873
May 12
299243
Apr 12
38148
Apr 12
32849
Vol.
1073
8841
11255
7
12774
133705
3582
34806
SOYBEAN MEAL
100 tons- dollars per ton
May 12
375.80 378.90
Jul 12
375.10 379.70
Aug 12
373.40 375.40
Sep 12
363.40 369.00
Oct 12
357.80 359.40
Dec 12
354.90 357.80
Frisales 62780
Friopen int 240542 up+1,755.00
SOYBEAN OIL
60,000 lbs- cents per lb
May 12
55.46
55.82
Jul 12
55.80
56.21
Aug 12
55.65
56.33
Sep 12
55.76
56.50
Oct 12
55.91
56.54
Dec 12
56.29
56.81
Frisales 121796
Friopen int 356920 up+7,888.00
SOYBEANS
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
May 12
1379
1388.50
Jul 12
1384
1393.50
Aug 12
1365.75 1382.25
Sep 12
1347.25 1359.25
Nov 12
1327
1339.50
Jan 13
1325
1337.75
Frisales 178236
Friopen int 661777 up+13,902.00
Settle Chg.
332.75
-.25
2331
+24
178.80 +.05
35.00
90.91 +1.28
659.50 +5.25
14.805 +.205
322.88 +1.87
107.03 +.16
3.4166 +.0314
2.226 -.049
372.40
373.50
373.00
363.30
357.20
354.10
377.90
378.40
374.30
367.50
357.40
356.00
+4.90
+4.50
+3.90
+3.20
+1.90
+1.60
54.66
55.09
55.60
55.76
55.86
55.80
55.43
55.83
55.99
56.15
56.23
56.47
+.55
+.54
+.54
+.54
+.53
+.54
1364
1369.50
1365.75
1341.25
1321
1325
NAME
TICKER LAST
CHG NAME
CloudPeak
A-B-C
CocaCola
AAR
AIR
19.06 +.15 CocaCE
ABB Ltd
ABB
20.61 +.27 Coeur
AES Corp
AES
13.11 +.19 ColgPal
AFLAC
AFL
46.86 +1.14 CompDivHd
AGL Res
GAS
38.92 +.16 ComstkRs
AK Steel
AKS
7.84 -.08
AT&T Inc
T
31.79 +.27 ConAgra
AbtLab
ABT
60.99 +.59 ConocPhil
Accenture
ACN
65.89 +1.01 ConsolEngy
Actuant
ATU
29.56 +.55 ConEd
AdamsEx
ADX
11.04 +.13 ConstellA
AdvAuto
AAP
90.33 +1.34 Cnvrgys
AMD
AMD
8.24 +.15 Corning
Aegon
AEG
5.76 +.05 CorrectnCp
Aetna
AET
47.00 +1.40 Crane
Agilent
A
45.05 +.75 CSVS2xVxS
Agnico g
AEM
34.37 +.76 CSVelIVSt s
AirProd
APD
91.33 +1.13 CrosTim
AlcatelLuc
ALU
2.43 +.12 Cryolife
Alcoa
AA
10.22 +.11 Culp Inc
AlliBGlbHi
AWF
15.05 -.08 Cummins
AlliBInco
ACG
8.15 -.13 Cytec
AlliBern
AB
15.80 +.38
AlliantEgy
LNT
43.25 +.96
Allstate
ALL
33.08 +.57 DCT Indl
AlphaNRs
ANR
15.68 -.30 DHT Hldgs
Altria
MO
30.66 +.26 DR Horton
AmBev
ABV
44.10 +1.39 DTE
AMCOL
ACO
29.05 +.54 Darden
Ameren
AEE
32.18 +.41 Deere
AMovilL s
AMX
24.68 +.73 Delhaize
AEagleOut AEO
17.66 +.53 DeltaAir
AEP
AEP
38.49 +.01 DenburyR
AmExp
AXP
58.66 +1.41 DevonE
AmIntlGrp
AIG
29.06 +.79 DiaOffs
Amerigas
APU
40.82 +.57 DiamRk
Ametek
AME
48.52 +.76 Dillards
Anadarko
APC
79.46 +.05 DxFnBull rs
AnglogldA
AU
38.66 +1.00 DirSCBear
Annaly
NLY
16.30 +.01 DirFnBear
Apache
APA
101.04 -.72 DirxSCBull
AquaAm
WTR
22.31 +.19 Discover
Arbitron
ARB
37.29 +1.25 Disney
ArcelorMit
MT
19.85 +.07 Div&Inco
ArchCoal
ACI
11.42 -.24 DomRescs
ArchDan
ADM
32.04 +.18 DmRsBW
ArlingAst
AI
22.82 -.04 Dover
ArmourRsd ARR
6.68 -.01 DowChm
AstraZen
AZN
45.65 +.47 DuPont
AtlasPpln
APL
36.09 +.25 DukeEngy
ATMOS
ATO
30.99 +.19 DukeRlty
AutoZone
AZO
379.00 +.34 DynexCap
Avon
AVP
19.17 +.08 EMC Cp
B&G Foods BGS
23.32 +.41 EastChm s
BB&T Cp
BBT
31.42 +.43 Eaton
BHP BillLt
BHP
72.61 +1.03 EdwLfSci
BHPBil plc BBL
61.79 +1.05 ElPasoCp
BP PLC
BP
46.23 +.64 Elan
BP Pru
BPT
126.49 +.49 EldorGld g
BabCPtInv MPV
14.99 -.07 EmersonEl
BakrHu
BHI
43.11 -.60 EnbrEPt s
BcBilVArg
BBVA
8.21 -.07 EnCana g
BcoBrad pf BBD
18.31 +.23 Energen
BcoSantSA STD
8.02 +.01 Energizer
BcoSBrasil BSBR
9.69 +.08 EngyTEq
BkofAm
BAC
9.93 +.08 EngyTsfr
BkNYMel
BK
24.59 +.64 Enerpls g
Barclay
BCS
16.24 +.42 Enersis
Bar iPVix
VXX
15.67 -1.63 Ennis Inc
Bard
BCR
99.05 +2.49 Entergy
BarrickG
ABX
44.49 +.73 EntPrPt
Beam Inc
BEAM
58.51 +.27 EnzoBio
BeazerHm BZH
3.30 -.07 EqualEn g
BectDck
BDX
77.67 +1.27 EscoTech
BerkHa A BRK/A 123555.00 +1385.00 ExcelTrst
BerkH B
BRK/B 82.34 +.96 ExcoRes
BestBuy
BBY
27.37 -.14 Exelon
Blackstone BX
15.66 +.31 ExxonMbl
BlockHR
HRB
17.12 +.32 FBL Fn
Boeing
BA
75.18 +1.21 FamilyDlr
Boise Inc
BZ
8.47 +.09 FedExCp
BostonSci
BSX
6.08 +.11 Ferrellgs
Braskem
BAK
16.50 +.01 FstHorizon
Brinker
EAT
28.41 +.33 FT Fincl
BrMySq
BMY
33.59 +.63 FT IndPrd
BrwnBrn
BRO
23.89 +.28 FirstEngy
CBL Asc
CBL
19.01 +.32 Fluor
CBRE GRE IGR
7.96 +.08 FordM
CBS B
CBS
32.42 +.58 FBHmSc n
CGG Verit
CGV
31.46 +1.41 FrkUnv
CLECO
CNL
39.57 +.37 FMCG
CNOOC
CEO
214.68 +2.35 FresenM
CSX s
CSX
21.55 +.38 Frontline
CVS Care
CVS
45.65 +.51 FullerHB
CblvsNY s CVC
15.08 +.38 Fusion-io n
CabotOG s COG
32.65 +.13
Calpine
CPN
16.92 -.31
Cameco g
CCJ
22.82 +.13 GabelliET
Cameron
CAM
52.86 +1.08 GabHlthW
CdnNRs gs CNQ
33.59 -.08 GabUtil
CapOne
COF
57.15 +1.41 Gafisa SA
CapitlSrce
CSE
6.88 +.06 GameStop
CapsteadM CMO
13.52 +.11 Gap
Carnival
CCL
32.60 +.69 GnCable
Caterpillar
CAT
108.75 +.92 GenDynam
CedarF
FUN
29.53 -.07 GenElec
Cemex
CX
8.06 +.09 GenMills
CenterPnt
CNP
19.49 +.18 GenMotors
CntryLink
CTL
39.16 +.20 GenOn En
ChesEng
CHK
24.21 -.45 GenuPrt
Chevron
CVX
107.84 +1.48 Genworth
Chicos
CHS
15.45 -.10 Gerdau
Chimera
CIM
2.99 +.03 GlaxoSKln
ChinaUni
CHU
17.31 +.29 GoldFLtd
Chubb
CB
68.60 +.84 Goldcrp g
Cigna
CI
46.97 +1.13 GoldmanS
Citigrp rs
C
37.43 +.29 Goodyear
ClearEnFd CEM
23.57 -.03 GreenbCos
CliffsNRs
CLF
70.80 +.02 Hallibrtn
Clorox
CLX
68.32 +.33 Hanesbrds
TICKER LAST
CHG
CLD
16.52 -.23
KO
71.90 +.41
CCE
28.43 +.13
CDE
24.33 +.36
CL
96.81 +.87
CODI
15.36 +.11
CRK
17.36 +.12
CAG
26.08 +.03
COP
77.36 +.85
CNX
33.74 -.02
ED
57.58 +.45
STZ
23.78 +.25
CVG
13.73 +.10
GLW
14.41 +.39
CXW
26.35 +.48
CR
47.71 +1.01
TVIX
5.88 -1.28
XIV
13.36 +1.12
CRT
44.15 -.35
CRY
5.33 +.06
CFI
11.10 +.26
CMI
123.91 +2.39
CYT
61.55 +.44
NAME
Nordstrm
NorflkSo
NorthropG
Novartis
NovoNord
NSTAR
Nucor
NustarEn
OGE Engy
OcciPet
OfficeDpt
OfficeMax
OldRepub
Olin
OshkoshCp
PG&E Cp
PNC CapD
PNC Cap68
PNC
PPG
PPL Corp
Pandora n
PatriotCoal
PeabdyE
Pengrth g
PennVaRs
PennWst g
Penney
Penske
PepcoHold
PepsiCo
PetrobArg
PetrbrsA
Petrobras
PetRes
Pfizer
PhilipMor
PiedNG
PiedmOfc
PimcoStrat
PitnyBw
PlumCrk
Polaris s
Polypore
Potash
PS USDBull
Primerica
PrUShS&P
ProUltQQQ
PrUShQQQ
ProUltSP
ProUShL20
ProUSSP500
PrUltSP500
PrUVxST rs
ProUSSilv
ProctGam
ProgrssEn
ProgsvCp
ProvEn g
Prudentl
PSEG
PulseElec
PulteGrp
PMMI
PPrIT
QstDiag
RPM
RadianGrp
RadioShk
Ralcorp
RJamesFn
Rayonier s
RedwdTr
RegalEnt
RegionsFn
RelStlAl
Renren n
ReynAmer
RiteAid
RockTen
RockwlAut
RockwdH
Rowan
RoyalBk g
RylCarb
RoyDShllA
Ruddick
D-E-F
DCT
DHT
DHI
DTE
DRI
DE
DEG
DAL
DNR
DVN
DO
DRH
DDS
FAS
TZA
FAZ
TNA
DFS
DIS
DNI
D
DOM
DOV
DOW
DD
DUK
DRE
DX
EMC
EMN
ETN
EW
EP
ELN
EGO
EMR
EEP
ECA
EGN
ENR
ETE
ETP
ERF
ENI
EBF
ETR
EPD
ENZ
EQU
ESE
EXL
XCO
EXC
XOM
FFG
FDO
FDX
FGP
FHN
FXO
FXR
FE
FLR
F
FBHS
FT
FCX
FMS
FRO
FUL
FIO
5.77
1.15
15.43
55.44
51.94
82.78
54.15
9.88
18.39
72.65
69.21
10.25
63.89
112.87
16.74
20.02
66.03
33.83
44.38
3.59
50.71
9.97
63.43
35.68
53.25
20.97
14.28
9.58
29.61
51.93
50.26
75.51
29.91
14.99
13.62
51.35
31.20
20.57
50.21
73.55
41.32
47.42
23.21
20.72
16.25
67.53
50.90
2.75
3.90
37.24
12.72
7.03
38.98
87.03
34.85
58.44
92.77
14.81
10.69
15.69
19.49
45.06
62.51
12.48
21.61
6.91
38.88
70.37
6.81
31.76
29.53
+.06
+.12
+.78
+1.02
+1.94
+.89
+.26
+.07
+.61
+.18
+.36
+1.73
+4.87
-1.10
-.95
+3.74
+.73
-.01
+.43
+.08
+.90
+.66
+.62
+.18
+.10
+.06
+.46
+.71
+.96
+4.23
-.27
+.22
+.22
+.14
+.15
+.08
+.67
-1.08
-1.16
+.13
+.15
+.43
+.19
+.70
+.02
-.03
+.01
+.48
-.05
+.14
+1.48
+.42
+.76
+.39
+.19
+.22
+.23
+.20
+.34
+1.75
+.16
+.28
+.10
+.40
+1.63
-.33
+.62
-.62
G-H-I
GAB
GRX
GUT
GFA
GME
GPS
BGC
GD
GE
GIS
GM
GEN
GPC
GNW
GGB
GSK
GFI
GG
GS
GT
GBX
HAL
HBI
5.87 +.07
8.27 +.13
8.10 +.02
5.30 +.04
23.80 +.18
26.87 +.41
29.10 +.47
73.91 +1.13
20.05 +.27
39.24 +.39
25.58 +.41
2.30 -.06
62.20 +.74
8.80 +.09
10.41 +.18
45.61 +.49
14.03 +.20
45.64 +1.09
128.07 +1.89
12.01 +.10
21.14 -.46
33.65 +.23
29.43 +.32
NAME
HarleyD
HartfdFn
HatterasF
HawaiiEl
HltMgmt
Heckmann
HeclaM
Heinz
HelixEn
Hershey
Hess
HewlettP
HollyEnr
HollyFrt s
HomeDp
Honda
HonwllIntl
HostHotls
HovnanE
HugotnR
Humana
Huntsmn
IFM Inv h
ING
INGPrRTr
iShGold
iShBraz
iSh HK
iShJapn
iSTaiwn
iShSilver
iShChina25
iShEMkts
iShSPLatA
iShB20 T
iS Eafe
iShR2K
iSSPMatl
iShREst
iStar
Imation
IngerRd
IBM
IntlGame
IntPap
Interpublic
Invesco
ItauUnibH
TICKER LAST
CHG NAME
HOG
50.48 +1.42 IvanhM g
HIG
22.01 +.60
HTS
28.04 +.20
HE
25.34 +.20 JPMorgCh
HMA
6.92 +.26 Jabil
HEK
4.59 +.09 JacobsEng
HL
4.69 +.08 JanusCap
HNZ
53.20 +.43 JohnJn
HLX
18.35 +.26 JohnsnCtl
HSY
61.24 +.72 JnprNtwk
HES
60.14 +.28 KB Home
HPQ
23.89 +.26 KC Southn
HEP
61.51 +.11 KA MLP
HFC
34.16 -.29 Kellogg
HD
50.13 +.59 KeyEngy
HMC
38.48 +.14 Keycorp
HON
61.78 +1.62 Kimco
HST
16.67 +.47 KindME
HOV
2.66 -.02 KindMM
HGT
15.17 -.05 Kinross g
HUM
87.99 +2.08 KodiakO g
HUN
14.58 +.35 Kraft
CTC
.77 +.09 KrispKrm
ING
9.02 +.24 Kroger
PPR
5.78 +.09 LSI Corp
IAU
16.49 +.29 LabCp
EWZ
66.91 +1.10 LVSands
EWH
17.85 +.31 LeggPlat
EWJ
10.06 +.07 LennarA
EWT
13.50 -.02 LillyEli
SLV
31.94 +.70 Limited
FXI
37.31 +.40 LincNat
EEM
43.66 +.76 LinkedIn n
ILF
48.68 +.91 LionsGt g
TLT
112.63 -.58 LizClaib
EFA
55.48 +.70 LloydBkg
IWM
84.40 +1.72 LockhdM
MXI
63.60 +.89 LaPac
IYR
61.89 +.63 Lowes
SFI
7.57 +.12 LyonBas A
IMN
6.34 +.04
IR
41.63 +1.20
IBM
207.77 +2.29 MEMC
IGT
17.21 +.51 MFA Fncl
IP
35.98 +.79 MGF
IPG
11.52 +.15 MGIC
IVZ
26.84 +.55 MGM Rsts
ITUB
20.40 +.30 Macerich
TICKER LAST
IVN
16.35
J-K-L
JPM
JBL
JEC
JNS
JNJ
JCI
JNPR
KBH
KSU
KYN
K
KEG
KEY
KIM
KMP
KMR
KGC
KOG
KFT
KKD
KR
LSI
LH
LVS
LEG
LEN
LLY
LTD
LNC
LNKD
LGF
LIZ
LYG
LMT
LPX
LOW
LYB
46.17
25.70
46.36
9.44
65.17
32.78
21.42
9.62
71.47
30.77
52.83
16.24
8.46
19.44
83.64
75.75
10.21
10.32
38.63
7.44
24.21
8.89
91.90
58.83
22.78
26.40
40.27
49.80
27.06
101.38
15.18
12.22
2.25
90.64
9.81
31.18
43.87
M-N-O
WFR
MFA
MGF
MTG
MGM
MAC
3.96
7.56
6.98
5.05
14.54
56.41
CHG NAME
-.17 Macys
Manitowoc
Manulife g
+1.01 MarathnO s
+.20 MarathP n
+1.46 MktVGold
-.10 MV OilSv s
+.62 MktVRus
+.70 MktVJrGld
+.31 MarkWest
-.67 MarIntA
+1.02 MStewrt
+.03 Masco
+.42 MasterCrd
+.26 McDnlds
+.10 McMoRn
+.24 McEwenM
-.02 MeadJohn
+.08 MeadWvco
+.18 Mechel
-.23 MedcoHlth
+.38 Medtrnic
+.26 Merck
-.23 MetLife
+.23 MetroPCS
+2.43 MKors n
+1.30 MidAApt
+.38 Modine
+.54 Mohawk
+.40 Monsanto
+1.25 MonstrWw
+.61 MorgStan
+1.88 Mosaic
+.65 MurphO
+.27 NRG Egy
+.01 Nabors
+.87 NatFuGas
+.41 NtHlthInv
+.45 NOilVarco
+1.35 NatResPtrs
NY CmtyB
NewmtM
+.05 NextEraEn
+.12 NiSource
-.02 NikeB
+.15 NobleCorp
+.34 NokiaCp
+.78 NordicAm
TICKER LAST
CHG
M
40.44 +.60
MTW
14.59 +.14
MFC
14.10 +.42
MRO
32.51 +.05
MPC
45.21 +1.21
GDX
50.63 +.87
OIH
41.78 +.13
RSX
32.09 +.75
GDXJ
25.71 +1.06
MWE
58.88 -.75
MAR
38.62 +.90
MSO
3.83 +.03
MAS
13.78 +.20
MA
435.68 +11.67
MCD
96.97 +1.42
MMR
12.14 -.50
MUX
4.37 +.25
MJN
82.21 +.29
MWV
31.32 +.54
MTL
9.94 +.13 SAIC
MHS
69.50 +1.01 SCANA
MDT
40.00 +1.30 SK Tlcm
MRK
38.66 +.66 SpdrDJIA
MET
38.31 +.67 SpdrGold
PCS
9.78 +.18 SP Mid
KORS
47.08 +.08 S&P500ETF
MAA
65.53 +1.00 SpdrHome
MOD
9.02 +.17 SpdrS&PBk
MHK
66.22 +1.16 SpdrLehHY
MON
80.05 +1.61 SpdrRetl
MWW
10.12 -.10 SpdrMetM
MS
21.17 +.84 SPX Cp
MOS
58.64 +.94 SafegdSci
MUR
57.41 +.24 Safeway
NRG
16.58 -.13 StJoe
NBR
18.78 -.49 StJude
NFG
49.37 -.07 Saks
NHI
49.52 +.50 SandRdge
NOV
80.08 -.50 SaraLee
NRP
25.26 +.12 Sasol
NYB
13.73 +.10 Schlmbrg
NEM
53.45 +.13 Schwab
NEE
60.93 +.53 SeadrillLtd
NI
24.22 +.20 SempraEn
NKE
108.55 +1.13 ServiceCp
NE
38.83 +.47 Sherwin
NOK
5.34 +.05 ShipFin
NAT
14.85 +.06 SiderurNac
TICKER LAST
CHG NAME
TICKER LAST
33.97
JWN
55.29 +.75 SilvWhtn g SLW
SJM
80.19
NSC
66.13 +1.68 Smucker
SNA
61.80
NOC
61.53 +.96 SnapOn
SQM
59.28
NVS
55.66 +.40 SocQ&M
41.10
NVO
142.41 +2.58 SolarWinds SWI
SAH
18.47
NST
48.77 +.71 SonicAut
SO
44.51
NUE
43.76 +.61 SouthnCo
NS
59.98 +.25 SthnCopper SCCO 31.19
SUG
41.10
OGE
52.96 +.49 SoUnCo
LUV
8.35
OXY
99.17 +1.55 SwstAirl
32.24
ODP
3.79 +.25 SwstnEngy SWN
16.20
OMX
6.23 +.37 SpecOpps SPE
TRK
16.87
ORI
10.80 +.19 SpeedM
S
2.86
OLN
21.95 +.57 SprintNex
14.62
OSK
22.90 +.83 SprottGold PHYS
SP Matls
XLB
37.39
P-Q-R
SP HlthC
XLV
37.26
PCG
43.60 +.21 SP CnSt
XLP
33.99
PNU
25.14 -.01 SP Consum XLY
45.36
PNH
26.04 -.09 SP Engy
XLE
72.80
PNC
63.99 +.63 SPDR Fncl XLF
15.98
PPG
95.41 +1.76 SP Inds
XLI
37.71
PPL
27.74 +.07 SP Tech
XLK
30.43
P
10.53 -.03 SP Util
XLU
34.84
PCX
6.64 -.03 StdPac
SPF
4.34
BTU
30.40 +.21 StanBlkDk SWK
79.18
PGH
9.83 +.07 StarGas
SGU
4.27
PVR
24.75 +.10 StarwdHtl
HOT
58.83
PWE
20.85 +.42 StateStr
STT
46.29
JCP
35.99 -.06 Statoil ASA STO
28.08
PAG
25.25 +.81 Sterlite
SLT
8.72
POM
19.05 +.17 Stryker
SYK
55.51
PEP
65.78 +.48 SubPpne
SPH
42.21
PZE
13.09 +.01 Suncor gs
SU
33.41
PBR/A 26.63 +.43 Suntech
STP
3.10
PBR
27.47 +.51 SunTrst
STI
24.00
PEO
26.28 +.24 SupEnrgy
SPN
26.87
PFE
22.16 +.34 Supvalu
SVU
6.09
PM
88.15 +1.32 Synovus
SNV
2.14
PNY
31.44 +.27 Sysco
SYY
30.02
PDM
17.81 +.13 TCW Strat TSI
5.20
RCS
11.39 +.03 TECO
TE
17.75
PBI
18.21 +.22 TJX s
TJX
39.36
PCL
41.51 +.31 TaiwSemi
TSM
15.38
PII
73.77 +3.23 TalismE g
TLM
13.08
PPO
37.49 +.60 Target
TGT
58.86
POT
46.95 +1.43 TeekOffsh
TOO
29.34
UUP
21.88 -.14 Teleflex
TFX
60.68
PRI
25.93 +.32 TenetHlth
THC
5.54
SDS
14.92 -.42 Tenneco
TEN
37.65
QLD
121.00 +4.01 Terex
TEX
24.06
QID
29.82 -1.07 TerraNitro
TNH
242.90
SSO
59.06 +1.59 Tesoro
TSO
28.66
TBT
20.32 +.18 Textron
TXT
27.80
SPXU
8.90 -.38 ThomCrk g TC
7.00
UPRO
86.52 +3.46 3M Co
MMM
89.12
UVXY
12.75 -2.91 TimeWarn
TWX
37.18
ZSL
10.22 -.49 TollBros
TOL
23.65
PG
67.46 +.03 Trchmrk s
TMK
50.50
PGN
52.85 +.54 Toyota
TM
84.35
PGR
23.12 +.31 TrCda g
TRP
44.38
PVX
11.88 +.20 TrnsMont
TLP
34.98
PRU
64.05 +1.06 Transocn
RIG
56.62
PEG
29.98 +.31 Travelers
TRV
58.85
PULS
2.61 -.06 TriContl
TY
16.05
PHM
8.79 -.09 TrinaSolar
TSL
7.65
PMM
7.50 -.03 Trinity
TRN
33.78
PPT
5.50 +.06 TwoHrbInv TWO
10.17
DGX
60.66 +1.49 TycoIntl
TYC
53.19
RPM
25.64 +.42 Tyson
TSN
19.48
RDN
4.58 +.16 UBS AG
UBS
14.48
RSH
6.50
US Airwy
LCC
7.73
RAH
73.83 +.62 USG
USG
17.94
RJF
37.95 +.52 UltraPt g
UPL
23.56
RYN
44.47 +.21 UndrArmr
UA
98.96
RWT
11.41 +.05 UtdContl
UAL
20.97
RGC
13.95 -.19 UtdMicro
UMC
2.64
RF
6.61 +.18 UPS B
UPS
80.57
RS
56.43 +.54 US Bancrp USB
32.11
RENN
5.33 +.03 US NGs rs UNG
17.36
RAI
41.44 +.44 US OilFd
USO
40.77
RAD
1.83 +.04 USSteel
X
29.54
RKT
68.67 +1.17 UtdTech
UTX
83.50
ROK
81.47 +1.18 UtdhlthGp
UNH
55.10
ROC
52.46 +.61 UnumGrp
UNM
24.34
RDC
33.35 -.17
V-W-X-Y-Z
RY
59.21 +1.14
VALE
23.17
RCL
30.30 +.93 Vale SA
RDS/A 72.17 +1.61 Vale SA pf VALE/P 22.58
VLO
27.05
RDK
40.83 +.63 ValeroE
VangDivAp VIG
58.62
S-T-U
VangEmg
VWO
43.98
SAI
13.46 +.14 VectorGp
VGR
17.63
SCG
45.20 +.59 Vectren
VVC
29.08
SKM
14.04 +.14 VerizonCm VZ
39.33
DIA
132.09 +1.49 Visa
V
120.06
GLD
164.40 +2.87 VMware
VMW 110.35
MDY
182.84 +2.70 VulcanM
VMC
44.29
SPY
141.61 +1.96 WGL Hold
WGL
40.82
XHB
21.49 +.26 Wabtec
WAB
76.80
KBE
24.27 +.32 WalMart
WMT
61.20
JNK
39.69 +.28 Walgrn
WAG
34.37
XRT
62.84 +1.25 WalterEn
WLT
61.69
XME
50.25 +.36 WREIT
WRE
29.56
SPW
76.55 +1.11 WsteMInc
WM
35.41
SFE
17.60 +.36 WeathfIntl
WFT
16.65
SWY
20.42 -.71 WeinRlt
WRI
26.16
JOE
19.01 -.08 WellPoint
WLP
68.63
STJ
43.80 +.33 WellsFargo WFC
34.39
SKS
11.70 +.26 WstAsWw
SBW
14.41
SD
8.21 -.08 WDigital
WDC
42.60
SLE
21.58 +.13 WstnUnion WU
18.23
SSL
49.53 +1.70 Weyerhsr
WY
21.91
SLB
72.40 -.78 Whrlpl
WHR
78.02
SCHW 15.23 +.22 WmsCos
WMB
30.61
SDRL
38.47 +.86 WiscEngy
WEC
35.06
WWE
8.99
SRE
58.62 +.49 WldW Ent
XRX
8.38
SCI
11.15 +.16 Xerox
AUY
16.28
SHW 109.60 +2.00 Yamana g
YGE
3.81
SFL
15.13 +.06 YingliGrn
YUM
71.44
SID
10.10 +.11 YumBrnds
CHG
+.36
+.19
+1.22
+1.31
+2.35
+.70
+.39
+.23
-1.30
+.12
-.14
+.16
+.22
+.12
+.29
+.48
+.64
+.23
+.71
+.54
+.25
+.55
+.45
+.24
-.07
+.98
+.01
+1.27
+.66
+.59
-.25
+1.07
-.08
+.59
-.09
+.27
-.16
-.03
+.04
+.18
+.02
+.22
+.73
+.39
-.04
+.67
+.13
+1.36
+.29
+.13
+.07
+8.35
+.14
+.66
+.66
+.10
+.05
+.94
+.59
+.67
+.04
+.75
+.65
+.12
-.44
+.11
-.02
+.33
+.24
+.18
-.12
+.27
+1.86
+.42
-.05
+.86
+.41
-.47
+.08
-.20
+1.70
+1.44
+.39
+.32
+.27
+.36
+.76
+.67
-.08
+.15
-.09
+1.28
+1.51
+.13
+.49
+1.08
+.45
+.81
-1.03
+.16
+.46
+.02
+.27
+1.95
+.86
+.16
+.30
+.04
+1.24
+.43
+.56
+.20
+.16
+.36
-.10
+.80
CLOSE
CHG.%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
+160.90
+71.20
+3.34
+108.72
+41.54
+54.65
+19.40
+14.29
+205.69
+16.10
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
+1.23
+1.36
+.74
+1.33
+1.73
+1.78
+1.39
+1.44
+1.40
+1.94
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
+8.38
+5.37
-1.85
+10.86
+7.48
+19.86
+12.64
+14.34
+13.07
+14.20
Interest rates
Dollar
Today
Today Previous 1Yr Ago
Argent
Australia
Brazil
Britain
Canada
China
Denmark
Egypt
Euro
Hong Kong
India
Indnsia
Israel
Japan
Kenya
Mexico
N. Zealand
Pakistan
Poland
Russia
Saudi Arab
Singapore
So. Africa
Sweden
Switzerlnd
Taiwan
Venzuel
1379.50+13.75
1384.25+12.50
1373 +10.25
1349.50 +8.25
1329.50 +7
1328.25 +5.50
New York Stock Exchange
LOW
13082.39 13,241.63
5221.72 5,289.02
452.89
456.10
8228.19 8,288.78
2418.63 2,448.65
3090.05 3,122.57
1397.11 1,416.51
991.55 1,005.22
14707.74 14,913.43
836.45
846.13
4.3660
.9497
1.8128
.6268
.9924
6.3173
5.5729
6.0385
.7495
7.7683
51.270
9175.00
3.7150
82.82
83.20
12.6604
1.2165
90.81
3.10
28.9635
3.7506
1.2574
7.5833
6.6732
.9038
29.64
4.2927
4.3700
4.0420
.9561
.9751
1.8141
1.6580
.6301
.6243
.9985
.9812
6.3086
6.5600
5.6066 531.9149
6.0389
5.9527
.7540
.7106
7.7680
7.7948
51.220
44.663
9183.00 8712.50
3.7285
3.5500
82.49
81.41
83.08
84.39
12.7618 11.9731
1.2230
1.3265
91.92
84.96
3.13
2.85
29.2736 28.2885
3.7506
3.7504
1.2615
1.2617
7.6907
6.8545
6.7395
6.3816
.9086
.9195
29.57
29.48
4.2951
4.2926
Prime Rate
Discount rate
Fed funds
3.25
0.75
.00-.25
Treasuries
3-month T-bill
6-month T-bill
1 year T-bill
1 year T-note
2 year T-note
5 year T-note
10 year T-note
30 year T-bond
0.085
0.15
0.20
0.22
0.35
1.08
2.25
3.34
London Inter-Bank Offered Rate
3-month Libor
6-month Libor
0.47
0.74
Housing
FHLB Cost of Funds
Fixed 30 yr. mortgage
1.224
3.71
Money Market and CDs
Money market avg yld
90 day CD
0.04
0.28
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NASDAQ - Over The Counter
NAME
TICKER
LAST CHG NAME
A-B-C
ATMI Inc
AcmePkt
ActivsBliz
AdobeSy
AEterna g
Affymax
Agilysys
AkamaiT
AllnceRes
AlteraCp lf
Amarin
Amazon
AMovilA s
ACapAgy
ARltyCT n
AmSupr
Amgen
Amylin
Andrsons
ApolloGrp
ApolloInv
Apple Inc
ApldMatl
ArenaPhm
AresCap
AriadP
ArmHld
ArubaNet
Astec
Atmel
Autodesk
AutoData
BE Aero
Baidu
BassettF
BobEvans
BoltTech
Broadcom
BrcdeCm
CA Inc
CVB Fncl
Cadence
Celgene
Ceradyne
ChrmSh
CienaCorp
Cirrus
Cisco
CleanEngy
Clearwire
CobraEl
CocaBtl
Colmbus
Comcast
Comc spcl
Comverse
Copart
Covenant
CrackerB
Cree Inc
Crocs
CrosstxLP
Ctrip.com
ATMI 23.72 +.43
APKT 26.87 -.01
ATVI 12.77 +.07
ADBE 34.40 +.59
AEZS 2.03 +.08
AFFY 13.73 +.31
AGYS 9.30 -.04
AKAM 37.77 +1.15
ARLP 67.77 +1.04
ALTR 39.22 +.43
AMRN 11.50 -.23
AMZN 202.87 +7.83
AMOV 24.64 +.83
AGNC 29.48 +.19
ARCT 10.43 +.07
AMSC 4.21 +.12
AMGN 67.52 +.86
AMLN 15.88 +.36
ANDE 48.18 -.07
APOL 43.20 +.79
AINV 6.96 +.09
AAPL 606.98 +10.93
AMAT 12.96 +.27
ARNA 3.01 +.60
ARCC 16.39 +.18
ARIA 16.32 +.60
ARMH 28.64 +.41
ARUN 24.11 +.17
ASTE 38.37 +1.42
ATML 10.50 +.24
ADSK 42.37 +1.29
ADP 55.73 +.74
BEAV 48.36 +1.44
BIDU 150.80 +6.48
BSET 9.04 +.21
BOBE 38.32 +1.26
BOLT 15.00 +.35
BRCM 38.93 +.46
BRCD 5.78 +.13
CA
27.88 +.53
CVBF 11.85 +.26
CDNS 12.13 +.11
CELG 78.50 +1.67
CRDN 32.60 +.57
CHRS 5.83 -.14
CIEN 15.96 +.08
CRUS 24.63 +.20
CSCO 20.84 +.31
CLNE 23.33 +.51
CLWR 2.33 -.07
COBR 4.09
COKE 62.64 +.64
CMCO 17.39 +.64
CMCSA 30.35 +.37
CMCSK 29.91 +.34
CMVT 6.66
CPRT 53.50 +.64
CVTI 3.34 -.01
CBRL 56.49 +1.08
CREE 31.63 +.48
CROX 21.24 +.91
XTEX 16.97 -.03
CTRP 23.15 +.32
TICKER
LAST CHG NAME
TICKER
CubistPh
CypSemi
LAST CHG NAME
CBST 44.72 +.88
J-K-L
CY
16.08 +.41 JDASoft
JDAS 27.77 +.59
JDS
Uniph
JDSU 14.32 +.44
D-E-F
JamesRiv
JRCC 5.44 -.45
DeckrsOut DECK 68.09 +1.68
JetBlue
JBLU 5.21 +.12
Dell Inc
DELL 16.70 +.23
JoeJeans h JOEZ 1.25 -.05
Dndreon
DNDN 10.39 +.35 KIT Digitl KITD 6.68 +.35
DirecTV A DTV 48.64 +.57 KLA Tnc
KLAC 54.08 +1.20
DiscovLab DSCO 2.75 -.03 KeryxBio
KERX 5.07 +.10
DixieGrp
DXYN 3.95 -.04 Kirklands KIRK 17.03 -.02
DollarTree DLTR 95.82 +1.08 LamResrch LRCX 44.49 +.67
DryShips DRYS 3.44 +.06 LegacyRes LGCY 29.40 +.25
DynMatl
BOOM 22.68 +.59 LibtyIntA
LINTA 19.64 +.50
Dynatron h DYNT
.77 +.01 LifeTech
LIFE 48.90 +.83
E-Trade
ETFC 11.36 +.09 LimeEngy LIME 2.94
eBay
EBAY 38.08 +.99 LinearTch LLTC 33.59 +.37
EagleBulk EGLE 1.96 +.16 LinnEngy LINE 38.31 +.35
ErthLink
ELNK 8.05 +.17 lululemn gs LULU 75.23 -.65
Ebix Inc
EBIX 23.99 +.59
M-N-O
EchelonC ELON 4.64 +.14
ElectArts
EA
17.00 +.14 Manntch rs MTEX 3.77 +.22
EndoPhrm ENDP 38.82 +.97 MarvellT
MRVL 15.87 +.03
MAT 34.38 +.63
Ericsson
ERIC 10.25 +.26 Mattel
MDCO 20.32 +.32
Expedia s EXPE 35.44 +1.30 MediCo
MTOX 17.33 +.13
ExpdIntl
EXPD 46.90 +.64 Medtox
MelcoCrwn
MPEL
14.06 +.33
ExpScripts ESRX 53.52 +.81
MU
8.25 -.15
EZchip
EZCH 44.87 +.43 MicronT
MSFT 32.59 +.58
FifthThird FITB 14.30 +.17 Microsoft
Finisar
FNSR 19.40 +.58 MdsxWatr MSEX 18.74 +.17
MYL 23.32 +.34
FstNiagara FNFG 9.82 -.07 Mylan
MyriadG
MYGN 23.34 +.56
FstSecur rs FSGI 3.32
EGOV 12.59 +.25
FstSolar
FSLR 26.42 +.31 NIC Inc
NIHD 18.18 +.13
Flextrn
FLEX 7.23 +.19 NII Hldg
FocusMda FMCN 28.44 -.20 NektarTh NKTR 7.87 +.25
NetApp
NTAP 46.33 +.71
ForcePro FRPT 5.55
NFLX 121.99 +1.80
FrankElec FELE 51.23 +1.55 Netflix
NewsCpA
NWSA
20.19 +.40
FrontierCm FTR
4.17 -.02
FultonFncl FULT 10.59 +.14 NewsCpB NWS 20.42 +.38
Novlus
NVLS 49.70 +.84
G-H-I
NuanceCm NUAN 26.00 +.19
NVDA 14.72 +.18
GT AdvTc GTAT 8.34 +.42 Nvidia
GalenaBio GALE 2.10 -.16 OCharleys CHUX 9.84
OReillyAu
ORLY
91.51 +1.47
Garmin
GRMN 47.78 +.15
Gentex
GNTX 24.93 +.37 OnSmcnd ONNN 9.10 +.17
Gibraltar
ROCK 15.68 +.66 OptCable OCC 3.35 -.12
ORCL 29.16 +.61
GileadSci GILD 47.22 +.37 Oracle
Orexigen
OREX 4.85 -.04
GluMobile GLUU 4.58 -.27
OtterTail
OTTR 22.27 +.65
Google
GOOG 649.33 +6.74
GravityCo GRVY 3.41 +.47
P-Q-R
GreenMtC GMCR 52.45 -1.06 PDL Bio
PDLI 6.45 +.11
GrifolsSA n GRFS 7.65 +.13 PacSunwr PSUN 1.80 +.07
Groupon n GRPN 17.38 +.49 PanASlv
PAAS 21.88 +.24
GulfportE GPOR 31.12 -.16 PaneraBrd PNRA 164.27 +3.54
Hasbro
HAS 37.10 +.72 PattUTI
PTEN 17.86 -.03
HercOffsh HERO 4.91 -.16 Paychex
PAYX 32.13 +.39
HudsCity
HCBK 7.34 +.04 PeopUtdF PBCT 13.39 +.10
HumGen
HGSI 8.01 +.17 Polycom s PLCM 20.01 +.62
HuntBnk
HBAN 6.41 +.12 Popular
BPOP 2.14 +.06
Intel
INTC 28.19 +.32 Power-One PWER 4.74 +.10
Inteliquent IQNT 12.77 +.48 PwShs QQQ QQQ 68.11 +1.17
IntervestB IBCA 3.94 -.01 priceline
PCLN 735.40 +20.41
Intuit
INTU 58.73 +1.02 PrUPShQQQ SQQQ 10.52 -.59
IntSurg
ISRG 541.96 +8.56 ProgrsSoft PRGS 24.59 +.40
QGEN 15.68 +.68
IRIS Int
IRIS 13.35 +.28 QIAGEN
TICKER
LAST CHG
QCOM
QSII
RFIL
RFMD
RIMM
RVBD
RODM
ROST
68.59
43.71
3.50
4.98
14.04
28.16
1.02
58.76
Qualcom
QualityS s
RF Inds
RF MicD
RschMotn
RiverbedT
RodmanR h
RossStrs s
+1.91
+1.13
+.05
+.16
+.38
+.60
+.02
+1.65
S-T-U
SLM Cp
SanDisk
SeagateT
SearsHldgs
Sequenom
SigaTech h
SigmaAld
SilvStd g
Sina
SiriusXM
SkywksSol
SmithWes
SnydLance
SonicCorp
Staples
Starbucks
StlDynam
SteinMrt
Stericycle
Suprtex
SusqBnc
Symantec
TD Ameritr
TeslaMot
TevaPhrm
TexInst
ThrshdPhm
TibcoSft
TiVo Inc
TractSupp
TripAdv n
TriQuint
Unilife
UtdCBks rs
USecBc AL
UrbanOut
SLM
SNDK
STX
SHLD
SQNM
SIGA
SIAL
SSRI
SINA
SIRI
SWKS
SWHC
LNCE
SONC
SPLS
SBUX
STLD
SMRT
SRCL
SUPX
SUSQ
SYMC
AMTD
TSLA
TEVA
TXN
THLD
TIBX
TIVO
TSCO
TRIP
TQNT
UNIS
UCBI
USBI
URBN
16.29
50.52
27.90
71.77
4.05
3.49
74.07
15.18
65.78
2.24
28.52
7.86
25.45
8.00
16.84
55.91
14.75
6.55
85.90
18.94
10.17
18.67
20.50
37.40
43.90
33.99
8.03
31.85
12.17
90.92
34.30
6.63
3.53
10.26
5.86
29.49
+.17
+1.12
-.06
-.59
+.05
+.79
+1.53
+.24
-3.25
-.01
+.36
+.07
+.42
+.51
+.26
+.57
+.08
+.01
+1.24
+.66
+.19
+.47
+.58
+3.32
+.83
+.64
+.69
+.79
+.08
+4.88
+1.03
+.13
+.02
+.44
+.12
V-W-X-Y-Z
VCA Ant
ViacomB
VirgnMda h
Vivus
Vodafone
Wendys Co
Windstrm
Wynn
Yahoo
Yandex n
ZaZaEngy
ZebraT
ZionBcp
Zix Corp
Zogenix
Zoltek
Zynga n
WOOF 22.87
VIAB 47.07
VMED 24.25
VVUS 21.02
VOD 27.96
WEN 5.05
WIN 11.93
WYNN 130.00
YHOO 15.54
YNDX 24.28
ZAZA 3.83
ZBRA 41.46
ZION 21.97
ZIXI
3.04
ZGNX 2.15
ZOLT 10.64
ZNGA 13.08
+.48
+.43
+.27
-.29
+.31
+.13
+.03
+3.43
+.16
+.27
+.11
+.91
+.24
+.11
+.19
+.35
-.32
Stocks of Local Interest
NAME
AGL Resources
AT&T Inc
Astec Inds
BB&T Corp
Bank of America
CBL & Associates
CBL & Associates pf
CBL & Assoc pfD
Cigna Corp
Cintas Corp
Coca Btl Cns
CocaCola
Coca-Cola Ent
Comcast Corp A
Comcl Metals
ConAgra Foods
Convergys Corp
Corrections Corp
Covenant Transp
Cracker Barrel
Darden Rest
Dean Foods Corp
Dillards Inc
Dixie Group Inc
DuPont
Fst Horizon Natl
First Security Grp
Intel Corp
Johnson & Johnson
La-Z-Boy Inc
Medtronic Inc
Microsoft Corp
TICKER
GAS
T
ASTE
BBT
BAC
CBL
CBLpC
CBLpD
CI
CTAS
COKE
KO
CCE
CMCSA
CMC
CAG
CVG
CXW
CVTI
CBRL
DRI
DF
DDS
DXYN
DD
FHN
FSGI
INTC
JNJ
LZB
MDT
MSFT
52LO
RANGE
34.08
27.29
26.53
18.92
4.92
10.41
22.00
20.09
38.79
26.39
50.26
63.34
23.03
19.19
8.64
22.20
8.49
18.41
2.35
37.31
40.69
7.83
37.87
2.76
37.10
5.38
1.10
19.16
58.93
6.76
30.18
23.65
6
0
9
0
6
0
8
0
6
0
5
0
8
0
7
8
9
0
2
9
9
8
0
6
8
9
3
0
7
0
8
0
52HI CLOSE
CHG %CHG
43.69
31.97
40.68
31.71
13.88
19.35
25.99
25.65
52.95
40.61
76.32
71.77
29.99
30.05
17.84
27.34
14.66
26.60
9.86
59.90
53.81
13.90
64.24
4.80
57.50
11.70
9.60
27.99
68.05
15.23
43.33
32.95
+.16
+.27
+1.42
+.43
+.08
+.32
+.03
+.09
+1.13
+.43
+.64
+.41
+.13
+.37
+.53
+.03
+.10
+.48
-.01
+1.08
+1.02
+.13
+1.73
-.04
+.62
+.22
...
+.32
+.62
+.48
+1.30
+.58
38.92
31.79
38.37
31.42
9.93
19.01
25.18
25.16
46.97
39.81
62.64
71.90
28.43
30.35
14.60
26.08
13.73
26.35
3.34
56.49
51.94
12.37
63.89
3.95
53.25
10.69
3.32
28.19
65.17
15.10
40.00
32.59
+0.4%
+0.9%
+3.8%
+1.4%
+0.8%
+1.7%
+0.1%
+0.4%
+2.5%
+1.1%
+1.0%
+0.6%
+0.5%
+1.2%
+3.8%
+0.1%
+0.7%
+1.9%
-0.3%
+1.9%
+2.0%
+1.1%
+2.8%
-1.0%
+1.2%
+2.1%
...%
+1.1%
+1.0%
+3.3%
+3.4%
+1.8%
WK MO QTR
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
r
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
t
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
YTD
CHG
-7.9%
+5.1%
+19.1%
+24.8%
+78.6%
+21.1%
+1.2%
+6.3%
+11.8%
+14.4%
+7.0%
+2.8%
+10.3%
+28.0%
+5.6%
-1.2%
+7.5%
+29.4%
+12.5%
+12.1%
+14.0%
+10.4%
+42.4%
+34.4%
+16.3%
+33.6%
+41.3%
+16.2%
-0.6%
+26.9%
+4.6%
+25.5%
1YR
VOL
CHG (Thou) P/E
+4.4%
+18.2%
+5.6%
+19.0%
-27.5%
+13.6%
...%
...%
+10.7%
+34.2%
-3.5%
+14.2%
+9.7%
+26.3%
-8.0%
+17.7%
-6.0%
+11.6%
-63.6%
+15.7%
+11.1%
+19.9%
+59.5%
-7.0%
+1.5%
-5.1%
-62.3%
+41.4%
+13.8%
+64.6%
+5.2%
+28.2%
726
55793
109
4104
228151
1307
3
11
2901
637
23
5669
3653
13279
1560
3742
1455
1065
17
159
2009
1536
581
4
4411
4820
4
31965
8292
500
5693
35349
17
48
22
17
dd
39
10
18
18
19
12
20
dd
15
13
17
dd
16
15
dd
7
49
14
19
dd
12
19
10
12
12
9
DIV
1.84f
1.76f
...
0.80f
0.04
0.88f
1.94
1.84
0.04
0.54f
1.00
2.04f
0.64f
0.65f
0.48
0.96
...
...
...
1.00
1.72
...
0.20
...
1.64
0.04
...
0.84
2.28
...
0.97
0.80
The symbol above illustrates a stock’s
price in relation to its low and high
closing prices during the past 52
weeks.
NAME
Miller Inds
Mohawk Inds
Mueller Water Pdts
Natl Hlth Inv
Ntl Hlthcare Cp
Norfolk Sthn
OCharleys
Panera Bread Co
Provident Engy Ltd
Raymond James Fncl
Regions Fncl
Reliance Steel Alu
Rock Tenn
Ruby Tuesday
Sanofi
Sonic Corp
Suntrust Bks
Unum Group
Vodafone Group
Vulcan Matl
WalMart Strs
Whirlpool
TICKER
52LO
RANGE
MLR
MHK
MWA
NHI
NHC
NSC
CHUX
PNRA
PVX
RJF
RF
RS
RKT
RT
SNY
SONC
STI
UNM
VOD
VMC
WMT
WHR
14.65
39.93
1.94
37.90
29.97
57.57
4.51
96.68
6.90
23.16
2.82
31.09
43.61
6.35
30.98
6.35
15.79
19.72
24.31
25.06
48.31
45.22
4
0
5
9
8
5
0
0
0
0
9
9
8
4
9
3
6
7
8
9
0
8
A Fresh Take
On News
52HI CLOSE
CHG %CHG
21.29
68.86
4.80
51.29
53.08
78.50
10.30
165.23
12.19
39.00
7.45
60.60
78.64
13.65
40.75
11.86
30.13
27.16
29.46
48.09
62.63
92.00
+.40
+1.16
-.06
+.50
+1.28
+1.68
...
+3.54
+.20
+.52
+.18
+.54
+1.17
+.54
+.51
+.51
+.27
+.39
+.31
+.13
+.45
+1.24
17.27
66.22
3.35
49.52
46.50
66.13
9.84
164.27
11.88
37.95
6.61
56.43
68.67
9.21
38.82
8.00
24.00
24.34
27.96
44.29
61.20
78.02
+2.4%
+1.8%
-1.8%
+1.0%
+2.8%
+2.6%
...%
+2.2%
+1.7%
+1.4%
+2.8%
+1.0%
+1.7%
+6.2%
+1.3%
+6.8%
+1.1%
+1.6%
+1.1%
+0.3%
+0.7%
+1.6%
WK MO QTR
s
s
t
s
s
s
r
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
t
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
s
YTD
CHG
+9.8%
+10.6%
+37.3%
+12.6%
+11.0%
-9.2%
+79.2%
+16.1%
+22.6%
+22.6%
+53.7%
+15.9%
+19.0%
+33.5%
+6.2%
+18.9%
+35.6%
+15.5%
-0.3%
+12.6%
+2.4%
+64.4%
1YR
VOL
CHG (Thou) P/E
+8.4%
+12.1%
-16.7%
+10.3%
-2.3%
-0.7%
+59.7%
+35.0%
+36.3%
+2.7%
-9.8%
+2.9%
+1.1%
-28.0%
+17.0%
-18.7%
-17.5%
-5.9%
+3.9%
+3.8%
+20.5%
-2.5%
68
465
1750
97
51
2729
209
306
628
872
19405
332
392
657
1933
818
7749
1755
4861
402
5853
1164
9
26
dd
16
12
12
dd
36
18
39
12
25
19
33
22
7
dd
14
16
DIV
0.52f
...
0.07
2.60a
1.20
1.88f
...
...
0.54
0.52
0.04
0.60f
0.80
...
1.76e
...
0.20
0.42
2.10e
0.04
1.59f
2.00
...
. timesfreepress.com
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • C3
Breaking News: [email protected]
Mutual Funds
+1.5
+1.4
+3.1
+3.1
+0.8
+0.8
+2.4
+2.0
+3.6
+3.2
+2.2
+2.0
-10.1
+4.1
-1.5
+3.9
-0.1
+2.3
+2.4
+4.1
+3.2
+1.9
+2.6
+2.3
+2.3
-0.4
+1.6
+2.2
-0.6
+1.4
+2.7
+3.0
+0.4
+1.5
-0.4
+2.9
+3.8
+3.2
+0.9
+2.1
-0.7
+2.3
+3.5
+3.3
+3.2
+3.6
+1.4
+3.5
+2.4
+4.5
+2.8
-0.7
-0.9
+2.5
+0.4
+2.5
+0.4
+3.4
+2.6
+0.5
+3.5
+3.0
+3.6
+3.7
+3.4
+2.1
-0.3
-0.7
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN
SelComm A 50.33 +.85
Columbia Class C:
Acorn t
28.19 +.48
AcornInt t 37.88 +.42
Columbia Class Z:
Acorn Z
32.21 +.56
AcornIntZ 39.44 +.44
Copley
50.50 ...
Credit Suisse Comm:
ComRet t
8.40 +.03
DFA Funds:
IntlCorEq n10.56 +.15
USCorEq1 n 12.23 +.17
USCorEq2 n 12.06 +.18
DWS Invest A:
TechA
15.93 +.28
DWS Invest C:
DreHiRC 35.26 +.47
DWS Invest S:
CoreEqtyS 18.30 +.25
Gold&Prc 15.22 +.23
LgCpFoGr 33.80 +.51
LifeCmpRet 11.54 +.06
SmCpVlS r 19.34 +.33
Davis Funds A:
NYVen A 36.70 +.57
RlEstA
27.81 +.25
Davis Funds Y:
NYVenY 37.09 +.57
Delaware Invest A:
Diver Inc p 9.18 ...
Delaware Invest B:
USGrB p 15.42 +.21
Dimensional Fds:
EmMCrEq n20.02 +.12
EmMktV 30.47 +.17
IntSmVa n 16.02 +.19
USLgVa n 21.79 +.27
US SmVa 26.79 +.49
IntlSmCo n 15.95 +.22
Fixd n
10.33 ...
IntVa n
16.68 +.24
Glb5FxInc n 11.05 ...
2YGlFxd n 10.12 ...
Dodge&Cox:
Balanced 75.39 +.82
Income
13.68 ...
IntlStk
33.32 +.45
Stock
116.39 +1.64
DoubleLine Funds:
TRBd I
11.22 ...
TRBd N p 11.21 ...
Dreyfus:
AMTMuBdZ 13.91 +.01
Aprec
44.74 +.59
Discp
33.13 +.46
Dreyf
9.81 +.13
GrInc
15.59 +.23
MunBd r 11.60 ...
OppMCVal A 30.57 +.48
Dupree Mutual:
TNTF
11.47 +.01
Eaton Vance A:
LgCpVal 18.94 +.28
TMG1.1
26.76 +.36
Eaton Vance I:
FltgRt
8.99 ...
LgCapVal 18.99 +.28
FAM Funds:
EqtyInc n20.98 +.27
FBR Funds:
FocusInv t n50.56 +.73
GasUtlInv r n21.85 +.17
FMI Funds:
LgCap p n17.08 +.20
FPA Funds:
Capit
45.95 +.29
NwInc
10.69 ...
FPACres 28.68 +.23
Fairholme 30.04 +.29
Federated Instl:
KaufmnR
5.56 +.10
Fidelity Advisor A:
NwInsgh p 22.78 +.37
StrInA
12.35 +.01
Fidelity Advisor I:
NwInsgtI n23.07 +.37
Fidelity Freedom:
FF2010 n14.05 +.09
FF2015 n 11.75 +.08
FF2015K 13.04 +.08
+2.4
+1.6
+2.4
+1.7
NA
-3.0
+1.1
+3.1
+2.9
+7.0
+2.7
+3.2
-9.6
+4.4
+0.4
+2.5
+3.3
+3.3
+3.3
-0.8
+4.3
-0.7
-1.5
+0.9
+2.5
+2.5
+1.0
0.0
+0.8
0.0
+0.1
+2.5
4-WK
4-WK
0.0
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
NAV CHG %RTN
+1.1 NAME
+3.3
FF2020 n 14.23 +.10 +1.2 LargCap n 19.99 +.31 +4.3
LgCapVal 11.40 +.15 +3.4
NA FF2020K 13.49 +.10 +1.3 LatAm
56.16 +.97 +1.0
NA FF2025 n 11.88 +.10 +1.5 LevCoStk n 29.79 +.44 +2.1
FF2025K 13.67 +.12 +1.6
FF2030 n 14.16 +.13 +1.7 LowP r n 41.08 +.56 +2.6
-0.9 FF2030K 13.84 +.13 +1.7 LowPriK r 41.06 +.56 +2.6
+2.7 FF2035 n 11.77 +.12 +1.9 Magelln n 73.95 +1.13 +4.5
+4.4 FF2035K 13.99 +.15 +2.0 MegaCpStk n11.65 +.17 +4.6
+4.6 FF2040 n 8.21 +.08 +2.0 MidCap n 30.61 +.46 +1.8
+4.0 FF2040K 14.04 +.15 +2.0 MtgSec n 11.20 +.01 0.0
-0.9
MuniInc n 13.17 +.01 -0.6
+3.7 Fidelity Invest:
AllSectEq 12.91 +.18 +3.9 NwMkt r n 16.51 -.02 +0.2
NwMill n 32.99 +.50 +3.2
-0.9 AMgr50 n 16.19 +.12 +0.9 OTC n
65.34 +1.10 +3.8
AMg85 n 13.98 +.17 +1.8
Balanc n 19.95 +.18 +2.3 100Index 10.00 +.14 +4.3
19.58 +.18 +2.4
+3.0 BalancedK 19.95 +.18 +2.3 Puritn n
+3.8 BlueChGr n 50.85 +.78 +4.7 RealEInc r 10.85 +.03 +1.2
Canada n 53.83 +.89 +0.3 SAllSecEqF 12.92 +.19 +4.0
+0.6 CpInc r n
9.22 +.02 +0.8 SCmdtyStrt n 9.19 +.03 -2.9
+3.0 Contra n 78.11 +1.26 +4.7 SrsIntGrw 11.53 +.17 +1.8
8.89 +.12 +1.6
ContraK
78.08 +1.26 +4.7 SrsIntVal
+2.3 DisEq n
24.36 +.35 +3.0 SrInvGrdF 11.68 -.01 -0.7
StIntMu
n
10.80
... -0.6
DivIntl n
29.02 +.40 +1.8
8.53 ... +0.1
+4.5 DivrsIntK r 28.98 +.39 +1.8 STBF n
StkSlcACap
n
28.06
+.40
+2.8
+0.5 DivGth n 30.48 +.47 +3.0
EmergAs r n 28.34 +.10 -0.6 StratInc n 11.05 ... -0.2
TotalBd
n
10.97
...
-0.4
+3.6 EmrMk n 23.11 +.19 -0.3 USBI n
11.73 ... -0.7
Eq Inc n 45.79 +.57 +3.0
Value
n
73.13
+.95
+2.8
-1.0 ECapAp 17.98 +.32 +2.7 Fidelity Selects:
35.83 +.52 +4.5
+0.1 Fidel n
n39.08 +.62 +2.6
19.93 +.37 +4.2 Air
+1.6 Fifty r n
FltRateHi
r
n
9.81 +.01 +0.3 Biotch n 103.75 +2.36 +4.7
+3.0
Brokr
n
49.85 +.63 +4.8
FrInOne n 28.90 +.34 +2.3
87.19 +1.60 +1.1
GNMA n 11.80 ... -0.1 DfAer n
+4.1 GroCo n 98.54 +1.52 +4.9 Electr n
55.15 +.80 +3.2
53.81 +.47 -4.2
GroInc n 20.81 +.30 +4.3 Enrgy n
+4.6 GrowthCoK 98.48 +1.52 +4.9 EngSv n 69.69 +.30 -6.2
-0.2 GrStrat r n 21.53 +.37 +1.1 Gold r n
41.54 +.69 -10.6
HighInc r n 9.00 ... +0.2 MedDl n 62.49 +1.35 +2.1
+4.6 IntGov n 10.89 ... -0.6 MdEqSys n 28.88 +.45 +1.9
IntlDisc n 31.27 +.44 +2.3 Fidelity Spartan:
+1.0 IntlSCOp r n 10.50 +.15 +0.8 500IdxInv n50.35 +.69 +3.7
50.36 +.69 +3.7
+1.1 InvGrBd n 11.68 -.01 -0.7 500Idx I
+1.1 InvGB n
7.73 ... -0.6 IntlInxInv n 33.49 +.45 +1.2
Gold
Date
High
Low
100 troy oz.- dollars per troy oz.
Mar 12
1692.90 1657.80
Apr 12
1693.40 1655.10
May 12
1694.10 1657.40
Jun 12
1696.00 1657.50
Aug 12
1696.70 1660.00
Oct 12
1700.40 1667.50
Dec 12
1701.40 1667.80
Feb 13
1703.50 1674.40
Apr 13
Jun 13
1707.70 1700.30
Aug 13
Oct 13
Dec 13
1711.50 1710.80
Jun 14
Dec 14
1737.20 1736.40
Jun 15
Dec 15
1771.00 1747.90
Jun 16
Dec 16
Jun 17
Dec 17
Est. sales:Fri’s sales: 178021
Fri’s open int: 431439
Close
Change
1685.50
1685.60
1686.70
1688.20
1690.60
1692.80
1694.90
1697.10
1699.10
1701.70
1704.60
1707.60
1710.80
1722.50
1736.40
1752.10
1771.00
1791.10
1812.90
1835.90
1863.00
+23.20
+23.20
+23.50
+23.30
+23.30
+23.40
+23.40
+23.40
+23.40
+23.50
+23.50
+23.40
+23.30
+23.30
+23.30
+23.40
+23.10
+23.30
+23.50
+23.50
+23.50
Silver
Date
High
Low
5,000 troy oz.- cents per troy oz.
Mar 12
3272.6 3212.0
Apr 12
3275.0 3211.0
May 12
3293.5 3202.0
Jul 12
3295.5 3210.0
Sep 12
3287.5 3270.5
Dec 12
3302.0 3230.5
Jan 13
Mar 13
May 13
Jul 13
Sep 13
Dec 13
Jan 14
Jul 14
Dec 14
Jul 15
Dec 15
Jul 16
Dec 16
Est. sales:Fri’s sales: 42963
Fri’s open int: 112236
NAME
+4.7
Close
Change
3272.6
3273.1
3275.0
3280.6
3285.5
3290.8
3291.4
3292.9
3293.3
3291.9
3290.5
3291.2
3289.4
3279.5
3273.0
3265.0
3258.0
3243.6
3233.6
+47.8
+47.8
+47.8
+47.9
+48.2
+48.4
+48.6
+48.8
+48.7
+48.8
+48.8
+48.8
+48.6
+48.4
+48.3
+48.3
+48.3
+48.3
+48.3
NAME
Fidelity Spart Adv:
500IdxAdv n50.36 +.69
TotMktAd r n 41.06 +.58
First Eagle:
GlblA
49.17 +.36
OverseasA 22.14 +.10
Frank/Temp Frnk A:
DynTchA 34.43 +.67
FedTFA p 12.35 +.01
GrwthA p 50.73 +.81
HYTFA p 10.53 ...
IncomA p
2.19 +.01
RisDvA p 37.15 +.47
SmCpGrA p 13.27 +.25
SmCpVl p 46.12 +.86
USGovA p 6.88 ...
UtilsA p
13.25 +.10
Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv:
GlbBdAdv n13.12 +.06
IncmeAd
2.17 +.01
Frank/Temp Frnk C:
HiIncC t
2.03 ...
IncomC t
2.21 +.01
Frank/Temp Mtl A&B:
SharesA 21.78 +.24
Frank/Temp Temp A:
GlBd A p 13.16 +.06
GlbOpA p 17.75 +.21
GrwthA p 18.55 +.22
WorldA p 15.65 +.17
Frank/Temp Tmp B&C:
GlBdC p 13.18 +.06
GAMCO Funds:
GlTelAAA 20.05 +.21
GE Instl Funds:
US Eq
12.72 +.18
GMO Trust III:
Quality
24.13 +.32
GMO Trust IV:
IntlIntrVl
20.68 +.22
GMO Trust VI:
EmgMkts r 11.80 +.11
Quality
24.14 +.32
The Georgia f.o.b. dock quoted price on
broilers and fryers for this week’s trading is
93.25 cents based on full truck load lots of
ice pack USDA grade “A” sized 21⁄2 to 3 pound
birds. Ninety-eight percent (representing 921
loads) of the loads offered have been confirmed within a range of 86.97 to 99.73 with
a final weighted average of 92.34 f.o.b. dock
or equivalent. The market is steady and the
live supply continues generally adequate for
a mostly normal demand. Average weights
are ranging desirable to occasionally light.
Estimated slaughter today is 4,443,100 head.
This compares with 4,291,300 head last
Monday.
The f.o.b. dock confirmed final weighted
average prices on ice pack parts based
on truck load and pool truck load lots for
this week’s trading are: Line Run Tenders:
$2.0150; Skinless Boneless Breasts: $1.6250;
Whole Breasts: 99.50; Boneless Skinless
Thigh Meat: $1.31; Thighs: 72.00; Drumsticks:
72.00; Leg Quarters: 54.50; Wings: $1.88.
Demand on line run tenders, skinless boneless breasts and wings is good to normal;
whole breasts, boneless skinless thigh meat,
drumsticks and leg quarters ranges normal
to good, mostly normal; while the demand on
thighs is normal.
Source: Georgia Department of Agriculture
Tennessee Livestock
Source: The Associated Press
+0.7
-0.3
+5.4
-0.6
+2.8
-0.2
+1.0
+1.8
+1.9
+0.8
0.0
+1.1
-0.1
+1.0
+0.1
+0.9
+2.1
-0.1
+1.7
+2.1
+1.8
-0.1
+0.9
+3.7
+3.3
+1.2
-0.5
+3.3
+5.5
+2.5
+2.3
+2.6
+0.2
-0.3
+5.5
+1.3
+3.1
+3.2
+3.6
+2.0
+3.2
+0.3
+3.0
+1.1
-1.8
-1.2
+3.3
+0.2
+3.5
+2.1
+2.1
+2.6
-0.9
+1.4
+1.4
+1.4
+2.5
-0.6
-0.6
+0.4
0.0
+3.3
+4.7
+3.4
+3.9
-0.8
+3.9
+3.2
+3.8
-1.8
+1.1
+4.6
+7.8
-0.6
+7.7
+1.6
+2.2
+2.3
+0.3
+3.2
+3.8
+2.3
+0.4
+0.6
+0.5
+0.7
0.0
By Dave Flessner
Staff Writer
The head of the Minnesota
bank that took over the failed
Covenant Bank & Trust in
Rock Spring, Ga., on Monday
said he hopes to add more
services and possibly acquire
other banks in Georgia.
Stearns Bank National
Association, a $1.3 billion
bank based in St. Cloud,
Minn., reopened the shuttered Covenant Bank offices
in Rock Spring and Dalton
and acquired more than $90
million of bank deposits on
Monday.
Stearns emerged Friday as
the winning bidder for the
assets of Covenant Bank,
which state regulators shut
down over the weekend after
the bank lost more than $9
■ The $1.3 billion bank
based in St. Cloud, Minn.,
reopened the shuttered
Covenant Bank offices in
Rock Spring and Dalton,
Ga., and acquired more
than $90 million of bank
deposits on Monday.
+3.2
+0.1
+0.3
+0.3
+0.3
+0.8
+3.9
+3.0
+0.7
+3.5
+2.8
+1.8
+0.8
+3.9
+3.6
+1.7
+5.4
+1.2
+0.4
+3.6
+2.6
+0.3
+0.2
+0.9
+2.9
+3.5
+3.6
+4.9
+2.0
+1.4
+1.7
+1.7
+2.0
+1.7
+0.6
+2.6
+3.3
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
+3.1
-0.6
+0.9
-0.5
+4.8
+2.3
+4.6
+0.7
+1.5
+1.9
+4.7
+4.6
+1.6
+0.7
+3.6
+2.9
0.0
-0.5
+3.6
+0.6
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN
GlOppC
29.70 +.55
Oppenheimer Y:
DevMktY 33.40 +.39
IntlBdY
6.33 +.01
PIMCO Admin PIMS:
TotRtAd
11.06 -.01
PIMCO Instl PIMS:
AlAsetAut r 10.65 +.01
AllAsset
12.16 +.02
ComodRR 6.79 +.01
DivInc
11.62 -.01
EmgMkCur 10.56 +.06
EmMkBd 11.65 ...
HiYld
9.30 +.01
LowDu
10.38 ...
RealRtnI 11.93 -.05
ShortT
9.79 -.01
TotRt
11.06 -.01
PIMCO Funds A:
RealRtA p 11.93 -.05
TotRtA
11.06 -.01
PIMCO Funds B:
RealRtB t 11.93 -.05
PIMCO Funds C:
AllAsset t 11.92 +.02
ComRR p 6.49 +.01
TotRtC t
11.06 -.01
PIMCO Funds D:
TRtn p
11.06 -.01
PIMCO Funds P:
TotRtnP
11.06 -.01
Parnassus Funds:
EqtyInco n28.52 +.34
Perm Port Funds:
Permannt 48.98 +.36
Pioneer Funds A:
AMTFrMu p 13.75 -.01
Pioneer Funds C:
HiYldC t
10.34 +.04
Price Funds Adv:
R2030A p n18.59 +.23
Price Funds:
BlChip
n46.33 +.84
CapApp n 22.64 +.20
EmMktB n 13.42 +.01
EmMktS n 32.42 +.27
EqInc n
25.83 +.34
EqIndex n 38.32 +.52
FinSvcs n 14.46 +.22
Growth n 38.26 +.66
Gr&In n
22.38 +.30
HiYield n
6.74 ...
IntlBond n 9.86 +.02
IntDis n
43.72 +.55
Intl G&I
13.04 +.18
IntlStk n
14.17 +.18
LatAm n 44.92 +.69
MidCap n 60.32 +.83
MCapVal n 24.09 +.26
N Asia n 15.79 +.04
New Era n 45.48 +.54
N Horiz n 36.48 +.63
N Inc n
9.69 ...
RealEst n 20.49 +.21
R2010 n 16.28 +.12
R2015 n 12.72 +.12
R2020 n 17.68 +.19
R2025 n 12.99 +.15
R2030 n 18.72 +.23
R2035 n 13.27 +.17
R2040 n 18.91 +.25
SciTec n 31.36 +.52
ShtBd n
4.84 ...
SmCpStk n 36.01 +.63
SmCapVal n 38.83 +.65
SpecGr n 19.46 +.29
SpecIn n 12.69 +.03
Strat Inco n 11.72 +.01
SuMuInc n 11.55 ...
Value n
25.52 +.35
Prudential Fds A:
NatResA 49.82 +.34
Putnam Funds A:
AmGvA p 9.12 ...
AABalA p 11.54 ...
DvrInA p
7.64 +.01
GrInA p
14.55 +.20
IntlNop p 15.37 +.23
Putnam Funds B:
GlNtRs t 18.32 ...
GlblUtilB 10.39 +.10
Putnam Funds M:
MultiCpGr 52.11 +.84
+4.4
+0.7
-0.5
GET MORE
-0.3
-0.6
-0.2
-3.8
+0.3
+0.3
+0.7
+0.2
-0.2
-1.3
+0.3
-0.3
Breaking news
-1.3
-0.3
is more than just one story.
-1.4
-0.3
-3.9
-0.4
-0.3
-0.3
+2.5
-1.5
-0.3
+0.6
+2.5
+6.2
+2.4
+0.7
-0.5
+3.0
+3.7
+7.1
+6.0
+3.8
-0.1
-0.8
+2.5
+1.2
+1.6
-1.2
+2.6
+1.9
+1.9
-3.8
+3.4
-0.6
+3.7
+1.3
+1.8
+2.1
+2.3
+2.6
+2.7
+2.8
+3.3
+0.2
+2.4
+1.8
+3.3
+0.2
0.0
-0.7
+3.1
-6.2
NA
NA
+1.4
+3.6
+1.8
NA
+2.1
+3.9
million from soured real
estate and other loans in the
past three years.
Stearns hired all but former Covenant Bank CEO
Trent Sanford among Covenant’s 21-employee staff.
“We hope we can better
serve these bank customers with the strength of our
capital and our status as a
preferred SBA [Small Business Administration] lender,”
said Norm Skalicky, the chief
executive and largest shareholder for Stearns Bank.
“We’re a heavily capitalized
bank, and we can come in to
help the bank, the employees, the community and the
FDIC.”
The purchase of Covenant’s assets is the seventh
such acquisition of a failed
bank by Stearns. Skalicky
said his bank is looking at
more such FDIC-aided purchases, including others in
Georgia.
“We’ll see how it goes,
but I think we’ll bid on other
banks [in Georgia] because
there are others in a similar
situation,” he said.
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp., which
regulates banks and insures
k`d\j]i\\gi\jj%Zfd
NAME
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
Royce Funds:
PennMuI r 12.25 +.21
PremierI r 20.96 +.29
TotRetI r 13.96 +.20
VlPlSvc
14.00 +.24
Rydex Investor:
InvNasdInvs 9.32 -.17
SEI Asset Alloc:
DvrAgStkA 11.06 ...
ModGroA 10.64 ...
SEI Portfolios:
DvrAggGrA 10.77 ...
Schwab Funds:
1000Inv r 40.11 +.55
S&P Sel 22.14 +.30
Schwartz Funds:
CathVal p 18.48 +.27
Scout Funds:
Intl
32.07 +.54
Sequoia 162.28+2.09
St FarmAssoc:
Balan
56.69 +.41
Templeton Instit:
ForEqS
18.96 +.18
Thornburg Fds:
IntValA px 26.96 +.21
IntValue I x 27.55 +.19
Thrivent Fds A:
SmCpStk 15.13 +.29
Tocqueville Fds:
Delafield n31.49 +.48
Gold t n
72.42 +1.31
Tweedy Browne:
GblValue 24.04 +.26
UBS Funds Cl A:
GlobAllo t 9.60 +.09
UBS Funds Cl C:
GlobAllo n9.38 +.08
USAA Group:
EmgMkt
18.00 +.14
GrTxStr
14.38 +.09
Grwth
16.50 +.25
+1.8
+1.0
+1.7
+0.9
-6.3
0.0
0.0
0.0
+3.5
+3.7
+1.6
+2.0
+3.5
+0.5
+0.8
+1.0
+1.0
+0.9
+1.6
-9.4
+3.5
+0.9
+0.9
-1.8
+1.4
+3.8
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
Intl
24.99 +.45
PrecMM 30.75 +.60
SmCpStk 15.17 +.30
TxEIt
13.40 +.02
TxELT
13.49 ...
TxESh
10.80 ...
Value Line Fd:
PremGro n30.30 +.46
Vanguard Admiral:
BalAdml n23.55 +.20
CAITAdm n 11.47 +.01
CpOpAdl n 76.25 +1.28
EMAdmr r n 36.39 +.30
Energy n 118.26 +1.14
ExtdAdm n 45.59 +.72
500Adml n 130.47 +1.78
GNMA Ad n 11.03 +.01
GrwAdm n 36.73 +.52
HlthCr n
58.20 +.88
HiYldCp n 5.84 ...
InfProAd n 27.90 -.09
ITBdAdml n 11.73 ...
IntGrAdm n 60.14 +.96
ITAdml n 14.08 +.01
ITGrAdm n 10.12 ...
LtdTrAd n 11.14 ...
LTGrAdml n 10.24 -.03
LT Adml n 11.47 +.01
MCpAdml n 102.01 +1.35
MuHYAdm n 10.89 ...
PrmCap r n 71.17 +1.20
ReitAdm r n 89.52 +.94
STsyAdml n 10.76 ...
ShtTrAd n 15.92 ...
STIGrAd n 10.73 ...
SmCAdm n 38.26 +.68
TtlBAdml n 10.94 -.01
TStkAdm n 35.43 +.50
WellslAdm n 57.68 +.28
WelltnAdm n 58.50 +.56
Windsor n 49.45 +.70
WdsrIIAd n 51.66 +.73
Vanguard Fds:
DivrEq
n23.13 +.34
+3.0
-9.5
+2.6
-0.7
-0.4
-0.2
+3.0
+1.8
-1.0
+2.7
-0.5
-3.7
+2.4
+3.7
0.0
+3.9
+2.8
-0.2
-1.4
-1.2
+1.8
-1.0
-0.5
-0.5
-2.5
-0.7
+2.2
-0.5
+2.4
+3.3
-0.2
-0.1
+0.1
+2.2
-0.8
+3.5
+0.6
+1.9
+3.3
+4.2
+3.6
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
CapValue n 11.19 +.15
CapOpp n 33.01 +.55
Convrt n 13.03 +.09
DivdGro n 16.66 +.23
Energy n 62.99 +.61
EqInc n
23.82 +.32
Explr n
82.74 +1.45
GNMA n 11.03 +.01
GroInc n 30.13 +.42
HYCorp n 5.84 ...
HlthCre n 137.93 +2.07
InflaPro n 14.20 -.05
IntlExplr n 14.89 +.21
IntlGr n
18.90 +.30
IntlVal n
30.30 +.42
ITIGrade n 10.12 ...
LifeCon n 17.08 +.09
LifeGro n 23.37 +.25
LifeInc n 14.52 +.04
LifeMod n 20.70 +.17
LTTsry n 12.52 -.04
Morg n
20.59 +.32
MuInt n
14.08 +.01
PrecMtls r n 19.77 +.37
PrmcpCor n 14.85 +.24
Prmcp r n 68.59 +1.15
SelValu r n 20.66 +.29
STAR n
20.50 +.19
STIGrade n 10.73 ...
StratEq n 21.21 +.33
TgtRetInc n 12.01 +.05
TgRe2010 n 23.80 +.14
TgtRe2015 n 13.23 +.10
TgRe2020 n 23.57 +.21
TgtRe2025 n 13.46 +.13
TgRe2030 n 23.16 +.25
TgtRe2035 n 13.98 +.17
TgtRe2040 n 22.99 +.28
TgtRe2045 n 14.43 +.17
USGro n 21.60 +.31
Wellsly n 23.80 +.11
Welltn n
33.87 +.33
Wndsr n 14.66 +.21
WndsII n 29.11 +.42
+3.3
+2.7
+1.2
+2.6
-3.7
+3.1
+2.1
-0.1
+4.0
-0.2
+2.8
-1.5
+1.1
+1.8
+0.9
-0.5
+0.6
+1.9
-0.1
+1.3
-4.3
+3.9
-1.0
-7.4
+2.5
+2.4
+2.6
+1.5
+0.1
+2.3
+0.2
+0.7
+1.1
+1.4
+1.7
+1.9
+2.2
+2.3
+2.3
+4.1
+0.6
+2.0
+3.3
+4.2
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN
Vanguard Idx Fds:
TotIntAdm r n24.74 +.32
TotIntlInst r n 98.94 +1.27
TotIntlIP r n 98.96 +1.27
500 n
130.48 +1.79
Balanced n 23.54 +.20
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STBnd n 10.60 ...
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Vanguard Instl Fds:
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Wasatch:
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Yacktman Funds:
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NA
+2.8
+2.4
deposits up to $250,000, will
absorb 80 percent of the cost
of the loan losses from Covenant’s failure and expects the
insurance fund to lose about
$31.5 million from the bank
failure.
Covenant was the 78th
Georgia bank to fail since the
recession began in 2008 —
the most of any state. Despite
Georgia’s record number of
bank failures, the industry is
showing improvement, analysts said Monday.
“The picture from 2011
was a year of stabilization
and improvement for our
industry,” said David Oliver, a
senior vice president for the
Georgia Bankers Association.
“Earnings turned positive for
the first time since 2008.”
Last year, 60.3 percent of
Georgia’s 238 banks reported
profits, up from 45.9 percent
the previous year. Overall,
Georgia banks made $569.8
million in 2011, a $2.4 billion
improvement from the collective losses in 2010, Oliver
said.
Weiss Ratings, a leading
independent rating agency
of U.S. financial institutions,
reported Monday that profits
were up for banks nationwide
in the fourth quarter for the
second year in a row.
Of the 78 bank failures
in Georgia, the FDIC has
arranged for other banks to
take over the assets of the
failed banks in all but six
instances.
Contact Dave Flessner at
[email protected]
or at 757-6340
‘Pink slime’ maker suspends work at three plants
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — The maker
of “pink slime” suspended operations
Monday at all but one plant where the
beef ingredient is made, acknowledging recent public uproar over the product has cost the company business.
Craig Letch, director of food quality and assurance for Beef Products
Inc., declined to discuss financial
details but said business has taken a
“substantial” hit since social media
exploded with worry over the ammonia-treated filler and an online peti-
Comcast
• Continued from Page C1
customers allies rather than
antagonists.
For the same flat $29.95 that
users already pay for their TV
service, they now can pick up
their iPad or Android tablet, walk to any room in the
house and indulge in a nonstop “Arrested Development”
marathon, he said.
A new application on
Microsoft’s Xbox allows
users to wave their hands or
use their voice to pick a TV
show from the couch, though
Comcast still is waiting for
Microsoft to approve it.
If the boss isn’t looking,
workers can queue up shows,
decide what to record and
even create favorite lists of On
Demand content during the
day — then come home and
let their TV do all the work.
DIGITAL WORLD
tion seeking its ouster from schools
drew hundreds of thousands of supporters. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has decided school districts
may stop using it, and some retail
chains have pulled products containing it from their shelves.
Federal regulators say the product,
which has been used for years and is
known in the industry as “lean, finely
textured beef,” meets food safety standards. But critics call the product an
unappetizing example of industrialized food production.
Beef Products will suspend opera-
for a monthly fee, said Tom
Blaxland, senior director for
Xfinity TV.
“Historically, you’ve always
had to go buy the latest physical media like Blu-Ray,” Blaxland said. “Now your subscription gives you all of that.”
There’s even a new term
for when consumers record
so much content on their
DVR that they have to delete
unwatched shows to make
room for new ones: “Ti-No,”
according to Blaxland.
The cable giant’s embrace
of giving away all the goodies
in every format serves both to
remind users of why they pay
that monthly live TV subscription, and to build brand loyalty
in the long term, he said.
“Hulu only does certain
networks, while we have all
the networks,” he said, noting
that other rivals like Netflix
force users to wait for months
before offering new content.
“Netflix will get it two years
behind, but we have the current episodes of “30 Rock” and
we also have all the way back
to season one.”
Movies, once the domain of
rental empires like BlockbustMADNESS
er, are increasingly moving
Building on the success of
into the digital realm, where
users can access a huge library Comcast’s March Madness
ON THE WEB
Beef Products Inc. launched a
website, http://beefisbeef.com,
that Craig Letch says will help
dispel myths about the product.
tions at plants in Amarillo, Texas; Garden City, Kan.; and Waterloo, Iowa,
Letch said. About 200 employees at
each of the three plants will get full
salary and benefits for 60 days during
the suspension. The company’s plant
at its Dakota Dunes, S.D., headquar-
mobile app, which allows
subscribers to browse their
bracket and watch any game
with just a touch, the company
also is plotting an app to take
on the Olympics.
NBC bought the rights to
the Olympics through 2020,
and Comcast plans to take
advantage of the arrangement,
he said.
Gold claims that the developers, who hail from Philadelphia, have found a way to
make the 32 summer sports as
easy to navigate as the March
Madness tournament.
“People won’t have the
anxiety of missing something,”
Gold said.
The Olympics application
for mobile devices will allow
users to jump from event to
event, schedule times for their
DVR to record and even allow
them to jump from event to
event from any room in the
house,” Gold said.
100
Reported auctions on Saturday at Carthage,
Crossville and Greeneville:
Cattle receipts: 1,904.
Trends: Compared to same sale one week
ago: Slaughter cows 1.00 to 4.00 higher. Bulls
steady. Steers/bulls 1.00 to 6.00 lower. Heifers
steady to 3.00 lower.
Slaughter Cows Boners 80-85 pct lean
77.50-88.50; Slaughter Cows Lean 85-90 pct
lean 64.50-75.50; Slaughter Bulls 1100-2200
lbs 90.00-101.50. Feeder Steers Medium
and Large 1-2: 300-400 lbs 180.00-221.00;
400-500 lbs 177.00-196.00; 500-600 lbs
154.00-178.00; 600-700 lbs 138.00-160.00.
Feeder Bulls Medium and Large 1-2: 400500 lbs 166.00-187.00; 500-600 lbs 144.00172.00; 600-700 lbs 130.00-155. Feeder
Heifers Medium and Large 1-2: 300-400 lbs
161.00-186.00; 400-500 lbs 152.00-177.50;
500-600 lbs 132.00-168.00; 600-700 lbs
117.00-141.50.
+3.7
+3.5
+1.7
+2.3
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
Lord Abbett A:
AffilA p
11.95 +.15
BdDebA p 7.95 ...
ShDurIncA p 4.60 ...
Lord Abbett C:
ShDurIncC t 4.63 ...
Lord Abbett F:
ShtDurInco 4.59 ...
MFS Funds A:
UtilA
17.81 +.13
ValueA
25.20 +.37
MFS Funds B:
MCapB
n8.96 +.15
NewDB
18.19 +.31
RschB n 26.08 +.38
GlGrB n
25.92 +.41
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n15.10 +.13
UtilC n
17.74 +.13
MFS Funds I:
ValueI
25.31 +.37
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Manning&Napier Fds:
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22.49 +.36
Matthews Asian:
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MergerFd n 15.79 +.02
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47.27 +.76
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31.63 +.48
Metro West Fds:
TotRetBd 10.54 ...
TotRtBdI 10.53 ...
MorganStanley Inst:
EmMktI
24.57 +.15
MCapGrI 38.81 +.48
Muhlenk n 57.64 +.88
Munder Funds:
Idx500A p 19.66 +.27
Munder Funds B:
GwthOppB 26.60 +.37
Mutual Series:
BeacnZ
13.03 +.12
EuropZ
20.81 +.21
GblDiscA 29.40 +.29
GlbDiscZ 29.77 +.29
SharesZ 21.95 +.24
Needham Funds:
Growth p n38.16 +.46
Neuberger&Berm Fds:
GenesInst 49.99 +.83
Nicholas Group:
Nich
n48.36 +.75
Nch II I n 23.50 +.34
Northern Funds:
HiYFxInc
7.31 ...
IncEq
12.97 ...
LCGr
24.79 ...
SmCapVl 16.52 ...
Technly
16.87 ...
Nuveen Cl A:
LrgCpV p 20.97 +.29
TNMBA p 11.82 ...
Nuveen Cl C:
HYMuBd t 15.89 ...
TNMuBd t 11.81 ...
Oak Assoc Fds:
BlkOkEm
3.27 +.07
LivOakHlt 14.48 +.26
RedOakT 10.99 +.17
Oakmark Funds I:
EqtyInc r 29.28 +.35
GlobalI
23.12 +.27
Intl I r
19.62 +.20
Oakmark 48.23 +.73
Select
32.69 +.46
Old Westbury Fds:
GlbSMdCap 15.33 +.19
Oppenheimer A:
DvMktA p 33.78 +.40
Disc p
63.22 +1.36
GlobA p
61.62 +.96
GblStrIncA 4.21 ...
IntBdA p
6.33 +.01
Oppenheimer B:
DiscB t
52.81 +1.13
Oppenheimer C&M:
DevMktC t 32.43 +.38
Stearns Bank seeks bigger presence in Georgia
By Betsy Blaney
Georgia Poultry
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
Gabelli Funds:
Asset
52.46 +.73
EqInc p
22.35 +.28
Goldman Sachs A:
TechTollkp 14.19 +.26
Goldman Sachs B:
GrOppt
21.52 +.32
MidCVB p 36.28 +.52
SCapB p 37.84 +.61
Goldman Sachs Inst:
HiYield
7.14 ...
Harbor Funds:
Bond
12.46 ...
CapApInst 44.35 +.73
Intl r
60.88 +1.04
Hartford Fds A:
CpAppA p 33.82 +.44
Hlthcare p 19.12 +.36
Hartford Fds B:
GlbGrB p n14.19 +.23
MidCpB t n 17.11 +.25
Hartford Fds C:
Hlthcare t 17.25 +.31
HiYieldC tx 7.33 +.01
Hartford HLS IA :
CapApp
43.55 +.62
Heartland Fds:
ValPlusInv p 30.67 +.57
Hussman Funds:
StrGrowth 11.52 -.05
ING Funds Cl C:
EmgCntC n23.78 +.24
InPLCC p 16.09 +.22
IVA Funds:
Wldwide I r 16.44 +.13
Invesco Funds A:
CmstkA
17.25 +.24
EqIncA
8.97 +.08
SmCpEq p 13.78 +.22
Invesco Funds B:
EqWtdB
34.12 +.46
PacGrB
19.68 +.10
Ivy Funds:
AssetSC t 24.96 +.35
AssetStA p 25.73 +.36
AssetStrI r 25.96 +.37
EurOpB p 22.05 +.41
JPMorgan A Class:
CoreBd A 11.86 ...
JPMorgan Sel Cls:
CoreBd n11.85 ...
HighYld n 7.93 +.01
ShtDurBd n 10.98 ...
USLCCrPls n22.69 +.33
Janus T Shrs:
Contrarn T 14.35 +.17
EnterprT 67.29 +.97
GlLifeSciT r 28.59 +.48
GlbSel T 11.58 +.09
GlTechT r 19.10 +.33
Grw&IncT 34.44 +.51
Janus T
31.99 +.43
OvrseasT r 38.58 +.20
PrkMCVal T 22.38 +.25
Twenty T 62.14 +.98
John Hancock A:
FnIndA p 11.24 +.15
TFBd A
10.20 +.01
John Hancock B:
FnIndB p 10.47 +.14
John Hancock Cl 1:
LSBalanc 13.36 +.11
LSGrwth 13.36 +.15
Kinetics Funds:
Medical n19.97 +.38
Lazard Instl:
EmgMktI 19.79 +.18
Legg Mason A:
CBAppr p 15.36 +.20
Legg Mason O:
CBEquity 13.46 +.20
Longleaf Partners:
Partners 30.39 +.31
Loomis Sayles:
LSBondI 14.68 +.05
StrInc C
15.29 +.07
LSBondR 14.63 +.06
StrIncA
15.20 +.07
Loomis Sayles Inv:
InvGrBdY 12.40 +.02
ters will continue operations.
The company, meanwhile, will
develop a strategy for rebuilding business. “We feel like when people can
start to understand the truth and reality, then our business will come back,”
he said. “It’s 100 percent beef.”
The lower-cost ingredient is made
from fatty bits of meat left over from
other cuts. The bits are heated and
spun to remove most of the fat. The
lean mix then is compressed into
blocks for use in ground meat. The
product is exposed to ammonium
hydroxide gas to kill bacteria.
“We’ll have profiles of athletes, tours of London, local
color, previews of events,
every angle,” he said.
The app will be ready in
about 20 days, allowing for 100
days of lead-up for true Olympics fans, he said. But, there’s
a catch. “It’s just for Comcast
customers,” he said.
Contact staff writer Ellis
Smith at esmith@timesfree
press.com or 423-757-6315.
Brown
Associates Inc.
Discount Brokerage Service
Member FINRA SIPC
Save 50-80%
On Stock, Bond & Option
Transactions
819 Broad St., Chattanooga, TN
267-3776
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Celebrating 100 years of advancing trust together.
34246432
4-WK
NAV CHG %RTN NAME
AcadEm n 18.81 +.16
Alger Funds A:
SmCapGr 8.22 +.15
Alger Funds B:
SmCapGr 7.27 +.13
AllianceBern A:
SMdCpVlA 17.58 +.27
AllianceBern B:
SMCpVlB t 16.84 +.25
Allianz Admin MMS:
MCapVal p 18.41 +.24
Allianz Funds B:
MCapValB 15.82 +.21
Amer Century A:
SCapVal p 8.70 +.15
Amer Century Adv:
EqIncA p
7.71 +.07
HeritageA p 22.77 +.34
ValueA p
6.26 +.08
Amer Century Inv:
EmgMkI
8.23 +.11
EqInc
7.71 +.07
GlGold
19.60 +.34
GrowthI
28.65 +.43
InfAdjBd 12.83 -.05
SelectI
45.13 +.73
SGov
9.76 +.01
SmCpVal
8.74 +.14
SmallCo
8.80 +.16
Ultra
26.67 +.41
ValueInv
6.26 +.08
Veedot
6.94 +.09
American Funds A:
AmcpA p 21.41 +.29
AMutlA p 27.75 +.30
BalA p
19.80 +.23
BondA p 12.64 ...
CapIBA p 51.62 +.47
CapWGA p 35.92 +.50
CapWA p 21.03 +.03
EupacA p 39.90 +.47
FdInvA p 39.68 +.56
GwthA p 33.13 +.47
HI TrA p
11.07 +.01
IncoA p
17.57 +.14
IntBdA p 13.63 ...
ICAA p
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N PerA p 30.04 +.47
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SmCpA p 39.06 +.51
TxExA p 12.70 +.01
WshA p
30.60 +.43
Ariel Investments:
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45.42 +.59
Ariel
49.92 +.64
Artisan Funds:
Intl
23.16 +.43
MidCap
40.38 +.68
MidCapVal 21.76 +.28
Ave Maria Funds:
Group p
23.85 +.40
RisingDiv 13.90 +.20
Baron Funds:
Asset
52.86 +.83
Growth
56.44 +.96
Bernstein Fds:
IntDur
13.82 ...
DivMu
14.74 ...
BlackRock A:
EqtyDiv
19.72 +.26
GlAlA r
19.72 +.17
MdCpVlA 12.15 +.16
BlackRock B&C:
GlAlC t
18.35 +.16
HlScOpC 29.20 +.50
BlackRock Instl:
EquityDv 19.77 +.26
GlbAlloc r 19.82 +.17
Brandywine Fds:
BlueFd n27.23 +.44
Bridgeway Funds:
AggInv1
36.27 +.52
CGM Funds:
Focus
n30.58 +.44
Mutl n
28.51 +.29
Century Funds:
ShsTrInst 21.18 +.32
ChamplSC p 15.32 +.27
Columbia Class A:
HiYldBd
2.82 ...
TxEA p
13.84 ...
34238334
NAME
bbb.org
C4 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
WEDNESDAY
TODAY
29
Murfreesboro
80/58
Shelbyville 24
TN
59
AL
PM Shower?
High: 78; Low: 53
High: 79; Low: 56
High: 81; Low: 52
High: 82; Low: 57
High: 75; Low: 53
High: 80; Low: 55
High: 77; Low: 50
National
TEMPERATURE
Knoxville
76/52
75
High Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78
Low Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53
Normal High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67
Normal Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43
Record High . . . . . . . . . . . . .84 in 2007
Record Low . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 in 1894
PRECIPITATION
Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.00"
Month to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3.53"
Normal Month to Date . . . . . . . . . .4.19"
Year to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12.88"
Normal Year to Date . . . . . . . . . .13.94"
SUN
Tomorrow
Today
Sunrise . . . . . .7:34 a.m. . . . .7:33 a.m.
Sunset . . . . . .7:59 p.m. . . . .8:00 p.m.
MOON
Tomorrow
Today
Moonrise . . .10:16 a.m. . . . .11:01 a.m.
Moonset . . . . .Next Day . . .12:50 a.m.
Atlanta
75/54
First
3/30
Southeast
Today
Hi/Lo/F
67/47/s
73/51/s
75/49/s
83/58/s
71/48/s
70/50/s
71/48/s
82/58/s
79/62/s
78/63/s
70/52/s
82/57/s
81/61/s
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
75/52/s
78/55/pc
80/58/s
83/60/s
74/50/t
77/57/s
78/58/s
83/58/s
80/59/s
77/63/s
80/58/s
84/56/s
78/58/s
City
Key West
Knoxville
Memphis
Miami
Mobile
Montgomery
Myrtle Beach
Nashville
Orlando
Panama City
Pensacola
Savannah
Tallahassee
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
80/70/s
80/71/s
76/52/s
77/54/t
83/64/s
84/63/s
81/71/pc 80/69/s
82/60/s
81/62/s
84/58/s
82/59/s
63/49/s
72/60/s
80/58/s
82/58/t
84/61/s
83/60/s
80/61/s
79/62/s
81/64/s
79/64/s
74/56/s
77/58/s
84/56/s
83/54/s
Today
Hi/Lo
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
City
Today
Hi/Lo
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
82/57
84/56/s
72/57
77/58/s
Full
4/6
Last
4/13
New
4/21
67/47
77/57/s
Los Angeles
Sunny
67/51
69/54/s
Chicago
Partly cloudy
68/53
70/41/s
Memphis
Sunny
83/64
84/63/s
Pollen
Cincinnati
Sunny
66/54
75/45/t
Nashville
Sunny
80/58
82/58/t
PREDOMINANT POLLEN . . . .Maple
FORECAST
Dallas
82/61
82/62/pc
New York
50/39
57/46/sh
Today . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High
Tomorrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High
Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High
Atlanta
Sunny
Las Vegas
Sunny
Partly cloudy
Sunny
Denver
Sunny
70/42
74/46/s
Orlando
Sunny
84/61
83/60/s
Detroit
Sunny
47/45
64/39/s
Pittsburgh
Sunny
53/43
68/44/t
Ft. Lauderdale
Sunny
79/70
78/68/s
Tampa
Sunny
84/63
83/60/s
Houston
Sunny
83/63
83/62/pc
Washington
Sunny
54/42
70/52/t
Amazon
• Continued from Page C1
Thomas said the Bradley
County site, which holds hundreds of thousands of items,
typically carries goods larger
in size than the Hamilton
County location.
For example, the Bradley
County center holds inventory such as lawn tractors,
barbecue grills and water
heaters along with bulk items.
It lacks the noisy array of long
conveyor systems carrying
smaller goods that line the
Hamilton County center.
On Monday in the giant
facility here, electric-powered forklifts scurried up and
down its web of aisles, regularly beeping their horns to
prevent a collision.
About three dozen forklift
recharging stations line one
side of the center.
110s
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s
L
H
National Extremes
Charlotte
Sunny
Airports
The Northeast will see mostly clear to partly cloudy skies and isolated snow, with the highest temperature of 73º
in Harrisburg-Raleigh, Ill. The Southeast will experience mostly clear to partly cloudy skies, with the highest
temperature of 86º in Ft. Myers, Fla. The central United States will see scattered showers and thunderstorms,
with the highest temperature of 91º in Laredo, Texas. In the Northwest, there will be partly cloudy to cloudy skies
and scattered showers, with the highest temperature of 80º in Torrington, Wyo. The Southwest will see mostly
clear skies, with the highest temperature of 90º in Carlsbad, N.M.
LAKE LEVELS
Lake
Apalachia
Blue Ridge
Center Hill
Chatuge
Cherokee
Chickamauga
Douglas
Fontana
Fort Loudoun
Great Falls
Guntersville
Hiwassee
Melton Hill
Nickajack
Normandy
Norris
Ocoee No. 1
Tellico
Tims Ford
Watts Bar
Weiss
Wheeler
City
2
Sun Returns
Athens
73/51
Monteagle
NC
Chattanooga
Murphy
75/53
78/53
Cleveland 74/49
65
78/54
Bridgeport
Blue
Huntsville
80/55
Ridge
82/57
Dalton
Scottsboro
73/50
76/52
81/55
LaFayette
76/51
Calhoun
77/51
Fort
GA
Guntersville
75
Payne
Rome
78/54
76/53
79/50
80/57
1
Showers
at Chattanooga through 4 p.m. Yesterday.
Dayton
78/54
31
MONDAY
Few Showers
75
Crossville
73/54
30
SUNDAY
Few Clouds
Cookeville
75/56
40
SATURDAY
PM Shower
Local
Nashville
80/58
FRIDAY
Mostly Sunny
Regional
City
Asheville
Athens, GA
Augusta, GA
Birmingham
Bristol
Charleston, SC
Columbia, SC
Columbus, GA
Daytona Bch.
Destin
Greenville, SC
Huntsville
Jacksonville
28
27
This forecast
prepared by
Chief Meteorologist
Paul Barys
THURSDAY
Norm
1280’
1691’
692.2’
1928’
1075’
682.5’
1002’
1710’
813’
800’
595’
1526’
795’
634’
880’
1020’
830.76’
815’
886.8’
741’
564’
556’
Curr
1277.6’
1670.1’
627.7’
1919.8’
1050.6’
676.7’
970.0’
1667.0’
809.2’
794.5’
594.7’
1490.3’
791.3’
633.4’
867.8’
1007.6’
821.8’
809.2’
881.0’
737.2’
562.5’
553.0’
Chng
+0.4’
+0.6’
+0.3’
+0.3’
+0.4’
-0.6’
+1.1’
+2.0’
-0.3’
+0.9’
+0.5’
-0.2’
-0.5’
-0.7’
+0.4’
+0.5’
-0.1’
+0.1’
+0.1’
-0.6’
0.0’
+0.3’
High: 95° in Pecos, Texas
Low: 16° in Tioga, N.D.
City
Albany
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlantic City
Austin
Baltimore
Baton Rouge
Billings
Boston
Buffalo
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Dayton
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Fargo
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
43/27/s
50/39/rs
74/42/s
78/43/s
37/28/mc 43/27/mc
53/41/s
63/51/sh
81/62/s
81/63/mc
53/43/s
68/51/t
85/62/s
82/62/s
64/40/s
70/41/s
43/27/s
47/40/sh
44/39/s
58/39/sh
54/42/s
70/52/t
67/47/s
77/57/s
68/53/mc 70/41/s
66/54/s
75/45/t
53/49/s
66/43/s
82/61/s
82/62/s
62/52/s
73/43/t
69/41/s
74/43/s
76/47/mc 72/43/s
47/45/s
64/39/s
79/56/s
80/56/s
28/4/pc
32/6/pc
59/34/sh 48/37/pc
City
Grand Rapids
Greensboro, NC
Helena
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Lincoln
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Macon
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
New Orleans
New York City
Norfolk
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Peoria
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Today
Hi/Lo/F
55/47/t
61/40/s
52/34/s
81/65/s
83/63/s
68/56/s
79/58/t
72/57/s
76/42/s
83/61/s
67/51/s
76/59/s
78/54/s
64/47/t
69/44/s
81/67/s
50/39/s
54/38/s
82/59/s
76/45/s
75/55/t
52/39/s
83/53/s
Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
60/37/s
76/54/s
55/35/sh
81/67/s
83/62/pc
71/46/s
77/55/s
77/58/s
75/47/s
83/60/s
69/54/s
78/50/t
80/53/s
61/37/pc
52/36/s
81/66/s
57/46/sh
73/57/s
81/59/s
73/47/s
71/42/s
65/49/sh
87/55/s
City
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Portland, OR
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Richmond
Sacramento
St. Louis
Santa Fe
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Seattle
Topeka
Tucson
Tulsa
Washington
Wichita
Wilmington, DE
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
53/43/s
68/44/t
43/23/s
42/37/pc
54/43/ra
54/43/sh
46/27/s
50/41/sh
60/42/s
76/55/s
61/38/s
68/46/s
59/39/mc 61/36/sh
59/37/s
77/55/s
58/48/ra
60/47/ra
81/61/s
80/51/t
67/36/s
68/43/s
65/48/s
70/48/s
81/62/s
81/64/mc
63/51/s
64/56/s
61/51/ra
63/50/sh
64/50/ra
65/48/sh
54/44/ra
53/44/ra
78/52/s
77/53/s
81/50/s
83/51/s
83/59/pc 83/59/s
54/42/s
70/52/t
79/55/s
81/57/s
52/37/s
65/48/sh
City
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
New Delhi
Paris
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
62/48/sh 58/43/sh
65/41/s
67/39/s
78/52/t
78/52/t
40/28/s
43/33/rs
34/15/pc 36/16/mc
93/69/pc 93/69/s
68/50/s
68/44/s
City
Port-au-Prince
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
91/74/t
91/74/pc
86/73/s
83/71/t
72/48/s
74/47/s
56/36/s
59/36/s
74/63/pc 74/64/sh
55/40/s
59/41/sh
42/37/s
65/39/pc
International
City
Athens
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Frankfurt
Hong Kong
Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo/F
Hi/Lo/F
59/45/s
65/47/s
71/39/s
67/40/s
65/45/pc 63/44/sh
67/46/pc 72/52/s
76/56/s
72/53/s
64/44/s
63/42/sh
73/65/pc 70/65/s
Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy; mc/mostly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow;
s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy
ing the height of the racks
could create more storage
space if needed.
He said that while the
facility has about 100 parttimers on staff currently, it
will begin ramping up hiring
of more seasonal personnel
closer to the busy Christmas
holiday.
According to Amazon, the
center had about 1,400 total
jobs in 2011.
The head of the Chattanooga center said earlier this
year that the two Southeast
Tennessee facilities likely
will have 5,000 workers at
some point in 2012.
Contact Mike Pare at
Staff Photo by John Rawlston
[email protected]
Debbie Harp stocks the shelves at the Amazon Fulfillor 423-757-6318.
ment Services facility near Charleston, Tenn., Monday.
extend a program of shuffling
its investment portfolio to shift
more of its holdings into longterm Treasurys. That could
• Continued from Page C1 help lower long-term rates. Or
the Fed could launch another
take further steps, if the econ- round of bond-buying.
omy falters, to try to further
drive down long-term borrowing rates. The goal would be to SEE EVERY HOME!
encourage more spending by JillHillHomes.com
consumers and businesses.
JILL HILL
Robert Dye, chief econoCell: 595-3359
mist at Dallas-based Comer- Office: 664-1900
ica bank, said the Fed might
Stocks
34280226
CHANNEL 3
7-DAY
FORECAST
..
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FREE CONSULTATIONS &
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK
CHARLES W. WHELAND III
Law office of Thomas Bible Jr.
6918 Shallowford Rd., Ste 100 | 423-424-3116
LOCAL, PROFESSIONAL, AFFORDABLE ATTORNEYS
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JOB GROWTH
Bradley County Mayor
D. Gary Davis said Amazon
originally pledged to create 250 full-time jobs at the
Charleston site.
“Now, they’ve almost doubled that,” he said.
State Rep. Kevin Brooks,
R-Cleveland, said Amazon
has “gone above and beyond”
what it originally promised.
The House assistant
majority leader said Amazon will have five distribution centers in Tennessee
when it’s finished building
two more this year.
Doug Berry, vice president
for economic development
with the Cleveland-Bradley
Chamber of Commerce, said
Amazon fills “a good niche”
in the area’s labor market.
Cleveland, Tenn., Mayor
Tom Rowland quipped that
Amazon’s Bradley distribution center is so big that “we
could save a lot of money
putting the airport on the
roof.” The city is relocating
its airport.
Thomas said the new storage space will add about 20
percent more shelving to the
facility. In addition to the
shelving, the facility stores
goods on the floor and in
large racks that run nearly
floor to ceiling.
Thomas said that increas-
34165916
...
.
D
SPORTS
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012
timesfreepress.com/sports
Hunter
returns
to field
PREP FOOTBALL: Crane fired as Southeast Whitfield coach, D6
q
q
ALABAMA FOOTBALL: Saban and assistants get raises, contract extensions, D5
ELITE EIGHT: BAYLOR 77, TENNESSEE 58
Summitt
deserved
better draw
dementia, Alzheimer’s type.
“This team is about Pat Summitt.
This team has battled all year,” associate
head coach Holly Warlick said as she
fought back tears. “I’m proud of them.
I thought our team and coaching staff
obviously was in a difficult situation.
But I thought this team was responsive.
I wouldn’t trade anything that we did
this year.”
The Lady Bears (38-0), who are back
in the national semifinals for the second
time in three years, will face Stanford
on Sunday night in Denver. Should Baylor win it all, it’ll become the first men’s
or women’s basketball team in NCAA
history to finish a year with 40 wins.
Baylor held Tennessee to 30.3 per-
Pat Summitt deserved
better.
Not from her Tennessee Lady Vols basketball
team. They did all they
could against the Baylor Bears and 6-foot-8
Brittney Griner in Monday night’s 77-58 loss in
the Des Moines NCAA
regional final.
No,
Summitt
deserved
better
from the
tourney
selection
committee
that all but
assured
Mark
her seaWiedmer
son, and
Commentary
probably
her career, would end
short of this year’s Final
Four.
Don’t misunderstand.
UT in no way deserved to
be a No. 1 seed. With eight
losses, the Lady Vols actually may have been given
a gift as a second seed.
But could the selection committee not have
placed Tennessee in the
Raleigh Regional opposite
Notre Dame? Or against
Stanford in the Fresno
Regional?
And, yes, I know the
Lady Vols were humbled
by both the Fighting Irish
and Cardinal during the
regular season. Doesn’t
matter. Baylor is the one
team in the tourney that
UT absolutely, positively
couldn’t have been given a
realistic chance to beat.
As for the fourth No. 1,
given the frigid relationship that exists between
UConn coach Geno
Auriemma and Summitt,
that potential pairing
would have been equally
devastating for far different reasons.
You could fairly say
that sentimentality has
no place in the selection
process, and were this the
men’s tournament I might
agree with you. But the
women’s tournament only
See LADY VOLS, Page D4
See WIEDMER Page D4
■ The Vols’ receiver
recovering from knee
surgery is “pretty excited”
after Monday’s practice.
By Patrick Brown
Staff Writer
KNOXVILLE — One route
was all Justin Hunter needed
to feel a brief moment of nostalgia.
The junior-to-be Tennessee
receiver took off on a deep pattern early during the Volunteers’
first spring practice Monday
morning, and the memories of
where he was before a devastating knee injury certainly flashed
in his head.
Making it through today,
though, will be the trick for
Hunter and UT.
“It was good in the beginning,” Hunter said after his first
practice since tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in the Vols’
loss at Florida last September.
“Toward the end of practice I
felt a little soreness, but by that
time it was straight.
“I’m pretty excited because
the first day it wasn’t that bad,
but I know tomorrow’s going to
be a different day. I was running
on it a lot today.”
One advantage Hunter will
have as he tries to maximize a
limited spring is the daily rehabilitation he’s already endured.
More than six months removed
from the injury, he is ahead of
schedule in making a full recovery.
Monday was evidence of that,
as the 6-foot-4, 200-pounder
was making cuts, running routes
and catching passes sooner than
expected, though he certainly
isn’t 100 percent.
“He went through the whole
practice, but it’s not where he
can go full speed and then we
back him down,” coach Derek
Dooley said. “He’s kind of at
the same pace throughout practice, and it’s hard for him when
he’s getting pressed and those
[defensive] guys are full speed.
But he did: He went through
the whole practice, he ran a lot
of routes and now I think we
just have to see how his knee
responds from today.
“He probably did a little more
than we had anticipated back in
February. They’re moving along
— both him and [linebacker]
Brent [Brewer] are moving at a
pretty good pace — and we’ve
got to be smart about how we
See VOLS, Page D5
The Associated Press Photos
Baylor’s Brittney Griner grabs a rebound in front of Tennessee’s Glory Johnson during the first half of their
NCAA tournament regional final Monday night at Des Moines, Iowa. Undefeated Baylor won 77-58.
PAT’S LAST
STAND?
Baylor, Griner end
Lady Vols’ season
in regional final
By Luke Meredith
The Associated Press
Lady Vols coach Pat Summitt, right, is embraced by
Baylor coach Kim Mulkey.
“
It’s not fun for me
to coach against Pat. I
don’t take great pleasure
in that. But I have a job
to do.
”
— Kim Mulkey
DES MOINES, Iowa — The Baylor
University women’s basketball team has
just two wins to go for 40-0. Tennessee’s
future is far less certain.
Brittney Griner had 23 points, 15
rebounds and nine blocks before being
ejected with less than a minute left
Monday night, and top-seeded Baylor rolled over the Lady Vols 77-58 to
advance to the Final Four.
Shekinna Stricklen had 22 points
for Tennessee (27-9), whose seniors
became its first four-year class not to
reach a Final Four.
Pat Summitt has yet to say if she’ll
return for a 39th season as Tennessee coach. She announced in August
she’d been diagnosed with early-onset
Baylor has Moore
softball incentive
By Kelley Smiddie
Staff Writer
Staff File Photo by Patrick Smith
UT’s Justin Hunter watches
a game last season while
injured but is back now.
The Baylor softball team’s motto
this year is “State championship on
the field, fighting for Moore off the
field.” But the Lady Red Raiders
will be “fighting for Moore” at their
field Thursday.
Baylor is hosting neighboring
Red Bank High School in a Hits for
Hope fundraising game for breastcancer awareness. One reason is
that Kelly Moore, mother of junior
shortstop and pitcher Sarah Moore,
is in an ongoing battle with the disease.
“It will change your life in an
instant,” Kelly said. “You go from
being happy and healthy to being a
patient and a number label.”
Sarah turned 16 last March 10
and got the horrible birthday pres-
GETTING IN THE PINK
Below are the breast-cancer awareness
fundraising softball games in Hamilton
County this spring.
■ Thursday: Red Bank at Baylor, 5
■ April 9: Ooltewah at Hixson, 6
■ April 18: East Ridge at Ooltewah, 6
■ May 1: Central at Ooltewah, 5
ent of her mother being diagnosed
with breast cancer that day. Kelly
has since been through two major
rounds of chemotherapy, in addition to dealing with radiation treatments, and had a couple of hospital
stays.
“It’s been very rough,” she said.
And no doubt rough on Sarah.
“It’s just the type of kid Sarah is,”
Baylor coach Kelli Smith said. “She
never mentioned it in practice. She
Staff Photo by Angela Lewis
Kelly Moore and her daughter Sarah pose at Baylor in anticipation
of Thursday’s fundraiser sparked by Kelly’s battle against cancer.
never said a word.”
It hasn’t affected Sarah’s play.
She’s 1-0 as a pitcher and has a
.333 average with two homers and
12 RBIs batting leadoff for a 10-1
team.
The Baylor community knew the
situation and Kelly said the support
— from the cards to the visits to the
help with laundry — has been huge.
She made it to as many games as she
could last year, noting she treasures
a home run ball her daughter hit in
the Lady Trojan Classic at Soddy
See SOFTBALL, Page D5
34339164
■ To contact Sports • Phone: 423-757-6273 • Fax: 423-668-5049 • Email: [email protected]
Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
PAGE2BITS
SCHEDULES
Area Colleges
INTHEBLEACHERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L
Pct
19
4
.826
15
4
.789
14
5
.737
14
9
.609
12
8
.600
13
9
.591
13 11
.542
10
9
.526
11 10
.524
13 12
.520
10 13
.435
7 14
.333
6 15
.286
6 16
.273
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis
13
7
.650
Los Angeles
12
8
.600
San Francisco
14 10
.583
San Diego
15 11
.577
Colorado
13 10
.565
Houston
11 12
.478
Chicago
12 14
.462
Milwaukee
10 12
.455
Miami
8 10
.444
Philadelphia
10 13
.435
Cincinnati
10 14
.417
Arizona
9 14
.391
Atlanta
8 14
.364
Pittsburgh
8 14
.364
Washington
7 13
.350
New York
6 14
.300
NOTE: Split-squad games count in the standings;
games against non-major league teams do not.
———
Monday’s Games
Tampa Bay 10, Minnesota 4
N.Y. Mets 6, St. Louis 3
Washington 7, Houston 4
Boston 6, Philadelphia 0
Detroit 3, Miami 3, tie, 10 innings
Milwaukee 6, Cleveland 5
Colorado 6, L.A. Angels 2
San Francisco 4, Kansas City 2
Chicago Cubs (ss) 2, San Diego 0
L.A. Dodgers 4, Chicago White Sox 3
Arizona 3, Chicago Cubs (ss) 2
Baltimore 4, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., late
College Scores
SOUTH
Campbellsville 7-13, WVU Tech 0-3
Ferrum 6-12, Averett 2-6
New Orleans 7, Spring Hill 4
North Carolina 7, N.C. State 4
Baseball America Top 25
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — The top 25 teams in
the Baseball America poll with records through
March 25 and previous ranking (voting by the
staff of Baseball America):
Record Pvs
1. Florida
22-2
1
2. Stanford
15-2
2
3. Arkansas
22-3
3
4. Florida State
21-3
6
5. North Carolina
18-5
4
6. UCLA
17-4
7
7. Texas A&M
19-5 10
8. Arizona
18-7
5
9. Rice
18-8
9
10. Kentucky
24-1 16
11. South Carolina
17-7
8
12. Miami
19-5 12
13. Cal State Fullerton
14-8 13
14. Arizona State
15-8 14
15. Louisiana State
18-6 11
16. Mississippi
17-7 17
17. Central Florida
19-6 21
18. Texas
13-9 22
19. Purdue
16-4 25
20. North Carolina State
16-5 20
21. Baylor
18-7 NR
22. Oregon State
15-7 19
23. Oregon
15-6 24
24. San Diego
20-6 NR
25. Georgia
17-8 18
SOCCER
Men’s NIT
Men’s CONCACAF
Olympic Qualifying
CBI
BOWLING
League Scores
SPORTSONAIR
TUESDAY TELEVISION
■ Baseball
MLB: L.A. Angels vs San Francisco, ESPN2, 4 p.m.
NCAA: Clemson at Georgia, CSS, 7 p.m.
■ Basketball
NCAA W: Connecticut vs Kentucky, ESPN, 7 p.m.
NCAA W: Notre Dame vs Maryland, ESPN, 9 p.m.
NIT: Massachusetts vs Stanford, ESPN2, 7 p.m.
NIT: Washington vs Minnesota, ESPN2, 9 p.m.
NBA: Atlanta at Milwaukee, SSouth, 8 p.m.
■ Hockey
NHL: Tampa Bay at Boston, NBCSN, 7:30 p.m.
NHL: Nashville at St. Louis, FoxSS, 8 p.m.
■ Soccer
UEFA: APOEL vs Real Madrid at Cyprus, FoxSS, 2:30 p.m.
TUESDAY RADIO
■ Basketball
NCAA W: Connecticut vs Kansas, 1370 AM, 7 p.m.
NCAA W: Notre Dame vs Maryland, 1370 AM, 9 p.m.
■ Hockey
NHL: Nashville at St. Louis, 105.1 FM, 8 p.m.
BASEBALL
BASKETBALL
Collegiate Baseball Poll
Women’s NIT
MLB Spring Training
Toronto
Detroit
Oakland
Los Angeles
Seattle
New York
Kansas City
Baltimore
Boston
Minnesota
Chicago
Tampa Bay
Cleveland
Texas
BASKETBALL
CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Best-of-3)
Monday
Pittsburgh (20-16) at Washington State (18-16), late
Wednesday
Washington State at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
Friday (if necessary)
Washington State at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
Area High Schools
BASEBALL
For a list of upcoming events in the area’s
sports community, check out
timesfreepress.com/sportscalendar
SEMIFINALS
Madison Square Garden, New York
Tuesday
UMass (24-10) vs. Stanford (24-11), 7 p.m.
Washington (24-10) vs. Minnesota (22-14), 9 p.m.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Thursday
Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.
All Times Eastern
Tuesday, March 27
BASEBALL
Chattanooga State at Hiwassee (2), 1
Trevecca Nazarene at Lee, 4
Shorter at Bryan, 5
SOFTBALL
Covenant at Berry (2), 2
Brenau at Lee (2), 3
Bryan at Truett-McConnell (2), 3
Roane State at Chattanooga State (2), 3
Cleveland St. at Tenn. Wesleyan JV (2), 3
Tuesday, March 27
BASEBALL
Cleveland at Walker Valley, 1
Bledsoe County at Sequatchie County, 2:30
Brainerd at Central, 5
Chattanooga Christian at Notre Dame, 5
Howard at Red Bank, 5
Meigs County at Polk County, 5
Silverdale Baptist at Boyd-Buchanan, 5
Soddy-Daisy at Baylor, 5
Grundy County at Signal Mountain, 5
Hixson at East Hamilton, 6
McMinn Central at McCallie, 6
South Pittsburg at Van Buren County, 6
McMinn County at Bradley Central, 7
Ooltewah at Rhea County, 7
Sonoraville at Coahulla Creek, 5:30
Calhoun at Lakeview-F.O., 5:30
Walker at Gordon Lee, 5
Mt. Paran Christian at Trion, 5:30
SOCCER
Boyd-Buchanan at Sequoyah, 5
Grace Academy at Silverdale, 5:30
Warren County at Ooltewah, 6
Bradley Central at Soddy-Daisy, 7
Central vs. East Ridge at Camp Jordan, 7
Chattanooga Christian at Dalton, 7
Notre Dame at Baylor, 7
East Hamilton at Arts & Sciences, 7
Ridgeland at Ringgold, 5, 7
Dade County at Calhoun, 5 (boys), 7 (girls)
Murray County at Southeast Whitfield, 5, 7
Coahulla Creek at Chattooga, 5:30, 7:30
Woodland at Northwest Whitfield, 5:45, 7:45
SOFTBALL
Copper Basin at Boyd-Buchanan (DH), 3:30
East Ridge at East Hamilton, 4:30
Sale Creek at Lookout Valley, 4:30
McMinn County at Ooltewah, 5
Soddy-Daisy vs. Rhea County at Bryan College, 5
Red Bank vs. Brainerd at Warner Park, 5
Chattanooga Christian vs. Notre Dame at
Warner Park, 5
Meigs County at Polk County, 5:30
Baylor at Marion County, 5:30
Bledsoe County at Signal Mountain, 5:30
Tyner at Central, 5:30
Grace Academy vs. Arts & Sciences
at Warner Park, 6
Grundy County at Sequatchie County, 6
Coffee County at White County, 7:30
Walker Valley in Disney Spring Training
at Orlando, Fla.
TENNIS
Lookout Valley at East Ridge, 3
East Hamilton vs. Signal Mountain
at Town Hall, 3:30
Ooltewah at Soddy-Daisy, 3:30
Chattanooga Christian vs. Notre Dame
at Champions Club, 3:45
Chattooga at Coahulla Creek, 4
SPORTS CALENDAR ONLINE
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The Collegiate Baseball
poll with records through March 25, points and
previous rank. Voting is done by coaches, sports
writers and sports information directors:
Record Pts Pvs
1. Florida
22-2 498 1
2. Kentucky
24-1 493 2
3. Stanford
15-2 492 3
4. Arkansas
22-3 490 4
5. Florida St.
21-3 487 5
6. North Carolina
18-5 482 7
7. Miami, Fla.
19-5 478 9
8. Texas A&M
19-5 475 13
9. N.C. State
16-5 473 11
10. Cal St. Fullerton
14-8 470 12
11. UCLA
17-4 467 16
12. Louisiana St.
18-6 465 8
13. Rice
18-8 463 10
14. South Carolina
17-7 461 6
15. Arizona
18-7 459 14
16. Oregon
15-6 457 17
17. Arizona St.
15-8 455 18
18. Baylor
18-7 453 27
19. Texas
13-9 450 21
20. Louisville
18-6 448 22
21. Central Florida
19-6 447 28
22. Purdue
16-4 444 24
23. Oregon St.
15-7 442 25
24. Auburn
15-9 440 —
25. Coastal Carolina
16-6 438 —
26. Georgia
17-8 435 23
27. Mississippi
17-7 433 26
28. Sam Houston St.
14-9 430 —
29. Missouri St.
19-6 427 —
30. St. Louis
19-5 424 —
THE ODDS
Glantz-Culver Line
Major League Baseball
American League at Tokyo
Wednesday
FAVORITE
LINE UNDERDOG LINE
Seattle
-130 Oakland-x
+120
Thursday
Oakland-x
-110 Seattle
+100
x-Home team
NCAA Basketball Tournament
Final Four
Saturday
FAVORITE
LINE O/U UNDERDOG
1
1
Louisville
Kentucky
8 ⁄2 (137 ⁄2)
Ohio State
21⁄2 (1361⁄2)
Kansas
NIT Semifinals
Today
Stanford
21⁄2 (1491⁄2)
UMass
Washington
1
(143)
Minnesota
College Insider Tournament
Championship
Wednesday
at Utah State
5
(127)
Mercer
NBA
FAVORITE
LINE
UNDERDOG
at Philadelphia
10
Cleveland
1
Minnesota
at Memphis
6 ⁄2
at Milwaukee
4
Atlanta
1
Houston
at Dallas
7 ⁄2
San Antonio
3
at Phoenix
1
at Portland
Oklahoma City
4 ⁄2
L.A. Lakers
6
at Golden State
NHL
FAVORITE
LINE UNDERDOG LINE
at New Jersey -140 Chicago
+120
at Pittsburgh
-280 N.Y. Islanders +230
at Toronto
-110 Carolina
-110
Buffalo
-120 at Washington +100
at Boston
-250 Tampa Bay
+210
Florida
-115 at Montreal
-105
N.Y. Rangers
-200 at Minnesota +170
at St. Louis
-150 Nashville
+130
BASKETBALL
CollegeInsider.com
CHAMPIONSHIP
Wednesday
Mercer (26-11) vs. Utah State (21-15), 9 p.m.
TENNESSEE LOTTERY
CONTACT
SPORTS
AP Men’s All-America
Statistics through March 13
First Team
Thomas Robinson, Kansas, 6-10, 237, junior,
Washington, 17.9 ppg, 11.8 rpg, 1.9 apg, 53.1 fg
pct. (65 first-place votes, 325 points)
Anthony Davis, Kentucky, 6-10, 220, freshman,
Chicago, 14.3 ppg, 10.0 rpg, 64.2 fg pct., 4.6
blocks (63, 321)
Draymond Green, Michigan State, 6-7, 230,
senior, Saginaw, Mich., 16.1 ppg, 10.4 rpg, 3.6
apg, 1.5 steals (53, 301)
Jared Sullinger, Ohio State, 6-9, 280, sophomore, Columbus, Ohio, 17.6 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 53.9
fg pct. (30, 246)
Doug McDermott, Creighton, 6-7, 220, sophomore, Ames, Iowa, 23.2 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 61.0 fg pct.,
49.5 3-pt fg pct. (29, 237)
Second Team
Isaiah Canaan, Murray State, 6-0, 195, junior,
Biloxi, Miss., 19.2 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 3.7 apg, 47.3 3-pt
fg pct., 84.0 ft pct, 1.4 steals (30, 232)
Marcus Denmon, Missouri, 6-3, 185, senior,
Kansas City, Mo., 17.6 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 2.1 apg, 40.9
3-pt fg pct., 89.8 ft pct., 1.6 steals (22, 220)
Tyler Zeller, North Carolina, 7-0, 250, senior,
Washington, Ind., 16.5 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 55.5 fg pct.,
80.9 ft pct., 1.3 blocks (7, 185)
Jae Crowder, Marquette, 6-6, 235, senior, Villa
Rica, Ga., 17.4 ppg, 8.1 rpg, 2.1 apg, 50.5 fg pct.,
2.4 steals (6, 140)
Kevin Jones, West Virginia, 6-8, 260, senior,
Mount Vernon, N.Y., 20.1 ppg, 11.1 rpg, 38.3
minutes, 51.3 fg pct. (2, 112)
Third Team
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Kentucky, 6-7, 232, freshman, Somerdale, N.J., 11.8 ppg, 7.6 rpg, 2.0
apg (0, 89)
Tyshawn Taylor, Kansas, 6-3, 185, senior, Hoboken, N.J., 17.3 ppg, 4.8 apg, 49.2 fg pct, 43.5
3-pt fg pct. (2, 83)
John Jenkins, Vanderbilt, 6-4, 220, junior, Hendersonville, Tenn., 19.9 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 44.8 3-pt fg
pct., 84.3 ft pct. (2, 73)
Kendall Marshall, North Carolina, 6-4, 195,
sophomore, Dumfries, Va., 7.8 ppg, 2.6 rpg, 9.7
apg, 1.2 steals (5, 49)
Damian Lillard, Weber State, 6-3, 195, junior,
Oakland, Calif., 24.4 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 4.1 apg, 42.1
3-pt fg pct., 88.1 ft pct., 1.5 steals (3, 45)
Honorable Mention
Harrison Barnes, North Carolina; Will Barton,
Memphis; Julian Boyd, LIU Brooklyn; Ryan Broekhoff, Valparaiso; De’Mon Brooks, Davidson.
Trey Burke, Michigan; Deonte Burton, Nevada; Torrey Craig, S.C.-Upstate; Paul Crosby, Mississippi
Valley State; Matthew Dellavedova, Saint Mary’s.
LaRon Dendy, Middle Tennessee; Matt Dickey,
UNC Asheville; Jamaal Franklin, San Diego State;
Jorge Gutierrez, California; John Henson, North
Carolina.
Robbie Hummel, Purdue; Pierre Jackson, Baylor;
Darius Johnson-Odom, Marquette; Perry Jones III,
Baylor; Kris Joseph, Syracuse.
Jeremy Lamb, Connecticut; Scott Machado, Iona;
C.J. McCollum, Lehigh; Dominique Morrison, Oral
Roberts; Mike Moser, UNLV.
Andrew Nicholson, St. Bonaventure; Kyle O’Quinn,
Norfolk State; Darryl Partin, Boston University;
Ryan Pearson, George Mason; Mason Plumlee,
Duke.
Patrick Richard, McNeese State; Austin Rivers,
Duke; Zack Rosen, Pennsylvania; Mike Scott,
Virginia; John Shurna, Northwestern.
Jordan Taylor, Wisconsin; Dion Waiters, Syracuse;
Casper Ware, Long Beach State; Mitchell Watt,
Buffalo; Royce White, Iowa State; Isaiah Wilkerson,
NJIT; Nate Wolters, South Dakota State; Cody
Zeller, Indiana.
GEORGIA LOTTERY
Winning numbers picked Monday:
Cash 3 Midday: 1-3-6
Lucky Sum: 10
Cash 4 Midday: 0-4-6-7
Lucky Sum: 17
Cash 3 Evening: 5-1-4
Lucky Sum: 10
Cash 4 Evening: 3-6-1-4
Lucky Sum: 14
Tennessee Cash: Not available
Winning numbers picked Sunday:
Cash 3: 8-2-6
Lucky Sum: 16
Cash 4: 6-9-3-3
Lucky Sum: 21
SEMIFINALS
Wednesday
Syracuse (22-14) vs. James Madison (28-7),
7 p.m.
Oklahoma State (20-12) vs. San Diego (268), 8 p.m.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday
Semifinal winners, 3 p.m.
Winning numbers picked Monday:
Cash 3 Midday: 9-2-6
Cash 4 Midday: 2-7-4-9
Georgia FIVE Midday: 5-7-1-5-6
Cash 3 Evening: 7-9-9
Cash 4 Evening: Not available
Georgia FIVE Evening: 1-5-6-6-9
Fantasy 5: Not available
Decades of Dollars: 7-11-13-19-20-47
HOLIDAY BOWL BRAINERD
Eastgate League
Stan Gregory 816 (300), Ralph Richardson 790,
Chris Harmon 773, Steven Nichols 773, Gary
Hancock 749, Jason Day 732, Keith White 725,
Tyler Field 724, Duane Mayo 723, Shawn Cole
722, Joe Cranfield 704.
Monday Nite Mixers
Men: Beasley Frazier 655, Roy Cochren 604,
Ted Alvey 604, David Tittle 597, John Hall 594.
Women: Shervon Frazier 605, Linda Crutcher
565, Tammy Howard 538, Betty Norman 524,
Carolyn Miller 494.
HOLIDAY BOWL HIXSON
Sunday Night Roundup
Men: Doug Barber 677, David O’Malley 672,
Steven O’Malley 612, Mike Dunn 602. Women:
Robin O’Malley 518, Heather Carnes 487,
Aimee Sizemore 421, Carolyn O’Malley 383.
MIDDLE SCHOOL
GOLF
St. Jude 180 (Jarrod Nelson 42), BoydBuchanan 195 (Jake Campbell 48), OLPH 213
(Gehrig Johnson 43), Collegedale Academy 234
(Derrick Turk 54)
GIRLS’ TENNIS
Christian Heritage 9 (Claudia Brumlow standout),
Boyd-Buchanan 0 (Hannah Isenberg standout)
BOYS’ TENNIS
Christian Heritage 6 (Jordan McClure standout),
Boyd-Buchanan 3 (Charlier Driver standout)
BASEBALL
Brown 9 (Dakota Fowler 7 IP, 10 Ks), East
Hamilton 4 (Jeffrey Coleman 3B)
TENNIS
Sony Ericsson Open
Monday
Tennis Center at Crandon Park, Key Biscayne,
Fla.
Purse: Men, $4.83 million (Masters 1000);
Women, $4.83 million (Premier)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles-Men
Third Round
Mardy Fish (8), U.S., def. Kevin Anderson (28),
South Africa, 6-4, 6-3.
Richard Gasquet (17), France, def. Albert
Ramos, Spain, 6-2, 5-7, 6-3.
Nicolas Almagro (12), Spain, def. Fernando
Verdasco (20), Spain, 6-3, 6-4.
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Viktor Troicki
(27), Serbia, 6-3, 6-4.
David Ferrer (5), Spain, def. Julien Benneteau
(30), France, 7-6 (5), 6-4.
Juan Martin del Potro (11), Argentina, def.
Marin Cilic (23), Croatia, 6-3, 7-6 (3).
Andy Roddick (31), U.S., def. Roger Federer
(3), Switzerland, 7-6 (4), 1-6, 6-4.
Juan Monaco (21), Argentina, def. Gael Monfils
(14), France, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Singles-Women
Fourth Round
Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Ekaterina
Makarova, Russia, 6-4, 7-6 (3).
Marion Bartoli (7), France, def. Maria Kirilenko
(22), Russia, 6-1, 6-2.
Agnieszka Radwanska (5), Poland, def. Garbine Muguruza Blanco, Spain, 6-3, 6-2.
Serena Williams (10), U.S., def. Sam Stosur
(6), Australia, 7-5, 6-3.
Li Na (8), China, def. Sabine Lisicki (12), Germany, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2.
Caroline Wozniacki (4), Denmark, def. Yanina
Wickmayer (23), Belgium, 7-6 (6), 6-0.
Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus, def. Dominika
Cibulkova (16), Slovakia, 1-6, 7-6 (7), 7-5.
NASCAR
Sprint Cup Leaders
Through March 25
Points
1, Greg Biffle, 195. 2, Kevin Harvick, 188. 3,
Dale Earnhardt Jr., 178. 4, Tony Stewart, 177.
5, Martin Truex Jr., 175. 6, Matt Kenseth, 173. 7,
Denny Hamlin, 171. 8, Clint Bowyer, 157. 9, Jimmie Johnson, 156. 10, Ryan Newman, 155.
11, Paul Menard, 148. 12, Carl Edwards, 146.
13, Joey Logano, 146. 14, Kyle Busch, 143.
15, Jeff Burton, 142. 16, Brad Keselowski,
139. 17, Mark Martin, 129. 18, Juan Pablo
Montoya, 123. 19, Regan Smith, 118. 20, Bobby
Labonte, 108.
Money
1, Matt Kenseth, $2,192,126. 2, Dale Earnhardt
Jr., $1,599,240. 3, Tony Stewart, $1,488,135.
4, Greg Biffle, $1,430,003. 5, Denny Hamlin,
$1,412,900. 6, Kyle Busch, $1,204,833. 7, Kevin
Harvick, $1,132,860. 8, Jeff Burton, $1,125,395.
9, Martin Truex Jr., $1,089,338. 10, Jimmie
Johnson, $1,077,368.
11, Carl Edwards, $1,038,735. 12, Ryan Newman, $998,756. 13, Brad Keselowski, $944,585.
14, Jeff Gordon, $897,638. 15, Clint Bowyer,
$886,713. 16, A J Allmendinger, $874,395. 17,
Marcos Ambrose, $859,210. 18, Paul Menard,
$853,945. 19, Jamie McMurray, $841,625. 20,
Juan Pablo Montoya, $829,275.
SOCCER
MLS Standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Sporting Kansas City 3 0 0 9 6 1
Houston
2 1 0 6 2 2
Chicago
1 0 1 4 2 1
New York
1 2 0 3 5 5
Columbus
1 1 0 3 2 2
New England
1 2 0 3 1 4
D.C.
0 2 1 1 1 4
Montreal
0 2 1 1 1 5
Philadelphia
0 3 0 0 2 6
Toronto FC
0 2 0 0 1 6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Vancouver
2 0 1 7 3 0
Seattle
2 0 0 6 5 1
Real Salt Lake
2 1 0 6 5 2
San Jose
2 1 0 6 4 1
Colorado
2 1 0 6 5 5
Portland
1 1 1 4 4 3
FC Dallas
1 1 1 4 4 4
Los Angeles
1 1 0 3 4 4
Chivas USA
1 2 0 3 1 2
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
———
Friday’s Game
FC Dallas at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
Columbus at Toronto FC, 2 p.m.
Montreal at New York, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
San Jose at Seattle FC, 10 p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Portland, 10 p.m.
New England at Los Angeles, 11 p.m.
Top two nations in each group advance
FIRST ROUND
GROUP A
GP W D L GF GA PTS
Canada
3 1 2 0 3 1 5
El Salvador
2 1 1 0 4 0 4
United States
2 1 0 1 6 2 3
Cuba
3 0 1 2 1 11 1
———
Monday at Nashville, Tenn.
Canada 1, Cuba 1, tie
United States 3, El Salvador 3, tie
GROUP B
GP W D L GF GA PTS
x-Mexico
2 2 0 0 10 1 6
Honduras
2 1 0 1 2 4 3
Panama
2 0 1 1 2 3 1
Trinidad
2 0 1 1 2 8 1
x-advanced to to semifinals
———
Tuesday at Carson, Calif.
Honduras vs. Trinidad and Tobago, 9 p.m.
Mexico vs. Panama, 11:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
Monday’s Moves
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Optioned INF Matt
Antonelli, RHP Brad Bergesen and RHP Jason
Berken to Norfolk (IL). Reassigned OF Scott
Beerer, C John Hester, INF Steve Tolleson, RHP
Armando Galarraga and LHP Dontrelle Willis to
their minor league camp. Placed LHP Zach Britton and INF Brian Roberts on the 15-day DL.
DETROIT TIGERS—Optioned RHP Jacob
Turner to Toledo (IL). Reassigned RHP Chris
Bootcheck, INF Audy Ciriaco, INF Argenis Diaz,
INF Ryan Strieby and OF Quintin Berry to minor
league camp.
MINNESOTA TWINS—Reassigned RHP Brendan Wise to minor league camp.
TEXAS RANGERS—Optioned RHP Mark
Hamburger to Round Rock (PCL). Assigned
RHP Sean Green to their minor league camp.
Released LHP Joe Beimel, LHP Mitch Stetter
and OF Conor Jackson.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Agreed to terms with
RHP Dustin McGowan on a three-year contract.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS—Agreed to terms with RHP
Shawn Camp on a minor league contract.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Announced LHP
John Grabow exercised his option to opt out
of his minor league contract and become a
free agent.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Returned C Mike
Rivera to minor league camp.
NEW YORK METS—Agreed to terms with RHP
Chris Young on a minor league contract.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Reassigned OF
Adron Chambers to their minor league camp.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Placed INF Logan Forsythe on the 15-day DL. Reassigned RHP Brad
Boxberger to minor league camp.
American Association
LAREDO LEMURS—Traded LHP Logan Williamson to San Angelo (NAL) for future considerations.
SIOUX FALLS PHEASANTS—Signed INF Joe
Anthonsen.
Frontier League
EVANSVILLE OTTERS—Signed OF Troy Frazier to a contract extension. Released 1B Steve
Caseres and SS Greg Fontenot.
FLORENCE FREEDOM—Signed RHP Ryan
Bean, RHP Daniel DeSimone, INF Tucker
Nathans, INF Edwin Padua, and RHP Stephen
Shackleford.
RIVER CITY RASCALS—Signed 1B Chris
Andreas. Released LHP Kolby Moore and RHP
Jason Pankau.
ROCKFORD RIVERHAWKS—Signed OF Brandon Anderson to a contract extension. Signed C
Andrew Caron and SS Danny Gonzalez. Traded
RHP Adam Osteen to McAllen (NAL) for a
player to be named.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS—Agreed to terms with
LS Mike Leach on a three-year contract and LB
Reggie Walker on a two-year contract.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Released FB
Lousaka Polite.
ST. LOUIS RAMS—Signed WR Steve Smith.
Canadian Football League
CALGARY STAMPEDERS—Signed RB Matt
Walter.
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS—Re-elected Jeff
Thompson to the board of directors.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINS—Assigned F Trent Whitfield
to Providence (AHL).
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Recalled G Carter
Hutton from Rockford (AHL).
DETROIT RED WINGS—Reassigned D Adam
Almqvist to Grand Rapids (AHL).
NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Recalled D Peter Harrold from Albany (AHL).
NEW YORK RANGERS—Agreed to terms with
F Andrew Yogan.
American Hockey League
GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS—Signed F Alan
Quine and D Richard Nedomlel.
ECHL
READING ROYALS—Released D Daniel Spivak.
Central Hockey League
ALLEN AMERICANS—Activated F Brett Clouthier from league suspension. Signed G Jon
Groenheyde.
EVANSVILLE ICEMEN—Declared D Karl Linden an unrestricted free agent.
FORT WAYNE KOMETS—Declared F Jesse
Bennefield an unrestricted free agent.
MISSOURI MAVERICKS—Signed G Jakub
Macek. Declared D Brad Good an unrestricted
free agent.
RIO GRANDE VALLEY KILLER BEES—Signed
D Cody Carlson.
TEXAS BRAHMAS—Declared F Thomas
Galiani an unrestricted free agent.
TULSA OILERS—Activated D Sean Erickson
from league suspension.
WICHITA THUNDER—Activated F Alex Bourret
from league suspension.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
SPORTING KANSAS CITY—Waived F Birahim Diop.
TENNIS
WTA—Named Bessie Lee, Winston Lord, Bruce
Rockowitz and William Pfeiffer to the Global
Advisory Council.
COLLEGE
ALABAMA—Signed football coach Nick Saban
to a two-year contract extension through Jan.
31, 2020; defensive coordinator Kirby Smart
and offensive coordinator Doug Nussmeier to
three-year contracts; outside linebackers coach
Lance Thompson to a two-year contract; and
tight ends and special teams coach Bobby
Williams, strength and conditioning coach Scott
Cochran, defensive line coach Chris Rumph,
running backs coach Burton Burns, wide receivers coach Mike Groh and secondary coach
Jeremy Pruitt to one-year contract extensions.
DRAKE—Announced the resignation of women’s basketball coach Amy Stephens.
DREXEL—Agreed to terms with men’s basketball coach Bruiser Flint on a multiyear contract
extension.
DUKE—Announced freshman G Austin Rivers
will enter the NBA draft.
MISSISSIPPI STATE—Announced junior F
Renardo Sidney will enter the NBA draft.
MURRAY STATE—Agreed to terms with men’s
basketball coach Steve Prohm on a one-year
contract extension through the 2015-16 season.
UAB—Named Jerod Haase men’s basketball
coach.
WAGNER—Promoted men’s assistant basketball coach Bashir Mason to head coach.
AROUNDTHEREGION
Fuzzard, Ringle
league honorees
The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s Michelle Fuzzard was voted the Southern
Conference softball player of the week for the
third time this season after she set school and
league records with her nine RBIs in a 16-4 win
spanning Saturday and Sunday at Appalachian
State. That was two more than the previous
Lady Mocs total for a game, and in the process
Fuzzard passed Amanda Cone’s SoCon career
record of 184 RBIs for College of Charleston
(2001-04) and now is at 191. Fuzzard went 3-for-3
with two home runs, a double and a basesloaded walk.
■ Lee University shortstop Jennifer Ringle
was the Southern States Athletic Conference
softball player of the week after collecting 11
hits in 15 at-bats in four wins. She was 4-for-4
with a grand slam, a double and six RBIs in one
game and had two homers, a triple, two doubles,
10 RBIs and nine runs scored for the week. The
28-5 Lady Flames, ranked 15th in the NAIA, host
Brenau in a showdown of the SSAC East’s top
two teams today at 3.
■ UTC softball coach Frank Reed will be
the guest speaker for the UTC Mocs Club’s
meeting tonight at 7 in the Hall of Fame Room of
McKenzie Arena, and the public is invited. The
club also will honor its athletes of the month for
January (Ricky Taylor and Whitney Hood)
and February (Jamaal Burroughs and Taylor
Hall).
FISHING
■ Joe Leonard of Bristol, Va., won the
Walmart Bass Fishing League Volunteer Division season-opening tournament Saturday on
Lake Chickamauga with a five-bass limit totaling
25 pounds, 2 ounces. He received $4,037 for his
haul. Knoxville’s Shane Sloan was second with
19-9, good for $2,019, and Dayton’s Michael Neal
was third with 19-4 and got $1,345. Madisonville’s
Brian Holcomb tied Jonathan Henry of Grant,
Ala., for fourth at 18-15, and Ooltewah’s Josh Wofford was sixth at 18-14. Kingston’s Jimmy Flanagan won the co-angler category with 20-8 and
got $2,019, and Kenneth Palmer of Lenoir City
was second at 19-4, good for $1,009. Chattanooga’s
Tyler Youngblood was fourth with 15-4. In the
BFL Music City tournament on Kentucky Lake,
Manchester’s Brent Sain was sixth among the
pros with 15-10 and Crossville’s Kibbee McCoy
was ninth among the co-anglers with 11-11.
LACROSSE
■ Colorado College ended the Sewanee men’s
lacrosse team’s four-game win streak with a 13-8
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference victory Sunday at Colorado Springs. Davis Brown
scored three goals and Tommy Healy made 12
saves for Sewanee (6-3, 1-1).
GOLF
■ Howell Kerr of Dalton and Greg Brock
of Calhoun closed with a 68 Sunday and tied for
first place in the third flight and eighth overall in
the Georgia Four-Ball tournament with a 54-hole
209 at Southern Hills Golf Club in Hawkinsville. Macon’s Ryan Emory and Billy Foshee
were the overall winners by three strokes with
a 199.
■ SAVANNAH, Ga. — Lee University’s
Courtney Shelton is tied for third individually at 74 and teammates Geandra Almeida
and Kristin Bourg are among those sharing
eighth place at 77 after the first round of the
SCAD Invitational women’s golf tournament
at Wilmington Island Club. Lee is third in the
10-team field at 308, one shot behind the host
school. Northwood leads at 299.
BOWLING
■ Justus Cross, representing AMF Tri State
Lanes in East Ridge, won two $100 scholarships
in the Tennessee USBC Youth Pepsi Tournament held recently at Holiday Bowl Brainerd.
The event included more than 500 bowlers from
throughout the state, competing in 11-under
and 12-up age groups in handicap and scratch
divisions. Cross got his scholarships for his
high scratch game of 230 and his 292 handicap
score in the 9 a.m. squad. Reginald Long from
Holiday Brainerd got a $100 scholarship with
his 11 a.m. high scratch game of 243.
Staff Reports
Correction
Sequatchie County High School senior Emily
Dagnan defeated Katie Brunacini of Los
Angeles 16-9 in the women’s lightweight
(132-pound) final of the USA Boxing
National Championships early this month
at Fort Carson, Colo. Another Los Angeles
resident was incorrectly listed as Dagnan’s
victim in a March 4 story.
MARKTRAIL
Winning numbers picked Sunday:
Cash 3 Midday: 2-7-7
Cash 4 Midday: 5-1-4-4
Georgia FIVE Midday: 6-4-3-8-2
Cash 3 Evening: 3-8-0
Cash 4 Evening: 1-3-3-9
Georgia FIVE Evening: 0-9-6-5-0
Fantasy 5: 4-10-33-34-36
■ SPORTS EDITOR
Jay Greeson 423-757-6273
[email protected]
■ DEPUTY SPORTS EDITOR
Ron Bush 423-757-6291
[email protected]
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Jim Tanner 423-757-6478
[email protected]
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Ward Gossett 423-757-6288
[email protected]
by phone: 423-757-6364 or 1-800-733-2637 • by fax: 423-668-5049 • by email: [email protected]
■ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Stephen Hargis 423-757-6293
[email protected]
...
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NBA
Tiger may be starting phase two
Philadelphia
Boston
New York
Toronto
New Jersey
27
27
25
16
16
Southeast Division W
Miami
Orlando
Atlanta
Washington
Charlotte
35
32
30
11
7
Central Division
W
x-Chicago
40
Indiana
29
Milwaukee
22
Cleveland
17
Detroit
17
x-clinched playoff spot
L Pct GB
22
22
25
34
35
.551 —
.551 —
.500 21⁄2
.320 111⁄2
.314 12
L Pct GB
13
18
20
38
40
.729 —
.640 4
.600 6
1
.224 24 ⁄2
.149 271⁄2
L Pct GB
11
19
27
29
32
.784 —
.604 91⁄2
.449 17
1
.370 20 ⁄2
.347 22
MONDAY’S RESULTS
■ Boston 102, Charlotte 95: Paul Pierce
scored a season-high 36 points, and the
Celtics held on to beat the Bobcats to
move into a first-place tie with the 76ers in
the Atlantic Division.
■ Indiana 105, Miami 90: Danny Granger
scored 25 points to help the Pacers beat
the Heat.
■ Orlando 117, Toronto 101: Ryan
Anderson made a career-best eight 3pointers and finished with 28 points to help
the Magic win their third straight game.
■ Detroit 79, Washington 77: The Pistons’
Rodney Stuckey scored half of his 24 points
in the fourth quarter, including the winning
20-foot jumper with 0.2 seconds left.
■ Utah 105, New Jersey 84: Paul Millsap
had 24 points and 13 rebounds, and the Jazz
shook off the weariness from their four-overtime loss 24 hours earlier to beat the Nets.
■ New York 89, Milwaukee 80: Carmelo
Anthony scored 28 points as the Knicks
beat the Bucks.
■ Denver 108, Chicago 91: Ty Lawson
tied a season high with 27 points, Arron
Southwest Division W
San Antonio
Dallas
Memphis
Houston
New Orleans
33
28
26
27
12
Northwest Division W
Oklahoma City
Utah
Denver
Minnesota
Portland
37
27
27
24
23
Pacific Division
W
L.A. Lakers
L.A. Clippers
Phoenix
Golden State
Sacramento
30
27
25
20
17
By Doug Ferguson
The Associated Press
L Pct GB
14
22
21
23
36
.702 —
.560 61⁄2
.553 7
.540 71⁄2
.250 211⁄2
L Pct GB
12
23
23
26
26
.755
.540
.540
.480
.469
—
101⁄2
101⁄2
1
13 ⁄2
14
L Pct GB
19
21
24
27
32
.612 —
.563 21⁄2
.510 5
.426 9
.347 13
Tebow laughs off worries
TODAY’S GAMES
Cleveland at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Atlanta at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Houston at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Portland, 10 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
F LO R H A M PA R K ,
N.J. — Tim Tebow laughed
a few times, smiled steadily
and stayed polite and composed.
If being surrounded by
dozens of cameras and
scores of media people
made him nervous, the
New York Jets’ new backup
quarterback didn’t show
it.
He was cool and calm
— exactly how he looked
during those hair-raising
comebacks last season
with the Denver Broncos.
His message: I’m here to
help, not to create another
Jets controversy.
“It’s an honor for all of
you to show up to hear me
say a few words,” a grinning Tebow told a pack of
more than 200 reporters.
Asked what he thought
about the media crush, he
said: “I really don’t think
it will be much of a distraction because, honestly,
I will try not to pay too
much attention to it.”
But Monday was only
the beginning, even though
both he and No. 1 quarterback Mark Sanchez don’t
want more drama.
Tebow spoke for more
than 30 minutes at a news
conference held in the
team’s field house because
the media turnout was
so massive it couldn’t be
accommodated in the normal press room. It was
hardly a run-of-the-mill
meet-and-greet, with the
star of the show hardly a
part-time player.
Cameras flashed, capturing every Tebow step,
as he strolled onto the
field and made his way to
the podium for his big New
York close-up. He appeared
polished and unfazed handling a barrage of 31 questions, most of his answers
measured and upbeat as
he deftly handled the local
media.
Tebow, who used the
word “excited” more than
40 times, refused to stir the
volatile mix that is the Jets.
He went out of his way to
say he believes he and Sanchez can co-exist despite
all the skeptics. And there
are plenty.
“I think the exciting
thing is me and Mark have a
great relationship,” Tebow
The Associated Press
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Phoenix 108, Cleveland 83
Minnesota 117, Denver 100
Atlanta 139, Utah 133,4OT
Boston 88, Washington 76
San Antonio 93, Philadelphia 76
Oklahoma City 103, Miami 87
Portland 90, Golden State 87
Memphis 102, L.A. Lakers 96
EASTERN
CONFERENCE
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Atlantic
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
206 168
253 195
241 213
206 200
180 224
x-St. Louis
x-Detroit
Nashville
Chicago
Columbus
76
76
76
76
76
Northeast
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Northwest
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Boston
Ottawa
Buffalo
Toronto
Montreal
75
77
76
76
76
y-Vancouver
Colorado
Calgary
Minnesota
Edmonton
75
77
76
75
76
Southeast
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Pacific
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
Washington
Winnipeg
Tampa Bay
Carolina
75
76
76
75
76
Dallas
Phoenix
Los Angeles
San Jose
Anaheim
75
77
75
75
76
x-N.Y. Rangers 75
x-Pittsburgh 75
x-Philadelphia 76
New Jersey 76
N.Y. Islanders 75
47
47
44
42
31
44
39
37
33
29
36
38
35
35
30
21 7 101
22 6 100
24 8 96
28 6 90
33 11 73
28 3
28 10
29 10
34 9
34 13
24 15
30 8
33 8
33 7
31 15
91
88
84
75
71
87
84
78
77
75
244 184
236 227
197 209
217 239
197 211
186 206
205 214
205 223
214 255
202 228
47
46
44
42
24
45
40
34
31
31
41
37
37
38
32
20
25
24
26
45
9 103
5 97
8 96
8 92
7 55
21 9
31 6
27 15
34 10
36 9
29 5
27 13
26 12
27 10
33 11
99
86
83
72
71
87
87
86
86
75
196 147
237 187
219 199
230 220
177 250
229 187
200 202
186 208
159 207
206 223
198 198
200 202
175 164
205 195
191 212
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
x-clinched playoff spot; y-clinched division
MONDAY’S RESULTS
■ Tampa Bay 5, Philadelphia 3: The Lightning’s Martin St. Louis scored the go-ahead
goal early in the third period, and Steven
Stamkos notched his team-record 53rd goal.
■ Detroit 7, Columbus 2: Tomas Holmstrom scored two goals, and the Red
Wings earned a postseason berth for a
team-record 21st consecutive year.
■ Ottawa 6, Winnipeg 4: Daniel Alfredsson scored two goals in the third period to
send the Senators to a win over the Jets.
■ Calgary 5, Dallas 4: Mike Cammalleri had a goal and two assists, and the
Flames used a four-goal second period for
a win over the Stars.
■ Los Angeles at Vancouver, late
■ Colorado at San Jose, late
TODAY’S GAMES
Carolina at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Chicago at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Washington, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Florida at Montreal, 7:30 p.m.
Nashville at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
N.Y. Islanders 3, Florida 2, SO
Edmonton 6, Columbus 3
Washington 3, Minnesota 0
Pittsburgh 5, New Jersey 2
Nashville 6, Chicago 1
Boston 3, Anaheim 2
St. Louis 4, Phoenix 0
SPORTSBRIEFS
El Salvador keeps U.S.
from shot at Olympics
NASHVILLE — Jaime
Alas scored in stoppage time
and El Salvador ousted the
United States from Olympic
qualifying Monday night with
a 3-3 tie. The Americans had to
win to reach Saturday’s semifinals in Kansas City, Kan., and
they led 3-2 on Joe Corona’s
goal in the 68th minute. But
Alas scored his goal off the
hands off keeper Sean Johnson to stun the Americans,
who missed the Olympics for
the second time since 1976. El
Salvador reached the semifinals, putting it a win away
from its first Olympic berth
since 1968. Canada, which
tied Cuba 1-1 earlier, finished
second. Lester Blanco and
Andres Flores also scored for
El Salvador. Terrence Boyd
scored twice for the U.S., and
Johnson replaced keeper Bill
Hamid in the 39th minute.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
■ ATLANTA — Georgia
Tech began spring football
practice with some bad news:
Senior linebacker Julian
Burnett is unlikely to play
this season. The school has
been vague about Burnett’s
condition, which apparently
stems from a tackle he made
in a Sun Bowl loss to Utah.
He led the Yellow Jackets in
rate never before seen in golf — and
then two years in the middle with no
trophies at all. That’s what makes Bay
Hill the start of a comeback, or at least
the start of his second career.
“Every golfer has two careers,”
Johnny Miller said at the end of
NBC’s telecast. “You have the first
burst, and then sometimes you have
a lull, and then you have a second
career. Some guys have a pretty darn
good second career. If I was coaching
him, I’d say, ‘OK, you made the mistakes you made. Let’s just start over.
This is the second career. You’ve got
a new swing. Let’s see what you can
do with this one.’
“It wouldn’t totally surprise me if
he were to win 35 to 40 times from
now,” he said. “He could do it. The way
he is playing right now, he is going to
kick butt.”
Afflalo added 22, and the Nuggets shot 50
percent to beat the Bulls.
■ Houston 113, Sacramento 106, OT:
Patrick Patterson scored a career-high 24
points and Earl Boykins hit four free throws
for the Rockets late in overtime.
■ New Orleans at L.A. Clippers, late
NHL
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
ORLANDO, Fla. — Tiger Woods
might be the only one who doesn’t
consider his win at Bay Hill the start
of a comeback.
As much joy as he felt on the 18th
green after finishing a five-shot victory — his first win on the PGA Tour in
two and a half years — he was all business when he fielded his first question
about what kind of leap forward this
might be.
“This is my second win,” Woods
said.
Technically, he was right.
Woods counts the Chevron World
Challenge nearly four months ago,
when he finished birdie-birdie for a
one-shot win over Zach Johnson. He
earned world ranking points that day.
And while it was only an 18-man field,
every player had to be among the top
50 in the world to qualify.
But later when he talked about his
progression, he mentioned just about every
event except the one
he won — the 36-hole
lead in the Australian
Open, a share of the 54hole lead in Abu Dhabi,
being in contention at
Pebble Beach and the
closing 62 at the Honda
Tiger
Classic.
There is no denying Woods
Woods is starting the second phase
of his career. He had every right to
bristle, as he did 11 years ago at Bay
Hill, at the mere mention of a slump
for going three months without a PGA
Tour win.
His record will show winning at a
tackles the last two seasons.
The Associated Press
Tim Tebow holds his first news conference since joining the New York Jets.
said. “We have had a great
relationship for the last
three years, I think. We’ve
been friends. We text
back and forth. We talked
already and we’re going to
have a great working relationship. I think we’ll have
a lot of fun together.”
The two do have a bit
of shared history. Sanchez hosted Tebow on his
recruiting trip to Southern
California. Sanchez didn’t
watch the big news conference because he was
working out, but he also
isn’t worried that Tebow
could take his job at some
point.
“We’re adding another
player and were not replacing anybody,” Sanchez said.
“I mean, he’s here to help
us and I’m confident in my
abilities. I know the team
feels the same way about
me. They have belief in
me.
“I’m not worried about
losing my spot.”
Payton may continue
NFL commissioner
Roger Goodell might allow
Sean Payton to coach the
Saints while he appeals his
season-long suspension for
his role in the team’s bounties program.
“I said in a letter they
have to appeal by April 2, I
believe,” Goodell said Mon-
day at the owners meetings
in Palm Beach, Fla. “If he
decides to appeal, I probably will allow him to continue and I would expedite
the hearing and I would
expedite my decision.
“We did meet twice and
went through the information. If he has something
else for me to consider, I
will.”
Payton’s agent, Donald
Yee, said “no decisions have
been made about an appeal”
by his client.
“Sean fully supports
the league’s player safety
goals,” Yee said. “Given this,
he probably won’t address
the entire league” when he
arrives at the owners meetings.
Browns get four picks
At Cleveland, the
Browns have holes all over
the field. Monday, they got
four more draft picks to
help plug them.
The NFL awarded
Cleveland four compensatory picks in this year’s
draft, giving the Browns a
total of 13, a baker’s dozen
of choices to revamp a talent-starved roster with
offensive and defensive
needs.
The club gained two
sixth-round picks (Nos. 204
and 205 overall) and a pair
in the seventh round (Nos.
245 and 247). The Browns
already have the No. 4 overall pick and three of the top
37 selections, which they
hope to improve a team
that went 4-12 last season
and has made the playoffs
just once in the past 13
years.
The Browns, Green Bay
Packers and New York Jets
were each given four picks,
and 32 picks were awarded
to 15 teams.
Before this year, the
Browns had only received
two compensatory picks
since the league first started awarding choices in
1994.
Under league rules, a
team losing more or better compensatory free
agents than it acquires in
the previous year is eligible
to receive compensatory
picks.
Concussions reduced
At Palm Beach, Fla.,
Rich McKay of the NFL’s
competition committed
said that moving kickoffs
up 5 yards last season
did exactly what the NFL
sought, reducing concussions.
“There was a 40 percent
reduction in concussions
on that play,” McKay said,
but he admitted surprise
that total kickoff returns
dropped 53 percent.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
■ MANHATTAN, Kan.
— A source close to Kansas State basketball coach
Frank Martin said Martin
will become South Carolina’s
next coach. The source confirmed a report in The State,
a newspaper in Columbia,
S.C., that said Martin will
be introduced as the Gamecocks’ coach this morning.
Martin just finished his fifth
season at K-State and has led
the Wildcats to three straight
NCAA tournaments. South
Carolina fired Darrin Horn
after the Gamecocks finished
last in the SEC this season.
■ BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
— UAB announced Monday
night the hiring of North Carolina assistant Jerod Haase
as head basketball coach.
Mike Davis was fired after
making the NCAA tournament once in six seasons.
■ STARKVILLE, Miss.
— Mississippi State forward
Renardo Sidney has signed
with an agent and will declare
for the NBA draft. The 6-foot10 junior from Jackson, Miss.,
averaged 11.5 points and 6.1
rebounds per game in two
seasons with the Bulldogs.
Wire Reports
Cougars pounce, win Roane series
Staff Reports
Cleveland State won its
rain-delayed TCCAA baseball series at Roane State
by beating the Raiders 12-1
in Monday’s game, following a 22-9 Cougars win and
a 5-3 Roane win Sunday in
Harriman.
Cody Commons was
4-for-4 with a run and an
RBI and Colin Sullivan and
Damo DeMatteo each had
two hits and two RBIs for
the Cougars (19-11, 5-7) in
Monday’s game, and each of
the three had an extra-base
hit. DeAndre Allen was 2for-4, stole three bases and
scored three runs, and Ross
Spurgeon and Hunter Hammond combined to pitch a
four-hitter.
Michael Hargrove was
4-for-4 with a home run, a
triple, five RBIs and four
runs in the Cougars’ Sunday
win, when Derek Shugart
was 3-for-5 with three RBIs,
Colby Harmon, Commons
and Allen each had three
hits and three runs and Burnside and Branca each
Harmon, Sullivan and Allen had two hits and an RBI.
added two RBIs each. Hargrove was 2-for-2 with two Lady Cougars go 3-1
walks and Commons was
The Cleveland State soft2-for-3 in the loss.
ball team won 6-0 and 5-3
Eric Brown was 3-for-3
with a triple and three RBIs in TCCAA play Friday at
Dyersburg State and won
in Roane’s win.
Chattanooga State also 6-5 in eight innings and lost
played Sunday and Monday 7-1 Saturday at Southwest
— at Volunteer State — and Tennessee.
Meghan Smith pitched a
won 5-0 Sunday with a run
in the eighth inning and four three-hitter Friday and got
in the ninth. Tripp White another win Saturday, when
pitched into the eighth and Ashlen Mitchell homered
got the win with relief from and Sydney Howell doubled
Taylor Patterson and a save and singled in the first game
for Cody Hartley. That lifted and Casey Griffin had three
the Tigers to 26-8 overall, hits for the Lady Cougars (1111, 3-1) in game two. Griffin,
8-2 in the TCCAA.
■ North Alabama 7, Howell and Halen Weeks
Tennessee Wesleyan 5: each had three hits in the
Sunday at Athens, J.P. LaMunyon drove in two runs as
the NCAA Division II visitors edged their NAIA hosts. In REMCO Business Center
For TWC (26-6), Jake Stone
I-75 Exit 348
had a two-run single in the
Ringgold, GA
first inning, Stephen Branca
scored two runs and Travis
K&M MASSAGE
second game at Dyersburg.
■ Lenoir-Rhyne 1-4,
Carson-Newman 0-3: Sunday at Jefferson City, Lady
Bears ace Dawon Millwood
from Hixson improved to
20-5 with the two one-run
South Atlantic Conference
wins. She pitched a fourhitter with eight strikeouts
in game one, when she got
Lady Eagles shortstop Shelby Robertson from Lakeview-Fort Oglethorpe for the
final out on a 12-pitch at-bat
with the tying and winning
runs on third and second.
Bri Shoemake from
Ooltewah was 2-for-3 with
an RBI and Ridgeland graduate Caitlyn Lance had an
RBI single for Carson-Newman in the second game.
SUN SPA
Oriental Massage
103 Catoosa Street
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WESTERN
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EASTERN
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Atlantic Division
• • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • D3
Breaking News: [email protected]
706-937-5511 706-866-0111
...
. D4 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
Stanford strong
in topping Duke
By Janie McCauley
The Associated Press
FRESNO, Calif. — Nnemkadi
Ogwumike will end her sensational senior season right where she
has the rest: at the Final Four.
Ogwumike made it happen
on both ends of the floor with 29
points and nine rebounds Monday night despite constant doubleteams, sending top-seeded Stanford past No. 2 seed Duke 81-69
in the Fresno Regional final for
the Cardinal’s fifth straight Final
Four berth.
Little sister, Chiney, did plenty to seal the Denver trip, too
— along with everybody else.
Chiney Ogwumike grabbed 17
rebounds to go with 12 points and
freshman Amber Orrange came
through with 13 points and four
assists as the Cardinal extended
their school-record winning streak
to 32 games.
Nneka Ogwumike is headed
back to the Final Four in her
NCAA tournament farewell with
that elusive championship still in
reach. Stanford (35-1), looking for
the program’s first title since 1992,
will play Sunday night against
Brittney Griner and unbeaten Baylor (38-0) at the Pepsi Center.
Chelsea Gray had 23 points,
four rebounds and four assists
Lady Vols
• Continued from Page D1
cent shooting from the floor. Much
of that was because of the inside
presence of the 6-foot-8 Griner,
who was just one block shy of her
fifth career triple-double.
“Defense wins ballgames for
you,” Baylor coach Kim Mulkey
said. “I guess learned from two of
the best. I learned from [Summitt]
and [former Louisiana Tech coach]
Leon Barmore, you better guard
people. And these kids are going
to guard you.”
A rather ugly game for a purist’s
perspective got even uglier in the
final 46.8 seconds.
Baylor’s Odyssey Sims, who led
the Bears with 27 points, tumbled
to the floor, and she and Stricklen had to be separated and were
each assessed a technical foul for
unsportsmanlike conduct.
No punches were thrown, but
Griner and teammates Terran
Condrey and Jordan Madden were
ejected for leaving the bench. The
NCAA said none of the players will
be suspended for the Final Four.
“Just got caught in the heat of
the moment,” Sims said. “Everything’s fine now.”
As for Summitt, she was given
a standing ovation from Tennessee
and Baylor fans when she came out
roughly 15 minutes before tipoff.
But as defeat became apparent, she
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
and Shay Selby scored 11 in her
final college game for Duke (27-6),
which fell short of reaching the
program’s first Final Four since
2006. The Blue Devils never got
clicking on offense the way they
had in their three NCAA wins.
The projected No. 1 pick in the
WNBA draft, Nneka Ogwumike
scored in the paint, on the perimeter, on leaping putbacks and even
by knocking down a pretty 10-foot
turnaround jumper late in the first
half as the Cardinal built a comfortable 40-25 lead at the break.
Stanford boasted a strong rooting section that made the threehour trip from the Bay Area to the
Save Mart Center, including Cardinal football coach David Shaw
and his wife, Kori. The couple
sat alongside former Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice.
In a matchup dubbed “nerd on
nerd” by Chiney Ogwumike for
the schools’ rigorous academic
standards, Stanford’s smart girls
aced their latest final. But this
group has its sights set on winning two more to make good on
the most important test and give
Hall of Fame 26th-year coach Tara
VanDerveer another long-awaited
trophy for the case back on The
Farm.
Just as she has wanted all sea-
Robinson heads
All-America men
Davis received 63 first-team
votes while Green, the lone senior
Kansas forward Thomas Robin- on the team, got 53. Sullinger had
son has even more in common with 30, one more than McDermott. The
Blake Griffin now. Not everything, voting was done before the NCAA
though.
tournament.
Robinson, who played through
Robinson received nationwide
personal tragedy as a sophsupport as a sophomore
omore reserve, capped his
when he lost his mother,
junior season by being a
grandmother and grandfaunanimous selection to
ther in a three-week periThe Associated Press’s
od. He not only became
All-America men’s basketa starter this season; he
ball team Monday, a day
became a star.
after leading the Jayhawks
“It’s an unbelievable
to the Final Four.
honor for a kid that came
The 6-foot-10 Robinson
as a semi-highly recruited
averaged 17.9 points and 11.8 Thomas
guy, played seven minutes
rebounds this season and Robinson
as a freshman, 10 minutes
was a first-team pick by all
as a sophomore, endured
65 members of the national media the tragedies he’s had and then
panel that selects the weekly Top 25. somehow made so many sacrifices,
The last unanimous pick was not only for the betterment of himGriffin in 2009.
self but the betterment of all of us.,”
“It’s a blessing to be named even Kansas coach Bill Self said. “To be
in the same category as Blake Grif- unanimous, it’s just something that
fin,” Robinson said. “For that to hap- blows me away.”
pen, I’m glad all the hard work is
The 6-9 Sullinger, the first player
paying off.”
to repeat as a freshman and sophoJoining Robinson on the first more since Chris Jackson of LSU in
team were Jared Sullinger of Ohio 1989 and 1990, averaged 17.6 points
State, the first All-America repeater and 9.3 rebounds while shooting
in three years, freshman Anthony 53.9 percent from the field. The 6Davis of Kentucky, Draymond 10 Davis averaged 14.3 points, 10
Green of Michigan State and Doug rebounds and 4.6 blocks while shootMcDermott of Creighton.
ing 64.2 percent from the field.
By Jim O’Connell
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Stanford’s Nnemkadi Ogwumike
goes to the basket during the
first half Monday. She had 29
points and nine rebounds in
the Cardinal’s 81-69 pdefeat of
son during a challenging schedule
featuring games with Connecticut, Tennessee, Texas and Xavier,
VanDerveer got contributions
from most everybody in a balanced effort.
Joslyn Tinkle knocked down
two 3-pointers in the opening five
minutes and also made an early
steal, then hit another 3 with 4:26
left that put Stanford ahead by 13.
She finished with 13 points, four
rebounds and three assists.
BAYLOR 77, TENNESSEE 58
TENNESSEE (27-9)
Manning 1-2 0-0 2, Baugh 1-6 0-0 2, Johnson 8-17 3-6 19,
Bass 0-1 0-0 0, Stricklen 8-26 2-3 22, Williams 0-1 0-0 0,
Massengale 2-5 0-0 4, Simmons 2-11 1-1 5, Burdick 0-1 0-0
0, Spani 0-3 2-2 2, Harrison 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 23-76 8-12 58.
BAYLOR (38-0)
Williams 3-7 1-2 7, Griner 8-18 7-9 23, Sims 9-21 4-4 27,
Hayden 6-8 3-3 18, Madden 0-4 0-2 0, Robertson 0-0 0-0 0,
Condrey 0-2 0-0 0, Agbuke 0-0 0-0 0, Field 0-1 0-0 0, Palmer
0-0 0-0 0, Pope 0-1 2-2 2. Totals 26-62 17-22 77.
Halftime—Baylor 35-20. 3-Point Goals—Tennessee 4-21
(Stricklen 4-10, Johnson 0-1, Massengale 0-1, Bass 0-1,
Manning 0-1, Spani 0-2, Baugh 0-2, Simmons 0-3), Baylor
8-15 (Sims 5-8, Hayden 3-3, Condrey 0-1, Field 0-1, Madden 0-2). Fouled Out—Harrison. Rebounds—Tennessee 47
(Johnson 14), Baylor 47 (Griner 15). Assists—Tennessee 11
(Baugh, Johnson 2), Baylor 14 (Madden 5). Total Fouls—Tennessee 20, Baylor 13. Technicals—Stricklen, Sims. Ejections—Condrey, Griner, Madden. A—9,068.
sat silently on the bench with her
legs crossed.
Summitt has 1,098 wins, more
than any basketball coach in NCAA
history, but these Lady Bears were
too much for her Lady Vols.
“It’s not fun for me to coach
against Pat,” Mulkey said. “I don’t
take great pleasure in that. But I
have a job to do.”
Like most of Baylor’s games this
season, the Bears’ regional semifinal was more about dominance
than drama.
Baylor led 35-20 at halftime
despite a poor start shooting from
Griner. Tennessee made a spirited
charge to start the second half,
highlighted when Glory Johnson
scored a second-chance bucket on
Griner and simply smiled when
Griner tossed her to the floor.
Johnson finished with 19 points
and 14 rebounds for Tennessee,
which had a habit of starting poorly.
Louisville guard
Russ Smith
(2) pulls off
amazing plays
but drives
Coach Pitino
crazy with his
inconsistency.
The Associated Press
‘Russdiculous’
By Colin Fly
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Tennessee players, from left, Shekinna Stricklen, Meighan Simmons, Briana Bass, Glory Johnson and Cierra Burdick stand during
a timeout in the second half against Baylor on Monday.
Wiedmer
• Continued from Page D1
recently has been concerned with
fairness.
For proof, consider that beginning in 1982, the Lady Vols played
at least one NCAA tourney game
on their home court for 22 straight
years. We repeat, 22 straight years.
What kind of uproar would there
be if North Carolina or Kentucky
got to play the first game or two
of March Madness inside the
Dean Dome or Rupp Arena for 22
straight years?
Exactly.
But the women needed fannies
in the seats, and the only way to
ensure that would happen was to
place higher seeds on their home
courts whenever possible. Beyond
that, the Lady Vols also hosted six
regional finals, two of those becoming a portion of two of Summitt’s
eight national championships.
Point is, should this become
Summitt’s final season as she continues the fight of her life against
Alzheimer’s, would it have been so
wrong to give her at least a sporting chance to reach her 19th Final
Four?
Beyond that, would it not have
been an incredibly smart business
decision? Can you imagine the ratings for the women’s Final Four
if Summitt and the Lady Vols had
won their way there?
Especially if she faced Baylor
or UConn in the Final Four? Or
both? Heck, if UT reached the title
game — admittedly a long shot — it
might have set ratings record for
the women’s final.
Instead, what could well be the
final game of Summitt’s untouchable career ended on a monotonous Monday night in Des Moines
against a Baylor team only her
very best Lady Vols championship
squads could have been given a reasonable chance to beat.
Said UT associate head coach
Holly Warlick in Monday’s aftermath, tears rolling down her cheeks:
“This team is about Pat Summitt.”
In truth, women’s basketball has
been about Pat Summitt for 38 seasons. And because of that, solely
because of that, would it have been
too much to ask of the selection
committee that it make this tournament about Summitt for as long as
possible rather than handing her a
draw all but certain to remove the
Lady Vols from the field one win
shy of the Final Four?
Just asking.
Email Mark Wiedmer at [email protected] or 423-7576273.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Louisville guard Russ Smith is the offensive catalyst who plays entirely by
feel — often frustrating coach Rick
Pitino.
Yet Pitino knows he can’t win
without his frenetic playmaker.
The sophomore is averaging
13.3 points in the NCAA tournament and his play will be pivotal
when Louisville faces Kentucky
in Saturday’s rematch at the Final
Four in New Orleans.
Smith scored 30 points in the
Cardinals’ 69-62 loss to the Wildcats
on Dec. 31 — the most points any
individual scored against Kentucky
this season — but he has mental
lapses that raise Pitino’s ire.
Pitino coined a term for his
inconsistency: “Russdiculous.”
Smith’s antics led Pitino to say
during a Monday teleconference
that Senegal native Gorgui Dieng
is not the only foreign-born player
on his roster.
“He’s not from a different country,” Pitino said of Smith. “He’s
from a different planet.”
Smith has ably directed Louisville’s offense for long stretches. At
other times, he’s been able to shoot
himself straight to the bench.
“It’s just that you can’t fathom
what he’s going to do when he
takes you off the bounce,” Pitino
said. “That’s the difficult thing
coaching him.”
Almost enough to make Pitino
lose it.
After one game this season, he
called coaching Smith the closest
thing he’s ever had to a nervous
breakdown, and Smith is often
seen apologizing to Pitino on the
bench or after games.
“I take a lot of risks and I do a
lot of things that maybe are questioned a lot, but I have total confidence in my abilities, so I guess
that’s most important,” Smith said.
“I get like very, very hyped because
I did do something good or something maybe that I should not have
done, and then it’ll work and then
I’ll know that Coach is upset, but it
was a positive, so we got a positive
out of it, so Coach is just satisfied
that everything worked.
“But then again there’s that play
that if it don’t work, it’s just like,
I’m going to the bench, I’m about
to get destroyed.”
It’s hard not to laugh at Smith,
a 160-pound lightly recruited prep
school player who often has a big
smile and loves to answer even the
most mundane questions.
After Louisville advanced to the
regional semifinals, Smith mugged
for the cameras during Pitino’s live
shot on the arena floor and gave
his coach bunny ears before Pitino
finally pulled him to the side.
“He has a unique ability to score,
but he has no clue how to play the
game,” Pitino joked. “So the first
thing we had to do is, ‘OK, Russ,
let’s go from eight ridiculous shots
a game to five to three. Now let’s get
— because we’re going to the Final
Four, to one, two.’ And he’s done
that. So he has bailed us out of more
situations this year with his play.”
Smith scored 19 points in Louisville’s 72-68 West Regional final
victory over Florida but also committed four of the Cardinals’ six
turnovers, including two in the
final 2:25 after point guard Peyton
Siva fouled out.
Washpun released from UT basketball
By Patrick Brown
Staff Writer
KNOXVILLE — It took less
than a week for the Tennessee
men’s basketball program to solve
the math problem with its roster.
The school announced Monday that Wes Washpun has been
granted a release from his scholarship and will transfer out of the
program. The freshman point guard
averaged 10.2 minutes, 0.9 point and
1.3 rebounds in 17 appearances this
season. His last appearance came
in UT’s win at Florida on Feb. 11, in
which he picked up a technical foul
in the game’s waning moments.
“We wish nothing but the best
for Wes,” UT coach Cuonzo Martin said in the university’s release.
“He’s a high-character kid who
comes from a good family. We all
want him to be successful.”
Washpun was Martin’s first
commitment after the coach took
the job in late March. The athletic,
6-foot-1, 163-pound Iowa native was
the last from Martin’s first class
to arrive, though, after he wasn’t
cleared by the NCAA until August.
He didn’t play in UT’s final nine
games, surrendering his backup
point guard spot to a rotation of
Josh Richardson, Skylar McBee
and Jordan McRae.
When Atlanta-area wing Armani
Moore committed to UT last week,
it put the Vols one over the 13-player scholarship limit for next season
and indicated at least one player
from this year’s roster would not
return. Washpun’s lack of playing
time made him a likely candidate.
Center Kenny Hall remains
indefinitely suspended.
...
. timesfreepress.com
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • D5
Breaking News: [email protected]
Saban, staff
earn raises
UTC adds
‘assistants’
By John Zenor
By John Frierson
Staff Writer
The Associated Press
The first sign that something was up came
at the end of practice last Wednesday. As University of Tennessee at Chattanooga all-conference safety D.J. Key jogged off the field, he
turned and encouraged Keith Mayes to hustle
toward the exit at Scrappy Moore Field.
Key is one of the Mocs’ best players, but
he’s not known for being chatty. In fact, one
could follow him around practice for a week
and hardly hear a word. But Key is one of 10
players charged by Mocs coach Russ Huesman with speaking up and serving as “assistant coaches.”
“We’ve got 10 more assistant coaches out
here, and I want energy,” Huesman said.
Huesman picked a player from each position group to serve as the leader of that position. He said he doesn’t want cheerleaders
or guys who simply yell out, “Come on!”
Huesman selected players he thinks can be
leaders, guys who can push their teammates
and hold one another accountable.
“All of that stuff,” he said. “Like what you
saw with D.J. Key. He’s not a vocal person, but
now we’re starting to get him more vocal.”
Key said the experience is good for him,
especially now that he’s the Mocs’ veteran
safety. Before this spring Key had played
with Jordan Tippit, who loved to talk.
“There’s always leading by example, but
it’s important to talk to your teammates and
let them know they need to do this or do that
and help the team,” he said. “I like that we’re
doing it and I think it will help me because I
know I need to be a vocal leader.”
The idea for assigning players as “assistant coaches” came to Huesman last week.
He spoke at length to the team following last
Monday’s practice about the need for more
mental toughness, and that eventually led
to the idea.
“I got to thinking that I want more energy, more mental toughness — I want better
effort,” he said, adding, “I don’t know if it’s
going to work or not.”
Some of the other designated “coaches”
are center Patrick Sutton, running back J.J.
Jackson and defensive tackle Chris Mayes. At
some positions Huesman picked the obvious
choice, such as Jackson or Key because of
their experience. Right tackle Adam Miller,
a three-year starter, was the obvious pick
among the offensive linemen.
“Adam would have been everybody’s
choice, which is why I didn’t go that way,”
Huesman said.
The 10 players who have the jobs at the start
of this initiative will be held accountable for
their positions. Huesman said he’ll keep the
good coaches “and fire the bad coaches.”
On good days it’s easy for everyone to
be up and into what’s happening. The challenge, Jackson said, is pushing yourself and
your teammates on days when you’d rather
be elsewhere.
“I’m still working on that, but we’re going
to get there,” he said. “I think this was a good
thing to implement, and I think it will help.”
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Alabama football coach Nick Saban said he received overtures for other jobs after the Crimson Tide’s
second national title in three years. Instead
of bolting, he has received a raise and contract extension worth $5.62 million a year
that he said represents his intention to finish
his career in Tuscaloosa.
“From my standpoint, the acceptance of
this extension represents our commitment
... to the University of Alabama for the rest
of our career,” Saban said. “We made that
decision after the season when other people
were interested.”
The university’s board of trustees approved
a two-year extension for Saban on Monday
that will run through Jan. 31, 2020. He’ll receive
$5.32 million in 2012 with a $50,000 raise next
year and $100,000 annually after that.
Under the deal, he’ll make $5.97 million
in 2019.
Saban will make nearly $45 million over
eight years in base salary ($245,000) and what
Alabama calls “talent fees.” The contract represents a $500,000 raise in talent fees plus
longevity pay and the built-in raises.
He declined to say who made the overtures.
“It doesn’t really matter,” Saban said. “We
wanted to stay at Alabama. We’re staying at
Alabama and we’re not interested in going
anyplace else. We weren’t
interested in going anyplace
else at the end of the season,
so it really doesn’t matter.”
Saban remains among college football’s highest paid
coaches, along with Mack
Brown of Texas ($5.2 million)
and Oklahoma’s Bob Stoops
($4.875 million), dwarfing the
Nick Saban
eye-catching eight-year, $32
million deal he received after leaving the NFL’s
Miami Dolphins.
He made at least $5.170 million last year in salary, talent fee and bonuses, including $400,000
for winning the national title. The new deal
represents a $500,000 raise to his talent fee, plus
longevity pay, which totals $5 million over the
duration, and a $5 million life insurance policy.
The Tide are 48-6 over the past four seasons. Saban has restored the program to the
point that a 10-3 title follow-up in 2010 was
viewed as a big disappointment. He has had
Alabama at its best in the biggest games,
particularly the powerhouse defense.
The Tide claimed the 2009 title with a 3721 win over Texas and blanked LSU 21-0 in
New Orleans for the national championship
two years later. Before his arrival, Alabama
hadn’t won a national title since the 1992
season.
The deal states that if he’s fired without
cause he gets the lesser amount between four
years of pay or the balance of his contract.
Saban said he “really wasn’t involved in the
negotiations.”
“To me, this all happened a long time
ago, right after the [LSU] game,” said Saban,
whose agent is Jimmy Sexton. “I really think
they sort of decide what they want to do
and you decide if it’s good enough, and it’s
certainly good enough for me.”
His coaching staff was rewarded, too.
The trustees’ compensation committee
also approved a $100,000 raise for defensive
coordinator Kirby Smart, up to $950,000. New
offensive coordinator Doug Nussmeier will
make $590,000. Both have three-year deals.
New outside linebackers coach Lance
Thompson will make $355,000 in a two-year
deal. The assistant coaches will receive 4
percent bonuses for an appearance in the
SEC championship game, 8 percent for a bowl
game, 12 percent for one of the SEC’s top 5
bowl tie-ins and 16 percent for a BCS game.
This and that
The Mocs practiced Monday and, just as in
Saturday’s scrimmage, the offense had the upper
hand, Huesman said. Despite some drops by
the wide receivers, the offense moved the ball
and reached the end zone in team scenarios. ...
The football Mocs are joining a campus effort
to get students, faculty and staff to become
part of the Be The Match Registry, which pairs
stem cell donors with patients battling blood
cancers. Blood donations and registrations will
be accepted today and Wednesday in the Tennessee Room at the University Center.
Contact John Frierson at [email protected] or 423-757-6268. Follow him on
Twitter at twitter.com/mocsbeatCTFP.
Staff File Photo by Staff Photo by Angela Lewis
Tennessee linebacker Herman Lathers goes for a loose ball during the 2010
season. He missed last season with a bad ankle injury and is practicing now at
nearly full recovery.
Lathers ‘good to go’
SEC team that year.
“I’ve been through a lot of defenses,” he
KNOXVILLE — Herman Lathers kept said. “[Learning a new system] came easy
hoping for a return, but his left ankle had and natural to me. I’m able to help a lot of
other ideas.
the other guys and translate some stuff that
Once the brutal injury last June that is similar from last year.”
required surgery to insert 11 screws wiped
out the Tennessee linebacker’s 2011 sea- Sophomore surprise
son, Lathers focused on Monday’s start of
After flourishing at outside linebacker
spring practice as a checkpoint in making
as
a
freshman, Maggitt admitted he was a
a full return to the field.
little
surprised to learn he’d move inside
“Sitting out the whole year was tough,”
the fifth-year senior said after Monday’s for Sunseri. The 6-foot-3, 227-pounder was
session, “but I put it in my mind that I third on the team in tackles and made
was coming into spring to work and to Freshman All-SEC. He even filled a role
try to get my ankle back to as normal as as a pass-rushing defensive end early last
season before becoming too valuable at
I can get it.
“I’d say it’s about 85 or 90 percent, but linebacker.
“I’m down for whatever,” Maggitt said.
I’m able to do everything so it’s good to
With Johnson taking over one middle
go.”
The 6-foot, 225-pound Louisiana native spot and Jacques Smith and Willie Bohanstarted 12 games and finished second on non in the important Jack position, Maggthe team in tackles in 2010. His original itt’s move might have come out of necesplan after his injury was to return by Octo- sity with the Vols short on big linebackers.
ber, but he didn’t make it back to the prac- The long-armed Florida native, who will be
tice field until November as his rehab went limited some this spring after undergoing
slower than he’d hoped. Even now, Lathers shoulder surgery in December, sees posiadmitted, it’s sometimes difficult to plant tives in his new spot.
“Last year I didn’t have a good underand push off his left foot.
“It’s great to see him,” UT coach Derek standing of the defense,” he said. “I pretty
Dooley said. “Of course, he’s got a lot of much understood my position, but now it’ll
leadership, he’s got experience, he’s a vet- be me learning the whole defense pretty
eran. I just hope he’s able to maintain that. much. In nickel I’m still going to play in
“Until we get him out there and he goes space. We’ll just see how it goes.”
through a number of practices hitting, we
really won’t know because the physical Status updates
toll that your body takes is going to be
Dooley said the opening practice was
the key. We have to try to manage him the
“sloppy”
from a standpoint of “knowing
right way.”
what
to
do,
knowing how to do it, knowing
Lathers tried to manage his absence the
why
it’s
important
to do it that way and
right way. Curt Maggitt and A.J. Johnson
praised his assistance during their fresh- going out there and doing it the right way.”
man seasons as starting linebackers. With ... The first-team offensive line during the
Lathers working with him at the middle open period of Monday’s practice was (left
linebacker spot in new coordinator Sal to right) Antonio “Tiny” Richardson, DalSunseri’s 3-4 defense, Maggitt can lean on las Thomas, Alex Bullard, James Stone and
Ja’Wuan James. Thomas, a senior, slid over
Lathers some more.
“He’s a big leader,” Maggitt said. “Even a spot to make room for the sophomore
last year, not playing he was still a leader Richardson, who very well could UT’s best
and somebody everybody looked up to. lineman. Stone takes over for Zach Fulton,
This offseason, every time I’ve seen him who’s temporarily out with a foot injury. ...
he’s always happy and always working Quarterback Tyler Bray said he was up to
hard. He’s just a fun person to be around 217 pounds. ... Defensive end Jordan Williams was not on the field during the open
and to learn from.”
Lathers played middle linebacker as portion of practice.
Contact Patrick Brown at pbrown@
a redshirt freshman in 2009 after Nick
Reveiz and Savion Frazier were lost for timesfreepress.com or 901-581-7288. Folthe season. Lathers started five games and low him on Twitter at twitter.com/patrickearned a selection to the Freshman All- browntfp.
By Patrick Brown
Staff Writer
Great ‘complexity’ Vols
slowing BCS talks
• Continued from Page D1
By Stephen Hawkins
The Associated Press
GRAPEVINE, Texas
— BCS leaders finally are
starting to get into some
specifics in their discussions
about possible — maybe
even likely — changes in
college football’s postseason and how to determine
a champion.
They are finding out just
how tricky the process will
be. And it’s far from being
finished.
“The complexity is phenomenal. The level of details
requires a great deal of
time,” BCS executive director Bill Hancock said Monday after the 11 conference
commissioners and Notre
Dame’s athletic director met
for more than seven hours.
This was the third meeting this year, coming just
more than a month after the
group met over two days at
the same hotel connected to a
terminal at Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport.
“There’s no consensus yet
on anything,” SEC commissioner Mike Slive said. “The
first couple of meetings, we
talked a lot about just college
football in general, the regular
season. This time, less of that
and more about how we need
to start getting closer to where
the rubber meets the road.
And there’s lots of different
options, and start to analyze
each one of those and the pros
and cons that go with them.”
MAC commissioner Jon
Steinbrecher said while
progress is being made,
things also are getting more
complicated.
“The deeper you get, the
deeper you’re going to have
to dig,” Steinbrecher said.
While the commissioners have acknowledged a
four-team playoff is among
the options being considered, and there seems to
be considerable talk about
that, Hancock cautioned
that isn’t a done deal.
“There’s a long way to
go and a lot of people still
to hear from,” he said.
The next meeting is
scheduled April 24-26 in
Hollywood, Fla.
The group released a
statement after the meeting that ended with: “We’re
making good progress
toward our self-imposed
goal of making a final recommendation this summer
to our governing bodies.”
The statement also said
Monday’s meeting was
“constructive and highly
detailed.” But it acknowledged that no decisions
were made about the overall structure.
manage them.”
Hunter followed a seventouchdown freshman season with an explosive start
to last season. He caught
16 passes for 302 yards and
two scores in UT’s first two
games before going down on
a 12-yard catch in the loss to
the Gators, so the Vols know
Softball
• Continued from Page D1
Lake Kids’ Park that sailed
over the fence and practically came right to her. Text
messages kept her informed
about games she couldn’t
attend.
One competition she was
determined to see last year
was the Spring Fling in Murfreesboro. With assistance
from her mother-in-law, a
bald-headed Kelly skipped
one chemo session, brought
along an umbrella for sun
protection and cheered on
the Lady Raiders.
“No doubt in my mind
she would be there,” Smith
said. “She had her hat on.
She gave me a good-luck
charm before we played.
That’s the kind of people
they are. They’re fighters.”
As if fate rewarded her,
Sarah pitched a shutout in
the Division II-AA championship game.
what they have with him.
UT might be best served
by playing it extra safe with
Hunter, but he had other
ideas Monday.
“The training room, I
know they didn’t want me
to do a lot of stuff today,” he
said. “But I felt good. I told
them to just let me do it.”
As happy as Hunter was,
his teammates might have
been even happier to see No.
11 back on the field, even if he
was in a red noncontact jer-
sey. He is one of the most wellliked players on the team, and
even quarterback Tyler Bray
noted how having Hunter’s
“character” back on the practice field provided a boost.
Hunter admitted he used
his right leg to cut on some
slant routes during one-on-one
drills. The key, he said, is not
thinking about the injury or
hesitating to use his left knee.
The Vols expect him to back
to 100 percent when summer
workouts begin in June.
“I hate sitting on the sidelines because it’s so boring,”
he said. “You want to help
your team, but you can’t help
your team. When you’re on
the field, you can do that.
“It was fun because I
was real eager to go out
there and do one-on-ones,
because I’ve been talking
all offseason about what I’m
going to do. I went out there
and caught a couple of balls
on some people, and I was
real excited.”
“It meant a lot having
her there because she had
missed a lot of other games,”
Sarah said.
The Baylor softball family
already had been devastated
by breast cancer recently when Kaitlyn Phillips’
mother, Dinkle McAdams,
died before Kaitlyn graduated in 2010. With McAdams
already ill when Phillips
came to Baylor in the ninth
grade, Smith began organizing a group to participate
in September’s Susan G.
Komen Race for the Cure.
She and more than 60 others represented Baylor softball in the run in 2011. Kelly
hopes to run with them this
year.
She also hopes this Hits
for Hope will be the first
of many annual games. At
Kelly’s request, Thursday’s
proceeds, which will include
donations and profits from
concessions, will go to local
social workers who have
helped her so they can assist
other local victims with
expenses such as prescriptions and gasoline vouchers. Friday is a rain date, if
necessary.
Baylor girls’ basketball has
been involved with a Hoops
for Hope event the last three
seasons. Other softball and
volleyball programs, in particular, have been active the
last few years with competitions raising money for
the Komen charity or the
MaryEllen Locher Foundation Scholarship Fund.
Kelly, who is meeting
with surgeons today hoping
for good news, said she’s
amazed how so many athletic programs have been willing to offer time and money
to such worthy causes. The
athletes are learning to support their community while
being made aware that no
family is immune to such a
dreaded disease.
“It can change their lives
at any moment,” she said.
Contact Kelley Smiddie
at ksmiddie@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6653.
News From Across 12 Counties
Every day,
every week in the...
D6 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
PREPSUMMARIES
Crane
fired as
coach
BASEBALL
The Night’s Stars
SEQUATCHIE COUNTY 11, BLEDSOE COUNTY 0
Sequatchie County
201 060 2 — 11 7 0
Bledsoe County
000 000 0 — 0 6 8
WP: Keegan Fredrick, 7 Ks. LP: Chad Cagle, 4 IP, 7
Ks. 2B: Dakota Hudson, Cates (S). Other highlights:
Houk 2-4 (S); Cameron Colvard 2-3, Silas Mills
3-3 (BC). Records: Sequatchie 1-0 7-AA; Bledsoe
County 1-5, 0-1.
■ Austin Parrish, Ringgold: He hit a three-run homer in
the bottom of the seventh to lift the Tigers over Cartersville
7-4 in a game of Georgia-ranked AAA baseball powers.
■ Sadik Spence, Tyner: He doubled and singled and
knocked in two runs in the Rams’ 3-0 win over East Ridge.
TYNER 3, EAST RIDGE 0
Tyner
100 010 1 — 3 5 1
East Ridge
000 000 0 — 0 3 2
WP: Isaiah McIntosh (2-1). LP: Dickerson, 13 Ks. 2B:
Sadik Spence, Ryan Revieire (T). Other highlights:
Spencer 2-3, 2 RBIs; Reviere 2-3 (T). Records: Tyner
3-3, 2-2 6-AA.
■ Taylor Baird, Ooltewah: She struck out seven in a 7-0
softball shutout against Rhea County and added two hits.
By Lindsey Young
MARION COUNTY 12, LOOKOUT VALLEY 2
Lookout Valley
001 01 — 2 6 4
Marion County
605 1x — 12 11 2
WP: Zach Roberts (1-1). LP: Horton. 2B: Vann
Scribner (LV); Roberts, Hunter Murray, J. Vinson (MC).
Highlights: Wallace 2-2 (LV); Murray 2-2, 4 RBIs;
Brandon Hutchins, Tyler Peardon each 2-3, 3 RBIs.
Records: Marion County 3-4-1, 3-0 6-A.
RINGGOLD 7, CARTERSVILLE 4
Cartersville
000 022 0 — 7 9 3
Ringgold
010 120 3 — 7 10 2
WP: Adam Weldon (3-0). LP: Ty Fowler. HR: Slade
Dale, Corey Kafka, Austin Parrish (R). 2B: Michael
Goss, Jameson, Adam Benefield (C). Other highlights: Parrish 2-4, game-winning 3-run homer;
Weldon 2-4. Records: Ringgold 9-3, 6-1 7-AAA;
Cartersville 10-1, 6-1 7-AAA.
SODDY-DAISY 17, HIXSON 1
East Hamilton
714 005 — 17 13 1
Hixson
000 10 — 1 4 2
WP: Patrick Parris (3-0), 7 Ks, 3 IP. LP: Blaine Long.
HR: Ryan Longwith (EH). 2B: Gary Price, Matty
Henshaw (EH). Other highlights: Price 2-2, 2 runs,
2 SBs, RBI; Longwith 1-1, 3 RBIs; Ryan Corwden,
Hunter Parker, Chris Moore each 2 RBIs (EH); Gill
Brown 2-3 (H). Records: East Hamilton 8-3, 4-1 6-AA;
Hixson 2-3 6-AA.
Staff File Photo
David Crane has been terminated as football coach at
Southeast Whitfield after four seasons.
we were heading in the right
direction,” said Crane, who
had 88 players on his roster
last season compared to 40 in
his first. “Our numbers have
been good the past couple
of seasons, and for the most
part we’ve been competitive.”
Crane, who has a degree
in special education, said
he and his wife can stay in
the Whitfield County school
system as teachers, but he’s
not sure what the immediate
future holds.
“I do want to coach again
and I’ve talked to a few people in the area,” he said. “It’s
a bit different with my wife.
She was already talking about
scaling back with our children getting older. Initially
we were shocked by this, but
in the long run it may turn
out to be a blessing.”
North Murray also recently fired its coach, Larry Cornelius, who started the program and won one game in
two seasons of varsity competition.
North Murray athletic
director Roger Rainey said
the search for Cornelius’
replacement is getting close
and the school has been
pleasantly surprised by the
interest in the job.
“We thought it might be
tough to find a coach at this
time of the year, but we’ve
had over 80 applicants from
14 different states,” Rainey
said. “We want someone
with experience as at least
a position coach or coordinator and someone who is
familiar with the type of athlete we have in the northwest
Georgia area.”
Rainey said the decision
to fire Cornelius was not just
about wins and losses.
“It was a combination of
things,” he said, “but mostly
it was the fact the overall
program wasn’t where we
wanted it to be.”
Rainey said the list of
candidates has been pared
to 10 and he expects a coach
to be chosen by the April 5
Murray County school board
meeting.
Contact Lindsey Young at
[email protected]
or at 423-757-6296.
Baylor, GPS Decoturf’s top 2
Staff Reports
kills and 88
aces last
season.
“ S h e
played all
the way
around for
u s ,” H i l l
said. “She
led us on
Chelsi Roark
defense,
and she’s a
smart offensive player. She
uses her knowledge of the
volleyball game to her advantage.”
Pounder Classic time
Smith before she was hit by
a pitch, injuring her hand, in
a quarterfinal against Karns.
Kelsey Nunley earned four
pitching victories, totaling 36
strikeouts in 23 innings, as
the Lady Trojans went 6-0-1.
Marion wins Madness
Marion County slipped
past host Hixson 5-4 on Saturday for the championship
in the Lady Wildcat March
Madness softball tournament.
The Lady Warriors were
5-0 with their games averaging about five innings each.
Kelsey Thomas had a 3-0
pitching record and joined
Keli Bruning and Brooke
Baxter with better than .500
batting averages in the tournament.
Central’s annual Pounder
Classic baseball tournament
is scheduled for ThursdaySunday at Hixson and Central.
It includes Goodpasture
Christian, Morristown West
and Jefferson of Lafayette, Rhea takes Classic
Ind., along with the host
Rhea County defeated
Purple Pounders, Hixson and
Sequatchie County 6-0 in the
Cleveland. The championBlack-division final at Dayton
ship game is scheduled for 2
in Meigs County’s Lady Tiger
p.m. Sunday at Central.
Classic, which was shortened
to Saturday only because of
Scenic City success
rain Friday.
The four ChattanoogaHanna Manley, who was
area softball teams that the winning pitcher in four
entered the Lady Bruins of the Lady Golden Eagles’
Classic at Brentwood made five wins, allowed three hits
the semifinals. After beat- in six innings in the final.
ing Ooltewah on Saturday, Paige Mason went 3-for-3,
Soddy-Daisy won the final Manley doubled twice and
5-4 against Baylor, which Alyssa Greenwood homered
defeated Central in the other in an 8-0 semifinal victory
semifinal.
over Sullivan East.
Haley Reynolds had a
Bradley Central beat Midwalk-off home run and was way in the final of the Orange
among Soddy-Daisy’s offen- bracket, which was for teams
sive standouts along with not finishing in the upper
Cassidy Hackney and Hannah halves of their pools.
COAHULLA CREEK 12, GORDON CENTRAL 1
Coahulla Creek
311 205 — 12 13 0
Gordon Central
000 001 — 1 3 2
WP: Tyler Higgins (3-1), 7 Ks, CG. LP: Chapman. 2B:
Austin Busby (C). Other highlights: Tucker Sheram
2-5, RBI, 2 runs; Busby 2-3, 2 RBIs, 2 runs; Michael
Ward 2-4, 3 RBIs; Higgins 3-4, RBI; Blake Phillips
1-2, RBI, 2 runs; Cody Wood 1-3, RBI (C). Record:
Coahulla Creek 6-3; 1-2 7-AA.
SEQUATCHIE COUNTY 11, BLEDSOE COUNTY 0
Sequatchie County
201 062 — 11 11 1
Bledsoe County
000 000 — 0 5 3
WP: Kegan Frederick (3-0) 7 Ks. LP: Chad Cagle.
2B: Thomas Willoughby, Dakota Hudson, Jake
Cates (SC). Other highlights: Willoughby 2-4, RBI;
Frederick 2-4, 2 runs; Logan Summers 2-3; Cates,
Hudson each 2 RBIs (SC); Mills 3-3 (BC). Records:
Sequatchie 7-2, 1-0 7-AA.
POLK COUNTY 7, MEIGS COUNTY 6
Polk County
300 220 0 — 7 9 2
Meigs County
300 300 0 — 6 6 2
WP: Carter Flowers (1-2). Save: Justin Brown
(1). LP: Christian Thompson. 2B: Alex Akins 2,
Andrew Aldridge (PC); Dustin Kennedy, Ryan
Hughes, Jake Moon (MC). Other highlights:
Akins 3-4, 2 RBIs; Duncan Coffey 3-4; Collin
Wimberley 2-4, 2 runs (PC); Eli Clark 2-4, run; Bryson
Baker 2 RBIs (MC). Records: Polk County 7-3, 1-0
5-AA; Meigs 0-8, 0-1.
BOYD-BUCHANAN 10, SILVERDALE BAPTIST 0
Boyd-Buchanan
002 035 0 — 10 12 1
Silverdale Baptist
000 000 0 — 0 4 2
WP: Austin Kline. LP: Spencer Mossburg. HR: Nathan
Murrell (BB). 2B: Austin Bailey 2, John Hale (BB).
Other highlights: Bailey 3-3, 3 RBIs; Murrell 3-3, 2
RBIs, 2 runs; Hale 2-4, 2 runs, RBI; Kline 2-4, RBI
(BB). Records: Silverdale 5-4, 0-1 5-A.
NOTRE DAME 6, CHATTANOOGA CHRISTIAN 2
Notre Dame
210 120 0 — 6 8 2
Chattanooga Christian 000 010 1 — 2 6 1
WP: White. LP: Jonah Paul (1-1). HR: Zach Swartout,
A. Coombs (ND). 2B: Swartout (ND); Zach Mercer
(CCS). Other highlights: Swartout 3-4, 2 RBIs;
Coombs 2-2, 2 RBIs; Rousche 2-4 (ND); Mercer 2-4,
RBI; Paul 2-3 (CCS). Records: Notre Dame 8-2, 1-0
7-AA; CCS 3-2, 0-1.
SOUTH PITTSBURG 13, VAN BUREN COUNTY 2
Van Buren 100
01 — 2 6 2
South Pittsburg
175 0x — 13 15 1
WP: Cam Moss (1-0) 8 Ks. LP: Trogian. HR: Jacob
Toney 2 (SP). 2B: Josh Thomas, Jake Stone, Moss
(SP). Other highlights: Toney 3-3, 6 RBIs; Stone 3-3,
2 RBIs; Matt Allen, Blaze Moats, Thomas each 2-3.
SOUTH PITTSBURG 16, VAN BUREN COUNTY 0
Van Buren 000
—
0 0 2
South Pittsburg
1510 — 16 11 0
WP: Tyler Reed (1-0). LP: Hitchcock. 2B: Jacob Toney
2, Matt Allen, Stone, Moss. Other highlights: Toney
2-2, 3 RBIs; Moss 2-2, 2 RBIs; McKenna Blevins 3
RBIs; Matt Allen 2-3, 2 runs; Michael Allen 2 RBIs
(SP). Records: South Pittsburg 9-4, 4-0 6-A; Van
Buren 3-5.
GRUNDY COUNTY 6, SIGNAL MOUNTAIN 1
Signal Mountain
000 010 0 — 1 3 8
Grundy County
012 030 x — 6 7 3
WP: Nick Shrum (3-1) 9 Ks. LP: Braxton Reese.
Other highlights: Austyn Cooper 2-3, RBI, run;
Chandler Knight 2-3, run; Dylan Cleek 2-3, RBI (GC);
Williams 2-3 (SM). Records: Grundy 3-3-1, 1-0 7-AA.
HERITAGE 10, CEDARTOWN 1
Cedartown
000 001 1 — 1 3 3
Heritage
000 334 x — 10 12 3
WP: Cody Sherlin (2-0). LP: C. Tanner. 3B: Jordan
Liles (H). 2B: Lee Gibson, Jacob Carter (H). Other
highlights: Shirlen 3-4, 2 runs; Jake Sampson 3-4,
RBI; Austin Morris 2-4, 2 RBIs (H). Records: Heritage
8-2, 4-2 7-AAA.
BRADLEY CENTRAL 7, McMINN COUNTY 0
Bradley Central
112 300 0 — 7 8 0
McMinn County
000 000 0 — 0 2 2
WP: Jordan Whitmire (2-1). LP: Matt Lingerfelt. HR:
Dylan Johnston (BC). 3B: Lingerselt (BC). 2B:
Robbie Works (BC). Other highlights: Johnston
2-4, 2 RBIs (BC). Records: Bradley 9-3, 1-2 5-AAA;
McMinn 0-9, 0-5.
WALKER VALLEY 4, CLEVELAND 0
Walker Valley
301 000 0 — 4 12 0
Cleveland
000 000 0 — 0 2 0
WP: Bobby Towne (3-0) 13 Ks. LP: Taylor Thompson. 3B: Chris Caffrey, Conner Hale (WV). 2B:
Matthews Simmons, Caleb Longley (WV). Other
highlights: Simmons 3-4, run; Longley 2-4, run,
RBI; Logan Longwith 2-3, 2 RBIs; Jarrod Broome
2-3; Towne 2-4, run (WV). Records: Walker Valley
4-4, 4-1 5-AAA.
BLEDSOE COUNTY 8, HIXSON 6
Bledsoe County
210 310 1 — 8 5 6
Hixson
402 000 x — 6 6 3
WP: Gabi Holland (1-0). LP: Michaela Penney. 2B:
Haley Fugate, Ashley Brown (B). Other highlights:
Victoria Roberson, Fugate each 2-4; Judith Roberson
3-3. Record: Bledsoe County 5-3.
POLK COUNTY 7, CHATTANOOGA CHRISTIAN 0
CCS
000000 0 — 0 4
2
Polk County
301 300 x — 7 12 2
WP: Jordan Triplett (4-2), 4 2/3 IP, 6 Ks. LP: Sarah
Hundley. HR: Sydney Sloan (PC). 3B: Lydia Triplett
(PC). 2B: Hundley 2 (CCS); L. Triplett (PC). Highlights: Hundley 3-3 (CCS); Caroline Jenkins 3-4,
2 runs, 2 RBIs; J. Triplett 2-3, 2 RBIs; L. Triplett
2-4, 2 runs, RBI; Sloan 2 RBIs (PC). Record: Polk
County 7-5.
CENTRAL 3, SODDY-DAISY 0
Central
000 002 1 — 3 5 0
Soddy-Daisy
000 000 0 — 0 5 3
WP: Shelby Willard (8-2), 7 Ks. LP: Kelsey Nunley,
8 Ks. 2B: Hannah Powell (C). Record: Central 12-3;
Soddy-Daisy 11-1-1.
RED BANK 13, LOOKOUT VALLEY 7
Lookout Valley
102 301 0 — 7 10 4
Red Bank
050 332 x — 13 12 3
WP: Allison Walker (4-3). 8 Ks. LP: Destiny Haines.
3B: Autumn Babb, Aly Walker (RB). 2B: Brianna
Whitlock (RB). Other highlights: Babb 3-4, 6 RBIs, 3
runs; Haley Tate 2-5, 2 runs, 2 RBIs; Hannah Holmes
2-4, 3 runs, RBI; Whitlock 2-3, 4 runs, 2 RBIs (RB);
Annie Marr 3-4, 3 runs; Haines 3-4 (LV). Record:
Red Bank 5-7.
SILVERDALE BAPTIST 11, SIGNAL MOUNTAIN 1
Silverdale Baptist
403 202 0 — 11 16 0
Signal Mountain
001 000 0 — 1 1 3
WP: Katie Henderson (5-2) 15 k. LP: Megan Hromi.
2B: Savannah Clay, Allison Meadows, Henderson,
Loren Hilton, Bryce Killingsworth (SB). Other highlights: Killingsworth 3-4; Meadows, Clay each 3-5
(SB). Record: Silverdale 7-5.
Saturday games
Lady Bruins Classic
At Brentwood
OOLTEWAH 5, KARNS 0
Karns
000 00 — 0 1 4
Ooltewah
110 3x — 4 5 0
WP: Taylor Baird, 5 Ks. Other highlights: Kelsey
Chernak 1B, 2 RBIs, 2 runs; Kerri Catchings 1B, 2
RBIs (O).
OOLTEWAH 4, CLARKSVILLE 3
Clarksville
100 20 — 3 5 1
Ooltewah
000 04 — 4 4 2
WP: Taylor Hicks, 4 Ks, 2 ER. HR: Katelyn Bowen (O).
3B: Hicks (O). Other highlights: Bowen 2-3, walk-off
HR, 3 RBIs (O).
OOLTEWAH 8, FORREST 4
Forrest
040 000 — 4 7 0
Ooltewah
200 42x — 8 8 0
WP: Taylor Baird, 5 Ks. 3B: Katelyn Bowen (O). 2B:
Bowen (O). Other highlights: Bowen 3-3, RBI; Kelsey
Chernak 2-3, 2 RBIs; Baird 2-3 (O).
SODDY-DAISY 1, OOLTEWAH 0
Soddy-Daisy
001 000 — 1 2 0
Ooltewah
000 000 — 0 5 3
WP: Kelsey Nunley. LP: Elizabeth Novelli. Other
highlights: Allie Jones 2-3 (O).
BOYS’ TENNIS
OOLTEWAH 5, EAST HAMILTON 4
Singles: Bryson Lype (O) def. Daniel Jung, 8-3; Kyle
Molhusen (O) def. Clark Templeton, 8-6; Bailey Lenoir
(EH) def. Richard Huynh, 8-6; Ryan Williamson (EH)
def. Patrick Gleeson, 8-6; David Templeton (EH) def.
Brady Matthews, 8-4; Deken Flaherty (O) def. Matthew Sayne, 8-2.
Doubles: Lype/Molhusen (O) def. Jung/Lenoir, 8-2; C.
Templeton/Williamson (EH) def. Huynh/Matthews, 8-5;
Gleeson/Flaherty (O) def. D. Templton/Sayne, 8-2.
Records: East Hamilton 3-2, 2-2 5-AAA.
RED BANK 7, EAST RIDGE 2
Singles: Nic Gagliano (RB) def. Colton Cruse, 8-1;
Mark Colbert (RB) def. Matt Whisenant, 8-1; Adam
Ryder (RB) def. Cody Poe, 8-4; Robert Foster (ER)
def. Christian Brown, 8-6; William Best (ER) def.
Stephen Jansen, 9-8 (7-5); Tanner Bailey (RB) def.
Chris Smith, 8-1.
Doubles: Gagliano/Matthew Smith (RB) def. Cruse/
Whisenant, 8-2; Colbert/Jonathan Campbell def. Foster/Best, 8-2; Brown/Saagar Desai (RB) def. Poe/Will
Holloway, 8-2. Records: Red Bank 3-1, 3-1 6-A/AA.
Mathis/Nathan Commers (BB) def. Babbitt/Ivan Snyder, 8-5. Records: Boyd-Buchanan 1-3; 1-2 5-A/AA.
GRACE ACADEMY 5, MEIGS COUNTY 4
Singles: Blake Savard (GA) def. Dylan Scott, 8-1;
Stephen Record (GA) def. Cory Jarvis, 8-0; Dillon
Crisp (MC) def. Josh Leamon, 9-7; Nolan Turner (GA)
def. Brandon Livingston, 8-2; Logan Groves (GA) def.
John Livingston, 8-4; Austin Parks (GA) def. Coltin
O’ Shields, 8-2.
Doubles: Scott/Jarvis (MC) def. Turner/Groves, 8-4;
Crisp/B. Livingston (MC) def. Leamon/Parks, 8-1; J.
Livingston (MC) def. Josh Dyer/Max Bowers, 8-4.
Records: Grace Academy 2-1, 2-0 5-A/AA.
CHATTANOOGA CHRISTIAN 9,
LOOKOUT VALLEY 0
Singles: Stewart Fellers (CCS) def. David Jones, 8-3;
Barrett Schock (CCS) def. Clayton Fuller, 8-2; Matthew Day (CCS) def. Michael Dempsey, 8-0; Austin
Mays (CCS) def. Will Benefield, 8-1; David Herberich
(CCS) def. Josh Hickman, 8-0; Ian Cooper (CCS) def.
Spencer Adams, 8-0.
Doubles: Fellers/Schock (CCS) def. Jones/Fuller, 8-0;
Day/Mays (CCS) def. Dempsey/Benefield, 8-1; Herberich/T. Payne (CCS) def. Hickman/Adams, 8-0.
CHRISTIAN HERITAGE 8, SODDY-DAISY1
Singles: Philip McClure (C) def. Jordan Crowe, 8-5;
Evan Townson (C) def. Brandt Carson, 8-3; DevinSanders (C) def. Dillon Keef, 8-3; James Cochran (C)
def. Logan Bailey, 8-2; Samuel Pippin (C) def. Justin
Bennett, 8-2; Jake Myers (C) def. Seth Stewart, 8-4.
Doubles: McClure/Townson (C) def. Crowe/Carson,
8-5; Keef/Bailey (SD) def. Cochran/Keys, 8-1; Mers/
Pippin (C) def. Bennett/Stewart, 8-3.
Record: Soddy-Daisy 1-4.
GIRLS’ TENNIS
EAST HAMILTON 9, OOLTTEWAH 0
Singles: Taylor Johnson def. Holly Humberger, 8-2;
Hilleary Chandler def. Rachel Faulkner, 8-2; Abigail
Ware def. Rachel Collins, 8-6; Katie Lofton def. Caitlyn
Moro, 8-1; Shanna Love def. Samantha Whitson, 8-2;
Jordan Kaset def. Kayla LaBlue, 8-5.
Doubles: Johnson/Chandler def. Humberger/Faulkner,
8-1; Ware/Kaset def. Collins/LaBlue, 8-4; Lofton/Love
def. Whitson/Moro, 8-4.
Records: East Hamilton 1-4; 1-3 5-AAA.
RED BANK 7, EAST RIDGE 2
Singles: Katie Lawson (RB) def. Anna Millard, 8-1;
Lynn Tran (RB) def. Ruby Hambrick, 8-2; Taylor
Lewis (RB) def. Amber Avery, 8-1; Madyson Williams
(RB) def. Kiana Ballard, 8-1; Kayli McKee (ER) def.
Laila Seymour, 8-0; Sarah Barnes (ER) def. Tamia
Foster, 8-5.
Doubles: Lawson/Amee Desai (RB) def. Millard/
McKee, 8-0; Tran/Julia Reed (RB) def. Hambrick/Ballard, 8-2; Orienne Gage/Alaire Gage def. Barnes/
Avery, 8-0.
Records: Red Bank 1-3, 1-3 6-A/AA.
BOYD-BUCHANAN 8,
COLLEGEDALE ACADEMY 1
Singles: Emily Brown (BB) def. Dani Voght, 8-6;
Taylor Eades (BB) def. Melissa You, 8-2; Allie Keasler
(BB)def. Julia Dolinskli, 8-5; Paige Zumbrun (BB) def.
Hannah Hunt, 8-1; Katie Delay (BB) def. Landon Duff,
8-0; Emily Wilt (C) def. Makenna Thomas, 8-5.
Doubles: Brown/Eades def. Voght/Wilt, 7-4 (7-5);
Keasler/Zumbrun (BB) def. Duff/Dolinskli, 8-4; Shelby
Brown/Peyton Miller (BB) def. You/Hunt, 8-3.
Records: Boyd-Buchanan 4-1, 4-0 5-A/AA.
GRACE ACADEMY 8, MEIGS COUNTY 1
Singles: Kelly Cox (GA) def. Kaitlyn Grant, 8-0;
Serena Turner (GA) def. Samantha Richardson, 8-1;
Leanne Daugherty (GA) def. Destiny Brown, 8-3;
Hannah Matthews (GA) def. Brea Tate, 8-2; Haley
Gent (GA) def. Sarah Creasman, 8-3; Ashley Herring
(GA) def. Summer Robinette, 8-0.
Doubles: Emily Reed/Monica Carpenter (GA) def.
Grant/Richardson, 8-6; Brown/Tate (MC) def. Abbey
Niswonger/Alysah Niswonger, 8-6; Selena Calecas/
Mollie Tune (GA) def. Creasman/Robinette, 8-6.
Records: Grace Academy 3-1, 3-0 5-A/AA.
CHATTA. CHRISTIAN 9, LOOKOUT VALLEY 0
Singles: Ellie Henry (CCS) def. Torey Yates, 8-0;
Hannah Henry (CCS) def. Hope Gibson, 8-5; Allie
Sullivan (CCS) def. Cotie Sam, 8-0; Gracie Smith
(CCS) def. Devan Smith, 8-0; Emie Cornell (CCS) def.
Mariah Hoffer, 8-0; ANsley Rogers (CCS) def. Jessica
Thacker, 8-0.
Doubles: E. Henry/Sullivan (CCS) def. Gibson/Sam,
8-0; Smith/Cornell (CCS) def. C. Dowell/J. Lawrence,
8-2; H. Henry/Rogers (CCS) def. Smith/Hoffer, 8-0.
SODDY-DAISY 9, CHRISTIAN HERITAGE 0
Singles: Callie Brannon dec. Teagen McEntire, 89-5;
Olivia Holden def. Alli McClure, 8-5; Rachel Hargis def.
Sara Pippin, 8-4; Chloe Mitchell def. Catherine Landers, 8-0; Abigail Ellis def. Courtney Pirkle, 8-2; Adriana
Peckinpaugh (SD) dec. Sydney White, 8-2.
Doubles: Brannon/Hargis def. Pippin/Landers, 8-0;
Holden/Ellis def. Anglec/Katryn, 8-1; Mitchell/Casey
def. Griggs/White.
Records: Sodd-Daisy 5-0; Christian Heritage 4-2.
COLLEGEDALE 7, BOYD-BUCHANAN 2
Singles: Conner O’Brien (C) def. Joseph Fairchild,
9-7; Boston Lonnis (C) def. Kyle Thomas, 8-4; Michael
Chung (C) def. Stephen Ingram, 8-2; Austin Lee (C)
def. Austin Mills, 8-6; Grayson Hartness (BB) def.
Steve Collins, 8-3; Brandon Babbitt (C) def. David
Zumbrun, 8-1.
Doubles: Lonnis/Chung (C) def. Fairchild/Thomas,
8-4; O’Brien/Lee (C) def. Ingram/Hartness, 8-2; Grant
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34227795
The Baylor girls’ tennis
team repeated as champion
of the Decoturf National
Championships this past
weekend in Louisville, Ky.
GPS was the runner-up for
the second straight season, and Baylor’s Samantha
Caswell was named most
valuable player of the rainplagued event.
Harper Caswell was
named to the all-tournament
singles team for the Lady Red
Raiders (3-0), while her sister and McCall Morgan made
the doubles team. Michelle
Fleenor and Emma McCallie
were honored in both singles
and doubles for GPS, which
lost 5-2 to its Chattanooga
rival in the final.
“I think this year’s team is
more mentally tough than we
were last year,” Baylor coach
Dustin Kane said. “We’ve very
talented, but this team is more
composed and able to handle
adversity a lot better.”
Baylor’s top four players, also including Maggie
Crumbliss, are sophomores
in their third year of varsity
experience.
After an easy first-round
win, GPS (3-1) had to play
three matches Saturday, as
its quarterfinal match with
Notre Dame from Arizona
was postponed Friday night.
The Bruisers won 5-0 and
then earned an emotional
victory over top-seeded
Blessed Trinity, which had
beat them in the Buckhead
Rotary last season, before
facing Baylor.
COPPER BASIN 12, ARTS & SCIENCES 7
Copper Basin
00010(10) 1 — 12 8 4
CSAS
021 022 0 — 7 76H
WP: Blake Satterfield. LP: Lucas Hicks (1-1). 2B: E.J.
Crutcher (CSAS); Satterfield, Phil Spargo (CB). Other
highlights: Collin Thul 1-3, 2 RBIs (CSAS); Satterfield
3-5, 2 runs, 2 RBIs; Stephen Spargo 2-3, 2 runs, 2
RBIs (CB). Record: CSAS 2-5.
OOLTEWAH 7, RHEA COUNTY 0
Rhea
000 000 0 — 0 2 2
Ooltewah
002 050 x — 7 7 2
WP: Taylor Baird (7-1). LP: Hanna Manley. HR: Taylor
Hicks (O). 2B: Thompson (RC). Other highlights:
Baird 2-2, Hicks 1-3, 3 RBIs (O). Records: Ooltewah
9-2, 4-1 5-AAA.
SOCCER
TYNER 6, SEQUATCHIE COUNTY 1
Halftime score: Tyner, 2-1. Goals: Jorge Nieves
2, Johnni Orozco, JaMichael Knight, Lamar Allen,
Deelandis White (T); Nic Ross (S). Assists: White,
Orozco, Nieves (T). Saves: Cory Selvidge 9 (T).
Other standouts: Morgan Mines, Madison Mines
(T). Record: Tyner 1-1-1.
Trusted Jeweler for 20 years.
SOFTBALL
BAYLOR 11, COFFEE COUNTY 1
Coffee
000 01 — 1 5 5
Baylor
202 61 — 11 9 0
WP: Kaitie Sims (8-1), 4 Ks, 1 BB. LP: Brianna
Jones. 2B: Chelsea Howell, Ashlynn Young (CC);
Noelle Winkles (B). Other highlights: Winkles 3-4,
3 runs; Sims 2-3; Kelsie Clark 1B, 2 RBIs (B); Bricen
Hunt RBI (CC). Record: Baylor 10-1.
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DALTON, Ga. — Technically, David Crane woke
up Monday morning still
the head football coach at
Southeast Whitfield High
School. By night’s end, the
fourth-year coach also knew
that would no longer be the
case.
Crane, who refused to
resign his position in a March
12 meeting with Southeast
principal Karey Williams and
Whitfield County Schools
superintendent Danny Hayes,
was terminated as football
coach at Monday night’s
county school board meeting. The decision caught
Crane off guard, especially
with spring football practice
coming up.
“I was called in and told
they wanted to go in a different direction, and Miss
Williams didn’t elaborate,”
said Crane, whose wife, Elizabeth, resigned as the Southeast girls’ basketball head
coach after being told she
also would not be retained.
“That’s all I really can say
right now.”
Phone calls to Williams
and Southeast athletic director Scott Ramsey were not
returned as of Monday night.
Williams, in her first year as
Southeast principal, said in a
previous interview with the
Dalton Daily Citizen that she
would not comment since it
concerned a personnel matter.
Crane’s teams won 10
games in four years, though
two wins from last season
later were forfeited after the
Raiders were found to have
used an ineligible player. His
2009 team finished 5-5, the
first non-losing season for
the program since 1992. The
Raiders won 15 games in the
10 years before Crane’s hiring.
“It’s a tough job, but I feel
■ Autumn Babb, Red Bank: She had three hits in four
at-bats, scoring three runs and knocking in six in a 13-7
victory over Lookout Valley.
34308972
Staff Writer
501-B Alamar Street, Fort Oglethorpe, GA • 706-866-3522
34249211
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Chelsi Roark, a Sale Creek
team captain and all-state
selection, recently signed a
volleyball scholarship with
Bryan College. She helped
the Lady Panthers win a
school-record 49 matches
and the District 6-A and
Region 3 titles on the way to
the program’s first state tournament, where they finished
third.
Sale Creek coach Debbie
Hill said she expects Roark
to be a defensive specialist
for the Lady Lions. Roark had
a team-high 555 digs plus 315
...
.
E
LIFE
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012
timesfreepress.com/life
INBOX
COVER’S ON A
ROLL Designer
Jonathan Adler is
all about bringing
style with a dash of
whimsy to the home.
So it’s not surprising
he would team up
with Cottonelle to
design covers for
stashing that spare
roll of toilet paper.
Adler, known for
his pottery and
home furnishings,
introduced his first
line of covers in
August and recently
unveiled his spring
collection. The covers
all have bold, modern
designs. Consumers
can get a roll cover
for free using an
offer code found in
specially marked
packs of Cottonelle
Clean Care toilet
paper, or they can
buy them for $2 each.
In either case, they
pay an additional
$1.99 for shipping
and handling. More
information is at
RespectTheRoll.com.
— Akron Beacon
Journal
RAINBOW OF DENIM: Colorful bottoms bloom for spring, E6
q
q
MOVIE MAYHEM: Five formiddable teen-movie heroes, E4
Goo Goo Dolls to play Riverbend
By Barry Courter
Staff Writer
Contributed Photo
The Goo Goo Dolls are Mike Malinin, John
Rzeznik and Robby Takac, from left.
The Goo Goo Dolls will
headline this year’s Riverbend Festival on Friday,
June 15, according to talent
and production coordinator
Joe “Dixie” Fuller.
The rock band, known
for such hits as “Iris” and
“Slide,” are the final headlining act to be announced,
Fuller said. The city’s largest festival will be June
8-16.
The Goo Goo Dolls are
founding members John
Rzeznik and Robby Takac,
along with drummer Mike
Malinin, who has been
a member for the last 15
years. They released their
first hit single, “Name,” in
1995.
In 1998, Rzeznik wrote
“Iris,” which originally
appeared on the soundtrack
for “City of Angels.” It also
was on the band’s sixth
album, “Dizzy Up the Girl,”
and stayed 18 weeks at No.
1 on the Billboard Singles
chart.
The album also produced Top 10 hits “Slide,”
“Black Balloon” and
“Broadway.”
Previously announced
Riverbend acts include
Foreigner; Lauren Alaina;
The Band Perry; The
Happy Together Tour featuring Micky Dolenz of
The Monkees, The Turtles
featuring Flo and Eddie,
The Grass Roots, The
Buckinghams and Gary
Puckett and The Union
Gap; Gov’t Mule; Eric
Church; Charlie Wilson
and Foghat.
Contact Barry Courter
at bcourter@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6354.
PERSON TO WATCH: GREG DENNIS
Staying
on his toes
Peyton
Manning
is not
normal
Chattanooga State baseball
coach a success on the
diamond and dance floor
Something is wrong
with Peyton Manning.
I don’t care if his neck
operation is a success and
he can thread a needle
with a football, something
is wrong in his gourd.
To sign with the Tennessee
Titans, he
was offered
a sack of
Krystals
before
every
game and
a lifetime
Dalton
supply of
Roberts
MoonPies,
Commentary
and he
turned it down to go to
Denver where a man can
only breathe once a day!
The first time Daddy
took me to a Krystal, I ate
14. So you know what I
would have done if they
had tendered such an
offer to me.
Before the restaurants
were built in Dallas, my
son would drive north
now and then for hours to
get to a Krystal. So now
you know he is a chip off
the old block. Jeff is 6foot-5, and if he had just
liked football he would be
packing for a return home
to Tennessee right now.
After a long visit to
Florida, I was about to
pull out of Uncle Van’s
driveway to return home
and asked him how long
I would have to drive
before hitting a Krystal,
and he knew the exact
When I went to McLennan in junior college, the
He’s more at home in
assistant coach there, Dub
spikes and a cap tugged
Kilgo, taught the dance class,
tightly over his forehead,
popular social dance. And
but Chattanooga State ComMark, my older brother, took
munity College baseball
it with Kevin Kollmansperger
coach Greg Dennis is also the [like Mark, a former teamschool’s popular social dance mate at Notre Dame High
instructor.
School]. When I got out
Although he disdained
there, Mark said, “You need
high school dances at Notre
to take his class. It’s a great
Dame High School, he picked class.” So, my sophomore
up the skill in community
year, both [former Tyner
college in Texas, took addiHigh School player] David
tional classes at Baylor UniTurner and [I] took it. ... We
versity and has been adept at just took it out there, and we
it since.
had a blast, and then I came
“I’ve been teaching it since back after playing a little pro
1987,” said Dennis, assistant
ball and volunteer-coached at
professor and baseball coach McLennan while I was finishat CSCC since 2004.
ing up at Baylor [University],
He previously taught
and when Coach Kilgo got
dance at his alma mater,
the Arizona State assistant
McLennan Community Coljob, I was hired, and I took
lege in Waco, Texas, and
over his classes.
at Collin County Community College in Plano, Texas,
Is it true you didn’t
before coming back to Chatattend a dance when
tanooga.
you were in high school?
When Dennis was hired
No, it’s true. I was socialfor the Chattanooga State
ly inept, I believe. I just
job, his offer to also teach
wasn’t functional socially,
dance was gratefully
so I just tended to stay out
accepted.
of social settings as much as
And while his coaching
possible. Probably not the
prowess has helped the
worst thing in the world.
baseball Tigers win more
than 300 games, including
What is valuable for
conference titles in 2007
the average person
and 2010, he said there are about taking dance?
attributes related to dance
We talk at the beginning
that can help both athof class about ... how
letes and nonathletes.
from a social-skills situation,
it’s a great way of coming
How did you get
By Clint Cooper
Staff Writer
A
Q
A
Staff Photo by
Angela Lewis
Q
A
Q
involved in teaching dancing?
See TOES, Page E6
See ROBERTS, Page E6
TALENTSHOW
Violinist battles partial deafness
By Casey Phillips
Staff Writer
Just when MacKenzie
Hammond began to think
of playing music as something she couldn’t live
without, it started to slip
through her fingers.
Now 15, MacKenzie
began studying violin two
and a half years ago while
living in Knoxville. At
almost the same time, she
began experiencing severe
pain in her right ear.
A series of surgeries
removed the tumor before
allows her to connect
it could spread and paralyze her facial muscles but
with her emotions on a
not before MacKenzie lost
different level.
almost all the hearing in
her right ear.
With no sign of the
The family thought the tumor for 18 months,
earaches were the result
MacKenzie readily cracks
of sinus infections, but a
jokes about her ear being
later examination revealed reattached crookedly after
a cholesteatoma, a tumor
her last surgery. She diseating away the bones of
misses any thought of her
her inner ear.
condition being a handicap,
■ Teen says playing
despite affecting her ability
to hear those around her in
an orchestra setting.
“It’s been a gradual
thing, so it’s not been dramatic,” she said. “I didn’t
even realize it for a while.”
In two years, she has
risen up the ranks to enviable positions at school
and in the city’s youth
symphony program.
As an eighth-grader at
See VIOLINIST, Page E6
Staff Photo by John Rawlston
Eighth-grader MacKenzie Hammond studies music at Chattanooga Center for Creative Arts and is the principal second
violinist with the CSO Youth Philharmonic.
■ To contact Life phone: 423-757-6645 • Fax: 423-668-5051 • Email: [email protected]
E2 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
Puzzles&Funnies
Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
Universal Uclick
In the coming months,
take advantage of every
opportunity you get to join
some reputable organizations that are well connected either commercially
or socially. At the very least,
you’ll establish some valuable contacts.
ARIES (March
21- April 19):
Although your
fertile imagination will
supply you with many
brilliant ideas, unless you
implement at least some
of them, they’ll be of little
value. Don’t be all talk and
no action.
TAURUS (April
20- May 20):
A better-thanusual day in terms of your
finances is not a signal to
loosen up the purse strings,
especially if you do so
to gratify an extravagant
whim. Better to pay off any
long-standing bills.
Crossword
ACROSS
1 __ Tomé and
Príncipe
4 Cap on
spending, say
9 Norwegian Sea
arm
14 Footed vase
15 Habituate
16 Friend of Fido
17 Agt.’s cut
18 Grouchy Muppet
19 The other side
20 The smile on
an email happy
face
23 Director Reiner
24 Jazz singer
Anita
25 Vatican City
is one
27 Split end in a
uniform
32 Air-conditioned
33 Tut’s cousin?
34 Andrea __: illfated vessel
36 88 or 98 automaker
37 Barrier-breaking
noise
40 “Pygmalion”
playwright
43 Reeves of
“Speed”
44 Palindromic
Altar
47 Bridge holding
such as
ace-queen
50 Surprises
52 More decrepit
54 Wuss
55 Topsy’s
playmate in
“Uncle Tom’s
Cabin”
56 Exalted group
leader,
facetiously
61 __ cotta
63 Household
cleanser
64 Alternate identity
letters
65 Encouraging cry,
such as the one
formed by the
ends of 20-, 37-,
and 56-Across
66 Trumpet sound
67 __ canto:
singing style
68 Leno and
Letterman, e.g.
69 Artist Grant
Wood, by birth
70 Bermuda hrs.
DOWN
1 Provide for, as a
dependent
2 Teen haunts
3 According
to plan
4 Ponce de __
5 R&D site
6 A whole lot
7 “Dies __”: Latin
hymn
8 Short and sweet
9 Mural on wet
plaster
10 Comedian Lovitz
11 From one end to
the other
12 Took out
13 Ditches where
creeks once
were
21 A patch may
cover one
22 Co. designation
26 Rise up
dramatically
28 Courtroom oath
29 Otto __
Bismarck
30 The Phantom of
the Opera
31 Puts through a
food press
35 Blind as __
37 Babe Ruth’s
sultanate?
38 “I’m __ roll!”
39 Wilder’s
“__ Town”
40 Final race leg
41 Bum’s rush
42 Supergiant in
Scorpius
44 Woodcutter
who stole from
thieves
45 New versions of
old films
46 Paving material
48 Perfectos, e.g.
49 Suffix with profit
51 Pair
53 Jewish holy man
57 __ contendere:
court plea
58 Shootout shout
59 Lawyer’s aide
60 Plow pullers
62 Inactive mil.
status
Today is Tuesday, March
27, the 87th day of 2012.
There are 279 days left in
the year.
■ 1513: Spanish explorer
Juan Ponce de Leon sighted
present-day Florida.
off, crashed into a Pan Am
747 on the Canary Island of
Tenerife.
■ 1992: More than a
month after winning the
Olympic gold medal in
men’s figure skating, Viktor Petrenko of the former
Soviet Union won his first
world title in Oakland,
Calif.
ON THIS DATE
CANCER
(June 21- July
22): Although
conditions for personal
acquisition look good, you
need to be smart about how
you handle your newfound
wealth.
LEO (July 23Aug. 22): Social
involvements with
friends should prove to be
rather pleasant, as long as
you don’t get carried away
and spend more than you
can afford.
The Associated Press
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
GEMINI (May
21- June 20): As
long as you don’t
allow negative inclinations
to weaken your resolve,
you should be able to
successfully promote a
promising idea.
VIRGO (Aug.
23- Sept. 22):
There is nothing
wrong with fulfilling your
ambitious aspirations, but
only if you don’t do so at
the expense of others.
Today In History
By Gary Steinmehl (1937-2012)
Stumped? Call
c.Tribune Media Services
March 27, 2012
1-900-226-4413 99 cents a minute
LIBRA (Sept. 23Oct. 22): In order
to get your points
across, you should try not to
be coy or circuitous when
explaining them. The best
way to state your case is
in an enthusiastic, direct
manner.
■ 1625: Charles I acceded to the English throne
upon the death of James I.
■ 1794: Congress
approved “An Act to provide a Naval Armament” of
six armed ships.
■ 1836: The first Mormon temple was dedicated
in Kirtland, Ohio.
■ 1911: Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., was incorporated.
■ 1942: American servicemen were granted free
mailing privileges.
■ 1958: Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier in addition to First
Secretary of the Communist
Party.
■ 1964: Alaska was hit
by a powerful earthquake
and tsunamis that killed
about 130 people.
■ 1968: Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first
man to orbit the Earth, died
in a plane crash.
■ 1977: 583 people were
killed when a KLM Boeing 747, attempting to take
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Former newspaper columnist Anthony Lewis is
85. Dance company director
Arthur Mitchell is 78. Actor
Julian Glover is 77. Actor
Jerry Lacy is 76. Actor Austin Pendleton is 72. Actor
Michael York is 70. Rock
musician Tony Banks is
62. Rock musician Andrew
Farriss is 53. Jazz musician Dave Koz is 49. Movie
director Quentin Tarantino
is 49. Rock musician Derrick McKenzie is 48. Rock
musician Johnny April is
47. Actress Talisa Soto is 45.
Actress Pauley Perrette is
43. Singer Mariah Carey is
42. Rock musician Brendan
Hill (Blues Traveler) is 42.
Actress Elizabeth Mitchell
is 42. Actor Nathan Fillion
is 41. Hip-hop singer Fergie
(Black Eyed Peas) is 37.
Actress Megan Hilty is 31.
Actress Emily Ann Lloyd is
28. Actress Brenda Song is
24. Actress Taylor Atelian
is 17.
Bridge
By Phillip Alder
Universal Uclick
In this deal, South is in
four hearts. West leads a
low spade. East wins with
his ace and returns the six,
the higher of two remaining
cards. West takes his jack,
cashes the king, and shifts
to a low diamond. What
should declarer do after
taking East’s king with
his ace?
South’s four hearts
was an overbid. Maybe
he should have rebid two
no-trump. Then, perhaps,
North would have continued with three clubs, and
four hearts would have
been reached.
South’s diamond loser
can be discarded on dummy’s clubs. But trumps
must be drawn first. After
leading a heart to dummy’s
king, should declarer play a
heart to his jack or to
his ace?
No doubt you have heard
of “eight ever, nine never.”
This suit is the first half
of that. With eight cards,
finesse against the queen;
do not try to drop it doubleton offside.
South needs hearts to
be 3-2, and the queen will
be in the three-card holding 60 percent of the time
and in the two-card holding
only 40 percent. Taking the
finesse is much better than
playing for the drop.
Cryptoquote
SCORPIO (Oct.
23- Nov. 22): The
ability to improve
upon some basic ideas of
others is one of your better
assets. If and when your
schemes work out well,
make sure you get some of
the credit.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec. 21):
If a partnership is
to work out well, both you
and your cohort must be in
total agreement, down to
the last detail.
Jumble:
Monday’s Answer:
GUESS
CROWN
FALLEN
LIQUID
Their choice of Leonard Nimoy to play Spock was this
— LOGICAL
Answer to previous Sudoku
For more information about Jumble, visit www.jumble.com on the Web.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
You have what it
takes to accomplish a lot,
but remember, you still have
your limitations.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20- Feb. 18): In
order to maintain
a smooth relationship
with a valued friend, do
not intentionally or even
accidentally pry into
personal matters he or she
wishes to keep secret.
Sudoku
Answer to previous Crossword
Complete the grid so every row, column and 3x3 box
contains every digit from 1 to 9.
PISCES (Feb. 19March 20):
When it comes to
your work or something
you’re tying to accomplish,
much productivity can
be achieved through
consistency and tenacity.
Call 757-6200
for professional help
or do it Yourself
timesfreepress.com
Answer to previous Word Sleuth
... timesfreepress.com
.
Breaking News: [email protected]
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • E3
E4 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
5 fearless teens
in modern movies
EXPERTADVICE
LIFE
Invite brother, girlfriend
even if you don’t like her
DEAR ABBY: I’m getting married this summer. I
want to send an invitation to my brother, but I don’t
want his live-in girlfriend to come.
We used to be friends until I realized
she was lying to me and using me.
Now she’s with my brother, who is 23
years older than she is, which caused
a rift in my relationship with him. We
barely talk anymore.
I know I should be more underDear Abby
standing because it’s my brother’s
Written by
life. He enjoys her company. But I
Jeanne Phillips
find her hospitality fake — just like
the smile she puts on. She’s not welcome at my
wedding. I want my brother there, but I’ll feel terrible if he feels alone. What’s the best way to handle
this? Should I tell him verbally that only he is invited and not send an invitation? — WANTS A HAPPY
WEDDING IN MASSACHUSETTS
DEAR WANTS A friend is part of the package
HAPPY WEDDING: Tell- deal. You can bank on the
ing your brother with whom fact that he would feel alone
you are no longer close that without her, so plan on seathis live-in girlfriend isn’t ing them some distance from
welcome at your wedding your table at the reception. It
is sure to go over like a lead will make her presence less
balloon. If you want him to painful for you.
be there, accept that his girlc. Universal Press Syndicate
HEALTH
Focus Features
Saoirse Ronan is shown in a scene from “Hanna,” a
story set in the Arctic Circle. She plays a 16-year-old
killing machine.
Characters use grit,
wit, wisdom to survive
By Christy Lemire
The Associated Press
Simple measures help
treat urinary incontinence
DEAR DOCTOR K: I’m a middle-aged woman
with urinary incontinence. Is there any way to treat
this problem without drugs or surgery?
DEAR READER: I’m
glad you asked. Surveys
of women
across the
country
indicate
that millions have
urinary
incontinence — the
Dr. K
inability to
Dr. Anthony
Komaroff
keep from
sometimes
leaking urine.
The reason I’m glad you
asked is that those same
surveys indicate that more
than half the women with
this problem never seek
care for it. That’s a shame,
because there is much that
can be done to fix it. There
are several strategies you
can try before considering
medications or surgery.
Start with bladder retraining. This is a program of urinating on schedule. It helps
you to gradually increase
the amount of urine you can
comfortably hold.
To begin bladder retraining, first keep track for a day
or two of the times of day
you urinate or leak urine.
Calculate how long, on
average, you wait between
bathroom visits during the
day, and then add 15 minutes. For example, suppose
you calculate that you go to
the bathroom about once
every hour. Adding 15 minutes brings you to 1 hour and
15 minutes.
When you start training,
empty your bladder first
thing in the morning and
not again until the interval
you’ve set — 1 hour and
15 minutes. You may feel
uncomfortable as the end
of that first hour approach-
es. However, do your best
to hold off urinating until
1 hour and 15 minutes have
elapsed. Keep up that practice: Wait another hour and
15 minutes before you urinate again. Each time you
do this, you should feel that
it is a little easier.
Once you’re comfortable
for the whole hour and 15
minutes, then increase the
interval by 15 minutes. Again,
it may take a while, but you’ll
get comfortable with the longer interval. Once you are,
push out the time between
urinations again by another
15 minutes. And so on. Over
time, you should be able to
wait much longer.
I also recommend drinking less fluid. For some
people, this is all it takes to
bring incontinence under
control. (But don’t hesitate
to drink water if you are
thirsty because you’re hot
or you’ve exercised.)
Pelvic floor exercises
may also help. These exercises, also called Kegels,
strengthen the pelvic floor
muscles that help maintain
continence.
To perform a Kegel, pretend to tighten your vagina around a tampon. You
should feel the contraction
more in the back than the
front. Practice both short
contractions and releases
(lasting 1 to 2 seconds)
and longer ones. Gradually
increase the strength of the
contraction and hold it at
your maximum tightness for
up to 10 seconds.
You can use these exercises strategically. Tighten
your pelvic floor muscles
just before coughing, laughing or whatever usually
causes urine leakage.
FAITH
Make the Bible part of your life
Q: I picked up our old family Bible the other
day and started reading it (which I’d never done
before), but to be honest I didn’t get much out of
it. Is the Bible mainly for preachers and people like
that? — Mrs. V.L.
A: The Bible certainly “The word of God is living
should be the foundation and active. Sharper than
o f e ve r y any double-edged sword
preacher’s ... it judges the thoughts
l i f e a n d and attitudes of the heart”
m e s s a g e (Hebrews 4:12).
What can you do to
— but no, it
isn’t just for make the Bible part of your
people like life? First, get a modern
Billy Graham that. God’s translation of the Bible to
word is for everyone, and supplement your old famno matter who we are God ily Bible. Your local Chriswants to speak to us through tian bookstore can suggest
one. Then set aside a few
its pages.
Why is this? The rea- minutes each day to read it.
son is because God wants Don’t skip around, but take
to change our lives — and a book and read through it
one of his chief tools is the little-by-little every day. (I
Bible. Through it, we learn often suggest people begin
who God is and what he did with the Gospel of John.)
Then, as you read, ask
for us through Jesus Christ.
Through it, we also learn God to help you understand
how he wants us to live, and what it says — and apply it
what it means to turn from to your life. The Bible says,
sin and walk with him every “Do not merely listen to the
day. Through it, we learn, word, and so deceive youras well, about our hope selves. Do what it says”
of heaven. The Bible says, (James 1:22).
.
timesfreepress.com ...
Breaking News: 423-757-News
LOS ANGELES — Jennifer Lawrence already proved
in 2010’s “Winter’s Bone”
that she could play a girl
with strength, wisdom and
survival instincts beyond her
years. Her performance as
an Ozarks teenager searching for her father earned her
an Oscar nomination and put
her on the map.
It also made her the ideal
choice to play Katniss Everdeen, the fiercely independent, 16-year-old heroine of
“The Hunger Games,” which
opened last weekend as the
third highest domestic film
opening on record. Here’s a
look at five other tough teenage characters — if you’re not
too intimidated to take them
on, that is.
Daniel Radcliffe in the
“Harry Potter” movies: He defeats pure evil.
What more do you need?
Sure, he starts out as a slightly nerdy, insecure 11-year-old,
living a miserable life underneath the stairs at his aunt and
uncle’s house, unaware of the
greatness that dwells within
him. But by the time he hits
his teenage years, he’s mastering spells and brandishing his wand with purpose
and ferocity. He’s the king of
Hogwarts. Professors admire
him. Friends are loyal to him.
Chicks dig him. Everyone
knows his name — including
Lord Voldemort, who could
be using his destructive powers in myriad other ways, but
instead chooses to focus them
on our young hero. And he
probably wishes he hadn’t.
Harry thinks on his feet and
conquers every challenge
but still remains a good kid
at heart.
1
Saoirse Ronan in
“Hanna” (2011): Ronan
reteams with Joe Wright,
who directed her to an Oscar
nomination for “Atonement,”
in a role that could not be
more different, or more challenging. She stars as the title
character, a blonde-haired,
blue-eyed, 16-year-old killing machine. Living with her
father (Eric Bana) in a rustic
cabin in a remote and unforgiving forest just below the
Arctic Circle, she learns to
hunt, fight and speak in various languages. Their handto-hand combat scenes are
quick, intense, visceral —
until one day she tells him,
“I’m ready.” Upon embarking on the journey that’s her
destiny, she gets captured by
government agents who think
she’s a shy and sheltered little
girl. But, uh ... they’re wrong.
Even Cate Blanchett in fierce
Prada heels can’t stop her.
2
Hailee Steinfeld in
“True Grit” (2010):
Her pigtails and her
purity make her adorable, but
her strong will and resourcefulness make her a force to
be reckoned with. Steinfeld
made her astonishingly selfassured film debut as Mattie
Ross, the 19th-century pioneer girl who sets the story’s
action in motion, and earned
an Oscar nomination for best
supporting actress in the process. She was only 13 when
she shot the movie, and to
say she holds her own with
Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon,
Josh Brolin and the rest of
the cast would be an understatement. She dominates the
Coen brothers’ film — carries
it, practically — handling the
difficult language as well as
the physical challenges with
equal aplomb.
3
Paramount Pictures
Hailee
Steinfeld,
above, plays
a 19th-century pioneer
girl in “True
Grit.”
Jennifer
Lawrence,
left, depicts
a teenager
from the
Ozarks in
“Winter’s
Bone.”
Lionsgate
Joseph Gordon-Levitt in “Brick” (2005):
I must admit I did not
love this movie, a 1930s-style
film noir set in a contemporary Southern California high
school, when it first came
out. I admired its daring but
found it too self-conscious
... maybe I should revisit it.
Still, I always loved GordonLevitt’s performance as Brendan, a teenage loner who’s
investigating the murder of
one of his classmates. In the
tradition of classic Humphrey
Bogart characters, Brendan’s
looks in no way indicate what
he’s capable of doing as he
digs closer to the dangerous
truth. He’s slight, fine-featured
and messy-haired, perennially dressed in a simple, gray
hooded sweat shirt. But he’s
quick-witted and he can take
a punch (the frequency with
which he gets his butt kicked
is comical), all of which he’s
4
willing to do for this doomed
woman he loved.
Sean Penn in “Fast
Times at Ridgemont
High” (1982): No matter how many roles Penn
immerses himself in or Oscars
he wins, he will always be Jeff
Spicoli to me. Spicoli totally
knows how to navigate the
system. He orders pizza in
Mr. Hand’s class — ‘cause
there’s nothing wrong with
a little feast on our time
— trashes a sports car and
turns it into a positive for the
school’s football team, has fun
at all the joiner activities like
dances and games but still
remains blissfully, obliviously
cool and above the fray. Of
course, he’s high the entire
time — and we would never
condone drug use here in
the Five Most space — but
Spicoli does graduate. And
he saves Brooke Shields from
drowning.
5
Sure you can go home again after college
By Sara Barbour
Los Angeles Times
The week before my 23rd
birthday it hit me. “You know,”
I said casually to my mom as
we drove into town to get
pedicures, “I don’t think I’ve
hung out with anyone my age
in over a month.”
It was true. Almost a year
out of college and here I was,
living at home and socializing
decades above my age group.
I shopped for groceries and
made dinner every night. I
watched “The Daily Show”
with my mom and went to a
Wilco concert with my dad.
I took my grandma to movies nominated for best picture
and, for the first (and hopefully only) time in my life, when
the Academy Awards rolled
around, I’d seen them all.
Strangest of all, I was happy.
After six months on a biodynamic farm with a rampant
mouse problem and a refrigerator that didn’t close, my
old bedroom felt like a luxury.
After four years of dorm living in New York City, with fire
alarms that wrenched us from
bed at 2:30 a.m., cursing whatever drunk sophomore had
pulled the emergency lever
“for fun,” I appreciated the
quiet. I loved having a house to
myself, 9 to 5. I loved hosting
elaborate meals for my parents’ friends, the overworked
adults sighing with relief into
their glasses of wine.
Orange County Register
Is it so wrong, I wondered, to actually like living
at home?
It wasn’t that I’d given
up on starting my own life.
Every morning at 7 I dutifully staked out my spot at the
kitchen table, sifting through
job postings and honing my
resume. The optimism with
which I began my job search
was — to my now appropriately jaded self — staggering.
My applications ran the gamut
from Green For All to Google.
I checked my Gmail constantly, confident in my ability to
make an impression.
I heard back from no one.
Slowly it began to dawn
on me that living at home
was, perhaps, going to be a
long-term thing. The “quick
stopover” fantasy I’d indulged
over the holidays was harder
to maintain when my sister
went back to school. Instead
of brightly telling people I’d
be home for “maybe a couple more weeks,” I mumbled
incoherently and changed the
subject.
And then, strangely, I started to like living at home. I kept
up the applications, but I also
began working part-time for a
local filmmaker. I started volunteering at the public radio
station that had become my
closest companion. I cooked,
I flossed daily, I organized
my parents’ CDs. And when
no one else was home (on
average, six to eight hours a
day) I cranked up the stereo
and listened to a song called
“Happiness” on repeat.
After a vibrant college life,
it’s hard to move home without feeling at least a twinge
of failure. It’s demoralizing
to offer yourself up — all the
college prep, the hours of
internships, the years spent
working for free — and come
away not just rejected but
unacknowledged. Under my
parents’ roof once again, the
benefits were obvious (food,
rent-free housing, a washing
machine that worked), but so
were the difficulties.
Miles from the nearest big
city and car-less, I didn’t just
feel stranded, I often actually
was. The stigma of jobless-
ness greeted me everywhere,
from newly employed peers
to a local J. Crew clerk. And
then there were the moments
when I felt like a teenager all
over again: Arriving home
late from my first dinner out
on a date in weeks, I was summoned to my parents’ room
and greeted with reproachful
looks.
My generation was seared
with the terrorizing ultimatum that come graduation
we’d better be hired because
financial independence was
the ultimate predictor of success. Unfortunately, that’s not
an automatic option, but my
sense of self-worth is deepened through providing for
my family in the ways I can
— cooking, cleaning, getting the car washed — while
gratefully acknowledging
their willingness to provide
for me.
So here’s my advice to
those in the class of 2012 who
fear the great Move Home:
Be thankful you have one.
Don’t stop your search for the
job or opportunity that will
get you into that first apartment, but appreciate your
family and the ways you can
help them. There are worse
(if less embarrassing) things
than having to lean on a social
structure that is meant to provide support. And it wouldn’t
hurt to start being nice to
Mom and Dad.
... timesfreepress.com
.
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • E5
Breaking News: [email protected]
Can we condemn Murdoch when we love his gossip? Lopez makes $25 million
from ‘Idol,’ commercials
Tune In
OTHER HIGHLIGHTS
Tonight
By Kevin McDonough
LATE NIGHT
■ Toby Keith, Ben Gleib,
Sarah Colonna and Greg
Fitzsimmons are booked
on “Chelsea Lately” (11
p.m., E!).
■ Charles Murray sits
down on “The Colbert
Report” (11:30 p.m.,
Comedy Central).
■ Lionel Richie appears
on “Late Show With
David Letterman”
(11:35 p.m., CBS).
■ Jay Leno welcomes
Mitt Romney, Megan
Hilty and the Pierces on
“The Tonight Show”
(11:35 p.m., NBC).
■ All-American Rejects
appear on “Jimmy
Kimmel Live” (midnight,
ABC).
■ Shaquille O’Neal, Lily
Collins and Andrew Bird
visit “Late Night With
Jimmy Fallon” (12:35
a.m., NBC).
CULT CHOICE
The competition for
worst holiday film of
all time is fierce, but
the 2004 “comedy”
“Surviving Christmas”
(8:30 p.m., Cinemax) is
clearly a contender.
to Camilla Parker Bowles,
then very much not his wife.
He mused privately about
intimate matters that were
EPB
BATTL
LAFAY
CLEVE
RINGD
DALTN
CHATT
A tale of screaming
headlines, gossip, sex and
criminal collusion between
the police, press and politicians, “Murdoch’s Scandal”
on “Frontline” (10 p.m., PBS,
check local listings) offers a
survey course
TO SEE IT on the scandal
“Frontline,” 10 that threatens
Rupert Murp.m., PBS,
doch’s News
Comcast
Corp., one of
cable chant h e l a rge s t
nels 5 and
press empires
204 in Chatin the world.
tanooga.
At the center is a London
newspaper’s cynical use of
voicemail-hacking to prolong
a story about a kidnapping
— in the process, giving false
hope to the young victim’s
family. In many ways, these
transgressions seem lifted
from fiction, specifically the
2003 BBC miniseries “State of
Play” and Billy Wilder’s 1951
satire “Ace in the Hole.”
But combine the ease of
accessing cellphone conversations with the ubiquity
of the phones’ use, and you
have the makings of a tabloid
dictatorship, a place where
citizens are subject to blackmail and humiliation at the
hands of the vengeful, sleazy
and capricious. Imagine TMZ
merging with the KGB and
you’re getting close.
While some have cheered
at Murdoch’s humiliation, this
story transcends his press
empire. As long as people
seem more addicted to gossip than standing up for their
rights (and the rights of others), such practices will flourish.
Twenty years ago, a newspaper tapped into a phone
call that Prince Charles made
6
PM
6:30
■ Burt throws his hat into
the ring on “Raising Hope” (8
p.m., Fox, TV-PG).
■ Jess and Russell step out
on “New Girl” (9 p.m., Fox,
TV-14).
■ The first contestant goes
home on “Dancing With the
Stars” (9 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
■ A case complicates Carrie’s love life on “Unforgettable” (10 p.m., CBS, TV-14).
■ Product placements on
“Fashion Star” (10 p.m., NBC,
TV-14).
■ A terror plot threatens
the city on “Body of Proof” (10
p.m., ABC, TV-14). Luke Perry
NBC Photo guest-stars.
Bob Harper stars in “The
■ “Bomb Patrol: AfghaniBiggest Loser” tonight on
stan” (10 p.m., G4) returns for
NBC.
a new season.
■ Raylan faces two killers
later leaked to the press and from the Motor City on “Justified” (10 p.m., FX, TV-14).
labeled “Camillagate.”
Folks in and out of the
SERIES NOTES
media seemed so intoxicated
■
A
suspect too close to
by catching a royal saying
naughty things to his lover home on “NCIS” (8 p.m., CBS,
that relatively few seemed TV-PG).
■ “The Biggest Loser” (8
to ask about the propriety of
tapping his phone calls. Or to p.m., NBC, TV-PG).
■ Recaps on “Dancing
ponder fearfully, “If they can
tap the phone of the Prince With the Stars” (8 p.m., ABC,
of Wales, what can they do TV-PG).
■ Haley Reinhart guestto me?” I think we’ve begun
to see the results of that over- stars on “90210” (8 p.m., CW,
TV-14).
sight.
■ Violence among SEALs
DVD RELEASES
on “NCIS: Los Angeles” (9
TV-themed DVD sets p.m., CBS, TV-14).
■ Bridget opts to take the
available today include “I,
Claudius: 35th Anniversary stand on “Ringer” (9 p.m., CW,
Edition.” Decades before TV-14).
■ Oz must make a phantom
“Downton Abbey,” viewers
were glued to this PBS Brit- figure appear on “Breaking In”
ish import that starred Derek (9:30 p.m., Fox, TV-14).
Jacobi as the troubled Roman
Contact Kevin McDonough
emperor and featured perat
[email protected].
formances by John Hurt and
c. United Feature Syndicate
Patrick Stewart.
7
PM
TUESDAY EVENING
7:30
8 PM
8:30
3.1 NBC
Eyewitness
NBC Nightly
Entertainment Inside Edition
4
3
3
3
4
4
3
WRCB
News
News
Tonight 'TVPG' 'TVPG'
3.2 Antenna 216 148 148 148 216 216 163 Dragnet
Dragnet
News 6 p.m. Good Times
9.1 ABC
NewsChannel ABC World
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
10 9
9
9 10 10 9
WTVC
9
News
Fortune 'TVPG' 'TVG'
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes ('72) An intelligent ape
9.2 ThisTV 208 174 174 174 208 208 169
12.1 CBS
WDEF
12.2 TUFF
WDEF
18.1 PBS
23.1 TBN
23.2 Church
23.3 JCTV
23.4 Enlace
23.5 Smile
39.1 WYHB
45.1 PBS
WTCI
45.2 Create
53.1 CW
WFLI
53.2 MeTV
WFLI
61.1 FOX
WDSI
61.2 MNT
A&E
AMC
ANPL
BET
BRAVO
CMT
CNBC
CNN
COM
CSPAN
CSPAN2
CSSE
DISC
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FNC
FOOD
FOXSS
FX
GAME
GOLF
HALL
HGTV
HIST
ION
INSP
LIFE
MTV
NBCSN
NGEO
NICK
OWN
SPEED
SPIKE
SPSO
STYLE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TRUTV
TVLAND
UCTV
USA
VH1
WGN
13
12
12
12
13
13
12
204
9
8
4
8
4
4
204 204 10
9
9 13
156
158
159
18
5
10
10
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6
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53
118
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83
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96
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101
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48
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36
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24
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27
59
26
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5
29 29
67 67
15 15
2
46
58
52
69
62
68
39
41
65
14
85
34
47
23
31
32
53
43
50
33
30
144
35
60
51
44
107
101
25
66
311
48
55
127
36
64
37
24
63
27
59
26
28
56
49
45
57
226
26
19
21
48
17
45
61
14
39
95
104
27
20
35
28
29
31
59
58
33
42
179
36
43
22
126
178
244
37
25
70
226
26
19
21
48
17
81
61
30
39
95
104
27
20
35
28
29
31
59
58
33
42
179
36
43
22
86
178
244
37
25
70
16
103
78
44
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118
8
44
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62
49
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77
43
40
73
17
18
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34
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36
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40
265
24 23
53 78
2
2
7
69
41
15
34
47
252
40
265
29 24
67 30
15 2
CINEMAX 320 515 520 515 320 15 520
DISN
136 43
43
54
64
57
HBO
302 500 500 500 302 302 500
HBO2
303 501 502 501 303 303
HBO FAM
305 503 504 503 305 305
SHOWTIME 340 400 400 600 340 14 540
TMC
350 408 406 408 350 62 560
9 PM
DEAR STACY: Every like to see it again. — Chartime I sit down to watch lotte D., Jamestown, N.Y.
TV, there is Jennifer Lopez
DEAR CHARLOTTE:
in yet another comThat’s the 1974 film
mercial. Any idea
“Buster and Billie,”
how much she’s
with Vincent and
making from all
Joan Goodfellow.
that? — Kevin A.,
The movie, which
Chattanooga
has retained a devotDEAR KEVIN:
ed following, can be
Lopez reportedly
found on the Intermakes $25 million a
net.
Stacy
year, $20 million of Jenel Smith
DEAR STACY:
which comes from Entertainment Some friends were
“American Idol.” You
talking about Nicolhave to know a large chunk lette Sheridan, and I said
of the remaining $5 million is she was related to the late
coming from advertising and “Kojak” star Telly Savalas.
endorsements. But companies They thought I was imagfeel she’s worth seven-figure ining things. Can you help?
deals. When Lopez and ex- Also, wasn’t he related to
husband Marc Anthony con- Jennifer Aniston somehow?
tracted with Kohl’s for their — J.J., Fairmont, Minn.
lifestyle collection, the store
DEAR J.J.: Savalas, who
expected them to drive sales died of prostate cancer in
of an astounding $3 billion.
1994, had a son, Nick, with
DEAR STACY: I’m an Nicollette’s mother, Sally
admirer of Linda Cardel- Sheridan. Therefore, Savalini of “Freaks and Geeks” las’ son is Nicollette’s halfand “ER” fame. Can you brother. The “Kojak” star was
tell me what she’s been up also the godfather of Jennifer
to lately? — Russ S., War- Aniston.
ren, Ohio
DEAR STACY: WhatDEAR RUSS: Cardel- ever happened to Victor
lini is busy with motherhood French, Mr. Edwards from
these days. She gave birth to “Little House on the Praidaughter Lilah-Rose on Feb. rie”? — Karen T., Canton,
29. Lilah-Rose is the first Ohio
child for the actress and her
DEAR KAREN: A heavy
boyfriend, Steven Rodriguez. smoker, veteran actor French
Work-wise, she recently did a succumbed to lung cancer at
guest star stint on “Person of age 54 in 1989.
Interest” and voiced a characTo find out more about
ter in the video game Lollipop
Chainsaw, due out this year. Marilyn Beck and Stacy
DEAR STACY: What is Jenel Smith and read their
the old movie that starred past columns, visit the CreJan-Michael Vincent, ators Syndicate web page at
where he falls in love with www.creators.com.
c. Marilyn Beck, Stacy Jenel Smith
the school tramp? I’d really
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11
PM
11:30
The Biggest Loser The contestants head to a Zumba class.
Fashion Star "Here Comes
Eyewitness
(:35)Tonight
'TVPG' (N)
Summer" 'TVPG' (N)
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Sanford
Sanford
All in Family All in Family 3's Company The Ropers
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Dancing With the Stars: The
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Story So Far 'TVPG' (N)
Results 'TVPG' (N)
1 of 2 cont'd April 3 'TVPG' (N) 9 at 11 p.m.
Nightline
Unforgettable (1996,Crime Story) A man implants his
Blue Steel (1990,Thriller) A rookie cop pursues an
leads a revolution against humanity. Roddy McDowall 'TVPG'
wife's memories to catch her killer. Ray Liotta 'TVMA'
obsessed psychopath. Jamie Lee Curtis 'TVMA'
News 12 at
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The Andy
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(5:00)Praise the Lord 'TVG'
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Earl
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Time" 'TVPG' Moore 'TVG' Dyke Show
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Everybody
The Simpsons The Big Bang The Big Bang Raising Hope Raising Hope New Girl
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Divorce Court Judge Alex
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Family Guy
Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage (N)
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CSI: Miami "Dead Zone" 'TV14' CSI: Miami "Hard Time" 'TV14' Under Siege (1992,Action) Steven Seagal 'TV14'
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River Monsters: Unhooked
I, Predator "Killer Whale"
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106 & Park: BET's Top 10 Live 'TVPG'
Stay Together Stay Together The Game
The Game
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Stay Together
Tabatha Takes Over
Tabatha Takes Over
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
Tabatha Takes Over (N)
Watch (N)
Atlanta
Ext. Makeover: Home
My Big Redneck Vacation
Ron White's Comedy Salute to the Troops
Ron White
Movie
Ron White's Comedy Salute to the Troops
Mad Money 'TVPG'
The Kudlow Report
The American Tax Cheat
60 Minutes "Energy Business" 60 Minutes "Global Expansion" Mad Money 'TVPG'
John King, USA
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight 'TVG'
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Daily Show
Colbert Report 30 Rock
30 Rock
Key & Peele Tosh.O
Tosh.O
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(5:00)U.S. House of Representatives 'TVG'
Key Capitol Hill Hearings
(5:00)U.S. Senate 'TVG'
Tonight From Washington 'TVG'
Capital News Today 'TVG'
SportsNite 'TVG'
Baseball NCAA Clemson vs. Georgia 'TVPG' (L)
Spring Training TV
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Deadliest Catch "Fresh Blood" Deadly Catch "Changing Tides" Deadliest Catch
Deadly Catch "The Final Hour" Frozen Planet "Summer"
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Fashion Police 'TV14'
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I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry ('07,Comedy) Adam Sandler 'TV14' Ice Loves Coco Chelsea Lately E! News
SportsCenter 'TVG'
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Gameday
(5:00) Ace Ventura: Pet Detective... Ace Ventura: Pet Detective ('94,Com) Jim Carrey 'TV14'
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story Vince Vaughn 'TV14' The 700 Club 'TVPG'
Special Report With Bret Baier FOX Report
The O'Reilly Factor 'TVG'
Hannity
On the Record
The O'Reilly Factor 'TVG'
Chopped "Plenty Of Fish" 'TVG' Cupcake Wars
Cupcake Wars
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped "Sweet Redemption"
N.C. State
The Game 365 Coaches' Show 'TVG'
Soccer UEFA Champions League Chelsea vs. Benfica 'TVG'
UFC Bad Blood: Chuck 'TV14'
Met-Mother
Two and Half Two and Half Star Trek (2009,Sci-Fi) Chris Pine 'TVPG'
Justified "Measures" (N)
Justified "Measures" 'TVMA'
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
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Golf Central
PGA Tour (N) Academy (N) Learn (N)
The Golf Fix 'TVG'
Feherty "Michelle Wie" 'TV14' The Haney
The Haney
Golf Academy Golf Central
Little House "His Father's Son" Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie
Little House "A Matter of Faith" Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Million Dollar Rooms (N)
Property Virgin Property (N)
HouseH (N)
House (N)
Million Dollar Rooms
Top Gear "Continental Divide" Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Top Gear "Rut's Show" 'TVPG' Top Shot (N)
Top Shot "Trick Shot Shoot Off"
Criminal Minds "Safe Haven"
Criminal Minds "Devil's Night" Criminal Minds "Middle Man" Criminal Minds
Flashpoint "Backwards Day"
Flashpoint
Happy Days
Happy Days
Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman
The Waltons "The Ferris Wheel" Little House "The Odyssey"
Little House "The Collection"
Dr. Quinn M.D.. "Lead Me Not"
Reba
Reba
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms (N)
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
(5:30)Pregnant 16 and Pregnant 'TVPG'
16 and Pregnant 'TVPG'
16 and Pregnant 'TVPG'
16 and Pregnant 'TVPG'
16 and Pregnant 'TVPG'
NBC Sports Talk
NHL Live!
Hockey NHL Tampa Bay Lightning vs. Boston Bruins Site: TD Garden 'TVG' (L)
NHL Live!
NBC Sports Talk
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Doomsday Preppers
Border Wars
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iCarly
Victorious
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Wife and Kids Wife and Kids George Lopez George Lopez '70s Show
'70s Show
Friends
Friends
Primetime: You Do? 'TVG'
The Rosie Show
Unusual Suspects
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Beyond Belief
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NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
Supercars
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Pimp My Ride Pimp My Ride RideRule (N) My Ride Rules NASCAR Race Hub
The Rock (1996,Action) A general takes over Alcatraz Island. Sean Connery 'TVMA'
The Rock (1996,Action) A general takes over Alcatraz Island. Sean Connery 'TVMA'
Golf America Season Preview
Pre-game
Basketball NBA Atlanta Hawks vs. Milwaukee Bucks 'TVG' (L)
Post-game
Classics NCAA LSU/Ala.
Giuliana, Bill "The Year of Fun" Giuliana and Bill
Big Rich Texas
Sex & City
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Jerseylicious "Tracy's Big Test"
Monster Man
Ghost Hunters "Flooded Souls" Ghost Hunters
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Monster Man "Seeing Double"
King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan 'TV14'
(:15) Stingaree (1934,Romance) Richard Dix 'TVPG'
Cape Fear (1962,Thriller) Gregory Peck 'TV14'
River of No Return ('54,Western) Robert Mitchum 'TVPG'
19 Kids
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19 Kids and Counting
Little Couple Little Couple 19 Kids
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Bones
Bones "The Pain in the Heart"
Bones "Yanks in the U.K."
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Con Air (1997,Action) Nicolas Cage 'TVMA'
AdventureTime AdventureTime AdventureTime Gumball
Level Up
AdventureTime King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy
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Bizarre Foods 'TVG'
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Mysteries at the Museum
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Off Limits "Arizona" 'TVG'
When Vacations Attack (N)
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WienerCircle Las Vegas Jail Las Vegas Jail
M*A*S*H
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Home Imp
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HappilyDiv.
Hot/ Cleve.
Ft. Oglethorpe Aging Matters Know Your Bible 'TVG'
Cotton's Aut
Ringgold Chr Night Talk
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Rick Davis Talking Gold 'TVG'
Law & Order: S.V.U. "Goliath" Law & Order: S.V.U. "Parts"
Law & Order: SVU "911" 'TV14' Law & Order: S.V.U. "Strain"
Law & Order: S.V.U. "Raw"
CSI: Crime "You've Got Male"
Consignment Consignment Styled By June La La's Full
Behind the Music "Game"
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Surviving Christmas A rich man pays a
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family to spend Christmas with him. 'TV14'
for his stolen baseball card. Bruce Willis 'TVMA' Guide 'TVMA'
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(:15) Blue Valentine
must deal with her dad's former wives. Tim Allen 'TV14'
drug smuggling. Jesse Eisenberg 'TVMA'
child in a hit and run accident. 'TVMA'
('10,Dra) Ryan Gosling 'TVMA'
Colorful
bottoms are
blooming
in spring
By Samantha
Critchell
The Associated Press
tangerine tank and cobalt
blue cardigan.”
Stylist George Kotsiopoulos says all the color infuses
fun into fashion without
making women victims of
a frivolous trend, but he
agrees it’s not for shrinking
violets. “I don’t know that
you could do too much color
— OK, maybe yellow jeans,
a fuchsia top and orange
jacket. You can absolutely
run the risk of looking like a
clown in all of this, but it can
also be very chic. You can be
a very chic clown.”
He adds, “This gives you
something new to shop for.
It’s a way to be casual with a
little something extra.”
(The E! Fashion Police
commentator says he bought
many colored denim pants
for his TV appearances
because they look good on
camera and in photos. He’s
not sure, though, how many
other men he’ll bump into on
the street wearing them.)
Color is giving a jolt to
the jeans business, which
only has so many options
for growth. Over the past
few years, skinny jeans have
been the top silhouette and
BESTBETS
Toes
Looking for something
to do today? Here are
some ideas.
■ HIKE Soddy-Daisy
Hiking Club meets at
10 a.m. today at South
Chickamauga Creek for
an easy hike along the
Tennessee Riverwalk.
842-3619.
■ BOOK SIGNING
Former Major League
Baseball media relations
executive Michael
Ringerling will sign
copies of his first novel,
“Six Bits,” noon-2 p.m.
today in the Great Room
of Lee University’s Math
and Science Complex,
Cleveland, Tenn. Hosted
by Communication Arts
Department. 423-6148621.
■ STORYTELLING
Chattanooga Story
Circle meets at 7
p.m. today in the firstfloor auditorium at
Chattanooga Public
Library, 1001 Broad St.
Free admission.
■ STUDENT PLAY
The Signal Mountain
Homeschool Theater
Group will present
“The Lion, the Witch
and the Wardrobe”
at 7 p.m. today in the
Bachman Community
Center auditorium, 2815
Anderson Pike, Signal
Mountain. The play is
based on C.S. Lewis’
classic book. Admission
is free, but donations
for the center will be
accepted at the door.
The Associated Press
American Eagle Outfitters offers jeggings in bold colors.
• Continued from Page E1
into a setting and being confident and being able to put
yourself out there a little bit
in an arena where a lot of
people aren’t comfortable ...
and should be. From a lifetime fitness [standpoint], it’s
a great thing. It’s something
like bowling or tennis. You
can do it the rest of your life.
I’ve had so many students all
the way back to my days at
McLennan or Collin County
that I still get in touch with
... that say they still go out
and dance. Their kids now
dance. I just think from a
social standpoint and from
a staying-active standpoint,
it’s a great activity.
Are there advantages
for athletes to take
dance?
I think [there are]. Normally, I try to get at least
three or four of my guys in
there. I’ve had as many as 10
or 12 at a time. Again, I think
it’s great [for] tempo, understanding rhythm. When
you’re playing sports, footwork and things like that are
very rhythm-related. I know
I’ve found with my infielders, it’s been a great help to
them to be able to be a little
more conscious of what their
feet are doing and what kind
of movement and whether
it’s just a grapevine step or
whatever — learning how to
do that well and the agility
Q
A
women haven’t been eager
to part with them, says
Dylan George’s Guez, and
then there are the committed fans of other cuts. Once
they know what they like,
there’s often no urgency to
try something new. “I wish I
could say that regular denim
was blowing out, but I can’t.
But what is? Color and patterns — lace, plaid, floral
prints.”
And, as the weather
warms, shoppers will have a
chance to buy into this trend
all over again in shorts, Guez
adds.
Denim can be a “blank
canvas” that can evolve
each season as long as the
industry thinks out of the
box, says Jeff Lubell, CEO of
True Religion. When there’s
not enough variety, interest
wanes. “I like to do something that is different than
the pack. I like a lot of novelty. I believe in color, not
necessarily only in denim,
but in cargos and khakis.”
Shoppers are ready, even
hungry, for it all, he says.
There certainly has been
time to adjust the collective eye since these bright
hues have been on the bottoms of models, editors and
fashion insiders for a year
or so. There was a “fashion
moment” last September
during New York Fashion Week where every top
retailer, editor and stylist
seemed to get the memo
to wear yellow jeans in the
front row.
Still, Guez says he would
like to see more orange out
there, and red gives off the
sexiest vibe. Yellow comes
off as flirty, he says. Meanwhile, Kate Upton, Sports
Illustrated Swimsuit’s cover
model this year, will start
appearing in his company’s
ads in multishade “watercolor” jeans.
Pink is one of the most
popular pant shades based
on sales at American Eagle,
Ward reports. She says it
complements other hot
items of the season, including belts and bracelets in
pastel shades.
The one place not to put
color if it’s everywhere else
is on the feet. A neutral ballet flat or wedge sandal can
wisely keep bright bottoms
grounded, Ward says.
people, and it was a
fundraiser for the dance
department. ... We would
let the class choose, and
ABOUT HIM
one semester ... one
■ Age: 49.
of the dances we did
■ Hometown:
was “Bye Bye Bye” by
Chattanooga.
’N Sync, and I got out
■ Education: Bachelor’s there and did that with
degree, physical
them to my great disdain
education, Baylor
because I told them,
University; master’s
“I’ll do whatever we do.”
degree, education, Baylor So we went out there,
University.
and it was not my finest
■ Family: Wife, Mary;
moment, but I worked
three sons, Zach, 20,
my way through it, and
Fielder, 17, Mitch, 10.
I’m sure they still chuckle
about that one when they
think back on it.
HOBBY
Reading. My boys and
Mary got me a Nook, and SAVOR THE
I take it on the [baseball]
MOMENT
trips on the road, and I
am reading all the time. I He said his greatest
baseball triumphs, both as
just love to.
a player, were the Class
state high school
DANCE FAUX PAS AA
championship when he
At Collin County, we
was with Notre Dame
used to do a recital
High School in 1979 and
at the end of each
the junior college World
semester, and it was all
Series championship
of the dance classes.
when he was with
... It was a big thing
McLennan Community
in front of about 500
College in 1983.
FACTFILE
that’s involved with it.
Have you ever done
a ny p r o f e s s i o n a l
dancing?
No, no. I tell [students]
when I first come in —
the first day of class we do
syllabus and all that — and
I say, “Let me tell you something. I’m probably the only
baseball coach in America
Q
A
that’s teaching folk dance,
ballroom dance” — we do
some country-western —
“[and] I am knowledgeable
about what I do, but I am
by no means a professional.”
No studio’s going to pick me
up. ... I’m grassroots. I know
what I know.
Contact Clint Cooper at
[email protected]
or 423-757-6497.
Violinist
CLAIM TO FAME
• Continued from Page E1
Center for Creative Arts,
MacKenzie sits in the firstviolin section of the high
school orchestra. She is also
the principal second violinist of the Chattanooga Symphony & Opera’s Youth Philharmonic.
MacKenzie said she felt
drawn to the violin because
of its ability to convey emotion. A desire to achieve that
level of emotionality has
pushed her to understand the
composer’s intent when she
tackles a new piece.
“Playing an instrument,
in general, especially for
me, lets you connect with
your emotions on a different level,” she explained.
“Sometimes, I play a scale,
and it hits me as this big,
emotional thing.”
MacKenzie has looked
for opportunities to improve
her playing. Last summer
she attended the Southeast
Chamber Music Institute
at Tennessee Tech University.
While there, she received
word that she would be leading the Youth Philharmonic’s
second-violin section this
year.
MacKenzie said she considers the position, and the
accompanying responsibility
of coordinating her section
mates, as an honor greater
than playing more complicated parts as a first violinist.
Even after a spot opened
up for MacKenzie to move
up the ranks she said opted
to retain her position as a
principal.
Philharmonic conductor
Sandy Morris said MacKenzie’s passion and insightful suggestions have proven
she is a good candidate for a
leadership role.
“It has been very good
experience for her because
I’m sure she will lead other
sections in the future,” she
said. “She brings a lot to the
table.”
Even after MacKenzie’s
relatively short period on
the instrument, her mother,
Karen Hammond, said she
sees no reason her daughter can’t achieve her dream
of attending The Juilliard
School in New York.
Hammond said she is
inspired by MacKenzie’s
Roberts
• Continued from Page E1
mileage and the exit number. Those Roberts boys have
their heads on straight.
But wait! Peyton’s behavior gets even more bizarre.
He was offered a lifetime
supply of MoonPies, and
turned it down!
MoonPies have been made
here since Noah stepped off
the boat, and there’s nothing
more delicious on the planet.
I like them unadorned with
coffee in the morning or after
dinner with a scoop of ice
cream (give the ice cream
time to seep in).
Even country singers
know and extol the glories
of MoonPies. One of the
most famous country songs
was “Give Me an RC Cola
and a MoonPie and Play
Maple of the Hill.” I believe
it was Lonzo and Oscar
who sung that winsome little ditty. It’s hard for me to
accept that Peyton is not as
smart as Lonzo and Oscar.
Lonzo doesn’t even have
front teeth, and he’s never
been hit by a 350-pound NFL
tackle.
Peyton surely knows
that in the years of Papa
Archie’s revered presence
®
www.carmike.com
MAJESTIC 12
NORTHGATE 14
WYNNSONG 10
BATTLEFIELD 10
34162356
Rainbow of denim
NEW YORK — Your
attention, please: One of the
easiest ways to spruce up
your wardrobe this spring
is with a splash of color. It
doesn’t have to go on your
lips or over your shoulder
— and not across your chest,
either. This season, the place
for bold color is on the bottom.
Colored denim and, by
extension, every other kind
of pants and trousers in hues
as bright as the rainbow are
a key look in stores at every
end of the shopping spectrum. Part of the pervasiveness is that it’s pretty democratic: You find the shape
and silhouette that you like
best and find the shade that
best complements your skin
tone. Swap out blue or khaki
and, voila, you’re on trend.
Think of it as you would
a fresh coat of paint.
“You can’t deny what’s
going on with color,” says
Daniel Guez, CEO and creative director of the upscale
denim label Dylan George.
“Everyone can participate
in this.”
Yes, bright yellow bottoms might seem a little
intimidating at first, says
Tana Ward, American
Eagle’s chief merchandising
officer, but adds: “We see
colored bottoms as easy to
wear, believe it or not.”
Reverse whatever outfit
you would have worn before,
she suggests: Instead of
jeans and a bold pink or red
top, put the color on the bottom and pair it with a denim
chambray shirt — maybe
even a Western style — or
go for a little femininity with
a white lace tank top peeking
out the top of a crisp white
or blue button-down. You’re
also likely to find an easy
transition into crocheted or
other loose-weave sweaters
in natural, neutral colors,
too, Ward says.
However, she adds, while
there are many user-friendly
ways to wear colored pants,
don’t expect any of them
to go unnoticed. Turning
a few heads is the point,
Ward says, and eventually
you’ll gain the confidence to
put the bright top with the
bright bottom. “Being bold
is very modern ... and the
most modern way to do this
is color on color. Wear the
unexpected — a red bottom,
..
timesfreepress.com ..
Breaking News: 423-757-News
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A Fresh
Take
On News
MacKenzie Hammond,
15, is a first violinist
who plays in the highschool orchestra at
Chattanooga’s Center
for Creative Arts. She
is also the principal
second violinist in the
Chattanooga Symphony
& Opera Youth
Philharmonic and has
attended the Southeast
Chamber Music
Institute at Tennessee
Tech University.
ABOUT HER
■ School: Eighthgrader at Center for
Creative Arts.
■ Siblings: Sister,
Maggie, 6.
■ Pets: A Chihuahua
named Lupe.
■ Favorite
composers: Johann
Sebastian Bach,
Antonio Vivaldi and
Antonin Dvorak.
■ Favorite violinists:
Itzhak Perlman and
Isaac Stern.
■ Favorite bands: The
Beatles, Black Sabbath,
The Black Keys and
Kings of Leon.
TALENT SHOW
Do you know a child
age 15 or younger with
a precocious talent in
academics, athletics
or the arts? The Times
Free Press is searching
for children to feature
in “Talent Show,” which
appears in the Life
section on Tuesdays.
To nominate a child as
a possible subject of a
future feature article, email staff writer Casey
Phillips at cphillips@
timesfreepress.com or
call him at 423-7576205.
accomplishments, which she
finds all the more impressive
in light of the obstacles she
has had to overcome.
“She’s done amazingly
well starting where she was
to where she is now in just
two and a half years,” she
said. “I think she can do a
lot with [music], especially
since she’s come so far in
such a short time.”
Contact Casey Phillips
at cphillips@timesfreepress.
com or 423-757-6205. Follow
him on Twitter at @Phillips
CTFP.
on the Mississippi football team, a Meridian bakery made Archie cookies
instead of gingerbread. My
little wife remembers going
into the bakery when she
lived in Meridian and seeing several trays of Archie
cookies, and she feels sure
the folks at McKee would
have come up with a Little
Debbie cake with Peyton’s
physiognomy. The McKees
have always known what
is hot and what is not, and
Peyton is as hot a cookie as
anyone has ever got (may
not be grammatically correct but it rhymes, and
that’s all a songwriter cares
about).
All I know is when the
Titans beat the Broncos in
the Super Bowl, I will have
a Super Bowl Party here at
the house with a huge sack
of Krystals and MoonPies
with a big pot of coffee, and
we will get to see Peyton
repent on national television.
No, to tell the truth, I
appreciate the man for what
he did for Tennessee football. I love him, and I am still
squalling like a run-over dog
that he will not be a Titan.
I shall continue to maintain
that he has a gourd problem.
Email Dalton Roberts at
[email protected].
THE
HE ULTIMATE STADIUM THEATER
HE
w
www.ravemotionpictures.com
EAST RIDGE 18 (423) 855-9652
EAST
I
I-24
at Moore Road (Exit 184)
Showtimes for Tuesday,
y, March 27,, 2012
*Monumental - G 7:30
*Hunger Games - PG13 (1:45) (2:15) (3:00)
(3:45) (5:15) 6:00 6:45 7:30 9:00 9:45 10:30
11:15
*Hunger Games IMAX - PG13 (1:00) (4:30)
8:15
*Friends with Kids - R (2:00) (5:00) 8:00 11:00
*21 Jump Street - R (1:00) (2:00) (4:00) (5:00)
8:00 11:00
*Project X - R (1:30) (4:30) 7:30 10:30
*John Carter 3D - PG13 (4:30) 11:00
*The Lorax 2D - PG (1:00) (4:00) 7:00 10:00
*The Lorax 3D - PG (2:00) (5:00)
*Silent House - R (4:30) 10:30
*A Thousand Words - PG13 (1:15) (4:15)
7:15 10:15
*John Carter - PG13 (1:15) 7:45
*Act of Valor - R (1:45) (4:25) 7:45 10:45
*Good Deeds - PG13 8:00 11:00
*This Means War - PG13 (1:30) 7:30
*Safe House - R (1:45) (4:45) 7:45 10:45
*The Vow - PG13 7:15 10:15
*Journey 2 2D - PG (1:15) (4:15)
*October Baby - PG (1:15) (4:15) 7:15 10:15
34053765
E6 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
*= No Passes Accepted ( ) = Bargain Matinee Showtimes
Group Event & Field Trips (50 or more) 1-866-878-7068
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Tuesday,
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SERVICES STUFF
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Double
Door
English
Wardrobe
125
$
FEATURED VEHICLE
FEATURED HOUSE
FEATURED JOB
FEATURED PROVIDER
2000 LEXUS GS 400
SODDY DAISY
LPN
ABBOTT PAINTING &
PRES-WASH
Platinum Edition, pearl white with
tan leather. 119K miles. Great
condition, perfect service history.
Clean Carfax.
$9,800.
Beautiful home in Hunters
Hollow subdivision! 2600 sq ft on
cul-de-sac lot! 4BR/ 3BA, finished
bonus room, huge basement.
$240,000
Call 423-618-5044
TO ADVERTISE, CALL:
757-6200
Needed for busy medical practice.
EMR / Computer experience a
plus. Send resume to: GI Specialist,
302 Point North Place, Dalton GA
30720 or fax: 706-279-3969
Lowest Prices All Work
Guaranteed
Low temp Interior & exterior
painting & restorations. Insured.
Pressure wash & paint decks,
carpentry 423-314-6970
CLASSIFIED
READER’S PHOTO
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BUSINESS HOURS:
TELEPHONE SALES
MONDAY–FRIDAY
8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
CLOSED SATURDAY/SUNDAY
WE GLADLY ACCEPT
THE INSYDE
OUTSYDE SHOP
5006 Dayton Blvd.,
Red Bank, TN
Thurs. 10 – 4
Fri. & Sat. 10 – 5 • Sun. 1 – 5
876-1400 or 875-9828
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Local
Services
yp.timesfreepress.com
Air Conditioning
Baileys Heating & Air Svc
& Sales. All makes/models, senior discounts 423-413-5312
Bulldozing
Lot Clearing, footings, road
building, septic systems, topsoil,
and fill dirt. 605-5374.
LADDS CONSTRUCTION
backhoe, dozer, demolition,
& tree service. 423-290-4184
Bush Hogging
BUSH HOGGING
All Size Jobs
A. C. HEATING & AIR
Service on all makes. Heat pump
replacement installed up to
3 ton, $2900. 10 yr. factory
warranty. 423-505-9296
LOOKOUT AIR SOLUTIONS
$39.99 Seasonal Cleaning
Sales, Service & Installation.
Free Est. 100% financing avail.
423-710-1328
Same Day Heat & Air
All makes & models. $25 service
call. $49.95 seasonal tune-up
Lic. & Ins. Call 423-344-6650
BILL’S DISCOUNT
HEATING & AIR
Lic. TN. & GA. Certified all
makes & models. 423-667-1347
Jim Swafford 423-842-7266
Carpet Sales/
Installation
GOT WRINKLES?
Carpet Repair Specialist
Call Dave 423-304-6559
“Flooring” Chatt. Since 1982
CARPET RESTRETCH
No Job too small. 423-240-9881
customflooringusa.com
Crystal Clean Team
Appliance Repairs
All makes & models.
Call Joe (423) 855-8890
CLOCK REPAIR
A-1 SERVICE Air Cond.,
Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers,
Stoves. 822-6003/322-2790
Computer Repair
REPAIR HOME icemakers,
Trojans, Viruses, Worms
Holding Your PC Hostage???
Can Fix call 423-463-0872
Concrete Work
Custom Concrete & Masonry
Complete Reliable Work!
Concrete & Demolition.
Dump Truck & Bobcat Service
423-421-4895 or 888-615-0705
JUNK CARS, TRUCKS
BUSES, MOTOR HOMES
HENSHALL CONCRETE
Will pay cash in 30 minutes.
Call Joe at: 423-635-5680
the other guys are offering for
junk cars. Running or not.
Call Roger, 423-402-6741
Autos/Trucks Wanted
FAST SERVICE
$200-$1000
CASH FOR
JUNK CARS
423-320-6971
I Pay More Than The Rest
Bobcat Service
GroundWerx Unlimited
demolition/french drains/dump
truck/retaining walls/driveways.
Free Estimates! 423-593-7810
DRIVEWAYS, FILL & TOPSOIL,
Land Clearing & Drainage Work.
Lic. & Inc. 423-421-0664
BOBCAT, DOZER, BACKHOE
& DUMP TRUCK. Clearing to
site prep. Lic/Ins. 423-718-5664
Bulldozing
Dozer, Excavator, Bobcat,
Backhoe, Dump Truck, Top Soil,
Fill Dirt & Gravel. Prompt &
Reasonable. 423-503-5568
GLOBAL FENCE SYSTEMS
Wood, Vinyl, Chain Link
Install & Repair 423-595-3597
Flooring
Driveways, slabs, concrete removal
Dump truck & Bobcat Service.
ACTION CONCRETE
Removal/replacement. Stamped
- All types. 423-304-8647
COMPLETE CONCRETE
423.421.8785 or 423.421.9466
SPECIAL 10X40X4’’ $1099
ALL Concrete - Including
pea gravel / decorative concrete.
Concrete removal. 34 yrs. 825-0017
Decks
DECK BUILDERS pool/spa
decks, Screened porches,
fences, 30 yrs. professional exp.
Lic./ Ins. Free Est. 629-8055
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Installation, Finish & Refinish.
423-240-9712
WOOD FLOORS -Refinishing
& Repairs. All work guaranteed.
Best Prices. 423-227-9328
Gutter Work
Quality Seamless Gutters
Gutter Replacement,
Repairs, and Cleaning Services.
Call Rick @ 423-488-5942
GUTTERING Free Estimates
(706) 965-4999
Handymen On Call - Can do it
all! Storm Damage Clean Up &
Repair - Concrete - Decks - Room
Remodels - Tile - Electrical.
handymenoncall.net
423-240-4227
423-710-3911
Miller’s Handyman Service
Home Repairs, Maintenance,
Small jobs, Painting.Free est.
Lic/Bonded/Ins. 423-876-3465
Quality is Our Business
Demolition & asbestos
abatement. Call: 423-298-1154
Carpentry, Painting, Odd Jobs
Call Robert 423-504-6771
Drywall
STEVES’ HANDYMAN SERVICE
Low price leader
423-821-0423 / 304-0218
Bedwell Handyman Services
All home repair - Painting
& Carpenty. 423-432-2405
MJM Contracting - Home
Repair/Carpentry. Accept major
credit cards. 423-902-7576
Cut, Trim, Edge, Blow
Ron: 316-7904
AAA LAWNCARE
Reasonable Rates, Quality Work
Father & Son Team
423-421-5912
Hound/trenching/Straw-Blowing
842-7536 or 580-4931
Budget Scapes/Design -Trees,
shrubs, sod-Install. Specialize in
low main. landscape. 704-7442
RESIDENTIAL LANDSCAPING
Design & Installation. Shrubs,
Mulch, Sod & Pavers. 400-2157
Lawn Care
5 Star Lawn Services
Chattanooga’s Premier Lawncare Service
Commercial & Res. Scheduled Service
Reasonable Rates
“Tried the rest, now try the best”
423-344-7446/423-635-0057
E. BRAINERD AREA - PRO
MOWER . Experienced, Honest
Ag. Degree UTK, Allen 802-5729
Affordable Roofing
HRepairs & RoofingH
706-639-7030, 423-584-0515
423-505-8071
A PAINT CONTRACTOR
SUPER’S
Interior & Exterior, Lic./Ins.
Satisfaction Guar. 423-902-6954
Church & Senior Discounts
Cut, Trim & Blow
499-4468
JOLLY PAINTING
Int/Ext. Decks, Fences, Comm.
Lic/Ins. Free Est. 423-698-1831
Ken’s Roofing & Leak Repair
Quality work, Written warranty
Senior Citizen Discount 30 yrs
Exp. Great Rates!! Call Us 1st!!
Free Estimates. 423-991-7702
Painting/Wallpaper
LAWN MASTER - Mowing
Excellent Painter & Wallpaper
Hanger. Great work & Great
Rates. Call Cathie 423-304-3355
New Roofs & Repairs.
20 yrs. in business. Lic. & Ins.
Paving
BEST ROOFING
Lawn and Landscape, Lic. &.
Ins, Free Est. 706-820-2928
Moses Yard Service
Serving E. Ridge & E. Brainerd
423-355-0949
Free Estimates. Call anytime
Curtis 423-255-7040
Landscaping, Trim Shrubs, Cut
Trees, Clearing, Plant, Mulch &
Hauling. Christian Man. 413-1251
THE LAWN TEAM -Landscaping
/Mulch/Gutters/Pressure wash.
[email protected]/531-7556
QUALITY PAVING CO.
WADE HUTTON OWNER
Residential asphalt paving,
asphalt sealing. 423-332-6720
STANLEY’S PAVING CO.
Parking lots, driveways, seal
coat, patchwork. 706-669-9526
Plumbing
ABSOLUTE PLUMBING
Master Plumber, 24/7. Sewer
Jetting. Great Rates. Bonded,
Lic & Ins. Matthew 423-509-4523
Quality home repairs low rates.
Master Plumber. 423-785-7430
DENTON MASONRY
Leaks repaired H Drains
Cleaned H Fixtures installed
Senior Disc Josh 423-598-1466
423-499-9301
All Plumbing & Gas
Pay by the job. Not the hour.
24hr. Call 314-4789
Pressure Washing
TONEY MASONRY-Chimneys,
Repair, Retainer Walls, Block
Brick & Carpentry. 423-580-3611
Scott’s Pressure Washing
Free estimates.
Call: 423-645-4440
Roofing
Brick, Block, Rock, Concrete,
Retaining & Carpenter. 208-1404
Moving & Hauling
CHATTANOOGA’S TRUSTED
MOVERS 423-855-7000
or at foxmoving.com
FREE HAULING of appliances/metal. Starting @ $30
for brush, trash, furniture, etc.
Cleaning of attics, garages, etc.
Call Gary @ 423-899-4850
Moving & Storage
HOODMOVING.COM
Local moves starting at $89.
Experienced Movers 423-825-2167
ROOFING UNLIMITED
Free roof inspection.
Will help with deductible.
423-413-0438 & 423-443-1667
51 yrs. Exp. Free estimates, Lic.
Ins & bonded. 423-356-7442
www.Able Dockery Roofing.Com
LEAK REPAIR &
SMALL ROOF JOBS
& Leak Repair. No job too big or
small. 432-385-9594
R & W ROOFING & REPAIR
Roofing Repairs
DALE’S PLUMBING
H No Job Too Big or Small H
& Construction- Brick, block,
bobcat. Lic. (423) 344-9929
MASONRY OF ALL TYPES
BROWN’S ROOFING
Guaranteed to beat anyone’s
price! Call for free estimate
423-394-8273 or 423-362-0471
30 yrs. exp. Free Estimates.
423-299-6037
MASTER PLUMBER
20 yrs Exp. & Joe 320-2871
Call us first! Discount Coupon
with this ad. We do all roofs &
leak repairs. 423-355-6214
INDEPENDENT ROOFING
Marvin Jenkins & Son Plumbing
Lic. & bonded. $25 service call
applied to repairs. 421-5380
jmmasonryinc.com
423-320-4897
423-903-4701
Masonry
All types brick, block, stone &
stucco. Concrete & remove old
concrete & repair chimney top.
Garner Masonry
698-6080/645-1846
ROOFING
ABLE DOCKERY ROOFING
A TO Z ROOFING
& HOME IMPROVEMENT
& More. Lic. & Ins. Over 30 yrs
exp. Free Est. Low Overhead.
Plus warranty!
423-664-2508 718-9960
423-593-7124
Sheetrock
HANGING & FINISHING
& REPAIRS - Up to 60 mi.
Ceiling Spray, Popcorn,
Knock Down & Slick.
Free Estimates
423-876-4445
CEILINGS REPAIRED
Textured, Finishing, 30 yrs.
Clay Simmons. 842-7786
BIRGERHOMES.COM
SIDING
Insurance Claim Specialists
423-421-3666
BIRGERHOMES.COM
AAA STUMP GRINDING
ROOFING
Insurance Claim Specialists
423-421-3666
Best Price - Just Call
423-825-CALL / 825-2255
Swimming Pools
423-355-3777
423-605-5374
Finest of all Topsoil
706-861-6404, 423-593-2191
TRIPLE CROWN
TREE SERVICE
Trimming, Topping & Removal.
Free Estimates. Fully insured.
Senior Citizen & Military
Discount 423-499-0134
TREE SERVICE REMOVAL
or Trimming - Any size tree Anywhere - lg. or sm. Clean-up.
Any size Root Ball removal. Root
Stump grinding. Bushhog up to
6” brush. Insured & Bonded.
Free estimates. Call:
423-619-1565
ALL TYPES CLEANUP
Tree, stump removal. Dozer &
backhoe work. Good rates.
Free estimates. Service
Chattanooga to Monteagle
areas. Call: 423-802-9663
or 423-290-2166
ABC-12TREE
Removal, Stump grinding, Crane
Service, Debris Cleanup.
Hazardous Tree Specialist.
423-599-1108
TENN TREE SERVICE
Removal, Trimming, Stump
Grinding. We specialize in
dangerous trees. Free est.
Lic/Ins. 423-244-3487
B & D TREE SERVICE
3Insured. 3Free Estimates.
423-605-2523 423-364-8041
423-762-4164
A CHRISTIAN TREE / LAWN
SERVICE Insured. Free
Estimates. 423-544-2602
HC - MOBILE TREE SERVICEH
Stump grinding. 309-6148
www.c-mobiletreeservice.com
Fully insured. 20 yrs. exp. 70’
bucket truck. 423-605-4158
Northside Tree Service
Top trim removed. Insured.
Since 1978 877-0717/843-9020
NEED A TREE CUT?
423-790-7540
Treebusters Tree Service
Fully insured, 26 yrs. exp., 80’
bucket truck. 423-503-0949
KB TREE SERVICE
Affordable, Reliable & Insured.
17 Yrs. Serv. 423-298-4669
NORRIS TREE SERVICE, Inc.
Tree work, stump removal
Licensed, insured. 892-7950
Stump Removal
H & H Inc. Lic., Bonded & Ins.
BBB Rating A+
MACHINE CLEANED
TOPSOIL
TIM-BERS Tree Service
Mid-South Roofing & Repairs
30 yrs. experience.
Licensed, Bonded, Insured.
Siding
A-1 ROOFING
Quality Lawn & Groundworks
Lawncare/Landscaping. Comm/
Res. Lic. & Ins. 423-903-0812
320-9491/886-2569
Lic. & Ins. Free Est. Credit cards
accepted. 423-605-4161
EDIBLE LANDSCAPING
Add food & beauty to your yard!
Tilling, Planting, Raised Beds.
Call Jon 423-838-0578
homeflavorschattanooga.com
MAGIC BRUSH - Int/Ext
Pressure Wash. Free Quotes!
Exp. Lic. Will Shane Smith
Top Soil
Tree Service
Most Yards $20
TOP NOTCH SERVICES
PAINT, PRESSURE WASH,
LAND CLEARING, ROOF,
LAWNCARE. 423-903-2135
Lowest Prices All Work Guaranteed
Low temp Int/Ext painting & restora
tions. Ins. Pres wash & paint
decks, carpentry 423-314-6970
Metal Roofing
Repairs, Shingles, Flat
Short Waits * Low Rates
BETTER HOMES
Home
Restorations
TENNESSEE ROOFING
GAF Master Ellite Applicators
Full Insured/ Warrantied
All types roofs
Metal, Shingle & Flat
Residential & Commercial
FREE Estimates! 842-8826
423-298-3198/256-599-6217
FAVORS PAINTING PLUS
WE MOW, weed eat & blow
Please give us a call. Free est.
423-322-2419
Large or Small, I do it all!
Roofing & Siding Also
Lic. Contractor 423-320-4897
Roofing
Mowing & More - We Do It All!!
Planting , Mulching, Trimming &
Retaining Walls/Irrigation. Lic &
Ins. Reliable. 423-364-1798
MCB Custom Renovations
All home remodeling. Big/small.
Free estimates/reasonable rates.
20 yrs. exp. Bonded/Insured
423-800-1884
Home repairs & maintenance
Free Est. 423-475-5904
423-475-2110, 423-693-9975
Abbott Painting & Pres-Wash
Professional Lawn Care
Mow-Trim-Haul, Commercial/
Residential. Insured. 894-4233
GALLET HANDYMAN SERVICES
Affordable Home Repairs
QUALITY $15
Chattanooga Home Improvement
Aeration/tilling/Seeding/Rock
Licensed/Bonded/Insured
Residential/Commercial Repairs
Free Estimate - Senior Discounts
Most E. Ridge/Brainerd lawns
$25. Free estimates, license &
Insured 697-1870, 309-0446
The Green Guys Lawn Care
STICKS AND STONES
All phases of remodeling
& new construction.
No job too big or too small.
Lic. Bonded & Ins. 423-802-2903
Painting
Ellis Painting/Pressure Wash
Interior / Exterior, Clean &
Restore & Stain Decks,
Low Pressure House Wash
Licensed / Insured. References.
Al Ellis 309-0988
WHITWORTH CONTRACTORS
Decks, tile, kitchen, bath, stucco,
painting. Lic. 423-305-8355
Landscaping
HOME HELPERS LLC
Lawn Care
& Trimming. Soddy, Hixson,
N. Hamilton Co. 423-280-0970
Handyman Services
% ANDY OnCall %
Est. 1993 Small jobs,
Home repairs & Maintenance
PLicensed & Fully InsuredP
Free Estimates! 423-624-9800
Place your ad today 423.757.6679
TOMMY’S LAWN CARE
Mike Delashmitt Const. We do it
all. Roofing, siding, windows & additions
Lic/Bonded/Ins 423-875-3024
Call J&R Construction
Jack up & Replace floor joists
Free Estimates! Ron 304-7765
Licensed and Insured
Demolition
Call Stephen: 423-653-4814
Call Gary: 423-903-3274
Residential & Commercial,
Decks, hardwood floors,
interior trim, tile showers,
plumbing, electrical. Bonded
& Ins. 423-595-3595
House Leveling
Gary Jackson Demolition
All Drywall Services
STR CONSTRUCTION
GUTTER CLEANING FREE ESTIMATES. Since 1988
Steve 423-503-6856
FULL LINE OF SERVICES
DRYWALL HANGING,
FINISHING, TEXTURED
CEILING & REPAIRS.
Free Estimates. 423-876-4445
HANDYMAN CONNECTION
Retired Craftsmen & other
experts offer low cost home
repairs and remodeling H Licensed H Bonded H Insured
Call: (423) 954-3002
ALL TYPES
www.alguireconstruction.com
423-394-5878
423-355-1814
Estimates. 706-996-1038
PRECISION SEAMLESS
Automotive
ABLE TO PAY MORE than
HOMECRAFT FENCE
& DECKS - All Types - Free
Signature Floors Hardwood,
Prefinished - Refinished,
Installation & Repair 760-1823
Clock Repairs
FOR JUNK CARS,
TRUCKS & BUSES.
FAITH-FULL Fences & Decks
All Types. Over 20 Yrs.
Exp. Call Gary 240-0980
Cleaning Services
ALTERATIONS BY DONNA
Formals, men, women, children.
Lowest prices! 423-593-9141
WE PAY
$400- $1000
Fencing
Ceramic, Laminate & Hardwood
Free estimates. 423-227-8998
Res. & Comm. cleaning for
over 15 yrs. 256-632-6831
WILL PICKUP UNWANTED
Scrap Metal & Appliances.
423-903-1125
GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOPSOIL
& EXCAVATING WORK
Lic. & Ins. 423-718-5664
BEST PRICE
Installation, Restretch, Repairs.
30 yrs. exp. 423-635-4326
Alterations
refrigerators, freezers & stoves.
7 days. 596-4083/899-9448
Bulldozer, Top Soil, Sitework,
Driveways, clearing, 20 yrs.
Lic. & Ins. 423-280-6347
Any Size Job!!
Lawn Master 423-280-0970
Home Improvement
Remodeling
GRAVEL, FILL DIRT,
BUSH HOGGING
BYRD HEATING & AIR
Conditioner, Ice Maker Machine,
Commercial Cooler, Repair &
Installation. Call 423-314-0711
Dump Truck
Service
DIRECTORY
T.W. POOLS “Work done with integrity”
In-Ground Liner Replacements Early Bird Specials through
April. Todd 423-503-5525
Wilson Tree Co. Oolt., TN.
Economy slow, bids are low.
Work Comp./Liab. 423-284-9872
Vinyl Siding
Quality work + quality material
= Coffey Construction Co. 20
yrs. experience. 877-7147.
Water Proofing
We Fix Water Problems
Wet basements/drainage/crawl
spaces. Lic./Ins. 423-421-0664
F2 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
timesfreepress.com
MEDICAL
SALES AGENTS
LPN’s
VILLAGE VOLKSWAGEN
NEEDS AUTOMOTIVE
SALES PROFESSIONALS
Successful candidates must
have; Drive and Integrity,Excellent Communication Skills,
Ability to Work Independently and as Part of a Team,
Sales Experience Preferred
but not Necessary
PT/ FT, $15 per hour.
ANS 423-267-6006
MA
FULL TIME CHEMICAL LABORATORY
TECHNOLOGY INSTRUCTOR
Whitfield Murray Campus
Georgia Northwestern Technical College is seeking
qualified applicants for the position of full time Chemical
Laboratory Technology instructor primarily on the Whitfield
Murray Campus. The successful applicant must be able to
teach day, evening, and online courses if necessary in a
multi-campus environment. The successful applicant will
also advise students and participate in institutional and
community service.
Required Qualifications: Master’s degree or higher
in Chemistry or a related master’s degree with 18
graduate hours in Chemistry. Excellent communication,
management, and interpersonal skills.
Preferred Qualifications: Industrial laboratory or
production experience. Teaching experience at a college
or university. Experience teaching online or hybrid classes
using ANGEL or Blackboard LMS software.
Starting date: Position opened until filled
To apply: Please go to www.gntc.edu and click on Employment for the
Human Resources webpage then click Employment Opportunities link for the
GNTC Job Center.
A Unit of the Technical College System of Georgia
Georgia Northwestern Technical College does not discriminate on the
basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, academic or economic
disadvantage, handicap or disability.
34334713
ANNOUNCEMENTS
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
EMPLOYMENT INFO
GOVERNMENT
WILDLIFE JOBS!!
Field Service
Technician
HIGH PAYING POSTAL JOBS!
GIANT CONSIGNMENT EVENT
for Sporting Gear, East Ridge,
details www.JockSale.com
CEMETERY LOTS
2 Plots- Lakewood Memorial
Garden West- $2,400obo for
both or can sep.606-464-8097.
HAMILTON Memorial Gardens,
1 lot, 2 vaults, 2 open and
closed, in the Garden of Prayer,
valued over $10,000 will sell for
$5500. Moved near Birmingham,
Alabama, need to sell.
Call 205-353-1608.
Hamilton Memorial Gardens,
Hwy 153, 2 lots. MUST SELL
AS PAIR. Garden of Valor,
Lot148D, Spaces 3&4.
$4000. for pair/ negoti. Buyer
pays transfer fee. 423-413-6542
Don’t pay for information about
jobs with the Postal Service or
federal government. Call the
Federal Trade Commission
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP, or
visit www.ftc.gov to learn
more. A public service announcement from the Chattanooga Times/Free Press and
the FTC.
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
BUCKET TRUCK DRIVER
NEEDED w/ CDL . Must have
experience in tree work and be
able to pass drug test. Call
423-242-8542
CARPET TILE INSTALLERS
needed: Must have valid
driver’s license & be willing to
travel nation-wide for a
minimum of 8 weeks at a time.
Starting salary: $26,000 per
year, up to $30,800 after first
year. Health insurance after
one year, solid advancement
opportunities 423-624-9700.
Chattanooga Safety Products
seeks FT Territory Industrial
SALES REP. Fax resume to:
423-305-7742 or email:
[email protected]
Counter Clerk Needed
Full-time. Apply at: Big Ridge
Cleaners, 5936 Hixson Pike.
No phone calls please.
Hamilton Memorial Gardens- 2
lots/ pair. Double Veteran’s
marker $4,500. 423-618-8275
HAMILTON MEMORIAL GARDENS , “Last Supper’’, 2 lots,
$4500/make offer. 423-332-5758
DELIVERY DRIVERS for local
children’s entertainment company. Must have pickup truck,
heavy lifting involved, $250+
per weekend or $750 per
week. astrojumpofchatt@
bellsouth.net
Typical Responsibilities:
Operating retubing
equipment
l Maintaining, trouble
shooting, & repairing
retubing equipment
l Travel & field assignments
required to support onsite
retubing activities.
l
Skills Required:
Experience in repairing
pneumatic & hydraulic
equipment
l Background in equipment
maintenance a plus
l High school diploma or
equivalent
l
Send a resume with
references to:
RETUBECO Inc.
6024 Georgetown Rd.
Ooltewah, TN. 37363
Fax # 423-238-9028
No phone calls please
General Laborer for large residential Home bldr. $10 per hr.
Apply in person M-F 8am-5pm
at 414 Spring Street. Chatt. TN
37405
Heavy Equipment & Truck
MECHANIC. Electrical &
hydraulic exp. req. Pay negotiable. Chatt. 423-320-4737
HOOK UP INSTALLER
Pay based on qualifications &
field experience. Must have
own tools. M-F.7:30am-4pm
423-842-8081
HVAC -RESIDENTIAL
LODGE NOTICES
ROSSVILLE LODGE #397
Called meeting, March 27th, To
confer the Masters
Degree Eat at 6:30pm,
work to follow.
Jesse Goodman, WM
LOST & FOUND
FOUND: Beautiful long haired
male Siamese Cat. Holly Hills
& Jenkins. 423-892-7100.
NURSING/
ELDERLY CARE
CNA / CAREGIVER NEEDED
for 2nd & 3rd shift. Experience
a plus but will train. Must have
flexible schedule & be able to
lift 25 lbs or more. Call
423-843-3110 or 423-355-4710
NURSERY/
CHILD CARE
Loving Nana offering a secure
home for your infant or toddler.
Please call to discuss. 468-0822
TICKETS
DIESEL MECHANIC
N E E D E D . Also run heavy
equipment. Call:
423-266-7402 for info
Start earning great money
today!
Are You Up For
The
Challenge...
…Of earning $390 weekly,
working 25 hours per week?
…Of beating our top sales rep,
who earned an avg. of $1,000
per week last month?
…Of being "the best"?
You will be knocking on the
doors of local residents
presenting the benefits of Times
Free Press home
delivery.
Applicants must:
Work M-F,3:30 pm- 8:30 pm
Communicate clearly.
Like working outdoors.
Meet & talk with new people.
Submit to and pass a
pre-employment drug screen.
If you are not afraid of a
CHALLENGE, want a GREAT
part-time income, & are OPEN
to learn from the experience of
others, call Justin Goodrich at
423-757-6587 or apply in person in HR, Monday-Thursday,
9:00 am to 3:00pm
Chattanooga Times Free Press
400 E. 11th St.
Chattanooga, TN 37403
I NEED MASTERS TICKETS
FOR ANY DAYCall 423-802-2644
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
MASTER'S TICKETS
Wanted.
706-410-1431
DRIVERS wanted. Professional, courteous, neat appearance, clean MVR. All
American Taxi 423-867-6190
I WANT TO BUY - Your
Masters Practice Rounds
and Badges. 423-760-0717
MONEY TO LOAN
FIRST LOAN FREE!
$100 - $800
Call for details - 622-3776
ACCOUNTING/
BOOKKEEPING
Controller/Bookeeper- CPA
licensed, 6 years experience in
construction including cost
acctg. Reply to: Chattanooga
Publishing, P.O. Box 1447,
Advertiser 34323053
Chattanooga, TN 37401-1447
EDUCATION &
TRAINING
EDUCATION/TEACHER Ridgedale Baptist Child Development Center is seeking
full time teachers with at least
one year experience in child
care. High school diploma or
GED required. Desirable applicants should be nurturing,
energetic, and positive role
models. Call 423-499-6292,
Mon. - Fri.
MATH TUTORS NEEDED. Fun,
energetic. Perfect for college
students. If you know the math
we’ll teach you the rest. Email:
[email protected]
East Ridge Cab taking
applications. Must be clean, neat
& have clean MVR. Seniors
welcome. Call Charles
at 423-421-0370
EAVES FORMAL WEAR is now
accepting applications for full
time temporary positions in our
order dept. Position includes
keying telephone & faxed tuxedo
orders from our wholesale
customers. Apply in person at
910 Creekside Rd. B1, just off
Amnicola Hwy. 622-3242
Experienced Shipping/
Receiving Clerk needed
Must have the following
qualifications:
* Proficient in Excel
* Forklift experience
* Warehouse & inventory
control
* Loading & Unloading Trucks
* Exp. in bill of ladings and
shipping documents
* Data entry
* Customer service skills
* Answering telephones
This is a combination
office/warehouse position
and some heavy lifting will be
required. Email resume to:
r.smith@finishing
solution.com
or apply in person @
1320 E 49th Street
Chattanooga TN 37407
Monday – Friday 8:30 – 3:30
No phone calls please.
Full Time Exp. Managers
& CSR Positions Available. Exp.
preferred. Starting pay based on
exp. Fax: 1-866-445-7363 or
email: [email protected]
Applications available at any
Americash store location.
Immediate need for
experienced Hook-Up Installer & Sheet Metal Duct
Installer. Top pay & benefits. Apply in person at:
Reliable Heating & Air Cond.
404 Spears Ave. N. Chatt.
423-266-2424
INSULATION
INSTALLER NEEDED
Call: 31 W Insulation Co.
423-622-9044
K I T C H E N T E C H : Must be
able to trouble shoot and repair Deep fryers, Ovens, Flat
Tops, Hood Vents All that
commercial kitchens have.
Knowledge of HVAC-R a
plus. Must have valid DL.
Please fax resume to:
423-867-3733 or email:
[email protected]
LIVE, WORK, PLAY PARTY!
Play in Vegas, Hang in LA,
Jet to New York!
Hiring 18-24 girls/guys.
$400-$800 wkly. Paid
expenses. Signing Bonus.
Are you energetic & fun,
Call 866-574-7454
Maintenance Technician (FT)
HVAC certified. Signal View
Condos, 900 Mtn. Creek Rd.
Chatt. 37405 or send resume
to [email protected]
MEDICAL BILLER WANTED
Healthcare Billing Services is
accepting resumes - No
experience needed. 50 wpm
typing skills, data entry skills,
phone skills, stable employment
history and a professional
demeanor. Fax resume
to: 423-893-3257 or mail
to: HBSI, 4419 Hwy 58 Ste. 4,
Chatt., TN. 37416
Metro Lawn Care
We are currently hiring:
Lawn Maintenance Supervisor
Experience a must. Position
based on Quality not
Productivity. Great pay, benefits
& room for advancement.
Please call or apply in person:
6114 Bonny Oaks. 423-894-9896
Locally owned & operated.
NEED PERSON OR
FAMILY TO LIVE & WORK ON
HORSE FARM.
706-375-4346
Now Hiring Sales, Cashiers
& Product Placement at
our Chatt., TN retail store! We
are a family-owned company
on our way to reaching $1
billion in annual sales. Our
growth requires highly
motivated people who are
passionate about tools &
customer service! We offer a
competitive wage & excellent
benefits package including a
generous employee discount
& paid time off. Apply today
at: northerntool.com/careers
AMERICA’S FASTEST GROWING
POULTRY PRODUCER
SHOP DELIVERY PERSON
Must have valid drivers
license. To apply
call: 423-842-8081 M-F
7:30am til 4pm.
Medical Assistant needed for
busy physician practice. Experience preferred. Duties include, but not limited to vitals,
labs, and assisting in exams
and procedures. Fax resume
to 423-339-2242.
ELECTRICIANS
MAINTENANCE TECHS
CDL TRUCK DRIVERS
NURSE - PART TIME
Busy office needs LPN or RN,
2 - 4 days per week. IV exp.
required for infusions.
Computer data entry for EHR.
Must be able to work at fast pace
with accuracy & attention to
detail. Fax resume to:
423-826-0813.
Koch Foods
(Corner of 19th St. & Baldwin
Behind Mtn. View Ford)
Fax: 266-1280
[email protected]
NURSE PRACTITIONER or
PHYSICIANS ASSISTANT
NEEDED Part-time for fast
paced family medical practice.
E-mail resume to:
[email protected]
Ophthalmic Technician
needed for busy ophthalmology practice in Chattanooga.
Experience preferred.
Send resume to:
ophthalmologyresumes@
gmail.com
34338020
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
GENERAL HELP
WANTED
ORTHODONTIC ASSISTANT
NEEDED - Experience preferred. Full-time Mon. - Thurs.
Please send resume to: Chattanooga Publishing, P.O. Box
1447, Advertiser 34334761
Chattanooga, TN 37401-1447
PRIVATE CLINIC NORTH
Newspaper Carrier
E. Brainerd, Ooltewah,
Ringgold Rd., Standifer
Gap, Graysville,
Centerville areas
Be done with work before
most people start their day.
Home delivery routes
available.
Earn $600 to $900/month
Earning potential varies by
route size and area
Be your own boss! Grow your
own business through sales
contests and satisfied
customers
Perfect opportunity for
everyone! Seniors,
homemakers, students and
people with "regular" jobs
Qualifications:
Must be able to work 7 days
a week, approximately
3 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Must be at least 18 years old
Must have a valid driver's
license and proof of vehicle
liability insurance
Must have reliable
transportation
Must provide a trained
substitute if you're unable to
report to work
Find out why more and more
families and adults agree that
delivering the Chattanooga
Times Free Press suits their
extra income needs.
For more information contact:
District Manager
Scott Shadrick
423-595-6916 or email at
[email protected] or
ccunningham@
timesfreepress.com
Newspaper Carrier
North Brainerd Area
Bonny Oaks,
Hickory Valley Area
Be done with work before
most people start their day.
Home delivery routes
available.
Earn $600 to $800/month
Earning potential varies by
route size and area
Be your own boss! Grow your
own business through sales
contests and satisfied
customers
Perfect opportunity for
everyone! Seniors,
homemakers, students and
people with "regular" jobs
Qualifications:
Must be able to work 7 days
a week, approximately
3 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Must be at least 18 years old
Must have a valid driver's
license and proof of vehicle
liability insurance
Must have reliable
transportation
Must provide a trained
substitute if you're unable to
report to work
Find out why more and more
families and adults agree that
delivering the Chattanooga
Times Free Press suits their
extra income needs.
Call or email today!
Willie Kaimikaua
423-582-1097
[email protected]
Newspaper Carrier
Ooltewah and Harrison Area
Birchwood and
Highway 58 Area
Be done with work before
most people start their day.
Home delivery routes
available.
Earn $600 to $900/month
Earning potential varies by
route size and area
Be your own boss! Grow your
own business through sales
contests and satisfied
customers
Perfect opportunity for
everyone! Seniors, homemakers, students and people
with "regular" jobs
Qualifications:
Must be able to work 7 days
a week, approximately
3 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Must be at least 18 years old
Must have a valid driver's
license and proof of vehicle
liability insurance
Must have reliable
transportation
Must provide a trained
substitute if you're unable to
report to work
Find out why more and more
families and adults agree that
delivering the Chattanooga
Times Free Press suits their
extra income needs.
Call or email today!
Bob Hendrix
423-227-7205
[email protected]
Truck Driver / Laborer
Needed part-time for Xanitos,
Inc. Flexible hours. Fax:
423-778-2578 or email
qualifications to:
[email protected].
EOE M/F/D/V
Equal Opportunity Employer
& Drug Free Workplace
Sales Clerk needed Part time
Clerk needed for Hallmark
department. Experience
helpful. Call 423-629-1434
Intake specialist to take patients
medical history and input into
EHR. Must be able to work
quickly & accurately.
Computer experience a must.
4 days per wk. Fax resume to
423-826-0813
Technician's Needed
Must have at least 2yrs exp with
Comm HVAC/Light REF
21yrs + EPA Certified. BCBS
1-888-294-9617
WAREHOUSE MANAGER &
WAREHOUSE HELP. Forktruck exp. a must. Apply
Mon. - Fri. 7:30 am - 4pm at
1409 Fort St., Chatt., TN.
Newspaper Carrier
Hixson and Middle Valley
Area
Be done with work before
most people start their day.
Home delivery routes available.
Earn $600 to $900/month
Earning potential varies by
route size and area
Be your own boss! Grow your
own business through sales
contests and satisfied
customers
Perfect opportunity for everyone! Seniors, homemakers,
students and people with
"regular" jobs
Qualifications:
Must be able to work 7 days
a week, approximately
3 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Must be at least 18 years old
Must have a valid driver's
license and proof of vehicle
liability insurance
Must have reliable
transportation
Must provide a trained
substitute if you're unable to
report to work
Find out why more and more
families and adults agree that
delivering the Chattanooga
Times Free Press suits their
extra income needs.
Call Garry Grimes today!
423-618-7964
PLANT ENGINEER/
MANUFACTURING
MANAGER
Manchester Tank, a leading
manufacturer of lowpressure vessels is
accepting applications for
the position of Plant
Engineer/ Manufacturing
Manager. This manager will
provide direction for
engineering & maintenance by
identifying, communicating &
implementing departmental
goals and cost reduction
objectives. Works with
Operations & operators to
define the layout of
equipment & production
processes.
General Responsibilities:
- Prepares, plans, & directs
projects including cost
estimates for & capital
requests as needed
- Participates in new product
development including
manufacturing prototypes
- Participates in product
liability investigation when
required
- Oversees Plant ECN
process
- Engages/leads meetings to
plan & schedule work
assignments & to assess
progress & results
- Maintains in conjunction with
Quality Supervisor,
compliance to DOT, TC, UL
& TPED Regulatory
requirements
- Performs product/process
analysis & initiates activities
for continuous improvement,
cost reductions, quality
improvements, & improved
efficiencies
- Responsible for initiation,
follow-up & timely
completion of projects;
works with plant personnel
as well as outside
contractors throughout all
phases of projects
Skills:
- Ability to organize &
manage multiple priorities &
projects simultaneously
- Hands-on, team orientated &
committed to business
improvement processes
- Must have solid working
knowledge in the following
areas: metal fabrication,
drawing, stamping,
machining, process
automation & welding,
electrical, PLC, hydraulic, &
pneumatic with a minimum
of 5 years related
experience. Working
knowledge of Rockwell
software, specifically
RSLogix is a plus. Working
knowledge & application of
OSHA regulations AutoCAD
or SolidWorks experience
preferred. Ability to work
independently as well as in a
team environment.
Excellent written &
communication skills.
Proficient in Microsoft office
products. Quality orientated
& attention to detail. High
Volume manufacturing
experience from raw
material to finished product
NFPA electrical compliance
& facility classification
preferred Bachelor's Degree
in Mechanical Engineering or
related field required.
Interested applicants should
send resume and salary
history to:
Manchester Tank
& Equipment
1383 Industrial Blvd.
Crossville, TN 38555
Attn: Human Resource
Manager
Email:
[email protected]
EOEFemales and minorities
are encouraged to apply
Wholesale distribution co.
seeking experienced,
motivated Route Sales/
New Business Developer.
Existing route + large territory
for growth. Unlimited
commission potential.
Excellent benefits hlth,
suppl, 401K, vehicle
allowance. Please send
resumes to: Chatt Publishing,
P.O. Box 1447,
Advertiser 34323054
Chattanooga, TN 37401-1447
STARS, Inc. hiring Direct
Support Staff.
Call 423-447-2590,
Ext. 7 for instructions
Summer Sales and
Marketing Internship
Are you, or is someone you
know, looking for a paid
summer internship?
The Chattanooga Times Free
Press has excellent, salaried,
three-month summer internship opportunities for college
students or others looking for
great-paying, temporary
sales positions. We are
looking to employee
energetic people who are
either skilled sales people or
presently participating in a
four-year degree program in
sales, business or marketing.
Get paid a $500 weekly
salary, plus mileage
reimbursement and potential
sales bonuses, from
mid-May through late July.
This would be an excellent
way to demonstrate to the
Times Free Press that you
have the skills needed to join
our sales team full-time after
you've obtained your degree.
Interested applicants must
have a working vehicle, a
valid driver's license and a
clean driving record. Only
online applications will be
accepted for this position.
To apply, go to
www.jobs.timesfreepress.com
register as a new user or sign
through your existing
account, and complete the
online application associated
with this summer sales
internship position.
Arrangements will be made if
you have a disability that
requires an accommodation in
completing and/or submitting
an application. Please notify
Human Resources at
(423) 757-6424 in advance so
necessary arrangements can
be made.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
MEDICAL
is now accepting resumes
for a LPN. FT position,
5:30am til 1:30pm.
Fax resumes to:
Steve 706-866-6277
Village Volkswagen Offers
Great Benefits; Medical,
Dental and Vision, 401(K)
with Company Match,Vacation Days, L i f e I n s u r a n c e ,
Great Work Environment
This is an opportunity to join
one of the most respected
dealership groups whose total focus and commitment is
to customer & employee satisfaction!Qualified candidates should bring their resumes to Greg or Ron, Wed.
or Thurs. 9AM - 5PM to Village Volkswagen @ 6001
International Drive.
DRUG FREE EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
SKILLED TRADES
HVAC TECHNICIAN,
APPLIANCE TECH & GOOD
INSTALLER
Min. 5 yrs exp. Good pay &
benefits. Call 423-595-1555
TRUCKING
OPPORTUNITIES
ATTENTION
CLASS A CDL
DRIVERS
$1000 SIGN
ON BONUS
Quickway Transportation is
looking for drivers in the
Chattanooga, TN. area.
We offer:
· Excellent home time
· Excellent benefits
· Excellent retirement
Call today!
877-600-2121
RECEPTIONIST & MEDICAL
ASSISTANT Needed for busy
medical practice in Dalton, GA.
Previous medical experience
preferred. People oriented,
team player, professional appearance, E-mail resume to:
[email protected]
RECEPTIONIST - Min. 2 yr. exp.
in busy doctors office & strong
insurance background. Excellent pay. Fax resume to:
423-698-8847
Are you
interested
in pursuing a
career in the
medical field?
See the Educational
classification for
more information.
MOTEL/HOTEL
M A I D - Now hiring experienced Maid. Apply in person
at: Kings Lodge, 2400 Westside Dr. Chattanooga, TN
RESTAURANT/
FOOD SERVICE
FUJI STEAK HOUSE
HIXSON LOCATION
CURRENTLY HIRING ALL
POSITIONS.
Please go to fujishixson.com
for applications.
HIBACHI CHEF ONLY CALL:
423-762-4822
www.quickwaycarriers.com
DRIVER Needed-Part-time
Home every night. Must have
CDL’s with B endorsement.
Perfect for the retired driver.
Call 423-615-0171. No calls
before 10am or after 5pm.
DRIVERS NEEDED
Minimum 1 yr. experience in
tri-axle dump truck. Asphalt
hauling experience a plus.
Top wages. 423-476-7905
Gibco Construction is an
Equal Opportunity Employer
Drivers Needed Class A CDL
3 years exp., clean record
needed, home every night.
Call: 423-266-7402 for info.
DRIVERS OTR - $.32 per
mile & up. Must have 2 yrs.
recent experience. Must be
able to pass DOT drug
screen. Call 423-493-0022
9am-5pm Mon.-Fri. only.
DRIVER
Truck Driver
Be your own boss. No Truck
to Own or Lease. Deliver
decked trucks. $.70-$1.50/
mile. Class A CDL, Double/
Triple Endorsement, & Tow
Car req’d. Recent truck
school grads welcome!
Unimark Truck Transport
866-254-2884
www.unimarkinc.com
Dry Van Truck Load CarrierLooking for OTR company
drivers & Owner Operators.
2 yrs. min. exp. Clean MVR.
2500+ miles per wk. New
model tractors. Mileage pay
& bonus program. No touch
freight. John 423-664-0480
Motor Coach Driver
CNAs, RNs,
LPNs wanted
All shifts available.
Looking for caring
individuals in all areas of
East Tennessee. Call
At Home Healthcare
for more information:
(423) 473-9922
CMA / Ophthalmic Tech
Experienced Full-time
CMA/Ophthalmic Tech
needed for Ophthalmology
practice. Successful
applicant will have good
technical skills and an
outstanding attitude. Salary
will be commensurate with
experience. Send resume' to
(423) 870-4044.
CNA’s / Caregivers $$$
Apply Tues & Thurs
at 10 am OR 2 pm. Amara
Home Care 423-756-2411
DIETARY AIDE
NHC HealthCare,
Ft. Oglethorpe has an
immediate part-time and
temporary Dietary Aide
position available.
No exp. needed, will train.
Must have flexible schedule.
Apply in person at:
2403 Battlefield Pkwy.
Ft. Oglethorpe, GA
ADA/EOE
HOME CARE AGENCY
Looking for experienced
CNA'S / PSA'S to:
Provide services for the disabled
and elderly in their homes in
Rossville, Ringgold, &
Lafayette GA. Duties include
personal care, light housekeeping, and errands. Must be
21 or older to apply. Competitive pay rates. Please apply at:
www.homenurse.net
Computer knowledge and
access to a computer required.
SALES AGENTS
APPOINTMENT
SETTERS/
TELEMARKETERS
Fast growing home
improvement company needs
agent to advertise and
promote our high end home
improvment products to
potential customers.
2 positions available.
No experience needed.
Customer service or retail a
plus! Call Sonny Chambley
@ 423-503-3324 today!
Full-time position available.
Must have a bachelor’s or
associate’s degree in
paralegal studies, a paralegal
certificate & litigation exp.
Should be a team player with
strong written & verbal
communication skills,
extensive reading & oral
presentation capabilities & an
ability to multitask & remain
focused. An attention to detail
& accuracy is also required. A
knowledge of medical
terminology is preferred.
Send resumes to:
[email protected]
3570 Keith St. NW
Cleveland, TN. 37312
Visit us online at: LCCA.COM
EOE/M/F/V/D-30946
LPN NEEDED for busy medical
practice. EMR / Computer experience a plus. Send resume
to: GI Specialist, 302 Point
North Place, Dalton GA 30720
or fax: 706-279-3969
423-894-2277
OTR OWNER OPERATOR
wanted. Pay is 80% of total
revenue. Small 10 truck
company, 1 spot available.
Call: 904-529-1740
OWNER OPERATORS
needed. Home every
weekend. Glen R. Ellis Inc.
(Chattanooga), a small
truckload carrier needs a few
good O/O. If you have a good
truck & you are dependable
call Phil for details. No NE or
West Coast. 423-629-4333
PACKAGE
DELIVERY
DRIVER
Be a part of our
Kiosk Sales
Team
Outside Sales
Our Top Sales Representatives average over $450.00
per week!!
You Can Too!
Evening part time hours are
available; up to 25 hours per
week. Applicants must:
Have excellent
communication skills.
A dependable vehicle
with a good driving
record and insurance.
Be willing to learn a
proven sales method.
Apply in person Monday Thursday between 9:00 a.m.
and 3:00 p.m. at:
400 E 11th Street
Chattanooga TN. 37403
Or call Noah Cusick at:
423-757-6650 for more
information
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
PARALEGAL
Life Care Centers
of America’s corporate
office in Cleveland
Experienced. Part-time.
Grand Southern Tours
C & R Roofing, a local roofing
company seeking OUTSIDE
ROOFING SALES REPS
High commissions, $60k $80k possible for motivated
people. Will train! Truck or
SUV is highly recommended.
Call: 423-653-7420
Licensed Real Estate Agent
wanted with at least 2 years
experience for the position of
listing and or showing assistant. Call James Perry
499-9999 x 11 or email
[email protected].
LTL TRANSPORTATION
SALES
Vitran Express, an emerging,
non-union LTL transportation
company experiencing
continued growth seeks
aggressive, confident,
results oriented individual
with LTL transportation
background for Account
Manager position in
Chattanooga area. Minimum
2 yrs. sales exp. In the LTL
industry or related
transportation field preferred.
Excellent starting salary and
benefits package.
Send resumes
in confidence to
mitch.anderson@
vitran.com
Parman Energy has an
exciting opportunity for a
Class B Delivery Driver.
HAZMAT preferred. This
role is home daily and
offers competitive pay,
excellent benefits
including employee paid
portions of medical &
dental & 401(k) matching.
Apply in person at :
1110 Stuart Street;
Chattanooga, TN
from 12 p.m. - 4 p.m.
M-F or send resume to
hiring@parmanenergy
TRUCK DRIVER NEEDED
For local tandem hauls.
Must be experienced.
Call 423-280-3344
ANTIQUES
ANTIQUE COKE BOX 1950/60
series $250
423-598-1414
BANK, Antique Mech. (Uncle
Sam) Circa 1880s, Exc. Cond.
$1100, 423-240-2068
Bank, Antique mechanical, Trick
Dog, circa 1880’s, $950. Call
423-240-2068.
CHINA CABINET Bow front
Glass shelves $600.
423-309-0355
CLOCK, Antique round, Michelobe rotating top, fully glass
enclosed. $250obo. 653-1531.
DINING ROOM-1930, Walnut,
Table w/ pad, 6 chairs, China
cabinet $600 423-309-0355
Pedal Car- Fire engine with no
trim. $80
Call 423-314-4037
SELL STERLING
SILVERWARE- Top dollar. Get
our up front no obligation bid.
1-800-428-6580
SOFA Early American 1930’s
Camel back , Pretty Carvings
$450. 423-266-8257
WANTED ANTIQUES Glassware,
Coins, Jwlry, Pocket knives,China
Clocks, Furn, Etc. 423-987-6238
WANTED ANTIQUES Glassware,
Coins, Jwlry, Pocket knives,China
Clocks, Furn, Etc. 423-987-6238
ART & DECORATIVE
BASS BOAT- 1989, 17 ft.,
Cheetah, nice & clean, $2500
OBO, 423-961-4017
JACK NICKLAUS "The Master
of Augusta" by Alan Zuniga,
#1387/1988, $155, 290-9195
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • F3
timesfreepress.com
Monty Jim Meddick
34243040
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
APPLIANCES
A C Dryers, Washers, Stoves,
Fridges, $75/up. Can deliver.
Guaranteed. 423-760-0123
A/C with HEAT Dryer & Washer
$199. & up will separate.
Also avail. Stoves & Refrigerators.
Guaranteed 706-866-3347
DRYER- 220 Volt, Kenmore,
Works Good, $60
423-653-5097
DRYER, Gas, Whirlpool, LP Or
Ng, Works Good, H-Gold, $75,
423-598-9795
DRYER Kenmore Works perfectly, Guaranteed, Can
deliver. $75, 423-635-4237
DRYER- Kenmore,
Late Model, Can Deliver.
$95.00 706-866-4586
FREEZER- Large Chest Type,
Works Great. $75 Call
423-505-4869
I BUY WASHERS & DRYERS
& Stoves Working or not working Can pick up 423-635-4237
JUNK APPLIANCES
Will haul off for free.
Call 423-596-6701
Microwave$7.50
Call 423-396-9399.
MIXER, Hamilton Beach Triple
Spindle. 6 cups incld. Like
new. $275obo. 423-432-0935
Refrigerator$200
Call 706-657-3987 before 6pm
REFRIGERATOR- G.E. 25 CU
Ft, side-by-side, white, all most
new $800 obo 865-243-1641
STEAMER- Rowenta, Pro Compact Garment, Model IS1425,
$25 423-505-4869
CAMPING
EQUIPMENT
COFFEE MAKER- 1950’s
Campfire/stove top, traditional
drip, $25. 423-698-3643.
CLOTHING
Caftan- New never worn
$25
Call 423-396-9399
DRESS, PROM Size 10
Strapless Red taffeta Above
knee New $20 423-899-8342.
Dress- Wedding/ prom mermaid
style. Size 8, worn once. Paid
$800, asking $400. 421-0894
FORMAL/PROM DRESS- Red,
size 18, worn once. $80
Call 423-838-0856
Infants & Boys & Girls Sizes
4-7 Large lot.Like new. $35.
423-598-3122
JEANS Men’s Name brand.
Various sizes. 9 for $90.will
separate 706-937-3085
OVERCOAT, Cashmere, 42 reg.
$800 value, $200 cash.
Call 423-886-0455.
PROM DRESS- Red,
size 18, worn once. $80
Call 423-838-0856
SUITS Men’s Austin Reed
44reg coat, 36 waist 31 length
$50. 706-937-3085
TUXEDO Black Size 41 regular
Like New $100 Cash
423-886-0455
COINS-JEWELRY
STOVE,
Whirlpool, white, $100,
423-505-1124
EMERALDS - 3.60 Carat oval
Trapiche, 3.27 Carat pare
shape Cab. 2/$300. 598-1569.
WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE
Washer, Dryer, Fridge, Stoves
Cash Reward! 423-580-2031
G E M S T O N E - Pair of 12mm
Round Russian Strawberry
Quarts, $50. 423-598-1569.
WASHER / DRYER - Kenmore, Heavy Duty, like new
with warranty. Will sacrifice
$325. 423-421-1615
WASHER & DRYER, Good
condi, $100. Cash only, buyer
moves. 423-304-2580
WASHER- Kenmore,
Can Deliver.
$145.00 706-866-4586
WASHER- Maytag, 8 cycle, 2
speed, white, 1 yr. old, $225.
Call 423-598-9795.
WASHER Whirlpool , Works
perfect. Guaranteed can
deliver. $125. 423-635-4237
BABY ITEMS
Baby Beds (2)
$75
Call 423-314-5428
Baby bed- w/ stroller
$100
Call 423-802-7302
BABY CLOTHES: Boys & girls,
Very large lot , Exc. cond.
$50. Call 423-598-3122.
Car seat
$30
Call 423-314-5428
Highchair, Baby Trends, good
condition, very clean, brown
checked seat. $35. 842-4342.
JOGGING STROLLER
Baby trend expedition, Like New!
$75 Call 423-344-7079
STROLLER$40.
Call 423-314-5428.
BICYCLES
LANDRIDER, New, model
3001-17, cost $400, sell for
$300. 423-622-4646.
SPECIALIZED/ HARD ROCK 19”
Mtn.Bike, w/ disc brakes Sell for
$500.obo 706-996-3243
Test Ad - TREK bike, rarely
used, road tires, great shape.
Need cash, sacrifice $100.
000-0000
BUILDING
MATERIAL
BRICK PAVER Solid, Red,
3.5x9”, from1920’s homes.
$.65 240-0153 can deliver
COUNTER TOP L-shape
Formica Cut out for double sink
$65. 423-892-4261
CURB STOPS- Ball Valve Lock
wing 1/4 turn 3/4 compression,
solid brass $20, 593-8128
DOOR - 32” Interior solid wood
door, like new. $49.
Call 423-364-6320.
DOORS- Inside. Locks & hinges
attached, ready to install.
$150/all or can sep. 842-3998.
FLOOR MARBLE
PIECES- Used. $50.
Call 423-332-1442.
KITCHEN/ BATH CABINETS
Truck loaded. Solid wood. New
Boxed. $7,950. 266-8257
KITCHEN/ BATH CABINETS
New. Solid wood. 10 for $895.
cash, will separate 266-8257
LIGHT FIXTURE BATH/HALL ,
8” frosted glass globe & brass
base. $4.50. 423-894-0299.
OUTDOOR POST LIGHT,
$45. Good Shape
706-866-3918
GEMSTONES- Pair Russian Lab
Alexandrite, 11mm square,
11.5 tcw, $55. 423-598-1569.
RING- Ladies’, Wedding, sz 6
1/4 Ct Diamond, w/ 6 small
Diamonds $500 423-838-8318
STONE - 45.28 Karat Natural
Black Spinel, Unheated, Unset, $100 cash 706-272-9161
WATCH & BRACELET Mens.
Seicko. All in perfect cond.
$35. 423-894-2213.
Sliding Closet Doors,
2 Hollow 30” $10 for both
Call 423-842-0123
SUNROOM WINDOW SYSTEM20 of them, new, Pd $4100
asking $1950 423-364-6320
AMMO- .357 Sig Lawman, TMJ,
125 grain, 500 rounds, for
$200. 423-635-4342.
BAKERS RACK/ WINE RACK
Glass wrought iron & wood.
$200. 423-315-1746
SETTEE Antique 1800's . Burgundy w/ornate wood carvings
Very unique. $250 227-6764
AMMO .357 Sig, Speer FMJ
125gr, 50rnd box $20
423-635-4342
BED Full size White iron Ornate
Complete room Never slept on.
$1200. 423-843-0218
SOFA & CHAIR Brown/
Burgundy Good condition
$150. 423-332-3259
BOWTECH ADMIRAL Bow,
Loaded, $450.
Call 423-421-0493.
BED, queen size, dresser and
night stand, $150 for all.
Call 770-843-6242.
SOFA, Key City Camel Back,
Vintage Cherry finish, Very
nice, $400. 706-375-6565.
HANDGUN CARRY PERMITCLASSES $50.
Immediate opening, over 300
guns in stock. Fugate’s Firearms. 423-336-2675.
BEDROOM- A Queen/Full.
Very nice 5 piece set. NEW!
Still in boxes. Sacrifice. $399.
423-400-6233 Can Deliver.
BEDROOM-A Ralph Lauren-like
6 piece Cherry Sleigh set. Brand
new in box. List $2500. Must sell
$895. 423-400-6233. Can deliver
BEDROOM SUITE, Queen bed,
Fruitwood, $1200. Call
423-842-9932.
BEDROOM SUITE, Queen,
Pecan wood, 6 pcs. $250.
Call 423-987-8765.
BUREAU- w/ mirrow, antique
oak, $75
call- 423-877-2107
CABINETS- All wood stained
cabinets, L-Shaped 7’ x 7’ and 7’
tall. Perfect for wet bar area. Includes bar sink & granite top.
$2500. E-mail for pictures.
[email protected]
423-332-2697
CHAIR & 1/2, w/Ottoman Overstuffed Real nice! Paid Over
$850 Ask $350. 423-855-9825
MAGAZINES - Aviation, Paranormal, Civil War Items, Monster $400 423-629-0551
NASCAR JACKET, Dale
Earnhardt #3, never worn,
$100. Call 423-332-4594.
Test Ad - Beanie Babies 1000 dolls, moving must sell
fast! All for $1000. Some
collectibles too! 000-0000
Test Ad - Beanie Babies - 1000
dolls, moving must sell fast! All
for $1000. Some collectibles
too! 000-0000
Washer: Maytag ringer, $150 or
trade for old Bendix/ Westinghouse front load. 698-3643.
COMPUTERS
FURNACES/
FIREPLACES
LOOKOUT VALLEY Nazarene
Daycare. Indoor Yard Sale. All
proceeds go to benefit a church
family in need. Sat. March 31st.
8-4. Lot of items. 136 S Astor Av
GUNS
12 GAUGE PUMP- Winchester
Vent Rib, Screw in Chokes, $250
obo 423-837-4325
1892 OECB 20, double barrel,
$100 or best offer. Call
423-774-3665.
30.06 SCOPE- Weatherby Vanguard and Sling $350 obo call
423-837-4325
DINETTE TABLE w/wood top
and metal base, 4 wood metal
stools, $250. 423-802-1081.
CVA Muzzle Loader, 50 cal.
brand new in box, never shot.
$175.firm. Call 423-421-7274.
DRESSING Table and chest,
2 pc. Good cond. $175
Call 423-238-1314.
ENTERTAINMENT CENTERFormal, Light Color Wood,
Glass Shelves $450 595-1798
FOR SALE
CVA Muzzle Loader, 50 cal.
brand new in box, never shot.
$175.firm. Call 423-421-7274.
CVA Optima with scope
Camo Mint condition.
$225. Call 423-421-7274.
CVA Optima with scope
Camo Mint condition.
$225. Call 423-421-7274.
East German AK47 Mag pouchgreen, $5
Call 423-635-4332
GLOCK model 23, Gen4
Like new in box $550.
423- 298-7836.
GUNS- Browning Bar 308, Ruger
Model 77 SS 7MM-08, Weatherby 7MM-08 $2000 or will
separate 423-658-5045
New marble top Table and
stool set w/ 4 stools. $250
High top table and chair set,
great condition. $75
TV stand, new w/ glass
shelves. $85
GUNS- SHOW BOOTH, ready
for next show. Guns, Racks,
Knives, Conservative Retail
$14,500, For Sale Less 20%
423-883-6392
DELL P-4 Desk Top. Complete,
XP Pro, Internet Ready. 30 day
Warranty! $125. 423-473-2767
Call 423-227-6586
DISCONNECT, 220v., with
breakers, $10. Call
423-892-5775.
FREE: King size bed Head &
Footboard & frame All wood
No mattress 423-544-3505
MARLIN 30-30 At 98% Scope &
Sling 40 rds Model 336,
$450. Call 423-847-5383.
Glass Dining Rm. Table, 3
Chairs, $50, Call
706-866-2238
Mauser .32 auto pistol. WW2
NAZI issue, exc, w/holster &
2 clips. $550 490-5693
Jazzy Electric Wheelchair,
Never Used! $1200/b.o.
706-866-2238
REMINGTON 700 270cal.
BSA 3X9X50 $450.
Call 423-624-2975.
LAMP- Ceramic cowboy boot
and pistol, western style, $25
call 423-332-5972
REMINGTON 870 Slug gun,
Fully rifled w/ scope
$525.obo, 596-4349
LAPTOP - Dell Inspiron, new
still in box, paid $440, asking
$350. Call 423-364-6320.
LOGITECH QuickCam
Communicate Deluxe (S 7500),
$15.00 Call 423-991-7613
CRAFTS
MANY CRAFT ITEMS, and materials, cutting/display tables,
$500 or can sep. 877-3268.
BUSH HOG- 4 ft.
$350.obo
423-332-0881
CULTIVATOR, 3pt. hitch,
almost new, $150. Call
706-657-7711.
Post Hole Auger- 9 inch, never
used. $75
Call 423-886-1239
TRACTOR ‘58 or ‘60 Model 5000
Ford. Front end lift. Box,
Bush hog, $5995. 280-2490
TRACTOR ‘58 or ‘60 Model 5000
Ford. Front end lift. Box,
Bush hog, $5995. 280-2490
=@I<NFF;&=L<C
LAMPS (2)
$25.00 EACH
423-867-5592
LAMPS 2 w/ shades
Crystal look.
$20. 423-877-7724.
MATTRESS A1 NEW QUEEN
ORTHOPEDIC Set. $139.
Never opened. 423-400-6233
SHOTGUN- Winchester 1200,
Very nice w/ 2 barrels &
chokes. $400/trade 785-6897
MATTRESS A 3-Piece Brand New
KING PILLOWTOP. Sacrifice
$189. 423-400-6233. Can deliver
SIG P226- .357 SIG + .40 S&W
barrel. Heinie sights, 4 hi-cap
mags, $750 extras.
Call 423-326-8160.
MATTRESS A Queen Pillowtop.
NEW in plastic. Must sell. $149.
CAN DELIVER. 423-400-6233
MATTRESS, Queen
Waterbed Waveless $75.
855-9825.
M A T T R E S S S E T, Full size,
good cond. thick 2 pcs. $125.
423-298-2985. 298-8115.
MATTRESS-SERTA Made Qn
Orthopedic, brand new, Sac.
$99 Can Del. 423-582-9820
MATTRESS- Simmons Beauty
Rest, very good cond.
$50. Call 423-892-7323.
LAWN MOWER- Honda Mulch
and mower, self propelled.
$75. Mike 706-858-1244
MOWER- Toro 6.75hp self propelled, with mulcher and grass
catcher, $150. 423-875-9911
MTN. STONE Odd shapes.
Small & Medium, 10 stones
$100. You select 400-7376
PATIO TABLE, 48” round
wrought iron, mesh top, $85.
Call 423-892-4261.
PUSH MOWER, Lawn Boy self
propelled with attachments,
$95. Call 423-894-1101.
PUSH MOWER
Murray , 21”, Big wheels,
$75. Call 423-544-1849.
SIG P22OR Combat, .45ACP.
Nite sights, threaded barrel,
earth brown frame, extras NIB.
$950. 423-326-8160.
SIG P290 9mm- NIB, N/S, Factory Warranty. Case & all paper work. $550 obo 284-4203
SKS Type 56
No bayo. $250
Call 423-521-0074
SMITH & WESSON 45, auto,
model 45-66, Stainless
$600 706-820-1618
SMITH & WESSON, Model 640
Snub nose Stainless 38 special $500. 423-298-7836.
Sunquest tan bed, Pro 16 SE,
16 bulb, Asking $250,
Call 423-635-7008
RIDING MOWER- Murray, 14 hp,
42” cut, $250. Call
423-838-9501. 706-866-7434.
RIDING MOWER- Yard Machine,
12.5 hp, 38” cut, $300. Call
423-838-9501. 706-866-7434.
RIDING MOWER- Snapper, 10
hp, 28”cut, $350. Call
423-838-9501/706-866-7434.
RIDING MOWER Craftsman
LT3000 20hp 42” cut Used 4
times $950. 423-875-9911
Rotary Lawn Mower3.5HP $40
Call 423-463-0443
Rotary Lawn Mower4.0 HP $50
Call 423-463-0443
Tiller- Troy-Bilt Jr.
$350
Call 423-991-4012.
TILLER, Yard machine 18”
3.5hp Front Tine Gas B&S Runs
good $100. Call 423-653-5097
TRAILER- large steel lawn
trailer $15
call 423-332-5972
WANTED: Log Splitter
$400-$500 Price Range
Call Scott 423-580-1000
MACHINERY &
TOOLS
34243039
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
PAINT & SUPPLIES
China- Chris Madden Casual, 8
place setting, ivory color. Ex
Cond. $50. 706-375-8860
PILLOWS New
2 Large 20X20 Brown $20.
423-877-4487/ 802-4441
PAINT 10 gallon Industrial
paint Light gray $60.
423-942-1773
CHINA- Fine porcelain, floral
design, “Diane”, 33 pieces.
$20. Call 706-935-2360.
PLANTS, Iris
Purple, White & Lilac. $1
706-935-2218
PHOTO EQUIPMENT
CHINA-NORITAKE, 8 settings
42 pieces Perfect condition.
$185 423-894-2213
Play Ground Equip- Wood very
sturdy. Swing set, tube slide,
rock climb. $1,100. 227-6764
CHURCH Altar
Flowers $30
423-629-6686
QUILT, Full size.
Homemade Patch work
$60. 706-937-3085
COKE A COLA CRATES,
1 Wood, 2 Plastic. $12.
Call 423-899-8342.
RCA Tube Caddie-with TV and
radio tubes. Old. $125/offer
423-894-8046
DISHES- Bone w/silver ring,
33 pieces, $14. Call
706-935-2360.
RUG, Hand Woven,
from India. $85. Perfect cond.
Call 423-894-2213.
DISHES- White, blue pastel accent 20 pcs 3 “Frog” ceramic
canisters $12. 706-935-2360.
SHEETS, White, in plastic,
queen size. $7.00. Call
5432-877-3313.
Dish Set- Frankoma, 8 place set,
includes pitchers, covered
bowls, & extras $50. 877-5602
DOGHOUSE, Small size, New,
Wooden, Shingle Roof,
$25, 423-653-5097
ADULT DVD’s XXX- New!
10 for $30 / will separate.
423-645-2295
EASTER BASKETSHomemade
All brand name candy, Toys, 4
for $20. E. Brainerd 240-0891
DIE/ANGLE GRINDER, Dotco,
like new, $400 for both.
Call 423-598-9795.
EXERCISE BIKE, Stationary,
needs a bolt, $10. Call
423-877-3313.
GENERATOR 3500 WATT,
new, never run, $250.
423-843-0112
FLOOR MATS for Toyota
Camry, black, all weather
$170.00 423-762-0529
J D 650H Dozer ‘04$45,500. And JD 310J Backhoe
‘08 - $55K. Call 423-238-3903
FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS
3 Lg identical Red & White/ beautiful vases,$90obo 706-866-4465
OXYGEN & ASCETYLENE
Gauges, Works Great, 3-Sets,
$50 a Set, 423-774-0493
FOOD MILL, Vegetables
& fruit strainer $25.
Call 423-892-3807
RADIAL ARM SAW, Craftsman,
new table & blade guide,
$300. Call 423-314-4037
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
BEDSIDE COMMODE Potty
Chair, new, $30.00. Call
423-472-0947.
BLOOD PRESSURE MONITOR
Automatic RELI ON
$15. 706-937-3085
Hospital Table- over the bed,
Invacare. Adjust in height &
tilts both ways. 423-472-0947
POWER CHAIR, Jazzy, exc.
cond. 1 yr. old, bought new.
$1500 obo. 423-834-5926
FOOT SPA- Nice gift! Conair,
deluxe, massaging, never
opened, $20, 423-842-0123
GARAGE DOOR, 18ft. white, w/
motor all parts included. $1200
door Sell for $350.706-935-9321
GARAGE SALE ITEMS. Lamps,
bedding, clothes, lots more.
$50. 423-870-2400.
Garage Window Fans$10
call 423-834-0344
GARDEN HOUSE Flags (14),
28x44, ALL HOLIDAYS &
SEASONS $60. 886-2919.
GOLF BALLS- Major Brands,
Exc Cond, 50 for $20 call
423-499-0618
GRANITE SLABS- Gorgeous
polished, 30X42”X3”, suitable
for hearth, $45. 423-266-8257
SLIPCOVERS (Velvet), Wine
Bombay Chair or Green PB
Loveseat $75both. 290-9195.
Storage Building- 8X8, 2 years
old, bought at Home Depot.
Wood. $600. 423-842-3733
TANNING BED, New bulbs,
110 volt. 30 minute timer
Like new! $650. 423-344-7407
THOMAS THE TRAIN items,
wooden, $300 or can separate. 423-842-9932.
TOTE, 18 gallon with built in
handles, $5.00. Call
423-877-3313.
TRAILER, Construction, 16 ft.
Steel frame, Wood sides,
$1600. 423-693-4935.
TRAVEL SUIT BAG, Samsonite,
heavy blue cloth, $10.
Call 423-629-2530.
TV- Sanyo, 13”, cable
ready, w/ remote $30 Cash.
Call 423-855-0089.
VENDING MACHINES (2), exc.
cond. Drinks and candy. $600
for both or can sep. 244-6328.
WATCHES Womens & Mens
Case full 75-100.
$100. 423-883-5009.
Water Filtration Sys- under sink
w/18 mo filter. Reg $995. Local
$350. 706-996-3243
MUSIC LESSONS
****PIANO TEACHER. New
To Area But not to music.
30+ Yrs. Exp. Teacher Appointed St. Louis Institute Of
Music. Caring, nurturing, patient, fun loving teacher who
loves sharing the gift of music
with all ages. Ooltewah/Collegedale. 423-710-3868.
CAMERA Kodak Digital w/ case
Only used a few times.Pd$500
Great condi. $200. 870-2400
CANON EQUIP. 530 Z Flash
Mopod Tripod 300lens Camera
bag $500. will sep. 400-7376
Nikon6006 Nikkor 28-85AF Lens
Sigma 400MF Lens, flash, xtras
Pelican case. $300. 298-3407.
POOLS/SPAS
DIVING LADDER
Swimming pool $40
Call 423-629-0404
FREE: In Ground Pool 24’ w/
pump & filter. Must remove
from property 423-892-4166
PUMP
for Swimming pool
$50 423-629-0404
SEWING
MACHINES
Sewing Machine, Singer Comm.
Heavy Duty, industrial clutch
motor, $250. 423-877-3268.
SINGER 281-1 head, w/ table.
New alphasew motor $450
obo, 423-834-5926
SPORTS
EQUIPMENT
AQUARIUM, 58 gallon
Salt water $500obo.
Call 423-457-4264
BOFLEX HOME GYM,
brand new, $350 firm.
Call 423-413-6726.
DECK STORAGE BOX
RUBBERMAID . $60.
PLEASE CALL: 886-2919
FISHING REEL MAGNUM LITE,
GT-X Plus, $18.00
706-937-3085
FOOSBALL TABLE- Sportcraft
Brand, Very Little Use $85 call
423-280-0126
FREE-WEIGHT BENCH, dumbbells, 30-15lbs, curling bar,
50lbs, w/ pads. 423-902-7465
GOLF CART Electric 48 volt
Lights Rear seat FM/CD New
batteries $3200.obo 899-3820
RASCAL SCOOTER, excellent
condition, power seat, $550.
Call 423-488-0234
Greeting Cards- Conformation,
Christening, and communion
cards. $30. 423-396-9399
SCOOTER- Rascal R200,
Like New $900
423-443-9127
Hammock- Pawleys Island, with
stand. Like new. $85
Call 423-332-1652
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
Wheelchair- manual, older. Very
good condition. Must see.
$50. Call 423-472-0947
Hampton Prints- 5 incl. Winter
South framed in old barn
wood. $500 423-894-8046
Banjo- 5 String, good condition.
$200
Call 423-894-0299
MISCELLANEOUS
HUMIDIFIER Lasko 9 gallon,
Multi room console , Good shape
$25obo, 423-432-0935
GUITAR ACOUSTIC Electric
Gibson Custom Shop. $3500,
Call 423-624-2566
Ladder- 18 ft, aluminium
$50
Call 423-499-9924.
GUITAR - C a n d y A p p l e R e d
Stratocaster w/ Case $1000
call 423-598-0955
LANDSCAPE PLANTS,
Monkey grass, daylilies, Vinca 10
section. $30. 892-4261.
GUITAR , Electric Mint 2007,
Rickenbacker Jet Glo, black
w/case, $1775 firm. 400-4796.
LIGHT FIXTURES, Several
Mid-Century Swags, $125,
Will Separate, 423-266-8257
Henry Slaughter Gospel Piano
Course, + TV w/VCR Player,
$150. 423-629-5344
LUGGAGE, 2 piece,
Paisley green, Good condition.
$30. Call 423-629-0404
PIANO- Black Baby Grand, well
kept, tuned, like new. Blemish
free. $1,800. 423-838-0075
Military Relics. German, Japanese & American World War
I&II Pay top prices. 842-6020
PIANO- Henry F. Miller,
Mahogany, Spinet, $500.
Call 423-877-5960.
MOVING BOXES-25 used
U-Haul, excellent cond. $25.
Call 423-877-5008.
PIANO WITH STOOL
Kohler & Campbell,
$200. Nice! 423-451-7948
TELEPHONE
SYSTEMS
NASCAR JACKET, Dale Earnhardt #3, never worn, $150.
Call 423-332-4594.
SPEAKERS,
For sterio
$50. pr., 423-903-1888
PHONE- 2 Handset Cordless w/
Digital Answering Syst. NEW
IN BOX $35 423-894-0299
MUSICAL
OPPORTUNITIES
TV/RADIO/STEREO
EQUIPMENT
GUITAR/PIANO - Assist w/ guitar, piano, voice, 4 part harmony $12.50 lesson 893-5144
Cable TV Testing Device. Sunrise telecom brdbnd calibrator.
CM500IP $800.706-935-9311
AIR PURIFIER Whirlpool Whisper, Like new, Paid $189 asking $85 Cash 423-855-0889
Alabama 1992 Championship
Coke can. Collector’s item
$100. 423-894-8046
ALUM. STORAGE BUILDING,
7x7x7, Metal, good shape.
$200. Call 423-774-0493.
AREA RUNNER- 8 ft. long,
muted colors, like new. $45.
Call 423-892-4261.
CARPET, 4x6,
Ivory and Green $800 value,
$150 cash. Call 423-886-0455.
Toy- Childs large jumping horse
$30
423-883-6357
Cell Phone- Straight Talk,
Sampson. $100. Works excell.
423-624-6464/ 423-486-4444
RECLINER , La-Z-Boy, Cranberry color, $300. Like new
cond. 423-488-0444.
WANTED TO BUY
16 gage Shotgun
423-842-6346
CEMETERY FLORAL
ARRANGEMENTS- INSERTS
$15 423-629-6686
RECLINER,
velvet green, $50. Call
423-821-4383.
XP100 221, with ammo & scope,
Exc. cond. Collectors item.
$600 or trade. 423-355-2501.
CEMETERY FLORAL
ARRANGEMENT - SADDLES,
$25 423-629-6686
STEREO CONSOLE Old,
Zenith, owners manual, 8 track
tapes, $75. 423-227-0080.
XP 100 7mm, with ammo and
scope, Exc. cond. Collect.
items. $600 or trade. 355-2501
China Cabinet, Nice! Glass On
Back & Sides, Like New! $70,
706-866-2238
QUILT RACK,
Excellent condition, $20,
Call 706-861-9157.
34243038
LAWN MOWER- 20” Mulcher,
excellent. $100. Call
423-413-8855 after 5pm.
Taurus, 1911-45, In Box,
Asking $500
Call 423-635-7008
PATIO TABLE- steel weave
with 2 chairs, large china cabinet, $250. Call 423-227-0080.
FIREWOOD- Split Hardwood.
WHILE IT LASTS!
$45.00/rick. 423-313-2323
Ruger- Security six, 357.
$475
Call 423-883-6357
SHOTGUN: Remington 11-87
Police, semi auto, Speed Feed
IV Stock with tactical light &
pressure switch. Barely Used:
$900 firm. Call 615-351-9463
OTTOMAN Wood w/ Leather
top, Drawers & trays New!
$150. Call 423-413-9468.
FIREWOOD for sale, pre-cut into
15-24" sections. kept dry. $5 per
bundle. TEST AD
RIFLE, Henry Goldenboy, 44
mag w/ octagon barrel $550.
423-698-6646 after 5:15pm
LIVING ROOM Suite, Complete,
w/ Coffee & 2 End tables,
2 Lamps, $400. 423-987-8765.
Manicure Table- with chair,
$40
Call 423-236-4598
MATTRESS A + New Mattress
Sets all sizes. Can deliver. Nice
sets. 314-3620
International cub cadet
55 In. Mowing Deck, $650,
Good Cond. 423-710-3974
RIDING MOWER- 2007 Troy Bilt
Super Bronco, 42”, 19 hp,
Kohler motor, $600. 875-2980.
Caliber 25 automatic- Raven
$65.
423-883-6357
DRESSER w/ Mirror Marble top
4 Big drawers 2 Small drawers
$70. Call 423-624-6464.
FREE PICK UP of unwanted
lawn mowers, tillers, etc.
Call 706-820-0604.
PUSH MOWER
Craftsman, 21”, $75.
Call 423-544-1849.
DESK- Solid Mahogany,
8’ long, 28” Wide,
$125. 423-838-8318
Dresser- 6 foot, solid wood, very
good condition. $175.
Call 423-838-8659
FINISH MOWER LandPride 5ft
Like New Works Great $600
423-598-1414
PRESSURE WASHER- Troy
Built, Briggs 8.75, Bad Pump,
$50 call-423-315-2604
Benelli, 20 gauge nova pump,
26” barrell w/ three chokes,
$300, 423-635-7008
Dining Table, new, elegant, expendable, with 6 chairs. Brand
new. $500. 423-238-1428
FUNTANAS 90, .90 3D ARF
100 Saito 4 stroke engine. High
spd. servos. $450. 362-8532
LAWNMOWER(RIDING) 46”
Cut, 18.0 hp, $300
423-598-1414
DESK- roll top,
oak, with chair, $150. Call
423-834-0344.
DINING ROOM, Bassett, w/china
cabinet. Seating for 6/8. Pics.
avail. $700. 678-908-1542.
HOBBIES/TOYS
CRAFTSMAN Zero turn
42” cut, 21HP, new 2012
$2,200. 423-875-9911
DESK,
Computer Roll Top, Oak,
$550. 706-937-4452
DESK, Drexel, Cream color.
Drop front. 3 drawers.
$300.obo 423-400-7376
PROPANE TANK- 500 gallon,
needs painting, $200,
423-598-9795.
WING BACKED CHAIRS, (2)
Gold velour, excellent condition. $150. Call 706-861-9157.
COFFEE TABLE, 2 END
TABLES, Solid Oak,
$50 each 867-5592
COFFEE TABLE & 2 End tables,
wood, mint condition, $100.00
423-238-1428
HEAT PUMPS Installed. Up to 3 ton $2995
423-595-6700
LAWN/GARDEN
EQUIPMENT
GARAGE SALES
COFFEE TABLE (Vintage), 42”
L Mahogany Leather Top,
Shelf/Drawer, $79. 290-9195.
HEATING/AIR
CONDITIONING
Water Bed- King sized, heated,
has 6 drawers on side of bed. .
$125. 423-432-8671.
China Cabinet, cherry wood,
Lights on top, Very nice.
$400. Call 423-903-2835.
COMICS Over 600 Spider-Man &
Venom Fantastic cond, ’69-‘03
Incl. rare issues. $400 424-9430
LP COLLECTION, various
genres, 140 in all, $200.
Call 432-240-2068.
TV CABINET Oak w/ storage on
each end. Exc. condi.
$200 423-870-2400
CHAIRS (2) Matching, Cane
sides, Nice, $40 for both,
Call 423-629-5064
DESK CHAIR,
Swivel $15.
423-877-7724.
Joey Stivic Doll- Still in the box,
Archie Buncker’s Grandson.
$50. 706-861-9157
TV ARMOIRE , ETHAN ALLEN,
Beautiful Cherry, holds 42 in. TV,
$700 706-375-6565
Thermostat, Hunter, programmable in box w/instr., gas or
elec. $20obo. 892-5775.
Desk- 1 piece school desk
$25
Call 423-236-4598
HI-FI CONSOLE - Radio/record
combo, 78 & 33 1/2 records.
$100. 423-336-5773
TEA CART, large, metal, on
casters, ideal for porch or patio, $75. 423-892-4261.
CHAIR- Queen Anne,
gold color, $60 Call
423-821-4383.
COMIC BOOKS Many Different
Types, .10 .15 .20 cents Collectible 5/ $5.00 423-903-2835
GWTW. 2 Videos in case.
w /Magazine. 50th anniv.
$20. Call 423-899-8342.
TABLE TOP CHEST,
19” tall, 30”x50” $60.
423-838-8318
FIREWOOD, SEASONED
While it last!! $45. Rick
U-Pick Up 423-762-2289
CURIO, CORNER, JCPenny
Cherry New $999.99
Now $450. 706-375-6565.
Dish Towels- Want to buy linen
calendar dish towels. 1962,
‘63, 2000. 706-937-3367
TABLE- Folding,
wooden, $50.
Call 423-834-0344.
CHAIR- Queen Anne Wingback,
pretty dark green, w/little burgundy, nice. $150. 855-9825.
COKE BOTTLES- Old, Filled Variety, $50 or can separate.
Call 423-883-5009.
DIECAST CAR #9 Nascar Gold
and Tucker, New in original
box. $40. 423-883-5009.
SOFA, Small, Brown plaid
Like new, clean. $75.
423-842-4342
TV STANDsolid oak, 2 doors, $50.
Call 423-842-4342.
COUCH & Matching loveseat,
asking $250 for both, or can
separate. 423-697-9432.
WINDOWS, PINE,w/ jambs
Custom made, 3pr Never used
$275/lot 423-598-3122
CABELA EQUIP- 1 Per Tent,
Back Pack, Sleeping Bag, All
Only Used 1 Time $150.
Call-303-808-8018
R O C K I N G C H A I R, A p p r o x .
75-100 yrs. old, very good
cond. $125. 423-892-7323.
COCA-COLA ITEMS- Including
bottles, trays, village, etc.
$500. Call 423-875-9438.
VANITY LIGHTS, 5 light,
Bronze, new in box
$75. 706-866-3918
CAMPING
EQUIPMENT
Arm Chair- Maroon, large, very
comfortable, $100.
Call 423-838-8659
COLLECTIBLES
TILLER-SICMA 6 ft. 3pt. hitch
with clutch, almost new,
$1200. 706-657-7711.
SAW MILL CUT PINE
1” & 2” $450. A THOUSAND
423-313-2323
SHOOTING
SUPPLIES
COMFORTER SET Queen
Lots of Extras. $100.
423-499-9924
CORN PLANTER4 Roll Ford, $1100.
Call 423-238-9587.
POLE BARN - 24x36, 10’ ceiling,
6x6 treated posts,Wood trusses.
Metal roof. Installed. $4000.
Other sizes avail. 423-595-2079
FURNITURE
PROM DRESS Size 16 Baby
Blue, Beaded, Beautiful, Like
new, worn 1x, $125, 362-5996
STOVE- 30”, Electric, Nice &
Clean! Can Deliver.
$140.00 706-866-4586
Washer$200
Call 706-657-3987 before 6pm
FURNITURE
Nintendo Wii$90. Works good.
423-624-6464 & 423-486-4444
OFFICES CUBICLES, Turn
unused space into rental offices
w/ 9 Lockable Fully Fitted Units
New condition. Cost $75,000
Steal!@ $12,500. 423-266-8257
GOLF CART Ez-Go Electric
New batteries Good condi.
$2000. Call 423-332-5199
POOL TABLE Vintage
1957 Valley $1500 obo,
Call 423-457-4264
ROLLER BLADES, womens
size 8/boys 7, Nice pair.
$50 423-629-2530
TENNIS RACKETS 2 adults,
1 child, & 1 bag. $100. firm for
all Call 423-629-2530
Total Gym by Chuck NorrisLIKE NEW! $100.
Call 423-413-4520 for more info..
WEIGHTS- 325 lbs. Olympic.
Hexagon 2.5-35 lbs. Stands.
Bench. $1 Info. 421-0516.
STORM DOOR- 32in Bronze Full
View With Half Screen & Closure. $50 706-375-3285
F4 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
INTERCOM SYSTEMS (2)with book, $40.
Call 706-866-3918
SATELLITE RADIO, Sirrus
Sportster 5, Complete kit,
$120 obo. Call 423-618-5433.
STEREO- cabinet style,
beautiful wood, $125.
Call 423-892-7323.
SHIH TZU PUPPIES- AKC,
Beautiful colors! Shots utd. Warranty. $350. & up 423-775-4016
YORKIE, 3yr Old, Male, $200,
To Good Home, Preferably No
Sm. Kids 423-290-9065
T.V. 13 in orion, with remote,
rarely used $25 call
423-332-5972
TV- 27 inch, Samsung,
$40
Call 423-394-0926
TV- 32 inch Panasonic w/ surround sound. Grey w/ matching cabinet included. Good
condition. $74. 423-332-3259
YORKIE PUPPY CKC, 3 males,
$600 423-637-9226 or
charmingyorkshires.com
Yorkie Puppies- AKC reg. 1st
shots. Small. $600 & up
Call 256-495-2569
TV HITACHI 52”- Floor model,
Like new, HD ready w/ remote,
Proj. screen, $250, 987-8765
TV- Samsung 32” new, warranty, 1 month old, paid $399.
Sell for $250. 423-463-1963.
TV- Sony, 32”, includes stand,
DVD player, $75. Call
423-238-1428.
TV- Toshiba, 13”, cable
ready, w/DVD player,
$50 Cash. 423-855-0089.
WANTED TO BUY
YORKIES AKC Beautiful Champs
1 yr health guar. Tea cups avail.
Ready now. Layaway aval.
Can deliver.$900. 423-949-9715
pics @ myyorkiebreeder.com
Lionel, American Flyer & Other
Old Toy Trains Wanted Pays
Cash, 423-716-1677
WANTED- Diabetic Test Strips
1 Touch, Freestyle/Accucheck,
up to $10./per 100. ct 774-3994
WANTED: Need dependable vehicle, w/4 cyl. Willing to pay
$1500 Cash. 423-260-2450.
YORKSHIRE TERRIER Males &
Females $500.& up 423-658-2205
www.birdsongkennel.com
PET SUPPLIES
PETS
DOG KENNEL- Airline
approved, medium size, like
new, $47.00 423.240.0153
FISH AQUARIUM 20 gallon
w/ wood stand & light $80.
Call 423-892-3807
PET CARRIER, large
34”x21”x26”. Like new. $40.
423-332-5199
GOLDEN RETRIEVER
PUPPIES AKC & Golden
Doodle CKC OFA/ Champ lines.
$500.-$650. 615-765-7976
www.berachahfarms.com
a EXOTIC BIRD FAIR a
Camp Jordan Arena, E. Ridge,
Mar. 31st & April1st 240-8423
PET CARRIER, Pet Mate
2dr deluxe, 22lx14wx16h
$30. 423-332-5199
LIVESTOCK
Baby Chicks,
Asking $4.00,
Call 423-285-0538
Baby Guineas,
Asking $8.00
Call 423-285-0538
AIREDALE PUPPIES. (3). Females, Parents 1 AKC Reg. 1
CKC. Puppies not reg. 9 wks.
old. 1st shots. $300 each.
423-453-8521. 423-368-5882.
CHICKENS, Asking $7,
Cockrels,
Call 285-0538
FEED/SEED/
PLANTS
FERTILIZER All purpose
33.3 bag $7.00
706-937-3085
LANDSCAPE PLANTS,
Monkey grass, daylilies, Vinca 10
section. $30. 892-4261.
BORDER COLLIE Pups, ABCA
Excel.stock dogs &pets $250 /$350
931-939-2426/ 931-607-2426
PLANTS, Angel trumpets
white, pink, yellow. $4
706-935-2218
PLANTS, Red
hot pokers $4
706-935-2218
BULL MASTIFF- AKC Registered puppies, $1000 call
706-409-5544
LEGAL NOTICES
CATS- free, need home for 1 or
2 indoor cats, orange & calico.
423-236-4262 after 5 P.M.
LEGAL NOTICE
CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES CKC,
Small. Must see!
$250. 423-322-1839
CHIHUAHUAS-1 female 2 males
full blooded, parents on premises
$125 ea. 423-364-8455
DOBERMAN PUPS, CKC
2 Blk/rust, 3 Blue/rust & 1
Cream/fawn. Females only
$400.-$600. 931-588-6743
littleduckriverkennel.com
F O U N D B O X E R- F e m a l e ,
Brindle w/ white patch on
chest. 423-296-0375
Free: Beagle, Female, 2Yrs Old,
Pet not a hunter, Dalton Area,
Call 706-537-2281
GERMAN Shepherd Pups.
AKC. Blk/tan 1st shots/wrmed
$500. 423-702-5821.
KITTENS- Free to good home, 3
blacks, 1 stripe, call
423-326-4650
LAB MIX- 3 yr old. Free to good
home. Great Dog. Moving cant
keep her 423-991-3724
PUG PUPPIES. M&F. $250.
Parents on site.
Shots & wormed.
931-686-5544/931-686-2155.
SHIH TZU- Puppies for Sale,
CKC registered, 4 Males 1 Female $250 423-488-9483
Notice is hereby given that a
review will be held by the
Soddy-Daisy Municipal Planning Commission, Wednesday,
April 11, 2012 at 12:00 noon in
the courtroom of the SoddyDaisy Municipal Building, 9835
Dayton Pike, when consideration will be given the request
of Iraj R. Radpour to rezone
from A-1 Agricultural District
and M-1 Industrial District to
A-1 Agricultural District a tract
of land located at 9177 Daisy
Dallas Road for agricultural
use. The same will be considered by the City Commission at
a public hearing to be held
Thursday, April 19, 2012 at
7:00 p.m.
Annette Dolberry
Planning Secretary
Anuncio Público
Aviso de asamblea pública
acerca de una enmienda al
programa Soluciones de
Emergencia de Subvención
(Emergency Solutions Grant)
del Plan consolidado del estado de Tennessee
Lugar: Parkway Towers, THDA
12vo piso, Sala de conferencias, 404 James Robertson
Pkwy, Nashville TN
Fecha: El 26 de Abril 2012
Hora: 4:30 – 6:30
El Organismo para el Desarrollo de la Vivienda de Tennessee (THDA, Tennessee
Housing Development Agency)
administra el programa Soluciones de Emergencia de Subvención (Emergency Solutions
Grant), uno de los cuatro programas del Departamento de
Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano
que cubre el Plan consolidado
estatal. La enmienda propuesta se refiere únicamente al
programa HOME.
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on
June 23, 2004, by Dilip G.
Naik and Priti D. Naik to
Thomas L. Moser, Trustee, as
same appears of record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee, under
Book No. GI7185, Page 214,
("Deed of Trust"); and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to BANK OF AMERICA,
N.A., SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO BAC HOME
LOANS SERVICING, LP FKA
COUNTRYWIDE HOME
LOANS SERVICING LP; and
WHEREAS, BANK OF
AMERICA, N.A., SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO BAC
HOME LOANS SERVICING,
LP FKA COUNTRYWIDE
HOME LOANS SERVICING
LP, the holder of said Deed of
Trust, (the "Holder"), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.,
as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee, with all the
rights, powers and privileges of
the original Trustee named in
said Deed of Trust; and
WHEREAS, pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-5-117
(i), not less than sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication required by § 35-5-101, the notice of the right to foreclose
was properly sent, if so required; and
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by
the Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee
Services, Inc., Substitute
Trustee, or its duly appointed
attorneys or agents, by virtue
of the power and authority
vested in it, will on Thursday,
April 5, 2012, commencing at
11:00 AM at the Main Door
(Walnut Street side) of the
Hamilton County Courthouse,
Chattanooga, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash, the following described
property situated in Hamilton
County, Tennessee, to wit:
IN THE SECOND CIVIL
DISTRICT OF HAMILTON
COUNTY, TENNESSEE:
Lot Six (6), Block G, Addition
to Brookfield Place, as
shown by plat of record in
Plat Book 23, Page 95, in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 4112
Wade Drive, Chattanooga,
TN 37412
CURRENT OWNER(S): Dilip
G. Naik and Priti D. Naik
The sale of the abovedescribed property shall be
subject to all matters shown on
any recorded plan; any unpaid
taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back
lines that may be applicable;
any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and
any matter that an accurate
survey of the premises might
disclose.
This sale is also subject to
the right of redemption by the
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE
U.S. TREASURY, pursuant to
26 U.S.C. 7425(d)(1) by reason of the following tax lien(s)
of record in: Book GI9191,
Page 42; Book GI9286, Page
281. Notice of the sale has
been given to the Internal Revenue Service in accordance
with 26 U.S.C. 7425(b).
SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: AmSouth Bank and City
of East Ridge
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower
are expressly waived in said
Deed of Trust, and the title is
believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee.
The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place
certain without further publication, upon announcement at
the time and place for the sale
set forth above.
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
Nationwide Trustee Services,
Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o PP
Nationwide Trustee Services,
Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329 (404)
417-4040
File No.: 432.J1200385TN
Web Site: www.jflegal.com
Publication Dates: March 13,
20, 27, 2012
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S
SALE
Sale at public auction will be on
April 17, 2012 at 12:00 PM local time, at the west door,
Hamilton County Courthouse,
Chattanooga, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by
Jessica Grimes, a single
woman, and Shaun Bowling, a
single man, to Arnold M. Weiss,
Esq., Trustee, as trustee for
Wells Fargo Bank, NA on April 8,
2008 at Book GI 8658, Page
830; conducted by Shapiro &
Kirsch, LLP having been appointed Substitute or Successor
Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP
Substitute Trustee
www.kirschattorneys.com
Law Office of Shapiro & Kirsch,
LLP
555 Perkins Road Extended,
Second Floor
Memphis, TN 38117
Phone (901)767-5566
Fax (901)761-5690
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
WHEREAS, default having
been made in the payment of
the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on
January 30, 2008, by Mary E.
Hicks to Larry A. Weissman,
Trustee, as same appears of
record in the Register's Office
of Hamilton County, Tennessee, under Book GI 8580,
Page 346, ("Deed of Trust");
and
WHEREAS, the beneficial
interest of said Deed of Trust
was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Mortgage
Inc.; and
WHEREAS, SunTrust Mortgage Inc., the holder of said
Deed of Trust, (the "Holder"),
appointed the undersigned,
Nationwide Trustee Services,
Inc., as Substitute Trustee by
instrument filed for record in
the Register's Office of Hamilton County, Tennessee, with all
the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee
named in said Deed of Trust;
and
WHEREAS, pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-5-117
(i), not less than sixty (60) days
prior to the first publication required by § 35-5-101, the notice of the right to foreclose
was properly sent, if so required; and
NOW, THEREFORE, notice
is hereby given that the entire
indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by
the Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee
Services, Inc., Substitute
Trustee, or its duly appointed
attorneys or agents, by virtue
of the power and authority
vested in it, will on Thursday,
April 12, 2012, commencing
at 11:00 AM at the Main Door
(Walnut Street side) of the
Hamilton County Courthouse,
Chattanooga, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash, the following described
property situated in Hamilton
County, Tennessee, to wit:
Located in the City of Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tennessee:
Being Lot Number Eight (8),
Block Forty-two (42), Orchard Knob, a plat of which
is of record in Plat Book 1,
Page 41, in the Register's
Office of Hamilton County,
Tennessee, to which reference is hereby made for a
more complete description.
Being the Southwest corner
of Vine and Willow Streets.
For prior title see deed dated
February 25, 2005 and recorded March 1, 2005 in
Book 7443, Page 723, in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2014
Vine Street, Chattanooga, TN
37406
CURRENT OWNER(S): Mary
E. Hicks
The sale of the abovedescribed property shall be
subject to all matters shown on
any recorded plan; any unpaid
Publication Dates: March 20,
27, April 3, 2012
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S
SALE
Default having been made in
the payment of the debts and
obligations secured to be paid
by a certain Deed of Trust executed September 7, 1993 by
Slaughter L. Henderson, unmarried to Stuart Jones, as
Trustee, as same appears of
record in the office of the Register of Hamilton County, Tennessee, in Book 4224 Page 46,
and the undersigned having
been appointed Substitute
Trustee by instrument recorded in the said Register's
Office, and the owner of the
debt secured, Midfirst Bank,
having requested the undersigned to advertise and sell the
property described in and conveyed by said Deed of Trust,
all of said indebtedness having
matured by default in the payment of a part thereof, at the
option of the owner, this is to
give notice that the undersigned will, on Thursday, April
19, 2012 commencing at
01:00 PM, at the West Front
Door of the Courthouse, Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tennessee proceed to sell at
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder for cash, the following described property, to
wit:
Situated in County of Hamilton, State of Tennessee.
Being part of Tract No. ATwo-Two (A-2-2) of the Simpson Estates, as shown by
plat of record in Plat Book 9,
page 16, Register's Office,
Hamilton County, Tennessee, being more fully described as follows: Beginning at an iron pin in the
Eastern line of Juandale
Trail, said pin, being also in
the Southwest corner of a
tract conveyed by J. Boyd
Brown and wife Floy C.
Brown to David B. Moon,
Trustee by deed recorded in
Book 1530, page 104 in said
Register's Office; running
thence Eastwardly along the
Southern line of the Moon
Tract, Four Hundred FortyOne and 7/10 (441.7) feet,
more or less, to the center
line of Section Seven (7),
Township Six (6) North Two
(2) South, Range Three (3),
West of the Basis Line,
Ocoee District; running
thence South Twenty Four
(24) degrees Twenty Two
(22) minutes West along said
center line, One Hundred
(100) feet to an iron pin;
thence Westwardly, Four
Hundred Fifty-Four (454)
feet, more or less, to an iron
pin in the Eastern line of
Juandale Trail, thence
Northwardly along Juandale
Trail, One Hundred (100)
feet to the point of beginning.
Notice of the Right to Foreclose has been given in compliance with T.C.A. § 35-5-117.
Tax Parcel ID: 137N-F-002
Property Address: 3912 Juandale Drive, Chattanooga, TN
a/k/a 3912 Juandale Trail,
Chattanooga, TN
Other Interested Parties:
AmSouth Bank
All right and equity of redemption, homestead and
dower waived in said Deed of
Trust, and the title is believed
to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only
as Substitute Trustee.
ARNOLD M. WEISS,
Substitute Trustee
Weiss Spicer Cash PLLC
208 Adams Avenue
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
901 526 8296
File # 1882-093977-FC
Publication Dates: March 27,
April 3, April 10, 2012
AREA 19
OOLTEWAH 5506 Waterwheel
Ln. Mill Run Subd. 4br 3.5 bath
Full basement corner lot. Reduced $320,000 423-238-4913
HOUSES FOR SALE
Walker County
HOUSES FOR SALE
Dtwn, St. Elmo, Highland Park,
Avondale, Missionary Ridge
HOUSES FOR SALE
Dade County
(423) 332-8640
CONDOS TOWNHOUSES
Lookout Mtn., Repo! 3 BR, 3.5
BA, 2K sq. ft., golf! Sold $499K,
now $109,900 423-304-4041
Trade/Sell, 4 Star Emerald
Beach Resort.com on PCB
FL. Will Trade For Your
Home Or Condo, $349,000
423-591-4322 or 595-3600
N. Chatt., Mtn. Creek,
Riverview, Rivermont
APISON, TN.
5+ acre lots. Go to
www.apisonland.com
BENTON TN- 2003 28x52, 3bd 2
bth on 3/4 acre land, $25,000
Call- 423-504-5912
CLAYTON 2010, 16x80, 3BR,
2 bath, nice home! $23,700.
Call 423-504-5912.
REAL ESTATE
WANTED
H ANY HOUSE! H
Any Condition!
I BUY
HOUSES
CA$H!
RETAIL FOR SALE
BRAINERD- Dry Cleaner, Full
Plant, for QUICK SALE, Asking
$45,000 obo. Call 423-313-1955
Catoosa County
DUPLEXES
FOR RENT
E Ridge- 1200 sq ft. 2BR/ 1.5
BA, large deck, no pets. Lawn
kept. $645 month. 423-344-8794
E. Ridge- Deluxe townhouse,
1200 sq ft, 2 BR, garage, no
pets, $700. 423-238-2738.
Highland Park- Nice 1 BD, applncs, hookups, $425 mo/dep
423-667-5752
Lookout Valley--Duplexes for
rent. 2BR. W/D connection.
Starting at $450. Call
423-894-0324
Red Bank- $875. Large 3 BR
garage 2 BA, heat/air ,applicenaces, NO PETS! 595-7800
or 877-0068
HOUSES-RENTFURNISHED
SODDY LAKE, 2 BR 2 Bath
No smoking, No Pets $225. wkly
includes utilities 423-240-2800
Bonny Oaks- 3 BR, 2 BA, ga
rage, 1 yr. lease, $800 mo. (Min.
credit score-650) Call 827-3761
CHATT. 4BR, 2 bath, HVAC,
$400 dep. $750 mo.
E. RIDGE. 1BR, 1 bath, $500
mo. $350 dep.
E. CHATT. 1BR, $375 mo. $200
dep. Sec. 8 ok. 423-802-2083.
E. LAKE Rent to own! 3br 1bath
C/H/A Fenced yard, Hook ups
$162.50.wk. $350.dep
423-344-4614 /394-1715
Ft Oglethorpe- Fort Town Estates, 1950 sq ft, 3/4 BR, 2/BA,
Fenced yard. $1,200 mo.
Call Mike 423-785-7467.
Ooltewah - 3 BR mobile
homes starting at $670/mo.
423-899-2780.
RINGGOLD 3br 2bath. Newly
remodeled. C/H/A, 2 car garage,
cul-de-sac. $975. 760-731-1390
RISING FAWN VALLEY Minutes
from I-59.1700+sf + bonus room;
3BR 2Bath; Appliances;
W/D hookups; Gas F/P; 2 Car
carport; Storage shed; Private;
end of dead end Rd;1 yr lease
$700mo.$500dep. 423-785-7385
OFFICE FOR LEASE
MOBILE HOMESRENT
Lookout Valley:
Office Space for lease.
Various sizes. 423-894-0324
E. RIDGE/N.GA - $99 move-in
2 & 3 BR’s for $75.00 per week
& up! 894-0039 or 355-1104
WAREHOUSE
FOR LEASE
Ft Oglethorpe - 4000 sq. ft. with
office/loading dock. $1500 per
mo. Chris 423-645-8067
www.carltonpropertiesllc.com
HOUSES FOR SALE
HIXSON/NEAR TARGET. 1200
sq.ft. 2BR, 1.5Bath, Wood/ Tile
floor. $675.mo. 423-255-6350
3 BR,1 BA, fenced in yard, car
port, Owner finance with $3,500
down Close to UTC, Downtown
Rent or Buy $720 mo.
(931)319-8893 Owner/ Agent
Signal Mountain,
Walden, Suck Creek
Signal Mtn- 4BR/3.5 BA home
in Hidden Brook. Updated, open
floor plan, office, and bonus.
$479,900. Call 423-667-9893
CONDO-TOWNHOUSE-RENT
MOBILE HOMES
HOUSES FOR SALE
Beautifully modernized Signal
Mtn. home near the Brow. 3 BR
All new kitchen and bathrooms!
$335,000 423-645-7014
www.203northpalisades.com
One Bedroom Special
*** Restrictions May Apply ***
HOUSES-RENT
-UNFURNISHED
$ WE BUY HOME$!
Any condition - Any reason.
Call Today! 752-SELL (7355)
NoogaHomeBuyers.com
TRUSTEE'S SALE
New Owners / Management
Ooltewah, 2.07 acres. Minutes
to VW & downtown. Below
appr. $44,900. 423-413-2559.
316-3800
N. CHATT- AWESOME Tri-Level
Contemporary 4/3, Guest Apt.
Lease av. $239,900 423-266-8257
“The Commons”
WATERFRONT
HOMES
N. CHATTANOOGA!
78 x 190. Cul-de-sac lot!
Very private! Good
schools! Must See! $35,000
227-6586
HOUSES FOR SALE
Soddy Daisy, 8890 Hunt St,
1 BR/1BA, C/H/A Hookups
$475 month. 423-421-0664
The Commons Apt. Homes
mins to I-75 / Hamilton Place
Call 423.894.9223
C A T O O S A C O . 7.9 acres,
wooded, for $48,000. Call
423-304-5951. 706-764-1514.
E. BRAINERD, New construction full masonry home with 3
BR, 2.5 Baths, large rec room,
featuring hardwood floors,
travertine tile, custom cabinets with granite countertops,
and much more. All on .4 acre
lot with circular drive. 2,625
sq ft, $305,900 Call 313-3373
for more info
SHEPHERD- 2 BR, 1 Bath
kitchen appliances, no pets, 1
yr. lease, $450 dep.
$575 mo., 423-855-2866
$399 pays your Rent till
May 1st, 2012
So. Chatt - By owner. Nice 3BR,
1 bath, lg. fenced yard. Must See
423-867-7710
E. BRAINERD, Concord
Highlands. Beautifully redone
4br/3bath Brand new everything!!
Roof, windows, heat/air, floors,
paint, designer kitchen w/ custom
cabinets & SS Viking, Thermador
Subzero Totally new inside & out.
$293K 423-987-9277 or visit
forsalebyowner.com
ID# 23385755 details & photos
Call us to hear Special Rates !
Red Bank-$425. Nice 1 BR, applicances, water, no pets.
877-0068, 595-7800
BY OWNER 30 Acs.WILL DIVIDE
in Dayton On Blythe Ferry Rd.
Off Hwy 60, Partially cleared,
2 Miles from Lake Access.
$5500 acre. Call 865-919-2279.
Brainerd, East Brainerd
NEED STORAGE??
www.StorageWorksTN.com
LOTS & ACREAGE
HOUSES FOR SALE
- FT. OGLETHORPE Ground Level Apts
with private patios
Garbage & Water paid
Established community
Close to everything!
Call for details
706-861-0455
Rossville Foreclosure Home &
Land, 3 BR, 2 BA, Remodeled,
Move in! $29,900. 304-4041
NASHVILLE/CHATT. 3BR, 3
bath, carport, many outbldgs.
on 30or90 acre, like new, plus
fruit orchard. 931-314-1945.
Avondale- Brick Home, 3 BR,
Large den, move in ready, large
lot. 2106 Portland St. $40K
Call 423-902-7003
E. RIDGE
MOVE-IN SPECIAL!
Equal Housing Opportunity
FLINTSTONE . 3/4 brick, 2BR/1
BA, det.garage - MOVE
INREADY! Hrdwd floors, gas log
FP. Lrg, level fully fenced yard!
$92,000. 423-902-3904.
Dade Co- 3,100 sq ft house &
10+ acres, 100% financing
available to qualified borrowers. 640 credit score. PITI
$1,000. Call 706-398-3650
MINI FARM House, Barn,
Shed, 5 Acres, $120,000.
May finance. 423-650-8802.
Call
423-894-0324
Fountainbleau
Near I-24 and I-75
894-1769
Ooltewah
FARMS - FARM
LAND
Near Hamilton Place
Eastgate
Newly Redecorated Available
1 Bedroom from $405
2 Bedroom from $450
OPEN HOUSE
OOLTEWAH. PRELlSITING
OPEN HOUSE- 12-5.
7323 Salmon Lane on 3/24, 3/25
3/31, 4/1. 3BR; 2.5BA, 2291sf.
offers over $175,600 considered.
For more info/pics call
423-344-2172 or email
[email protected]
APTS-RENTUNFURNISHED
1, 2, Bedrooms & Efficiencies
William David Jones,
Successor Trustee
MidFirst Bank/Slaughter Henderson
Whereas, a Deed of Trust
has been heretofore executed
by Peggy Stubbs, to Realty
Center Title & Escrow, LLC,
Trustee, dated January 28,
2011, and filed for record in
Book 9342, Page 779, in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee, conveying the hereinafter described
real estate in trust to secure
payment of a promissory note
and said promissory note being described therein and payable to the order of Kenneth W.
Scarbrough, Jr. and Deborah
Ann Scarbrough; and
Whereas, by instrument
executed by Kenneth W. Scarbrough, Jr. and Deborah Ann
Scarbrough, dated October 14,
2011, and filed for record in
Book 9505, Page 635 in said
Register's Office, they declared themselves to be the
owner and holder of said note
so secured by said Deed of
Trust and appointed William
David Jones as Successor
Trustee, with all rights, powers
and privileges of the original
Trustee named in said Deed of
Trust; and
Whereas, default has been
made in payment of installments maturing on said promissory note, and in performance of covenants contained
in the Deed of Trust by reason
of which the entire balance
owing thereon has been declared due and payable, default has been made in payment thereof and such default
continuing;
Now, therefore, by virtue of
the power and authority vested
in him as such Successor
Trustee under the Deed of
Trust of record in Book 9342,
Page 779 aforesaid, at the request of the owner and holder
of said note, and for the purpose of effecting payment and
satisfaction thereof, principal
and interest, attorney's fees
and costs of sale, William
David Jones, a resident of
Hamilton County, Tennessee,
Trustee, will on M a r c h 2 8 ,
Ooltewah
BRAINERD
RUSTIC VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
AREA 20
The amendment is available for
review and public comment at
www.thda.org on the homepage. The amendment is also
available for review at the nine
Development Districts of Tennessee. Locations of the nine
Development Districts are
available on the THDA website.
Written comments via electronic submission on the THDA
website will be accepted
through April 25, 2012.
Nationwide Trustee Services,
Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o
CS11 Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329
(404) 417-4040
File No.: 221.0932828TN
Web Site: www.jflegal.com
AREA 16
Tennessee Housing Development Agency (THDA) administers the Emergency Solutions Grant Program, one of
four Department of Housing
and Urban Development programs covered by the State
Consolidated Plan. The proposed amendment is to the
Emergency Solutions Grant
Program only.
AREA
1 2
AREA
CASSETTE TAPE RECORDERConcord Stereo, Meters,
AC/Batt. Nice $35. 698-3643
Location: Parkway Towers,
THDA 12th Floor Conference
Room, 404 James Robertson
Pkwy, Nashville TN
Date: April 26, 2012
Time: 4:30 – 6:30 pm
2012, at 11:00 o'clock a.m.
offer for sale at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder for
cash at the West Door of the
Courthouse in the City of
Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tennessee, in bar of all equities of redemption, statutory
right of redemption, homestead, dower and other rights
or exemptions of every kind,
the following described real
estate located in the City of
Chattanooga of Hamilton
County, Tennessee:
Lot 276, Phase 14, Lake Hills
Subdivision, as shown by
plat of record in Plat Book
20, Page 54, Register's Office of Hamilton County,
Tennessee.
Subject to restrictions,
easements and other matters recorded in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
The street address of the
above described real estate is:
4610 Parkside Lane, Chattanooga, TN 37416.
Pursuant to TCA 35-5-117,
Notice of Right to Foreclose, if
applicable, has been made no
less than 60 days prior to the
first publication date in this
matter.
Said Deed of Trust recites
title as unencumbered, but sale
will be made as Trustee only,
without covenants of seizin or
warranties of title, subject to
any unpaid taxes or assessments
owing on said property.
This the 17th day of February, 2012.
HOUSES FOR SALE
AREA
1 4
AREA
PETS
Notice of Public Meeting Regarding an Amendment to the
State of Tennessee Consolidated Plan, Emergency Solutions Grant Program
y
y
taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back
lines that may be applicable;
any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and
any matter that an accurate
survey of the premises might
disclose.
SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: N/A
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower
are expressly waived in said
Deed of Trust, and the title is
believed to be good, but the
undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee.
The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place
certain without further publication, upon announcement at
the time and place for the sale
set forth above.
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO
COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
AREA 6
TV/RADIO/STEREO
EQUIPMENT
PUBLIC NOTICE
Trustee, all of record in the
Hamilton County Register's Office. Default has occurred in the
performance of the covenants,
terms, and conditions of said
Deed of Trust and the entire indebtedness has been declared
due and payable.
Party Entitled to Enforce the
Debt: Owner of Debt: Wells
Fargo Bank, NA
The following real estate located in Hamilton County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder:
Located in the Second Civil
District of Hamilton County,
Tennessee, being Lot 55,
Quail Run Subdivision, Unit 1,
as shown by plat of record in
Plat Book 34, Page 52, in the
Register's Office of Hamilton
County, Tennessee.
Street Address: 8903 Quail
Run Drive, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421
Parcel Number: 150O-E-006
Current Owner(s) of Property:
Jessica Grimes, a single woman
and Shaun Bowling a single
man, as joint tenants with rights
of survivorship
Other interested parties: Castle
Credit Corporation
The street address of the
above described property is believed to be 8903 Quail Run
Drive, Chattanooga, Tennessee
37421, but such address is not
part of the legal description of the
property sold herein and in the
event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control.
SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION.
If applicable, the HB 3588 letter mailed to the borrower(s) pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated 35-5-117.
This sale is subject to all matters shown on any applicable recorded plat any unpaid taxes;
and any restrictive covenants,
easements, or setback lines that
may be applicable; any statutory
right of redemption of any governmental agency, state or federal; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and to
any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose.
This sale is subject to all matters shown on any applicable recorded plat any unpaid taxes;
and any restrictive covenants,
easements, or setback lines that
may be applicable; any statutory
right of redemption of any governmental agency, state or federal; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and to
any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose.
In addition, the following parties may claim an interest in the
above-referenced property:
Castle Credit Corporation
SALE IS SUBJECT TO UCC
LIEN HELD BY CASTLE
CREDIT CORPORATION, OF
RECORD AT BOOK 8808,
PAGE 184, IN THE
REGISTER'S OFFICE OF
HAMILTON COUNTY, TENNESSEE.
All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and
homestead are expressly waived
in said Deed of Trust, and the
title is believed to be good, but
the undersigned will sell and
convey only as Substitute
Trustee.
The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication,
upon announcement at the time
and place for the sale set forth
above. If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twentyfour (24) hours of the sale, the
next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder.
This property is being sold with
the express reservation that the
sale is subject to confirmation by
the lender or trustee. This sale
may be rescinded by the Substitute Trustee at any time.
This office may be a debt collector. This may be an attempt
to collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for
that purpose.
File No. 12-031283
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 9
33412315
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for
real estate which is in violation
of the law. All persons are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal
opportunity basis.
g
El público puede analizar y
comentar la enmienda en la
página principal del sitio
www.thda.org, así como también en los nueve distritos de
desarrollo de Tennessee. El sitio web del THDA indica los lugares de los nueve distritos de
desarrollo. Se aceptarán los
comentarios presentados por
vía electrónica en el sitio web
del THDA hasta el 25 de Abril
de 2012.
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 11
All real estate advertised herein is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to
advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of
race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national
origin, or intention to make any
such preference, limitation or discrimination.”
LEGAL NOTICES
APTS-RENTFURNISHED
- FT. OGLETHORPE Furnished Efficiency Apts
Water, Garbage, and Utilities
are all included with lease.
Furnished for one low price!
Must Qualify!
Lakeshore II Apts
706-861-0455
N. HAMILTON CO. Georgetown
2 BR, 2 Bath Private setting in
country. No pets / smokers.
$500.mo/$250.dep.423-961-2572
SIGNAL MTN. Rd. 1 & 2 bedroom, utilities paid, Call
267-3783, 1-4, Mon.-Fri.
ROOMS FOR RENT
SIGNAL MTN. RD. $115 week,
$20 Dep. Free HBO & cable,
267-3783
AIRCRAFT
APTS-RENTUNFURNISHED
RINGGOLD Foreclosure - 1600
Sq. Ft., 3 BR, 2 BA, 1.5 Acres w/
lake access. $29,900. 304-4041
AREA 13
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE:
LEGAL NOTICES
AREA 16
timesfreepress.com
HOUSES FOR SALE
N. Hamilton Cty., Soddy-Daisy,
Bakewell, Sale Creek, Middle Valley
BRAINERD
CHATEAU ROYALE
MOVE-IN SPECIAL!
Controlled Entry
Gate
1, 2 & 3 bedrooms
55 years and older
Reserved Parking
Germantown Rd. Near I-24
423-629-6528
equal housing opportunity
Soddy Daisy- Beautiful home in
Hunters Hollow subdivision! 2600
sq ft on cul-de-sac lot! 4BR/ 3BA,
finished bonus room, huge
basement. $240,000
Call 423-618-5044
BRAINERD. Montview & Rosemont Apts. 1 & 2 BR, On Bus
Line, Quiet Community, Section 8 Okay, $300 Deposit, All
Credit Considered, No Pets
(423) 629-1557
SODDY DAISY. 3BR, 2 baths,
country porch, as is, very nice.
$112,000. 423-320-5941.
E. RIDGE - 1 & 2 BR apts.
W/D hookups, Pets ok. Pool.
Call 875-2069
BEECH BARON 1/4 Share. Glass
panel, Executive trans. Many upgrades. Ex. condi. 423-595-7700
POWER BOATS
ALLISON 2003 ‘98 200hp
Johnson w/ tandem axel trailer
w/ brakes. $14,500. 432-3643
B O A T - Sea Ray, 18’ walk
through, V6 eng, only 100 hrs.,
gar. Sac. $8k obo. 344-4428.
CIGARETTE-TYPE PROJECT
BOAT 30' +Trailer. RebuiltTwin
454 engines.$8,750. 332-6444
CRUISER Overnighter 21’ 140
Johnson, Trailer. $5500/ trade
for smaller boat. 488-3309.
Sell Your stuff for Free! 3 Classified Lines FREE 423.757.6200
timesfreepress.com
subject to availability
Three Lines Three Days No Charge
• • • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • F5
timesfreepress.com
POWER BOATS
REPAIRS/PARTS/
ACCESSORIES
TRUCKS
Chevy 99 Suburban LT, 5.7 auto
4x4, red w/tan leather, 166K,
loaded, $2500. 423-991-0285
DUALLY TRUCK BED- LWB, w/
fiberglass fenders, fits Ford
93-97, $500, 423-332-3863
CARVER CRUISER ‘05- 36ft,
Extremely Nice, Central Vac
Radar Atc, Always Covered,
Loaded, $150,000. MAKE
OFFER MUST SALE 991-3754
Electric Tongue Jack- For a
trailer or RV. $45.
Call 423-463-0443
JUMP SEATS (2), for Landrover
from SE7, $200. Call
423-326-1098.
MICHELIN FLOOR MATS,
Tan, 4 pc set, MD970, NEW,
$25.00 Call 423-991-7613
FOUR WINNS ‘2006- 220 Horizon, Bright Red and White w/
only 153 hrs, volvo 5.0 V-8,
$30,950 call 423-344-9019
MARINE PARTS &
ACCESSORIES
SEADOO TRAILERWhite, exc. cond. $450.
Call 423-344-4784.
GO-CART, 2 seater Padded,
Good condi. 300.obo only serious inquries 423-622-3837
cars.timesfreepress.com
Ford Ranger XLT ‘98, Super
Cab 5spd.4 Cyl. 2WD $6,100 $139.28MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
AUTOS/TRUCKS
WANTED
Ford Ranger 2WD Reg Cab ‘04,
Auto, 6 CYL $5,800 - $132.86
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
DFKFI:P:C<J
J:FFK<IJ
FAST SERVICE
$200 - $1000
CASH FOR JUNK CARS
423-320-6971
I Pay More Than the Rest
I BUY JUNK CARS - running
or not. I pay top dollar.
Start at $300 & up.
Dennis 595-1132/ 843-4972.
CASH For CARS, FORK LIFTS
& EQUIP. At reasonable price,
Run or No run. 423-421-3103
EXPRESSWAY TOWING
PAYS CASH FOR JUNK
CARS!!!! 423-266-0558
CORVETTE 1975. Silver,
Auto, 350/400, $9000. Call
423-622-4441. 423-314-4441.
Delta 88 Oldsmobile ‘84- new
tires, V8, auto, runs like new.
$900. Call 423-339-7385
GMC Sierra C1500 `07 V6,
5 Speed, CD, 72K $9,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
GMC Dually 1996, 4 door,
bad motor, $4000 obo.
Call 423- 509-7140.
Harley Davidson ‘05, Softtail
Deluxe, 3100K, Perfect!
$12,900 423-488-4237
Infiniti FX45 ‘06, AWD V8
Leather, Sunroof,Nav, 71K Miles
$25,900 423-499-9799
HONDA FURY CHOPPER ‘11
White on Blk. 21500 miles Blk
Cobra pipes.$12,900. 605-6859
HONDA REBEL CMX250C,
1986. 15k, fun & reliable.
$1000 obo. 615-579-5202.
HONDA SHADOW 2001, 600
VLX, saddlebags, windshield,
sissy bar, new tires, 68 mpg,
$2,800. obo 423-605-2603.
HONDA SHADOW SPIRIT 750
‘07- 500 miles, warranty, saddle
bags, $4200. 423-322-9937
HONDA Shadow ACE ‘01.
Lots of chrome, excellent cond.
$4500/offer. 423-718-1995.
KAWASAKI ‘03 1600cc 11k
miles New tires Excel. condi.
$4800. 423-400-8708
MG MGB GT ‘65- Rare. Excellent condition! $8,950.
Call 423-243-7933
VANS
CHEVROLET, 2002 hightop, explorer, TV, DVD, leather, 103K
$11,500 423-344-9887
Chrysler Town & Country LX
‘07, Rear Air, 3rd Seat $10,900 $242.03
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
$3,982
GMC VAN, 2003, Hightop,
TV, PS2, 81k
$13,500 423-344-9887
TRUCKS
$13,950
CHEVY C10 Fleetside, 1970,
Short wheel base, $5000 obo.
Call 423-509-7140.
Chevy S10 Ext. Cab LS ‘00,
Auto, 6 Cyl. $7,900 - $177.81
MO.W.A.C. 423-499-9799
BMW 325i ‘06 Blue,V-6, All
Power, A/C,Sunroof,Lthr $14,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Chevy Silverado “05 V-6, Auto,
A/C, Alloys, $8,800 643-0003
www.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 Quad
Cab SLT ‘07, Hemi, V8, 20”
Wheels, 73K Miles $17,900 $391.87 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
BMW Z4 ‘04 2.5L Convertible
98,400 miles, Silver, Blk top,
5 spd. Power locks & windows.
AM/FM CD, Exc. cond.
$11,000. 423-322-6519
Buick Century ‘04, White 4dr
Clean 64k mi $5900
423 593-9314 / 423 716-4781
Dodge Ram 1500 4X4 Quad
Cab Laramie ‘08, Hemi, V8,
20” Wheels, Leather, 51K Miles
$24,900 - 423-499-9799
CADILLAC ‘06 STS-V , Only
18,900 mi. Every conceivable
option. $28,800 706-889-5969
CADILLAC STS ‘05 Black,
Custom 20” wheels, Sharp,
$13,995 Call 423-760-1108
BEDLINER
Nissan - Short bed. $75
423-903-1888
CAMARO HOOD 1967
$200
423-362-8532
$8,811
Economy
Honda
Superstore
Kelly
Hwy
153
$7,975
Subaru Legacy L `99 4 Door, 2.2, 4 Cylinder,
5 Speed Manual, White, 101K #UC3056
incl. $383 Doc Fee + TTL 423-267-1104
$6,861
Kia Optima '06, 4 door, Auto, All Power, Deluxe wheel covers, Emergency trunk release
# T65448976+TTL & Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$11,950
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$10,950
Toyota 4Runner SRS ‘01 98K Miles,
Alloys #0214190 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
Kia Rondo EX ‘08 1 Owner, 43K Miles,
Alloys #7171657 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Economy
Honda
Superstore
$9,841
Kia Sorento '05, 4 Door, Auto, Keyless Entry,
Alloys, Roof rack, All Power #T55384104
+TTL & Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
$3,991
$6,485
Grand Marquis LS ‘93, 4 door, Auto, Mocha,
V8, 203K, #PPX671428+TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
$8,995
Nissan Sentra Sedan `06 4 Door, 1.8, 4 Cylinder, Automatic, Gold, 58K #UC0102A
incl. $383 Doc Fee + TTL 423-267-1104
Honda Pilot EX-L ‘03, 4 Door, 6 Cyl, Auto,
DVD, Ent System, AWD, 174K, #T3H597066
+TTL & Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
Kelly
Hwy
153
Ford Taurus '00, V-6 4D, Auto, Alloys, Keyless entry, All power # TYG292449 +TTL &
Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
Kelly
Hwy
153
Mazda 626 LX Sedan `02 4 Door, 2.0, 4 Cylinder, Automatic, Silver, 114K #UC0102B
incl. $383 Doc Fee + TTL 423-267-1104
$9,950
Chevy TrailBlazer LS ‘06, 5 Passenger, Tow
Pkg., Alloys #2144803 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$10,950
Toyota Tundra SR5 ‘03 Access Cab, Bed
Liner, Tow Packages #5439717 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 648-4314
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$10,950
Mercury Mountaineer AWD Premier ‘02,
Sunroof, Leather, 7 Passenger, Fixed running
board #ZJ41301+TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
$10,950
VW Jetta ‘06 94K Miles, Alloys
#M717245 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
CHEVY S-10 ‘87 2.8 V-6 5 spd
SWB new clutch. Needs a little
work $500. 423-582-6845
The first three lines of
your classified ad cost you
NOTHING!
423-757-6200
Dodge Ram 1500 SLT ‘05 V-8,
All Power, Alloys $12,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Chevy Aveo LT Sedan ‘10,
Auto, 4 Cyl. 37K Miles $11,900 $263.43 MO. W.A.C
423-499-9799
CHEVY CAVALIER ‘04 4 cyl., 5
speed, 36mpg. 98K, black, 2
door. $2800 423-991-0285
CHEVY LUMINA 1996. 162k
miles, good cond. Admission
Ready. $1500. 423-827-6573.
Subject to availability
Ford F350 4x4 Reg Cab XLT
DRW ‘06, Diesel, Flatbed 48K
Miles $24,800 423-499-9799
SPORT UTILITY
Chevy Monte Carlo LS ‘02,
Auto, 6 Cyl. 90K $7,800 $175.67 MO.W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Chevy Silverado ‘04 4x4, V-8,
Auto, A/C, 51K $11,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
CHEVY SILVERADO $1400/
trade for ext. cab & pay cash
difference. 931-779-4100
CHEVY MONTE CARLO ‘99Red, 117k, 1 Owner, $3800 obo
call 423-837-4325
Chrysler PT Cruiser ‘06 4-Cyl,
Auot, A/C, All Power, $6,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Dodge Dakota Crew Cab ‘05
4x4, V-6, Auto,A/C $8,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
3 Lines · 3 Days · Free
CALL
Chevy Monte Carlo- ‘95 - Z34
V6, Auto, 2 dr, 140K.
$1,800. 423-991-0285
HONDA CIVIC ‘98- Coupe,
150k miles, $2100
call 423-847-0429
Mini Cooper ‘03 5 Speed, All
Power, Alloys, A/C, Lthr $10,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
HONDA S2000 ‘05- Convertible,
6spd, Black w/ Black Leather Int,
XM Rdy, Factory Spoiler,
$15,000 931-743-2335
HONDA CRV ‘03 51k All power
Like new. CD Cassette
$13,500 Call 423-344-7707
Mitibishi Eclipse GT `04, Convert, V6, $7,800 NU 2 U Cars
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Chrysler Crossfire Limited
Convertible ‘05, Leather, Auto
58K MILES $16,800 - $368.32
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Jaguar X Type 310 ‘0621.5mpg, radiant red/ivory. New
tires, GPS, & phone. $15,300.
653-7942
LARGE SELECTION OF
SUBARUS
$5,995 or less.
Check out dougjustus.com
Hyundai Santa Fe ‘07 V-6, Auto,
All Pwr,Alloys,Sunroof $11,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
PONTIAC SUNFIRE’97, 4 cyl. 5
speed, 36 mpg, 2 door , 133K,
$1800, runs great 423-991-0285
M i t s u b i s h i E c l i p s e G T ‘ 0 0,
Auto,6 Cyl.95K $6,900$156.40MO.W.A.C. 423-499-9799
Chrysler Crossfire Coupe ‘07,
Leather, 6 speed, 30K Miles
$16,800 - $368.32 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Dodge Ram 2500 SLT ‘02 Auto,
All Pwr,Cummings Diesel,$8,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
NISSAN MURANO ‘11 Like new
All power Only 3,197 miles!! Glazier pearl, $29,000,423-842-1010
CLASSIC T-BIRD ‘84
74.5K Actual miles, 302 engine,
Sunroof, $2000 .706-639-6254
CORVETTE ‘99 C5 Model,
$14,000 Or Best Offer,
423-509-7140
FORD ESCORT 2 door, needs
transmission, good radio, cold
air, $1500, 309-9930.
BUSES
BEDLINER Ford F150. $75
423-903-1888.
Economy
Honda
Superstore
Economy
Honda
Superstore
$2,444
BMW 528i ‘00 Auto, A/C, All
Pwr, Sunroof, Lthr, 84K $8,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Trail Lite Camper, 30 ft. 2004,
slide out, Exc. Cond.
$11,000/neg. 423-762-6401
BEAUTY RINGS15inch set $25
423-332-4594
$10,950
Economy
Honda
Superstore
DODGE RAM 2500, 2007. Quad
Cab Hemi, 8 cyl, 4x4, auto,
67k. $17,000. 423-332-7369.
COLEMAN Pop up w/ Roof air
Needs little repairs.
$800.obo 423-505-6153
20 Inch Rims- Brand new in box
w/ receipt. Black & Chrome.
$500obo. 423-760-2145
$7,982
Ford F-250 ‘04, Reg Cab, 2Door, 8 Cyl,
Auto, White, 246K, #T4EB41755+TTL & Doc
Fee 800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
$15,950
Nissan Murano SL ‘04 74K Miles, Sunroof,
Leather #W223493 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
Honda Odyssey EX ‘03 95K Miles, Leather,
Rear Entertainment #B076774 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 648-4314
Economy
Honda
Superstore
BMW 325CI Convertible ‘05
V-6, All Pwr, Alloys, Lthr $11,800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
CAMPERS WANTED We Buy
Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels,
Motor Homes & Pop-up Campers.
Will Pay Cash! 423-504-8036
REPAIRS/PARTS/
ACCESSORIES
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Dodge Grand Caravan SE ‘10 1 Owner, 71K
Miles, 7 Passenger #R316459 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 648-4314
CHEVY 3/4 TON 1977, 350 auto,
PS, PB, $2450obo.
423-710-3947. 423-309-8799.
Dodge Ram’04, 4x4, crew cab,
long bed, 5.7L V-8 Hemi, leather,
power, $7,900 505-5588
CHEVY ‘89, Church bus, 36
Passenger runs good, good
condition $5,000 309-9930
Crown Victoria '97, V-8, 4D, Auto, Alloys,
Keyless entry, All Power # TVX103686 +TTL
& Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
4 X 4 TRUCKS
FORD VAN E-150 ‘76, Windsor
1/2ton 351 engine $900.
Call 423-624-4710.
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
Keystone Cougar, 5th wheel,
‘05, ‘02 F250 Super Duty, As
Is $21,000. 488-7371.
Cadillac Deville `97 4 Door, 4.6, 8 cylinder, 4
Speed Automatic, Green, 87K #P1125A
incl. $383 Doc Fee + TTL 423-267-1104
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
$9,842
Honda CRV EX ‘04, AWD, 5 Speed, Black,
132K, #T46254212 +TTL & Doc Fee
800-256-5286 www.economyhonda.com
Economy
Honda
Superstore
GMC YUKON DENALI 1999.
212k mi. All options. Exc.
cond. $4500. 423-290-9065.
WINN VIEW 24 ft. ‘08. Dsl. All
extras. Generator 1 owner. 17
mpg. $69,000. 423-842-9584.
Cadillac DeVille DHS ‘04, 55K Miles, Sunroof, Leather, Alloys #U169609 +TTL & $349
Doc Fee 648-4314
$7995
Toyota Tundra 2WD Reg Cab
‘06, Auto, 6 CYL 82K Miles
$11,800 - $261.29 MO. W.A.C.
423-499-9799
Dodge Ram ‘99, 15 passenger,
school or church, new engine
at Maxie, $5000,309-9930
MOTORCYCLE
ACCESSORIES
MOTOR HOMES
$7,881
Buick Rendezvous '03, 4D, Auto, Alloys,
Roof Rack, All Power # T35532451+TTL &
Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
Jeep Grand Cherokee ‘04
Limited, 4x4, extra nice, sunroof,
leather, $5800 423-991-0285
S a t u r n O u t l o o k X E ‘ 0 8 - All
wheel drive; Leather; CD; Alloy
wheels, Power Seat, window &
locks; DVD player; Seats 7;
White with tan interior; $15,500
423-298-4561.
Chevy Colorado 2WD Reg Cab
LS Z71 ‘08, 5 Speed, 4 Cyl. 55K
Miles $10,900 - $242.03
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
RIMS '09 w/ new tires.
HD Ultra Classic Sell together,
$600 or sep, $300. 332-4015
Economy
Honda
Superstore
Got something to sell?
Suzuki Blvd. ‘06 C50T, 800cc,
fully dressed, chrome, 7,805
mi. Mint cond.$5500 653-1531
HJC Helmets- (2) Gloss black, 1
medium, 1 XL, good cond.
$60 for both. 423-910-0424
Economy
Honda
Superstore
Toyota Tacoma 2WD
PreRunner SR5 ‘07, 5 Speed, 4
Cyl, 25K Miles $10,800 - $239.89
MO. W.A.C. 423-499-9799
VW Super Beetle ‘72- 2,000
miles on engine, licensed & on
the road. $4750. 365-0752
RED CAT Mini trail, (copy of
Honda trail 70) 2 helmets, Like
new. $500. 423-344-4784
WE BUY MOTORCYCLES
Top $ for used Harley Davidson
& all other brands. Must have
clean title Craig@ 423-280-3556
$8,862
Nissan Altima 2.5 ‘07, 4 Door,4Cyl, Auto,
Blue, Sunroof, 195K, #T7N436894+TTL &
Doc Fee 800-256-5286
www.economyhonda.com
Kelly
Hwy
153
HONDA 250 ‘09- Less than 40
miles, showroom cond, $2800
call 423-653-7827
HONDA CRF 450 2008, Milan
Suspension, Renthal Sprockets,
$4500obo. 423-599-0778.
$12,950
Honda Accord LX ‘07 1 Owner, 97K Miles
#C015644 +TTL & $349 Doc Fee
648-4314
Jeep Grand Cherokee, ‘93,
4X4, New Mud Grip Tires,
$1500 Firm, 706-820-1618
Malibu Wagon ‘82- Modified 350
eng & trans. $6,400 invested.
$4,500obo. 706-866-5346
Mustang Coupe ‘67, lots of new
parts, 302 motor. $6,200.
Call 423-304-6312.
H A R L E Y - D A V I D S O N Ultra
Classic ‘07, 4705 mi, dressed to
perfection, white diamond paint.
A must see! HOG on front
fender with lighted eyes.
$17,500. 423-544-2217.
$8,950
Economy
Honda
Superstore
Buick Le Sabre Limited ‘04 1 Owner,
Leather, Alloys #U220119+TTL & $349 Doc
Fee 648-4314
$12,950
Ford Mustang ‘65- 2 door,
$3,000. Needs some work.
Call 423-886-0164
HARLEY ‘02 Fatboy - Pearl white,
12k mi, Loaded w/ extras. Health
forces sell. $11,500 521-3759.
Ford Excursion Limited ‘05,
diesel, 150K, local, one owner,
$16,000, call 423-667-1988.
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Chevy ‘55- 2 door sedan, completely restored, $42,000
Call 423-877-1762.
FORD GALAXY 500, 1965, 352
auto, low miles, $4000obo.
423-326-1098. 762-0762.
TRIKE GOLD WING ‘02 1800
30K miles, ill. blue $24K o/b/o
706-629-5240 or 423-580-9209
Ford Excursion Lmtd ‘03 All
Pwr,DVD,HeatedSeats,Diesel,
Lthr.643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
AARON’S JUNK CARS,
TRUCKS, BUSES &
MOTOR HOMES. Will pay
cash in 30 min 423-355-1814
CLASSIC
SPECIALTY AUTOS
HONDA RANCHER 2003, 4 Trac
350ES, w/wench, 1050 hrs.
$2500. 423-596-5700.
Capital
Toyota
Pre-Owned
Outlet
Wheels- 2006 Mustang factory
18’’. New Michelin 225/45/18
tires. $1,000. 423-421-4690
SEA NYMPA 1998 ,16’ Flat bottom w/ Steering 28hp EvanrudeTn trailer $3495. 280-2490
WELLCRAFT SCARAB NOVA 2
+trailer 26-ft. twin 350’s.Blue
book $14,500, $9995. 332-6444
Chevy Suburban Z71 ‘02 All
Power,DVD,Sunroof, Lthr $8800.
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
TIRES- 275/70/17 & 265x70x16,
$150 for both sets OBO,
423-961-4017
Transmission- 350 Chevy
Turbo, short shaft, in good
shape. $350. 423-704-0240
SEA RAY SUNDANCER
CRUISER '06 290 Immaculate, Black hull, Cherry cabinetry, 2 Flat screens, Many extras , Rarely used & ready for
Spring $98,900 423-653-3176
Ford F250 Super Cab XLT ‘04,
Diesel,Auto, 97K $13,800 $304.10 MO.W.A.C. 423-499-9799
MOTOR ONLY for 2000
Nissan Truck 4 cly. 95k miles
$400. 423-505-6153
Trailer Hitchs ‘03 Subaru
Legacy ‘04-’10 Toy. Sienna
$250/can sep. 298-8115
Motor Yacht 408 Meridian, 40’
ultimate luxury boat, twin Mercury inboards, low hours, beautifully maintained,
covered slip year round at
Chickamauga Marina.
www.nice2004meridian.com
$189K 931-808-3600.
4 X 4 SPORT
UTILITY
Dodge Ram SRT-10 2WD Quad
Cab ‘06, 500HP, V10, Viper
Engine, 22” Wheels, 43K Miles
$27,800 423-499-9799
RANGE ROVER SPORT ‘0653k, GPS, Remini Red, Black
Leather, Sunroof, New Pirelli
Tires, Alloys $28,900
M-F 706-226-6542
S-S 706-226-7227
FORD ‘93 V-8 w/ Fiberglass
camper top New factory rebuild
trans w/ over drive. Good condi
No rust. $2000. 423-332-7721
FORD F250, 2004. 4X4 Super
Duty, gas engine. Extended
Cab, $7500 Call 423-488-3309
Ford F-250 XLT ‘00, crew cab,
7.3 diesel, auto, 105K, clean
truck. New Brakes, good tires,
heavier overload springs.
White & tan. $14,500.
423-842-4039.
Mustang GT ‘96, Must see to
appreciate. Runs excellent.
$6,300obo. 706-764-1148
MAZDA CONVERTIBLE ‘93
Stunning. Like new. $5,900
Call 423-785-6650
Mazda RX7 ‘86- good motor &
trans. Black T-top, 2 door.
$15K 423-876-9661.
NISSAN SENTRA ‘08- Auto, silver, 59k miles, 34mpg, new
tires/breaks $10k 316-8970
Olds Delta ‘88- Runs good,
looks good. New tires, . $1,000
obo. 423-898-6680, 309-9863
4 X 4 SPORT
UTILITY
HONDA ACCORD ‘07. Sedan,
Leather, Non Smoker, 63K,
Runs Great, $12,900 693-6930
Mercedes S-500 ‘99- Grand
Edition, Blk, 4 door, 1 of 600
built. $9,950. 423-304-4041
KIA ALTIMA ‘03, 4Dr. 5 Spd, All
Power, 81K Miles, Clean Cold
AC $2750. 423-322-1134
MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS
‘04 LS, Loaded, 75k, Good
MPG!! $6500. 423-421-2414
B L A Z E R 2 0 0 0 , 4x4, leather,
new brakes, roaders, wheel
barrens, etc. $4500. 637-3989.
MAZDA 626 LX, ‘97. 4 cyl, 4 dr,
5sp, tan cloth int. Runs great.
$2200. 423-331-6846.
Mercury Marquis ‘06, loaded,
new tires. asking $7,700.
706-639-9245.
Nissan Maxima ‘03 V-6, Auto,
A/C, All Pwr, Sunroof,Lthr $6800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
NISSAN MAXIMA ‘96,
4dr Air Sunroof $1,895.
423-902-6187/ 423-902-2286
Toyota Sienna ‘05, LE, 88K,
Looks/Runs Good$10,500
298-8115 or 298-2985
VOLKSWAGEN CABRIO ‘95Convertible, 5 spd, New Tires,
Cold Air, $3000 obo
706-866-7876
VOLVO 850 ‘96 4 Cyl, auto,
sunroof, leather, 160K, 30mpg,
GLT, $2400 423-991-0285
VW JETTA TDO 2010. 1 owner,
dsl, 22k, $21,500 obo. Auto,
Eco-Friendly. 423-710-3625.
Pontiac Grand Prix GT ‘04,
Auto, 6 Cyl. $6,900 - $156.40
MO.W.A.C. 423-499-9799
GRAND PRIX ‘95 6-Cyl.,
good cond. $1,895 4 dr. trade
SUV or Pick up 706-639-6254
Saturn SC1 ‘02, Hold 10 gal. of
gas & gets 24 mpg city runs
great $3,350. 423-316-7209
VW BEETLE ‘98, 80k, Blown head
gasket. Good body. Nice car.
$3000. 423-521-3759.
Nissan Maxima ‘04 V-6,All
Power,Sunroof,Lthr $8800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
Ford Station Wagon ‘87, True
center line wheels, cold air.
$3,500. 423-820-1618.
Suzuki Grand Vitara 2WD ‘08,
Auto, 6 Cyl. $10,900 - $242.03
MO. W.A.C 423-499-9799
Nissan Sentra S ‘05 4-Cyl, Auto,
All Power, A/C, Alloys, $6800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
PONTIAC G-6 ‘07, 84k, Black
2 dr, Sunroof, Wrecked on right
side. $7,500. 423-313-0119
MAZDA MIATA 2005, Auto,
90k miles, blue, leather int.
$9,000. 423-842-8821.
Ford Mustang GT ‘02 White,
Auto, A/C, All Pwr, Alloys $9800
643-0003 www.nu2ucars.biz
FORD F-150 STX, ‘10, V8, reg.
cab, auto, 29K, silver, loaded,
like new, $18,000. 413-9468
FORD F250 1994, lots of new
parts. Good work truck. $2000
firm. Call 423-653-1923.
Lexus GS 400 ‘00, Platinum
Edition, pearl white w/ tan
leather. 119K miles. Great condition, perfect service history.
Clean Carfax. $9,800.
Call 423-322-4007
MITSUBISHI DIAMANTE ES,
1997, 4 door, 176,000 mi. $2300.
423-322-8171. 280-0200.
VW NEW BEETLE GLS ‘05
Convertible. Turbo 47,600 mi.
Leather heated seats, Immaculate $10,500 423-503-8204.
Service records available
TRAILERS
Porsche Boxter ‘99- Blk,
convertible, extra nice, low miles.
$13,900. 423-304-4041
TRAILER, Heavy duty Flat Bed,
Gooseneck, 17’ long 3 mobile
home axles, $2000. 332-3863.
F6 • Tuesday, March 27, 2012 • • •
timesfreepress.com
ONE LOW PRICE CARVED IN STONE
THERE ARE NOW 2 MTN. VIEW CLEARANCE CENTERS
CARFAX AVAILABLE ON ALL VEHICLES
ALL CLEARANCE PRICES ARE FIRM
$
0 DOWN
`11 FORD FIESTA SE
$
`08 SUBARU LEGACY SE
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Power
Windows, Locks,
24K, #7470
13,995 • $287.09 mo.
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Rack, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #1940
`07 CHEVY COLORADO
Short Bed, Reg Cab, Auto, Air,
Cruise, Stereo, Split Seat, Bedliner,
Sport Wheels, 55K, #1445
$
8,995 • $184.52
`10 CHEVY MALIBU LS
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Sport Wheels, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #6532
$
13,995 • $287.09
`07 CHEVY COLORADO
Shortbed, Regular Cab, Auto, Air,
Cruise, Stereo, Bedliner, Split Seat,
62K, #2781
$
8,995 • $184.52
`10 SUZUKI SX4 AWD
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, 14K #0914
$
13,995 • $287.09
Short Bed, Reg Cab, Auto, Air,
Cruise, Stereo, Split Seat, Bedliner,
Sport Wheels, 53K, #5321
$
9,995 • 205.04
`06 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
LT COUPE
Red, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Wing,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #5627
`07 JEEP COMMANDER
SPORT 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Rack, 3rd Seat, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, Nice One! #1950
$
$
14,500 • 297.45
$
14,995 • $307.61
9,995 • $205.04
5 Door, LWB, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Quad Seating,
Power, Windows, Locks, #3009
$
9,995 • 205.04
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#8094
$
14,995 • $307.61
`10 DODGE AVENGER RT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Wing, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #5079
`09 CHRYSLER P.T.
CRUISER
$
14,995 • $307.61
5 Door, Auto, Air, CD, Power
Windows, Locks, #5641
9,995 • $205.04
`07 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT
4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Sport Wheels, Rack, Power
Windows, Locks, #8499
$
10,500 • 215.40
`02 BMW X5 4.4I
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Sunroof, Leather, Alloys, Power
Seat, Windows, Locks, Nice! #7920
$
10,995 • $225.55
`10 FORD RANGER
Regular Cab, Short Bed, Auto, Air,
Stereo, Split Seat, SportWheels,
Bedliner, 37K, #4642
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 41K, #1352
$
14,995 • $307.61
`10 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Wing, Alloys, Bucket w/ Console,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#8547
$
`08 CHEVY IMPALA LS
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Buckets w/ Console, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 51K, #2893
$
12,500 • $256.42
`09 MERCURY SABLE
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #5790
$
12,995 • 266.58
`10 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Rack, Keyless Entry, Power
Seat, Windows, Locks, #1226
$
12,995 • $266.58
`10 CHRYSLER SEBRING
TOURING CONV
`11 JEEP PATRIOT SPORT
4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Sport Wheels, Rack, Power
Windows, Locks, #8057
$
13,500 • $276.94
`10 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Rack, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #1614
$
13,995 • $287.09
`10 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Buckets w/ Console,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#4527
$
13,995 • 287.09
`11 KIA FORTE LX
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD &
More, 25K, #1694
$
13,995 • $287.09
`08 DODGE NITRO SXT
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Windows, Locks,
#0861
$
13,995 • $287.09
$
14,995 • 307.61
`10 FORD TARUS SE
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #2263
$
14,995 • $307.61
`12 NISSAN SENTRA SR
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Wing, Power Windows, Locks,
4k, #5576
$
15,500 • $317.97
`10 FORD EDGE SE 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Windows, Locks,
#1414
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Buckets w/ Console,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, 19K,
#5149
16,995 • $348.63
`12 MAZDA 5
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, 3rd
Seat, Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks #5473
$
16,995 • $348.63
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Sunroof, Power
Seat, Windows, Locks, #3291
$
16,995 • $348.63
`12 MAZDA 5
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, 3rd Seat, Power Windows,
Locks, #8541
$
16,995 • $348.63
`11 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE
AWD
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #0180
16,995 • $348.63
`07 CHRYSLER ASPIN
LIMITED
5 Door, Auto, Front & Rear Air,
Cruise, CD, Rack, 3rd Seat, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, 49K,
#4009
$
16,995 • $348.63
`11 SUBARU IMPREZA
PREMIUM WAGON
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Sunroof, Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks, #6309
$
17,500 • $358.99
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Sunroof, Wing,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, 24K,
#3732
$
17,995 • $369.15
`10 CHEVY EQUINOX LT
4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Rack, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #6205
$
17,995 • 369.15
`10 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Rack, Keyless Entry, Power
Seat, Windows, Locks, 31K, #1585
$
17,995 • $369.15
$
`10 SCION TC COUPE
5 Door, Air, Cruise, CD, Dual
Sunroof, Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks, #6689
$
15,995 • $328.12
`10 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SE
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Stow & Go, Cruise, CD, Quad
Seating, Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks, #2435
15,995 • $328.12
$
`10 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Stow & Go
Quad Seating, Power Seat, Doors,
Windows, Locks, 26K #1741
$
$
17,995 • 369.15
`09 NISSAN QUEST
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Stow & Go
Quad Seating, Power Seat, Doors,
Windows, Locks, 26K #1587
$
17,995 • $369.15
$
`09 KIA BORREGO LX 4X4
5 Door, V6, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
3rd Seat, Alloys, Rack, Power
Windows, Locks, 52K #4251
$
$
16,500 • 338.48
`10 MAZDA CX7 GRAND
TOURING 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Alloys, Heated Seat,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#0857
$
$
16,995 • 348.63
`11 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE
AWD
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #0337
$
16,995 • $348.63
`08 SATURN SKY REDLINE ROADSTER
5 Speed, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Leather,
Power Windows, Locks,
31K #0718
15,995 • $328.12 mo.
$
`10 CHRYSLER 300
TOURNING SIGNATURE
4 Door, 3.5, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Leather, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 35K, #3353
$
$
17,995 • 369.15
`11 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #9692
$
$
17,995 • 369.15
`11 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #1904
$
$
17,995 • $369.15
18,500 • 379.51
4 Door, Auto, Air,
Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows,
Locks #7558
17,995 • $369.15 mo
$
`08 CHEVY TAHOE LS 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Leather, Rack,
3rd Seat, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #5402
21,500 • $441.05 mo.
`11 VOLVO S40 T5
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 19K, #6220
$
22,900 • $469.77
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
$
18,500 • $379.51
`10 FORD FLEX SEL
$
18,500 • $379.51
`08 VOLVO XC90 3.2 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Rack, Leather, Sunroof,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, 59K,
#6808
`12 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S
18,995 • $389.66
`11 TOYOTA SIENNA LE
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear Air,
Cruise, CD, Quad Seating, Rack,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks & Sliding Door, 22K, #3376
$
24,900 • $510.80
5 Door, Auto, Front & Rear Air,
Cruise, CD, Alloys, 3rd Seat,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, 27K, #0204
$
18,995 • $389.66
5 Door, Auto, Air, Alloys, 3rd Seat,
Loaded MSRP $35,965 14K #7366
$
29,500 • $605.16
30,900 • $633.88
`11 CADILLAC CTS 3.0
$
$
$
$
14,995 • $307.61
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #2776
$
15,500 • $317.97
`09 BMW 328I
$
`11 LINCOLN MKZ
$
4 Door, V8, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Sunroof, Leather, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
Over $50K New #5193
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks #0476
$
Red w/Tan Leather, 6 Speed,
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Sunroof, Nav, Sport Package,
Heated Seats, Sat Radio,
Power Seats, Windows, Locks
# 3325
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Wing, Leather, Sunroof,
Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, Over $30K
New #3959
5 Door, Auto, Air, Sunroof, Leather,
3rd Seat, Loaded MSRP $46,720.
15K #7862
$
`11 CHEVY CRUZE LTZ/RS
34,900 • $715.94
$
4 Door, Black w/Black Leather,
Auto, Air, CD, Sunroof, Alloys,
Loaded, $17K #9912, MSRP $24,535
$
17,995 • $369.15
21,500 • 441.05
White w/Tan Leather,Auto,
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Nav, Multi Contour seat,
Sat Radio, Power Seats,,
Windows, Locks. 54K #9029
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Sunroof, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 18K #1647
`08 MERCEDES C-300
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Heated Leather, Alloys, Sunroof,
Power Seats, Windows, Locks,
#1420
$
21,900 • $449.25
27,500 • $564.13
`08 MERCEDES SLK
350 ROADSTER
`11 CHRYSLER 200
TOURING
$
26,900 • $551.82
`09 MERCEDES C300
16,995 • $348.63
$
`11 CHEVY TAHOE LT 4X4
23,900 • $490.28
`09 JAGUAR XF
LUXURY
15,995 • $328.12
`11 SUZUKI KIZASHI
SE AWD
$
23,500 • $482.08
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Leather, Hot &
Cold Seats, Powered Seats,
Windows, Locks #8505
15,995 • $328.12
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks, #3615
5 Door, Air, Leather, 3d Seat,
Alloys, Loaded Up, $12K #7114
MSRP $40,420
21,500 • $441.05
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Leather, Alloys, Sunroof,
Power Seats, Windows and
Locks 32K #2170
`10 FORD EDGE SE 4X2
$
20,900 • $428.74
`10 BUICK LACROSSE
CXL
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front &
Rear Air, Cruise, CD, Rack,
Alloys, Stow & Go, Power
Doors, Seat, Windows, Locks,
#8084
$
20,900 • $428.74
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks #1905
`10 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT
`12 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT
AWD
32,000 • $656.44
20,900 • $428.74
`12 CHEVY CRUZE LTZ
4 Door, V6, 6 Speed, Air,
Cruise, CD, Split Seat,
Bedliner, Sport Wheels, 48K,
#5428
31,900 • $654.39
`11 KIA SORENTO EX 4X2
$
17,995 • $369.15
28,500 • $584.65
$
4 Door, V8, Auto, Air,
Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Split Seat, Power Windows,
Locks, 45K, #4972
19,900 • $408.23
$
16,995 • $348.63 mo.
$
`09 VOLVO S60 2.5T
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Sunroof, Alloys
Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, 42K, #4439
17,995 • $369.15 mo.
$
`11 FORD FLEX SEL 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Chrome Alloys,
3rd Seat, Heated Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 50K, #4406
21,900 • $449.25 mo.
30,900 • $633.88
`11 TOYOTA SIENNA LE
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear Air,
Cruise, CD, Alloys, Rack, Quad
Seating, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, #8143
21,500 • $441.05
$
24,900 • $510.80
$
`10 INFINITY G 37 CPE
Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Power
Seat, Windows,
Locks, 26K, #5080
28,900 • $592.85 mo.
$
$
4 Door, V8, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Bedliner, Split Seat,
Power Windows, Locks, 25K, #5212
$
`08 BUICK ENCLAVE CXL 4X2
17,995 • $369.15
`11 NISSAN TITAN SV X CAB 4X4
5 Door, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Heated
Seat, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #9113
20,900 • $428.74 mo.
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Leather, Alloys, Nav,
Sunroof, Heated Seats, Sport
, Sat Radio, Power Seats,
Windows, Locks, 43K #3850.
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Power Windows, Locks,
#1250
Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Leather, Power Windows,
Locks, Looks New! 55K,
#0419
5 Door, V6, Auto, Air, Cruise
CD, Leather, Alloys, Rack,
3rd Seat, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, 35K, #1896
`09 MERCEDES E-350
`11 HUUNDAI
SONATA GLS
`07 MINI COOPER S
17,500 • $358.99 mo.
*60 Months @ 8.35% APR WAC. Plus tax, tag, title. See dealer for inventory. Offer expires 12 noon on 3/27/12
763-0369
12,995 • $266.58
`08 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leathe.r, Alloys,
Loaded MSRP $44,905 8K #8171
19,995 • $410.18
$
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Navigation, Dual
Sunroof, Heated Seats, 3rd
Seat, Leather, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #8876
`11 CADILLAC CTS 3.0
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leather,Sunroof,
Loaded, $13k #1812 MSRP $41,985
$
`09 KIA BORREGO EX 4X2
$
$
28,500 • 584.65
`11 CHEVY MALIBU LTZ
21,500 • $441.05
`07 GMC ACADIA SLT
AWD
`12 CHEVY CRUZE LTZ
$
$
11,995 • 246.06
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Rack, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #4629
$
`12 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT
AWD
19,900 • $408.23
`09 CHEVY
TRAILBLAZER LT 4X4
5 Door, Auto, Air, Alloys, 3rd Seat,
Loaded, 12k #7045 MSRP $35,420
`11 CHEVY CRUZE LTZ
5 Door, Black w/ Black Leather,
Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Back up
Cam, Heated Seat, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #7695
$
$
13,995 • $287.09
$
`12 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT
AWD
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leather, Alloys,
Sunroof, Loaded MSRP $30,335.
15K #4483
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Sport Wheels, Power
Windows, Locks, #4611
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Alloys, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks #7572
$
$
18,995 • $389.66
`11 TOYOTA RAV 4 4X4
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Sport Wheels, Power
Windows, Locks, #2695
27,900 • 572.34
$
19,995 • $410.18
9,995 • 205.04
`11 GMC YUKON SLE 4X2
5 Door, Auto, Cruise, CD, Sport
Wheels, Power Windows, Locks,
6K #0073
$
$
$
`11 CHEVY HHR LT
24,500 • $502.59
18,995 • $389.66
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leather, Alloys,
Loaded 8K #1456 MSRP $ 22,810
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Hardtop #0551
`09 SCION XB
$
17,995 • $369.15
`08 JEEP WRANGLER
UNLIMITED X
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Power Windows, Locks,
#9981
$
$
19,995 • 410.18
$
5 Door, V6, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Quad
Seating, Rack, Power Seat, Doors,
Windows, Locks, #2188
18,995 • $389.66
$
9,995 • 205.04
2 Door, 5 Speed, Air, CD &
More, 24K, #7220
`11 TOYOTA SIENNA LE
$
$
$
$
`10 TOYOTA YARIS
CPE
23,900 • $490.28
$
5 Door, Auto, Front & Rear Air,
Cruise, CD, Rack, Alloys, 3rd Seat,
2 Tone Leather, Power Windows,
Seat, Locks, Sharp!, #2770
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks #0980
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Power Windows, Locks,
#6266
$
17,995 • $369.15
`11 HYUNDAI
SONATA GLS
`08 NISSAN VERSA S
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #0607
`07 FORD EXPEDITION
EDDIE BAUER 4X2
$
$
4 door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Heated Seat, Sunroof, Leather,
Alloys, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, Only $34K #9512
18,995 • $389.66
19,500 • $400.02
$
9,995 • $205.04
Short Bed, Reg. Cab, 3.7 V6,
6 Speed, Air, CD, Bed Liner,
Sport Wheels #6571
`08 MERCEDES C300
$
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Power Windows, Locks,
#3037
`07 DODGE RAM 1500
ST
23,500 • 482.08
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #6092
`11 CHEVY MALIBU LTZ
$
17,995 • $369.15
`11 HYUNDAI
SONATA GLS
5 Door, LWB, Auto, Front
& Rear Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Quad Seating, Power
Windows, Locks, #0735
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Leather, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, #5691
`12 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S
4 Door, Diamond White w/ 2
Tone Leather, Auto,Air, Cruise,
CD, Heated Seat, Power Seat,
Windows, Locks, $28,385 MSRP,
13K, #8791
`07 CHEVY
UPLANDER LS EXT
`12 VW CC
$
`12 SUZUKI GRAND
VITARA 4X4
$
22,900 • $469.77
18,900 • $387.71
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leather, Sunroof,
Chrome wheels, Loaded MSRP
$29,650. 22K #3632
8,995 • 184.52
$
$
`11 CHEVY MALIBU LT
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, 17K,
#6914
$
22,900 • $469.77
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Wing, Alloys, Sunroof,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, Over
$30K New, 14K, #2768
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
$
$
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Wing, Leather, Buckets w/
Console, Power Seat, Windows,
Locks, Only 10K, #3895
`11 HYUNDAI
ELANTRA WAGON
GLS
5 Door, Auto, Front & Rear
Air, Cruise, CD, Rack, Alloys,
Power Windows, Locks, Only
63K, None Nicer! #3813
5 Door, Auto, Dual Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Alloys, 3rd Seat, Heated
Seat, Power Windows, Seat, Locks,
31K, #9717
`11 CHEVY CRUZE LT
4 Door, Auto, Air, Leather, Alloys,
Loaded MSRP $21,410. 20K # 6319
`09 NISSAN TITAN SE CREW CAB
`11 FORD TAURUS SEL
$
22,500 • 461.56
18,500 • $379.51
16,500 • $338.48 mo.
$
$
$
$
16,995 • $348.63 mo.
Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Paddle Shifter, Power Windows,
Locks, 11K, #5558
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Wing, Sunroof, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, Over
$30K New, 18K, #2736
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, Wing, Sunroof, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks, Over
$30K New, 19K, #2387
`05 GMC SAFARI SLE
`11 MAZDA MIATA CONV
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
4 Door, V8, Auto, Air,
CD, Bedliner, Split Seat,
Rear Seat, Sport Wheels,
38K, #4236
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Rack, Power
Seat,Windows, Locks,
Only 25K, #5340
$
$
`09 NISSAN TITAN XE X-CAB
`10 DODGE JOURNEY SXT
$
14,995 • $307.61 mo.
$
17,995 • 369.15
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #4168
12,995 • $266.58
$
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Windows, Locks, #6866
$
`11 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS
`08 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X2
Red, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Leather, 18" Alloys, Power
Windows, Locks, None Nicer!
57K, #7415
`12 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5S
`08 BMW 328I
15,995 • 328.12
V6, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#9549
$
$
14,995 • 307.61
$
11,995 • 246.06
$
`11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
$
`09 CHEVY IMPALA LT
$
$
16,995 • $348.63
`10 FORD FUSION SE
`07 CHEVY UPLANDER LS
EXT
$
$
`11 FORD FUSION SE
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
#5398
$
$
4 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Windows, Locks,
15K, #7082
$
`07 CHEVY COLORADO
$
`11 CHEVY CRUZE LT
11,500 • $235.91
$
5 Door, V6, Auto, Air, Cruise, CD,
Racl, Alloys, Keyless Entry, Power
Seat, Windows, Locks, #8831
`07 PONTIAC SOLSTICE GXP ROADSTER
5 Door,V6, Auto,
Air, Cruise, CD,
Alloys, Power Windows,
Locks #5180
$
4 Door, 6 Speed, Air, Cruise,
CD, Alloys, Sunroof,
Power Windows, Locks, #2073
13,995 • $287.09 mo.
13,995 • $287.09 mo.
13,995 • $287.09 mo.
`08 NISSAN SENTRA SL
$
`10 KIA SPORTAGE LX 4X4
`10 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X2
$
11,995 • $246.06 mo.
$
DOWNTOWN
5 Door, Auto, Air, Cruise,
CD, Sport Wheels, Sunroof,
Power Windows, Locks,
Only 38K #4090
$
12,995 • $266.58 mo.
Regular Cab, Longbed,
Auto, Air, Cruise, CD, Sport
Wheels, Bedliner, Split Seat,
Only 37K, #4230
0 DOWN
MTN VIEW SELECT
`09 JEEP PATRIOT SPORT 4X2
4 Door, Diamond White, Auto,
Air, Cruise, CD, Alloys, Sunroof,
Power Seat, Windows, Locks,
None Nicer! 34K #4967
$
$
4 Door, V6, 6 Speed, Air,
CD, Sport Wheels,
Split Seat,
Bed Liner, #9959
11,500 • $235.91 mo.
8,995 • $184.52 mo.
$
`08 DODGE RAM 1500
`07 DODGE RAM 1500 ST QUAD CAB
Regular Cab, Short Bed,
Auto, Air, Stereo, Cruise,
Bedliner, Sport Wheels,
Split Seat, #57A21
ALL CLEARANCE
PRICES ARE FIRM
$
MTN. VIEW @ 153
`07 CHEVY COLORADO
CARFAX AVAILABLE ON ALL VEHICLES
CHAPMAN ROAD @
INTERNATIONAL DRIVE
*60 Months @ 8.35% APR WAC. Plus tax, tag, title.
See dealer for inventory.
Offer expires 12 noon on 3/27/12.
34249210
266-3322
201 E. 20TH ST.
NOW ONLINE @ WWW.MTNVIEW153.COM