Footprints of Tinsley Park - Creative Circle Media Solutions

Transcription

Footprints of Tinsley Park - Creative Circle Media Solutions
M O N D AY
SEPTEMBER 7, 2015
161st YEAR • NO. 111
CLEVELAND, TN 18 PAGES • 50¢
Industrial park faces infrastructure needs
Spring Branch preparation cost eyed at $6 million worth
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
The magic number is $6 million and the
hopes are if the city and county spend it,
they will come.
“They” are industries that can fill the
new Spring Branch Industrial Park and
the subsidiary businesses that may one
day surround the area.
The land itself is sitting ready to be
worked and the access roads are being
constructed, but the park will still need
infrastructure to become a viable player
for industry and a revenue stream for new
local tax dollars.
Doug Berry, vice president of economic
development for the Cleveland/Bradley
Chamber of Commerce, recently spoke as
part of the Chamber’s “Food for Thought”
series and addressed the park needs and
benefits as well as an overview of the
region.
“We have absolutely no reasons as a
community to be unhappy or down about
anything,” Berry said. “We are the sixth
fastest MSA community to come out of
recession according to organizations on
the West Coast that evaluate such things.”
He said the area has seen the largest
growth in the state with a total of $3 billion invested since 2009.
“We’ve protected and insured the stabili-
ty of about 3,600 existing jobs through the
expansions of 16 existing industries —
some of which we don’t even announce or
talk about because they prefer to work
quietly,” Berry said. “We also have a
steady stream of industries because of our
major regional initiatives and our successes.”
Berry said with the area being most recognizable for its outdoor venues, “We need
to make sure that in everything we do
we’re protecting our natural resources and
environment. That’s a thing I take very
seriously because there’s nothing better to
me than a weekend in the woods.”
Berry also gave an update on Wacker
saying “the massive, massive facility is like
building a city.”
“I know there has been some impatience
over the time it has taken [to get online],”
he said. “The good news is they are beginning to start up processes and are on
track to finish construction activities at
the end of this year and begin the final
phases of production startup.”
“This is the best community/company
marriage I have been a party to during my
career,” Berry said of Wacker. “And, when
you look at the benefit we get as a community over time versus the amount of
See INDUSTRIAL, Page 6
Doug Berry
County
to elect
officers
Tuesday
Inside Today
Alford, Yarber
current leaders
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
Hurd, Kamara
provide punch
Tennessee running Jalen Hurd
got some needed help when Alvin
Kamara stepped into the backfield
for the Volunteers. The Lee men’s
soccer team picked up a win over
Trevecca. The Lady Flames fell to
Columbus State. The Flames’
cross country team took the top
spot at the Sewanee Invitational.
See Sports, Pages 11-13.
Labor Day and
a long history
Most Americans are off work
today. Some are not. In either
category, it’s always interesting to
understand the history of Labor
Day. For some facts, check out
the editorial on Page 14 of
today’s edition.
Forecast
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
KENNETH TINSLEY RECREATION AREA is named after Cleveland’s former Commissioner of the Fire and Recreation Department.
Footprints of Tinsley Park
Past, current leaders reflect on the origin,
planning behind city’s recreation center
By CHET GUTHRIE
Banner Intern
Today should be mostly sunny,
with a high near 87. Tonight’s forecast calls for partly cloudy skies,
with a low around 68. Tuesday’s
forecast calls for mostly sunny
skies and a slight chance of rain,
with a high near 87. Tuesday night
calls for clouds and 30 percent
chance of showers or thunderstorms, with a low around 72.
Index
Classified................................16-17
Comics...........................................8
Editorials......................................14
Horoscope......................................8
MINI Pages....................................5
Obituaries.......................................2
Sports......................................11-13
TV Schedule..................................9
Weather........................................10
Around Town
Anthony “Gomer” Floyd getting
ready for an outdoor adventure ...
Peachess Searles headed to an
equestrian celebration ... the
Bennett Sisters totally surprised
by a “Pay It Forward” segment
on area TV ... Pastor Chris
Moody and family preparing to
move to Mississippi so that he
can serve as state administrative
bishop for the Church of God ...
Zoe Dooley, age 6, teaching
adults the meaning of “It’s better
to give than to receive.”
6 89076 75112 4
Kenneth Tinsley Recreation Center
paints a mosaic of human recreation with
the crack of bat against ball followed by a
cheering crowd, by the sound of children
splashing each other at the pool while yellow-felted balls bounce on the pavement
of the tennis courts.
Tinsley was an idea conceived in 1976
when Larry Presswood, former director of
the Cleveland Department of Community
Development, discovered the U.S. government had a series of grants and would
give cities and counties money for recreational purposes.
“It was a three-year grant, the way I
remember it,” said Eddie Cartwright, the
commissioner of Public Works under
Cleveland’s old form of City Commission
government who worked on Tinsley Park’s
development.
The city had to meet a matching
amount in order to receive the grant.
HIDDEN
CLEVELAND
“Some of us thought that since
Kenneth Tinsley had worked so
hard on trying to get all of this
arranged and so forth ... it was his
department, and we ought to
name it after him.”
— Eddie Cartwright
At the time it was one of the largest
grants funded for Cleveland.
The first of the three grants was awarded to the city on Dec. 1, 1976, for
$257,578. In 1978, the city was awarded
$501,223, and later that year with
$110,000.
“It started with Larry Presswood bringing it up to the City Commission meeting.
[Then Mayor] Harry Dethero was in charge
of Community Development — that was
his department,” Cartwright explained.
At that time, the city was divided into
departments and each commissioner was
involved with specific departments.
“The mayor saw the idea that we ought
to have a new park. Didn’t know where we
would put it. City owned an old disposal
plant out on Keith Street. … But it had
some environmental issues. And it had a
lot of sludge and so forth, and it had to be
hauled off,” Cartwright said.
The old sewage treatment plant had
been shut down for several years after the
city had outgrown it through population
growth.
Joe Edwards was the city engineer at
the time, and the city gave him the task of
getting rid of the waste that still lingered.
He succeeded.
See TINSLEY, Page 6
The
Bradley
County
Commission will perform its
annual selection of officers during its voting session Tuesday
night.
Normally, the session would
have been held
on Monday but
was delayed
because of the
Labor Day holiday.
The current
commission
chairman is
Louie Alford
and Jeff Yarber
is serving as
Alford
vice chairman.
Under the
standard protocol, Alford
will open the
meeting before
stepping aside,
a l l o w i n g
County Clerk
D o n n a
Simpson
to
take nominaYarber
tions for the
offices and conduct the vote.
The new chairman will then
preside over an agenda with five
significant items.
Commissioners will be voting
on the new amendments to the
contract
with
Santek
Environmental for the operation
of the county landfill.
The new agreement would
allow Santek to double its use of
the landfill to 400,000 tons per
year and would increase the
county’s revenue from 6-7 percent from the first 100,000 tons
to an across-the-board 10 percent.
Consideration will also be
given to a change in policy that
would allow county employees to
receive their per diems in
advance before attending training conferences.
See OFFICERS, Page 6
Avery McNeese loves ‘art’ of teaching
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Avery McNeese could never pick a favorite
type of art.
Perhaps this is why he enjoys teaching art
and exposing his students to a variety of
mediums.
“I don’t see any difference between painting, sculpture, icing a cake, making silver —
it is all art,” McNeese said.
He got his start teaching art as a senior in
high school, providing a class for special
education students needing art credit to
graduate. He went on to teach some one-onone classes during the summer before
attending Cleveland State Community
College.
The first lesson is always about clay.
PERSONALITY
PROFILE
“I want to see how their hands do. I want
to see how they deal with things in a tactile
way. Even if they are wanting to do painting
or drawing on the first day, I am still going to
stick clay in their hands,” McNeese said.
McNeese said he does this to get students
used to picturing something in their minds
and making it.
Some of his students have made stunning
pieces working with silver, he said.
“I have a lot student that are producing
silver pieces that just blow me away,”
McNeese said. “It’s because they weren’t told
they couldn’t do it, they weren’t told it was
too difficult … they just get in there and do
it.”
Many of his students are home schooled.
“I love the classes,” McNeese said. “I love
what the kids have come in here and done,
and I love what some adults have come in
here and done. People who would have
never picked up a brush, who would have
never sat at a pottery wheel and done great
stuff, and found a sense of fulfillment,
because they never thought that they could
paint, then they come in here and produce
great paintings.”
He said he has met some “great” children
See MCNEESE, Page 6
Avery McNeese
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
R. Hollis Gause
Dr. R. Hollis Gause, 90,
passed away Sunday, Sept. 6,
2015, in a local hospital.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Grissom Serenity Funeral Home
and Cremation Services.
(USPS 117-700)
Periodical Postage Paid at Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Post Office
POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600
2015 at the funeral home to proceed to Conasauga Cemetery for
the 11 a.m. committal service.
Family and friends will serve as
pallbearers, and a white dove
release ceremony will conclude
the services.
We invite you to visit the
Rucker family guestbook and
send a message of comfort to
www.serenityfunerals.com.
Serenity Funeral Home and
Cremation Center of Etowah is in
charge of arrangements.
Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600)
in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday
and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
Phone (423) 472-5041.
Stephen L. Crass
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Michael Henderson
Terry Avery
John Thomas Duncan
Terry R. Avery, 66, a resident of
Cleveland,
passed
away
Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2015, at the
family residence.
He was a member of First
Baptist Church.
He was loved by everyone he
met and was an avid caretaker for
others.
He was a veteran of the United
States Marines and received multiple service awards including two
Purple Hearts, serving in the
Vietnam War. He was a member
of the VFW, American Legion,
40/8, DAV, and the Marine Corp
League. He supported all of his
fellow veterans.
He was an active member of the
Bradley County Honor Guard
which provides full military honors
at funerals when requested as a
gift to the veteran’s family.
He was the son of the late Rufus
Avery and Mabel Ann Ellington
Avery. He was also preceded in
death by his brother, Eric Avery.
He is survived by his wife,
Gudny Jonsdottir Avery of
Cleveland; one daughter, Carrie
Ann Avery Rayburn of Cleveland;
two stepsons: Samuel “Sammy”
Allman of Murfreesboro and Simon
Jonthor Allman of Cleveland; two
granddaughters:
Lacey
and
Brenna Avery and grandson, Avery
Rayburn, all of Cleveland; two
great-grandchildren:
Braydon
Miller and Kaiden Boone, both of
Cleveland; two stepgrandchildren:
Malachi and Kaiden Allman, both
of Riceville; one sister, Janet
Ensley and husband, Pat, of
Cleveland; one brother, Phillip
Avery and wife, Evelyn, of
Charleston, S.C.; and several
nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be conducted at
noon on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015, in
the chapel of Ralph Buckner
Funeral Home. Interment will follow at 1:30 p.m. at the
Chattanooga National Cemetery
with military honors. A white dove
release ceremony will conclude
the service.
The family will receive friends
today, 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
In lieu of flowers, donations can
be made to the Bradley County
Veterans Honor Guard Funeral
Detail, c/o American Legion Post
81, James Asbury Drive N.W.,
Cleveland TN 37312
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Avery family guestbook at
www.ralphbuckner.com.
John Thomas “Tom” Duncan of
Coweta, Okla., 86, stepped out of
this world from Forest Hills
Healthcare in Broken Arrow, Okla.
and into heaven on Friday, Aug.
28, 2015. He was born on October
10, 1928, to Thomas Russell and
Kate (Ballard) Duncan at the family
home near Cumberland City.
He attended the W.T. Thomas
School in Cumberland City, and
obtained a vast education over his
entire lifetime through avid selfstudy.
He was married on July 18,
1950 to Joy Maxine Adams in
Detroit, Mich. One son, Larry, was
born to their union.
His career in broadcasting
began at WJZM radio in
Clarksville. From there, he went to
work in Nashville at WMAK.
Sensing the call of God on his life
he left broadcasting for a time to
serve with different evangelistic
groups as a musician. In 1950 he
accepted a position at WXYZ in
Detroit as a broadcast engineer for
the ABC radio network. While in
that position he was inspired to
begin a religious record club and
started a gospel radio broadcast
through his local church. In 1953,
he was invited to move that ministry to the International Offices of
the Church of God of Prophecy in
Cleveland where he was appointed
as
director
of
the
Communications Ministries. For
the next 43 years, he worked tirelessly in that position to spread the
gospel around the world through
the Voice of Salvation radio and
television broadcasts in English,
Spanish, and Greek; the Gospel
Concert Hall radio program; the
Voice of Truth radio broadcast; the
Broadcast Record Club; and
Majestic Recording Studios which
he designed and built.
He was a lifetime member of the
Audio Engineering Society and
Society of Broadcast Engineers.
He served more than 50 years
as a deacon in the Peerless Road
Church of God of Prophecy in
Cleveland. In 2013, he and Maxine
moved to Coweta, Okla. and
became members of the Coweta
Church of God of Prophecy.
He was preceded in death by his
father, mother, and one sister,
Alma.
He is survived by his loving wife
of 65 years, Joy Maxine; son, Larry
and wife Susan of Coweta, Okla.;
grandson, John and wife, Leia of
Waco, Texas; granddaughter,
Laura Weldon of Broken Arrow,
Okla.; sisters: Mary Virginia Jones
of Dickson, Mildred Mohr of
Auburn, Ind., Linda Walters of
Sevierville; and a large number of
in-laws, nephews, and nieces.
A home going celebration was
held at Coweta Church of God of
Prophecy in Coweta, Oka. on
Tuesday, Sept 1, 2015, at 11 a.m.
with Bishop Wayne Pense and
Bishop Sam Clements officiating.
A Remembrance of Life
Memorial service will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday Sept. 8, 2015, at the
Peerless Road Church of God of
Prophecy with Pastor Brian
Sutton, Bishop Tim Coalter, Bishop
Sam Clements and Bishop Fred
Fisher officiating.
The family will receive friends
Tuesday from noon until the service time at 1 p.m. at the church.
Jim
Rush
Funeral
and
Cremation Services North Ocoee
St. Chapel has charge of the
arrangements.
We encourage you to share
your memories and or condolences with the family by going to
www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
Tom was always generous to
assist individuals and families in
need. Therefore, in lieu of flowers,
memorial donations may be to the
benevolent fund of the Coweta
Church of God of Prophecy, 123
West Sycamore Street, Coweta,
OK 74429.
Rebecca Boring
Rebecca Boring, 70, passed
away Friday, Sept. 4, 2015, at her
home.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Albert and Needa
Chancey Boring; brothers: Earl
Kenneth Boring, Paul Boring,
Vernon Boring; and brother-inlaw, Cooper Rogers.
She is survived by her children:
Carole Hicks, Brenda Hicks Key,
Dona Hicks, Chris Jones and
Jackie Jones; seven grandchildren: Catie Poteet, Christie
Poteet, Kirby Gentry, Stephen
Staley, Jack Hicks, T.C. Jones
and Will Jones; great-granddaughter, Ava Gentry; brother,
Lewis Boring; sisters, Della Mae
Womac, Iris McNeely, Martha
Rogers and Colleen McDonald;
and several nieces and nephews.
Family and friends are welcome
to attend a memorial service at 5
p.m. today, Sept. 7, 2015, at the
family residence, 144 Yuchi Drive,
Benton.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Boring family guestbook at
www.higginsfuneral.com.
Higgins Funeral Home, Benton,
is handling arrangements.
Clifford Garrett
To submit an obituary,
have the funeral home
or cremation society in
charge of arrangements
to email the information
to
[email protected] and fax
to 423-614-6529
Clifford
Garrett,
74,
of
Englewood, died Sunday morning,
Sept. 6, 2015, at a local hospital.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Serenity Funeral
Home and Cremation Center of
Etowah.
Michael Henderson, 60, of
Decatur, died Friday, Sept. 4,
2015, at a local hospital.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Serenity Funeral
Home and Cremation Center of
Etowah.
Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
Member of The Associated Press
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Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041
Alleged gym break-in
is being investigated
Larry Edward Key
Larry Edward “Butch” Key, 66,
of Calhoun, died Friday, Sept. 4,
2015, at his residence.
Survivors include his wife,
Patricia Crye Key of Calhoun;
daughters: Stephanie Howard
and Brandy Key, of Calhoun.
The funeral will be held at 8
p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015, in
the chapel of Laycock-Hobbs
Funeral Home in Athens with the
Rev. Kevin Cheatham officiating.
Interment will be at 11 a.m.
Wednesday
in
Riceville
Cemetery with military honors.
The family will recieve friends
from 5 to 8 Tuesday at the funeral
home.
Those unable to attend may
send condolences at www.laycock-hobbs.com.
Fredrick McFarland
Fredrick McFarland, 78, died
Monday, Sept. 7, 2015, in a
McMinn County health care facility.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Higgins Funeral Home.
Sandra Penn
Sandra
Penn,
63,
of
Cleveland, died Sunday, Sept. 6,
2015, in a local hospital.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home
and Crematory.
Morgan Larry Pollard
Morgan Larry Pollard, 36, died
Saturday, Sept. 5, 2015, in a
Chattanooga hospital.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Grissom Serenity Funeral Home
and Cremation Services.
Jay Rucker
Jay Rucker, 77, of Etowah,
passed away Sunday morning,
Sept. 6, 2015, at a Knoxville hospital.
The son of the late Clyde and
Sue Beaty Rucker, he was a
native of the Conasauga community and spent the majority of his
life in McMinn County.
He was employed by General
Motors, Union Nno. 76, and finally retired from Athens Stove
Works after 15 years of service.
He was an avid fisherman and
enjoyed
woodworking
and
spending time his family and
friends. He was of the Baptist
faith.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by his
brother, R.T. Rucker.
He is survived by his wife,
Jane Eddington Rucker; children:
Kenneth Rucker and fiancé,
Mary Green, Wanda Yarber and
Nancy Disspain, all of Etowah;
grandchildren: Jamie Cornwell,
Cody Yarber, Caleb Moses and
Charity
Disspain;
brother,
Sterling Rucker and wife,
Geneva, of Athens; sister, Benita
Ward and husband, Jim, of
Athens; brother-in-law, J.L.
Eddingtion of Tellico Plains;
uncles: Fred Beaty and wife,
Judy ,of Niota and Hubert
Armstrong of Madisonville; and
special friends: George Beaty
and Edgar Harris; and several
nieces, nephews and other
extended family members and
friends.
The funeral will be conducted
at 8 p.m. today, Sept. 7, 2015,
from the chapel of Serenity
Funeral Home with Pastor
Ronnie Best officiating.
Family and friends will assemble at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8,
Katherine Stockburger
Katherine Anne Stockburger,
87, of Cleveland, passed away
Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015.
She was born Nov. 11, 1927, in
Catoosa County, Ga., to Walter
Green Stockburger and Bessie
(Boyd) Stockburger.
Her paternal grandparents
were
Augustus
Edward
Stockburger and Cassandra
Matilda (Nance) Stockburger.
Her maternal grandparents were
Robert Wesley Boyd and Naomi
Paralee (Kirby) Boyd.
In 1929, she moved with her
family to the Flint Springs area of
Bradley County. She attended
Flint Springs School and graduated from Bradley Central High
School.
She was a member of the Flint
Springs
Cumberland
Presbyterian Church, where she
served as a Sunday school
teacher and director of vacation
Bible school for many years.
She was also active in the
women’s’ministry. She was
involved in what is now the
Tennessee
Association
for
Family and Consumer Education.
Her family played a vital role in
her life. She cared for family
members for many years. She
enjoyed hosting family events
and gatherings. She was always
glad to share family stories and
memories. Her hobbies included
birdwatching and nature as well
as cooking and gardening.
She was preceded in death by
her parents; brothers: Walter
Edward Stockburger, Robert
Boyd Stockburger, and Jacob
Donald Stockburger; and sister,
Dorothy Elizabeth Jaques.
She is survived by a sister,
Cassandra Naomi Stockburger of
New York City and numerous
nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be conducted
at 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 10,
2015,
at
Flint
Springs
Cumberland
Presbyterian
Church with the Rev. Robert
Heflin officiating.
Interment will follow in the Flint
Springs Cemetery. The service
will conclude with a white dove
release ceremony.
Her family will receive friends
from 5 until 7 p.m. Wednesday at
Fike-Randolph & Son Funeral
Home, and on Thursday from
noon until 1 p.m. at the church
prior to the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
Stockburger family guestbook at
www.fikefh.com.
Annie Mae Walker
Annie Mae Walker, of Florida,
died Thursday, Sept. 3, 2015.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home
and Crematory.
Bobby Joe Yates
Bobby Joe Yates, 77, of Old
Fort, died Sunday evening, Sept.
6, 2015, at the family residence.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by Jim
Rush Funeral and Cremation
Services’ Wildwood Avenue
Chapel.
From Staff Reports
Investigation is ongoing into an
alleged break-in of the visiting
locker room and the school’s
gymnasium during Friday’s football game between Science Hill
High School and Bradley Central
High.
According to BCHS Principal
Todd Shoemaker, school authorities are checking to see if any
items are missing from the
school’s gym. Bradley Central
was the host for the game
between the two schools.
The BCHS principal did not
identify any property that was
reportedly taken from the visitor’s locker room. He did mention
that local officials have spoken
with the Science Hill High assistant principal who was checking
over the weekend on property
allegedly taken from the visitor’s
locker room during the game.
Shoemaker said that a suspect
has been identified and BCHS is
working with local law enforcement on the incident, with the
investigation still in progress.
U.N. envoy concerned over lack
of arrests in West Bank arson
JERUSALEM (AP) — The U.N.
envoy to the Middle East
expressed concern Monday that
Israel has not yet apprehended
Jewish extremists suspected in a
July arson attack on a Palestinian
family’s home that claimed the
lives of a toddler and his parents.
The remarks by Nickolay
Mladenov came after the toddler’s
mother died of wounds suffered in
the blaze, becoming the third family member to die from the attack.
Rihan Dawabsheh died in an
Israeli hospital early Monday, a
day after her 27th birthday.
On July 31, assailants hurled
firebombs into a bedroom of the
Dawabsheh family’s home in the
West Bank village of Duma in a
pre-dawn attack, and sprayed
graffiti of a Jewish star of David
and the word “revenge” on the
walls. Rihan’s 18-month-old son
Ali was burned to death in the
attack, and her husband Saad
died last month after being treated for burn wounds in an Israeli
hospital.
The last remaining family member is the couple’s 4-year-old son
Ahmad, who is still undergoing
treatment for severe burns at an
Israeli hospital. A relative of the
family, Amjad Dawabsheh, told
Israeli Army Radio on Monday
that relatives have not told the
boy what happened to the rest of
his family.
“How can we tell him, ‘Your
father and mother and brother
died?’” he said.
The attack drew widespread
condemnation and Israel pledged
to get tougher on Jewish extremists in the West Bank suspected
in attacks on Palestinians and
their property.
Israel’s Cabinet approved harsh
measures to fight what Israeli
leaders have called “Jewish terrorism,” and three young settler
activists were jailed for six
months without charge, a measure used regularly against
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR...
Linda Mangrum, Rick Nelson,
Kippi Cox, Jacob Sanders,
Stephanie Radzyminski, Cubby
Culberson, Wanda McMahan and
Angie Stephens, who celebrated
birthdays Sunday.
CHURCH
ACTIVITIES
Joe Washington will be the
speaker Tuesday at 7 a.m., for
His Hands Extended Devotional
at Garden Plaza, 3500 Keith St.
———
Community Chapel Church of
God, 1807 Blythe Ave., will have
its ladies praise and worship
service, Tuesday at 11 a.m.
Palestinian detainees but rarely
on Israelis.
Still, Israeli authorities have
not announced arrests or identified suspects in the July arson
attack. Israel has imposed a gag
order on publishing details of the
investigation into the arson
attack.
Mladenov called for “justice” in
a statement released after reports
of Rihan’s death.
“Acknowledging the wide condemnations issued at the time of
the incident by Israeli and
Palestinian leaders, I am nevertheless concerned by the lack of
progress in identifying and prosecuting the perpetrators of this
outrage,” Mladenov said.
Israeli human rights groups say
few police investigations into
alleged Israeli settler crimes
against Palestinians in recent
years have resulted in indictments.
On Monday, Israeli police
announced that two Israeli settler
activists, an 18-year-old and a
minor, were indicted on suspicion
of setting fire to a Bedouin Arab
tent in the West Bank last month
to protest Israeli actions to round
up Jewish extremists. No one was
injured in the attack.
Police said the 18-year-old, Avi
Gafni, had been living in a hilltop
outpost in the West Bank and had
been banned from the area three
times in the last two years due to
suspicions that he had been
involved in arson attacks on
Palestinian holy sites and property in the West Bank and
Jerusalem.
You can browse
the classified listings
on-line. Keep
up with the
latest sports.
Check the weather.
Watch the stocks.
Read about local
happenings.
Whether you’re
buying or selling,
you’ll click with
success when
you use
The Cleveland Daily
Banner on-line.
www.clevelandbanner.com
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—3
Obama extends contractors paid sick leave
WASHINGTON (AP) — Showing
solidarity with workers on Labor
Day, President Barack Obama
will sign an executive order
Monday requiring paid sick leave
for employees of federal contractors, including 300,000 who currently receive none.
The White House wouldn’t
specify the cost to federal contractors to implement the executive order, which Obama was to
address at a major union rally
and breakfast in Boston. The
Labor Department said any costs
would be offset by savings that
contractors would see as a result
of lower attrition rates and
increased worker loyalty, but
produced nothing to back that
up.
Under the executive order,
employees working on federal
contracts gain the right to a minimum of one hour of paid leave
for every 30 hours they work.
Stretched out over 12 months,
that’s up to seven days per year.
The order will allow employees to
use the leave to care for sick relatives as well, and will affect
contracts starting in 2017 — just
as Obama leaves office.
The Obama administration
has been working on the executive order for months, and chose
Labor Day to announce it as
Obama works to enact what policies he can before his presidency
ends despite resistance in
Congress to laws he’s proposed
to improve workplace conditions.
That push has reverberated in
the 2016 campaign, where
Democratic candidates are seeking to draw a distinction with
Republicans on who’s most sup-
AP Photo
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA Speaks in Anchorage, Alaska on
Aug. 31, 2015. Obama will sign an executive order today requiring
paid sick leave for employees of federal contractors, including
300,000 who currently receive none.
portive of the middle class.
“There
are
certain
Republicans that said we can’t
afford to do this,” said Labor
Secretary Thomas Perez. He
lamented how paid leave is seen
as a partisan issue in the U.S.
despite broad support in Europe.
“The Republican Party is out of
step with similar conservative
governments around the world,”
he said.
Roughly 44 million private
sector workers don’t get paid
sick leave — about 40 percent of
the private-sector workforce, the
White House said. In his speech
to the Greater Boston Labor
Council’s breakfast, Obama was
also to renew his call for
Congress to expand the requirement beyond contract workers to
all but the smallest U.S. businesses, an idea that has gained
little traction on Capitol Hill.
The Labor Day gathering in
Boston was attracting other
bold-named politicians, Sen.
Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and
Boston Mayor Marty Walsh
among them. Vice President Joe
Biden, who is considering entering the Democratic presidential
primary, was to echo the labor
rights theme in a march with
AFL-CIO President Richard
Trumka on Monday at a Labor
Day parade in Pittsburgh.
Unable to push much of his
agenda through a Republican-
controlled Congress, Obama has
in recent years used executive
orders with frequency to apply
policies to federal contractors
that he lacks the authority to
enact nationwide. His aim is to
lay the groundwork for those
policies to be expanded to all
Americans. Earlier executive
orders have barred federal contractors from discriminating
against workers based on their
sexual orientation or gender
identity, raised the minimum
wage for contractors and
expanded the number of contract workers eligible for overtime.
Although labor groups have
hailed those moves, they remain
deeply skeptical of Obama’s
push to secure sweeping new
trade deals with the Asia-Pacific
region and with Europe. Many
unions have warned that the
deals could lead to the widespread elimination of certain
types of U.S. jobs.
The White House said it couldn’t estimate how many federal
contractors don’t offer paid leave
now, citing a maze of state and
local laws that make crunching
the numbers difficult. Officials
also declined to put a dollar figure on how much contractors
would face in added compensation costs.
Cecilia Muniz, director of the
White House’s Domestic Policy
Council, said the administration
has an obligation to get the most
out of every federal tax dollar.
She said the change to the government’s contracting rules
would not increase federal
spending.
Family
Medicine Today
by Dr. Paul Grayson Smith, Jr., D.O., P.C.
and Dr. Paul Grayson Smith, III, D.O.
Both Physicians Are Certified by the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians.
INCREASE IN ATRIAL FIBRILLATION
Atrial fibrillation is the most com- dition’s symptoms include racing heart
mon form of irregular heartbeat. Even or palpitations, shortness of breath,
so, the number of people who have dizziness, and sweating.
It’s important to work with your
visited the hospital with atrial fibrillation has almost doubled in the past healthcare provider to determine your
few years according to statistics. One treatment needs and to understand
factor of this alarming increase may your options. It is also important to
be a greater awareness of the con- maintain a heart-healthy lifestyle and
dition, which is what transpires when reduce your overall risks as much as
the heart’s upper two chambers possible. To schedule a consultation,
become disorganized and rapid in please call 472-6548. Our goal is to
their beating rhythm. Atrial fibrillation provide the best possible care and
may have any number of causes keep you and your family healthy and
including high blood pressure, heart happy. Open Monday through Friday
attacks, abnormal valves, infections, 8:00 to 5, we are located at Ocoee
and exposure to stimulants. Premiere Park, Suite 101 at 2121
Sometimes the origin of atrial fibril- North Ocoee. We Treat Our Patients
lation is never discovered. The con- Like We Would Like to be Treated.
P.S. If you have any symptoms of atrial fibrillation, see a doctor. If you
have chest pain as well, seek emergency medical assistance.
Powell, Wasserman Schultz support Iran nuclear deal
WASHINGTON (AP) — Already
a done deal in Congress, the
Iran nuclear agreement gained
more momentum Sunday when
former Secretary of State Colin
Powell and Rep. Debbie
Wasserman Schultz, the head of
the
Democratic
National
Committee, announced their
support.
Powell, secretary of state
under President George W.
Bush, called the agreement “a
pretty good deal” that would
reduce the threat of Iran gaining
a nuclear weapon.
Iran’s nuclear program “has
been thrown into a detour” making it less likely it can produce a
nuclear weapon to be used
against Israel or other countries,
Powell said. “So that’s pretty
good,” he told NBC’s “Meet the
Press.”
Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla.,
said the decision to endorse the
agreement was the most difficult
one she has made in nearly 23
years in elected office.
The Jewish lawmaker wrote in
The Miami Herald that while she
has concerns about the agreement, the deal “provides the best
chance to ensure” security for
the U.S., Israel and other allies.
“Under the agreement Iran will
not be able to produce a nuclear
bomb for at least 10-15 years,”
she said, while the U.S. and its
allies “will be able to more closely concentrate on stopping Iran’s
terrorist activity.”
Wasserman Schultz choked
back tears as she described her
decision to back the Iran deal as
“a Jewish mother” and American
citizen.
“There’s nothing more important to me, as a Jew, (than) to
ensure that Israel’s existence is
there throughout our generations,” she said on CNN’s “State
of the Union.”
“And I’m confident that the
process I have gone through to
reach this decision is one that
will ensure that Israel will be
there forever.”
The White House has clinched
the necessary Senate votes to
ensure that Congress will
uphold the deal even if President
Barack Obama ends up having
to veto a disapproval resolution
set for a vote in the week ahead.
But with that support in hand
and more piling up, the White
House and congressional backers of the deal have begun aiming for a more ambitious goal:
enough commitments to bottle
up the disapproval resolution in
the Senate with a filibuster, preventing it from even coming to a
final vote.
That effort suffered a setback
on Friday as Sen. Ben Cardin of
Maryland, top Democrat on the
Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee, said he opposed the
deal.
Thirty-eight senators back the
agreement, three votes shy of
the 41 needed to filibuster a disapproval resolution and block it
from passing.
Powell, who served as national
security adviser under President
Ronald
Reagan,
invoked
Reagan’s oft-quoted maxim that
the West should “trust but verify” any agreements with the former Soviet Union.
“With respect to the Iranians,
it’s don’t trust — never trust —
and always verify,” Powell said.
“And I think a very vigorous verification regime has been put in
place,” with the International
Atomic Energy Agency and other
international
organizations
monitoring Iran’s compliance.
Zion Assembly Church of God
12th Annual General Assembly
Replanting project focuses on
repairing Sandy-damaged area
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Vast
stretches of the iconic tall grasses that dot the Atlantic coast
were
destroyed
during
Superstorm Sandy, removing a
vital protective buffer for the
region’s shoreline.
Now, the New England Wild
Flower Society and its partners
are planning to collect the seeds
of native plants like saltmarsh
rush and little bluestem and
replant them in areas battered
by the deadly 2012 storm.
The $2.3 million project will
help make these habitats more
resilient to future storms, especially the coastal areas that act
as a buffer during storms, the
Society said. For inland states,
the seeds will be used to help
restore river banks in areas that
flooded extensively during
Sandy.
The two-year project is the
first large-scale, coordinated,
seed banking effort in the
Eastern United States. It is part
of the Seeds of Success program,
a national initiative the Bureau
of Land Management first established in 2001. Wildlife refuges
in Connecticut, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire and Rhode
Island are participating in the
New England collection effort.
The Society’s partners, North
Carolina Botanical Garden and
Mid-Atlantic Regional Seed
Bank, part of the New York City
Department of Parks and
Recreation, will collect and distribute seeds in North Carolina,
Virginia, Maryland, Delaware,
New Jersey and New York.
Bill Brumback, conservation
director for New England Wild
Flower Society, said he and his
team are collecting seeds from
inland areas of wildlife refuges
and replanting them near the
coast.
“We know from experience that
having natural habitats there,
along the coast, as a buffer for
storms is very important,”
Brumback said. “We know
restoring these areas is going to
provide protection for future
storms.”
Many common species of
native New England plants were
damaged when the storm
slammed into the East Coast. A
shortage of native seeds left the
area vulnerable to erosion and
invasive plants, the Bureau of
Land Management said.
LOTTERY NUMBERS
NASHVILLE (AP) — These state
lotteries were drawn Sunday:
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 5-6-7, Lucky
Sum: 18
Cash 4 Evening: 0-0-2-2,
Lucky Sum: 4
Georgia
All or Nothing Day: 01-02-0305-07-12-13-15-19-20-21-23
All or Nothing Evening: 01-0304-06-08-12-15-18-19-20-21-23
All or Nothing Morning: 01-0206-10-11-13-16-17-19-22-23-24
All or Nothing Night: 02-04-05-
08-11-12-14-16-18-20-23-24
Cash 3 Evening: 5-4-5
Cash 3 Midday: 6-6-6
Cash 4 Evening: 6-0-0-3
Cash 4 Midday: 6-3-5-3
Fantasy 5: 01-04-06-12-13
Estimated jackpot: $141,000
Georgia FIVE Evening: 1-8-65-1
Georgia FIVE Midday5-9-9-8-8
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $95 million
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $149 million
September 8-13, 2015
United Christian Church
2200 Peerless Rd.
Cleveland, Tennessee
Wade H. Phillips
Presiding Bishop
E.A. McDonald
Assistant Presiding
Bishop
Scott Neill
Superintendent of
Operations
THEME:
“Piercing the Darkness with the Light of Christ”
--Program Highlights-Tuesday: 6:30
Message---Jonathan Gregory, KY
Official Opening of the Assembly
Message---Joel Brooks, MS
Wednesday
Message: Rick Ferrell, KY
General Treasurer’s Report
Reports from Around the World
Message: Todd McDonald, SC
Message: L.W. Carter, VA
Thursday
Sunday School Program--Donna Pounders, MS
Message: Pete Sarry, CA
Message: Pam Jones, IN
Ordination Service
In Memoriam
School of Ministry Program- -Bruce Sullivan, SC
Healing Message and Prayer Service--Danny Ramirez, CA
Friday
Voice of Zion/SYNC Boost---Glenda Major, CA
Ladies Ministries Program---Rosie Ramirez, CA
Communations & Media Program---Scott Neill, TN
Message: Lee Jaynes, MS
Showing-Off the talent of our Youth---Kim Erwin, TN
Senior Ambassador’s Program---E.A. McDonald, TN
Youth Program---Miguel Garcia, Jr, CA
Saturday
Message: Tom Brown, WV
Assembly Choir
Presiding Bishop’s Annual Address
Assembly Business Committee
Message: Jerry Pounders, MS
World Mission Program---Scott Neill, TN
---Parade of Nations--Sunday
Children’s Ministries Program---Cheryl McDonald
Assembly Choir
Message: Joseph Steele, TN
Assembly Appointments
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cathedral restored in time for pope’s visit
AP photo
IN ThIS AUG. 3 photo made available by the Carter County
Detention Center shows Kim Davis. The Rowan County, Ky.
clerk went to jail Thursday for refusing to issue marriage
licenses to gay couples, but five of her deputies agreed to
comply with the law, ending a two-month standoff. (Carter
County Detention Center via AP)
Kentucky clerk appeals her
jailing over gay marriage
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — A
defiant county clerk is willing to stay in jail for her
beliefs, but she’d prefer to be
a free woman.
Attorneys for Rowan
County Clerk Kim Davis
have officially appealed a
judge’s decision to put her in
jail for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex
couples. The three-page
motion does not include
arguments as to why Davis
should be released but
amends Davis’ earlier appeal
of the judge’s order.
Davis,
an
apostolic
Christian, says gay marriage
is a sin. She also says it
would be a sin for her to
issue a marriage license to a
same-sex couple because the
licenses are issued under
her authority. She tried in
vain to have state lawmakers
change the law as a legal
challenge to Kentucky’s
same-sex marriage ban
wound its way through the
federal appeals court.
Davis stopped issuing all
marriage licenses in June
the day after the U.S.
Supreme Court legalized
same-sex marriage nationwide. Two gay couples and
two straight couples sued
her. U.S. District Judge
David Bunning ordered
Davis to issue the licenses
and the Supreme Court
upheld his ruling.
But Davis still refused to
do it, saying she could not
betray her conscience or her
God.
Thursday, Bunning ruled
Davis was in contempt of
court for disobeying his
order and sent her to jail.
Her deputy clerks then
issued marriage licenses to
gay couples Friday with
Davis behind bars.
“Civil rights are civil rights
and they are not subject to
belief,” said James Yates,
who got a marriage license
Friday after having been
denied five times previously.
Mat Staver, one of Davis’
attorneys, said the marriage
licenses issued Friday are
“not worth the paper they
are written on” because
Davis refused to authorize
them. But Rowan County
Attorney Cecil Watkins says
the licenses are valid.
Bunning said he did not
know if the licenses were
valid but ordered them
issued anyway.
Bunning indicated Davis
will be in jail at least a week.
She could stay longer if she
continues to not obey the
judge’s order. Bunning had
offered to release Davis from
jail if she promised not to
interfere with her deputy
clerks as they issued the
licenses. But Davis refused.
Staver called the contempt
hearing “a charade” saying
Bunning had his mind made
up before the hearing began.
Kentucky law requires
marriage licenses be issued
under the authority of the
elected county clerk. Davis
views issuing marriage
licenses to same-sex couples
as a stamp of approval of
something she believes is a
sin. She has said she will not
issue marriage licenses until
the state legislature changes
the law so the licenses can
be issued under someone
else’s authority.
The state legislature is not
scheduled to meet again
until
January
and
Democratic Gov. Steve
Beshear has refused to call a
special session. Davis has
refused to resign her
$80,000-a-year job. As an
elected official the only way
she could lose her job is to
lose an election or have the
state legislature impeach
her, which is unlikely given
the conservative nature of
the state General Assembly.
“She’s not going to resign,
she’s not going to sacrifice
her conscience, so she’s
doing what Martin Luther
King Jr. wrote about in his
Letter from the Birmingham
Jail, which is to pay the consequences for her decision,”
Staver said.
Davis’ plight has reignited
the gay marriage debate and
the limits of religious freedom. Her imprisonment has
inspired spirited protests
from both sides in this small
eastern Kentucky community known mostly as the home
to
Morehead
State
University.
On Saturday, about 300
people rallied in support of
Davis at the Carter County
Detention Center where she
is being held. Another rally
is scheduled for Tuesday
with Republican presidential
candidate Mike Huckabee.
NEW YORK (AP) — A threeyear restoration project at St.
Patrick’s Cathedral, the seat of
the
Roman
Catholic
Archdiocese of New York and
one of the country’s most wellknown churches, is coming to
an end just in time for a late
September visit from Pope
Francis. Most of the scaffolding
has already been taken down
and officials are steadfast in
saying it will be done in time.
The project was officially
announced on St. Patrick’s
Day 2012 and got started soon
after. It was a huge undertaking — the entire exterior was
covered in scaffolding, all the
way to the top of the two 330foot-tall spires, and washed
clean of decades of dirt.
Scaffolding also blanketed the
inside, as workers cleaned and
repaired the 3,700 individual
panels in 75 stained glass windows and restored the 9,200pound bronze doors at the
Fifth Avenue entrance, among
other extensive renovation
work.
St. Patrick’s held its first
Mass in 1879 and was declared
a national landmark in 1976.
Coming in at a price tag of
$175 million, the restoration
was the most extensive since
the 1940s.
Some thoughts on the project from the people who
worked on it:
—NOT YOUR EVERYDAY
WORKSITE
One tricky aspect of the project was that the cathedral
stayed open to the public the
entire time. That meant work
being done around daily
Masses and while 5 million visitors a year passed through.
“It would be a constant
dance as we were moving
around,”
said
Eileen
McCarthy, one of the project
managers from Structure
Tone, the construction company overseeing the work.
“For the most part, everything was done during the day
while it was occupied, while
tourists and guests and visitors were coming through, so
that was always a concern,
you’re working in a living,
breathing environment.”
It was a situation that had
its drawbacks and advantages:
Construction workers had to
learn how to use their “inside
voices” but were also given a
chance to interact with the
public.
“People will stop and ask”
about the work, she said. “It’s
very cool, you can explain a little bit of what’s going on.”
—MOVING MOMENTS
Doing a renovation on a
church also led to some unexpected moments of grace.
McCarthy remembers a time in
late 2013 when she and some
of the painters were up on
some scaffolding above the
central part of the cathedral,
hidden from the view of the
people down below.
“All of a sudden, a capella,
was a young woman’s voice,
singing the ‘Ave Maria,’” she
said. “All of us just froze, we
stopped in our tracks. ...
That’s not something you
would have on a normal job
site.”
—PERFECT TIMING
The project seemed to have
the luck of the Irish. Jeff
Keeley, a foreman for the scaffolding company, said it was
“very uneventful,” there were
no safety incidents, and clear
skies and good weather were
on hand when they needed it.
They’ve been “very fortunate in
a lot of ways,” he said, adding
after thinking about it, “probably blessed.”
That extends to the timing of
the project’s end and its highprofile visitor. Pope Francis is
scheduled to be at St. Patrick’s
on Sept. 24 for evening prayer.
Keeley said workers were
excited to find out their efforts
would be seen by the head of
the church.
“Sometimes you do things,
and no one really cares,” he
said. “When the pope comes,
hopefully he will care, right?
He’s going to look at it and say,
‘Wow, this really looks good.’”
AP Photo
LUCIA POPIAN, PRESIDENT OF G&L POPIAN, uses a toothbrush to clean a marble relief of the St.
Therese altar as part of the of the restoration of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York on July 8. A threeyear restoration project at the cathedral is coming to an end, just in time for a late September visit from
Pope Francis.
Georgia Tech class represents STEM diversity work
ATLANTA (AP) — Amid a push
to attract more women and
minorities to technical industries, female students make up
the largest share of this year’s
Georgia Institute of Technology
freshman class since women
first were admitted in 1952.
Black students make up
about 7 percent of the freshman
class— a 35 percent jump from
last year.
Officials at the Georgia
Institute of Technology said the
benchmarks prove their recruitment efforts are paying off,
including current female or
black students who write notes
or get coffee with prospective
students and alumni who follow
up.
But they have a lot of work
ahead. Schools that Georgia
Tech officials consider peers are
attracting a similar amount of
students
still
considered
minorities in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields— or doing
even better. Cornell University,
for instance, reported more
than 52 percent female students in this year’s freshman
class, and matched Georgia
Tech’s percent of black students.
Increasing diversity on campus is a key part of preparing
all students for careers once
they graduate and key to convincing some of the country’s
best female or minority stu-
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dents to spend four years there,
said Rick Clark, director of
undergraduate admissions.
“To the best of our ability, we
have to put them in problembased classes where their peers
are coming at things with a different perspective and background,” Clark said, referencing
an ongoing debate about the
value of college. “We talk a lot
about debt versus salary, but
you’re also building a network
here, connections you can make
and can call on in the future.”
Technology companies in
Silicon Valley and throughout
the country are realizing the
need to hire diverse employees,
said Amy Hoover, president of
TalentZoo.com. Hoover also cofounded an Atlanta co-working
space called Strongbox West
and said she sees that playing
out every day in the small companies working out of the building.
“If you’re trying to put out a
product for everyone — women,
minorities, older people — it’s
just good sense to have all types
of people bringing their perspective,” Hoover said.
As part of a White House
event focused on entrepreneurs, Intel recently announced
that it would donate $5 million
to the school for increasing the
number of women and minority
engineers. The donation will be
used for scholarships, mentoring and workshops — similar to
the efforts Georgia Tech’s Clark
described for recruiting students.
Christine Brockman and
Chermia Mathis remember getting emails from current
Georgia Tech students during
their college search, followed by
even more notes after committing to join about 3,000 classmates this fall. Both are black
women majoring in biomedical
engineering and sat next to
each other Thursday in a week-
ly class that gives freshman tips
about how to succeed in college.
After the class discussed on
time management, Brockman
and Mathis said they love the
number of organizations on
campus for women in engineering fields but they don’t remember considering the student
body make-up when deciding
on a college.
“Tech was one of my top
schools I wanted to go to,” said
Mathis, who is from Lithonia,
Georgia. “I immediately said
‘Yes.’”
People do read
small ads.
You are reading
one now.
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472-5041
2015
Full Section
• Driveways
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• And Much More
Advertising Deadline:
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Publication Date:
Sunday, Sept. 20
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—5
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
McNeese
From Page 1
and their families by offering
classes at The Eager Beader, his
bead store on 25th Street in
Cleveland.
“I’ve watched them grow up,
and they are off doing great
things,” McNeese said.
As the name of his shop suggests, much of his time these
days is devoted to making beads.
Miniature masterpieces that can
be hung and strung sit in display
cases in his shop.
McNeese had worked at a local
jewelry store making molds for
gold and silver cast jewelry. His
work creating jewelry of his own
began when he started making
craft jewelry earrings.
“Going straight into fine jewelry
was not an option for me,” he
said. “My mentality was I don’t
have to make $100 on this one
piece. I’ll sell 100 $1 items to
make my $100.”
Nancy Mantooth helped him
get his start.
“She had produced beads back
during the early ’80s, mid ’80s,”
McNeese said.
Her beads were ceramic highfired glazed pieces.
“I had been into ceramics — I
love clay work, I love sculpture
work. I needed a kiln. She sold
me my first kiln for $50 at a yard
sale. She also had a lot of bead
molds,” McNeese said.
His first beads were similar to
the style Mantooth produced,
then he branched out into other
styles.
“I started doing carvings, making my own molds, and it just
kind of snowballed,” McNeese
said.
The beads he produces come
from a variety of inspirations.
“Someone can bring me a
design, I can sketch a design or I
can go from a photograph,” he
says.
A photograph of a child can
become the guide for a carving
used to create a cameo featuring
the child’s face at the center.
He has more than 400 “handcarved styles.”
“Some of them are pretty juvenile. Some of them are pretty
archaic in nature,” McNeese said.
He said he likes the ones that are
a little bit more intricate.
The styles he likes to design
are not always the ones he sells
the most of.
“I just love the act of carving,
and if it is difficult I like it a little
more, because it is a little bit
more of a challenge,” McNeese
said.
The original carvings for the
designs are used to make molds
THIS PLAYGROUND at Tinsley Park ensures there is something for all ages.
Tinsley
From Page 1
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
AVERY McNEESE stands by a display of his art and beadwork at
his store, The Eager Beader.
to make the desired number of
beads. The carvings are made in
paraffin wax.
Whichever project was last
completed is usually his favorite.
“With artwork, whether it is
tiny little beads or big paintings
and sculpture, they are kind of
like your kids. You love them all,”
McNeese said.
He said he does not have as
much time to pursue painting
and sculpture as he would like.
“Even simple art can take a
long time to create,” McNeese
said.
He said he always has several
projects going, yet “I always want
to start something new.”
“Selling paintings and selling
sculptures (and other) art in
Cleveland is a bit difficult, but I
can sell a bead,” McNeese said.
He said “hard economic times”
also mean a decrease in people
buying original art. Instead they
might buy a less expensive print
at a big box store.
McNeese became interested in
art as a child. He said there are
artists on both sides of his family.
He said he chose to pursue art
because “I’m not any good at
anything else.”
He began making pottery at
age 13. The idea of creating
three-dimensional art appealed to
him. Later, he developed a love
for sculpture.
“There is such great sculpture
out there to look at, and I’m not
necessarily a modernist when it
comes to sculpture either. I want
Greek and Roman people with
muscles, and I also like realism,”
McNeese said.
He said sometimes the art he
enjoys is not what appeals to the
public.
Although he feels art appreciation has increased in the past
decade as Cleveland has grown,
McNeese said further progress
needs to be made.
“We are still in the South, and
the South itself is not as art conscious as the North, and it really
comes down to arts and education. If you are not educated in
the arts (through school) then
you are not going to appreciate it
when you are older,” McNeese
said. “There is a tremendous
number of talented artists here in
town.”
He said making local art more
visible is important.
McNeese has been married to
his wife, Beth, “forever, and I’m
happy about that.” They have
four children.
Industrial
From Page 1
money we had to spend or the
taxes we forgo, it’s probably one
of the best economic development
projects the community has ever
negotiated.”
He said that extends from “the
great partnership” Wacker wanted to establish with the community.
Berry said both the Wacker
project and Volkswagen have
played a part in the area gathering more interest.
“We went from 18 leads in
2012 to 46 within the last 12
months,” he said. “That means
we are on a steady increase in
lead generation.”
Berry called “the brightest part
of the future” as being development around Exit 20.
“It looks as though the interchange improvements will finish
on time by the end of the year,”
he said.
“The state is in essence getting
that work done [on the new interchange] so we can begin marketing and effectively selling the
industrial park and commercial
properties before we complete the
interchange,” he said. “With new
construction, most companies
are going to need a year construction time and with that
being scheduled to finish in
October 2016, we are almost to
the point where we could locate a
company on the park, build it,
and match the opening date of
the plant with the interchange
completion. That’s how tight
we’re trying to work with all of
these.”
The commercial component of
Exit 20 contains 200 acres of real
estate.
“When we talk about improving
our industrial park which we
have acquired the land for, we’re
actually talking about improving
a total of 550 acres of real
estate,” he said. “I do want you to
understand there is a dual
dynamic at play that can help us
recover funds sooner rather than
later and has a long term, very
large source of revenue for city
and county government.”
Berry said the industrial park
design has been ready for a year
with 331 acres — 61 acres being
set aside for stream buffers and
irrigation of wetlands.
“We are estimating the budget
to do that work alone to be $1.15
million,” he said. “We have 64
acres of reserved open space and
have had talks about pooling it
with Johnston Woods for a
mountain bike trail network to be
established.”
“The good news is we took an
original plan that was developed
before we took it under option
and we’ve reduced site grade
from 2.5 to 1.3 cubic yards to
grade out the nine building pads
and increased the building potential area from 2 million to 3 mil-
lion square feet of space,” Berry
said.
He said the elected officials
now have the hard decisions to
make on funding the $6 million
for park infrastructure including
roads, sewer, water and power.
“We are assuming in our projections we will sell one lot a year
for nine years at $45,000 to
$65,000 an acre — that’s higher
than we’ve been accustomed to in
this market, but we’ve never been
this close to so many large projects,” he said.
Berry said every attempt has
been made to be conservative
and not be “overly aggressive in
our assumptions.”
“There will be some difficult
decisions made based on those
numbers,” he said.
Berry said the hopes are to be
able to have those infrastructure
improvements meet the timeline
of the interchange construction.
“We need to get a commitment
from the county and the city for
$6 million of additional debt to do
the improvements to the park
and finish the infrastructure so
we can start selling this off,” he
said.
He said without the additional
funding, there would be “330
acres of land you can’t get on to
from the road system.”
“It’s pretty simple,” Berry said.
“We don’t have a park until we
get the next $6 million.”
Louisiana salmonella cases may be in 27-state outbreak
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) —
Three cases of salmonella in
Louisiana may be part of the
outbreak that sickened 285 people in 27 states, killing a 99year-old California woman,
according to the Louisiana
Department of Health and
Hospitals.
The Louisiana cases were in the
Baton Rouge area, the northeast
and the northwest, according to a
news release Saturday.
The outbreak also included one
or two cases in Mississippi, 60 in
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
Arizona and 51 in California as of
Thursday, according to the Center
for Disease Control and
Prevention website.
Andrew & Williamson Fresh
Produce of San Diego made a voluntary recall Friday of “Limited
Edition” brand cucumbers, which
are produced in Mexico.
Louisiana’s health department
received notification Friday night
and began calling national companies with Louisiana outlets that
might have sold or used the
cucumbers, spokeswoman Ashley
Lewis wrote. The agency said Red
Lobster restaurants in Louisiana
disposed of the cucumbers Friday.
Whole Foods also was on the
U.S.
Food
and
Drug
Administration’s recall list of
chains which had bought the
cucumbers, and managers at the
Baton Rouge store told state sanitarians Saturday that they had
stocked and were getting rid of the
vegetables, said Olivia Watkins,
also a spokeswoman for the
Department of Health and
Hospitals.
The city then bulldozed the
plant. There were 60-foot diameter digesters that had to be
sealed off and filled in.
Several years ago the city
had to go back, drain the
digesters and fill them in with
rock.
Tinsley was planned as a
four-phase project. The baseball/softball fields would be
built first, the pool would come
second, the park came third
and the tennis courts last.
Lou Fitzgerald and Tommy
“Suds” Barrett, who worked in
the Recreation Department,
promised if the city could get
the park up and running, they
would keep it full of people to
enjoy it. When the park opened,
they kept their promise.
“They had softball tournaments coming out our ears,
really. Filled up all the motels
and restaurants in town, and it
was really good for the city of
Cleveland,” Cartwright said.
Originally Tinsley, who was in
charge of both the Fire
Department and Recreation
Department, proposed the new
park be named after Dethero, but
others on the Commission felt
since Tinsley had put so much
work into bringing the resources
together to build the park, it
should be named after him.
Cartwright met with Dethero
to plan a surprise for Tinsley.
“Some of us thought that
since Kenneth Tinsley had
worked so hard on trying to get
all of this arranged and so forth
... it was his department, and
we ought to name it after him.”
Cartwright made arrangements with the mayor that if
Tinsley got the floor at the
Commission meeting and began
to name the park, the mayor
was going to cut him off and let
Cartwright speak.
According to Cartwright,
things never got that far. At
that meeting, Cartwright spoke
up and the mayor heard him.
“When I started making my
little speech about going to
name the park, well Mr.
Tinsley, who was a dear friend
of mine, his face got red. He
thought I was trying to steal
his thunder,” Cartwright said.
Tinsley thought Cartwright
was going to name the park ...
in honor of Dethero.
However, Tinsley was reportedly at a loss of words when
Cartwright and the Commission
announced that they were
going to name the new park
after him.
“That's ... how Tinsley Park
got its name,” Cartwright said.
When Tinsley opened in
1979, the softball and baseball
portions were booming.
“I was in the motel business,
and on the weekends and the
summertime you had wall-towall kids and rented rooms and
restaurants were full, and it
was a good time,” Cartwright
remembered.
Before Patti Petitt headed
Cleveland Parks and
Recreation, she was still
administrative assistant under
Tommy Barrett. She recalled
how Barrett would bring in a
hundred teams or more.
Before Chattanooga,
Ooltewah, Athens and surrounding cities got their ballfields, Cleveland was the place
to come.
“The problem now is you've
got big facilities in Ooltewah
and in Dalton (Ga.) and in
Chattanooga. We were No. 1
when Tinsley Park was built.
Suds (Barrett) would go out to
national conferences and bid
on tournaments,” Pettit said
about Tinsley and those who
followed.
“We held the first Amateur
Softball Association national
tournament in Cleveland. Not
Chattanooga, or anywhere else,
or all of Tennessee, but here,”
said Barrett, who also worked
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
THE NATURE TRAIL at Tinsley Park has been paved and is now
a part of the Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway.
Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE
TINSLEY PARK is the only city recreation area with a skateboard
park.
on bringing Tinsley into reality.
“We helped Chattanooga get
one and Murfreesboro one,
Hendersonville one, Nashville
one, Johnson City one and
Athens one, but we kept the
cream of the crop here.”
If Cleveland couldn't host the
ASA national tournament, the
city would give the rights to
another city.
“The local news media did us
right. Not only the Cleveland
Daily Banner, but some of the
other people involved in the
local news, they gave good coverage and it was a fun time,”
Cartwright said of the media
covering Tinsley's tournaments.
“When Tinsley was set up,
Lou Fitzgerald had been in
baseball his whole life. And it
was built and he kept an eye
out and made sure it was built,
and built good. And it was even
wired up back in the ’70s for
television for everyone to come
and televise something. We had
facilities there to hook up and
televise the games, which was
unheard of back then.”
Cleveland was the first city to
plan and host the first ASA
tournaments.
The pool the city put in at
Tinsley had a minor building
flaw.
“The swimming pool, they
put in backwards,” Barrett
recalled.
When the pool was installed,
construction put the filters in
the deep end instead of the
shallow end, as originally
planned.
For many years, this flaw
went unnoticed until at one
committee meeting it was
pointed out.
In the late 1990s and early
2000s, a city project known as
the Cleveland/Bradley County
Greenway was planned to go
from the outskirts of downtown
Cleveland all the way to Mouse
Creek.
“The whole idea was the
Greenway [planners wanted it]
to go through on out to Mouse
Creek, and that was just the
smart connection, to go
through Tinsley Park,” Petitt
said.
The project would use
Tinsley's dirt trail to connect
two tracts of land.
Part of the dirt trail in
Tinsley was not city owned, but
was leased from M&M Mars.
When the Greenway went
through Tinsley, the city had to
get an extended lease with the
factory for the land.
According to Petitt it was a
difficult maneuver, due to the
fact M&M Mars had recently
changed ownership.
Barrett shared a tale about a
“bird issue” the park once had.
Nearby residents were complaining to the point that Mayor
Sam Colbert contacted Barrett
asking, “What you going to do
about these birds?”
“There's nothing we can do
about them, mayor,” Barrett
answered.
Colbert responded, “Put a
fence up in this section right
here.”
Barrett had a fence put up
around the small area.
“'Whatcha got the fence up
for?'” Barrett remembered being
asked.
“I said, ‘To keep the birds
out,’” Barrett replied.
Cartwright remembered the
department diminished the bird
problem by hiring someone to
put up strobe lights. While this
did not get rid of the birds, it
did make them move, because
the lights were set to come on
at night, disrupting the birds’
roosting habits.
Tinsley's future includes
additions and renovations to
the park. A long-awaited dog
park is in the works and the
renovation of the tennis courts
is being planned.
Officers
From Page 1
Acceptance of the lowest bid
for irrigation at Elrod Park and
the highest and best bid for
property at Minnis Road will
also be given votes by the commission.
A resolution requested by
members of the Bradley County
Democratic Party that would
support Gov. Bill Haslam’s
“Insure Tennessee” program will
also be on the table.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—7
Snapshot of U.S. job market: Solid hiring but still-tepid pay
WASHINGTON (AP) — On
Labor Day weekend 2015, the
U.S. job market has found an old
sweet spot: 5.1 percent unemployment — many miles from the
10 percent joblessness America
endured back in 2009.
It’s the lowest rate in more
than seven years, suggestive of
healthy hiring levels that have
traditionally fostered rising
incomes, consumer spending
and economic growth.
In August, the unemployment
rate fell on the strength of a
decent
if
less-than-stellar
173,000 added jobs. And most
economists expect the government to eventually revise up that
job gain because of seasonal
trends that are notoriously difficult to calculate.
Friday’s employment data
reflected the durability of the
U.S. economy, which has so far
withstood distress worldwide:
Tumultuous stock markets, a
sharp slowdown in China, a perpetually struggling European
economy and the start of a recession in Canada, America’s largest
trading partner.
Yet the report also spotlighted
aspects of an economic expansion that has been steady without being fully satisfying: Wage
growth remains slight. And millions remain relegated to the
sidelines of the job market.
Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S.
economist at Deutsche Bank,
grades the job market as “good”
but not great.
“It’s a solid B,” LaVorgna said.
“Definitely not an A.”
— 5.1 PERCENT UNEMPLOYMENT
That figure serves as compelling evidence for why the U.S.
job market is the envy of most of
AP photo
MARIO POlO, of Boston Market, left, talks to job seekers Herby Joseph, right, and Kingsly Jose, center, at a job fair in Sunrise, Fla., on June 10, 2015. On Labor Day weekend 2015, the U.S. job market
has found an old sweet spot: 5.1 percent unemployment.
the industrialized world. The
unemployment rate has dropped
a full percentage point over the
past 12 months, and for a good
reason: More Americans are finding work.
At previous times during the
recovery from the Great
Recession, the unemployment
rate had dipped only because
many people had abandoned
their job searches and were no
longer counted as unemployed.
Employers have added nearly
2.6 million workers since last
year — about 764,000 more than
the number who left the workforce to retire, start school or end
their job hunts in frustration,
according to the government’s
monthly survey of households.
A 5.1 percent unemployment
rate also fits the Federal
Reserve’s picture of a normal
economy. And so it heightens
expectations that the Fed will
raise interest rates from record
lows
later
this
month.
Maximizing employment is one of
the Fed’s mandates.
But the Fed must balance that
task with its other mandate: To
stabilize prices. And across the
economy, inflation remains well
short of the Fed’s 2 percent target, at which point a rate hike
would be appropriate.
— 10.3 PERCENT
Besides the official unemployment rate, the jobs report
includes a broader measure of
joblessness: It takes account not
only of people seeking work but
also of part-time workers who
can’t find full-time jobs and other
people on the fringes of the job
market. This broader measure
was 10.3 percent last month, rel-
atively high for a baseline unemployment rate of 5.1 percent.
When the unemployment rate
was most recently this low, in
early 2008, the broader measure
was 9.2 percent. That gap
between 9.2 percent in 2008 and
10.3 percent today translates
into an additional 1.9 million
Americans who are still barely
getting by, testament to a job
market has yet to fully heal.
— 221,000 JOBS
That’s the average monthly job
growth over the past three
months. That average could rise
later because economists say
seasonal adjustment quirks
could cause the August jobs figure of 173,000 to be revised up
by 50,000 or more.
Why do job gains of more than
200,000 matter so much? It’s
roughly twice the monthly influx
of workers into the job market. It
means that demand for workers
exceeds the incoming supply and
suggests that employers foresee
continued customer demand.
Tellingly, hiring in August
shifted away from sectors with
heavy exposure to the global
economy. Manufacturers, for
example, shed 17,000 jobs. The
pace of hiring also slipped for
business services.
More than half the added jobs
came from industries largely
insulated from overseas turmoil:
Government, education and
health services. Their share of
job growth nearly doubled last
month from 27.1 percent in July.
— 40.3 PERCENT
That’s the share of employed
Americans older than 25 with
college degrees. This figure has
climbed more than a percentage
point from 39.2 percent over the
previous 12 months. Seven years
ago, the share of college-graduate workers was roughly 35 percent.
The change points to an
encouraging shift since the
recession: American workers are
increasingly better educated.
College graduates not only earn
more on average than non-college grads, but on top of that,
their unemployment rate is now
a scant 2.5 percent — less than
half the national average.
—$25.09
The average hourly earnings
have crept up just 2.2 percent
over the past year to $25.09.
That increase looks adequate to
some economists because of
ultra-low inflation over that time.
But an unemployment rate barely above 5 percent would normally drive faster pay growth. That’s
because when hiring picks up,
the supply of available workers
tightens and employers generally
feel compelled to raise pay to
attract talent.
Yet since 2012, average hourly
earnings have largely risen
between 1.8 percent and 2.2 percent in the monthly reports —
not nearly enough for many
Americans to feel that their living
standards have improved.
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U.S. dentist who killed Cecil the lion to return to work
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The
Minnesota dentist whose killing
of Cecil the lion sparked a global
backlash emerged for an interview in which he disputed some
accounts of the hunt, expressed
agitation at the animosity directed at those close to him and said
he would be back at work within
days.
Walter Palmer, who has spent
more than a month out of sight
after becoming the target of
protests and threats, intends to
return to his suburban
Minneapolis dental practice
Tuesday. In an interview Sunday
evening conducted jointly by The
Associated Press and the
Minneapolis Star Tribune that
advisers said would be the only
one granted, Palmer said again
that he believes he acted legally
and that he was stunned to find
out his hunting party had killed
one of Zimbabwe’s treasured animals.
“If I had known this lion had a
name and was important to the
country or a study obviously I
wouldn’t have taken it,” Palmer
said. “Nobody in our hunting
party knew before or after the
name of this lion.”
Cecil was a fixture in the vast
Hwange National Park and had
been fitted with a GPS collar as
part of Oxford University lion
research. Palmer said he shot
the big cat with the black mane
using an arrow from his compound bow outside the park’s
borders but it didn’t die immediately. He disputed conservationist accounts that the wounded
lion wandered for 40 hours and
was finished off with a gun, saying it was tracked down the next
day and killed with an arrow.
An avid sportsman, Palmer
shut off several lines of inquiry
about the hunt, including how
much he paid for it or others he
has undertaken. No videotaping
or photographing of the interview
was allowed. During the 25minute interview, Palmer gazed
intensely at his questioners,
often fiddling with his hands and
turning occasionally to an advis-
er, Joe Friedberg, to field questions about the fallout and his
legal situation.
Some high-level Zimbabwean
officials have called for Palmer’s
extradition, but no formal steps
toward getting the dentist to
return to Zimbabwe have been
publicly disclosed. Friedberg, a
Minneapolis attorney who said
he is acting as an unpaid consultant to Palmer, said he has
heard nothing from authorities
about domestic or international
investigations
since
early
August.
Friedberg said he offered to
have Palmer take questions from
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
authorities on the condition the
session be recorded. He said he
never heard back.
“I’m not Walter’s lawyer in this
situation because Walter doesn’t
need a lawyer in this situation,”
said Friedberg, who said he knew
Palmer through previous matters. “If some governmental
agency or investigative unit
would make a claim that he violated some law then we’d talk
about it.”
Ben Petok, a spokesman for
U.S. Attorney Andy Luger,
declined comment about conversations with Friedberg and
referred questions to Fish and
Wildlife. An agency spokeswoman didn’t immediately
return a call or an email Sunday
evening.
After Palmer was named in late
July as the hunter who killed
Cecil, his Bloomington clinic and
Eden Prairie home became
protest sites, and a vacation
property he owns in Florida was
vandalized. Palmer has been vilified across social media, with
some posts suggesting violence
against him. He described himself as “heartbroken” for causing
disruptions for staff at his clinic,
which was shuttered for weeks
until reopening in late August
without him on the premises.
And he said the ordeal has been
especially hard on his wife and
adult daughter, who both felt
threatened.
AP photo
In thIs July 29, 2015, file
photo, protestors gather outside
Dr. Walter James Palmer’s dental office in Bloomington, Minn.
Palmer killed Cecil, a blackmaned lion, just outside Hwange
National Park in Zimbabwe.
Palmer participated in an interview Sunday in which he disputed some accounts of the hunt,
expressed agitation at the animosity directed at those close to
him and said he would be back
at work within days.
“I don’t understand that level
of humanity to come after people
not involved at all,” Palmer said.
As for himself, he said he feels
safe enough to return to work —
“My staff and my patients support me and they want me back”
— but declined to say where he’s
spent the last six weeks or
describe security steps he has
taken.
“I’ve been out of the public
eye. That doesn’t mean I’m in
hiding,” Palmer said. “I’ve been
among people, family and
friends. Location is really not
that important.”
Palmer, who has several biggame kills to his name, reportedly paid thousands of dollars for
the guided hunt but wouldn’t
talk money on Sunday.
Theo Bronkhorst, a professional hunter who helped
Palmer, has been charged with
“failure to prevent an illegal
hunt.” Honest Ndlovu, whose
property is near the park in
western Zimbabwe, faces a
charge of allowing the lion hunt
to occur on his farm without
proper authority.
Asked whether he would
return to Zimbabwe for future
hunts, Palmer said, “I don’t
know about the future.” He estimated he had been there four
times and said, “Zimbabwe has
been a wonderful country for me
to hunt in, and I have always fol-
lowed the laws.”
In addition to the Cecil furor,
Palmer pleaded guilty in 2008 to
making false statements to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
about a black bear he fatally
shot in western Wisconsin outside of the authorized hunting
zone. He was given one year probation and fined nearly $3,000
as part of a plea agreement.
Cecil’s killing set off a fierce
debate over trophy hunting in
Africa. Zimbabwe tightened regulations for lion, elephant and
leopard hunting after the incident, and three major U.S. airlines changed policies to ban
shipment of the trophies.
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2015
Magazine
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Advertising Deadline:
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Publication Date:
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Call the Cleveland Daily Banner today to
schedule your ad! 423-472-5041
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Pink, 36; David Arquette, 44;
Brooke Burke Charvet, 44; Neko Case,
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
45.
Happy Birthday: Keep your life simple and your overhead reasonable. You
don't have to impress anyone this year.
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
Just be yourself and enjoy what life has
to offer. Your ability to get things done
using your skills and common sense will
help you counter any negative influences. Focus on financial improvements and perfecting your image and
talents. Your numbers are 6, 11, 23, 29,
38, 40, 46.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): You will
gain more by being nice than by being
stern. Keep in mind that not everyone is
as quick as you are. Patience will be
required if you want help. Discuss your
plans with your partner or business
associate.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Look at
the big picture, but don't exceed your
budget. You'll face opposition if you try
to make physical changes. Focus on
getting along with the people you live
with. Compromise and taking care of
your responsibilities will ease tension.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don't
take on too much or indulge in something that will make you look or feel bad.
Put more into home, family and affection toward the people you enjoy being
with most. A change of location will do
you good.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Uncertainty will take over if you allow
someone to put you in a vulnerable
position. Don't put up with pushy behavior. Take a course or research something that interests you. Avoid anyone
who is trying to bait you into a disagreement.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Money matters will take an unusual twist. Don't
leave cash or valuables out in the open.
Kindness and generosity will lead to
loss. Put your skills to work in a progressive fashion and you will advance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Use old
ideas and skills in an interesting manner. Take on less responsibility and
make sure that whatever you do, you
do it superbly. A sudden change in
financial, legal or health matters will
lead to an important decision.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don't let
minor setbacks put you at a disadvantage. Set reasonable goals and don't
worry about what anyone else thinks.
Stay on track and avoid any emotional
disputes. Only offer help to those you
know will reciprocate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Business trips will give you reason to
celebrate. A positive change at home
and to your reputation is within reach. A
proposal you cannot turn down is heading your way. Prepare to negotiate and
get what you want in writing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Precision, coupled with facts and figures, will be the only way to operate
today. Know exactly what you will get
before you make any offers. Risky joint
ventures are best avoided. Invest in
yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Don't overanalyze. Focus on what you
know and do well and make deals that
are precise and non-negotiable. A partnership can bring you good fortune if
it's set up fairly. Don't make any impulsive decisions or travel to unsafe territory.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make
love, romance and social activities a priority. Share your thoughts and flesh out
how others feel about you and your
plans. A personal change can be made,
but hold off if you are thinking about a
vocational move.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Take
action with confidence and the outcome
will be stellar. Use your unique qualities
to draw reactions and responses from
those you want to interact with. You will
be pleasantly surprised by the input and
offers you receive.
Birthday Baby: You are adaptable,
compassionate and just. You are courageous and captivating.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—9
MONDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
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PGA Tour Golf Deutsche Bank Championship, Final Round. News
Nightly News Entertainment Inside Edition American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
Running Wild-Bear Grylls
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Jewish Jesus “The Investigator” (2013, Drama) Wade Williams-James.
Rodriguez
Potters
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End of Age
Franklin
J. Duplantis “One Night With the King” (2006, Drama) Tiffany Dupont.
Joel Osteen Perry Stone
Around Town
WTNB Today
Body
Southern-Fit Deals Around Town
Country Fix Nashville Un Around Town
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Adrenalin Rush Wrestling
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Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly The Middle
The Middle
Penn & Teller: Fool Us ’
Whose Line Significant
TMZ Å
Hollywood
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Paid Program Anger
Paid Program
Curious
Wild Kratts
Arthur (N)
Odd Squad
PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Georgia War Georgia War Antiques Roadshow Å
The Civil War Abraham Lincoln, Robert E. Lee. ’ Å
Georgia’s Civil War
Mission
Bill Winston Love a Child Reflections
Hour of Sal
Creflo Dollar Perry Stone John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni Lamb
Marcus and Joni
J. Duplantis Ron Carp.
Kenneth W. Kenneth
Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! ’ Shark Tank Å (DVS)
Bachelor in Paradise Å
Bachelor in Paradise: After News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Wild Kratts
Wild Kratts
Curious
Curious
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Antiques Roadshow Å
The Civil War Abraham Lincoln, Robert E. Lee. ’ Å
The Civil War Abraham Lincoln, Robert E. Lee. ’ Å
Name Game Name Game Family Feud Family Feud Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Big Bang
Big Bang
So You Think You Can Dance (N) ’ (Live) Å
FOX61 First Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Cleveland
Paid Program The Office
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith Big Bang
Fall Preview Scorpion “Cliffhanger” ’
(9:59) NCIS: Los Angeles ’ News
(:35) NCIS “Grounded” ’
Corden
(3:00) Discover Diamonique “Diamonique Month”
LG Electronics
Inspired Style
LG Electronics
PM Style with Shawn Killinger Fashion, fun and friends.
LG Electronics
Supersmile
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Elementary “Heroine” Å
Elementary “Step Nine” ’
Elementary ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest “Critical”
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest “C.O.D.”
Person of Interest ’ Å
Electronics Labor Day
Labor Day White Sale (N)
Labor Day White Sale (N)
The Monday Night Show
The Monday Night Show
Labor Day White Sale (N)
Labor Day Sale “Finale” (N) Labor Day Sale “Finale” (N) Home Solutions (N)
Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian
I Am Cait
Fashion Police
Stewarts & Hamiltons (N)
I Am Cait
I Am Cait
Fashion Police
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Doorknob Arch.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
› “What Happens in Vegas” (2008) Cameron Diaz. Å
›› “The Switch” (2010) Jennifer Aniston. Å
›› “The Proposal” (2009) Sandra Bullock. Å
(:02) ›› “27 Dresses” (2008) Katherine Heigl. Å
(12:02) ›› “The Proposal”
Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous The Man: 200lb Tumor
My Shocking Story ’ Å
Son’s Face- Stop Growing
Baby- Extra Head
World’s Tallest Couple
Son’s Face- Stop Growing
Friends
Friends
Friends ’
Friends
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Family Guy Family Guy Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Conan
The Office ’ Conan
The Librarians Flynn returns. The Librarians Å
The Librarians Å
The Librarians Å
The Librarians Å
The Librarians Å
›› “The Librarian: Quest for the Spear” (2004) Å
Law & Order “Misbegotten”
NCIS Naval officers targeted. NCIS “Enigma” ’ Å
NCIS “Bete Noir” ’ Å
NCIS ’ Å
WWE Monday Night RAW (N) ’ (Live) Å
(:05) ››› “Skyfall” (2012) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench.
Empire “Dangerous Bonds”
Empire “Out, Damned Spot” Empire “Our Dancing Days”
Empire “The Lyon’s Roar”
Empire “Unto the Breach”
Empire “Sins of the Father”
Empire “Die But Once”
Empire “Who I Am” Å
Tyrant “Pax Abuddin”
NHRA Drag Racing Chevrolet Performance U.S. Nationals. From Indianapolis.
College Football Countdown College Football Ohio State at Virginia Tech. (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
2015 U.S. Open Tennis Round of 16. (N) (Live)
2015 U.S. Open Tennis Round of 16. From the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. (N) (Live)
E:60
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
MLB Baseball
Cardinals Live! Postgame
N.C. State
UFC Insider College Football Virginia at UCLA. (Taped)
Red Bull Cliff Diving
World Poker Tour
Best of WEC
(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show Paul Finebaum discusses all things SEC. (N) (Live)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Featured College Football Alabama vs. Wisconsin. (Taped)
Football
(3:30) Arnie Arnie and Me
Masters
Golf Central (N) (Live)
Golf Acad.
Golf Acad.
The Golf Fix (N)
PGA Tour Golf Deutsche Bank Championship, Final Round.
Soccer
Horse Racing
NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) MLB Whiparound (N) Å
Mission Oct. Moments
MLB’s Best Bus Tour
World Poker Tour: Alpha8
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
FOX Sports FOX Sports
Auburn
Hook Future Future Phen. Georgia So. Georgia
Braves Live! MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies.
Prospectors Prospectors Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
West Texas Investors Club West Texas Investors Club West Texas Investors Club Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
Lockup
Lockup
Lockup
Lockup
Lockup: Savannah
Lockup: Savannah
Lockup: Savannah
Lockup: Savannah
Lockup: Savannah
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
CNN Quiz Show: TV
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
CNN Newsroom
››› “The Imposter” (2012) Adam O’Brian, Anna Ruben.
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
CNN Quiz Show: TV
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Dr. Drew: Transgender in
Forensic File Forensic File
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Greta Van Susteren
Best of Watters World
The Kelly File
The Trump Campaign
Best of Watters World
The Kelly File
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Outlaw: Hells Angels
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Six Degr.
Six Degr.
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Twist of Fate”
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48: Confessions
The First 48: Confessions
The First 48: Confessions
The First 48: Confessions
The First 48: Confessions
Fast N’ Loud Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud: Revved Up Combining Dodge Challengers.
Fast N’ Loud (N) ’ Å
(:01) Rusted Development
(:04) Fast N’ Loud ’ Å
(12:05) Rusted Development
The 2000s: A New Reality
The 2000s: A New Reality Continuing the decade’s story.
Diggers
Diggers
Yukon River Run
Yukon River Run
Diggers (N) Diggers (N) Yukon River Run
Diggers
Diggers
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods America
Travel Channel Star (N)
36 Hours (N) Å
Bizarre
Bizarre
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre
Bizarre
Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Guy’s Grocery Games
Kids Cook-Off
Kids Cook-Off
Cake Masters
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Cake Masters
Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Listed Sisters Å
Tiny House Tiny House Hunters
Hunters Int’l Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House
Alien Sharks: Return
Bride of Jaws ’ Å
Monster Mako ’ Å
Super Predator ’ Å
Ninja Sharks ’ Å
Air Jaws: Walking
Shark Alley: Legend
(:03) Ninja Sharks ’ Å
Air Jaws: Walking
(2:00) ››› “Cast Away”
›››› “Forrest Gump” (1994, Comedy-Drama) Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Gary Sinise.
Switched at Birth (N) Å
(:01) Chasing Life (N) Å
(:01) Monica the Medium ’ The 700 Club ’ Å
››› “Freaky Friday”
Bunk’d Å
Best Friends Austin & Ally “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D” K.C. Undercover (N) Å
› “College Road Trip” (2008) ’ ‘G’ Å
K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Å
I Didn’t Do It Jessie Å
Good-Charlie Good-Charlie
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Pig Goat Ban. Sanjay, Craig Harvey Beaks SpongeBob Pig Goat Ban. Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
(:36) Friends (12:12) Friends ’ Å
We Bare
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
Regular Show King of Hill
King of Hill
Burgers
Cleveland
Rick, Morty Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Facts of Life Facts of Life (:12) The Facts of Life ’
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Everybody Loves Raymond Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
(3:00) ›› “Fantastic Four” (2005) ‘PG-13’
››› “Batman Begins” (2005, Action) Christian Bale, Michael Caine. ‘PG-13’ Å
››› “Predator” (1987, Action) Arnold Schwarzenegger. ‘R’ Å
›› “Watchmen” (2009) Billy Crudup. Premiere. ‘R’ Å
›››› “Smiles of a Summer Night” (1955, Comedy)
››› “Sergeant Rutledge” (1960) Jeffrey Hunter. Å
›››› “Of Mice and Men” (1939) Burgess Meredith.
Fragments Rare scenes from early films.
››› “THX-1138” (1971)
Little House on the Prairie
The Waltons ’ Å
The Waltons “The Car” ’
The Waltons “The Conflict”
The Waltons “The Conflict”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Snapped
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Snapped
Snapped
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Ladies of London
Housewives/OC
Ladies of London
Z Nation
Z Nation
Z Nation “Resurrection Z”
Z Nation
Z Nation “Zunami”
Z Nation
Z Nation “Going Nuclear”
Z Nation “Sisters of Mercy”
Z Nation “Murphy’s Law”
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Lights Out
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Futurama
Futurama
(:13) Futurama Å
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Futurama
Archer Å
Archer Å
South Park “The Black Friday Trilogy”
South Park
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
Awkward. ’ Awkward. (N) Faking It (N) Todrick (N)
Girl Code
Awkward. ’ Faking It ’
Todrick ’
Girl Code
Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Black Ink Crew (N) ’
She’s Got Game (N) ’
Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood Black Ink Crew ’
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Reba Å
Reba Å
››› “Friday Night Lights” (2004, Drama) Billy Bob Thornton, Derek Luke.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
(3:00) › “Alex Cross” (2012) Tyler Perry.
›› “Good Deeds” (2012, Drama) Tyler Perry, Thandie Newton. Å
›› “Daddy’s Little Girls” (2007, Romance) Gabrielle Union, Idris Elba.
“Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Tough Love” (2015) The Wendy Williams Show
How the Universe Works ’ How/Made
How/Made
Outrageous Acts of Science Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman ’ Å
Impossible Engineering (N) Chaos
TBA
Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman ’ Å
Stoned
Not Fail
Adios, America
Arms and the Dudes
Hugh Hewitt on The Queen Capitol Hill
After Words “Kathryn Edin”
Mark Moyar on Strategic Failure ’
Kiernan on American Mojo Race and Politics
We Catholic Chaplet Kids Ancient Israel Bookmark
EWTN News Enlighten
Daily Mass - Olam
The Journey Home
EWTN News Holy Rosary World Over Live
Virtue
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds “The Caller” Criminal Minds “Bully” ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “200” ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “Gabby” ’
Criminal Minds “Persuasion” Criminal Minds “Rabid” ’
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Star Wars
Star Wars
Star Wars
Star Wars
Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Gravity Falls Pickle-Peanut Star-Rebels Ultimate Spider-Man
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Droid Tales Gravity Falls
Dog Eat Dog ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud The Chase “Teen Beast”
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Good Eats
Good Eats
Carnival Eats Carnival Eats
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Stiff” ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Blown Away”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Killer Regrets”
CSI: Miami “By the Book”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Stiff” ’ Å
El Chavo
El Chavo
El Chavo
El Chavo
Guereja
Guereja
Vecinos
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
La Familia
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Águila
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones
Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Avenida Brasil (N) ’ (SS)
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (N) ’
El Señor de los Cielos (N)
Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Muchacha Italiana Viene
Amores con Trampa (N)
Lo Imperdonable
Yo No Creo en los Hombres Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
(2:00) NASCAR 120 (N) ’
NASCAR America (N) Å
Pro Ftb Talk Scan All 43
Fishing
Bass
Eye of Hunter Hunting TV
Big Red: Outlaw Racer
RacerTV
NASCAR 120 ’
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R.:
Untold Stories of the E.R.:
How To Make Love-Wife
Untold Stories of the E.R.:
Untold Stories of the E.R.:
Monday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WRCB)
American Ninja Warrior
The event that all others on the show this
season have led to, the finals in Las Vegas,
informs a new episode that features the first
two of four stages in a course patterned
after Japan’s Mount Midoriyama. Those
who got through the regional finals take on
new challenges called Sonic Curve and the
Double Shock. Then, the finishers proceed
on the path that could lead them to the $1
million grand prize. Matt Iseman and Akbar
Gbaja-Biamila are the hosts.
8 p.m. on (WFLI)
Penn & Teller: Fool Us
Four years after the show’s initial season
was made in England — though it took
three more years for it to air in America —
Season 2 began with “Phone-y Business,”
as comedic illusionists Penn Jillette and
Teller again try to guess how would-be magicians make their magic. Those who “fool”
the duo get to appear with them in their Las
Vegas act. Original series host Jonathan
Ross also returns. Contestants here include
one nicknamed “The Shocker.”
8 p.m. on (WDSI)
So You Think You Can Dance
It’s the beginning of the end for the show’s
12th season, as the new episode “Finale
Part One: Top Four Perform” leaves only
two stage dancers and two street dancers
to vie for the win. Not only will the victory
— to be announced next Monday — mean
something to the person’s team, it also will
be significant to the specific style of dance
represented. Paula Abdul, Jason Derulo
and Nigel Lythgoe are the judges, and Cat
Deeley is the host.
8:30 p.m. on (WDEF)
CBS Fall Preview
With another television season about to begin, the network offers peeks at its new series. Emmy winner Jane Lynch — who’s in
one of the shows, the comedy “Angel From
Hell” — serves as host of the program,
which also covers another sitcom, the family saga “Life in Pieces.” Also previewed:
Melissa Benoist’s much-anticipated arrival
as “Supergirl”; the Marcia Gay Hardenstarring medical drama “Code Black”; and a
version of the Bradley Cooper movie “Limitless.”
TUESDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
WELFTBN
WTNB
WFLICW
WNGHPBS
DAYSTAR
WTVCABC
WTCIPBS
WDSIFOX
WDEFCBS
QVC
CSPAN
WGN-A
HSN
E!
ESQTV
LIFE
TLC
TBS
TNT
USA
FX
ESPN
ESPN2
FSTN
SEC
GOLF
FS1
SPSO
WEA
CNBC
MSNBC
CNN
HDLN
FNC
HIST
TRUTV
A&E
DISC
NGC
TRAV
FOOD
HGTV
ANPL
FAM
DISN
NICK
TOON
TVLND
AMC
TCM
HALL
OXYGEN
BRAVO
SYFY
SPIKE
COM
MTV
VH1
CMTV
BET
SCIENCE
CSPAN2
EWTN
WPXA ION
DISXD
GSN
COOK
WE
GALA
TELE
UNIV
NBCSP
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9 p.m. on (WNGH) (WTCI)
The Civil War
One of public television’s bona fide classics, Ken Burns’ unanimously acclaimed,
painstakingly assembled 1990 documentary
miniseries gets an encore nightly through
Friday as it marks its 25th anniversary in
a remastered format, opening with “The
Cause — 1861,” The program uses many
historical artifacts and visuals of the mid19th century, backed by voiceovers from
Sam Waterston, Jason Robards, Julie Harris and Colleen Dewhurst among others.
SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
6 PM
6:30
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12:30
The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
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Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Six Degr.
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Mick Dodge Mick Dodge Live Free: Down & Dirty
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10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Merkel demands EU partners share burden of migrant influx
BERLIN (AP) — German
Chancellor Angela Merkel,
reflecting on “a moving, in some
parts breathtaking weekend
behind us,” said Monday that all
EU countries could help to
accommodate the human tide
from the Middle East and Africa.
French President Francois
Hollande announced that his
country would welcome 24,000
refugees, and that he and Merkel
had agreed on a mechanism to
spread the migrant load across
Europe.
But Hungary’s prime minister,
Viktor Orban, said he wasn’t prepared to pitch in and questioned
how any EU quota system for
migrants could work.
Even as calm returned
Monday to the main border point
between Austria and Hungary
after more than 14,000 people
used it over the weekend to enter
Austria, Hungary’s leader hit
back at EU counterparts who
blamed his country for the chaos.
Merkel told reporters in Berlin
that Germany will ensure that
those who need protection
receive it, but that those who
stand no chance of getting asylum will have to return to their
homes swiftly. Germany is
preparing to receive by far the
largest number of immigrants,
but Merkel called for help from
EU partners.
“Germany is a country willing
to take people in, but refugees
can be received in all countries of
the European Union in such a
way that they can find refuge
from civil war and from persecution,” she said.
Orban mocked the European
Union’s efforts to distribute
migrants through a quota system
and comments by some EU leaders that cast Hungary as the
bloc’s “black sheep.”
Any EU migrant quota among
the bloc’s 28 countries, makes no
sense in a system where the free
movement of people would make
it impossible to enforce, he said.
Austria’s Chancellor Werner
and other EU leaders have
blamed Orban for the chaos they
say left Austria and Germany no
choice but to essentially open
their borders for thousands of
migrants and refugees who complained of neglect and human
rights violations in Hungary.
Most of those crossing into
Austria over the weekend proceeded by train to Germany.
Austrian officials said only about
90 people asked for asylum in
Austria.
Further south tensions were
high Monday in Macedonia at the
border with Greece, where scuffles broke out between police and
thousands of people attempting
to head north toward the
European Union.
About 2,000 people had gathered at the Greek border near the
village of Idomeni just after
dawn, attempting to cross into
Macedonia. But Macedonian
authorities were allowing only
small groups to cross every half
hour, leading to tension. The situation later calmed after more
were allowed to cross, with about
1,000 having passed the border
by mid-day.
Greek police said about 5,000
people had crossed the border
heading north in the 24 hours
from Sunday morning to Monday
morning.
Greece’s migration minister
estimated that at least two-thirds
of the 15,000-18,000 refugees
and economic migrants stranded
in “miserable” conditions on the
eastern Aegean island of Lesbos
will be ferried to the mainland in
the next five days. Lesbos bears
the brunt of the refugee influx,
with more than 1,000 arriving
daily on frail boats from nearby
Turkey.
In a late night meeting that
lasted until early Monday in
Berlin, the German government
agreed to spend 6 billion euros
($6.6 billion) next year to support
the hundreds of thousands of
new arrivals. At the same time, it
also agreed to introduce legal
measures making it easier to
deport-asylum seekers from
countries considered “secure
states” like Montenegro, Kosovo
and Albania. Asylum-seekers will
also get less cash in the future
and more non-cash benefits.
German officials recently pre-
dicted that up to 800,000
migrants will arrive by the end of
the year, many of them refugees
fleeing war and persecution in
Syria, Iraq and Eritrea.
The government’s aid package
will include improved housing,
more federal police and language
classes.
Merkel’s deputy, Sigmar
Gabriel, said integrating the
migrants into German society
would require confronting the
fears of the country’s native population.
“I say this quite openly, there
will be conflicts,” the economy
minister told reporters. “The
more openly we talk about the
fact that people are worried, that
there’s fear in the country and
that there may be conflicts, will I
think help us deal with this realistically and confront reality.”
Five asylum seekers were
injured in a fire early Monday in
Rottenburg
in
southwest
Germany, the German news
agency dpa reported. Three of
them were injured when they
jumped out of the burning building, while two others had to be
treated for smoke inhalation. The
AP photo
cause of the fire was not immediFireFighters look at a house that was meant to shelter migrants in Ebeleben, eastern Germany,
ately clear.
Monday. Police could not give a reason for the fire.
Austrian police spokesman
Helmut Marban said that no
migrants had arrived at the
Nickelsdorf border point since
before midnight, when 260 people crossed into Austria and left
shortly afterward by train to
Vienna.
Beyond the Red Cross tent set
up near the crossing and the
stores of food, empty cots set up
in a parking lot, hygiene articles
and other goods stacked up for
any new arrivals, there was little
to indicate Monday morning that
the border had served over the
weekend for the dramatic influx
of Syrians, Iraqis, Afghans and
others.
An AP reporter counted about
five vehicles driving into Austria
over two minutes, and slightly
fewer in the other direction. The
truck lane, which was backed up
on the Austrian side after being
blocked off over the weekend,
was empty.
The Latest: 14 kids among 61
people rescued near Lesbos
BERLIN (AP) — The latest
news as countries across
Europe cope with the arrival of
thousands of migrants and
refugees. All times local (CET):
9:45 a.m.
A ferry captain has told
Greece’s Vima FM radio there
were 14 children — including a
months-old baby — among the
migrants, who were rescued
after spending several hours in
the sea after their cabin cruiser
took on water and half-sunk.
The coast guard said Monday
the Blue Star 1 ferry had picked
up 35 people from the sea, while
it also notified the coast guard,
which picked up a further 26
people. The circumstances of
the incident were unclear.
Since Friday, the coast guard
has rescued more than 2,000
migrants in the Aegean.
—9:00 a.m.
The German government says
it will spend 6 billion euros
($6.6 billion) next year to support the hundreds of thousands
of migrants coming to Germany.
In a-late night meeting lasting
until early Monday in Berlin,
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
coalition government also
agreed to introduce legal measures making it easier to deportasylum seekers from countries
considered “secure states” like
Montenegro,
Kosovo
and
Albania. Asylum-seekers will
also get less cash in the future
and more non-cash benefits.
German officials recently predicted that up to 800,000
migrants will arrive by the end
of the year, many of them
refugees fleeing war and persecution in Syria, Iraq and
Eritrea.
The government’s aid package
will include improved housing,
more federal police and language classes.
—9:00 a.m.
Greece’s coast guard says a
ferry sailing between the mainland and the country’s eastern
Aegean islands has been involved
in a rescue of refugees or
migrants near the island of
Lesbos.
The coast guard said Monday
the Blue Star 1 ferry had picked
up 35 people from the sea, while
it also notified the coast guard,
which picked up a further 26
people. The exact circumstances
of the incident were unclear.
All 61 were being transported
to Lesbos, the island on which
most of the those entering Greece
clandestinely arrive. Greece has
seen more than 230,000 refugees
and migrants enter the country
so far this year. The vast majority
do not want to stay in the financially stricken country, and head
to the more prosperous European
north on an overland route.
1,000s of farmers gather at EU
HQ to protest slumping prices
BRUSSELS (AP) — Thousands
of farmers are protesting in
Brussels, driving hundreds of
tractors through the city center, to
demand that the European Union
act to raise prices for their milk
and meat.
From across the 28-nation EU,
farmers converged on EU headquarters with their tractors,
snarling traffic during morning
rush hour in the capital and on
some highways leading into
Brussels.
With the relentless blowing of
horns, they showed their anger
over a drop in prices that has
intensified since the opening up of
the milk market early this year.
“Prices have gone down 30-40
percent for most farmers and our
farms are really going bankrupt
like this,” said Sieta van
Keimpema, Vice-President of the
European Milk Board farmers
group.
EU agriculture ministers are
meeting in an extraordinary session to assess the crisis and look
for ways to help the farmers.
Some farmers have called for a
reintroduction of quotas on production or more direct aid from
their governments to pay the bills.
Farmers were complaining they
basically now have to dump their
produce on the market at a loss.
“The milk price is under or around
28 cents (per liter, about 0.2 gal-
lons). And this is not enough even
to cover the costs,” said Heinz
Thorwarth, who had come to
Brussels from Fuchsstadt, in
southern Germany.
Making sure there would be
sufficient food for Europeans was
one of the key pillars on which the
European Union was built half a
century ago. But a system of generous subsidies and market-
shielding measures led to overproduction and an industry that
found it tough to adapt to changing conditions.
Quotas to limit dairy production were abolished in April and
extra production has caused
prices to tumble.
The farmers are also complaining about cheap imports from outside the EU.
France considering
airstrikes in Syria
PARIS (AP) — France will send
reconnaissance flights over Syria
beginning Tuesday and is considering airstrikes in the fight
against the Islamic State group,
President Francois Hollande
said, calling it necessary to fight
against the “terrorism and war”
that have left Europe vulnerable
to attack.
The United States is leading a
coalition of countries that has
spent the past year striking at IS
militants,
weaponry
and
machinery from the air but has
made little progress in meeting
President Barack Obama’s goal
to “degrade and destroy” the
group, which has also beheaded
hostages,
including
some
Americans. France, which has
feared that hitting at Islamic
State would help Syrian
President Bashar Assad, had
limited its planes to Iraqi airspace until now.
“We have proof that attacks
against
several
countries,
notably ours, are being
planned,” he said. “Today in
Syria what we hope to learn, is
what is being planned against us
and what is happening to the
Syrian population.”
Hollande, however, ruled out
ground operations in Iraq and
Syria in the wide-ranging news
conference on Monday.
“According to the information
that we gather, the intelligence
that we collect, we will be ready
to strike,” he said.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—11
SportS
MONDAY
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Hurd, Kamara give Vols
much-needed 1-2 punch
From UTSPORTS.COM
NASHVILLE — Jalen Hurd
needed help.
As season ago, the freshman
dazzled for Tennessee, getting
better game after game in a season that saw him rush for 899
yards on 190 carries and five
touchdowns. But the volume of
those touches slowly took its
toll.
Enter Alvin Kamara. Thunder,
meet lightning.
After an off-season of wondering what could be with two former five-star recruits sharing
the Tennessee backfield, Vol
fans saw the promise fulfilled in
a 59-30 victory over Bowling
Green at Nissan Stadium in
Nashville.
“We’ve been talking about it
since spring,” Kamara said.
“Getting out there and finally
getting on the field and seeing
what that o-line can do and see
what both of us can do. It was
fun. It was a really fun game.”
Fun to the tune of a combined
267 yards and five touchdowns.
Add in the 89 yards and another
TD on the ground from quarterback Joshua Dobbs and it is
easy to see why the coaches and
players have had a quiet excitement about the potential this
season.
“They feed off of each other,”
Jones said of his running backs.
AP photo
VOLS RUNNiNg bAck Alvin Kamara gets past Bowling Green defensive back Nilijah Ballew (25) in
the second half Saturday, in Nashville.
“They’re selfless. When one
scores, we all score. You could
see the excitement in them and
their body language.”
The excitement started early
as both players carried on the
Vols’ opening drive. Hurd started and finished the drive, a sixyard run on the first offensive
play of the season and an eightyard cut to the left for
Tennessee’s first score. He had
a five-yard gain in the middle of
the drive as well. Kamara had
three touches on the first drive
for 16 yards, including a 10yard run to set up UT with a
third-and-1 that helped the Vols
keep the drive alive after a
Dobbs sack.
The running game helped set
up the passing game, just like
offensive coordinator Mike
DeBord drew it up.
“Tennessee football runs the
ball,” Hurd said. “Off of that, we
can do anything.”
The two even lined up together in the backfield, another
prospect that Vol fans were salivating over. The players have
that same reaction as well.
“When both of us are in at the
same time, we kind of look at
each other and laugh,” Kamara
said. “It’s fun just having that
extra element in our offense.”
Kamara’s 144 rushing yards
were the most by a Tennessee
running back in his debut in
orange. He scored twice, including a 56-yard run in the third
See VOLS, Page 13
CSU runs by Lady Flames at Invitational
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
COLUMBUS, Ga. — Host
Columbus State University
scored four second-half goals in
under 13 minutes on Sunday
afternoon, and roared to a 5-2
win in the final game of the
power-packed CSU Collegiate
Lee University photo
LADY FLAMES FRESHMAN FORWARD Mia Hollingsworth
scored a goal in Lee’s loss to Columbus State University in the CSU
Collegiate Invitational Sunday, in Columbus, Ga.
Invitational.
After trailing 1-0 at the half
and being outplayed in the
opening 45 minutes, the Lee
women’s soccer team came out
with plenty of energy in the second half and tied the score at 11 on an unassisted goal by
Summer Lanter in the 63rd
minute.
The Lady Cougars retook control and knocked four quick
scores into the back of the net,
suddenly holding a 5-1 lead in
route to the 5-2 victory.
“Their second goal seemed to
take all the adrenaline out of
our ladies,” admitted coach
Chris Hennessey. “Not trying to
make excuses, but Friday afternoon’s game took a lot out of
our girls, plus Columbus State
has a 32 person roster and they
substituted freely in both
halves.”
Hennessey added that his
club could take some positives
from the two invitational
defeats. “We were matched
against two really strong clubs
and we will use these two games
as a learning experience. In the
opening 20 to 25 minutes of the
second half, we played some
outstanding soccer. We’ve got to
build on that, and come back
and get a victory against
Newberry on Friday.”
Junior Nicole Corcione stole
the show for the Lady Cougars.
She scored the first goal of the
match at the 8:43 mark and
then came back with another
score in the 76th minute. She
also added an assist.
After Lanter tied the game at
the 62:45 mark, Mandy Janovitz
fooled two Lee defenders on the
right side and pushed her shot
into the left side of the goal.
Just over two minutes later,
Hugrun Elvarsdottir made it a
3-1 game as she picked up the
first of two assists from
Cassandra Wade. The final
Columbus State score was
recorded at the 83 minute mark.
Wade got into the scoring act on
Corcione’s assist.
Hennessey pulled one positive
from the scoresheet by noting
that his team fired 19 shots,
placing 11 on goal. However,
Lady Cougars’ goalkeeper
Maylyn Parsons picked off eight
of Lee’s shots. Her teammates
also added a save.
The final stat line did not look
good for Lee keeper Haley
Gribler. Although Columbus
State registered five goals,
Gribler recorded several diving
saves and finished the evening
with seven. The Lady Cougars
See CSU, Page 13
Lee University photo
LEE gOALkEEPER TOM HALSALL was named Lee Olive
Garden Most Valuable Player after posting his second straight
shutout on Saturday night, against Trevecca Nazarene.
Flames pick up big win
over Trevecca Trojans
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
The Lee men’s soccer team
scored early and often en
route to a 4-0 victory over
Trevecca
Nazarene
on
Saturday night at the Lee
Soccer Field.
The win secured the Lee
Olive Garden Invitational
Championship for the Flames.
Lee moves to 2-0 on the young
season while the Trojans fall
to 0-2.
David Perez got things
started soon after the opening
whistle as he nailed home his
first goal of the season off a
Jon Finlay assist at the 4:56
mark. Freshman Danny
Johnston set up the run and
was also credited with an
assist.
The leading goal scorer
from a year ago was just getting started. In the 38th
minute, Perez beat the keeper
off a pass from Rob Cutchin
to put Lee up 2-0.
Sophomore Matt Brady
capped off the first half with
his first career goal off an
assist from Finlay and Travis
Kiger.
Both teams ended the contest with 15 shots. Trevecca
put nine on frame while the
Flames placed 10 on target.
The Trojans earned six corner
kicks to Lee’s four.
Junior forward Quade
Marinell capped the scoring in
the 53rd minute as he
punched home a corner kick
from Perez, for his second
goal in as many matches.
“Quade and David are very
special players and they have
a tremendous drive to win and
a great work rate,” Furey
noted. “David has so much
confidence right now and he’s
ready to take guys on. Quade
is a machine in the middle
and really makes things happen. We have two really good
goal scorers, but across the
Harvick 40 laps from the end.
Crew chief Darian Grubb
made strong calls throughout
the night, Edwards said, and his
pit crew did the job at the most
crucial time.
“Everyone did their job in this
one,” Edwards said after his
25th Sprint Cup victory.
Keselowski was second and
Denny Hamlin finished third.
Joey Logano was fourth, followed
by Harvick and the Busch brothers, Kurt and Kyle.
Edwards gave Joe Gibbs
Racing its seventh victory in the
last 10 events. JGR swept the
weekend, with Hamlin winning
the Xfinity race Saturday.
Edwards did his signature victory backflip in the race’s return
to Labor Day weekend.
“I guess we made it Carlington
for a couple of minutes,”
Edwards said after his crew
taped over part of the “D’’ on the
painted Darlington sign along a
retaining wall. “This is the
Southern 500. This is amazing.”
Edwards has won multiple
races in season for the seventh
time in 11 seasons as a fulltime
driver.
Keselowski started on the pole
and by far led the most laps with
196. But he was beaten out of
the pits by Edwards on
Darlington’s record-setting 18th
caution period with 12 laps left.
Almost as much as drivers
enjoyed Darlington’s throwback
paint schemes and retro-1970s
theme, they loved the low downforce package given the cars —
the same that was used to rave
driver reviews in Kentucky earlier this year.
“Man, I loved it. This is as
good as it gets,” Edwards said
about the low-downforce package. “This is what it’s about: sliding cars, the tires falling off. If
there’s any way we can run this
in the Chase, I hope we do it.”
Keselowski agreed. “It separates the race car drivers from
the pretenders and that’s the
way it should be,” he said.
Keselowski hoped to use
Darlington to springboard into
the Sprint Cup playoffs, which
start in Chicago in two weeks.
See FLAMES, Page 13
Flames hot
in Sewanee
Carl Edwards drives to Southern 500 win
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) —
Carl Edwards wanted momentum heading into NASCAR’s
championship chase. He found it
at Darlington Raceway.
Edwards rallied after falling
two laps down because of a flat
tire, then beat Brad Keselowski
off pit road for the lead 12 laps
from the end and held on for his
first Southern 500 victory
Sunday night.
Edwards won the Coca Cola
600 in May and had six top-10s
in the past seven races. Still, he
was looking for a boost that
would propel his first-year Joe
Gibbs Racing program into the
playoffs.
“This is what we needed,”
Edwards said. “We really needed
a shot in the arm.”
And now Edwards heads into
the chase bursting with confidence — in the entire team. He
was two laps behind after this
flat around Lap 90. He was in
36th place on Lap 140. But there
he was at the end, pushing polesitter Keselowski and defending
Southern 500 winner Kevin
board we have a lot of guys
that can put the ball in the
net.”
Senior goalkeeper Tom
Halsall turned in his second
consecutive shutout to start
the season. The native of
Southport, England, came up
with eight big saves, including
several early denials when the
issue was still in doubt.
“After we got the first goal,
Trevecca had a few really good
scoring chances and Tom
came up with some big saves
for us tonight,” noted Furey.
Things began to slip away
from the Trojans in the 12th
minute, as starting keeper
Daniel Mudd was hit with a
red card and ejected for
touching the ball outside the
box during a Lee scoring
opportunity. Mudd allowed
one goal and had one save in
11:48 of work. Stephen
Sherer worked the final 78:12
in net and had five saves
while yielding three goals.
Following the match senior
co-captain Jon Finlay was
named Most Outstanding
Defensive Player of the Lee
Olive Garden Invitational.
Perez
claimed
Most
Outstanding Offensive Player
honors with two goals and two
assists. The Tournament MVP
was Halsall, who posted back
to back shutouts and 11
saves in the Flames two victories over the weekend.
Lee will get right back to
work on Tuesday as they host
NAIA member Dalton (Ga.)
State at 7 p.m. From there,
the early season gauntlet continues, with a trip to Boca
Raton, Fla., to square off with
the defending NCAA D2
National
Champs
Lynn
University next weekend.
“It’s not the smartest thing
I’ve ever done, scheduling five
games in nine days, so we are
where the field of 16 contenders
will be set. Kyle Busch, with four
victories, clinched a spot by
guaranteeing he would finish
among the top 30 drivers. Busch
missed the first 11 races after a
horrific crash in the Xfinity race
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
SEWANEE — Running for the
first time as official members of
NCAA Division II, the Lee
University cross country teams
outpaced the competition to win
the 35th Annual Sewanee
Invitational at the Sewanee Golf
Club.
The Lady Flames and Flames
will return to action on Sept. 12,
when they participate in the
Furman University Cross Country
Classic in Greenville, S.C.
In the women’s 6-kilometer race,
the Lady Flames posted a team
score of 33 with Rhodes right
behind at 36. University of North
Alabama was third (77 points) and
Lincoln Memorial was fourth with
a team score of 83. Host University
of the South placed fifth (141) and
LaGrange College was sixth (164).
Audrey Smith paced all runners
with a time of 22:52.87 for her first
See EDWARDS, Page 13
See SEWANEE, Page 13
AP photo
cARL EDWARDS celebrates in victory lane after winning the
Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway Sunday, in Darlington, S.C.
He said his team still has work
ahead.
“Just one spot short at the
end,” he said. “We’re right there.
We’ve just got to find one more
level to win these races and win
this championship.”
NASCAR’s regular season
ends next week at Richmond,
12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
on AIR
Sports on TV
Monday, Sept. 7
AUTo RACInG
4 p.m.
ESPN — NHRA Drag Racing, Chevrolet Performance U.S.
Nationals, at Indianapolis, Ind. (same day)
CoLLEGE FooTBALL
8 p.m.
ESPN — Ohio State at Virginia Tech
GoLF
11:30 a.m.
GOLF — PGA, Deutsche Bank Championship, final-round,
at Norton, Mass.
1:30 p.m.
NBC — PGA, Deutsche Bank Championship, final-round,
at Norton, Mass.
HoRSE RACInG
5 p.m.
FS1 — Horse Racing from Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
MAJoR LEAGUE BASEBALL
1 p.m.
ESPN — Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees
7 p.m.
SS — Atlanta at Philadelphia
SoCCER
12 p.m.
FS1 — Euro 2016, qualifying, Armenia vs Denmark
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — Euro 2016, qualifying, Scotland vs Germany
TEnnIS
11 a.m.
ESPN2 — U.S. Open Tennis, round of 16, at Flushing, N.Y.
5 p.m.
ESPN2 — U.S. Open Tennis, round of 16, at Flushing, N.Y.
on TAP
Monday, Sept. 7
SoCCER
Soddy-Daisy at Bradley Central (JV), 6
Tuesday, Sept. 8
GoLF
Bradley Central in McMinnville Tournament
Walker Valley at Soddy-Daisy (Bear Trace), 4
SoCCER
East Hamilton at Walker Valley, 5:30
CSAS at Polk County, 6
Bradley Central at McMinn County, 7 (JV 5)
Signal Mountain at Cleveland, 7 (JV 5)
VoLLEYBALL
McMinn County at Cleveland, 6 (JV 5)
Tellico Plains at Polk County, 6 (JV 5)
Bradley Central at Soddy-Daisy, 6 (JV 5)
Walker Valley at Ooltewah, 6:15 (9th 4:14, JV 5:15)
Wednesday, Sept. 9
GoLF
District 5-AAA Tournament at Bear Trace, Harrison Bay
Thursday, Sept. 10
GoLF
Cleveland at Soddy-Daisy (Bear Trace), 4
Polk County at McMinn Central, 4:15
SoCCER
Soddy-Daisy at Bradley Central, 6
Silverdale at Polk County, 6
Ooltewah at Walker Valley, 6
East Hamilton at Cleveland, 7
VoLLEYBALL
Polk County, Loudon at Sequoyah, 5
Cleveland at Ooltewah, 6:15 (9th 4:15, JV 5:15)
Walker Valley at Soddy-Daisy, 6:15 (9th 4:15, JV 5:15)
Friday, Sept. 11
FooTBALL
Sale Creek at TCPS, 7:30
Region 1-6A
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Maryville at Alcoa, 7:30
Dobyns-Bennett at Sevier County, 7:30
Farragut at Bearden, 7:30
Hardin Valley at South Doyle, 7:30
Jefferson County at Morristown-West, 7:30
Erwin, N.C. at Science Hill, 7:30
William Blount at Heritage, 7:30
Region 4-5A
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Coffee County at Walker Valley, 7:30
McMinn County at Lenoir City, 7:30
East Hamilton at Ooltewah, 7:30
Clinton at Rhea County, 7:30
Cookeville at White County, 7
Soddy-Daisy has bye
Region 3-2A
McMinn Central at Polk County, 7:30
Tyner at Signal Mountain, 7:30
Grace Baptist at Silverdale, 7:30
South Pittsburg at Marion County, 8
Whitwell at Bledsoe County, 8
Meigs County, Boyd Buchanan have byes
SoCCER
Newberry at Lee (W), 7
Wyndham Deerfield Beach Resort Soccer Classic
at Boca Raton, Fla.
Lee (M) vs. Palm Beach Atlantic, 4:30
Saturday, Sept. 12
SoCCER
Wyndham Deerfield Beach Resort Soccer Classic
at Boca Raton, Fla.
Lee (M) vs. Lynn, 7
VoLLEYBALL
Polk County in South Pittsburg Tournament
Sunday, Sept. 13
SoCCER
Lincoln Memorial at Lee (W), 6
BASEBALL
national League
East Division
W
L
Pct GB
New York
75
61 .551 —
Washington
71
65 .522 4
Miami
57
80 .416 18½
Atlanta
54
83 .394 21½
Philadelphia
53
84 .387 22½
Central Division
W
L
Pct GB
St. Louis
87
49 .640 —
Pittsburgh
81
54 .600 5½
Chicago
78
57 .578 8½
Milwaukee
60
76 .441 27
Cincinnati
56
79 .415 30½
West Division
W
L
Pct GB
Los Angeles
78
58 .574 —
San Francisco
71
66 .518 7½
Arizona
65
72 .474 13½
San Diego
65
72 .474 13½
Colorado
56
80 .412 22
Saturday’s Games
Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 6, 1st game
Chicago Cubs 2, Arizona 0
Boston 9, Philadelphia 2
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 1
Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 3, 2nd game
Washington 8, Atlanta 2
N.Y. Mets 7, Miami 0
San Francisco 7, Colorado 3
L.A. Dodgers 2, San Diego 0
Sunday’s Games
Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 3
Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3
Washington 8, Atlanta 4
Boston 6, Philadelphia 2
Chicago Cubs 6, Arizona 4
L.A. Dodgers 5, San Diego 1
San Francisco 7, Colorado 4
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Mets (Niese 8-10) at Washington (Scherzer 11-11),
1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Z.Davies 0-0) at Miami (Nicolino 3-2), 1:10
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Locke 7-9) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 7-10), 1:10
Chicago Cubs (Haren 8-9) at St. Louis (Lynn 11-8), 2:15
Colorado (K.Kendrick 4-12) at San Diego (Kennedy 8-12),
4:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Leake 9-7) at Arizona (Corbin 4-3), 4:10
Atlanta (W.Perez 4-6) at Philadelphia (Harang 5-14), 7:05
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 15-3) at L.A. Angels (Tropeano 1-2),
9:05 p.m.
nATIonAL LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-Harper, Washington, .339; DGordon, Miami,
.329; Posey, San Francisco, .326; Goldschmidt, Arizona,
.321; Votto, Cincinnati, .318; LeMahieu, Colorado, .317;
Pollock, Arizona, .315; YEscobar, Washington, .315.
RUNS-Harper, Washington, 101; Pollock, Arizona, 93;
Fowler, Chicago, 89; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 85; Votto,
Cincinnati, 85; Arenado, Colorado, 82; Braun, Milwaukee,
81; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 81.
RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 105; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 97;
Kemp, San Diego, 89; Bryant, Chicago, 86; CaGonzalez,
Colorado, 86; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 85; Harper,
Washington, 83; Rizzo, Chicago, 83.
HITS-DGordon, Miami, 169; Pollock, Arizona, 162;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 156; Markakis, Atlanta, 155; Posey,
San Francisco, 155; LeMahieu, Colorado, 154; Blackmon,
Colorado, 152.
DOUBLES-Frazier, Cincinnati, 39; Arenado, Colorado, 34;
MCarpenter, St. Louis, 33; Harper, Washington, 33;
McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 33; Bruce, Cincinnati, 32; Pollock,
Arizona, 32.
TRIPLES-DPeralta, Arizona, 9; Blackmon, Colorado, 8;
DGordon, Miami, 8; Fowler, Chicago, 7; Grichuk, St. Louis,
7; 7 tied at 6.
HOME RUNS-Arenado, Colorado, 36; CaGonzalez,
Colorado, 36; Harper, Washington, 34; Frazier, Cincinnati,
30; Rizzo, Chicago, 28; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 27; Stanton,
Miami, 27; Votto, Cincinnati, 27.
STOLEN BASES-BHamilton, Cincinnati, 54; DGordon,
Miami, 48; Blackmon, Colorado, 36; Pollock, Arizona, 33;
SMarte, Pittsburgh, 26; Revere, Philadelphia, 24;
GPolanco, Pittsburgh, 23.
PITCHING-Arrieta, Chicago, 18-6; Bumgarner, San
Francisco, 17-7; GCole, Pittsburgh, 16-8; Greinke, Los
Angeles, 15-3; Wacha, St. Louis, 15-4; CMartinez, St.
Louis, 13-7; BColon, New York, 13-11.
ERA-Greinke, Los Angeles, 1.59; Arrieta, Chicago, 2.03;
Kershaw, Los Angeles, 2.18; deGrom, New York, 2.40;
GCole, Pittsburgh, 2.54; Harvey, New York, 2.60; Wacha,
St. Louis, 2.69.
STRIKEOUTS-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 251; Scherzer,
Washington, 219; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 203; Arrieta,
Chicago, 197; Shields, San Diego, 188; TRoss, San Diego,
179; deGrom, New York, 175; GCole, Pittsburgh, 175.
SAVES-Melancon, Pittsburgh, 43; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 42;
Familia, New York, 36; Kimbrel, San Diego, 36;
FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 34; Casilla, San Francisco, 32;
Storen, Washington, 29; Jansen, Los Angeles, 29.
American League
East Division
W
L
Pct GB
Toronto
78
58 .574 —
New York
76
59 .563 1½
Tampa Bay
67
69 .493 11
Baltimore
65
71 .478 13
Boston
64
72 .471 14
Central Division
W
L
Pct GB
82
54 .603 —
70
66 .515 12
66
69 .489 15½
65
70 .481 16½
62
74 .456 20
West Division
W
L
Pct GB
Houston
75
62 .547 —
Texas
71
64 .526 3
Los Angeles
69
67 .507 5½
Seattle
66
71 .482 9
Oakland
58
79 .423 17
Saturday’s Games
Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2
Toronto 5, Baltimore 1
Boston 9, Philadelphia 2
Detroit 6, Cleveland 0
Chicago White Sox 6, Kansas City 1
Minnesota 3, Houston 2
Seattle 8, Oakland 3
Texas 2, L.A. Angels 1
Sunday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 4
Toronto 10, Baltimore 4
Cleveland 4, Detroit 0
Boston 6, Philadelphia 2
Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 5
Houston 8, Minnesota 5
L.A. Angels 7, Texas 0
Seattle 3, Oakland 2
Monday’s Games
Baltimore (W.Chen 8-7) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 10-8),
1:05
Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-2) at Detroit (Wolf 0-3), 1:08 p.m.
Toronto (Buehrle 14-6) at Boston (Porcello 6-12), 1:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Bauer 10-11) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 12-7),
2:10 p.m.
Houston (Fiers 2-0) at Oakland (Doubront 2-1), 4:05 p.m.
Texas (Gallardo 11-9) at Seattle (Elias 4-7), 6:40 p.m.
Minnesota (Milone 7-4) at Kansas City (Ventura 10-7), 8:10
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 15-3) at L.A. Angels (Tropeano 1-2),
9:05 p.m.
AMERICAn LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-MiCabrera, Detroit, .353; Bogaerts, Boston, .320;
Brantley, Cleveland, .319; Altuve, Houston, .315; LCain,
Kansas City, .312; Fielder, Texas, .312; Kipnis, Cleveland,
.311.
RUNS-Donaldson, Toronto, 105; Bautista, Toronto, 93;
Dozier, Minnesota, 92; Trout, Los Angeles, 88; LCain,
Kansas City, 87; Gardner, New York, 85; Kinsler, Detroit, 85.
RBI-Donaldson, Toronto, 114; CDavis, Baltimore, 100;
KMorales, Kansas City, 99; Bautista, Toronto, 94;
Encarnacion, Toronto, 93; JMartinez, Detroit, 89;
BMcCann, New York, 86; Ortiz, Boston, 86.
HITS-Altuve, Houston, 167; Bogaerts, Boston, 163; Kinsler,
Detroit, 163; Donaldson, Toronto, 159; NCruz, Seattle, 158;
Fielder, Texas, 158; Hosmer, Kansas City, 155; MMachado,
Baltimore, 155.
DOUBLES-Brantley, Cleveland, 42; Donaldson, Toronto,
38; KMorales, Kansas City, 38; Kipnis, Cleveland, 37;
Betts, Boston, 34; Dozier, Minnesota, 34; Kinsler, Detroit,
33.
TRIPLES-Kiermaier, Tampa Bay, 12; ERosario, Minnesota,
11; RDavis, Detroit, 9; DeShields, Texas, 9; Gattis,
Houston, 9; Betts, Boston, 8; Burns, Oakland, 8; Eaton,
Chicago, 8.
HOME RUNS-CDavis, Baltimore, 40; NCruz, Seattle, 39;
Donaldson, Toronto, 36; JMartinez, Detroit, 35; Pujols, Los
Angeles, 35; Trout, Los Angeles, 34; Bautista, Toronto, 33.
STOLEN BASES-Altuve, Houston, 36; LCain, Kansas City,
26; Burns, Oakland, 25; JDyson, Kansas City, 23;
DeShields, Texas, 22; Gose, Detroit, 20; RDavis, Detroit,
18; Gardner, New York, 18; Pillar, Toronto, 18.
PITCHING-Keuchel, Houston, 17-6; FHernandez, Seattle,
16-8; McHugh, Houston, 15-7; Eovaldi, New York, 14-3;
Price, Toronto, 14-5; Buehrle, Toronto, 14-6; Lewis, Texas,
14-8.
ERA-Keuchel, Houston, 2.29; SGray, Oakland, 2.36; Price,
Toronto, 2.43; Price, Toronto, 2.43; Kazmir, Houston, 2.50;
Kazmir, Houston, 2.50; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.88.
STRIKEOUTS-Sale, Chicago, 239; Archer, Tampa Bay,
228; Kluber, Cleveland, 219; Price, Toronto, 196; Keuchel,
Houston, 185; Carrasco, Cleveland, 173; Salazar,
Cleveland, 173.
SAVES-Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 34; Perkins, Minnesota, 32;
Street, Los Angeles, 32; AMiller, New York, 31; Britton,
Baltimore, 30; DavRobertson, Chicago, 29; GHolland,
Kansas City, 29; ShTolleson, Texas, 29.
Kansas City
Minnesota
Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit
FooTBALL
The AP Top 25 Fared
Saturday
No. 1 Ohio St. (0-0) at Virginia Tech, Monday. Next: vs.
Hawaii, Saturday.
No. 2 TCU (1-0) beat Minnesota 23-17, Thursday. Next: vs.
Stephen F. Austin, Saturday.
No. 3 Alabama (1-0) beat No. 20 Wisconsin 35-17. Next:
vs. Middle Tennessee, Saturday.
No. 4 Baylor (1-0) beat SMU 56-21, Friday. Next: vs.
Lamar, Saturday.
No. 5 Michigan St. (1-0) beat Western Michigan 37-24,
Friday. Next: vs. No. 7 Oregon, Saturday.
No. 6 Auburn (1-0) beat Louisville 31-24 at Atlanta. Next:
vs. Jacksonville State, Saturday.
No. 7 Oregon (1-0) beat Eastern Washington 61-42. Next:
at No. 5 Michigan State, Saturday.
No. 8 Southern Cal (1-0) beat Arkansas State 55-6. Next:
vs. Idaho, Saturday.
No. 9 Georgia (1-0) beat Louisiana-Monroe 51-14. Next: at
Vanderbilt, Saturday.
No. 10 Florida State (1-0) beat Texas State 59-16. Next: at
South Florida, Saturday.
No. 11 Notre Dame (1-0) beat Texas 38-3. Next: at Virginia,
Saturday.
No. 12 Clemson (1-0) beat Wofford 49-10. Next: vs.
Appalachian State, Saturday.
No. 13 UCLA (1-0) beat Virginia 34-16. Next: at UNLV,
Saturday.
No. 14 LSU (0-0) vs. McNeese State, cancelled due to
lightning. Next: at Mississippi State, Saturday.
No. 15 Arizona State (0-1) lost to Texas A&M 38-17. Next:
vs. Cal Poly, Saturday.
No. 16 Georgia Tech (1-0) beat Alcorn State 69-6,
Thursday. Next: vs. Tulane, Saturday.
No. 17 Mississippi (1-0) beat UT Martin 76-3. Next: vs.
Fresno State, Saturday.
No. 18 Arkansas (1-0) beat UTEP 48-13. Next: vs. Toledo
at Little Rock, Ark., Saturday.
No. 19 Oklahoma (1-0) beat Akron 41-3. Next: at No. 25
Tennessee, Saturday.
No. 20 Wisconsin (0-1) lost to No. 3 Alabama 35-17. Next:
vs. Miami (Ohio), Saturday.
No. 21 Stanford (0-1) lost to Northwestern 16-6. Next: vs.
UCF, Saturday.
No. 22 Arizona (1-0) beat UTSA 42-32, Thursday. Next: at
Nevada, Saturday.
No. 23 Boise State (1-0) beat Washington 16-13, Friday.
Next: at BYU, Saturday.
No. 24 Missouri (1-0) beat Southeast Missouri 34-3. Next:
at Arkansas State, Saturday.
No. 25 Tennessee (1-0) beat Bowling Green 59-30. Next:
vs. No. 19 Oklahoma, Saturday.
GoLF
PGA Tour-Deutsche Bank Championship Par Scores
Sunday
At TPC Boston
norton, Mass.
Purse: $8.25 million
Yardage: 7,242; Par 71
Third Round
Henrik Stenson
67-68-65—200 -13
Rickie Fowler
67-67-67—201 -12
Sean O’Hair
68-67-67—202 -11
Matt Jones
67-67-68—202 -11
Russell Knox
70-65-68—203 -10
Jerry Kelly
71-66-68—205 -8
Daniel Berger
68-69-68—205 -8
Hideki Matsuyama
71-65-69—205 -8
Danny Lee
70-66-69—205 -8
Kevin Chappell
67-67-71—205 -8
Hunter Mahan
69-73-64—206 -7
Matt Kuchar
69-72-65—206 -7
Patrick Reed
72-67-67—206 -7
Hudson Swafford
69-69-68—206 -7
Jim Furyk
71-65-70—206 -7
Charley Hoffman
67-63-76—206 -7
Brendon de Jonge
65-68-73—206 -7
Louis Oosthuizen
73-67-67—207 -6
Gary Woodland
68-70-69—207 -6
Kevin Kisner
71-71-66—208 -5
Dustin Johnson
70-70-68—208 -5
Sangmoon Bae
69-70-69—208 -5
Ian Poulter
67-72-69—208 -5
Zach Johnson
69-65-74—208 -5
Rory Sabbatini
69-74-66—209 -4
William McGirt
73-70-66—209 -4
Troy Merritt
74-67-68—209 -4
Harris English
67-74-68—209 -4
Daniel Summerhays
71-68-70—209 -4
Brendan Steele
70-67-72—209 -4
Jason Day
68-68-73—209 -4
Chris Kirk
74-69-67—210 -3
Cameron Tringale
75-66-69—210 -3
Charles Howell III
70-70-70—210 -3
Zac Blair
70-69-71—210 -3
Luke Donald
67-71-72—210 -3
Scott Pinckney
75-70-66—211 -2
Davis Love III
69-75-67—211 -2
J.B. Holmes
74-68-69—211 -2
Nick Watney
72-70-69—211 -2
Carl Pettersson
72-70-69—211 -2
Carlos Ortiz
74-67-70—211 -2
Justin Thomas
72-70-69—211 -2
Ben Martin
73-68-70—211 -2
Brian Harman
70-70-71—211 -2
Keegan Bradley
71-66-74—211 -2
John Senden
76-69-67—212 -1
Brandt Snedeker
71-73-68—212 -1
Kevin Streelman
73-70-69—212 -1
Pat Perez
71-71-70—212 -1
Alex Cejka
70-70-72—212 -1
Kevin Na
72-68-72—212 -1
Kyle Reifers
71-73-69—213 E
Camilo Villegas
72-72-69—213 E
Spencer Levin
73-71-69—213 E
Phil Mickelson
70-73-70—213 E
Webb Simpson
74-69-70—213 E
Bubba Watson
73-69-71—213 E
Robert Streb
69-72-72—213 E
Jason Dufner
69-70-74—213 E
Bill Haas
73-71-70—214 +1
Chesson Hadley
73-71-70—214 +1
Brendon Todd
70-74-70—214 +1
Rory McIlroy
70-74-71—215 +2
Shawn Stefani
70-74-71—215 +2
Colt Knost
67-73-75—215 +2
Ryan Palmer
68-77-71—216 +3
Scott Brown
70-72-74—216 +3
Johnson Wagner
72-73-72—217 +4
Boo Weekley
74-71-72—217 +4
Fabian Gomez
76-69-73—218 +5
Billy Horschel
73-68-77—218 +5
Mark Wilson
71-74-74—219 +6
Morgan Hoffmann
69-74-76—219 +6
nASCAR
nASCAR Sprint Cup-Bojangles’ Southern 500 Results
Sunday
At Darlington Raceway
Darlington, S.C.
Lap length: 1.366 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (13) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 367 laps, 106 rating, 47 points,
$279,625.
2. (1) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 367, 137.4, 44, $252,981.
3. (6) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 367, 114.7, 42, $180,915.
4. (4) Joey Logano, Ford, 367, 118.1, 41, $182,073.
5. (3) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 367, 123.6, 40, $175,190.
6. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 367, 116.4, 39, $133,365.
7. (10) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 367, 96.8, 38, $149,731.
8. (26) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 367, 91.6, 36, $120,165.
9. (7) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 367, 106.6, 35, $129,660.
10. (16) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 367, 99.6, 35, $128,873.
11. (11) Aric Almirola, Ford, 367, 85.2, 33, $137,141.
12. (15) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 367, 78.9, 33, $112,935.
13. (23) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 367, 78.3, 31, $130,635.
14. (20) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 367, 81.3, 30, $127,726.
15. (17) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 367, 91, 30, $125,249.
16. (5) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 367, 96.8, 28, $140,571.
17. (28) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 367, 71.1, 27, $129,493.
18. (24) Greg Biffle, Ford, 367, 75.1, 26, $126,018.
19. (19) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 367, 80.3, 25, $137,996.
20. (31) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 367, 60.7, 0, $93,710.
21. (14) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 367, 73.6, 23, $134,996.
22. (29) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 367, 62.8, 22, $128,846.
23. (34) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 367, 54, 21, $124,018.
24. (35) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 367, 49.9, 20, $106,818.
25. (25) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 367, 50.1, 19, $105,613.
26. (12) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 367, 59.3, 18, $97,255.
27. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 367, 42.7, 18, $108,213.
28. (33) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 367, 58.5, 16, $114,200.
29. (32) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 366, 53.2, 15, $105,202.
30. (9) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 366, 66.6, 0, $85,955.
31. (41) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 364, 34.9, 13, $86,755.
32. (42) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, 363, 35.5, 0, $84,055.
33. (27) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 354, 39.6, 11, $91,855.
34. (36) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 348, 33.8, 0, $83,655.
35. (18) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 342, 52, 9, $128,035.
36. (40) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 332, 31.2, 8, $83,360.
37. (43) T.J. Bell, Ford, 325, 28.7, 7, $83,138.
38. (8) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 313, 54.5, 6, $86,348.
39. (39) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 300, 34.7, 5, $74,285.
40. (21) David Ragan, Toyota, accident, 275, 73.6, 4,
$97,499.
41. (22) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, accident, 227, 45.4, 0,
$66,285.
42. (30) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, accident, 190, 39.3, 2,
$70,285.
43. (37) Cole Whitt, Ford, accident, 5, 23.5, 1, $58,785.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 111.993 mph.
Time of Race: 4 hours, 28 minutes, 35 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 0.902 seconds.
Caution Flags: 18 for 89 laps.
Lead Changes: 24 among 11 drivers.
Lap Leaders: B.Keselowski 1-62; C.Edwards 63-65; K.Kahne
66-67; D.Hamlin 68-109; K.Harvick 110; D.Hamlin 111-117;
B.Keselowski 118-137; K.Harvick 138-139; B.Keselowski
140-193; Ku.Busch 194; B.Keselowski 195-202; Ku.Busch
203-208; K.Larson 209-211; T.Stewart 212-221; D.Hamlin
222-229; K.Harvick 230-247; J.Logano 248-266; Ky.Busch
267-269; J.Logano 270-279; K.Harvick 280-302; D.Gilliland
303; B.Keselowski 304-344; C.Edwards 345; B.Keselowski
346-356; C.Edwards 357-367.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led):
B.Keselowski, 6 times for 196 laps; D.Hamlin, 3 times for 57
laps; K.Harvick, 4 times for 44 laps; J.Logano, 2 times for 29
laps; C.Edwards, 3 times for 15 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 10
laps; Ku.Busch, 2 times for 7 laps; Ky.Busch, 1 time for 3 laps;
K.Larson, 1 time for 3 laps; K.Kahne, 1 time for 2 laps;
D.Gilliland, 1 time for 1 lap.
Wins: Ky.Busch, 4; J.Johnson, 4; M.Kenseth, 3; J.Logano, 3;
Ku.Busch, 2; D.Earnhardt Jr., 2; C.Edwards, 2; K.Harvick, 2;
D.Hamlin, 1; B.Keselowski, 1; M.Truex Jr., 1.
Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 948; 2. J.Logano, 906; 3.
D.Earnhardt Jr., 855; 4. B.Keselowski, 837; 5. J.Johnson,
817; 6. M.Truex Jr., 806; 7. M.Kenseth, 776; 8. D.Hamlin, 754;
9. Ku.Busch, 752; 10. J.McMurray, 726; 11. R.Newman, 714;
12. C.Edwards, 713; 13. J.Gordon, 700; 14. P.Menard, 692;
15. C.Bowyer, 682; 16. A.Almirola, 653.
TRAnSACTIonS
Sunday’s Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
NEW YORK YANKEES — Recalled RHP Nick Goody from
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
TEXAS RANGERS — Recalled RHP Tanner Scheppers from
Round Rock (PCL).
national League
MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Activated RHP Tyler Cravy from
the 15-day DL.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Activated OF Randal Grichuk
from the 15-day DL.
FooTBALL
national Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS — Claimed OT Bryce Harris off waivers
from New Orleans.
BALTIMORE RAVENS — Signed S Nick Perry, WR Jeremy
Butler, QB Bryn Renner, LB Brennen Beyer, OL Kaleb
Johnson, OL De’Ondre Wesley and TE Konrad Reuland to
the practice squad.
BUFFALO BILLS — Claimed C Gabe Ikard off waivers from
Tennessee. Signed WR Dezmin Lewis, G Cyril Richardson,
LB Kevin Reddick, S Jonathan Meeks and RB Cierre Wood to
the practice squad. Waived WR Austin Willis from the injured
reserve list.
CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed DT Chas Alecxih, WR
Brenton Bersin, LB Brian Blechen, CB Carrington Byndom,
WR Damiere Byrd, DE Rakim Cox, OT David Foucault, LB
Adarius Glanton, TE Scott Simonson and CB Lou Young to
the practice squad.
CHICAGO BEARS — Claimed DB Harold Jones-Quartey off
waivers from Arizona and G Patrick Omameh off waivers from
Tampa Bay. Terminated the contract of S Sherrod Martin.
Waived OT Jordan Mills.
CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed DT DeShawn Williams,
RB Terrell Watson, WR Jake Kumerow, TE Matt Lengel, LB
Trevor Roach, CB Troy Hill, QB Keith Wenning, RB James
Wilder Jr., G-OT Dan France and G-C Trey Hopkins to the
practice squad. Waived CB-WR Onterio McCalebb. Placed
LBs Marquis Flowers and Jayson DiManche on injured
reserve.
CLEVELAND BROWNS — Claimed OT Austin Pasztor off
waivers from Jacksonville. Traded RB Terrance West to
Tennessee for a 2016 seventh-round draft pick. Signed RB
Shaun Draughn, DBs James Kendall and De’Ante Saunders,
WR Darius Jennings, OLs Erle Ladson, Andrew McDonald
and Darrian Miller and LB Hayes Pullard III to the practice
squad.
DALLAS COWBOYS — Waived DE Lavar Edwards. Acquired
RB Christine Michael from Seattle for an undisclosed 2016
draft pick.
DENVER BRONCOS — Waived RB Montee Ball and C Gino
Gradkowski. Claimed C James Ferentz off waivers from
Houston and TE Mitchell Henry from Green Bay.
DETOIT LIONS — Signed WR Andrew Peacock, DL Larry
Webster, TE Casey Pierce, DL Kerry Hyder, DB Isaiah
Johnson, OL Braxston Cave and RB George Wynn to the
practice squad.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Claimed DT T.Y. McGill off waivers
from Seattle and G Robert Myers off waivers from Baltimore.
Waived-injured RB Boom Herron. Waived LB Amarlo Herrera.
Signed LB Daniel Adongo, G David Arkin, WR Quan Bray, WR
Duron Carter, OT Ulrick John, S Dewey McDonald, LB Josh
McNary, CB Eric Patterson, DT Jeris Pendleton and TE Erik
Swoope to the practice squad.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Signed DL Richard Ash, TE
Ben Koyack, DB Craig Loston, OL Chris Reed, WR Neal
Sterling, LB Todd Thomas, DB Peyton Thompson and WR
Tony Washington to the practice squad.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Claimed TE Brian Parker off
waivers from San Diego.
MIAMI DOLPHINS — Claimed QB Logan Thomas off waivers
from Arizona. Placed RB Jay Ajayi on injured reserve-return.
Signed QB McLeod Bethel-Thompson, OL Sam Brenner, DT
Deandre Coleman, LB Mike Hull, TE Tim Semisch, TE Jake
Stoneburner, OT Aundrey Walker and S Cedric Thompson to
the practice squad.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed DE B.J. DuBose, G Isame
Faciane, WR Isaac Fruechte, S Anthony Harris, LB Brian
Peters, FB Blake Renaud, LB Brandon Watts, RB Dominique
Williams and OL David Yankey to the practice squad.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Claimed DT Khyri Thornton
off waivers from Green Bay.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Claimed DE Obum Gwacham off
waivers from Seattle and LB Michael Mauti off waivers from
Minnesota.
NEW YORK GIANTS — Claimed DB Asa Jackson off waivers
from Baltimore and DT Louis Nix off waivers from Houston.
Released DT Kenrick Ellis. Waived CB Mike Harris. Signed
OL Adam Gettis, OL Emmett Cleary, WR Julian Talley, DE
Brad Bars, LB Cole Farrand and DB C.J. Conway to the practice squad.
NEW YORK JETS — Claimed DB Ronald Martin off waivers
from Seattle. Released S Rontez Miles. Signed WR-KR Chris
Owusu. Placed CB Dee Milliner on injured reserve-return.
Signed LB Deion Barnes, FB-LB Julian Howsare, G Wesley
Johnson, LB Taiwan Jones, CB Keon Lynn, WR Walter
Powell, TE Wes Saxton and DE Jordan Williams to the practice squad.
OAKLAND RAIDERS — Claimed S Keenan Lambert off
waivers from Seattle. Waived CB SaQwan Edwards.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Claimed QB Stephen Morris off
waivers from Jacksonville. Signed G Brett Boyko, G Malcolm
Bunche, CB Randall Evans, WR Freddie Martino, DE Brian
Mihalik, RB Raheem Mostert, TE Chris Pantale, WR Quron
Pratt, S Ed Reynolds, LB Deonte Skinner to the practice
squad.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Claimed DE Caushaud Lyons
off waivers from Tampa Bay. Placed C Maurkice Pouncey on
injured reserve-return. Signed RB Jordan Todman and C-G
Doug Legursky. Released CB Doran Grant. Waived LB r
Anthony Chickillo. Signed RB Dominique Brown, DB Jordan
Dangerfield, OL Reese Dismukes, OL Antonio Johnson, LB
L.J. Fort, LB Shayon Green, DE Ethan Hemer, WR Shakim
Phillips, WR Jarrod West and TE Harold Spears to the practice squad.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Signed CB Greg Ducre, WR
Javontee Herndon, G Michael Huey, LB Ryan Mueller, S
Adrian Phillips, RB Dreamius Smith and NT Damion Square
to the practice squad.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed WR DiAndre Campbell,
CB Marcus Cromartie, RB Kendall Gaskins, DT Kaleb
Ramsey, LB Marcus Rush, NT Garrison Smith, QB Dylan
Thompson, G Andrew Tiller and S Jermaine Whitehead to the
practice squad.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed TE RaShaun Allen, G-C
Will Pericak, LB Eric Pinkins, OT Terry Poole, WR Kevin
Smith, RB Rod Smith and WR Kasen Williams to the practice
squad.
ST. LOUIS RAMS — Signed OT Isaiah Battle, RB Malcolm
Brown, S Christian Bryant, S Jacob Hagen, TE Justice
Cunningham, FB Zach Laskey, DE Matt Longacre, CB Trovon
Reed, DT Louis Trinca-Pasat and DT Doug Worthington to the
practice squad.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Claimed DE Kourtnei Brown
off waivers from Houston, LB Jeremiah George off waivers
from Jacksonville, QB Ryan Griffin off waivers from New
Orleans, LB James-Michael Johnson and C Eric Kush off
waivers from Kansas City. Released TE Cameron Brate, G
Kadeem Edwards, OT Reid Fragel, WR Rannell Hall and LB
Jason Williams.
Stenson takes lead
at Deutsche Bank
NORTON, Mass. (AP) — One
3-wood quickly put Henrik
Stenson into the mix at the
Deutsche Bank Championship.
Another one helped to give him
the lead.
Stenson drilled a 3-wood on
the 298-yard fourth hole at the
TPC Boston that hit into the
bank and rolled up to 20 feet for
an eagle that allowed him to bolt
up the leaderboard. The Swede
showed off his supreme
strength on the par-5 closing
hole with a 3-wood off the tee
that left him only a 6-iron into
the green for a two-putt birdie
that gave him a 6-under 65 and
a one-shot lead over Rickie
Fowler.
Five shots behind going into
the third round Sunday,
Stenson made up that deficit in
just seven holes. He can only
hope to make up that kind of
ground on a winless season
during the final month of the
FedEx Cup playoffs.
“It’s a good time to start playing well,” said Stenson, who was
at 13-under 200. “It’s a big
event and lots to play for. I’m
happy with the progress I made
and it gave me a little bit of a
confidence boost last week that
I had a nice tournament. I hope
I can have another one here
tomorrow.”
Fowler had a 67, missing out
on a chance to share the lead
when his 5-iron into the 18th
was too strong and he had to
scramble to salvage a par.
Sean O’Hair (67) and Matt
Jones (68) were two shots
behind.
They all took advantage of a
collapse by Charley Hoffman,
who blazed his way to victory at
the TPC Boston five years ago.
After opening with a birdie,
Hoffman put his second shot
into the hazard at the par-5 second hole and made bogey, and it
slipped away from there. He
shot 41 on front, had five
bogeys in a seven-hole stretch
and didn’t make another birdie
until his last hole for a 76.
Jordan Spieth was headed for
a return to No. 1, and he’s not
even here after missing his second straight cut.
PGA champion Jason Day
would have to win the Deutsche
Bank to go to No. 1 in the world,
and the Australian finally hit
the wall. Day made a double
bogey on the reachable par-4
fourth hole and never quite
recovered. He had a 73, his first
round over par since closing
with a 74 at the U.S. Open in
June.
“There’s no excuse for poor
playing,” said Day, who was
nine shots out of the lead. “I just
wish I had a little bit more energy.”
Rory McIlroy needs to finish
10th alone to remain No. 1, but
he had to birdie his last two
holes for a 71. He was 15 shots
out of the lead. McIlroy, playing
for only the second time since
the U.S. Open because of an
ankle injury, had made only
nine birdies in 54 holes.
The biggest move might have
been Hunter Mahan, the only
player to never miss a FedEx
Cup playoff event since the
series began in 2007. Mahan
faces elimination this week as
only the top 70 advance to the
third tournament, and he came
in at No. 91. But he found a
AP photo
HEnRIK STEnSon chips onto the first green during the third
round of the Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Mass.,
Sunday.
swing key on the practice, holed
some putts and shot a 64 to bolt
up the leaderboard into a tie for
11th. He has a chance to at
least advance to Chicago in two
weeks.
Stenson, however, grabbed
most of the attention. He won
the Deutsche Bank two years
ago, and converted that into a
$10 million bonus when he
dominated the field at East Lake
to win the Tour Championship.
The runner-up finish (by six
shots) to Day at The Barclays
put Stenson in good shape for
the FedEx Cup, and this could
only help.
It’s a big course that favors
big hitters, and Stenson is
smashing it at the moment.
He made his move with a 7iron into 6 feet on the par-3
third, and then drilling a 3-wood
that climbed onto the green at
the par-4 fourth hole and settled
20 feet away, setting up an
eagle. He closed out the front
nine with two more birdies, and
Fowler was keeping pace behind
him.
Stenson kept his cool on the
back nine as the putts stopped
falling. He missed four good
birdie chances from 12 feet or
in, but after another big 3-wood
off the tee at the 18th, he hit 6iron to the middle of the green
for his two-putt birdie and the
lead.
Fowler chipped through the
18th green and his ball got hung
up in the rough. He did well to
get up-and-down for a par to get
in the last group with Stenson.
“He’s a strong, powerful player,” Fowler said. “And obviously,
he’s playing well this week to be
in the position he’s in. I’m looking forward to the two of us
playing well, go head-to-head
and seeing if one of us will be
the one to come out on top.”
Still in range was Russell
Knox, who hit one of the best
shots of the week behind the
18th green. From about the spot
Fowler was in, Knox drilled a
pitch into the hill to kill the
speed and watching it trickle
down the slope to 3 feet for
birdie and a 68 to get within
three shots of the lead.
Slatery wins Russian Open
MOSCOW (AP) — England’s
Lee Slattery won the Russian
Open for his second European
Tour title, shooting a 2-under 69
for a one-stroke victory over
Argentina’s Estanislao Goya.
Slattery finished at 15-under
269 at Jack Nicklaus-designed
Skolkovo. Goya closed with a
68.
England’s David Horsey, the
winner last year at Tseleevo, was
third at 13 under after a 68. He
won two weeks ago in Denmark
for his fourth European Tour
victory.
Westrup earns LPGA win
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) —
Norway’s Caroline Westrup won
the Symetra Tour’s Sioux Falls
GreatLife Challenge by two
strokes for her first professional
title.
The 29-year-old former
Florida State player won four
weeks after applying for a job as
an assistant college coach and
coming close to quitting professional golf.
Westrup closed with a 2under 69 for a 12-under 272
total at Willow Run. She earned
a tour-record $31,500 to jump
from 56th to 14th on the money
list with $41,846. The top 10 at
the end of the season will receive
2016 LPGA Tour cards.
Sweden’s Dani Holmqvist was
second after a 70. She earned
$19,376 to jump from 17th to
sixth on the money list with
$50,970. Italy’s Giulia Molinaro
shot a 70 to finish third at 9
under. She earned $14,102 to
take the money lead with
$66,732, more than enough to
earn an LPGA Tour card.
Hawks fall to undefeated Rockwood Tigers
Special to the Banner
The Tennessee Christian
Preparatory School Hawks took
to the field Friday night against
the Rockwood Tigers for their
second battle with a stateranked opponent this year.
The Tigers had previously
outscored their other two opponents 82-6 in the first two games
and came away Friday with a 4817 victory.
Although the Hawks did not
come away with the win, there
were bright spots throughout the
game that kept the team’s determination for a breakout first season in sight.
The Hawks (0-3) kicked off to
the Tigers to open the game. A
few plays later, Rockwood running back Isiah Jones rushed up
the sideline for the first score of
the game. On their ensuing
drive, TCPS took their opening
drive all the way to the
Rockwood 25-yard line before
punting. Rockwood (3-0) scored
twice through the air on passes
that were nearly broken up or
intercepted. At the end of the
first quarter Rockwood led 21-0.
Tennessee Christian got on
the board after moving down-
field. A 27-yard run by running
back Jamey Billups helped move
the Hawks into Tiger territory.
Quarterback Luke Benton found
receiver Nate Boyd for a 24-yard
pickup through the air to put the
Hawks on the Rockwood 17-yard
line. A false start penalty on the
next play moved the ball back to
the 22. After failing to convert
the first down, TCPS elected to
attempt a field goal from the 17.
Kicker Lam Nguyen split the
uprights to put TCPS on the
board.
Rockwood scored three more
times before the half, but not
before Hawk safety Zadarius
Williams returned an interception 99 yards for a touchdown.
Nguyen’s PAT was good. The
Hawks headed into the half down
42-10. The second half saw each
team score one more time, with
running back Jordan Elam diving in from two yards out.
After the game, Coach Toby
McKenzie had positive things to
say to his team. “We have played
two ranked teams in three weeks
guys. It’s been tough, but you
have fought all the way to the
last second,” he told the Hawks.
“And I’m so proud of you for
that. Now that we’ve gotten those
out of the way, let’s go forward
from here with a new sense of
purpose. New attitudes and a
new work ethic. Our “W” is coming, and let’s work hard to make
sure it’s next week.”
Asked how the team is
responding to starting the season 0-3, McKenzie said, “Well,
it’s obviously never fun to leave
the field with a loss, but the
players and the staff aren’t packing it in anytime soon. We came
so close last week at Oliver
Springs. We were up at the half
12-7, but things didn’t go our
way in the second half, and we
have to learn from those mistakes and go on to the next
game,” he said. “We have some
real talent on the team and I
truly believe we will get our program’s first varsity win this season. Stay tuned.”
The Hawks will have their first
home game of the season next
Friday, Sept. 11, when they host
Sale Creek (1-2) at Charleston
Field. Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m.
TIGERS 48, HAWKS 17
Passing: Luke Benton, 7-12 101 2 int; Rashad Marshall, 510 44 (TC); Rushing: Jamey Billups, 7-46; Marshall, 8-31;
Jordan Elam, 5-12 TD (TC); Receiving: Nate Boyd, 5-78;
Zadarius Williams, 2-32; Luke Benton 2-27 (TC); Defense:
Billups, 8 tackles; Andy Chase, 7 tackles; Emmanuel
Ospina, 6 tackles; Williams 1 INT (TC).
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—13
Plummeting Braves’ skid reaches 12 games
WASHINGTON (AP) — Atlanta’s
A.J. Pierzynski has been catching
in the majors for 16 years and
never had to deal with anything
like what the Braves are going
through.
Sunday’s
8-4
loss
to
Washington was Atlanta’s 12th
straight, it’s longest in 27 years.
“Never seen anything like this,”
Pierzynski said, shaking his head
in disgust. “Just keep battling,
come (to the park) tomorrow and
try and win.”
The Braves (54-83) lost all 10
games in Washington this year,
the first time since 1990 that
they’ve been swept by a division
foe on the road.
Nick Swisher singled in Nick
Markakis in the first to give the
Braves the lead, but the Nationals
responded with five runs in the
second and two more in the third.
Atlanta was never within three
runs again.
“We’ve gotten a lot of people on
base throughout this losing
streak,” said Braves manager
Freddi Gonzalez. “But you gotta
have somebody drive them in and
we haven’t had that person. (And)
today we played sloppy.”
The Braves didn’t help themselves with three errors.
Michael Taylor put Washington
ahead to stay with a two-run double in the second. Pitcher Joe
Ross was hit by loser Manny
Banuelos (1-4) with two out, and
Jayson Werth followed with a
drive to left for his seventh homer.
Werth is hitting .329 (23 for 70)
with four homers and 10 RBIs
since moving into the leadoff spot
17 games ago.
Bryce Harper opened the third
with a drive to center on an 0-2
pitch for his 34th homer of the
season. The All-Star slugger was
7-for-11 and scored nine times in
the four-game set against Atlanta.
“I’m glad my dad doesn’t speak
English (so) he can’t listen to this
interview,” Gonzalez said. “But I’m
sure he’s watching games at home
and going, ‘How many (big hits) on
0-2 pitches are you going to give
up? ‘ “
Michael Bourn singled in
Swisher in the fourth, but
Anthony Rendon homered in the
bottom half for Washington.
Five Washington relievers combined for 4 2-3 innings of two-hit
ball, with Felipe Rivero (2-1) picking up the win.
Washington expects to pitch
Max
Scherzer,
Jordan
Zimmermann and Stephen
Strasburg, all of whom have been
All-Stars, against New York.
Jonathon Niese goes Monday for
the Mets who’ll follow with Matt
Harvey and Jacob deGrom.
“We got a big series coming up,”
Werth said. “We’re just going to
keep grinding ‘em out. I’ve been
saying all along at some point
we’re going to make to make a
run. Hopefully this is it. We’ve got
our (top) guys going (against the
Mets). We’re definitely going to
need to score some runs and do
the little things.”
Werth was at bat in the eighth
when he noticed on the scoreboard that Miami had the bases
loaded with the score tied in the
ninth against New York. After he
flied out, he went into the clubhouse to see the Marlins win
against
ex-teammate
Tyler
Clippard.
“We’re going to need stuff like
that,” said Werth, who won a
World Series with Philadelphia.
“We’re going to need other teams
to help us out. In the end, it’s
going to come down to us, but to
win, you gotta be good and you
gotta get lucky.”
‘ZIM’ RESTS
Washington’s
Ryan
Zimmerman, who is batting .439
with six home runs and 18 RBIs
during his 10-game hitting streak,
got the day off. Tyler Moore filled
in at first base.
AN ATLANTA RARITY
The Braves will finish below
.500 for a second straight season
for the first time since 1989 and
1990.
AP photo
AtlAntA BrAveS starting pitcher Manny Banuelos holds his face in his hand after he was relieved
in the third inning against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park Sunday, in Washington.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Braves: 3B Hector Olivera was
scratched with a bruised left foot.
Adonis Garcia was inserted into
the lineup.
Nationals: RHP Strasburg
threw a bullpen session and is
expected to return to the rotation
on Wednesday after missing his
last start with a back injury.
UP NEXT
Braves: RHP Williams Perez (46, 5.65 ERA) opens a three-game
series in Philadelphia against
Phillies RHP Aaron Harang (5-14,
4.89 ERA). Atlanta has lost all
eight of Perez’s starts since June
20.
Nationals: Scherzer (11-11,
2.89 ERA) is 0-3 with a 5.82 ERA
in his last six starts.
Falcons Asamoah on IR; injury settlement with RB Smith
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP)
— The Atlanta Falcons placed
offensive guard Jon Asamoah on
injured reserve and reached an
injury settlement with running
back Antone Smith as they got
down to the 53-man roster limit
with a final round of cuts.
The moves were announced
Saturday.
Asamoah didn’t suit up for the
final preseason game against
Baltimore because of a hip injury.
He already had lost his starting
job in the Falcons’ new zoneblocking scheme.
Smith was a big-play contributor for the Falcons in 2014, but he
injured a hamstring in the preseason opener and had not practiced
since.
Last season, Smith scored five
touchdowns on just 36 touches —
all of them covering at least 38
yards.
The Falcons waived three picks
from the last three drafts: linebacker Stansly Maponga (fifth
round in 2013), linebacker Tyler
Starr (seventh round in 2014) and
AP photo
cornerback Akeem King (seventh
AtlAntA FAlconS head coach Dan Quinn walks the sidelines round this year).
in the first half against the Baltimore Ravens, in Atlanta.
The team also waived line-
backer Derek Akunne, offensive
lineman Pierce Burton, offensive
lineman Eric Lefeld, nose tackle
Joey Mbu, and receiver Carlton
Mitchell. Offensive lineman Adam
Replogle, running back Jerome
Smith, and tight end D.J. Tialavea
were waived injured.
Fullback Collin Mooney and
cornerback Travis Howard were
placed on injured reserve. Tight
end Tony Moeaki was released.
“These were very difficult decisions and I cannot thank all the
guys enough for their effort during
this process,” coach Dan Quinn
said. “I was impressed by the
approach all offseason, camp and
the preseason. I like the group we
have put together after a very
competitive camp, and I am looking forward to us hitting the field
this week to prepare for Week 1.”
The Falcons open Sept. 14,
hosting Philadelphia in a Monday
night game.
Browns trade running back
Terrance West to Titans
CLEVELAND (AP) — The
Browns have given up on running
back Terrance West, trading him
to the Tennessee Titans for a sev-
From Page 11
Flames
From Page 11
going to have to come ready to
play on Tuesday,” said Furey.
“Dalton State is better than most
first-year programs. We are
excited about heading down to
Florida to play Lynn, but our
focus is on Tuesday.”
begin to close the gap between our
fourth and fifth women.”
Lacey Duvall was the fifth Lee
runner to finish the race. Duvall
placed 16th with a mark of
25:10.62. Logan Hernandez finished 19th (25:23.73), Elizabeth
Sillcocks was 31st (27:08.83) and
Mackenzie Mayer was 33rd
(27:12.87).
The Flames posted a team score
of 22 to win the 8K race. Rhodes
College was second with 38 team
points. University of North
Alabama was third (91),
University of the South was fourth
(110). Lincoln Memorial was right
behind in fifth (112) and
LaGrange College finished sixth
(180).
Lee claimed the top three places
and five of the top nine. Seth
Eagleson crossed the finish line
first at 26:09.18. Harold Smith
was second (26:09.39) and
Brandon Raleigh was third
(26:09.61).
Davis Moore finished seventh at
26:48.77 and Gus Whitman was
ninth (26:57.34).
“Our men ran great today,” said
Lee head coach Caleb Morgan. “I
am really pleased with where we
Vols
From Page 11
quarter that he credited to his
offensive line – and the Nissan
Stadium video board.
“The o-line had great push up
front and I cut outside and got a
big block from Josh Smith and
went up the sideline,” Kamara
said. “I looked up at the jumbotron and saw he was getting
close to me and I had to pick it
up.”
Hurd was just as impressive,
with 123 yards and a career-best
three touchdowns. And all he
wanted to talk about afterward
was the way his teammate did
exactly what he came to Knoxville
to do.
“Alvin coming in and producing
what he did today, that’s amazing,” Hurd said. “We’re just trying
to represent and do everything we
can for the Tennessee Volunteers.
We pride ourselves on being the
most unselfish group. This is a
family. When one of my teammates scores a touchdown, I’m
happy for him.”
The only question left is what
can they do for an encore in seven
nights when Oklahoma comes to
Neyland Stadium?
“We’re a great team and we’re
going to do great things this year,”
said Hurd. “But we can get better,
we’re never going to be satisfied.”
Nicks released
The Titans released veteran
wide receiver Hakeem Nicks
among their moves in trimming
their roster to the NFL’s 53-man
limit.
The Titans announced their
final moves Saturday.
They had signed Nicks to a one-
year contract, and the veteran
started the preseason finale
Thursday night. Nicks caught
only three passes for 59 yards this
preseason. The move leaves
Tennessee with four receivers:
Kendall Wright, Harry Douglas,
Justin Hunter and rookie Dorial
Green-Beckham.
The Titans also kept five tight
ends with Chase Coffman and
Phillip Supernaw joining Delanie
Walker, Craig Stevens and
Anthony Fasano. Coffman was
signed the day before Tennessee
reported for training camp, and he
finished with a team-high 12
catches for 189 yards and two
touchdowns this preseason.
Supernaw was second with nine
catches for 96 yards.
Tennessee also waived offensive
linemen Byron Stingily, Josue
Matias and Will Poehls; wide
receivers Rico Richardson and
Jacoby Ford; quarterback Alex
Tanney; and running back David
Fluellen.
The Titans also placed linebackers Zaviar Gooden (hamstring) and J.R. Tavai (knee) and
Yawin Smallwood on injured
reserve.
Steelers face challenge in
beating Brady on the road
Sewanee
collegiate cross country win.
Jessica Childers and Savannah
Ratcliff gave Lee three of the top
five finishes. Childers was fourth
(23:28.22) and Ratcliff was fifth
(23:46.65).
Amy
Carpenter
crossed the finish line at 23:51.10
for seventh place.
Smith, Childers and Ratcliff
each eclipsed Ashley Matthew’s
school record of 23:48.
“Our women had a strong
showing,” said Lee head coach
Caleb Morgan. “We are really
strong through our fourth runner.
We expect to only get better over
the next few weeks as our freshmen adapt to the training and
enth-round pick in the 2016 draft.
West was a third-round pick in
2014. He rushed for 673 yards
and three touchdowns as a rookie,
but never fulfilled the Browns’
expectations. On Friday, coach
Mike Pettine referred to West’s
“ups and downs,” saying he
“flashes at times brilliance and
then other times where he gets a
minus on the grade sheet.”
West’s departure came one day
after Cleveland finalized its 53man roster and released running
back Shaun Draughn. He could
be re-signed.
The Browns have been ravaged
by injuries to their backs all summer. Rookie Duke Johnson is in
the NFL’s program for concussions
and it’s not known if he’ll be ready
for next Sunday’s season opener.
Isaiah Crowell is expected to be
the Browns’ starting back.
are. Our top three runners ran as
a pack feeling controlled. Our
freshmen (Moore and Whitman)
did a fantastic job in their first
ever 8K, running as our No. 4 and
No. 5 runners.”
Matt Jenkins recorded a time of
27:44.36 (23rd), Garrett Flores
was 26th (27:58.28) and Colson
Hagan was the ninth Lee runner
in the top 30 with a mark of
28:40.41.
Emmanuel
Kipchumba
(29:09.97) and Adam Gullette
(29:14.10) crossed the line at 34th
and 35th, respectively. Tim Yates
finished 44th (30:14.16).
“We have a few things we need
to work on and expect to be ready
to run fast next weekend,” added
Morgan. “We’ll be running against
several ranked Division II teams,
so we are excited to see how we
stack up.”
Edwards
From Page 11
at Daytona.
NASCAR
returned
the
Southern 500 to Labor Day
weekend for the first time since
2003. The track, the sport’s oldest superspeedway, closed
NASCAR’s summer as one of its
crown jewel events for 53 years
until losing out in Sprint Cup
realignment.
But NASCAR leaders thought
the time was right to put the
iconic race back in its traditional sport. The race featured a
1970s, throwback theme, with
35 teams racing in retro paint
schemes.
Kyle Larson, his No. 42 sporting Kyle Petty’s old Mello Yello
colors, came out for driver introductions in a curly wig with a
mustache grown for the weekend. NBC Sports got into the
spirit, too, having Hall of
Famers Ken Squire, Ned Jarrett
and Dale Jarrett in the TV booth
to call some of the race.
While the hype was huge, the
true throwback was Darlington,
which was the same tire-chewing track that’s befuddled
NASCAR’s best for generations.
Chase Elliott, running his last
Sprint Cup race before slipping
into retiring Jeff Gordon’s seat
in the No. 24 car next season,
spun out just eight laps in to
bring out a caution.
It was far from the last — for
Darlington and for Elliott. Bill
Elliott’s son, who won the
Xfinity race here in 2014, was
involved in another spin that
took him out of the race for
good.
Tony Stewart stayed out during one of the cautions while the
field pitted and wound up leading for 10 laps, the first time
he’s run up front since
Talladega last May. But Stewart
was quickly run down by the
pack of front runners, led by
Harvick and Keselowski.
CSU
From Page 1
attempted 24 shots and the
rapid-firing club directed 13 on
target.
Lee’s other score came in the
87th
minute
when
Mia
Hollingsworth slid a shot past
the Lady Cougar keeper right at
the goal line. Lee also got a solid
offensive effort from McKenzie
Bricker, who attempted five
shots and led a solid 20-25 minutes of play in the second half.
The Lady Flames will host
Newberry in the annual Kickin-It
For Kids with Cancer on Friday
at 7 p.m.
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The
Pittsburgh Steelers have had
their struggles against New
England Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady in Foxborough.
The four-time Super Bowl
winner has led the Patriots to
three lopsided home victories
against Pittsburgh and he’s
looking for another. He was
cleared to play after a judge
overturned the NFL’s fourgame suspension of Brady last
week for his role in using
underinflated footballs during
last season’s AFC championship game.
The Steelers’ defense, even
after a rough preseason, isn’t
putting much emphasis on
past meetings with Brady.
Instead, the group welcomes
the opportunity to open the
NFL season Thursday on the
road against Brady and the
Super Bowl champions.
“It’s a hostile environment
that truly loves their team,”
Steelers defensive end Cam
Heyward said. “We want to be
able to go on the road and win
games like that, so this is a
great test for our team.”
Brady spoke for the first
time on Sunday since the
“Deflategate” court ruling, noting that he’s ready to move on
and focus on Thursday’s opener against Pittsburgh.
“It’s time for me to do my
job,” Brady said. “Anything
that’s happened over the last
seven months wasn’t really my
job.”
He’s had his way with the
Steelers in the past, going 5-2
in the regular season, including a 3-0 mark at Gillette
Stadium. Brady has thrown 18
touchdowns to just three interceptions with a QB rating of
109.7, third-best among any
team he’s faced.
“We’ve had some pretty good
days in the past, but if we want
to have a good outcome on
Thursday night we’re going to
have to be at our best,” Brady
said.
The Patriots have been at
their best against the Steelers
at Foxborough when Brady’s
under center. The Steelers
have never beaten Brady at
Foxborough during his career,
losing three times by an average of 20 points, including a
55-31 rout two years ago.
Heyward still remembers
that one, a game that was tied
in the third quarter until Brady
and the Patriots reeled off 28
points in the final 15 minutes
to pull away.
“It was a close game, but it
comes down to one or two
plays and that can really swing
a game,” Heyward said. “Our
wheels really fell off after that.”
The Patriots put up at least
30 points in each of Brady’s
wins against the Steelers at
Foxborough. New England has
averaged 458 yards and Brady
passed for an average of 364
yards in those games.
This time, Brady will face a
defense primed to rebound
from a shaky preseason of giving up big plays and a lot of
yards. All 11 starters weren’t
on the field at the same time,
as the Steelers allowed 353
yards per game and average of
5.6-yards per play during a 14 preseason.
“We’re not going to say this
is more important than any
other game,” Heyward said.
“It’s the first game. We’re just
looking to put it all together on
Thursday.”
And also try to beat Brady
for the first time in
Foxborough.
“It’s not the first time we
played against somebody like
that,” Steelers linebacker
Lawrence Timmons said.
“We’re the only game on that
night, it’s the defending Super
Bowl champions in a hostile
environment and we’re just
trying to start the season off
right. We’re looking forward to
it.”
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Vocabulary is the greatest barrier to comprehension
When it comes to understanding,
Scottish essayist Thomas Carlyle
(1795-1881) had this to say: "Not the
logical, argumentative, but the intuitive; for the end of understanding is
not to prove and find reasons, but to
know and believe."
There is another word for understanding. While not used too often in
our society, it nonetheless has a
tremendous impact on our ability to
communicate and also on our individual prosperity. The word I am referring
to is comprehension.
According to the dictionary, this
word means, "The mental grasping of
ideas, facts, etc., or the power of so
doing; understanding." While it may
not be recognized in most circles, lack
of comprehension is one of the greatest barriers to a young person acquiring a top-notch education.
Several months ago I was watching
the “CBS Evening News” and there
was a feature about this topic that
caught my attention. It was by me so
fast that I did not have a chance to
write down all the details, but in
essence the report stated that the
majority of students in our nation's
schools could read fairly well, but a
Editorial
Columnist
Jim
Davidson
high percentage could not comprehend or understand what they had
just read.
If you would like to verify the validity of this report, if you have schoolaged children around, ask them to
read a chapter of a book, at their own
reading level, and then write a brief
one- or two-paragraph summary of
what it was about. This exercise would
involve the big three — reading, writing and comprehension.
Now if what I am saying makes
sense to you, I want to share the benefits of some educational ideas I learned
several years ago while working for the
Nightingale-Conant Corporation, the
world's leader in motivational recordings. If you don't already know, in the
process I believe I can help you have a
better understanding of the greatest
barrier to comprehension and what
can be done about it.
In a nutshell, here is the problem.
Let's say we are reading a very interesting but very challenging book. We
move along at a good pace, but every
so often we come across a concept
word, one that is not in our workable
vocabulary, and we don't know what it
means. Unless we take time to stop
and look it up in the dictionary, we
have had a disruption in the continuity of the flow of ideas.
This is the process that destroys our
comprehension or understanding.
A survey was conducted several
years ago that discovered the average
person uses 400 words or less, 80 percent of the time in their everyday conversations. When we consider the fact
there are more than 800,000 words
today in the English language, it
begins to become clear why millions of
people in our prosperous nation are
not very effective communicators.
It is often said that a great communicator knows big words, but uses little words. This is true, but the key to
success is to know and understand
the educational level of the audience
or person with whom we are communicating. You would not use the same
words speaking to a group of college
professors as you would speaking to a
class of fourth-graders or, say, factory
workers.
Please understand that I am not
talking about the value of a human
being because in God's eyes we are all
equal. But, I am talking about our
ability to have a rewarding life and
career and to earn the kind of income
we need to live a comfortable lifestyle.
This brings me to another very
important point, and I hope you will
really tune me in. Another one of those
tidbits I learned while working with
the Nightingale people is the correlation between executive position,
income and working vocabulary. This
was another one of those surveys
these people conducted because this
was their business and what they were
getting paid to do. Believe me, this
does have a bearing on your future, as
it does mine.
A part of the survey with a number
of major corporations was a test of the
working vocabulary of all employees.
Here is what they found.
Presidents had the best vocabulary,
mid-level managers were next, and
then supervisors, foremen and right on
down the line to the hourly or lowestlevel employees in the company. While
a number of things on the survey differed from one level to the next, without exception the only thing that was
consistent was the individual's level of
vocabulary and his income and position in the organization.
Based on the information I have just
shared, you will have to be the judge
as to whether or not you need to
improve your vocabulary and are willing to spend a little time each day to
do it.
Here are a couple of suggestions
that will pay you great rewards for the
small investment of your time. First,
when you sit down to read, have a
good dictionary close by and look up
the words that are not in your vocabulary. Next, use your dictionary to learn
five new words each week. Copy the
meanings down on a sheet of paper,
because we retain so much more when
we use dual-sensory input.
Good luck!
———
(About the writer: Jim Davidson is a
motivational speaker and syndicated
columnist. He may be contacted at 2
Bentley Drive, Conway AR 72034.)
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Editorials
Autumn’s welcome
mat: It’s Labor Day!
A
utumn’s blessed arrival
is considered by most a
breath of fresh air;
whether that’s because of a
teasing nip in the late-afternoon breeze or the launch of
color in a thousand shades is
best left to the eyes and senses of the beholder.
In either circumstance, it is
not exactly fodder for fierce
debate.
But each year, the promise
of this splendid season is
trumpeted in by a teaser of its
own. It comes about three
weeks earlier.
It is called Labor Day.
And it is today.
Of all the holidays — federally endorsed or otherwise —
celebrated by mandate of the
U.S. calendar, Labor Day is
among the most diverse.
At its very core, the first
Monday in September was
originally intended as a welldeserved salute to those who
made this country one of the
finest on Planet Earth — the
American worker.
Yet, the holiday’s meaning
has evolved over the years
and was broadened to better
fit the need — and the convenience — of the average
American.
It became a day off work,
which is fitting.
Its observance landed on a
Monday — the first Monday in
September, which is just as fitting because how many
American workers relish the
thought of going back to work
after a calming two-day weekend?
Its
placement
gave
American workers a muchdeserved three-day weekend,
and that’s even more fitting
because over time Labor Day
has become the symbolic end
of summer and the welcome
mat into autumn.
For the record, neither of the
above actually happens this
year until Sept. 23. So look at
it this way. If autumn were
viewed as dinner out in a nice
area restaurant, Labor Day
would be the appetizer.
Truly, Labor Day epitomizes
ends and beginnings — some
real, some imagined.
Labor Day is all about final
picnics, one last plunge into
recreational waters, a seasonending camping excursion and
maybe even an indulgence in
this year’s final watermelon.
Labor Day is all about high
fashion; the holiday is now
considered the last day of the
year when it is fashionable for
women to wear white.
Labor Day is all about a
favored time for gridiron lovers
everywhere; yes, it marks the
start of football. High school
An editorial reprint
from Sept. 1, 2014
teams have already been
playing for a couple weeks.
College mascots take to the
sidelines for the first time, and
the NFL is just a few days
away from its opening kickoff
of the new season.
Labor Day is considered a
benchmark for the start of
school, albeit a sometimes
confusing one. High-school
classrooms opened weeks
ago and universities are just
now welcoming back students
for a new semester. Some colleges began student registration a little before and some a
little after, but in all cases
Labor Day was the slide rule
of decision.
Labor Day is as critical in
the physical well-being of yard
workers as it is in the emotional mindset of avid, or perhaps
rabid, followers of football. By
early September, lawn mowers — and the people who
push them or ride them — are
ready for a break. Tired of the
heat, frustrated by the lateafternoon thunderstorms and
exasperated by the carpet-like
thickness of their relentless
grass, lawn worshippers are
ready to bless seasonal
change where the mulching of
brown leaves trumps the raking, or the mower-blade dissemination, of rampant
clumps of irritatingly wet clippings.
If anything, Labor Day sets
the stage for change, whether
it comes in the form of climate,
fashion, sports or schooling. In
any case, because of its diversity this salute to the American
worker brings a mixed blessing to most, if not to all.
First observed on Sept. 5,
1882, Labor Day became a
federal holiday two years later.
Historians still argue over the
holiday’s founder, but that’s
hardly the point. In today’s
world, Labor Day is a time to
do anything but work. And
that’s as it should be.
Everyone deserves a little
rest, whether it’s a whole day
or just locking up the office
doors a few hours early.
Whatever Cleveland and
Bradley County residents are
doing today, we urge all to
enjoy the moment and to do it
safely.
It is a rightful holiday, one
that honors the American
worker as the American worker wishes to be honored — at
work or at play.
To each, his own.
And, to each her own ...
regardless of the color of her
dress.
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 7, the
250th day of 2015. There are 115
days left in the year. This is Labor
Day.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Sept. 7, 1940, Nazi
Germany began its eight-month
blitz of Britain during World War
II with the first air attack on
London.
On this date:
In 1533, England’s Queen
Elizabeth I was born in
Greenwich.
In 1812, the Battle of Borodino
took place as French troops
clashed with Russian forces outside Moscow. (The battle, ultimately won by Russia, was commemorated by composer Peter
Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s “1812
Overture.”)
In 1825, the Marquis de
Lafayette, the French hero of the
American Revolution, bade
farewell to President John Quincy
Adams at the White House.
In 1927, American television
pioneer Philo T. Farnsworth, 21,
succeeded in transmitting the
image of a line through purely
electronic means with a device
called an “image dissector.”
In 1936, rock legend Buddy
Holly was born Charles Hardin
Holley in Lubbock, Texas.
In 1957, the original animated
version of the NBC-TV peacock
logo, used to denote programs
“brought to you in living color,”
made its debut at the beginning of
“Your Hit Parade.”
In 1963, the National
Professional Football Hall of Fame
was dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In 1964, the controversial
“Daisy” commercial for President
Lyndon Johnson’s election campaign, featuring a girl plucking
flower petals followed by footage
of a nuclear explosion, aired on
NBC-TV.
In 1977, the Panama Canal
treaties, calling for the U.S. to
eventually turn over control of the
waterway to Panama, were signed
in Washington by President
Jimmy Carter and Panamanian
leader Omar Torrijos.
In 1987, Erich Honecker
became the first East German
head of state to visit West
Germany as he arrived for a fiveday visit.
In 1990, Kimberly Bergalis of
Fort Pierce, Florida, came forward
to identify herself as the young
woman who had been infected
with AIDS, allegedly by her late
dentist. (Bergalis died the following year.)
In 1996, rapper Tupac Shakur
was shot and mortally wounded
on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six
days later.
Ten years ago: Police and soldiers went house to house in New
Orleans to try to coax the last
stubborn holdouts into leaving
the
storm-shattered
city.
President George W. Bush led the
nation in a final tribute to William
H. Rehnquist, remembering the
late chief justice as the Supreme
Court’s steady leader and a man
of lifetime integrity. U.S. troops in
Iraq, acting on a tip, rescued
American businessman Roy
Hallums, who’d been held hostage
ten months.
Five years ago: A Chinese fishing trawler and two Japanese
patrol boats collided near disputed islands in the East China Sea,
further
straining
relations
between Beijing and Tokyo.
Lucius Walker, 80, who’d led an
annual pilgrimage of aid volunteers to Cuba in defiance of the
nearly half century U.S. trade
embargo, died in New York.
One year ago: The head of the
Arab League, Nabil Elaraby,
urged members to confront
Islamic State extremists “militarily and politically.” A star-studded
funeral was held in New York for
comedian Joan Rivers, who had
died three days earlier at age 81.
Serena Williams won her third
consecutive U.S. Open championship and 18th major title overall, taking 75 minutes to beat
good friend Caroline Wozniacki 63, 6-3.
Today’s Birthdays: Jazz musician Sonny Rollins is 85. Actor
Bruce Gray is 79. Singer Gloria
Gaynor is 72. Singer Alfa
Anderson (Chic) is 69. Actress
Susan Blakely is 67. Rock singer
Chrissie Hynde (The Pretenders)
is 64. Actress Julie Kavner is 64.
Rock musician Benmont Tench
(Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers)
is 62. Actor Corbin Bernsen is 61.
Dear Annie: My husband and I
are in our mid-70s and slowing
down a bit. My problem is
Thanksgiving. For most of our
married life, I provided elaborate
holiday dinners. When the kids
grew up and left home, the gettogethers took place every other
year, so they could spend alternating years with their in-laws
and other family.
This year it is our turn, but
frankly, I am tired of doing this. I
feel like it is time for someone else
to step up to the task and invite
us to his or her home. The family
will be together Labor Day weekend, and I am wondering if you
have any suggestions as to how to
approach this subject. — Need
Some Relief
Dear Need: Yes. Be direct. Say
to your children that you no
longer have the energy to cook
and host these big meals. Ask
whether one of them would like to
take over the hosting duties, or
perhaps they would do the cooking and bring the food to your
place and help you set up and
clean up after. Or go to a restaurant.
Even grown children can continue to believe their parents are
indestructible, and unless you
tell them that you are tired, they
don’t realize it. But kids can also
be tremendously helpful when
asked, and they may have ideas
of their own. In fact, they may
have wanted to change the holiday setup for a while, but thought
you might be offended. Give them
the opportunity to step up.
Annie’s Snippet for Labor Day
(Credit Martin Luther King Jr.):
“All labor that uplifts humanity
has dignity and importance and
should be undertaken with
painstaking excellence.”
———
(About the writers: Annie’s
Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please email your questions
to
[email protected], or
write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St.,
Hermosa Beach CA 90254. You
can also find Annie on Facebook
at Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To
find out more about Annie’s
Mailbox and read features by
other Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.)
U.S. services firms Cleveland Daily Banner
– Established in 1854 –
expanding rapidly
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. services companies expanded at a
healthy pace in August, lifted by
robust consumer spending resulting from steady job gains.
The Institute for Supply
Management reported that its
services index slipped to 59 from
60.3 in the previous month. July’s
reading was the highest in a
decade, and any reading over 50
indicates expansion.
The index remains at a high
level despite the decline and suggests that Americans have been
spending freely at retail stores,
hotels, restaurants and other
firms that make up the index. The
ISM is a trade group of purchasing
managers. Its services survey covers businesses that employ 90
percent of workers, including construction firms and financial services.
A measure of sales and produc-
tion fell one point but remained at
a solid level of 63.9 in August. A
gauge of new orders also fell
slightly.
Hiring also expanded, though at
a much slower pace. The survey’s
measure of job gains fell to 56
from 59.3. That suggests job gains
could slow a bit in August compared with July. ning paychecks
than three years ago, boosting
consumer spending.
That’s also fueled home sales,
which has helped service businesses such as real estate firms
and construction companies.
U.S. manufacturers are facing
greater headwinds. The dollar has
risen about 15 percent in value in
the past year, which makes U.S.
goods more expensive overseas,
holding back exports. It also
makes imports cheaper compared
with U.S. products. That has
caused manufacturers to stumble.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—15
Deep-seated anger helps Trump defy political gravity
NORWOOD, Mass. (AP) —
Donald Trump insults and exaggerates.
He dismisses the need for
public policy ideas, gets confused about world affairs and
sometimes says things that flatout aren’t true.
And the cheers from his supporters only grow louder.
By the standard that voters
typically use to judge presidential candidates, Trump probably
should not have survived his
first day in the 2016 race.
Yet as the summer draws to a
close and the initial votes in the
nominating calendar appear on
the horizon, Trump has established himself as the Republican
front-runner.
Listen to these voters:
—”It’s totally refreshing. He’s
not politically correct. He has a
backbone and he cannot be
bought,” said Leigh Ann Crouse,
55, of Dubuque, Iowa.
—”This country needs a businessman just like him to put us
back on track, to make us stop
being the laughingstock of this
world,” said Ken Brand, 56, of
Derry, New Hampshire.
—”He says everything that I
would like to say, but I’m afraid
to say. What comes out of his
mouth is not what he thinks I
want to hear,” said Janet
Boyden, 67, of Chester,
Massachusetts.
They are among the dozens of
voters interviewed in the past
two weeks by The Associated
Press to understand how Trump
has defied the laws of political
gravity.
Uniting them is a deep-rooted
anger and frustration with the
nation’s political leaders —
President Barack Obama as well
as conservative Republicans
who, these voters say, haven’t
sufficiently stood up to his
Democratic administration.
Some haven’t voted in years,
or ever, and may not next year.
But at this moment, they are
entranced by Trump’s combination of utter self-assurance,
record of business success and a
promise that his bank account is
big enough to remain insulated
from the forces they believe have
poisoned Washington.
By the way, they say it’s not
that they are willing to look past
Trump’s flaws to fix what they
believe ills the country. It’s that
those flaws are exactly what
makes him the leader America
needs.
“At least we know where he
stands,” said Kurt Esche, 49, an
independent who was at
Trump’s recent rally outside
Boston. “These other guys, I
don’t trust anything that comes
out of their mouths. They’re
lying to get elected. This guy’s at
least saying what he believes.”
“He may have started as a
joke,” Esche said, “but he may
be the real deal.”
—Crouse is a merchandise
processor at a retail distributor
outside
Dubuque,
the
Mississippi River town where
Trump tossed Univision anchor
Jorge Ramos from a news conference.
A political independent who
has never participated in Iowa’s
leadoff presidential caucuses,
Crouse said she began following
Trump from the moment he
referred to Mexican immigrants
as criminals during his campaign kickoff.
“He’s just attracting people
who are frustrated, and as you
can see, there are a lot of us,”
she said.
Illegal immigration is the per-
fect summation of Trump’s
unorthodox campaign.
He claims it’s an issue the
GOP would not be discussing if
not for his presence in the race,
even though the topic has been
at the center of political debate
for years.
It’s the only one on which he
has made a concrete proposal;
his rivals, by comparison, have
rolled out lots of ideas on a range
of issues.
Here’s Trump’s pitch: deport
millions of people who are living
in the United States illegally and
build a border wall. Critics
deride this approach as naïve,
but his supporters say it’s the
obvious solution.
“As crazy as it might be, I
think he’s addressing something
that needs to be heard,” said
Randy Thomas, 40, of Bedford,
New Hampshire. “I think he’s
saying something that everybody
thinks always has to be
addressed. If you have a country
of laws, you have to abide by the
laws.”
Republican pollster Frank
Luntz, who recently held a discussion with a group of nearly
30 Trump backers in Virginia,
said such support is emblematic
of Trump’s popularity. It stems
less from their love for the candidate and more from a belief
those in power have failed.
“He activates the anger and
frustration they have toward
Washington and Wall Street,”
Luntz said.
—For many, Trump’s rise is a
reaction to Obama, long criticized by opponents as a weak
leader who appeases America’s
enemies rather than asserting
U.S. dominance on the global
stage.
The voters interviewed by AP
said much of Trump’s appeal
stems from their belief he is a
decisive and forceful leader who
never backs down or apologizes,
even when maybe he should.
Many appear convinced that
the sheer force of Trump’s personality can reverse decades of
global realignment, and that his
pledges to rid the country of people living in the U.S. illegally and
penalize imported goods will
restore manufacturing jobs lost
to China and boost an economy
still scarred by the recession.
“We’re just so weak. We’re not
respected anymore,” said Jerry
Welshoff, 56, of Franklin,
Massachusetts. He arrived at a
recent Trump event near Boston
unsure about the candidate; he
emerged sold on the candidate.
“We’ve appeased everything.
We can’t negotiate. I would want
Donald Trump to sit across a
table from (Russian President
Vladimir) Putin or Iran or the
Mexican prime minister to cut a
deal because he’s done it his
whole life,” he said.
The frustration among voters
isn’t limited to their feelings
about Obama.
Welshoff said the Republican
Party has done nothing but
acquiesce to Obama despite taking control of Congress in 2014.
It’s the same complaint heard
from Duane Ernster, 57, of
Dubuque. He is disappointed by
the few accomplishments of tea
party candidates elected to
Congress in 2010.
“Things just didn’t happen. It
just hasn’t happened the way
we’d hoped,” he said. “Maybe we
need a warrior instead of a politician. People compare Mr. Trump
to Putin. There’s something to be
said about the man, who takes
care of the Russian people.”
Others are simply blown away
by Trump’s wealth and his
promise to pay for his campaign
out of his own pocket. “He won’t
owe anybody,” said Susan Sager,
57, of Aiken, South Carolina.
This is an important point of
distinction with both Democratic
front-runner Hillary Rodham
Clinton and former Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush, who began the campaign viewed as the GOP frontrunner due in no small part to
his ability to raise huge amounts
of money.
“Remember this. They have
total control over Jeb and Hillary
and everybody else that takes
that money,” Trump said this
past week, adding: “I will tell you
this. Nobody’s putting up millions of dollars for me. I’m putting up my own money.”
The argument that Trump is
uncorruptible is powerful.
“I just think he’s doing it for
all the right reasons,” said Nancy
Adam, 60, at the rally near
Boston. “It’s not about the
money. It’s not about the political power. He’s already got everything. He has nothing to lose by
doing this.”
—Trump’s uncanny ability to
stumble without consequence
has befuddled his rivals.
The latest misstep for Trump
came Thursday. After pledging
only to run as a Republican, he
fumbled a series of foreign policy
questions from radio host Hugh
Hewitt. Trump confused the
Quds Force, an elite Iranian military unit, and the Kurds, an
ethnic group of more than 30
million people.
He said the line of inquiry
amounted to a “gotcha question.”
“I mean, you know, when
you’re asking me about who’s
running this, this this, that’s
not, that is not,” Trump said, “I
will be so good at the military,
your head will spin.”
Such an answer would invariably be attacked as disqualifying
if offered by anyone other than
Trump. His rivals have yet to figure out how to challenge an
unpredictable opponent who
appears immune to such gaffes.
“He just keeps repeating
things over and over again. And
you all just accept it for the
truth, and it’s not,” Bush told
reporters in New Hampshire on
Thursday.
Indeed, Trump’s foibles often
appear to make him stronger.
During his recent discussion
with Trump supporters, Luntz
played several video clips of the
billionaire’s least flattering
moments.
One was Trump’s rejection of
Arizona Sen. John McCain’s status as a war hero — “I like people that weren’t captured, OK?”
Another was his complimenting
daughter Ivanka’s figure and
saying that if she “weren’t my
daughter, perhaps I’d be dating
her.”
Instead of being rattled, the
participants ate up Trump’s
comments and left the meeting
feeling even more confident in
their support for him than when
they had arrived.
“I think the Trump candidacy
is here to stay and I think
Republicans need to figure out
how to deal with it,” Luntz said.
He said there is little the party
establishment, journalists or his
rivals with a background in politics can do to knock Trump
down, because the candidate’s
supporters distrust those groups
so strongly.
“In essence, he’s Teflon
because the people most able to
take him down can’t because of
WASHINGTON (AP) — Actress
Sally Field and author Stephen
King are among luminaries set to
receive a National Medal of Arts
or a National Humanities Medal
from President Barack Obama.
Obama will bestow the honors
on 18 people and three institutions during a White House ceremony on Thursday.
Field, of Los Angeles, is receiving an arts medal for showing
dignity, empathy and fearlessness in performances that have
touched audiences worldwide, as
well as for showing those same
qualities in her off-screen advocacy for women, LGBT rights and
public health.
King, of Bangor, Maine, is also
receiving an arts medal for combining storytelling with analysis
of human nature, and for
thrilling readers through decades
of work.
Alice Waters, chef-owner of the
organic restaurant Chez Panisse
in Berkeley, California, is receiving a National Humanities Medal
for her work as a champion of a
holistic approach to eating and
health.
The National Endowment for
the Arts and the National
Endowment for the Humanities
were created by Congress in
1965 to provide grants to support
artistic excellence and creativity,
and to advance the understanding and appreciation of history,
literature, philosophy and language. Both independent agencies are celebrating their 50th
anniversaries this year.
The remaining recipients are:
National Medal of Arts:
—John Baldessari, visual
artist, Venice, California
—Ping Chong, theater director,
choreographer and video and
installation artist, New York City
—Miriam Colón, actress, theater founder and director, New
York City
—The Doris Duke Charitable
Foundation, New York City
—Ann Hamilton, visual artist,
Columbus, Ohio
—Meredith Monk, composer,
singer and performer, New York
City
—George Shirley, tenor, Ann
Arbor, Michigan
—University Musical Society,
Performing Arts Presenter, Ann
Arbor, Michigan
—Tobias Wolff, author and
educator, Stanford, California
National Humanities Medal:
—Evelyn
Brooks
Higginbotham,
historian,
Auburndale, Massachusetts
—Annie Dillard, author, Key
West, Florida
—Clemente Course in the
Humanities,
Annandale-OnHudson, New York
—Rebecca
Newberger
Goldstein, novelist and philosopher, Boston
—Larry McMurtry, novelist,
essayist and screenwriter, Archer
City, Texas
—Everett L. Fly, architect, San
Antonio
—Jhumpa Lahiri, author, New
York City
—Fedwa Malti-Douglas, professor and scholar, Rhinebeck,
New York
Obama to award arts medals
to Sally Field, Stephen King
AP photo
LEIGH ANN CROUSE of Dubuque, Iowa, shows her support for Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump at a park along the Mississippi River in Dubuque. Trump insults. He exaggerates. He dismisses the need for public policy ideas, gets confused about world affairs and sometimes says things
that flat out aren’t true. And the cheers from his supporters only grow louder. “It’s totally refreshing. He’s
not politically correct. He has a backbone and he cannot be bought,” said Crouse.
the very jobs that they do,” he
said.
It’s for that reason that
Herman Cain, the former chief
executive of Godfather’s Pizza
who rose to the top of the polls in
the fall of 2011, only to see his
fortunes derailed by allegations of
sexual harassment, said he
believes that Trump can succeed.
“It is a totally new paradigm for
how the race for president is
unfolding,” said Cain, making the
case that Trump, as well as two
other Republican candidates, former Hewlett-Packard chief executive Carly Fiorina and former
neurosurgeon Ben Carson, had
tapped into a portion of the electorate that is typically disengaged
from the political process.
—Many of the Trump supporters
interviewed by AP said there was
a chance they might change
their minds before voting next
year or sit the contest out.
Trump’s campaign operation
lacks the sophistication of many
of his rivals, who in some cases
have years of experience in politics and the business of getting
out the vote.
For all of Trump’s success so
far, he’s yet to drive any candidate from the race.
There are several debates still
to come and five months until
the Iowa caucuses — enough
time for a rival to build a winning coalition of voters such as
Marvin Smith, a Republican
from Independence, Kentucky,
who said Trump “scares the hell
out of me.”
“He’s appealing to some base
emotions. But my worry is that
he splinters the Republican
Party,” Smith said. “He’s saying
the message people want to hear,
but I don’t like the way he’s saying it.”
But anyone who has bet
against Trump so far in this
campaign has come up — as
Trump would say — a loser.
Paul Demerjian, a 55-year-old
small business owner from
Stoneham, Massachusetts, said
he isn’t much into politics. But
there he was at a recent Trump
rally outside Boston, mobbing
Trump’s SUV as he made his
exit.
“I haven’t been passionate
about a politician running for
office since Ronald Reagan,” he
said.
—Associated Press writers
Thomas Beaumont in Dubuque,
Iowa, Bill Barrow in Greenville,
South Carolina, and Julie Pace
in Cincinnati contributed to this
report.
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Icelandic people tell government
to take more refugees from Syria
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) —
“Future spouses, best friends, our
next soul mate.” That’s how an
Icelandic author is describing
refugees seeking European
shores, in a Facebook campaign
that has helped to spark a surge
of support for welcoming
migrants in her remote North
Atlantic island.
As much of Europe hesitates,
Iceland — which has just in
recent years emerged from the
effects of a devastating economic
meltdown — seems to be warming
to the idea of taking in Syrians
fleeing their war-torn homeland.
It’s a historic shift for an island
that has long been reluctant to
take in foreigners.
A grassroots movement in support of migrants making the perilous journey to Europe is already
having an impact on government
policy, with officials reaching out
to the United Nations refugee
agency to say Iceland is willing to
accept more refugees.
Even small towns are involved,
with the northern Iceland town of
Akureyri expressing an interest in
adding Syrian refugees to its population of 17,000 hardy residents.
“I think most Icelanders are
very interested in helping
refugees have a better life,” said
Akureyri town council chairman
Gudmundur
Baldvin
Gudmundsson. “We have a society that is very good for them and
we have experience in taking
refugees.”
The government said in July
that it would take in 50 Syrian
refugees over the next two years,
but that meager figure — consistent with a policy that has seen
just 549 refugees accepted since
1956 — is expected to rise in the
face of public pressure. Officials
already are making plans to
accept more and some citizens
are calling for up to 5,000 to be
admitted.
The movement started before a
photograph of a drowned 3-yearold Syrian boy who washed up on
a Turkish beach sparked worldwide concern about the fate of the
migrants trying to reach Europe.
The generous spirit is remarkable
because Iceland suffered a disastrous 2008 financial meltdown
that saw the collapse of its major
banks and a steep fall in living
standards.
One driver of the grassroots
movement is the “Syria Calling”
Facebook page launched last
week by Icelandic author and professor Bryndis Bjorgvinsdottir.
Some 15,000 people have “liked”
the page in an apparent endorsement of her call for Minister of
Social Affairs Eyglo Hardardottir
to let more refugees live legally in
Iceland.
“Refugees
are
human
resources, experience and skills,”
Bjorgvinsdottir wrote. “Refugees
are our future spouses, best
friends, our next soul mate, the
drummer in our children’s band,
our next colleague, Miss Iceland
2022, the carpenter who finally
fixes our bathroom, the chef in
the cafeteria, the fireman, the
hacker and the television host.
People who we’ll never be able to
say to: ‘Your life is worth less than
mine.’”
Hardardottir said Thursday her
ministry has informed the UN
that Iceland is prepared to accept
more than the 50 refugees it had
committed and asked residents to
contact the ministry if they want
to volunteer or provide material
assistance to newcomers who
may arrive with virtually no
resources.
“I encourage people to get in
touch with the ministry and the
Red Cross to ask how they can
help,” said Hardardottir. “People
need jobs, homes, and clothes, for
example, and to learn how the
banking system works.”
Iceland’s residents are taking
action as well. More than 900
people have signed up as Red
Cross volunteers in the last few
days to assist Syrian refugees
when they arrive in Iceland.
“What has happened in the last
few days is something very interesting-a bottom up movement,”
said
Red
Cross
Iceland
spokesman Bjorn Teitsson. “The
people of Iceland seem to have
woken up from a bad dream and
are embracing the refugee crisis
that the world has to face. We
have been very pleased about this
positive energy and the will to
help.”
AP photo
In thIs July 10, 1985 file photo, the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior is seen after it was sank in
Auckland harbor, after explosions on board. A retired French secret service agent who says he planted
the bombs 30 years ago which sank a Greenpeace ship and killed a photographer has apologized. JeanLuc Kister told Television New Zealand Sunday that he and his colleagues never meant to kill anybody
when they attached two bombs to the Rainbow Warrior on July 10, 1985, while the boat was moored in
Auckland.
French agent apologizes for bombing Greenpeace boat in 1985
WELLINGTON, New Zealand
(AP) — A retired French secret
service agent has apologized for
planting the bombs which sank
a Greenpeace ship 30 years ago,
killing a photographer and
causing an international incident that tarnished the image of
France.
Jean-Luc
Kister
told
Television New Zealand on
Sunday that he and his col-
LEGAL PUBLICATIONS
LEGAL PUBLICATION
FORECLOSURE SALE
Default has been made in payment of the indebtedness owed to Athens Federal Community Bank described in the Deed of Trust executed by Craig L.
Oetting on February 17, 2006 and recorded in Book
1622, Pages 369-373 on March 10, 2006 in the Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee; and
The holder of the Note described therein having declared the entire balance of the indebtedness due
and payable, the undersigned as Successor Trustee
pursuant to an appointment at said Register’s office, will on Wednesday, September 16, 2015, at
2:00 p.m., sell at public auction to the highest and
best bidder for cash, at the main door of the Bradley County Courthouse in Cleveland, Tennessee in
bar of the equities of redemption, homestead,
dower, and all other rights and exemptions of every
kind, the following real estate in Bradley County
known as 186 Old Kile Lake Road, SE, Cleveland,
Tennessee 37323.
LOT FIFTY-THREE (53) W.P. KILE AND WIFE PROPERTY, as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 1,
Page 205, in the Register’s Office of Bradley
County, Tennessee.
Being the same property conveyed to Jackie Gates
and Eric Spencer from K. David Waddell; dated
12/22/05; recorded in Book 1601, Page 370, Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee.
PRIOR TITLE:
Being the same property conveyed to E. Franklin
Childress, Jr. - Blair B. Evans and K. David
Waddell-Substitute Trustee from Larry W. Covington and wife, Sherry; dated 10/04/05; recorded in
Book 1584, Page 779, said Register’s Office. Also
the same property conveyed to Larry W. Covington
and wife, Sherry from Eric D. Gibson and wife,
Penny D. Langford Gibson; dated 3/17/03; recorded
in Book 1300, Page 517.
SUBJECT TO Joint Use and Maintenance Agreement, as recorded in Deed Book 396, Page 107 and
Deed Book 392, Page 986, in the Register’s Office
of Bradley County, Tennessee.
SUBJECT TO Quit Claim Deed recorded in Book 31,
Page 756, in the Register’s Office of Bradley
County, Tennessee.
SUBJECT TO any governmental zoning and subdivision ordinances or regulations in effect thereon.
Map and Parcel: 74B-E-18.00
Interested Parties: RZM Properties, LLC, Monica
Lesley Crox Oetting aka Monica Lesley Crox, and F.
Scott Milligan, Trustee
This sale is subject to any unpaid taxes, if any, any
prior liens or encumbrances, leases, easements and
all other matters of record including, but not limited to the priority of any fixture filing. If the U.S.
Department of the Treasury/Internal Revenue Service, the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue,
or the State of Tennessee Department of Labor and
Work Force Development are listed as Interested
Parties in the advertisement, then the notice of
this foreclosure is being given to them, and the sale
will be subject to the applicable governmental entities right to redeem the property, all as required by
26 U.S.C. 7425 and T.C.A. § 67-1-1433. If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. § 35-5-117
have been met.
Said Deed of Trust recites title to said real estate as
unencumbered, except as aforesaid, but the sale
will be made as Successor Trustee only, without
covenants of warranty or seizin, and subject to any
unpaid taxes or other liens, easements, or restrictions.
In the event the highest bidder does not honor the
highest bid, the next highest bidder at the next at
the next highest bid will be deemed the successful
bidder.
The Successor Trustee reserves the right to adjourn
the sale date to another day, time or place certain
without further publication, upon announcement at
the time and place for the sale set forth above. The
Successor Trustee reserves the right to rescind the
sale.
Thomas L. N. Knight, Successor Trustee
P O Box 11583
Chattanooga, Tennessee 37401-2583
(423) 267-1158; fax 265-8707
This is an attempt to collect a debt.
Any information obtained will be used for that purpose.
August 24, 31, September 7, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Helen Frances Carden No.
2015-PR-185 In the Chancery Court of Bradley
County, Tennessee Probate Division. Notice is
given that on September 1, 2015 Letters Testamentary for the Estate of Helen Frances Carden,
who died August 25, 2015, were issued to the
undersigned by the Chancery Court of Bradley
County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and
non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file their
claims with the Clerk and Master of the Chancery
Court of Bradley County on or before the earlier
of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise
their claims will be forever barred: (1) (A) Four
(4) months from the date of the first publication of
this notice if the creditor received an actual copy
of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days
before the date that is four (4) months from the
date of the first publication; or (B) Sixty (60) days
from the date the creditor received an actual
copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice to creditors if the
creditor received the copy of the notice less than
sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4)
months from the date of first publication as described in (1)(A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from
the decedent's date of death. The address of the
Clerk and Master is Bradley County Clerk & Master's Office, Room 203, 155 North Ocoee Street,
Cleveland, TN 37311. This September 1, 2015.
HELEN FRANCES CARDEN ESTATE, By:
David M. Carden, Personal Representative;
McMurray Law Office, PLLC By: Marcia M.
McMurray, BPR# 013337, Attorney for Personal
Representatives, P.O. Box 610, Cleveland, TN
37364-0610. (423) 479-7171; Filed this September 1, 2015; Sarah E. Coleman, Clerk & Master.
September 7, 14, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice to Creditors
State of Tennessee, Probate Court for Bradley
County at Cleveland. Notice to Creditors ESTATE OF: PERRY W. HARDEN, No:
2015-PR-175. Notice is hereby given that on the
24th day of August, 2015, Letters of Testamentary in respect of the Estate of Perry W. Harden,
who died July 18, 2015, were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Court of Bradley
County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and
non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the
same with the Clerk of the above named Court
on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in
(1) or (2) otherwise their claims will be forever
barred: (1) (A) Four (4) months from the date of
the first publication (or posting, as the case may
be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual
copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60)
days before the date that is four (4) months from
the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B)
Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors
of the creditor received the copy of the notice
less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is
four (4) months from the date of publication (or
posting) as described in (1)(A); or (2) Twelve
(12) months from the decedent's date of death.
This 24th day of August, 2015. Signed: Perry
Stevenson Harden-Personal Representative.
Ginger Wilson Buchanan, Attorney for Estate of
Perry W. Harden, P.O. Box 1083, Cleveland TN
37364-1083; 423-614-4035 BPR No.017620.
Sarah E. Coleman, Clerk & Master.
August 31; September 7, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
STATE OF TENNESSEE In The Probate Court
of Bradley County. NOTICE TO CREDITORS
ESTATE OF: YI LIAN LIU Docket No:
2015-PR-180. Notice is hereby given that on the
25 day of August, 2015, Letters Testamentary (or
of administration as the case may be) in respect
of the Estate of Yi Lian Liu, who died June 27,
2015, were issued to the undersigned by the
Probate Court of Bradley County, Tennessee. All
persons, resident and non-resident, having
claims, matured, or unmatured, against the Estate are required to file the same with the Clerk
of the above named Court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2) otherwise
their claims will be forever barred: (1) (A) Four
(4) months from the date of the first publication
(or posting, as the case may be) of this notice if
the creditor received an actual copy of this notice
to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the
date that is four (4) months from the date of the
first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60)
days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor
received the copy of the notice less than sixty
(60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months
from the date of first publication (or posting) as
described in (1)(A); or (2) Twelve (12) months
from the decedent's date of death. This 25 day of
August, 2015. Signed: Zhu Ying Xue, Personal
Representative. B. Prince Miller, Jr., Attorney for
the Estate. Sarah E. Coleman, Clerk & Master.
September 7, 14, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice to Creditors
IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF BRADLEY
COUNTY, TENNESSEE, IN THE MATTER OF
ESTATE OF: HENRY F. SMITH, Deceased, No.
2015-PR-181. NOTICE TO CREDITORS, ESTATE OF HENRY F. SMITH (deceased). Docket
No. 2015-PR-181. Notice is hereby given that on
the 26 day of August, 2015, Letters Testamentary were issued to the undersigned by the
Chancery Court (Probate Division) of Bradley
County, Tennessee for administration of the estate of DECEDENT who died July 24, 2015. All
persons resident and non-resident, having
claims, matured or un-matured, against this estate are required to file them with the clerk of the
above named court on or before the earlier of the
dates prescribed in (1) or (2) below, otherwise
their claims will be forever barred: (1)(a) Four (4)
months from the date of the first publication of
this NOTICE if the creditor received an actual
copy of this NOTICE at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date
of the first publication; OR (1)(b) Sixty (60) days
from the date the creditor received an actual
copy of this NOTICE if the creditor received an
actual copy of this NOTICE less than sixty (60)
days prior to the date that is four (4) months from
the date of first publication; OR (2) Twelve (12)
months from the DECENDENT'S date of death.
Claim forms may be obtained by calling the Probate Division of Bradley County Chancery Court
at (423)728-7208. This 26 day of August, 2015.
Mark E. Smith, Personal Representative/ Executor, Joseph C. Simpson, Attorney for the Estate.
SARAH E. COLEMAN, CLERK & MASTER, By:
K. Brown, Deputy Clerk. Joseph C. Simpson, Attorney, Husch Blackwell LLP, 736 Georgia Avenue, Suite 300, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37402.
Telephone: (423)266-5500.
September 7, 14, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
PUBLIC NOTICE
SPECIAL CALLED MEETING
CITY OF CLEVELAND HISTORIC
PRESERVATION COMMISSION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2015
AT 12:00 PM
CLEVELAND MUNICIPAL BUILDING ANNEX
160 2nd STREET NE
The Historic Commission will consider the following items:
City of Cleveland requests a Certificate of Appropriateness for work at 230 18th St NW (Tax Map 49E
Group K Parcel 17.00). The property is zoned R1
Single Family Residential.
September 7, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice of Sale
The following vehicles are located at Calfee's Towing, 655 Inman Street, Cleveland, TN 37311:
2004 FORD VIN# 2FMZA52274BA84124
2006 JEEP VIN# 1J4GK48K26W115592
HONDA VIN# JH2MC1304XK50157
1972 OLDS VIN# 3G87H2R160779
2000 DODGE 1B3ES46C7YD546440
The registered owner(s), lien holders or other interested parties, have 15 days from the original run
date of this notice to pay all towing, storage, taxes,
and fees. Failure to claim the vehicle within the 15
day period will be deemed as a waiver of all rights,
title and interest in the vehicle and shall be considered as consent to sell the vehicle at public auction.
August 31; September 7, 2015
leagues never meant to kill anybody when they attached two
bombs to the Rainbow Warrior
on July 10, 1985, while the boat
was moored in Auckland.
The boat was to travel to
French Polynesia to protest
French nuclear testing. The
bombing killed 35-year-old
Portuguese-born photographer
Fernando Pereira, who drowned.
Kister said their intention was
only to sink the boat, and the
death has plagued his conscience ever since. He described
the operation as a “big, big failure.”
“We were not cold-blooded
killers,” Kister said. “We did
everything to preserve life of the
people on board of the Rainbow
Warrior.”
He said he was surprised
when he got the orders to bomb
the Greenpeace boat, an organization he considered to be made
up of troublemakers but not
very dangerous.
“For us, it was just like using
boxing gloves in order to crush a
mosquito,” he told TVNZ.
Legal Publications
LEGAL PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BRADLEY
COUNTY, TENNESSEE AT CLEVELAND
JEANA SUE LUNSFORD ARGUETA, Plaintiff
vs. CARLOS ALBERT ARGUETA, Defendant.
Domestic Relations Docket No. V-15-541, Judge
Sharp. Order for Publication. It appearing to the
Court from an examination of the record in this
cause that an attempt to serve the Defendant
with process at his last known address of 175
North Street, Cleveland, Tennessee was unsuccessful and that the summons was returned with
the notation: "Defendant has moved and cannot
locate," and the Plaintiff having represented that
she has no way of learning or determining the
Defendant's current whereabouts, which are thus
unknown, the Court finds it appropriate in this
cause to give notice to the Defendant through
constructive service by publication, and according, it is hereby, ORDERED that constructive
service be had upon the Defendant, Carlos Albert Argueta, through publication of a notice of
this divorce proceeding for a period of four consecutive weeks in the Cleveland Daily Banner, a
newspaper of general circulation in Bradley
County, Tennessee. Enter this 17th day of
August, 2015. Michael J. Sharp, Circuit Court
Judge. Arthur Bass, BPR No. 001041, Attorney
for Plaintiff, 67 North Ocoee Street, P.O. Box
1473, Cleveland, TN 37364-1473; (423)
339-0032. CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE. This is
to certify that I have this day served a true and
exact copy of the foregoing Order for Publication
upon the Defendant by placing said copy in the
United States mail, addressed to his last known
address as shown below, with sufficient postage
thereon to insure delivery. Carlos Albert Argueta,
175 North Street, Cleveland, TN 37311. Done
this 11th day of August, 2015. Arthur Bass, Attorney for Plaintiff.
August 31; September 7, 14, 21, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Millie Nell Lyle No. 2015-PR-179 In the
Chancery Court of Bradley County, Tennessee
Probate Division. Notice is given that on August
25, 2015 Letters Testamentary for the Estate of
Millie Nell Lyle, who died July 1, 2015, were issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court
of Bradley County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or
unmatured, against the estate are required to file
their claims with the Clerk and Master of the
Chancery Court of Bradley County on or before
the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2),
otherwise their claims will be forever barred: (1)
(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first
publication of this notice if the creditor received
an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least
sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4)
months from the date of the first publication; or
(B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if
the creditor received the copy of the notice to
creditors if the creditor received the copy of the
notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date
that is four (4) months from the date of first publication as described in (1)(A); or (2) Twelve (12)
months from the decedent's date of death. The
address of the Clerk and Master is Bradley
County Clerk & Master's Office, Room 203, 155
North Ocoee Street, Cleveland, TN 37311. This
August 25, 2015. MILLIE NELL LYLE ESTATE,
By: Pamela Gail Crane, Executrix; By: Rockford
Dee Lyle, Executor. McMurray Law Office, PLLC
by: Marcia M. McMurray, BPR #013337, Attorney
for the Executors, P.O. Box 610, Cleveland, TN
37364-0610. (423) 479-7171; Filed this August
25, 2015; Sarah E. Coleman, Clerk & Master.
August 31, 2015; September 7, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Patrick Jay Murphy No. 2015-PR-187
In the Chancery Court of Bradley County, Tennessee Probate Division. Notice is given that on
September 2, 2015 Letters Testamentary for the
Estate of Patrick Jay Murphy who died July 2,
2015, were issued to the undersigned by the
Chancery Court of Bradley County, Tennessee.
All persons, resident and non-resident, having
claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate
are required to file their claims with the Clerk and
Master of the Chancery Court of Bradley County
on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in
(1) or (2), otherwise their claims will be forever
barred: (1) (A) Four (4) months from the date of
the first publication of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors
at least sixty (60) days before the date that is
four (4) months from the date of the first publication; or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the
creditor received an actual copy of the notice to
creditors if the creditor received the copy of the
notice to creditors if the creditor received the
copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior
to the date that is four (4) months from the date
of first publication as described in (1)(A); or (2)
Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of
death. The address of the Clerk and Master is
Bradley County Clerk & Master's Office, Room
203, 155 North Ocoee Street, Cleveland, TN
37311. This September 2, 2015. PATRICK JAY
MURPHY ESTATE, By: Pamela Jayne Bibee,
Personal Representative; McMurray Law Office,
PLLC By: Marcia M. McMurray, BPR# 013337,
Attorney for Personal Representatives, P.O. Box
610,
Cleveland, TN
37364-0610.
(423)
479-7171; Filed this September 2, 2015; Sarah
E. Coleman, Clerk & Master.
September 7, 14, 2015
He said he was told
Greenpeace had been infiltrated
by Russian KGB agents.
Kister, who was an agent with
France’s Direction Generale de
la Securite Exterieure, said he
was the diver who attached the
bombs to the ship’s hull. He
directed his apology to the photographer’s daughter.
“I would like to take this
opportunity given to me by the
TV of New Zealand to express
my deepest regrets,” he said.
“And apologize to Ms. Marelle
Pereira and her family for the
accidental death of Fernando
Pereira.”
“I want to apologize to the
people of New Zealand for the
unfair, clandestine operation,
conducted on an ally, a friendly
and peaceful country,” he said.
Greenpeace New Zealand’s
Executive Director Bunny
McDiarmid said it is good to
hear the apology but she
believes the French agents acted
recklessly. McDiarmid was a
deckhand on the Rainbow
Warrior but was not aboard at
the time of the bombing.
“I think it’s nice that someone
from that murderous fiasco
apologies, and recognizes what
they did was illegal and
immoral,” McDiarmid said. “But
the apology is so conditioned.
Does he expect people to believe
they didn’t mean to hurt anybody? I think they were indifferent to that.”
Peter Willcox, the captain of
the Rainbow Warrior at the time,
expressed similar reservations.
In a Facebook post, he said he
thought Kister’s apology was
sincere but that the agents were
indifferent to any deaths that
might occur.
“This was a highly trained
military team. Could they really
have been that bad at their job?”
Willcox wrote. “They could have
used, and I am guessing here,
one quarter of the explosives,
and sunk the boat, giving us
time to get off.”
The incident has remained a
source of tension between
France and New Zealand.
French agents Dominique Prieur
and Alain Mafart were caught in
New Zealand after the bombing
and
pleaded
guilty
to
manslaughter.
But both were repatriated to
France within three years, a
move which upset many New
Zealanders who believed their
government had capitulated to
French pressure.
Sea turtles set
nesting records
in Ga. and Fla.
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — Sea
turtles laying eggs on southeastern beaches have rebounded
from a nesting slump last year.
On the coast of Georgia, scientists and volunteers counted a
record 2,292 loggerhead sea turtle nests during the season that
runs from May through August.
It’s the fifth season in six years
that Georgia has counted a
record number of nests.
Florida’s nesting season still
has a month to go, but scientists
have already counted a record
12,000 nests dug by endangered
green turtles at the Archie Carr
National
Wildlife
Refuge.
University of Central Florida sea
turtle researcher Kate Mansfield
says the same beaches had fewer
than 50 green turtle nests in the
1980s.
Preliminary numbers show
loggerhead turtles also had a
nesting comeback in North
Carolina and South Carolina
after 2014 numbers dipped
sharply.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015—17
Cleveland Daily Banner
CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
001 Classified Ad Policy
002 Special Notices
003 Card of Thanks
004 Good Things to Eat
005 Lost and Found
006 Estate Sales and Auctions
007 Personals
008 Adoptions
MERCHANDISE
009 Pets and Supplies
010 Arts and Crafts
011 Articles for Rent
012 Want to Rent
013 Swap or Trade
014 Want to Buy
015 Yard Sales
016 Antiques For Sale
018 Articles For Sale
024 Heavy/Farm Equipment
For Sale
025 Livestock-Horses-Poultry
026 Plants-Soil-Seed-Feed
027 Wood For Sale
028 Cemetery Lots For Sale
039 Services and Repairs
040 General Services Offered
041 Professional Services
042 Day Care
043 Moving and Hauling
REAL ESTATE (Rental)
045 Vacation Rentals
046 Storage Space for Rent
047 Business Property for Rent
048 Office Space for Rent
049 Apartments for Rent
050 Mobile Homes for Rent
051 Sleeping Rooms
053 Houses for Rent
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
054 Lots for Sale
055 Realtors
056 Houses for Sale
057 Farms & Acreage for Sale
058 Business Property for Sale
059 Mobile Homes for Sale
060 Mobile Home Lots for Sale
061 Commercial Bldgs. for Sale
VEHICLES/BOATS/PARTS
062 Boats & Marine Equipment
063 Motorcycles & Bikes
029 Help Wanted - Part Time
064 Recreational Vehicles
030 Help Wanted - Full Time
065 Campers & Equipment
031 Work Wanted
066 Auto Parts
FINANCIAL
067 Automotive Repair
033 Business Opportunities
068 Sport Utility Vehicles
034 Money To Lend
INSTRUCTIONS AND SERVICES 069 Trucks for Sale
070 Vans - Misc. for Sale
036 Instructions and Lessons
071 Trailers for Sale
037 Business/Trade Schools
072 Cars for Sale
038 Barber/Beauty Salons
EMPLOYMENT
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CLEVELAND DAILY Banner
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[email protected]
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avoid scholarship scams. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
1. Classified Ad Policy
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value of the advertisement should be
corrected the first day. Then, one
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without charge, if the advertiser calls
before 3pm the afternoon the error
appears. The CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER assumes no responsibility
for errors after the first corrected insertion. The Publisher reserves the
right to revise or reject, at his option,
any advertisement he deems objectionable either in subject or phraseology or which he may deem detrimental to his business. Deadline for
classified ads: Tuesday through Friday is 2pm for business ads and
3pm for personal ads the day before
ad is to run. Sunday deadline is
11am Friday for business ads and
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HARVEST HAS started! MondaySaturday
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5. lost And found
LOST YOUR pet? Check daily at the
Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 Hill
Street.
7. Personals
AL-ANON OFFERS help for families
of alcoholics. For meeting information call 423-284-1612.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE support
group for abuse victims. Meets Mondays. Call 479-9339, extension 15 or
25 for location.
IF YOU want to drink that's your
business…If you want to quit, call Alcoholics Anonymous. Call 499-6003.
14. Want To Buy
CASH PAID for guns. One or entire
collection. Posey gun 2524 Keith
Street, beside Townhouse Bakery
423-472-7296.
I BUY junk cars, trucks, motorcycles
from $250 up to $600 I will pick up.
Call Donny at 423-404-1488.
If you are searching for a product
or service AND do not want to use
loads of time searching everywhere,
WHY NOT Advertise your need under the heading: 014 WANT TO
BUY in THE CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER!!
15. Yard Sales
HUgE YARD Sale, 8am. Next to
Journey Church on South Lee Highway. Kids items, baby items, miscellaneous. September 7th, 8th, 9th
10th, 11th, 12th.
NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE OR
RENT? USE CLASSIFIED ADS.
THEY WORK! CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER, 472-5041.
16. Antiques for Sale
IMMACULATE MATCHINg antique
glass top Mershan tables, 1 coffee
table and 2 end tables, woven oak
beneath glass tops, bought at Lakeland Florida home show 50 years
ago for $1,500, asking $800 for the
three. 423-284-6442.
18. Articles for Sale
30. Help Wanted - full Time
49. Apartments for Rent
53. Houses for Rent
LOSE 30 lbs. in 30 days! Medical
doctors say the only way to lose
weight is to eat less and exercise
more.
Learn
how
to
avoid
weight-loss scams. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
SECURITY AND Fire Alarm Installer: Seeking full- time Security
and Fire Alarm Installers. Applicants
should have at least 1+ years of experience installing and servicing
commercial Burglar Alarm and or
Fire Alarm systems. Applicants
should be self driven, self- organized, possess great customer service skills & able to work well with
others. Experience in Access Control, CCTV, Audio/ Visual, Phone/
Data/ Cable or other low voltage
fields is a plus. Apply in person at
2109 Hickory Valley Road, Chattanooga, TN 37421, Monday- Friday
8:30am-4:00pm.
$1,800: LUxURY Apartment, fully
furnished, utilities paid. Located on
quiet side street. Contact Jones
Properties 423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz
LARgE, CITY, brick, closets, spa,
2.5 baths, workshop. No pets.
$1,500. 423-584-6505.
MOVINg SALE: Large almond color
side by side refrigerator $150. Almond color stove $75. Both work.
Must go. Will consider reasonable
offer for the pair. 586-214-9037
(Cleveland TN area).
PAIR OF matching Broyhill Sofas,
mint condition, dark green and burgundy floral print, originally $1,000.
Also, dark green extra wide velour
Chaise lounge, matches the sofas,
originally $400. Selling all three for
$1,000. Many other pieces, call for
showing 423-284-6442.
PAllETS!!!
fREE WHIlE THEY lAST!
Cleveland Daily Banner
WASHER, DRYER, upright freezer,
console television, Duncan Phyffe
sofa, beautiful Japanese pattern
china, other items. 423-472-2664.
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
A LOCAL home medical equipment
company is in need of part time
weekend delivery driver. This position requires someone who can
communicate well with the elderly,
be able to lift over 50 pounds, prioritize their work schedule. Please apply at Tri-State Respiratory Service
60 25th Street NW, Suite 4, Cleveland.
PART TIME: Cooking, Marketing
and Delivery positions available for
healthy
food
prep
business
423-715-9519.
WINgATE INN is taking applications
for Weekend Breakfast Attendant.
Candidates must be neat, clean and
service oriented individuals who take
pride in their work. Apply in person.
Drug test may be required. Exit 25;
110 Interstate Drive NW.
30. Help Wanted - full Time
A/ C Salesman needed, 35 year old
company has opening for individual
with residential and commercial experience. Send resume to:
[email protected] or call
423-336-5958.
A/ C TECH position, residential and
commercial experience necessary.
423-336-5958.
AIR CONDITIONINg Tech and
Helper needed. Must have valid drivers license. Call 423-339-1613.
COUNTER SALES & Warehouse
personnel needed for fast paced
hardware & fastener company. Applicants must be well groomed, experienced in customer service, and
have a working knowledge of hardware, construction supplies & safety
equipment. Fax resume with verifiable work history for the past 10
years to 423-339-2255.
DELIVERY DRIVER needed. Box
truck experience helpful. Apply in
person at Scotts Furniture Company
1650 South Lee Highway, Cleveland.
EARN THOUSAND$ from home. Be
careful of work-at-home schemes.
Hidden costs can add up, and requirements may be unrealistic.
Learn how to avoid work-at-home
scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission. 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
ELITE MASONRY is hiring experienced brick layers. 423-421-6809.
FULL TIME Bradley County Bail
Bond Agent needed for Knox based
company in business for 25 years.
Commission based pay. Phone skills
needed, basic mathematical skills
required. Email resume [email protected]
or
fax
865-522-8552.
Phone
865-522-2240. Resume's preferred
over calls.
NOW HIRINg: Newly Weds Foods,
Inc. Starting Pay $10 hour. Apply in
person at: 187 Industrial Lane SW
Cleveland TN 37311
LOCAL ACCOUNTINg firm seeks
administrative assistant. Proficiency
in Microsoft Word required. Familiarity with Quickbooks desirable. Compensation based on experience and
proficiency. Send resumes to:
#731-M, c/o Cleveland Daily Banner,
P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN
37320-3600
LOCAL COMPANY hiring over the
road drivers Class A CDL. 2 years
minimum experience with good record. 423-595-8922.
LOOKINg FOR CARPENTERS
AND LEAD CARPENTERS: general Contractor serving Cleveland,
TN and surrounding areas looking
to hire full time employees for commercial and residential fields. Applicants must have valid driver's license and ability to pass drug
screening. Company offers Paid
Holidays and Paid Vacation.
Please send resume' to
[email protected].
LPN OR CMA needed for busy specialty practice. Candidate should
have experience in rooming patients,
pre-certification
and
scheduling
tests. Must have attention to detail
and be a team player. Excellent
benefits including health insurance
and 401K plan. Please send resume
with references to:
[email protected].
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST– full
time with benefits. Must be able to
1. Work in a fast- paced office 2.
give exceptional customer service
3. Differentiate between various insurance companies 4. Answer the
phone and schedule appointments
5. Work well with others. Please do
not waste my time if you are not a
qualified applicant Email resume’
to [email protected]
NOW TAKINg applications and resumes for a Police Officer/ Chief.
Respond by September 18, 2015 to
City of Calhoun, Attention City Manager P.O Box 115, Calhoun, TN
37309.
O T R DRIVERS wanted. Teams/
Singles. Owner Operators/ Company
Drivers. Late model equipment.
great home time. Steady freight
year round. Call: 423-870-9681.
PALLET HANDLERS: Full time/
days or nights. Sorting and loading
pallets, maintaining work area and
following all safety procedures
Monday- Friday and every other
weekend, $8.50 to start. Call Jamie
423-598-0634.
SKILLED CLINICAL Manager, RN,
full time. Skilled healthcare experience required. Apply at Bradley
Healthcare & Rehab Center, 2910
Peerless Road, Cleveland, TN. Drug
Free, E E O
STARS, INC. is hiring Personal Assistant,
wage
$8.50.
Call
423-447-2590 ext. # 1
VETERINARY TECHNICIAN/ Assistant: Experience required. Must be
available nights and weekends.
Send resume to P.O. Box 372
Charleston, TN 37310, fax to
423-336-2887
or
email:
[email protected].
WEEKDAY DORM Parent full time.
Nights. Dorm parents oversee a
dorm of middle and high school
students, taking part in activities,
tutoring, clubs, and teaching students how to live away from home.
Pay increases with experience! We
promote from within. Starting pay
is $10 hour. Send resumes to [email protected] or call
423-479-4523.
Change
lives,
change the future! www.bachmanacademy.org
YmCA YOUTH SPORTS
COORDINATOR NEEDED!
The YMCA needs an enthusiastic
leader to develop and supervise
youth and adult sports programs.
Qualified candidates will have superior organizational and staff management skills, strong customer service
and communication abilities, as well
as extensive rules and theory knowledge covering multiple sports.
Please submit resume and applications in- person at 220 Urbane
Road, Cleveland, TN 37311
33. Business Opportunities
$475: ONE bedroom, 1 bath, close
to Lee University, water/ sewer paid.
Contact
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz
$650: 2 Bedroom, 1.5 bath, 1,044
square feet, with patio, great location. Contact Jones Properties
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz
$860: LARgE 3 level townhome, 2
bedroom, 2.5 baths with den/ fireplace. Community pool. Contact
Jones Properties, 423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
1 BEDROOM, stove, refrigerator,
water paid, country setting, no pets,
$450 monthly, $300 deposit. Owner/
Agent STONY BROOKS REALTY
423-479-4514.
56. Houses for Sale
2 BEDROOM apartment, updated,
close- in, $700 monthly, $700 security deposit. 423-476-9101.
3 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. Laundry hookups. NO PETS. $545
monthly,
$375
deposit;
423-310-8792.
3 BEDROOM, 2 1/2 bath, large
townhouse 1,250 square feet, hardwood, tile, and stainless appliances,
$1,050. 1724 New Castle Drive NW
423-618-0823.
BY OWNER: NW Cleveland, ranch
style, approximately 2,800 square
feet, large lot, three full baths, desirable
location.
$159,000.
423-472-2664.
622- B BEECH CIRCLE NW: Newly
Remodeled! Large 2 bedroom, brick,
dishwasher, laundry area, large private yard with creek, rear deck,
Ross School. No smoking/ pets.
$600 deposit. $600 monthly, credit
check. 423-715-6605.
REMODELED HOME: 3 Bedrooms,
2.5 baths, double garage, rocking
chair front porch, Florida room.
Lease with option to buy. Owner/
agent, STONY BROOKS REALTY
423-479-4514.
BEHIND AUTO Zone at 737 Willow
Street. Townhouse: 2 bedrooms, 1.5
bath, Washer/ dryer hookup, no
smoking, no pets, $640 monthly,
$500 deposit (423)667-3551.
HORTON ROAD at Bohannon Road
Acreage. 7.6 acres fully fenced
$68,000.
423-476-3766
or
423-650-3181.
BEST PLACE for living: 2 bedroom,
1.5 bath, with bonus room, $690.
423-667-4967.
BEST PLACE for living: 3 bedroom,
2 bath, master on 1st floor, $820.
423-667-4967.
BlYTHEWOOD- STEEPlECHASE
APARTmENTS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2
Bedroom ($429- $599). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
PROCESS MEDICAL claims from
home? Chances are you won’t make
any money. Find out how to spot a
medical billing scam. Call the Federal Trade Commission,
1-877-FTC-HELP.
A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
Federal Trade Commission. Or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
CLOSE TO Everything, 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, 1 car garage. Newly decorated inside. $600 rent, $600 deposit. No pets, No smoking. AWARD
REALTY 423-476-3025, or genelle
423-596-9352
CLEVELAND SUMMIT Apartments
Rent is based on income for persons
62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. Equal Housing Opportunity 44
Inman Street 479-3005
gREAT LOCATION. Walk to Publix,
Starbucks. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths,
townhome. 3 ceiling fans, 1,000
square feet, Nicely decorated. No
pets ever! Must have rent references
and verifiable income. $625 monthly,
$500 deposit. 423-479-9891.
50. mobile Homes for Rent
NEED CA$H fast but can’t get a
loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a
loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP to learn
how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. A message from Cleveland
Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
14x55, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, newly remodeled, with appliances, $125
weekly, $400 deposit. No Pets.
423-240-2575.
40. General Services Offered
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, real nice on
private lot, 7 miles east of Cleveland.
Must see! No smoking. No pets. For
information
9am-6pm
call
423-479-5570 or 423-472-6641.
* AAA House PAINTINg: InteriorExterior, Pressure Washing, FREE
estimates,
References.
423-284-9652.
BLOOSOM ACRES gUNS firearms
guns transfer. We do transfer for all
your gun needs 423-591-0066 Ask
us about selling your guns.
POWER WASHINg, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
45. vacation Rentals
2 RIVERS CAMPINg: RV Park,
Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee
Rivers. 423-338-7208.
BEAR PAW COTTAgES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
2 AND 3 bedrooms units available.
Hours Thursday through Sunday.
423-790-7141.
COLLEgETOWN
MOBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
52. Sleeping Rooms
ExTENDED STAY Suites. 550
square feet, furnished, cable, internet, utilities, kitchen. 423-584-6505.
53. Houses for Rent
$625 MONTHLY, $400 deposit, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath. 630 14th Street
Cleveland
SE.
No
Pets.
423-595-2935.
46. Storage Space for Rent
47. Business Property for
Rent
$595: 1,770 square foot commercial
property, formerly leased as restaurant and an office. good location.
Call Dennis, PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAgEMENT LLC. 423-240-0231.
48. Office Space for Rent
600 SQUARE feet, multiple office,
$350 monthly, very convenient,
423-991-4984.
OffICE/ RETAIl Space Available,
short and long term lease. Several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
49. Apartments for Rent
57. farms & Acreage for Sale
lAND fOR SAlE.
17 BEAUTIfUl ACRES ON
lOWER RIvER ROAD IN
DECATUR.
vERY ClOSE TO THE
TENNESSEE RIvER.
PARTIAllY ClEARED.
BEAUTIfUl SITE fOR A HOmE
WITH A CREEK RUNNING
THROUGH IT lOTS Of PINE
TREES.
{GREAT fOR HUNTING}
DEER STANDS AND HUNTING
BlIND AlREADY ON SITE.
RECENTlY BUSH HOGGED.
TAKE HWY 58 NORTH
TOWARDS DECATUR,
CROSS OvER RIvER
AND TURN lEfT ONTO
ARmSTRONG fERRY ROAD,
TURN RIGHT ON
lOWER RIvER ROAD.
PROPERTY APPROXImATElY
7/10 mIlE ON lEfT.
mUST SEE!
$79,900
CAll 423-285-4030
423-593-1508
64. Recreational vehicles
1985 HOLIDAY Rambler, excellent
condition, Aluma frame, 2 owner,
barn kept, No hanger rash, $5,200,
24 foot long, 423-338-1975.
72. Cars for Sale
JUNK CARS, wrecked cars, trucks,
vans, SUVs. Cash paid, free pick up.
423-240-1334.
LLOYD'S USED CARS
5526 Waterlevel Highway
Cleveland- 423-476-5681
Come by before you purchase your
next vehicle! Cash talks, warranties,
history reports. 2007 Pontiac g5
Coupe, 2006 Kia Sedona, 2004 Nissan xterra, 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
ExT 4x4, 2003 Ford Explorer, 2000
Honda Accord.
$149 PLUS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent:
georgetown Pike, Spring Place
Road and Highway 64. Call
476–2777.
TEMPSAFE STORAgE
Climate Controlled
& Outside Units
Downtown Location
& georgetown Road
614-4111
1ST TImE HOmE BUYERS
PURCHASE YOUR HOmE
“WITH NO DOWN PAYmENT”
CAll TODAY fOR DETAIlS!
HERB lACY CEll
# 423-593-1508
EmAIl [email protected]
Century 21 first Choice Realtors
478-2332
CLEAN, SPACIOUS, 2 bedroom,
covered parking, private patio, $650
lease, deposit, 423-479-5451.
34. money To lend
54. lots for Sale
CLEVELAND: BEAUTIFUL building
lot in NW city. All utilities. great location and school zones! $36,000.
423-473-9111, Please leave message if no answer.
INvESTIGATE BEfORE
YOU INvEST!
Always a good policy, especially for
business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer
Affairs at (800) 342-8385 or the Federal Trade Commission at (877)
FTC-HELP for free information. Or
visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov
* LOANS up to $1,250 *
Quick Approval
423-476-5770
SECLUDED BRICK HOUSE in the
woods, (very quiet area), 3 bedroom,
2 bath, (3rd bath roughed in), full
basement plus 24x 36 A- Frame
workshop, hiking trails and access to
swimming pool (conditional). Only
$995 per month. Location in Ocoee4699 Highway 411, 1.5 miles north
of Highway 64. Call 423-718-4697
any hour.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
2 BEDROOM, $650 monthly, $650
deposit.
Appliances
furnished.
Washer/
dryer
hookup.
423-472-7816.
SALESMAN DRIVER
INSTALLER
Ocoee River Propane Gas in
Cleveland has an opening for a local
propane gas delivery salesman truck
driver and tank installer. Must have
CDL-HazMat Tanker, best job with
excellent pay and benefits. Please call
(423) 473-7772 or 1-800-874-4427
ext. 145 or email: [email protected]
FULL TIME
Maintenance
Technician needed
HVAC/ AC certification
required, willing to be on call
and familiar with apartment
maintenance. Pool knowledge
helpful. Benefits include paid
medical insurance, vacation
and holidays. Please bring
resume or come by and fill out
an application at
Cherokee Hills Apartments,
2020 Bates Pike, #100,
Cleveland, TN 37311
(423) 559-0800.
Fax 423-559-9966.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath house $400
monthly.
2 Bedroom, 1 bath mobile home
$400 monthly.
Out in the country 423-400-0218.
ADORABLE, 2 bedroom, 1 bath
house near Red Clay Park. Open
floor plan, $500 monthly, $500 deposit. One year lease/ credit check
required. NO smoking, NO pets.
423-715-2130.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
ADORABLE: 2 Bedroom cabin/ land
in the country, SE, $650 monthly.
423-650-5027.
IN CLEVELAND (HWY 64 area):
Nice Ranch house. New A/C, new
siding, 1,650 square feet, unfurnished, 3 bedroom, 2 bath on one
acre, fenced back yard. No Inside
pets. No smokers. Dishwasher/
stove/ provided. 1 year lease at
$950 monthly, $500 deposit. References required. Call 423-421-2851.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
LOCAL ROUTE
DRIVER/TECHNICIAN
OCOEE RIVER PROPANE
3159 Frazier Park Drive NE
Cleveland, TN
(423)-473-7772
Come be a member of our UPG
team! Must be 21 years old, have
CDL with tanker and hazmat
endorsements. We offer
competitive pay, company paid
benefits, and weekly incentives
based on self motivation. If you
are hard-working and self
motivated,
then this is the job for you!
Please email
[email protected],
or apply in person.
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Monday, September 7, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Schools rule!
Larry C. Bowers
Education reporter
Phone: 472-5041 Fax: 614-6529
E-mail:
[email protected]
Contributed photo
AMONG THE GREATEST
needs at the start of a school
year is school supplies. The students at Prospect and Hopewell
elementary schools recently
received two $5,000 gifts from
Elkmont Baptist Church which
offset those needs. Each grade
received five backpacks, and
any remaining funds were given
to the two schools school for
discretionary spending.
Participating in the presentation
were, back row from left, Pastor
Johnny Hood, Deacon Matt
Dillard and Prospect Principal
Steve Montgomery. Posing with
their new backpacks are, from
left, students Andrew Staton,
Haley Freeman, Brinley Hughes,
Hector Alaniz and Liebe
Carmona.
Contributed photos
THE FIRST-GRADE students in Susan Shaver’s class at
Yates Primary School received a lesson in agriculture early this
school year as they celebrated Farm Day. Among the students
dressing up for the day were, from left, Millie Freeman, Jason
Mirkovich and Alexander Johnson.
ALL DRESSED UP recently in their farm hats and bandanas
were a trio of students in Mrs. Shaver’s class at Yates Primary
School. These three young farmers included, from left, Zuleymi
Calderon, Ellie Lee and Jenna Belcher.
Contributed photos
BLYTHE-BOWER STUDENTS in the classes of Ms. Hicks and Ms. Caldwell took a trip to the hospital recently. The third-grade classes
were dressed in gloves and masks as they worked at Rock and Roll General Hospital. They were working together in an attempt to cure
incorrect math problems. As some of the students worked on the problems, below, the sound of a heart monitor filled the room. The students’
corrected work was written on a prescription pad, and handed over to the chiefs of staff (Ms. Hicks and Ms. Caldwell).
THE THREE YOUNG farm girls above were all dressed up for
a day of work in the field. The three students were in Mrs.
Shaver’s first-grade class and were participating in Farm Day.
THE TWO LADS ABOVE are usually occupied with classroom work, lunch, and recreation, but on this day they were
learning about farming. The two students were dressed up for
Farm Day in Mrs. Shaver’s class at Yates Primary.
You can pedal away pounds, improve cardio health
Special to the Banner
With Tennessee rated as the 49th worst state for
physical activity and 47th for obesity, one cannot
argue about the need for improved health in communities across the state.
Tennessee Department of Health Commissioner
Dr. John Dreyzehner believes those ratings can
change if state and city leaders increase efforts to
make bicycling and walking safer and more convenient.
This is not for any specific member of a family,
but for children, adults, and the elderly in each and
every household.
“We applaud the Tennessee Department of
Transportation and city governments across the
state for their leadership in seeking ways to
improve biking and walking for all Tennesseans,”
Dreyzehner said.
“Biking and walking are transportation,” he
added. “If we all walked and biked more, we could
reduce traffic congestion, pollution, heart attacks,
cancer and diabetes. More of us would live longer,
healthier lives, and the burden of health care costs
we all share could decrease.”
Among the top 10 leading causes of death in
Tennessee in 2014, obesity and a lack of exercise
are contributing factors in five, including:
—Heart disease – 15,197 dead;
—Cancer – 14,153 dead;
—Chronic lower respiratory disease – 3,967
dead;
—Cerebrovascular disease – 3,322 dead; and
—Diabetes – 1,724 dead.
“Bicycling and walking are among the best forms
of exercise,” said the TDH’s Family and Health and
Wellness Director Dr. Michael D. Warren. “Both
provide excellent benefits for the heart, burn calories and increase muscle development, and contribute to improved mental health.
“Walking or biking can be a great ‘prescription’ to
help restore the health of many who have been
diagnosed with diseases that may otherwise lead to
poor quality of life or early death,” Warren continued.
“I rediscovered the sheer joy of bicycling a few
years ago, and it’s now become my favorite way to
exercise and enjoy the outdoors,” said Valerie
Nagoshiner, TDH assistant commissioner for legislative affairs.
“With the number of greenways, bike lanes and
sidewalks in our communities, I see more and more
people out enjoying a walk, bike ride or run,” said
Magpshiner. “Many people are riding their bikes to
the store or walking to lunch. Walking and bicycling are great ways to get where you need to go
and have fun with family and friends.”
The mission of the Tennessee Department of
Health is to protect, promote and improve the
health and prosperity of people in Tennessee.
TDH has facilities in all 95 counties and provides
direct services for more than 1 in 5 Tennesseans
annually, as well as indirect services for everyone
in the state, including emergency response to
health threats, licensure of health professionals,
regulation of health care facilities and inspection of
food service establishments. Learn more about
TDH
services
and
programs
at
http://tn.gov/health.