HHWCD coming Saturday rain or shine

Transcription

HHWCD coming Saturday rain or shine
F R I D AY
NOVEMBER 6, 2015
161st YEAR • NO. 163
CLEVELAND, TN 22 PAGES • 50¢
HHWCD coming Saturday rain or shine
By RICK NORTON
Associate Editor
Rain or shine — and one year there
was even snow — Saturday’s semi-annual Household Hazardous Waste
Collection Day will proceed as scheduled.
And right now, most forecasters are
calling for the wet stuff. But in the eyes of
volunteers who share a cause, it’s little
more than liquid sunshine.
Gates open at the Tri-State Exhibition
Center promptly at 8 a.m. and will close
just as promptly at 1 p.m., according to
Cheryl Dunson, executive vice president
of marketing for Santek Waste Services
Inc. Dunson coordinates the HHWCD
event while her employer, Santek, operates the Bradley County Landfill under
contract with county government.
Saturday’s event is free and Dunson
urged Bradley County residents to take
advantage of the opportunity to clean up
and clear out their cluttered basements,
garages, storage sheds and closets of
items and substances considered to be
household hazardous waste.
These include an assortment of waste
streams, like household chemicals and
electronics, and plenty of others.
“The collection program is tailored to
relieve Bradley County residents of all of
their household toxic wastes including
paints, solvents, cleaners, pesticides,
automotive fluids, aerosols, old computers, television sets and fluorescent light
bulbs,” she said.
Dunson also reminded area residents
of the availability of the Peerless Road
Recycling Center which accepts electron-
ics wastes year-round.
A traditional part of gearing up for
each HHWCD event is educating area
residents about items that can be accepted at Tri-State, and those that cannot.
“We accepted almost 38,000 pounds of
household chemicals and electronics in
April [at the last HHWCD event],”
See HHWCD, Page 10
Real Heroes Wear Pink
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Industrial park
report is heard
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Inside Today
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THURSDAY was a special day at Lee University and for the entire community as the Volley for a Cure organizers held their annual
luncheon, with a packed house at Lee’s DeVos Recreation Center. The guest speaker for the event was Sonya Jones (far right), runner-up on this past season’s “Biggest Loser” television show. Lee volleyball coach Andrea Hudson (center) helped coordinate the event
and asked Jones (who she knew from when Jones played softball against Lee) to be the guest speaker. Survivors were honored at the
luncheon, as well as some who were instrumental in putting the event together, including Lee University’s Stephanie Taylor (far left).
Bears fall short
Bradley Central came up four
points short in their 38-34 loss to
Riverdale in the first round of the
playoffs. Lee Volleyball is ready for
Volley for a Cure festivities. The
Flames picked up an exhibition win
over Bryan College. The Vols’ Evan
Berry has established himself as
one of the nation’s top kickoff returners. Caleb Houston continues to pick
up accolades at UCF. The Predators
defeated the Wild in Minnesota. See
Sports, Pages 13-15.
Forecast
There is a slight chance of showers
early today with increasing chances of
thunderstorms into the afternoon.
Skies should be cloudy with a high
near 75 with a south wind at 5 to 10
miles per hour. Rain chance is 50 percent. Tonight, thre will be more of the
same with a low of 61, but rain
chances will pick up at 90 percent.
On Saturday, look for an 80 percent chance of rain with a high near
66.
Index
Church........................................6-7
Classified................................20-21
Comics.........................................17
Editorials......................................16
Horoscope....................................17
Movies..........................................20
Obituaries.......................................2
Stocks............................................4
Sports......................................13-15
TV Schedule...........................18-19
Weather........................................11
Around Town
Fran Green getting an eyeopening experience in earlymorning radio ... Mark Grissom
and Allan Jones reaching out in
some kind ways for a friend’s
birthday ... Jan Cooke enjoying
lunch with her children ... Dena
Thomas making new friends in
Cleveland ... Andrea Orr getting a
pleasant surprise ... Melissa
Woody doing some doublechecking on an event ... Toby
Pendergrass congratulating a
friend on some “classic” journalism ... Bart Borden providing
some helpful information.
6 89076 75112 4
ThreeStar
goals get
approval
of EDC
Sonya Jones: ‘You are the ones that
need to be honored and celebrated’
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
“Real Heroes Wear Pink,” and Thursday
the DeVos Recreation Center at Lee
University was full of pink. Sonya Jones
said that it was also full of heroes.
Jones, runner-up to this past season’s
“Biggest Loser” reality television show, was
the special guest speaker at the Volley for a
Cure luncheon held at the Rec Center, and
she said that while some consider her a
hero for what she did in the show, the real
heroes are those who give back to help others, such as those affected by breast cancer
or caregivers helping family and friends
dealing with that dreaded disease.
“We have all been affected by this somehow, and let me be the first to tell you that
“You are the warriors; you
are the heroes.”
— Sonya Jones
I do not consider myself a hero because I
lost half of my weight on national TV,” she
said. “I do think it was admirable or stupid
to step out on a scale that showed me at
283 pounds.
“I am thrilled that some of you have
taken inspiration from my journey,” Jones
added. “And that is what today is all about
— inspiring others to be all that God has
designed us to be.”
She said that cancer affects many people,
many who are survivors, “and we applaud
you today.”
“You are the heroes. You are the ones
that need to be honored and celebrated,”
she said. “You who walk along beside them
are heroes too.”
Jones talked about how she got on the
“Biggest Loser,” what she went through and
how she survived the grueling schedule of
losing from 283 pounds down to 139
pounds (a total of 144 pounds) and having
that all shown on national television for all
to see.
“My trainer, Jen, and I came up with our
phrase ‘why not you, why not us, why not
me’ to get us through the competition,” she
said. “There is a lot of drive in that statement.”
See HEROES, Page 10
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THE DEVOS Recreation
Center was filled with pink in
honor of breast cancer survivors at Thursday’s Volley for
a Cure luncheon. One table
featured a group from the
Bradley County Sheriff’s
Office, who not only wore pink
shirts but also pink Hawaiian
leis as accessories. From left
are Janet Conley, Stella
Crump, Elizabeth Kalabus,
Jean Clayton, Judy Gilley and
Carol Edwards.
Bradley County has set its
goals and objectives for the coming year’s ThreeStar program.
The Economic Development
Council approved the objectives
during a gathering Thursday.
The goals are focusing on education, supporting
the expansion of
existing industry,
economic development, maintaining
an inventory of
prospect-ready
industrial sites,
improving
the
urban transportation
system, Hathcock
recreation
and
agriculture.
Locally, the program is coordinated by Bradley
County Mayor D.
Gary Davis’ office.
“We are all competing for jobs and
industry and in
today’s economic
Berry
climate that is a
challenge.
ThreeStar
was
designed, built and implemented
to help all Tennessee communities’ efforts in completing this
task,” Lindsay Hathcock, assistant to the Bradley County mayor,
said. “They encourage time spent
with local industries.”
Counties that participate qualify for funding to help complete
projects to reach their ThreeStar
goals.
Hathcock said the program
also offers encouragement and
support. He said last year the
county received a $10,000 grant
for a needed piece of equipment
for the Emergency Medical
Service.
“The machine assists in cardiac
arrest patients,” Hathcock said.
The machine gives continual
chest compressions while the
EMTs are moving the patient.
“This year we are improving
Microsoft licensing for offices
throughout the Courthouse in
different areas. We will be improving efficiency and productivity
with those,” Hathcock said.
See EDC, Page 10
Bistro’s chef is
competing with
world’s finest
City’s Gene Bishop
retiring after a long
career with schools
By BRIAN GRAVES
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Banner Staff Writer
One of the longtime managers in the
Cleveland City Schools system is stepping down.
Director of Schools Dr. Martin
Ringstaff announced at a Cleveland
Board of Education gathering this
week that maintenance-construction’s
Gene Bishop is moving aside after
many years of service and accomplishments.
Bishop was in charge when
Cleveland High School’s Commons
area was built, he was site manager
for the Science Wing, worked with
Cleveland Middle School construction
and guided several other projects for
the school system.
Every year, thousands of the nation’s
best chefs gather for the world’s largest
culinary competition.
Cleveland’s own Eric Fulkerson,
executive chef at the Bald Headed
Bistro, has joined them at the World
Food Championships in Kissimmee,
Fla. as he competes alongside the
country’s premier food and beverage
talent. The popular event continues
through Nov. 10.
“This is a huge honor,” Fulkerson
said. “When you talk about this level of
competition, you are literally looking out
at a world view of culinary talent and
exposure. The atmosphere is electric,
and I want to show how ingredients
See BISHOP, Page 10
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
GENE BISHOP, left, a longtime
Cleveland City Schools constructionmaintenance manager, is stepping
down from his position. Current maintenance supervisor Hal Taylor, right,
praised Bishop’s contributions to the
school system.
See CHEF, Page 10
Eric Fulkerson
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
To submit an obituary, have the funeral home or cremation
society in charge of arrangements e-mail the information to [email protected] and fax to 423-614-6529, attention
Obits.
Wilbur Avery
Wilbur Avery, 75, of Cohutta,
Ga., passed away Wednesday,
Nov. 4, 2015, surrounded by his
loving family at his home.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Virgil and Jessie
Mae (Sitton) Avery; father-inlaw, the Rev. R.L. Shults; and
brothers-in-law: Bruce Schultz
and Jack Crump.
He was a member of South
Calhoun Baptist Church. He
loved his family and also had a
love for airplanes, cars and
tractors. He was a member of
the 1958 Calhoun High School.
He is survived by his loving
wife of 22 years, Ann Shults
Avery; three sons and daughters-in-law: Virgil and Jenn
Avery of Roswell, Ga., Tony
and
Yvonne
Graham
of
Cleveland, and Robert and
Pam Graham of Cleveland;
adopted son and wife, Carey
and Kristi Coker of Cohutta;
sister, Elva Crump of Calhoun,
Ga.; grandchildren: Tasha
Graham, who he called his
baby, Katie Cobb, Molly
Gazdziak, Alec Coker and
Amanda Price; great-grandchildren: Lalia Cobb, Rhyder and
Tucker Price; neighbor, George
Ford; and cousins.
The funeral will be held
Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at 2 p.m.
at the Pleasant Grove Chapel
of Julian Peeples Funeral
Home in Dalton, Ga., with the
Rev. Mike Malone officiating.
Burial will be in Blackwood
Springs
Baptist
Church
Cemetery,
Calhoun,
Ga.
Serving as pallbearers will be
Jeffrey Sitton, Keith Sitton,
James Parker, Carey Coker,
Scott Harden and Hank Milsap.
Honorary pallbearers will be his
classmates of the 1958 Class
of Calhoun High School.
The family will receive friends
at the funeral home on
Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m.
You may leave the family a
message on the tribute wall,
upload pictures or light a
memorial candle at www.julianpeeples.com
For more information, call
706-259-7455.
James Conley
James Conley, 53, died early
this morning, Friday, Nov. 6,
2015, at his home.
Arrangements and survivors
will be announced by GrissomSerenity Funeral Home &
Cremation Services.
Leona Geren
Leona
Geren,
87,
of
Cleveland, died this morning,
Friday, Nov. 6, 2015, at a local
health care facility.
Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home.
Beverley Kay Murray
Beverley Kay Melton Murray,
58, a resident of Cleveland,
passed away Tuesday evening,
Nov. 3, 2015, in a local hospital.
She was the daughter of the
late, Alice Lavern Goodwin
Melton and Horace Melton. Her
husband, Donald E. Murray Sr.
and her brothers: Lynn and Steve
Melton also preceded her in
death.
She
worked
for
Magic
Chef/Maytag with 35 years of
service. She enjoyed spending
time with her family and cooking.
She was a member of the River
Hills Church of God.
Survivors include her daughter,
Melissa Botts and her husband,
Kenny, of Cleveland; son, Donald
E. Murray Jr. and his wife,
Brandi, of Midland, Texas; grandchildren: Sierra and Omer Dunci,
both of Cleveland; sister, Sandy
Dillard and her husband, Craig,
of Cleveland; niece, Jennie
Melton Wilkison; her nephews:
Josh Melton and his wife, Niki,
Jonathan Dillard, Christopher
Dillard and his wife, Kara, James
Melton and his wife, Alicia; sisterin-law,
Helen
Melton
of
Cleveland; and several aunts,
uncles and cousins.
The Remembrance of Life
service will be held Sunday, Nov.
8, 2015, at 5 p.m. from the River
Hills Church of God with Pastor
Mike Rester and the Rev. Daron
Miller officiating.
A graveside service and interment will be held Monday, Nov. 9,
2015, at 12:30 p.m. from the U.S.
National
Cemetery
in
Chattanooga with Kenny Botts,
Omer Duncil, Jonathan Dillard,
Christopher Dillard, Josh Melton
and Nathan Goodwin serving as
casketbearers.
The family will receive friends
from 6 until 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov.
7, 2015, at the Wildwood Avenue
Chapel of Jim Rush Funeral and
Cremation Service.
You may share your condolences and your memories with
Beverley’s family at www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
T.J. McDonald
T.J. McDonald, 81, of Benton,
passed away Wednesday, Nov.
4, 2015, at his home.
He was a member of Shiloh
Baptist Church. He was a veteran of the United States Air Force
and retired from the Tennessee
Department of Transportation.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Traynor and Stella
Moorhouse McDonald; sister,
Mable Clark; brother, Willis Hoop
McDonald; and infant brother,
Erskine McDonald.
He is survived by his wife of 52
years, Carolyn Hitch McDonald;
sons: Joe and Jim McDonald;
brother-in-law, Bill Hitch and wife,
Barbara; sister-in-law, Mary
McDonald; and several nieces
and nephews.
The funeral will be held at 8
p.m. today, Nov. 6, 2015, at
Shiloh Baptist Church in Ocoee
with the Rev. Charles Campbell
officiating.
Interment will be at noon
Saturday in Benton Memorial
Gardens with a white dove
release ceremony concluding the
service.
The family will receive friends
from 6 to 8 p.m. today at the
church prior to the service.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the
McDonald family guestbook at
www.higginsfuneral.com.
Higgins Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.
Rogers Jr. of Georgetown;
grandchildren: Josh Lawson,
Matthew
Meadows,
Noah
Lawson, Zachary Meadows,
Sydney Lawson, Alyssa Rogers
and Luke Meadows; sisters:
Jessie Brennan and Shirley
Carter, both of Cleveland; and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
The Remembrance of Life
service will be held Saturday,
Nov. 7, 2015, at 3 p.m. from the
North Ocoee Chapel of Jim Rush
Funeral and Cremation Services
with the Rev. Gerald Adkins, the
Rev. Earl Farris and the Rev.
David Evans officiating.
Interment will follow in the
Cofer Cemetery with Josh
Lawson, Matthew and Zachary
Meadows, Noah Lawson, David
Rogers, Sydney Lawson, Alyssa
Rogers and Luke Meadows serving as casketbearers. Military
honors will be given. A dove
release will conclude the services.
The family will receive friends
from 5 until 8 p.m. today at the
funeral home.
You may share your condolences and your memories with
Neal’s family at www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
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Phone (423) 472-5041.
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Jim Bryant
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Beecher White
Rev. Beecher White, 68, a resident of Benton, passed away
Monday afternoon, Nov. 2, 2015,
in a Chattanooga hospital.
He was the son of the late,
Mamie M. Ledford White and
William Lloyd White. His sisters:
Dean White and Jewell White
Swinford also preceded him in
death.
He was a U.S. National Guard
veteran serving in Tennessee. He
has served as Pastor of the
Washington Avenue Baptist
Church for the past 30 years. He
also pastored the Charity Baptist
Church and Temple Baptist
Church here in Cleveland. He
loved missions and he served in
the mission field in Jamaica for
20 years. He loved raising
Beagles. He enjoyed hunting
rabbits and especially fishing
with his grandchildren. He loved
preaching the gospel and visiting
with shutins. He was a wonderful
family man and his ministry
spanned more than 40 years.
Survivors include his wife of 48
years, Frances White and daughter, Bonnie Wilson and her husband, Rodney, all of Benton; son,
the Rev. Daniel White and his
wife, Molly, of Cleveland; grandchildren: Jacob Wilson, Rebekah
Wilson, Caleigh White, Abby
White and Aiden White; sister,
Betty White Cooley and her husband, Paul, of Cleveland; and
several nieces and nephews.
The Remembrance of Life
service will be held Saturday,
Nov. 7, 2015, at 1 p.m. from the
Cecil Thompson
Cecil Thompson, 81, went Washington Avenue Baptist
home to be with the Lord Church with the Rev. Jason
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at a local Barnes, Jacob Wilson, his grandson,the Rev. James Vaughn and
health care facility.
He was a member of Pleasant the Rev. Daniel White, his son
Grove
Baptist
Church
in officiating.
Interment will follow in the
Cleveland.
He retired from Bowater Paper Sunset Memorial Gardens with
Cartwright,
Anthony
Company after more than 39 John
years. He loved gardening and Cartwright, Jeremy Cartwright,
Thompson,
Jonathan
doing anything that was out- John
doors. He was an avid craftsman. Strickland, Jimmy Strickland,
He is preceded in death by his Shane Strickland and Martin
parents, Arthur Thompson and Stanton serving as casketbearEaster Lillie Wells Thompson; ers. Honorary casketbearers will
infant daughter, Marion Elizabeth be the ministers that surrendered
Thompson; brothers: Arthur to the call under Rev. White’s
Lewis Thompson, Thedford Ministry and the deacons of
Thompson; sisters: Josephine Washington Avenue Baptist
Mathis, and Zella York and son- Church.
Military honors will be given. A
in-law, Warren Willis.
Memories of love and family dove release will conclude the
will be cherished by his precious service.
The family will receive friends
wife of 60 years, Louise
Thompson; and sons: Cecil today, Nov. 6, 2015, from 5 until 9
LaVelle (Wanda) Thompson Sr. p.m. at the Washington Avenue
and
Anthony
L.
(Cathy) Baptist Church. He may also be
Thompson, and Waymond L. viewed from 11:30 a.m. until 1
(Jackee) Thompson Sr., all p.m. Saturday at the Washington
Cleveland; daughters: Debbie R. Avenue Baptist Church. The Jim
Willis of Oak Ridge and Marilyn Rush Funeral and Cremation
A. (Hosea) Woods of Cleveland; Services Wildwood Chapel has
12 grandchildren: LaKeisha charge of the arrangements.
You may share your condoSailors of Hampton, Ga., Marcus
Donohoo, Maurice Donohoo, lences and your memories with
Cecil L. Thompson Jr., Shana Reverend White’s family at
Justice, Waymond L. Thompson www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
Jr.,
Dustin
Thompson,
Christopher Spruill, Kendrick
Thompson, Jordan Thompson,
Nicole Person and Garthellia
‘Pep’ Hickey, all of Cleveland; 21
great-grandchildren; sisters-inlaw: Vivian Thompson of
Cleveland, Andree Wright and
Edna
Talley,
both
of
Chattanooga; aunt, Juanita
Baker of Cleveland, Ohio; and a
host of nieces, nephews,
cousins, and friends.
The funeral will be held
Community Hall Church, 1305
Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at 2 p.m.
at Pleasant Grove Baptist 6th St., will have a Christmas
Church in Cleveland with Pastor Bazaar on Saturday, from 9 a.m.
Rev. Edward S. Robinson Sr. offi- to 3 p.m. There will be Christmas
ciating.
decorations, soups, cornbread,
Interment will follow at Sunset desserts and drinks.
Memorial Gardens.
———
The family will receive friends
Volunteers
with
power saws
one hour before the service at
are needed to help cut trees out
the church from 1 to 2 p.m.
Visitation by friends will be of Beech Springs Cemetery,
from 1 p.m. until 5 p.m. on located east of Charleston.
Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, at M.D.
———
Dotson & Sons Funeral Home in
There will be a spaghetti dinCleveland.
ner and silent auction to help
Words of comfort may be sub- raise money for the family mismitted at www.dotsonfh.com
3 months
6 Months
1 Year
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David “Neal” Rogers Sr., 67, of
Georgetown, passed away,
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at a
Chattanooga Hospital.
He was the son of the late
Irene Coffman Rogers and Arthur
Jess Rogers Sr. His sisters:
Catherine Geren, Opal Morrison
and Judy Lowery; and his brothers: Nelson, Don and A. J.
Rogers Jr. also preceded him in
death.
He was a U.S. Marine Corps
veteran serving in Vietnam. He
was retired with the railroad with
more than 25 years of service.
He enjoyed the outdoors including hunting and fishing and he
loved to sit and tell stories. He
enjoyed singing and would be
asked often to sing at funerals.
He was a member of the
Georgetown Baptist Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Debbie
Cofer
Rogers
of
Georgetown; daughters: Jennifer
“Missy” Meadows and her husband, Matt, of Decatur, Angie
Lawson and her husband, Billy,
of Charleston; son, David Neal
Information for Church Activities, I
See By the Banner or Special Days
may be sent to Mary Matthews at
[email protected],
mailed to Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O.
Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 or
dropped at the office, 1505 25th St.
Information should be in by noon the
day prior to publication.
sion trip coming up this summer.
All proceeds will go for the food to
feed everyone for one week at
Good Hope Baptist Church, 2601
Armstrong Ferry Road in
Decatur. The dinner and silent
auction will begin at 5 p.m. and
stop at 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
There will be a table where everything is $5.
———
The
Bradley
County
Democratic Party invites every
potential voter to its fall chili dinner on Monday at 6 p.m. at
Walker Valley High School, 750
Daily
$8.95
$1.95
Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041
Two men charged in theft
of Gibson Jubilee guitar
From Staff Reports
Two men have been arrested
for the late October theft of an
expensive guitar from a Caldwell
Road home.
Victim assistance is credited
with providing the information
that led detectives of the Bradley
County Sheriff’s Office to the
arrest of the men who reportedly
stole a Gibson Jubilee 50th
Anniversary guitar, which is valued at around $7,000.
One of the men arrested —
Freddy Dewayne Ruth, 46 — lives
on the same road where the theft
occurred, while the second man
— Adam Russell Creighton, 38 —
resides on Spring Place Road.
The two men were charged
with theft of property valued at
over $1,000.
Detectives traced the guitar to
a music store in Chattanooga,
where it had been sold for a fraction of its value. The guitar was
recovered and has been returned
to the owner.
U.S. employers added
271,000 jobs in October
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S.
hiring roared back in October
after two weak months, with
employers adding a robust
271,000 jobs and likely setting
the stage for the Federal Reserve
to raise interest rates next
month.
The unemployment rate
dipped to a fresh seven-year low
of 5 percent from 5.1 percent.
The burst of hiring, the most
since December, filled jobs
across a range of industries as
companies shrugged off slower
overseas growth and a weak U.S
manufacturing
sector.
Significant job gains occurred in
construction, health care and
retail.
Friday’s report from the government suggested that the U.S.
economy is rebounding after a
worrisome summer and is continuing to outshine most other
major
economies.
During
August and September, hiring
had flagged amid financial turmoil in China and faltering
growth in Europe and emerging
markets.
Even so, American consumers
have kept spending at a healthy
pace, supporting strong job
growth even as factory payrolls
were flat last month and oil and
gas drillers cut jobs.
Soon after Friday’s report was
released, the prospect of higher
interest rates drove down financial markets. Futures on the
Dow Jones industrial average
fell 51 points in early trading.
After a prolonged period of relatively stagnant pay raises for
many Americans, last month’s
robust hiring also raised wages
9 cents to $25.20. That is 2.5
percent higher than 12 months
ago, the largest year-over-year
gain since July 2009. That is
comfortably above inflation,
which was been flat in the past
year.
Chilhowee Mountain Craft
event is today, Saturday
The Chilhowee Mountain Craft
Bazaar Show and Sale will be
held today and Saturday at
People Helping People.
There will be quality handmade craft items available.
The craft show will be held
inside the nonprofit organization’s building. Proceeds from the
booth fees, concessions and
drawings will benefit People
Helping People, Polk County’s
I SEE BY THE BANNER
David ‘Neal’ Rogers Sr.
Monthly
$6.75
assistance organization.
The fair will be held at Highway
411 and 184 Mull/Benton
Station Road in Benton.
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
(AP) — These lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Tennessee
Cash 3 Evening: 3-0-2, Lucky
Sum: 5
Cash 3 Midday: 9-9-0, Lucky
Sum: 18
Cash 3 Morning: 1-3-7
Cash 4 Evening: 5-2-5-8,
Lucky Sum: 20
Cash 4 Midday: 4-9-1-2, Lucky
Sum: 16
Cash 4 Morning: 5-1-7-8
Cash4Life: 13-20-25-31-51,
Cash Ball: 3
Lauderdale Memorial Highway.
The featured speaker will be Rep.
Joanne Favors. There will be a
mock presidential debate, with
actors playing the candidates
Hillary Clinton and Bernie
Sanders and others in attendance. Bring questions that you
would like to ask them. There will
be a silent auction. Please bring
donated items. Come prepared to
place bids. Dinner tickets may be
GeorGia
purchased at the door. For more
All or Nothing Day: 01-03-04information, call 423-473-0968. 06-07-09-10-15-16-17-22-24
All or Nothing Evening: 01-0205-08-10-15-16-17-18-19-21-24
All or Nothing Morning: 04-0507-12-14-16-17-18-19-20-21-23
All or Nothing Night: 03-04-0714-16-17-18-19-20-21-22-23
Cash 3 Evening: 8-9-8
Cash 3 Midday: 1-2-8
Cash 4 Evening: 6-8-4-0
Robert Blair and Brandi
Cash 4 Midday: 4-6-2-6
Haynie, who are celebrating
Fantasy 5: 02-14-21-22-32
birthdays today ... Patty and
Georgia FIVE Evening: 0-3-7-0Doug Storey, who are celebrating
their 45th anniversary today ... 4
Georgia FIVE Midday: 0-9-2-6Holli Simko, David Adams, Matt
0
Wagner, Matt Jenkins and Robin
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 14-17-18Heaton, who will celebrate birth20-26-44
days Saturday ...
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—3
FRIDAY
LifestyLes
William Wright
Lifestyles Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
DON’S
The Elvis cake, a memory book among Oprah’s Favorite Things FENCE CO.
NEW YORK (AP) — A
Kardashian-worthy phone case
rimmed with tiny lights, a keepsake book of “Letters to My Love”
and a banana, peanut butter and
chocolate cake called the Elvis
are among Oprah’s Favorite
Things of 2015.
This year’s list, which guarantees companies a bump in sales,
includes 87 items, from a doggie
faux fur jacket from Park Avenue
and little-kid animal boots made
by Emu to an elegant box of cut
flowers courtesy of High Camp
and Oprah’s favorite drawstring,
tapered sweatpants (she owns
three pairs of these, called the
Vince from Melange).
While declaring the sugary
Elvis namesake from Carousel
Cakes “stupid good,” she also put
the traditional holiday yule log on
notice by including a deep-dish
cherry pie made by a California
bakery, Sweet Lady Jane. And
lest we forget about Hanukkah,
there’s a flat challah in the shape
of a menorah, courtesy of Eli
Zabar in New York.
The List, as loyal Oprah watchers call it, was revealed Thursday
on ABC’s “Good Morning
America.” It was previewed for an
intimate group of media and
business partners the day before
high atop Manhattan’s Hearst
Tower, home of “O, The Oprah
Magazine.” Before she gave up
her talk show, Oprah revealed
her picks on TV and in print.
Now, the December issue of the
magazine carries on the holiday
tradition she established more
than 20 years ago.
What else made the cut this
year? The multicultural line of
Fashionista Barbies (of which
Oprah declares: ‘I love chocolate
Barbie!’) and roomy sweatshirts
in soft pink, yellow and blue that
pay homage to her favorite day of
the week with the slogan, “I Love
Sundays.”
But for the queen and her
right-hand elves, pal Gayle King
and the magazine’s creative
director, Adam Glassman, the
holidays begin the summer
before, when Glassman scouts
AP photo
THIS IMAGE shows “O, The Oprah Magazine,” December 2015
issue featuring Oprah’s favorite things. The list was revealed
Thursday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” The December issue of
the magazine carries on the holiday tradition she established more
than 20 years ago.
prospects at gift shows and markets around the country. He and
King vet as they cull and chat
with Oprah via Skype to narrow
the picks.
“We try everything and gain
weight doing that,” laughed
Glassman at Wednesday’s preview. “We smell everything. We try
everything on. And then we do a
big summit in August, where we
rent out a studio and we spend
two days going through probably
about 500 items.”
This year, they’re trying something new, sourcing stocking
stuffers and bigger gifts at a variety of price points on Amazon.
“We really choose the products
based on relevancy,” Glassman
explained. “Will people like it?
Will it bring joy and passion to
their life? And it’s really about
things that Oprah wants to give.
That’s number one. But then,
companies are really made by
being on Oprah’s Favorite
Things.”
The latter, he said, has led to a
little chat between Oprah’s camp
and the vendors picked about
supply and demand.
“Once a company makes the
list we have to explain to them
about inventory. How much do
they need? They need to make a
lot. Some people get it and some
people don’t fully understand it
until maybe it’s a little too late,”
Glassman said. “And there are
times when people call me and
go, ‘I wish I had 3,000 more, we
sold out.”
With the convenience of
Amazon, he added, “I suspect
before Christmas we will sell out
of a lot of stuff.”
Highlights from Oprah’s
famous list:
———
Letters to My Love from
Chronicle Books: Glassman says
these cute little keepsake books
are Oprah’s “fave, fave, fave”
things on her list of things.
They’re books of 12 fold-and-mail
style letters with prompts for filling in the blanks, such as “I
knew you were the one for me
when ...”
The Bruffin: a stuffed brioche,
muffin and croissant hybrid
themed to countries in a variety
of savory flavors. The British has
bacon and sharp cheddar, the
Italian pepperoni, pesto and
Parmesan, and the American
Buffalo chicken, blue cheese and
hot sauce. They’re made in New
York by a company of the same
name.
Torres Black Truffle Chips:
Oprah loves her truffle flavors.
These are supercrunchy and
have a strong flavor, for the true
truffle lover. She first discovered
them in Spain. Chelsea Market
Baskets put six bags together in
a woven container.
A&B American Style hot sauce:
Anybody who knows anything
about Oprah knows that she and
Stedman need their heat! This
three-pack set includes this
Williamsburg, Brooklyn company’s Original, Garlic and More
Heat flavors. They grow their own
peppers on a rooftop.
Square One Vodka: made in
the USA with organic rye and
Teton mountain water. It’s a set
of five in flavors called Botanical,
Cucumber, Original, Basil and
Bergamot. From a purveyor
called Mel & Rose.
Moon and Lola pet ornaments:
They’re mirrored in a gold color
and engraved with the pet’s
name. Oprah’s pooches already
have some.
Emi Jay nightshirts: Oprah
loves her comfy loungewear,
including some soft, stretchy
gray nightshirts from this list
returnee. They’re emblazoned
with: “I Told My Therapist About
You,” ‘’Namast’ay in Bed” and “I
Wish You Looked at Me the Way
You Look at Your Phone.”
Typhoon Vision kitchen scales:
Oprah’s holiday picks were made
just before she announced her 10
percent stake in Weight
Watchers. She included these
retro-style, digital scales with
stainless steel bowls to make it
easier to measure dry and wet
ingredients with little fuss.
Anastasia Beverly Hills lip
gloss: Oprah handpicked a set of
eight from one of her favorite
companies. She promises they
stay on forever and will take
wearers from day to night.
Ultimate Lacquer Wardrobe
from Butter London: 24 nail lacquers also chosen personally by
Oprah. Rich color, free of
formaldehyde and toluene. She
said the tiered box with the double doors reminds her of another
favorite thing, the big box of 64
Crayola crayons.
Since 1961
ALL TYPES
OF FENCING
479-6212
& 336-1501
BELK.COM
Hints from Heloise
Readers offer efficiency hints
Dear Readers: HE (HIGHEFFICIENCY) WASHERS seem to
be a very hot topic with you. I
asked for your input when a
reader complained that she had
to run a second rinse cycle
because she felt the clothes were
not getting rinsed well. I had to
edit down the many responses,
but here are the best suggestions. Maybe these will help:
— Make smaller loads.
— Put baking soda in every
wash.
— Never use fabric softeners
in the wash. (Heloise Here: Not
sure why so many of you shared
this one.)
— Use the “extra rinse” cycle
on every load. (Heloise Here:
This defeats the purpose of
“using less water,” I think.)
— Check water level often,
and redistribute the clothes, if
necessary.
— Use a higher setting.
Instead of “normal,” try “heavy
duty.”
— Use “HE” biodegradable
soap because it rinses out better.
A favorite came from Tiffany
in Kerrville, Texas. She wrote: “I
add full-strength vinegar to the
fabric-softener dispenser, up to
the max-line level. I never have a
problem with extra soap, so I
don’t have to use the extra rinse
cycle.
“A bonus: My clothes do smell
fresh (no vinegar smell), and
they are super-duper soft in the
bargain. They smell so clean and
fresh (like being on a clothesline
outside).”
If there are other complaints
or good hints, please let me
know. This topic is not finished!
— Heloise
charity
PRIVATE TICKETED EVENT*
4 hours only!
Saturday, Nov. 7, 6–10am
Two-for-one hint
Dear Readers: This recycling
hint came from a reader almost
20 years ago. New quilters will
find this hint good today! —
Heloise
“Another way to keep and
recycle our garbage: Cereal
boxes make great templates in
my quilting projects.
“Use the cardboard for the
templates and the plastic the
cereal is packed in to store for
future use. Write on the plastic
with a permanent-ink pen so
you can tell at a glance what is
inside.” — LaVerne P., Billings,
Mont.
© 2015 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
sale
Buy your $5 ticket in store
up to the day of the event
or at the door on Saturday!
belk.com/charitysale
YOUR $5 CHARITY SALE TICKET SUPPORTS
LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS AND SCHOOLS.
THIS MEANS YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE,
JUST BY DOING WHAT YOU LOVE.
LAST YEAR, WITH YOUR HELP,
WE RAISED MORE THAN $11 MILLION.
belk.com/charitysale
$
70
%
up to
off
your first purchase**
In store only. Saturday, Nov. 7, 6-10am when
you present your Charity Sale ticket to
your sales associate. No cash back. Ticket
needed to shop 6-10am.
VERY LIMITED EXCLUSIONS
off
storewide
INCLUDING SPECIAL
SAVINGS ON RARELY
DISCOUNTED BRANDS
Not valid by phone or on Belk.com. Excludes Everyday
Values and Superbuys storewide. See below for details
See below for details
FREE gift card
ty
chari
sale
valued from $5-$1000 to the first 100
customers in each store Saturday!***
ard
gift c
See below for details
EARN 5XPOINTS†
ON COSMETICS & FRAGRANCE PURCHASES
Saturday, Nov. 7 with your Belk Rewards Card
See below for details
SATURDAY, NOV. 7, EARN
POINTS†
2X
†
3X POINTS
with your Belk Rewards
or Premier Rewards Card
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with your Belk Elite
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*$5 Tickets on sale at the door. Must purchase ticket to shop special sale hours. **$5 Discount on your first regular, sale or clearance purchase,
including Cosmetics & Fragrances. Excludes Breville, Brighton, Fitbit, Nike, Ugg, Under Armour, Vitamix; non-merchandise depts., lease depts.,
salon services and Belk gift cards. Not valid on prior purchases, phone or special orders, trunk shows or on belk.com. Cannot be redeemed
for cash, credit or refund, used in combination with any other discount or coupon offer. No cash back. Limit one $5 discount per customer.
Contact your store for a list of charities. All ticket proceeds benefit your favorite participating local charities. All unclaimed money from the
sale of Charity Sale tickets will be donated to a charity of Belk’s choice after 90 days. ***100 Belk gift cards per store valued anywhere from
$5 to $1000 will be given away. One lucky person per Belk Division (for a total of 3 winners) will walk away with a gift card worth $1000. No
purchase necessary. One per adult customer, while supplies last. Not valid by phone or on Belk.com. †Subject to credit approval and excludes
all gift cards, non-merchandise and leased departments. Cannot be combined with any other Rewards points offers. See store for details.
Connect with us for special offers and promotions at Belk.com/getconnected
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
Biden: Bypass legislatures to
direct road grants to cities
NASHVILLE (AP) — The federal
government should find more
ways to bypass state legislatures
to get transportation grants
directly to cities and towns, Vice
President Joe Biden said
Thursday.
Biden also criticized the highway bill approved by the U.S.
House earlier in the day as “basically a three-year patch that
doesn’t give enough funding or
enough certainty.”
The bill authorizes $325 billion
in spending through the 2021
federal budget year, but it provides money for only the first
three years because lawmakers
couldn’t agree on a way to pay for
it all. The measure would continue current rates of spending,
adjusted for inflation.
The vice president drew
applause from the hundreds of
local officials attending the
speech to the National League of
Cities when he observed that federal money flowing through state
capitols tends to get diverted
toward the interests of governors
and individual lawmakers.
“The biggest problem I have
with the cities and towns is you
almost always have to go through
your state legislative bodies to
get any help,” Biden said.
Biden said he learned that lesson from a bill he passed while in
the Senate for local law enforcement assistance.
Judge dismisses Franklin claims
against environmental group
NASHVILLE (AP) — A federal
judge has blocked the city of
Franklin’s efforts to countersue
an environmental group that is
suing the wealthy municipality
over pollution from its wastewater treatment plant.
Franklin claims in court
papers that a lawsuit by the
Harpeth
River
Watershed
Association constitutes a form of
extortion. U.S. District Judge
Kevin Sharp on Wednesday dismissed the city’s claim and
encouraged the parties to have
some “adult conversation” to
resolve their differences.
The wastewater treatment
plant has a permit issued by the
Tennessee
Department
of
Environment and Conservation
that allows it to discharge pollutants into the Harpeth River
within certain limits. The permitting process is a component of
the federal Clean Water Act. The
act also allows citizens to file lawsuits to enforce its provisions
when they believe regulators are
not doing so.
The original lawsuit filed by
the Harpeth River Watershed
Association claims, among other
things, that the city is polluting
the river with overflows from its
sewage system, in violation of the
Clean Water Act.
In court on Wednesday, attorney Gary Cohen argued that
Franklin’s permit has provisions
that go beyond the scope of the
Clean Water Act and cannot be
enforced with a citizen suit in
federal court. Those claims can
only be enforced in state court,
he said.
U.S. Justice Department attorney Matthew Oakes addressed
the issue as a friend of the court
— that is, the federal government
is not a party to the case but was
providing relevant information.
Oakes argued that the watershed
association’s claims are well
within the scope of the Clean
Water Act.
Former Clarksville attorney
indicted on theft charges
CLARKSVILLE (AP) — A former
Clarksville attorney has been
indicted on three counts of theft.
The Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation announced that
Carrie Gasaway was arrested
Wednesday.
In a statement, the agency said
it found Gasaway commingled
funds between her attorney trust
account and operating account
from January 2014 through
February 2015. Agents say they
learned Gasaway did not disperse $45,831 owed to one client,
and $2,000 for medical bills in
the name of another client.
Authorities also say Gasaway
kept $1,000 of trust money paid
by a third client for costs related
to a case.
Special agents began investigating Gasaway in August. She
and law partner Fletcher Long
operated a Clarksville law firm
until July. Both were convicted of
extortion in May.
It isn’t immediately clear if she
has an attorney.
Authorities investigate after
councilman shot, hospitalized
NASHVILLE (AP) — A Metro
councilman was in the hospital
Thursday after authorities say he
was shot multiple times in west
Nashville.
Media outlets report the incident happened at a Marathon gas
station on Wednesday night. Police
say Loniel Greene Jr. was shot
three times. The wounds he suffered were non-life-threatening.
According to a police statement,
surveillance video shows Greene
pulled up to the gas station, left
his car and followed two young
men who had just left the lot and
were walking down Burgess
Avenue toward Oceola Avenue.
Police said that it appears the
shooting occurred on Oceola
Avenue.
Police said Greene told detectives he followed the men because
he thought he recognized one of
them as a relative.
Police say Greene walked back
to his car, where he collapsed. He
was later found by another driver.
Metro Nashville Police Chief
Steve Anderson said Thursday no
arrests have been made.
Final residents to leave Clover
Bottom for small group homes
NASHVILLE (AP) — The last six
residents of a 90-year-old
Nashville facility for the disabled
will relocate this month to small
group homes.
WPLN-FM reports the Clover
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
5,200
Close: 5,127.74
Change: -14.74 (-0.3%)
5,080
10 DAYS
Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba. The House on Thursday overwhelmingly passed a revised
$607 billion defense policy bill that restricts President Barack Obama’s efforts to close the military prison
NASHVILLE (AP) — State offi- at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
cials are asking consumers to be
wary of fraudulent ticket purchasing during the upcoming
holiday season.
With numerous big games,
concerts and other events coming up, they say consumers will
be looking for discount tickets,
and many will turn to ticket brokers and the ticket resale market.
But the Tennessee Department
of Commerce and Insurance’s
Division of Consumer Affairs
says there’s a risk of being
scammed when purchasing tickets from secondary markets, and
the agency is offering tips to
avoid that.
One suggestion is to use the
official ticket sales agent for the
venue. Another is to check out
the seller or broker by looking
them up on the Better Business
Bureau to learn what other customers have experienced.
For more consumer tips, visit:
www.tn.gov/consumer .
TBI accepting entries for missing
children’s poster contest
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee
Bureau
of
Investigation is accepting entries
for the 2016 National Missing
Children’s Day Poster contest.
The agency is encouraging
fifth-graders from across the
state to participate in the contest
sponsored
by
the
U.S.
Department of Justice.
Contestants enter at the state
level for a chance to be selected
as the national winner and
awarded a free trip to
Washington, D.C.
Fifth-graders are asked to
develop artwork that represents
America’s united goal to bring
missing children home safely.
The contest also provides teachers and parents with tools to
educate children about safety
and the prevention of child
abductions.
Entries should be submitted to
the TBI, where a panel will select
a winner for the national contest.
Entries must be received by Jan.
13.
For additional information,
visit:
https://tbinews.wordpress.com/poster-contest/.
Defense bill OK’d by House still
would hamper closing Gitmo
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
House overwhelmingly backed a
$607 billion defense bill that
would bar President Barack
Obama
from
moving
Guantanamo Bay detainees to
U.S. prisons, setting up a showdown with Congress over his
2008 campaign pledge to close
the Cuban facility.
The long-running dispute
heated up on Capitol Hill on
Thursday just hours after the
House passed the bill, 370-58,
and sent it to the Senate, which
plans a vote early next week.
Three Republican senators from
Kansas, Colorado and South
Carolina — states where the
administration has explored
housing Guantanamo terror
suspects — held a news conference to make it clear they will
fight to prevent moving them to
U.S. soil.
Closing the prison was a priority of Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, and he promised
during his first days in office
that he would eventually shutter
the facility, which he argues is
costly and gives extremists a
recruiting tool.
The administration is finalizing a plan on closing the prison,
which houses 112 detainees, but
hasn’t said when it will share it
with Congress.
Republicans
and
some
Democrats in Congress have
blocked Obama’s effort for years.
Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas on
Wednesday placed a hold on
Obama’s nominee to be the next
Army secretary to prevent the
president from trying to bypass
Congress by using his executive
authorities to close the prison.
“This administration has continually gone around the
Congress and tried to figure out
which button to push to irritate
Congress the most,” said
Roberts, whose state includes
Fort Leavenworth. “Well he sure
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Dow Jones industrials
18,000
Close: 17,863.43
Change: -4.15 (flat)
17,760
17,520
18,400
5,200
10 DAYS
16,800
4,800
M
J
J
A
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
Name
18,351.36 15,370.33 Dow Industrials
9,310.22 7,452.70 Dow Transportation
657.17
539.96 Dow Utilities
11,254.87 9,509.59 NYSE Composite
5,231.94 4,292.14 Nasdaq Composite
947.85
809.57 S&P 100
2,134.72 1,867.01 S&P 500
1,551.28 1,344.80 S&P MidCap
22,537.15 19,619.26 Wilshire 5000
1,296.00 1,078.63 Russell 2000
Last
17,863.43
8,180.15
578.69
10,548.36
5,127.74
936.54
2,099.93
1,464.93
21,866.46
1,190.68
S
Net
Chg
%Chg
-4.15
-.02
+26.86
+.33
-4.76
-.82
-15.60
-.15
-14.74
-.29
-1.46
-.16
-2.38
-.11
+.44
+.03
-19.50
-.09
+.30
+.03
O
YTD
%Chg
+.23
-10.50
-6.37
-2.68
+8.27
+3.10
+1.99
+.86
+.91
-1.16
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
EyegatePh 4.11 +1.51 +58.1
CathGn wt 11.75 +2.87 +32.3
EKodk wtA 2.70 +.62 +29.8
Lantheus n 4.25 +.94 +28.4
SolarEdg n 22.01 +4.83 +28.1
Constellm 6.55 +1.36 +26.2
HomeAway 40.15 +8.11 +25.3
ePlus
102.03 +18.47 +22.1
ParTech
6.20 +1.01 +19.5
Triple-S
25.63 +4.16 +19.4
Shutterstk 33.38 +5.37 +19.2
InvTech
20.27 +3.24 +19.0
SelCmfrt 25.50 +4.06 +18.9
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
StrPathCm 12.81 -13.70 -51.7
EnerNOC 4.99 -3.14 -38.6
CastlightH 3.62 -1.68 -31.7
EnovaIntl n 8.79 -3.95 -31.0
CoreMold 15.61 -5.62 -26.5
AMEC FW n 8.50 -2.91 -25.5
Libbey
25.92 -8.29 -24.2
IntersENT 16.54 -5.15 -23.7
EnerJex pf 3.33 -1.03 -23.6
ARC Docu 5.04 -1.50 -22.9
FireEye
22.46 -6.66 -22.9
Axcelis
2.38 -.68 -22.2
EndoCh n 8.01 -2.27 -22.1
N
12-mo
%Chg
+1.76
-8.63
-3.15
-2.72
+10.55
+3.95
+3.38
+2.48
+2.37
+1.61
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
GenElec 1220699 29.64 +.10
BkofAm
814725 17.31 +.30
Qualcom
655186 51.07 -9.19
Facebook 595601 108.76 +4.82
ValeantPh 570919 78.77 -13.21
FireEye
422113 22.46 -6.66
PetrbrsA
404632 4.20 -.06
Apple Inc 378945 120.92 -.56
FrptMcM
364924 11.48 -.54
BarrickG
312936 7.36 -.21
Microsoft 296906 54.38 -.02
Petrobras 268337 5.17 -.07
MicronT
264936 16.51 -.93
15,200
Name
AT&T Inc
Apple Inc
BB&T Cp
BkofAm
B iPVixST
BarrickG
CocaCola
CocaCE
CmtyHlt
DukeEngy
Eaton
Facebook
FireEye
FstHorizon
FrptMcM
GenElec
HomeDp
iShJapan
iShEMkts
iShR2K
Kroger s
plan has not yet been presented
in any detail to the Senate
Armed Services Committee.
At a separate news conference, House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi said she is upset
that the Republicans have prevented Obama from closing
Guantanamo, “which he set out
to do, and which he had a plan
to do — and he does have a plan
to do now.”
On Wednesday, White House
press secretary Josh Earnest
hinted that the president might
use his executive authority to
close the prison. Obama wants
to work with Congress to close
Guantanamo, but “if Congress
continues to refuse,” the president will explore all other
options, Earnest said.
When asked again Thursday
about the prospect of executive
action to shut the prison,
Earnest said the administration
continues to believe that
Congress should remove the
obstacles it has imposed to closing it. He said that closing the
prison makes national security
and fiscal sense because spending to hold prisoners at
Guantanamo far exceeds what
the U.S. spends to detain and
incarcerate terrorists on U.S.
soil.
Earnest said there was no
veto threat but that the president still must review the bill
that passed on Thursday.
Obama vetoed the original
defense policy bill over a larger
spending issue. But that dispute
was resolved, and Obama on
Monday signed a bipartisan
budget bill that avoids a catastrophic U.S. default and puts
off the next round of fighting
over federal spending and debt
until after next year’s presidential and congressional elections.
The defense bill was trimmed
by $5 billion to align it with the
budget agreement.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Last
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4,600
as hell has pushed my button.
“As I have said for years and
years, we are not going to have
terrorists from Gitmo come to
Fort Leavenworth, the intellectual center of the Army, or any
other location in the United
States.”
Roberts accused Obama of
executive “overreach” and said
he would work to continue to
withhold congressional funds to
move detainees to the United
States, which currently is
against the law.
As he spoke, Roberts got visibly angry. “Why do we even have
a Congress,” he shouted, “if the
president can issue an executive
order on anything and, in this
particular case, endanger our
national security?”
Sen. Tim Scott of South
Carolina,
who
visited
Guantanamo two weeks ago,
said the military prison is a perfect site because it’s hours away
from Havana and is surrounded
by mountains, water and desert.
“To consider a domestic location is, in my opinion, the worst
decision for America’s national
security,” said Scott, whose
state is home to the Naval
Consolidated Brig in Charleston,
another prospective site for
detainees.
Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado
said the facility being considered
to house Guantanamo detainees
in his state is a closed state
prison that would cost millions
to retrofit. He said the administration has violated current law
that bans taxpayer money from
being used to “assist in the
transfer” of detainees.
“It’s hard for me to believe
that you can send a team of
experts to analyze where you’re
going to send detainees to fulfill
a campaign promise if you
haven’t spent any money,” he
said.
Roberts said the White House
M
J
A
S
O
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
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1.88
2.08
1.08
.20
...
.08
1.32
1.12
...
3.30
2.20
...
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2.36
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1.68
.42
J
5.6
1.7
2.8
1.2
...
1.1
3.1
2.2
...
4.6
3.9
...
...
1.6
1.7
3.1
1.9
1.0
2.3
1.4
1.1
36
13
14
13
...
20
27
22
10
18
13
...
...
16
...
...
25
...
...
...
19
33.34
120.92
38.15
17.31
18.44
7.36
42.33
51.73
30.05
71.45
57.11
108.76
22.46
14.67
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-8.9
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Name
Div Yld PE Last
Lowes
1.12
MktVGold .12
MicronT
...
Microsoft 1.44
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
PaneraBrd ...
PetrbrsA
...
Petrobras
...
Qualcom 1.92
RegionsFn .24
S&P500ETF4.13
Scotts
1.88
SouthnCo 2.17
SPDR Fncl .44
SunTrst
.96
Target
2.24
UtdCmBks .24
ValeantPh
...
WalMart 1.96
Whrlpl
3.60
1.5
.9
...
2.6
2.9
4.1
...
...
...
3.8
2.5
2.0
2.8
4.8
1.8
2.2
2.9
1.1
...
3.3
2.3
25
...
7
36
14
20
30
...
...
16
15
...
23
17
...
13
...
19
45
12
19
Pvs Wk
N
YTD
Chg %Chg
73.58 +.48 +6.9
14.08 -.54 -23.4
16.51 -.93 -52.8
54.38 -.02 +17.1
80.15 -.20 -26.9
19.40 -.01 -14.8
177.73 +.72 +1.7
4.20 -.06 -44.6
5.17 -.07 -29.2
51.07 -9.19 -31.3
9.73 +.14
-7.9
210.15 -.21 +2.2
67.40 -.09 +8.2
45.63 -.17
-7.1
24.48 +.10
-1.0
43.39 +.70 +3.6
78.15 +.76 +3.0
21.19 +.61 +11.9
78.77 -13.21 -45.0
58.61 +.24 -31.8
158.66 -2.33 -18.1
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.
lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at
least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt =
Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge,
or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s
net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.3988
1.5378
1.3163
.9211
121.57
16.5294
.9940
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds FnInvA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds NewPerspA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity Contra
Fidelity ContraK
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
FrankTemp-Templeton GlBondAdv
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
Vanguard MuIntAdml
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
Vanguard STGradeAd
Vanguard TgtRe2025
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotIntl
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MA
IH
WS
LB
LG
MA
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LG
LG
LB
CA
IB
FB
LG
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
CA
MA
LV
49,321
70,037
54,572
45,260
75,185
72,052
57,169
37,905
51,135
43,767
59,096
53,733
78,558
32,614
51,300
44,908
30,838
41,202
37,616
154,345
39,377
37,841
40,301
37,808
34,118
30,929
60,649
74,443
126,938
100,579
29,131
68,786
31,763
25.10
57.97
46.02
53.83
45.72
21.13
37.06
39.17
41.12
13.52
39.99
176.67
105.61
105.61
74.14
2.22
11.82
65.80
58.65
194.08
96.18
25.40
14.16
110.58
10.62
16.75
10.72
15.19
52.46
52.44
61.92
67.66
65.85
+3.9
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+0.5/D
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+9.1/A
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-7.3/E
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-4.6/E
+6.4/A
-3.9/B
+3.0/A
-0.3/C +3.4/C
+14.7/A +15.4/A
+5.9/B +13.7/A
+13.8/B +21.5/C
-3.1/D
NA
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+3.8/B
+6.2/D +15.1/A
+1.3/A
+2.0/A
+2.2/A
+8.0/B
+1.5/B +2.8/D
-3.2/D
+1.9/E
+5.4/B +13.6/A
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+3.2/A
+7.7/A
+3.3/A
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+2.2/B +12.5/B
MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW, Suite 1
472-6814
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
0
10,000
1,000
0
50,000
2,500
10,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
1,000
10,000
3,000
10,000
3,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.4000
1.5212
1.3164
.9185
121.67
16.6090
.9951
Prime Rate
3.25
3.25
Discount Rate
0.75
0.75
Federal Funds Rate
.00-.25 .00-.25
Treasuries
1.65
1.54
5-year
2.23
2.18
10-year
3.00
2.96
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1104.40 $1147.20
$14.988
$15.544
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot)
17,600
5,000
4,400
Consumers asked to be
wary of ticket fraud
DAILY DOW JONES
4,960
5,400
Bottom Developmental Center
opened in 1923. By its peak in the
1960s it housed 1,500 people with
physical and intellectual disabilities.
Accused in the 1990s of simply
warehousing the disabled, Clover
Bottom was slated to close in 2010
but has faced numerous delays.
At a closing ceremony on
Thursday,
Department
of
Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities Commissioner Debra
Payne said the move to group
homes has taken time because the
department wanted to do it right.
Payne said that for many years
there was no non-institutional
model for supporting people with
disabilities. Now people with disAP Photo
abilities often live more independIn thIs MArch 30, 2010, file photo, reviewed by the U.S. military, a U.S. trooper stands in the turret
ently and work in the community. of a vehicle with a machine gun, left, as a guard looks out from a tower at the detention facility of
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
112 Stuart Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—5
Stranded British tourists anxious to leave Egypt
NASA via AP
IN thIS frAme grAb from NASA Television, astronauts Scott
Kelly and Kjell Lindgren perform maintenance outside the
International Space Station, on Friday. Friday’s excursion involves
work on the space station’s cooling system. Kelly has been at the
250-mile-high outpost since March, and isn’t due back until next
March. Today marks his 224th day in orbit, a U.S. record.
Spacewalkers encounter
leaking ammonia, NASA
says there is no danger
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —
Spacewalking
astronauts
encountered leaking ammonia
and minor glove damage while
performing plumbing work outside the International Space
Station on Friday, but NASA said
neither issue posed an immediate
threat.
NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren
reported intermittent flakes of
toxic ammonia while making connections in a cooling line. He
assured Mission Control it
appeared to be just a small leak.
Mission Control stressed that
the astronauts were in no danger.
Lindgren and NASA’s one-year
spaceman, Scott Kelly, the station’s commander, were about
two hours into their planned 6½hour spacewalk when the ammonia flakes spewed out. As long as
the men were outside, any potential suit contamination would
pose no concern. But before
going back in, they would need to
make certain that any traces of
ammonia had been removed by
the sun.
In the past, several spacewalkers have been sprayed with the
hazardous substance, but the
outdoor cleanup procedures have
always worked.
Minutes later, Kelly reported
that the forefinger of his right
glove had a stitch poking out. He
said it looked like a loop. Flight
controllers in Houston scrambled
to make certain the damage was,
indeed, slight and superficial;
they determined it was.
It was the second spacewalk in
1 1/2 weeks for Lindgren and
Kelly, who’s more than halfway
through a U.S. record-setting
yearlong flight. They got started
an hour early, eager to make the
home improvements.
“Going off grid for spacewalk,”
Kelly said via Twitter before
heading out. “I’ll be back w you
again soon!”
Friday’s excursion involved
work on the space station’s cooling system. The spacewalkers
needed to undo jury-rigged
repairs made to a leaky cooling
line three years ago. The ammonia leak subsequently was fixed
another way — by replacing a
failed pump — so NASA wanted
the radiator system back in its
original setup.
Friday’s leak came as Lindgren
and Kelly opened and closed
valves, in order to top off the
ammonia coolant supply.
Their Oct. 28 spacewalk featured a robot-arm lube job and
other mundane maintenance.
Kelly has been at the 250-milehigh outpost since March, and
isn’t due back until next March.
Friday marked his 224th day in
orbit, already a U.S. record. His
companion for the long haul is
Russian Mikhail Kornienko.
Four other astronauts are on
board for the typical six months:
Lindgren along with a Japanese
and two other Russians.
This was the 190th spacewalk
in the station’s 17-year history.
Astronauts have been on board,
continuously, for 15 years.
—Online:
NASA:
http://www.nasa.
gov/mission-pages/station/main
/index.html
U.S. seeks democratic reform
validation as Myanmar votes
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
United States is troubled by religious discrimination and the
Myanmar military’s grip on politics as the nation heads into landmark elections Sunday that are
an acid test of its democratic
reforms. But for the Obama
administration, the question is no
longer whether to engage the former pariah state. It’s about how
deep the relationship should be.
Most U.S. economic and political restrictions were suspended
three years ago after Myanmar’s
repressive junta ceded power to a
quasi-civilian government. Those
benefits are unlikely to be rolled
back, but the credibility of the
election could determine future
U.S. cooperation with Myanmar’s
powerful armed forces and
whether remaining sanctions are
lifted.
Washington’s support for
Myanmar’s shift from five decades
of direct military rule was a rare
foreign policy triumph of
President Barack Obama’s first
term — demonstration of his willingness to extend a hand to
America’s most enduring adversaries. During his second term,
the administration has gone on to
reconcile with Cuba and strike a
nuclear deal with Iran.
Building ties with Myanmar
has served U.S. strategic interests, diluting the influence China
had over Myanmar during its long
international isolation, and
smoothing the way for greater
U.S. involvement with Southeast
Asia’s regional bloc that has been
key to Obama’s foreign policy shift
toward the Pacific.
But the flood of goodwill in
Washington
that
greeted
Myanmar’s initial shift from military dictatorship has dried up as
political reforms have stalled. As
the country also known as Burma
prepares for its most competitive
election in a generation, there’s
little talk in Congress about
removing sanctions. Rather, lawmakers have called for blacklisting of individuals responsible for
human rights abuses against persecuted minority Rohingya
Muslims who face violence and
intimidation at the hands of
Buddhist extremists.
The
U.S.
administration
remains upbeat about Myanmar,
but has also been critical of the
pro-military government of
President Thein Sein. Deputy
national security adviser Ben
Rhodes said Wednesday said that
“systemic problems” with the
structure of Myanmar’s politics
“will prevent this from being a
completely free and fair election.”
He was referring to the military’s lock on a quarter of parliamentary seats that gives it a veto
over amendments of the junta-era
constitution, which also bars
opposition leader Aung San Suu
Kyi from the presidency. Officials
have also criticized the disenfranchisement of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya and sidelining
of Muslim candidates for parliament.
But Walter Lohman at the conservative Heritage Foundation
said that short of the vote being
marred by terrible violence, the
administration would be likely to
portray it as a step forward for
Myanmar. He said the administration’s position that the election
should be “credible, transparent
and inclusive” allows it some wiggle room.
“At the end of the day, the
administration will probably find
a way to swallow whatever happens in these elections, but if the
disconnect between what they say
and the reality is great enough, it
could cause tensions on the Hill,”
Lohman said, referring to
Congress.
The Obama administration
says the conduct of the election
will fundamentally shape future
U.S.
engagement
toward
Myanmar. Rhodes cautioned that
if the election is not credible and
or the result is not respected,
“clearly it’s going to make it harder for us to move forward” with
the U.S.-Myanmar relationship.
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (AP)
— Hundreds of British tourists
stranded in the Egyptian resort of
Sharm el-Sheikh waited anxiously
Friday for flights home as budget
carrier easyJet said the Egyptian
government had disrupted some
of its flights out of Sinai, the site of
a Russian jetliner crash.
Tensions were high and an irate
British tourist, who had waited at
the airport since early morning
hours,
harangued
U.K.
Ambassador John Casson with
angry shouts of: “When are we
going home?”
Britain had grounded all flights
to and from Egypt’s Sinai
Peninsula on Wednesday, saying
there was a “significant possibility”
the Russian airliner that crashed
last Saturday, killing 224 people,
was downed by a bomb.
The Metrojet’s Airbus A321-200
crashed 23 minutes after takeoff
from Sharm el-Sheikh en route to
St. Petersburg, with mostly
Russian tourists aboard.
U.K. authorities had approved
the flights back, starting Friday,
though passengers were only
allowed to take carry-on bags with
them. EasyJet had been due to
operate 10 flights from the Red
Sea resort but said eight would
not be able to fly because Egypt
had suspended them. “We are
working with the U.K. government
at the highest level on a solution,”
easyJet said in a statement.
Two other carriers, Monarch
and British Airways, said they still
planned to operate flights back
from Sinai on Friday.
Egypt’s civil aviation minister,
Hossam Kamal, said there would
be eight flights in all to the U.K. on
Friday, instead of the 29 planned
earlier. He said the British airlines
are flying without passengers’ lug-
gage, while Sharm el-Sheikh airport’s storage can hold no more
than 120 tons of luggage left
behind.
“This big volume will affect the
smooth operation of the rest of the
domestic and international
flights,” said Kamal, adding that a
cargo plane would carry bags separately for each flight.
The development is likely to hinder Britain’s attempts to smoothly
bring back the estimated 20,000
U.K. nationals in Sharm elSheikh. Transport Secretary
Patrick McLoughlin said earlier
Friday that “most of the people
who were expecting to be home by
tonight will be home by tonight.”
On the ground in Sharm elSheikh, employee Mohammed
Abdel Fattah who works as a handling agent for easyJet, said two of
the budget airline’s flights to the
U.K. have been checked in. He told
the rest of EasyJet passengers to
return to their hotels, “until there
are new updates.”
“Why all of a sudden is everything on hold,” asked one of the
stranded British tourists, Carla
Dublin. “We don’t know what’s
going on.”
Casson, the ambassador, tried
to reassure the tourists, saying
that British authorities will “continue to work until we have everybody home.”
“There are challenging, difficult
issues to work through, this is a
busy airport and we need to make
sure people leave in a way that is
safe,” he said.
Early in the morning, the
Egyptians carried out expanded
security checks as dozens of
busses, ferrying British and
Russian tourists, waited outside
the airport, the line stretching up
to a kilometer (half mile) as police
inspected each vehicle.
Russia and Egypt have dismissed Western suggestions that a
bomb may have caused the crash
last Saturday, saying the speculation was a rush to judgment and
insisting the investigation must
run its course. The United States
and British leaders have stopped
short of a categorical assignment
of blame in the crash, but Prime
Minister David Cameron said
Thursday it was “more likely than
not” that the cause was a bomb.
The crash prompted companies
to ground flights from and to the
Red Sea resort, stranding thousands of tourists this week.
Britain later said additional security measures would be in place,
including only allowing passengers to carry hand baggage, while
checked luggage will be transported separately. The carry-on measure applies only to those departing
from Sharm el-Sheikh, British officials said.
Inside the crowded airport,
British tourists said they were just
anxious to get home.
“We were in the first flights that
were cancelled Wednesday night,
we were already queuing to
board,” said Amy Johnson, a 27year-old British administrative
assistant hoping to catch one of
easyJet flights out.
Standing in a crush of people
waiting to pass through security,
Terrance Mathurian, a British
builder vacationing with his family, said hotel staff told them in the
morning to head to the airport, following conflicting information.
The British Department for
Transport said travelers should
not leave for the Sharm el-Sheikh
airport unless they have a confirmed flight and asked for “people’s patience at this difficult
time.”
Meanwhile, Dutch carrier KLM
announced it instructed its passengers leaving from the Egyptian
capital of Cairo that they can only
take hand luggage on the plane
departing Friday. A statement on
KLM’s website says the measure is
“based on national and international information and out of precaution.”
KLM, which has no direct flights
to Sharm el-Sheikh, did not elaborate on the unusual measure.
Nothing has been revealed so far
from the ongoing investigation into
the plane crash.
Security officials at the Cairo
airport told The Associated Press
that flight KL554 left for
Amsterdam on Friday morning
with only 115 passengers out of
the 247 who were booked on the
flight. The rest refused to leave
without taking their check-in
bags, said the officials, who spoke
on condition of anonymity in line
with regulations.
Historic China-Taiwan meeting
about symbolism, not substance
BEIJING (AP) — Saturday’s
first-ever meeting between the
presidents of China and Taiwan
presents a formidable challenge:
How can they ensure the event’s
place in history when nothing of
substance should happen?
No agreements or joint statements are to be issued and only a
vague agenda has been sketched
out, a reflection of the extreme
sensitivity surrounding the
event, especially on the part of
Taiwanese wary of Beijing’s unification agenda.
Yet the event’s symbolism as a
moment of coming together is
undeniable, putting a strong
emphasis on presentation,
atmosphere and optics.
The get-together is fundamentally “about recognition, not
about results,” said University of
Virginia China expert Brantly
Womack. “The meeting is the
message.”
China’s Xi Jinping and
Taiwan’s Ma Ying-jeou are the
first leaders from the two sides to
meet since their territories split
during the Chinese civil war in
1949. Ma is the successor to
Chiang
Kai-shek,
whose
Nationalists retreated to the
island, while Xi now leads Mao
Zedong’s victorious Communists,
who set up government in
Beijing.
Already, arranging the meeting
has required extraordinary flexibility and patience.
According to Taiwan, planning
for Saturday’s meetings began
two years ago, complicated by the
need to meet conditions consistent with China’s refusal to recognize Taiwan’s government and
insistence on the “one-China
principle,” stating that Taiwan
and China are part of the same
nation.
Ma’s government, meanwhile,
needed to be highly mindful of
public sentiment in Taiwan,
where the Nationalists took a
drubbing in local elections last
year, due in large part to their
pro-China policies. They’re now
struggling ahead of presidential
and legislative polls in January
and a negative response to
Saturday’s meeting could deal
them a knockout blow.
Ma had already committed to
not traveling to China, while
Beijing had ruled out meeting at
multilateral forums such as the
annual Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation economic leaders’
meeting. In the end, they settled
on the neutral ground of mainly
ethnically Chinese Singapore,
whose government is close to
both Taipei and Beijing.
The two will meet in the afternoon at the luxurious Shangri-la
Hotel and attend an evening banquet. It’s not clear what contact
they’ll have with the horde of
Chinese, Taiwanese and international media descending on the
Southeast Asian city-state for the
event.
Mutual
non-recognition
requires a particular set of protocols and government agencies.
Because they don’t recognize
each other’s titles, Xi and Ma will
refer to each other as “Mr.”,
rather than “President.”
Unheard-of for a meeting of
heads of state, no flags will be in
view, at least where cameras are
present. Although Taiwan is
more relaxed about the matter,
even low-level Chinese delegations to Taiwan threaten to cancel events unless the island’s flag
is removed from meeting venues.
Confirmation of the visit on the
Chinese side came not from Xi’s
office or the Foreign Ministry, but
the Cabinet-level Taiwan Affairs
Office, in keeping with Beijing’s
insistence that issues involving
the island are an internal affair,
not foreign relations. Sticking to
those ideological guns, China’s
Foreign Ministry this week
referred all questions about the
event to the Taiwan Affairs
Office, even though the country’s
president is holding a high-profile meeting on foreign soil.
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November 7th: It
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6—Cleveland daily Banner—Friday, november 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
ChurCh
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614--6529
religion e-mail:
[email protected]
[email protected]
You can’t take it with you?
Have you heard of people
who try “to take it with them,”
when it comes to their wealth
and “stuff.” We all know it can’t
be done. But I heard a great
truth from a pastor recently,
who said, “One thing you can
take with you (to heaven) is
your children.”
How precious are our children to us and what great
lengths we go to protect and
care for them, because we love
them. But do you find sometimes, the temporal and physical needs give us more concern
than the eternal.
And Christ’s concern is definitely more than ours could
ever be. He paid a great cost
through redemption because
He loves our children, just as
He loves us. Is His death appreciated?
Warren W. Wiersbe in his
book, “Be Real,” relates a conversation between a college student and his chaplain.
“I went out and sinned,” the
student began, “because I knew
I could come back and ask God
Information for Church Activities
or the church page should be sent to
Mary Matthews at
[email protected]
m, mailed to Church Activities
Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O. Box
3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 or
dropped at the office, 1505 25th St.
Information should be in by noon the
day prior to publication.
to forgive me.”
“On what basis can God forgive you?” the chaplain asked,
pointing to 1 John 1:9: “If we
confess our sins, he is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins,
and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness.”
“God is faithful and just,” the
student replied.
“Those two words should
have kept you out of sin,” the
chaplain said. “Do you know
what it cost God to forgive your
sins?”
The young man hung his
head. “Jesus had to die for me.”
The chaplain then said,
“That’s right. Forgiveness isn’t
some cheap sideshow trick God
performs. God is faithful to His
promise, and God is just,
because Christ died for your
sins and paid the penalty for
you.”
And, he continued, “The next
time you plan to sin, remember
you are going to sin against a
faithful, loving God.”
The promise of God to forgive
our sins when we confess out
History museum exhibit
features Billy Graham
Lifelines
sins, “is not a magic rabbit’s
foot that makes it easy for us to
disobey God,” says Wiersbe.
A young girl asked, “What is
grace?”
The reply was, “It’s like a
snooze button on the clock —
when you do something wrong,
you press the button for some
latitude and freedom.”
I want to tell you, grace is not
a snooze button — it is Godgiven power through the Holy
Spirit to be able to stand strong
in Him — not an excuse for our
failings and postponement of
consequences.
In our world today, so much
is instant and temporary —
with easily-obtained “what I
want.” But our children need
truth; they need stability; they
need faith; they need solid
ground. Our concern should be
their spiritual welfare rather
than “I want them to have what
I didn’t.”
Song writer E.J. Carte in the
song, “Day of Wrath,” says, “Tell
your children and your children's children, Of the second
Bettie
Marlowe
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A new
exhibit at the N.C. Museum of
History chronicles the life of the
Rev. Billy Graham in time to celebrate a milestone.
The exhibit, “North Carolina’s
Favorite Son: Billy Graham and
His Remarkable Journey of
Faith,” opens on Friday in
Raleigh, one day before Graham
celebrates his 97th birthday.
The 5,000-square-foot exhibit
explores his life as well as a ministry that spanned seven
coming of the King.”
If there’s anything vitally
important parents should teach
their children, it is to love God.
How else can we be assured
they will grow up with a desire
to know Him and to serve Him?
Those who say “let my child
decide religion for himself” is
cheating that child by not
teaching him what life in Christ
is about.
We teach our children from
birth how and what to eat; how
to take care of their bodies;
physical hygiene; how to live in
society; to obey the laws of the
land and so on ... Why is it,
when it comes to the most
important lesson that can be
imparted to them, the decision
is “wait until ...”
If we are to “take our children
with us,” we must share our
knowledge of Christ and His
forgiveness with them.
Pope denounces priests, bishops
who ‘defamed’ Oscar Romero
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope
Francis has strongly denounced
the Catholic priests and bishops
who “defamed” Salvadoran
Archbishop Oscar Romero even
CHURCH
ACTIVITIES
Jessie Conner of Cleveland will
sing Saturday at 7 p.m., at Toqua
Community Church in Vonore.
———
Ladies Praise and Worship
Leonard Albert on Tuesday, and Prayer meeting is planned at 11
Paul Conn on Thursday.
a.m. Tuesday at Community
The public is invited to start Chapel Church of God, 1807
the day with a devotion.
Blythe Ave.
Albert and Conn to be HHE speakers
His Hands Extended is a nondenominational devotional held
on Tuesday and Thursday mornings from 7 to 7:30.
The devotions are held at
Garden Plaza, located at 3500
Keith St.
The speakers for this week are
EvEning Light gospEL
tabErnacLE
Community Chapel
Church of God
1807 Blythe Ave.
Welcome Valley Road, Benton
Thanksgiving dinner
sunday, nov. 8
P RAisE And
W oRsHiP
s ERViCE
Singing
Saturday,
For spiritual and
physical feeding
7 p.m.
featuring
Morning service at 11 a.m.
dinner to follow
Tuesday, 11 a.m.
By the Way
For more information, call
Sheila Beck, 423-331-7375
For more information, call 423-479-2143
after his murder in a campaign
that delayed his beatification
until earlier this year.
Francis spoke off-the-cuff
Friday to a group of Salvadoran
pilgrims who traveled to Rome to
thank history’s first Latin
American pope for beatifying
Romero, long a hero to the continent’s poor and oppressed.
Francis told them that Romero
suffered martyrdom not only
during his March 24, 1980, murder as he celebrated Mass in a
hospital chapel, but afterward.
He said: “I was a young priest
then and I was a witness to this:
He was defamed, calumnied and
had dirt thrown on his name —
his martyrdom continued even by
his brothers in the priesthood
and episcopate.”
Welcome Valley
Baptist Church
204 20th st. s.E.
L AdiEs
decades. It includes personal
memorabilia, interactive displays, and multimedia that help
bring Graham’s story to life.
In addition, the exhibit also
provides glimpses into Graham’s
family life, his leadership and
influence in the Cold War and in
the battle against segregation.
Also included in the exhibit is a
look at each of Graham’s 12 crusades in North Carolina and
other appearances in the U.S.
and overseas.
Everyone welcome
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—7
Does hell actually exist?
SOUth CLeVeLAnD ChUrCh OF GOD welcomed its new pastor Ed Lipsey and family at
a reception following morning worship Sunday. Top is a call to prayer after the sermon; below,
left, the reception; and below right, Pastor Lipsey and wife, Dawn.
Martin Marty, an American
church historian, commented,
“Hell disappeared and no one
noticed.” He summarized the
world’s viewpoint of a biblical
doctrine which was stressed in
other generations.
Of course, hell is a macabre
subject, and we do not enjoy
discussing it. We had much
rather talk of God’s love and of
all His goodness. In fact, hell
has become the “H” word which
is nearly completely shunned.
How long has it been since you
heard a lesson taught on hell or
a sermon on the theme from the
pulpit?
Hell is a difficult subject. To
some, the punishment seems
much more severe than the
crime. To others, it strains
credulity. To them it seems like
being sentenced to death for
jay-walking.
Dr. Erwin Lutzer, pastor of
Chicago’s famed Moody Church,
a solid, biblical preacher, said,
“Hell, more than any other doctrine of the Bible, seems to be
out of step with our times.”
He told of one man who said
that he would not want to be in
heaven with a God who sends
people to hell. His preference
was to be in hell so that he
could live in defiance of such a
God.
“If such a God exists,” he
complained, “he is the devil.”
Pity that man.
Our loving Lord stands today
with open arms, beckoning all
people to Himself. However, if
we refuse Him, then He
becomes our Judge. The unbelieving dead of all past ages will
stand before a holy God: “Then
death and Hades were thrown
into the lake of fire. ... And if
anyone’s name was not found
written in the book of life, he
was thrown into the lake of fire”
(Revelation 20:14-15). That is a
sobering reference, indeed.
The truth is God loves us,
and His love is far more encompassing than man’s. He loves us
so much that He will go to ends
of the earth to win us to
Himself. His book is packed
with references of His love for
mankind.
The golden text of the Bible
proclaims, “For God so loved
the world that He gave his only
begotten Son that whosoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.”
Did you notice that in that
beautiful passage are the words
perish and believe? To escape
perishing (hell) is contingent on
believing on the Lord Jesus
Christ. The New Testament
book of Acts, discussing Christ,
states: “Nor is there salvation in
any other, for there is no other
Attend church this
weekend
The Bible and
Current Events
Clyne W.
Buxton
name under heaven given
among men by which we must
be saved” (4:12).
On this theme, the apostle
Peter wrote, “The Lord is ... not
willing that any should perish
but that all should come to
repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). So, if
any of us perish (go to hell), we
step over a loving God and past
His Son on the cross.
Our Lord, full of love, must
have had a tear in His voice
when He said, “Enter through
the narrow gate. For wide is the
gate and broad is the road that
leads to destruction, and many
enter through it. But small is
the gate and narrow the road
that leads to life, and only a few
find it” (Matthew 7:13-14).
iTunes
Christian - Gospel
Jack Martin
“Songs That
Still The Storms”
Community Hall Church
will have a
Saturday, Nov. 7th • 9am-3pm
at 1305 6th Street S.E. in the fellowship hall.
Christmas decorations, soup, cornbread, dessert
& drinks will be sold. Church phone 472-2178
Convent prayer has gone on nonstop since 1878
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) —
Flooding, snowstorms, a flu outbreak, even a fire — any of those
might have slowed a group of
Wisconsin nuns who say none of
it has kept their order from praying nonstop for hundreds of
thousands of people over the last
137 years.
The
La
Crosse-based
Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual
Adoration claim to have been
praying night and day for the ill
and the suffering longer than
anyone in the United States —
since 11 a.m. on Aug. 1, 1878.
“When I walk into the chapel I
can feel this tangible presence
kind of hit (me),” said Sister
Sarah Hennessey, who helps
coordinate the prayers.
The tradition of perpetual
Eucharistic adoration — uninterrupted praying before what is
believed to be the body of Christ
— dates to 1226 in France,
according to Sister Marlene
Weisenbeck. Catholic orders
around the world have done it
since then. It grew in popularity
in 19th century and again under
Pope John Paul II, said Father
Steven Avella, a history professor
at Marquette University.
In La Crosse, the nuns estimate they’ve prayed for hundreds of thousands of people,
including 150,000 in the last
decade.
“Sometimes it’s overwhelming
with the pain that people have
and the illnesses that they are
suffering,” said Donna Benden,
AP Photo
SiSter SArAh henneSSey answers prayer requests in her
office at the Adoration Chapel in La Crosse, Wis. Hennessey is part
of the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, which claim to have
been praying nonstop for people who submit prayer requests since
1878.
who is among 180 lay people
known as “prayer partners” who
help the 100 sisters. Benden
prays from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. every
Wednesday before going to work.
The order started asking for
community help in 1997, when
the number of nuns began dwindling. Nowadays, the sisters usually take night shifts and lay people cover the day, according to
Sister Maria Friedman, who
schedules two people for every
hour. “Even the sisters go away
frequently or take on other tasks,
it’s the complexity of modern
life,” she said.
She said she’s constantly try-
ing to find ways to make it easier,
like getting a bed on campus
where lay people can sleep. If
necessary, the sisters will find
more creative solutions. “We will
make it work,” she said.
Other U.S. orders also pray 24
hours, seven days a week, like
the 16 nuns who take two-hour
shifts at Poor Clares of Perpetual
Adoration in Cleveland, Ohio.
Their order has done so in the
U.S. since 1921, a carryover from
an effort that began in 1856 in
France, according to that order’s
Sister Mary Thomas. One or two
nuns are there at all times, with
no help from lay people. Some
orders, though, have scaled back
to part-time because of aging
nuns or other reasons.
Since the La Crosse nuns
began, they’ve prayed through a
fire in an adjacent building in
1923, a flood in La Crosse in
1965, the flu and many storms.
Sister Hennessey compiles the
requests for each day from paper
slips people leave in person,
phone calls, emails and online
forms.
On the list recently was Laura
Huber, 52, a principal of two La
Crosse-area schools, who was
diagnosed with breast cancer 10
months ago. A school board
member requested the prayers
for her, she said.
“The prayer sustained me in
ways I haven’t been able to articulate,” she said, adding, “I felt
warm and loved and cared about
by strangers and that’s an
incredible feeling.”
Sister Friedman says she
never has problems finding people to help. She has a list of substitutes, but the prayer partners
and nuns often take extra hours.
“If it’s 11 o’clock at night and
it’s my hour and another sister
doesn’t show up, I can’t just go to
bed,” said Sister Hennessey.
“You’re like, ‘It’s 137 years — I
have to stay awake.’”
CHURCH DIRECTORY
Serving Cleveland for
over 175 years
Farmland Community Church
Meeting at the Cleveland Family YMCA
RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Photo of praying football players
causes stir on Facebook
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — North
Dakota’s High School Activities
Association says it has not created a new rule banning prayer at
sports games.
The statement comes in
response to a Facebook post of
praying players that caused a
stir.
A photo of the Bismarck St.
Mary’s and Kindred football
teams praying together after
Saturday’s playoff game in
Bismarck has been shared more
than 2,000 times on Facebook.
The post by a local resident
states that the activities association “said no public prayers
before the game.”
Association Executive Director
Matt Fetsch told The Bismarck
Tribune that a prayer can’t be
delivered over the public-address
system at a postseason game
because those games are hosted
by the association and not the
home team.
Fetsch said opening prayers
haven’t happened at postseason
games for 15 years, since the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled such
prayer was unconstitutional.
Christmas bonus: Farm animals
in demand for Nativity scenes
BERRY, Ky. (AP) — Some farmers have extra reason to rejoice at
Christmas: Tis the season for
renting out animals for live
Nativity scenes and other holiday
events.
Megan Powell, the event coordinator at Honey Hill Farm, a
mobile petting zoo with locations
in Kentucky and Ohio, says renting animals for Christmas programs helps pay for their food
and upkeep and has been a huge
growth area for the business.
Powell says Honey Hill works
with dozens of churches, schools
and businesses to provide sheep,
donkeys and goats for live
Nativity scenes.
Many churches also ask for
camels, but few petting zoos and
traditional farms raise them.
Bob Hudelson of Lost River
Game Farm in Orleans, Indiana,
says “There are a lot of camels
out there — just not a lot of tame
camels.”
Police arrest 2 men in vandalism
of Boston-area mosque
BURLINGTON, Mass. (AP) —
Police have arrested two 18-yearold men who allegedly vandalized
a mosque in the Boston suburb
of Burlington.
Cameron Cappella and Derrik
Demone, both of Burlington, are
each charged with malicious
destruction of property over $250
and tagging property.
Police were called to the
Islamic Center of Burlington
Sunday after the vandalism was
discovered. “U.S.A.” was written
multiple times with red spray
paint on the outside of the building. Several eggs had been
thrown at the building.
Cappella and Demone were
arrested Monday after police
received several leads from the
community. It was not immediately clear whether the men had
retained lawyers.
The Massachusetts chapter of
the Council on American-Islamic
Relations said Sunday that the
graffiti reflects a growing sentiment that Muslims are not “real”
Americans.
Sanctuary - Traditional Worship - 8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Fellowship Hall - Informal Worship - 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Nursery available for all worship services
Randy Martin, Senior Pastor Skip White, Associate Pastor
155 Central Ave., NW
423-476-5586
http://www.bsumc.org
Recycle this newspaper
Office Phone: 473-9891
“Come See The Difference”
REV. CHIP HAMMONDS
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH United Christian Church
3425 Ocoee St. N 476-4504
www.ClevelandUMC.com
Pastor: Rev. Tim Bracken
Sunday Worship....8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School..............................9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Night Together...........5:30 p.m.
(Supper Reservations Required) - (Nursery Provided)
OPEN HEARTS, OPEN MINDS, OPEN DOORS...
The People of The United Methodist Church
Wesley Memorial United
Methodist Church
3405 Peerless Road NW
Cleveland, TN 37312 • 472-9578
www.wesleymemorialchurch.com
Email: [email protected]
Rev. Ramon Torres
Sunday Worship – 8:30, 11:00, 6:00
Where Everybody is Somebody, & Jesus Christ is Lord
First Lutheran Church
“Building on His Promise”
“Scripture-Based”
Reuse the News
220 Urbane Road NE
Sunday Morning Worship Service 10 AM
8:15 & 10:45 Service
9:30 Sunday School
Reverend Robert Seaton, Pastor
-C)NTIRE3TREET.%s#LEVELAND4.
#HURCH/FlCEs0ARSONAGE
Pastors Charles & Margie Poteat
2200 Peerless Rd
Cleveland, TN
423.479.4277
A Full-Gospel Fellowship
Everyone Welcome
Service Times: Sunday 11 AM & 6 PM, Wed. 7 PM
´ of Lisieux
St. Thérese
Catholic Church
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday 6 p.m. (Vigil)
Sunday: 8 a.m. (Spanish), 9:30 a.m., 12 p.m.
1st & 3rd Sunday, 3 p.m. (Latin)
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday: 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday: 5:30 p.m.
SACRAMENT OF PENANCE
Saturday 4:45-5:45 p.m.
900 CLINGAN RIDGE DR. NW • 476-8123
sttheresecatholicchurch.org
ATTEND A
CHURCH OF
YOUR CHOICE
THIS WEEKEND
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
30-year
mortgage
rate jumps
to 3.87%
WASHINGTON (AP) — Average
long-term U.S. mortgage rates
rose sharply this week amid
growing expectations that the
Federal Reserve may soon raise
its key short-term interest rate.
Mortgage giant Freddie Mac
said Thursday the average rate
on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage jumped to 3.87 percent
from 3.76 percent a week earlier. It was the largest weekly
increase in the 30-year rate
since June. The rate on 15-year
fixed-rate mortgages advanced
to 3.09 percent from 2.98 percent.
Still, rates remained historically low, marking a 15th
straight week below 4 percent
and well below last year’s levels.
A year ago, the average 30-year
mortgage rate was 4.02 percent,
while the rate for 15-year loans
was 3.21 percent.
While keeping the key rate at
a record low near zero, the Fed
last week signaled the possibility of a rate hike in December. It
was the first time in seven years
of record-low rates that the Fed
has explicitly raised the possibility that it could raise the
benchmark rate at its next
meeting.
At their mid-December meeting, Fed policymakers will consider raising the rate if the
economy continues to grow at a
strong enough pace to keep
adding jobs and push annual
inflation toward the 2 percent
target, Fed Chair Janet Yellen
told Congress on Wednesday.
A December rate hike seems
more likely by the day. Stocks
have recovered nearly all of
their losses from the summer,
financial markets have calmed
in China and elsewhere, and the
U.S. economy continues to
slowly improve.
Market expectations of a rate
increase have brought plunging
government bond prices and
soaring yields. The yield on the
10-year Treasury bond, which
mortgage rates have been tracking, climbed to 2.22 percent
Wednesday from 2.09 percent a
week earlier. The yield was at
2.23 percent Thursday morning.
To calculate average mortgage
rates, Freddie Mac surveys
lenders across the country at
the beginning of each week. The
average doesn’t include extra
fees, known as points, which
most borrowers must pay to get
the lowest rates. One point
equals 1 percent of the loan
amount.
The average fee for a 30-year
mortgage rose to 0.6 point from
0.5 point last week. The fee for a
15-year loan was unchanged at
0.6 point.
The average rate on five-year
adjustable-rate
mortgages
jumped to 2.96 percent from
2.89 percent; the fee remained
at 0.4 point. The average rate on
one-year ARMs climbed to 2.62
percent from 2.54 percent; the
fee held at 0.2 point.
HOME OF THE WEEK
Banner photos, ALLEN MINCEY
THE DECK at the rear of the home is perfect for lounging and
checking out the beautiful country landscape.
THE BANBERRY DRIVE HOME is beautiful on the outside, and
has such a nice view of the surrounding area full of trees changing
color now.
Beautiful views — inside and out —
featured at Banberry Drive dwelling
Open house planned
Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m.
beautiful neighborhood. Then,
you open the front door to wooden
floors that lead to the living room
or kitchen area of the home. There
is also a nice dining room that
By ALLEN MINCEY
connects to the kitchen with a
Banner Staff Writer
great view of the trees outside the
It is nearing the winter season, home.
The kitchen features fabulous
but there are still some great colors to view in our area. How better cabinets and granite countertops,
to do that than from your own with Whirlpool appliances (range,
deck at a new home in one of the microwave oven and dishwasher)
prettier sections of Bradley strategically placed to give as
much room as possible in the
County?
That three-bedroom, 2 1/2- space. A beautiful bronze faucet
bath home is located at 175 highlights the sink in the kitchen,
Banberry Drive, located just off and there are drop lights that give
Banther Road, in the southern a special appeal to the area.
The living room area, much like
portion of the county. One look
from the deck or from the covered other areas of the home including
front porch gives a beautiful view all three bedrooms, features a nice
of colorful trees in that area, and lighted ceiling fan, and the living
just outside the front of the new room also presents the entrance
to a nice deck at the rear of the
home is even better.
But while the outside of the home. This deck will be perfect for
home is in a spectacular area, the those fall days to view the changinside of the Banberry Drive ing colors of the leaves, or nice in
the spring or summer to have outhouse is just as nice.
Just outside the front door is a door activities such as barbecues.
porch area that allows for a great It will be the perfect place, with
view of neighbors walking in the the proper furniture, to just sit
and enjoy the fantastic Bradley
County sunrise or sunset.
The master bedroom is on the
lower level, and is the only carpeted area downstairs. Through the
window in the master bedroom,
one can see the nice landscaping
at the front of the home.
A bath attaches to the master
bedroom that features a sliding
glass door shower and garden tub
that are perfect for the husband
and wife of the house, along with
ample space for towels and other
accessories, including a large
walk-in closet and storage area.
Much like the kitchen, the master bath has beautiful granite
countertops, as well as two sinks
with separate bronze faucets.
A half bath is located in the
hallway of the home, also with the
granite countertops, and there is
an entrance to the large two-vehicle garage from the downstairs
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
A LARGE WALK-IN CLOSET area.
An office area which could be
is a special part of the bedroom used
for a library is located on the
area in the Banberry Drive home. first floor.
The staircase to the upstairs
may be the highlight of the home,
with its wooden topped stairs and
great railing. It leads straight up,
then makes a 90-degree turn that
will lead to the second story. The
railing from the staircase is similar as you get to the upstairs foyer,
which also gives a nice view of the
living room down below.
A full bath is located on the second floor, as are two bedrooms,
one a very large room and the
other a smaller version of the
master bedroom. As mentioned,
both have beautiful ceiling fans
and also nice views of outside
from the windows in each room.
Each bedroom has nice closet
space as well.
Each of the bathrooms has nice
tile floors that match the decor
perfectly.
Upstairs, there is also a finished
bonus room that can be used for
any purpose you may have.
Back outside, there is a great
yard just waiting to have kids
enjoy activities, and roads that are
safe and have great visibility for
motorists and walkers.
And, if you are looking for more
room, there is an unfinished basement area that is longing for you
to put your own personal touches
to it. Just think of what you can
do to make it into a special area
for family and visitors to your
home.
The beautiful views from the
home lead one to think that the
home is in the country, and that is
partially true. Banther Road connects with Bancroft Road, and
Banberry Drive is located south of
the
McDonald
community.
However, it is also a quick drive to
Mountain Road, which connects
with U.S. Highway 58, and also to
U.S. Highway 11 (South Lee
Highway), which will take one to
Ooltewah and on to Chattanooga
if wished.
Getting to Cleveland is easy by
taking either route north, and as
with the home, travels through
pristine landscapes that enhance
the short drive.
Banberry Drive is located in a
new subdivision off Banther Road
Ask a Designer: Tips on making a room feel bigger
By MELISSA RAYWORTH
Associated Press
As the weather gets colder and
we come indoors, it’s easy to wish
your indoor space had some of
the open, airy feeling of the outdoors.
It is possible to make a room
feel larger than it really is:
Choosing the right colors and finishes and arranging furniture
properly can create the illusion of
space.
Here, three experts on designing small living spaces share
their strategies for making rooms
feel larger and more open, without the expense of construction
or major redecorating.
—REFLECTIONS
That classic advice is really
true: Strategically placed mirrors
will make a room feel larger.
“They let your eye travel
beyond the room,” explains
Maxwell Ryan, founder of
ApartmentTherapy.com. In small
dining rooms, Ryan suggests,
place a large, horizontal mirror
along one wall, so that while
entertaining, you’ll see the reflection of guests at your table and
flickering candles.
But mirrors aren’t the only
reflective option: New York-based
designer Young Huh uses reflective, glossy paint finishes on ceilings to make her clients’ rooms
feel taller and more open.
—GO BIG
Surprising as it sounds, Huh
recommends adding one oversize
piece of furniture to a small
room. Playing with scale by
adding something large amid
more modest-size furniture, she
says, tricks the brain into perceiving that the room must be
fairly large if it can hold something oversize.
Ryan says this works with art
as well: Consider adding a large
painting or other big piece of art.
“It seems counterintuitive,” he
says, “but our eye likes contrast.
We like variation.”
Long, dramatic curtains can
trick your eye in the same way.
“Hanging curtain rods all the
way at the ceiling, using large art
and big mirrors and vertical
stripes with paint are great ways
to make your eye go up visually,”
says Kyle Schuneman, co-author
of “The First Apartment Book:
Cool Design for Small Spaces”
(Potter). This has the effect of
“lifting the ceiling and making it
feel more spacious than it actually is.”
Huh agrees: “Where you have
small or low ceilings, definitely
have curtains go all the way up to
the ceiling.”
—LOCATION, LOCATION
“Decluttering and cleaning up
is always essential,” Ryan says,
but you don’t have to pare down
your furniture. Instead, try rearranging it to let energy flow more
easily.
“A room has good energy and
good flow if you can vacuum it
without moving any furniture,
including the corners,” Ryan
says. “If you can’t get behind
stuff, that’s a sign that the space
is gonna feel a little crowded.”
Experiment
with
small
changes in furniture placement
and see whether the room feels
different.
“If your bed is pushed up
against the wall on two sides,”
Ryan says, it may make the room
feel tighter. Try moving the bed
out so you can step out either
side, he says. Losing a bit of actual space could make the room feel
roomier.
—AREAS OF INTEREST
“If you have just a studio or an
open space, defining the areas
makes it feel like there is more
space,”
Schuneman
says,
“because your eye is seeing multiple ideas.”
Try using several small rugs to
define different areas for sleeping,
dining and relaxing. Or use different wall treatments, he says, like
reclaimed wood or wallpaper, to
further differentiate these areas.
And in a studio apartment, “try
creating a nook for your bed,”
Schuneman says, “making it feel
like a room within a room.”
—LIGHT OR DARK?
This subject is open to debate.
Huh has made clients’ rooms feel
bigger with dark and bold colors.
“Dark colors recede,” she says,
so if you paint a small room a rich
chocolate brown or peacock blue,
“you don’t notice how small the
room is.”
But Ryan thinks light walls
contrasted with a darker rug or
dark-stained wood floor are also a
strong choice. “Darkness contracts,” he says, while “lightness
expands.”
Whether you choose light or
dark colors, “consider painting
the ceiling the same color as the
walls,” Huh says. “It’s like that
fashion tip ... wearing the same
color all over” makes you look
taller.
—BRIGHTEN UP
“Your eye will only go where
there’s light. It won’t go where
there are shadows,” says Ryan.
“So lighting is the most important
thing.”
It’s also easy to remedy, and
“doesn’t require moving anything.”
The goal is to eliminate shadows. “Make sure you have at least
three points of light in every
room,” Ryan says, preferably floor
and table lamps “so the light is
down where you’re living.”
The light from ceiling fixtures
doesn’t count.
“It’s very far away,” he says,
“and makes you look bad.”
One exception to that rule:
“Really good track lighting ... if it’s
directed, pointed at your walls or
cabinets.”
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THE STAIRCASE features the same wood flooring seen throughout the home, and is one of the highlights of the home.
which has several nice houses,
and a great area to walk the dog or
take a jog or walk yourself. It is
zoned for Prospect Elementary
School, Ocoee Middle School and
Walker Valley High School.
The asking price for the 2,587square-foot home is $289,000. It
is
represented
by
Cindi
Richardson of Keller Williams
Realtors.
To view the Home of the Week,
take Bancroft Road and turn onto
Banther Road, then travel about
one mile to Banberry Drive, which
will be on the left. There will be an
open house at the home on
Sunday, from 2 to 4 p.m.
Quality Ready-Mix And Service
Congratulations Champion Builders
On Your New Home. Thanks For Choosing Us!!
479-4541
CONGRATULATIONS
Champion Builders
Thank you for choosing us for
your financial needs.
Congratulations
CHAMPION
BUILDERS
We were pleased to supply
materials used on this beautiful
new location.
BURNS ORNAMENTAL
IRON & FABRICATING
2312 GUTHRIE AVE. • 479-6844
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—9
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THE LIVING ROOM features beautiful wooden flooring and an awesome lighted ceiling fan. There are
ceiling fans in all of the bedrooms and many of the rooms of the home.
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
BEAUTIFUL CABINET WORK highlights the kitchen.
Congratulations
on finishing the
home, and we are
proud to have done
the electrical work.
Banner photos, ALLEN MINCEY
A BRONZE RAILING is featured as you reach the upstairs,
where you can get a great view
of the living room.
Serving Bradley/
Hamilton counties
(423) 599-0118
[email protected]
Thompson Springs Rd. SE
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES
in the kitchen include a range,
microwave oven and dishwasher.
STAIRS MAKE AN INTERESTING 90-DEGREE turn as
they go toward the upstairs portion of the home.
CONGRATULATIONS
Champion Builders
We are proud to have been a supplier.
INSULATION
UNLIMITED INC.
4130 Jersey
Pike
(423) 648-7863
Chattanooga,
Tennessee
• Residential • New Construction • Commercial
3455 Brainerd Rd.
Chatt., TN
698-4895
“Let Us Help”
For All Your Masonry Needs
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THE MASTER BATH has both a glass door shower and this soaker tub.
David Mayfield • 423-476-6000
P.O. Box 5161 • Cleveland, Tennessee 37320
www.mayfieldbrospestcontrol.com
Cleveland’s
Largest Flooring
Center!
PORTER
CONCRETE
Wants to Congratulate
Banner photos, ALLEN MINCEY
THE DOWNSTAIRS BATH is
located in the hallway
to the living room.
FINANCING AVAILABLE
THE FLOORING CENTER
“The Home
Improvement
Specialists”
Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-2:00
GRANITE COUNTERTOPS intertwine
with beautiful brass
faucet work in both the
kitchen and bathrooms.
923
StarVue Dr.
476-9434
Champion Builders
FOR ALL YOUR CONCRETE WORK
• BASEMENT • DRIVEWAYS • SIDEWALKS • PATIOS • ETC.
CUSTOM CONCRETE STAMPING & COLORING
144 Winding Creek Circle • Cleveland, TN 37312
423-596-0740
ATTENTION:
Contractors and Builders
To have your new home featured as
Home-of-The-Week
Congratulations
Call the
Advertising
Department
Today
Emmitt&PenelopeChampion
Champion Builders
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423-255-7400
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THE
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Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
A HALF-BATH
DOWNSTAIRS includes a wonderful
oval mirror that matches well with
the entire decor.
o r E m a i l [email protected]
Cleveland Daily Banner
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Heroes
From Page 1
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
THE VOLLEY FOR A CURE group received $500 as part of the News Channel 9 “Pay It Forward” promotion. Presenting the cash award was Sarah Jennings (Brandi King), a Bradley County native. The station learned about the organization from Emily Bishop, whose family has been touched by cancer and
decided to award the cash to VFAC. From left are Paula Deal, Wendi Bishop, Bailey Bishop, Emily
Bishop, Andrea Hudson and Jennings.
HHWCD
From Page 1
Dunson said. “What’s remarkable
about that amount is that it didn’t
include empty paint cans,
microwaves, vacuum cleaners
and tires which are not hazardous. We directed residents
with those waste streams to the
landfill. We also sent residents
with lead-acid batteries and waste
oil to the landfil because we
accept those materials all year
long for free.”
It’s important for the public to
understand what constitutes
household hazardous waste
because the twice-a-year HHWCD
collections aren’t cheap.
“Household hazardous waste
collection events are expensive to
coordinate,” Dunson said. “We’re
talking, on average, $50,000 per
event. So, if we can educate the
public about acceptable waste
streams, we can limit the county’s
financial exposure to those items
that can go in the trash or can be
taken to the landfill all year long.”
A detailed list of “Acceptable”
and “Unacceptable” items is
included in this news story. The
same list, and additional information, are also available on the
Santek
website
at
http://www.santekwasteservices.c
om.
Packaging is also important
because it impacts the efficiency
of traffic flow on Saturday, and it
affects the safety of volunteers
who are unloading the vehicles,
Dunson explained.
“By securing waste streams in
sturdy cardboard boxes, residents will ensure the safety of the
volunteers and workers who
package the materials for disposal
or re-use,” she stressed. “If waste
streams are properly labeled and
packaged, it also makes it easier
for the volunteers who unload
residents’ vehicles.”
As for those concerned about
Saturday’s weather — apparently
many are based on the number of
phone calls Dunson has received
this week — the HHWCD tradition
is RAIN or SHINE. Nothing has
changed.
“The event will be held come
rain or shine!” Dunson said, in an
almost celebratory tone. “If memory serves me correctly, we had
snow showers a couple of years
ago, but if the weather is uncooperative on Saturday, I would just
ask people to be patient and dress
accordingly. Although residents
are supposed to remain in their
vehicles and let the volunteers
unload materials, we always have
a handful who feel the need to get
out and help us.”
Santek doesn’t take on the
semi-annual event alone. The collection day operates thanks to a
team of partners including
Cleveland
Utilities,
Cleveland/Bradley Keep America
Beautiful, the Bradley County
Sheriff’s Office, Tri-State and
Santek.
The HHWCD collections are
funded with host fees paid to
Bradley County government by
Santek.
Questions about Saturday’s collection event, and the items being
accepted and not accepted, may be
Chef
From Page 1
from different parts of the world
come together to make amazing
food and amazing stories.”
The
World
Food
Championships boast over
$300,000 in prizes and awards to
the winners. The seven-day contest’s tournament-style format
spans nine categories of fierce
competition, with participants
from 40 states and 17 countries.
The competition is fierce, and it is
safe to say that the eyes of the
food world are intently focused
on the new talent emerging from
the flurry of flames and fine cuisine.
The massive event will cover an
entire city block and feature
enough grills, countertops and
cookware to allow 50 chefs to
compete at the same time.
The pinnacle of the event is a
$100,000 Final Table faceoff that
pits the contestants against a
panel of five elite judges with a
live audience.
If critics and countless live
spectators aren’t enough pressure, the entire competition is
filmed for release as a multiseries, cable television documentary that will debut in mid-2016.
“The
World
Food
Championships allow us to showcase our area to the world,”
explained Bald Headed Bistro
General Manager Aaron Reed.
“We always strive to promote the
growing food culture that has
emerged in the Cleveland and
Chattanooga area. We live in a
fantastic area of the country
where numerous local ingredients are available, and we want to
communicate that through our
food.”
To learn more about the World
Food Championships, visit
WorldFoodChampionships.com.
directed to Dunson at 303-7107 or
Joanne Maskew, executive director
of Cleveland/Bradley County Keep
America Beautiful, at 559-3307.
Tri-State Exhibition Center is
located in the McDonald community off Nature’s Trail, formerly
known as Pleasant Grove Road.
An itemized list of “Acceptable”
and “Unacceptable” items for
Saturday’s HHWCD event is provided below:
Acceptable items:
n Automotive and marine products: Oil and fuel additives, grease
and rust solvents, naval jelly, carburetor and fuel injector cleaners,
starter fluids, body putty and gasoline.
n Home maintenance and
improvement products: Oil-based
paint, used strippers and thinners,
adhesives, driveway sealant, roofing tar, wallpaper remover, and
stains and varnishes.
n Home lawn and garden products: Pesticides, fertilizers and
wood preservatives.
n Miscellaneous: Pool chemicals, photo processing chemicals,
medicines and drugs, aerosols and
compressed gas, mercury thermostats and thermometers, and fluorescent tubes.
n Electronics: CPUs, televisions
(console TVs must be dismantled),
monitors, printers and keyboards.
Unacceptable items:
n Empty paint cans and solidified paint (these can be disposed of
in household garbage).
n Medical and biological:
Needles and sharps, infectious
wastes, dead animals, and any
waste from a doctor’s office, clinic
or veterinarian office.
n Explosives and ammunition:
Fireworks, military ordnance, gun
powder and ammunition.
n Radioactives: Smoke detectors
and radium paint.
n Business and institutional
waste: No business (large or small),
no colleges or universities, no
schools, no hospitals, no home
improvement or painting contractors, and no agribusiness.
n Miscellaneous: Empty containers of any kind, automotive gas
tanks, laboratory chemicals and
cooking oil.
“All products must be properly
packaged and placed in cardboard
boxes or plastic containers ... no
exceptions,” the Santek website
reads. “Used oils, anti-freeze and
lead-acid batteries are currently
recycled free of charge at the
Bradley County Landfill. Take
advantage of this service yearround.”
As for final suggestions for
Saturday’s collection day, Dunson
recommended “arrive early,” “be
patient” and “properly package” all
items.
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
ANDREA HUDSON presents a special award to Stephanie Taylor
at Thursday’s Volley for a Cure luncheon, held at Lee University’s
DeVos Recreation Center.
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT at Thursday’s Volley for a Cure
luncheon included Lee student and Voices of Lee member Naja
Wilson singing “The Greatest Love of All.” She was accompanied on
keyboard by Jay Newsom.
school. She played college softball
at Greenville College and knew
LU’s Andrea Hudson from their
athletic connection.
Several awards were presented
at the luncheon. News Channel 9
presented the Volley for a Cure
organizers $500 as part of the station’s “Pay It Forward” promotion.
Hudson said Lee University’s
Stephanie Taylor works behind
the scenes to make sure the event
(including tonight’s volleyball
game between the Lady Flames
and University of West Georgia)
goes well. She added that is some-
thing she deserves recognition for,
and she was pleased to present
the honor to Taylor.
Volley for a Cure activities continue tonight with the volleyball
game starting around 7 p.m., with
a silent auction occurring prior to
the game. Activities at the school’s
Paul Dana Walker Arena begin
around 4:30 p.m.
Money raised by the event goes
toward the MaryEllen Locher
Foundation, and one student will
be presented a scholarship
tonight between the second and
third sets of the volleyball game.
are going unfilled because local
workers lack the necessary skills.
He said area colleges are working to develop programs to
address this.
While developing the manufacturing workforce, the EDC is also
focused on retaining industries
and bringing new industries to
the area.
“For the last quarter most of
my work has been with existing
industry projects,” Berry said.
He said several are looking to
expand.
“The thing we have to help people understand is once we get a
plant here, every other plant in
the company system is competing for those investments, too.
So, we are still competing even
though they are here,” Berry
said.
This is where the Chamber
strives to be a partner with the
industry to make the Cleveland
plant the best option.
This could mean encouraging
local governments to offer tax
incentives for expansion.
“Prospect activity has been
modest or normal for this time of
year,” Berry said.
Three
industries
have
expressed interest in the Spring
Branch Industrial Park.
The city and county governments are being asked to contribute $3 million to developing
infrastructure at the park.
“I’m really satisfied with where
we’re at with this activity right
now,” Berry said.
Activity will soon increase at
the site as logging begins to clear
the needed land. Berry said the
timber will be sold and he hopes
it will net $60,000 or more. He
said this will allow them to begin
showing the site.
Grants might also be available
for some of the site development.
EDC
From Page 1
The
ThreeStar
program
encourages partnerships with
community organizations and
industries.
Hathcock pointed out this has
been incorporated as a way to
meet the planned objectives.
Doug
Berry,
Cleveland/Bradley
County
Chamber of Commerce vice president for economic development,
pointed out the importance of
improving the existing workforce
through manufacturing training.
Berry highlighted a mechatronics program at Cleveland
High School that was preparing
students for this field.
Berry said the community education approach needed to be
two-fold, providing opportunities
for both students and adult
learners to receive training in
manufacturing-related fields.
Berry pointed out there are highpaying manufacturing jobs that
Cash Express launching annual
Christmas drive for local needs
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Bishop
From Page 1
Current maintenance supervisor Hal Taylor said Bishop
always had a “John Wayne” attitude in his work, and got things
done.
Discussing the early years of
Bishop’s career, and other positions he held, Taylor added,
“We’ve been fortunate to have
him.”
Bishop then repaid Taylor for
the compliments and praise.
“He’s the best man around,”
Bishop said of the current supervisor. “You need to take care of
him,” he told the board.
The outgoing manager was
also quick to praise Cleveland
City Schools. “You have the best
school system in the state,” he
said.
School board member Charlie
Cogdill said, “Gene has looked
after us (through the years), and
he’s a great man.”
Dr. Murl Dirksen added to the
praise.
“When
Mayfield
Elementary School was being
constructed, Gene saved us
when he noticed a huge I-beam
She said that she was so confident that she felt she would win
the $250,000 prize awarded on
the last night of the show, and
when she didn’t, she was disappointed. But, she also knew that
she had gained so much by pushing herself to her limits to lose the
weight and become a healthier
person. Still, she admits she
would love to have won (she lost
by .01 percent of body mass lost).
The softball coach said that she
loves to invest in the lives of kids,
so she used her story to inspire
them.
“I told them, you know, sometimes you can practice and do
everything right, and the chips
just don’t fall your way. You can
eat healthy, you can exercise, and
sometimes you get cancer. But we
all have to remember that God is
in control of everything that goes
our way,” she said. “I think the
key thing that I have learned is
that while you cannot always see
His hand, you can always trust
His heart.”
Jones said that most everyone
falls into one of three categories:
either you have cancer, you had
cancer or you know someone you
love who has cancer.
“And don’t you think through
all of this that we are to serve as
His hand extended,” she said. “I
know when I was at the (Biggest
Loser) ranch, I needed that person
to pick me up and dust me off,
and it was Jen. And now, you
need to ask yourself, who can I be
that person to?”
She said that her phrase “why
not me” is extremely important,
because she told those in attendance to ask themselves “why not
me to give a word of encouragement to someone who needs it.
And why not us together.
“Go out and talk to someone, to
share with someone,” Jones said.
“You do that everyday, and I
encourage you to continue to make
a difference in someone’s life.”
“You are the warriors; you are
the heroes,” she added.
Jones’ visit to Lee University
was not her first time at the
was missing from the center-area
of the building.”
“That saved us a lot of money,”
added Steve Morgan.
Other board members, and
school system administrators
and teachers, also paid tribute to
Bishop and his years of service.
In other school board business:
— Upland Design Group architect Brian Templeton said
Cleveland High’s new Raider
Arena is progressing, and presented the school board with the
latest basketball court design.
High school administrators
and coaches have given their
final opinions, and suggestion
were incorporated into the
design. Boys’ coach Jason
McCowan had asked that the
coaches’ box be extended, as
allowed by state rules.
School
board
members
approved the latest design.
— Jeff Elliott and Charlie
Cogdill had some slight policy
adjustments,
which
were
approved by the board.
Policy changes were for building and grounds management,
security, and student surveys.
— The next meeting of the Site
Committee is scheduled for 9:30
a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 18.
Dirksen is chair of the committee, serving along with board
members Dawn Robinson and
Peggy Pesterfield.
— Robinson presented her
report on the state Legislature,
discussing
the
recent
“Conquering the Hill” workshop.
The workshop was conducted
by Rep. John Forgety of Athens
and Rep. Joe Pitts of Clarksville.
“They discussed the political
environment in Nashville, and
how to know your way around
your legislators,” said Robinson.
“It was very eye-opening.”
— Director of Schools Dr.
Martin Ringstaff and Cleveland
Police Chief Mark Gibson attend
a bomb threat conference in
Knoxville Monday morning.
They were to share the information they received with their
co-workers.
As the weather turns colder,
thoughts turn to family and
the coming of Christmas.
Cash Express in Cleveland
is gearing up to be a part of
making sure that those who do
not have the means for
Christmas gifts receive something.
Each year the company collects coats, toys, clothing and
nonperishable goods.
This year, Family Resource
Center’s Family Violence program is partnering to distribute the items collected to those
in need
Cash Express Manager
Stephanie Wilson said the program is a part of the company’s desire to give back to the
communities of which they are
a part at Christmastime.
“We have two offices in
Cleveland that are accepting
donations,” Wilson said.
“Either side of town that you
are on, we have boxes in a
variety of places.”
In addition to the Cash
Express locations in town, collection points will be at The
Tanning Company, Radio
“Growing up as a
kid there were always
kids in my class that
didn’t have the best of
jackets or would come
in without a jacket
and they would
always be out sick. It
has always been a big
deal to me to try and
help them.”
— Stephanie Wilson
Shack, Walmart on Keith
Street and Leisure Time
Bowling alley, the Bradley
County Courthouse and
Cleveland Police Department.
Collection bins have already
been distributed and donations will be accepted until
Dec. 15.
Each of the stores are also
giving customers the opportunity to make a monetary donation.
They are also collecting
clothing for adults.
“There are people of all ages,
of all sizes that need stuff,”
Wilson said.
She is also glad to be able to
be a part of children getting a
toy who otherwise would have
nothing for Christmas.
“It makes me feel better to
know that I am helping the
community by … helping
someone stay warm through
the winter,” Wilson said.
Cash Express has held an
annual drive for the past 11
years as a way to be invested
in the community.
School participation is also
being solicited with a pizza
party being offered for the
class in each grade that collects the most.
“Growing up as a kid there
were always kids in my class
that didn’t have the best of
jackets or would come in without a jacket and they would
always be out sick,” Wilson
said. “It has always been a big
deal to me to try and help
them.”
CEO Garry McNabb said he
is impressed each year by the
community’s response.
Similar drives are being held
throughout
Kentucky,
Tennessee, Mississippi and
Alabama where Cash Express
has locations.
For more information, call
472-1798.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—11
NATIONAL BRIEFS
Lawyer: Man in gyrocopter flight
to Capitol to plead guilty
WASHINGTON (AP) — A lawyer
for the man who flew a gyrocopter through highly restricted
airspace before landing outside
the U.S. Capitol says his client
will plead guilty to a felony in the
case.
Attorney Mark Goldstone said
via email late Thursday that
Douglas Hughes is expected to
plead guilty to operating a gyrocopter without a license on Nov.
20 in federal court in
Washington.
Goldstone added Hughes faces
three years in prison and that the
government and Hughes’ lawyers
agreed sentencing guidelines
don’t apply.
Hughes was arrested April 15
after flying from Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania, to Washington in
what he called an act of civil disobedience over big money’s influence on politics.
William Miller, a spokesman
for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in
Washington, said via email his
office would not comment.
Woman apologizes for fire
started by efforts to kill bedbugs
DETROIT (AP) — A Detroit
woman has apologized for a massive fire that she and authorities
said was accidentally started by
her efforts to eradicate bedbugs
from her apartment.
Tuesday’s fire tore through
Ramblewood
Apartments,
destroying the 48-unit complex.
Sherry Young was injured along
with four others, including three
firefighters, the Detroit Free
Press reported.
Young told the newspaper she
had doused herself with rubbing
alcohol before it was ignited by a
stove and oven. She said she had
turned on the stove and oven the
previous day to heat up her
apartment, on advice from a
neighbor, as part of the effort to
kill the bedbugs.
“I didn’t know that the fumes
were so ignitable,” she said. “Had
I known that, I would not have
doused myself before going into
the apartment.”
Young said she suspected the
apartment had bedbugs in
January and earlier efforts by an
exterminator and an apartment
complex
employee
failed.
Speaking by phone from a hospital where she was being treated
for burns, she said she was in a
“state of torment” from the bedbugs.
“I’m so sorry,” she said, struggling to speak as she began sobbing. “I didn’t mean it. My neighbors ... everybody’s displaced
because of me.”
Young said she had slept in her
car Monday night and doused
herself with rubbing alcohol
before walking into the apartment. When she went inside, the
newspaper said, she started
pouring rubbing alcohol on the
floor and saw it ignite near the
oven.
Sentencing set for deputies
convicted in Georgia jail death
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — Two
former sheriff’s deputies face
possible prison time when they’re
sentenced for crimes in the stun
gun-related death of a 21-yearold jail detainee.
A Chatham County Superior
Court judge is scheduled to sentence ex-deputies Jason Kenny
and Maxine Evans on Friday. A
jury acquitted them of involuntary manslaughter charges in the
January death of Mathew Ajibade
(ah-jih-BAH-dee). But Kenny was
found guilty of cruelty to an
inmate. Evans was convicted of
faking jail records and three perjury counts.
Ajibade, of Savannah, died in a
cell after a jailhouse fight in
which deputies punched and
kicked him after he snatched a
Taser and injured two jailers.
Investigators found afterward
Kenny shocked a restrained
Ajibade four times with a stun
gun. An autopsy found no single
cause of death.
Boy released from hospital,
mother accused of poisoning him
DALLAS (AP) — A 4-year-old
boy whose mother is accused of
forcing him to swallow ant poison
has been released from the hospital.
The Dallas Morning News
reports that the boy was discharged from Medical City Dallas
Hospital on Tuesday, after being
in critical condition over the
weekend.
His 31-year-old mother, Paw
Eh, is charged with attempted
capital murder. She’s jailed on
$500,000 bond.
Police say Eh also tried to force
her 12-year-old daughter and a
7-year-old son to ingest poison.
Eh’s attorney, Heath Harris,
says he’s glad the boy is out of
the hospital. He says the next
step is getting Eh mental health
assistance. Harris said Eh had
sought help for depression and
suicidal thoughts.
Harris plans to push for the
charge to be downgraded to
injury to a child.
6 killed as bus leaves road in
Arkansas, hits bridge support
NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark.
(AP) — A charter bus ran off
Interstate 40 and hit a bridge
abutment on a foggy night in
Arkansas, killing as many as six
people and injuring many others
who were taken from the scene in
ambulances.
Arkansas State Police said the
crash occurred about 1 a.m.
Friday. A heavy storm had
recently passed through the area
and left light rain and fog in its
wake, but it wasn’t immediately
known if weather played a role.
Troopers said they received
reports about a single-vehicle
crash around 1 a.m. They diverted traffic to city streets through
North Little Rock but were able to
open one of the four westbound
lanes by 3 a.m. Traffic was
snarled for hours but all debris
and the bus were towed away
before daybreak.
The University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences said it received
three patients at its hospital. Two
were treated and released and a
third was admitted to the hospital in fair condition, UAMS said.
Television station KTHV said
on its Twitter feed Friday morning that the passengers were on a
business trip. The station posted
a photo showing a white bus with
“Continental” in broad letters on
the side being towed from the
scene, its roof partially crumpled.
Another photograph showed people standing outside the bus
beneath white blankets.
The accident occurred along
westbound Interstate 40 near its
intersection with U.S. 67-167.
The interchange is a bit tricky,
requiring drivers to change lanes
if they want to follow the route
numbers that brought them into
the area. They have about a
minute to chart a course and
execute it.
Authorities say police officer shot
in central Kentucky dies
RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) — A central Kentucky police officer died
early Friday after he was shot in
the head and severely wounded
Wednesday while searching an
apartment for a robbery suspect,
authorities said.
Richmond Police Officer Daniel
Ellis, 33, died at the University of
Kentucky Medical Center in
Lexington, Kentucky, according
to a statement from Kentucky
State Police Trooper Robert
Purdy.
“It’s just heartbreaking,”
Richmond Mayor Jim Barnes told
The Associated Press. “It’s an
emotional time for everyone in
the community. Those guys work
so hard to protect the city.”
Ellis, a seven-year veteran of
the force, had remained in the
hospital after suffering lifethreatening injuries following the
Wednesday shooting.
Authorities said Ellis and
another officer went to an apartment in search of a man who
tried to mug a woman in the
parking lot of a downtown gas
station.
While there, police said the
suspect, Raleigh Sizemore Jr.,
34, opened fire on Ellis. The second officer returned fire and
struck Sizemore, who was treated at the hospital and released to
police custody.
Sizemore was charged with
attempted murder of a police officer and unlawful imprisonment
first degree.
Two others in the apartment
during the shootout were also
arrested: Gregory Ratliff, 25, was
charged with complicity to commit murder, and Rita Creech, 44,
was booked with robbery in the
first degree.
All three are being held at the
Madison County Detention
Center.
Murder suspect walks free after
giving officers false name
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) —
Authorities in eastern Georgia
are searching for a murder suspect they say walked free after
using an alias when he was
recently arrested on an unrelated
charge.
News outlets report Richmond
County sheriff’s Lt. Allan Rollins
says Terrance Brown was arrested Oct. 30 for disorderly conduct
and identified himself as
Alphonso Bray while being
booked into the county jail.
Brown posted bond and Rollins
says upon exiting the jail Oct. 31,
Brown was fingerprinted and the
scan identified him as the murder suspect. But booking officers
didn’t notice the discrepancy.
Brown was identified by Bray’s
family after his photograph
appeared in a local newspaper.
House votes to keep highway spending level
WASHINGTON (AP) — Despite
years of warnings that the
nation’s roads, bridges and transit systems are falling apart and
will bring nightmarish congestion, the House on Thursday
passed a six-year transportation
bill that maintains the spending
status quo.
The bill, approved on a bipartisan vote of 363-64, authorizes
$325 billion in spending through
the 2021 federal budget year. But
it provides money for only the first
three years because lawmakers
couldn’t agree on a way to pay for
it all. The measure would continue current rates of spending,
adjusted for inflation.
The bill is similar to a transportation bill passed by the
Senate in July. Congressional
leaders say they hope to quickly
work out the differences between
the two measures and send
President Barack Obama a final
bill before Thanksgiving. They
also said they hope to find the
money to pay for the last three
years of the bill.
“At the funding levels proposed
in both the House and Senate
bills, the result will be more traffic,”
said
Transportation
Secretary Anthony Foxx. He has
said $400 billion over six years is
minimum needed to prevent matters from worsening.
Most lawmakers lauded the bill
as a major accomplishment
because it would assure states
and localities that they can count
on federal highway and transit
aid for at least three years. It’s
hard to plan major construction
projects when availability of federal aid is in doubt. The House
and Senate bills are first longterm funding bills in about a
decade.
Since 2008, Congress has kept
the federal Highway Trust Fund
teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, unwilling to raise the federal
18.4 cents-a-gallon gasoline and
24.4-cent diesel taxes. The fuel
taxes, the trust fund’s main
source of revenue, were last
raised in 1993. Transportation
aid has continued through
dozens of short-term extensions
and transfers of money from the
general treasury to make up the
gap between revenues and spending.
The House bill is filled with
changes to transportation policy
that reflect the small-government,
pro-business philosophy of the
chamber’s GOP majority. But it is
also a compromise that
Transportation
and
Infrastructure
Committee
Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa.,
spent months negotiating with
Rep. Peter DeFazio of Oregon, the
panel’s top Democrat. As a result,
the bill also includes many provisions sought by Democrats or
supported by lawmakers from
both parties, and avoids some of
the most divisive proposals.
The bill will give the nation’s
infrastructure and its economy “a
much needed shot in the arm,”
Shuster said.
One change that gained wide
support would direct $4.5 billion
a year to interstate highways and
other roads designated as freight
corridors to increase capacity
and relieve bottlenecks, and a
grant program of more than $700
million a year for nationally significant highway and freight projects.
The measure was the first
major bill on the House floor since
Rep. Paul Ryan became speaker,
and it reflected the Wisconsin
Republican’s promise to give
rank-and-file lawmakers greater
clout in shaping legislation —
something they complained they
lacked under Speaker John
Boehner, R-Ohio, who resigned
under fire last week.
More than 100 amendments
were debated on the House floor
over two days. But scores of other
amendments were blocked from
consideration by GOP leaders,
including a proposal by Rep. Earl
Blumenauer, D-Ore., to raise the
gas tax, and another by Rep.
John Delaney, D-Md., to tax profits U.S. corporations park overseas and use that tax to pay for
transportation programs.
The Obama administration has
offered a similar tax proposal,
and Ryan has backed the general
concept.
But
negotiations
between Ryan and Charles
Schumer of New York, the No. 3
Senate Democratic leader, failed
to produce an agreement. Such a
one-time cash infusion also
wouldn’t solve the trust fund’s
long-term problems.
The administration has complained that the House bill
doesn’t contain enough money.
Keeping funding steady won’t
keep up with rising population
and aging infrastructure, the
White House said in a statement.
“The Congress should be thinking
big, not locking in a worsening
system.”
Missing for 13
years, Ala.
teen found;
dad arrested
VESTAVIA HILLS, Ala. (AP) —
For 13 years after a 5-year-old
boy was taken from his mother’s
Alabama home, authorities
chased leads in hopes of finding
him. But in the end, the youth
himself helped unravel the mystery when he began applying to
colleges and found out he’d
allegedly been snatched away by
his father.
Father and son were discovered living under assumed names
recently in Cleveland, Ohio. By
all accounts, the now 18-year-old
Julian Hernandez was an excellent student and had been well
cared for. His father, Bobby
Hernandez, 53, was arrested and
faces charges that could send
him to prison for a decade or
more if convicted.
The mother, whose name has
not been released, has been in
contact with her son, but it’s not
known whether they have actually seen each other.
“You want to pick up and catch
up, but how do you do that?” said
police Lt. Johnny Evans of the
Birmingham suburb of Vestavia
Hills, where the boy once lived.
Authorities said the boy only
found out about his real name
because a problem arose with his
Social Security number during
the college application process.
“My understanding is that he
didn’t know his birthday. He didn’t even know his own name. He
was going by something else.
How does he cope with going
from somebody he thought he
was to now somebody that’s completely unknown to him?”
Authorities said they’re still
trying to piece together what happened to the boy over the 13
years he was missing. But some
things are known: He vanished
from his mother’s home in the
Birmingham area in 2002, his
father leaving a note saying he
had taken the child, according to
authorities. The parents of the
child weren’t married.
Police investigated hundreds of
possible sightings. The break in
the case didn’t come until the son
started applying to college.
A problem was discovered with
his Social Security number, and
so he approached a school counselor, who discovered Hernandez
was listed as missing by the
National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children, District
Attorney Brandon Falls in
Jefferson County, Alabama, told
the local media.
Authorities confirmed the
young man’s identity Monday,
and Evans said he told the mother her son had been located.
Having had her hopes raised
before, she was initially cautious.
“Over the years there have
been hundreds of sightings. You
know, ‘He’s here, he’s here, he’s
here.’ We check it out and it’s not
him or he’s not there,” Evans
said. “When we confirmed it, she
was extremely excited.”
Evans said Thursday that
mother and son had since been
in contact, but he was not sure
whether it was by phone or other
means.
The mother’s family said in a
statement: “Our family was overjoyed this week to locate Julian
and learn that he is safe. We
want to thank everyone for their
prayers and support during
Julian’s disappearance.”
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12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
JohN AND SuE FIEgENEr check out the interactive display that will remain a permanent fixture at
the Museum Center at Five Points.
Banner photo,
ALLEN MINCEY
JACk CLArk
(on keyboards)
assists a group
calling itself the
Red Back
Hymnal Quartet
as they sang
several hymns
prior to the ribbon cutting. The
quartet included,
from left: Tim
Gunnell, Tony
Trotter, Tim
Trotter and
Braxton
Kendrick.
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
SpoNSorS, SupporTErS plus board members got together Thursday night to cut the ribbon on
the Red Back Hymnal display that is now open to the public at the Museum Center at Five Points. Along
with ribbon cutting, there was a group singing of musical selections from the hymnal, which is a part of
the history of Cleveland. The hymnal was printed locally and remains one of the most historical hymnals
in gospel music today.
ThE rooM was filled with
Red Back Hymnals, and
Pathway Press was also selling
the hymnals during Thursday
evening’s grand opening of the
museum display.
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Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
DANNY MurrAY leads the audience in one of the songs from the
Red Back Hymnal. He is accompanied on piano by Sy Harris.
Serving Your Family Is
Our Family Tradition
Feds worry that the low-income
people may not get hepatitis cure
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Confronting the consequences of
high-priced drugs, the Obama
administration Thursday pointedly reminded states that they
cannot legally restrict access by
low-income people to revolutionary cures for liver-wasting hepatitis C infection.
The federal Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services
also sent letters to several drug
manufacturers,
requesting
details of what they are doing to
make their medications more
affordable. Among the companies
getting federal letters was
California based Gilead Sciences,
maker of market-leading Harvoni.
The moves echoed government
pressure decades ago to make
sure that low-income people covered by federal-state Medicaid
programs had access to groundbreaking HIV treatments. It’s
coming at a time the cost of prescription drugs is the leading
health care issue for the public,
according to opinion polls.
Hepatitis C is a viral illness
that affects some 3 million people
in the U.S. and claims more lives
here than AIDS. Patients say it
feels like a bad flu that never goes
away. While the disease advances
gradually, it can ultimately
destroy the liver, requiring a
transplant to save the patient’s
life.
Previous treatments were hit
and miss, and many patients
couldn’t tolerate the side effects.
With new drugs like Harvoni and
Viekira Pak, patients finally have
a choice among highly effective
cures with minimal side effects.
But with a course of treatment
priced at around $100,000, the
costs are straining government
programs and private insurers
alike.
In a notice to state Medicaid
directors, the administration
reminded states of their legal
obligations to cover prescription
medications for the poor.
Federal officials said they are
concerned that some states are
restricting access “contrary to ...
statutory requirements” by
“unreasonably” imposing limitations on which patients can get
the new drugs.
They questioned requirements
by some states that patients must
have advanced liver disease first
before they can get the cure.
Since the new drugs cure hepatitis C, doctors say such restrictions don’t make sense from a
clinical perspective. Federal officials also cited requirements by
some states that patients abstain
from illegal drugs and alcohol as
condition of getting treatment.
The
administration
also
requested explanations from drug
companies that make, or are
working on, breakthrough treatments. Although Medicaid programs are entitled to substantial
savings from drug makers, that
hasn’t been sufficient with the
new hepatitis C drugs. Officials
also asked for details on what the
companies are doing to help
states cover the cost of their medications.
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—13
FRIDAY
SportS
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Bears battle to bitter end
with Riverdale Warriors
By RICHARD ROBERTS
Banner Sports Editor
CHATTANOOGA — Thirty-two
teams set out in search of the
Tennessee high school 6A football championship, and 16 teams
will advance to the second round.
Bradley Central will not be one
of those teams.
The Bears fought to the bitter
end with Murfreesboro Riverdale
Thursday night at Finley
Stadium, overcoming two early
second-half turnovers with a
brilliantly executed fake punt to
begin the fourth quarter to take a
three-point lead. But in the end,
the Warriors were able to make
plays in crucial late game situations and held off the battling
Bears on four straight incompletions to advance with a 38-34
win.
“It was a battle back and forth.
They just made a couple more
plays than we did. Our kids
fought to the end. You just have
to give Riverdale credit, they
came out and beat us,” said a
disappointed Bears head coach
Damon Floyd. “We battled. It was
just one of those game of whoever
made the most plays was going to
win. I’m proud of our kids and
happy for this senior class. They
represented Bradley with class.
You want to win the game but I’m
happy to be able to coach these
kids.”
The Bears’ defense stepped up
big time on the Warriors’ first
possession, stopping Riverdale
on a fourth-and three at the
Bradley 22-yard line. But the
Bears were forced to punt the
ball away and Riverdale took
advantage of their second possession with the first score of the
night. The extra point attempt
failed and the Warriors led 6-0
midway through the first quarter.
Bradley Central’s Lameric
Tucker set the Bears up with
solid field position with a 41-yard
kick return and Bradley moved
to the Riverdale 21 before the
drive stalled. A 38-yard field goal
attempt fell just short with 2:52
left on the clock.
After holding the Warriors and
forcing a punt, the Bears moved
from their own 44-yard line to
the Riverdale 10 where Bears’
quarterback Cole Copeland —
after hooking up with Tucker for
27 yards on the third play of the
drive — fired a strike to a wide
open Nick Howell in the end
zone, tying score with 61 seconds
left on the clock. Anthony White
put the Bears on top 7-6 with the
extra point.
After trading punts in the second quarter, the Bears started a
drive at their own 26-yard line
that ended five plays later with
Copeland — a Tennessee 6A Mr.
Football semifinalist — tucking
the football and racing through
the Riverdale defense for 47
yards to the end zone, giving the
Bears their first lead of the night,
14-6.
The Warriors closed the gap to
14-13 minutes later with a 50yard scoring drive with just
under four minutes left in the
half.
“The option game was hurting
us on our assignment football.
They got us on the edge a couple
of times when we took the quarterback and they pitched it. The
bottom line is they made a couple
more plays than we did throughout the game,” said Floyd.
See BEARS, Page 15
banner photo, LynnAe roberTs
brAdLey cenTrAL QUArTer bAck Cole Copeland (10) throws to wide receiver Tyler Carpenter
in the first half against the Riverdale Warriors in the first round of the 6A football playoffs Thursday, at
Finley Stadium, in Chattanooga.
Evan Berry emerges as nation’s top kickoff returner
Photo from Lee sports information
kenny nAbors knocks down one of his four 3-point shots in the
Flames victory over Bryan College Thursday night.
Flames get exhibition win
From Lee Sports Information
Led by the 3-point shooting of
Kenny Nabors, the Lee men's basketball team out-scored visiting
Bryan College 21-6 to open the
second half and went on to score
82-70 exhibition contest victory
on Thursday night in Walker
Arena.
The Flames trailed the Lions
37-31 at the end of the first stanza but were able to wipe that lead
away when freshman Nabors
came out smoking in the second
half, nailing three straight 3-point
shots and then drilling his fourth
just a couple of minutes later. He
finished the contest with 12
points, four rebounds and was 4of-5 from behind the 3-point arc.
However, it was a balancedscoring attack and plenty of
depth that helped the Flames
overtake the hungry Lions.
Eleven players contributed in the
scoring column. The versatile
Keevin Tyus, a junior transfer
from Columbus State (Ga.) paced
the Lee scoring with 15 points. He
was 6-of-8 shooting from the field
and also pulled down seven
rebounds. Rantavous Gilbert, a
6-foot-8
transfer
from
Appalachian State, also helped
spark the Lee second-half effort
with 10 points and four
rebounds. He was a perfect 4-of-4
from the field.
CJ Reese, who played his high
school basketball at McCallie, tallied nine points and dished off
four assists. Elgrin Wilson and
Levi Woods pitched in with eight
points each. Woods was another
player to help light the flame in
the second 20. Jervon Johnson
added seven to the winning margin and freshman Cam Boyd
helped the Flames stay close in
the first half by knocking down a
pair of treys and finishing with six
points.
In the second half, the Flames
shot an amazing 79 percent from
the floor and finished the contest
with a 60.4 shooting percentage.
They made 6-of-17 treys (35 percent) and converted 18-of-25 free
throws. They out-rebounded the
Lions 39-33 but if there was a
negative in the overall contest, it
was 20 Lee turnovers to only
eight for the visitors.
The Lions were led by the
relentless Brandon Cole who finished with a double-double 22
points and 10 rebounds. Oteriah
Lee, the Bryan point guard,
added 16 points and Jeff Long
rounded out the double-figure
scoring with 11 points. Brice
Cusick also had 10 boards in the
loss.
Bryan shot 36 percent from the
field and made only 7-of-32 3point attempts (22 percent). They
were awarded six free throws and
converted five.
The Flames will return to
action on Saturday afternoon as a
part of the annual Lee
Homecoming. The Lady Flames
will see their first action of the
year in an exhibition contest
against Maryville College at 12
noon. The men will follow with
another exhibition battle, facing
always tough Martin Methodist
College. The tip-off is slated for
2:30 p.m.
KNOXVILLE
(AP)
—
Tennessee’s Evan Berry has
become well known around campus for more than his family
connections.
As the nation’s leading kickoff
returner, the younger brother of
Kansas City Chiefs defensive
back and former Tennessee AllAmerica selection Eric Berry is
making a name for himself.
Berry’s average of 42.6 yards
per kickoff return has him on
pace to set the Football Bowl
Subdivision
single-season
record. He has three touchdowns
on kickoff returns to tie the
school single-season record
Willie Gault has held since 1980.
Although Gault set that mark
15 years before Berry was born,
the Tennessee sophomore is
familiar with the former NFL
receiver and Olympian. Berry’s
father, James Berry, played running back for Tennessee from
1978-81 and he and Gault were
teammates.
“My dad was telling me about
him, and I remember watching
clips of him when he was here
and with the (Chicago) Bears
just running, and I was like,
‘Man, how does he do it’” Berry
said. “Just knowing that I’m in
that category with him, it’s kind
of a dream to me.”
Berry’s knowledge of Gault
reflects his keen understanding
of Tennessee football history. He
wears No. 29 — which is also
Eric’s number at Kansas City —
to honor Inky Johnson, who suffered nerve damage in his right
shoulder while making a tackle
in a 2006 Tennessee game.
Not only are his father and
brother former Volunteers, his
fraternal twin, Elliott Berry, is a
reserve linebacker on the current roster. Berry said he isn’t
bothered when people refer to
him as Eric’s younger brother or
Elliott’s twin.
Eric Berry made an inspirational return to the Chiefs after
AP file photo
Tennessee defensive bAck Evan Berry (29) talks to his
brother, Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Eric Berry, during the second
half of a game against Western Carolina, in Knoxville. As the nation’s
leading kickoff returner, the younger brother of Kansas City Chiefs
defensive back and former Tennessee All-America selection Eric
Berry is making a name for himself.
missing most of last season
while being treated for cancer.
He was on the sidelines earlier
this season when Evan scored
his first career touchdown on an
88-yard return against Western
Carolina. Eric returns to campus
Saturday to be honored as
Tennessee’s legend of the week
when the Volunteers (4-4, 2-3
SEC) host South Carolina (3-5,
1-5).
“Every game’s a big game, but
with him being there, it makes it
that much sweeter,” said Evan,
who also is a second-team safety. “It’s going to be a good one.
I’ll have to come ready to make
plays.”
He has made plenty of plays
already.
Since getting that first touchdown against Western Carolina,
Berry has scored on a 96-yard
return against Arkansas and a
100-yarder against Kentucky.
The FBS record for kickoff
return touchdowns in a season
is five by Tulsa’s Ashlan Davis in
2004.
“Who’s kicking it to him, and
why?” South Carolina interim
coach Shawn Elliott asked. “I
don’t know. I told (kickoff specialist Landon) Ard, ‘Let me tell
you one thing, it better be out of
the end zone.’ Because even
when you kick it in the end zone,
he brings it out.”
The FBS record for highest
kickoff return average in a season for anyone with at least 1.2
attempts per game is 40.1 by
BYU’s Paul Allen in 1961. Berry
knows that record is within
reach but isn’t dwelling on it.
“I really don’t try to look at any
stats or anything to clutter my
mind,” Berry said. “I just go out
there and just play hard.”
Berry said he didn’t start
returning kickoffs until his senior year at Creekside High School
in Fairburn, Georgia, and that he
hadn’t scored on a kickoff return
until this year. He ranked second
in the SEC with 29.5 yards per
return last season.
Now he leads a Tennessee special-teams unit that has a combined five touchdowns on kickoff
and punt returns, the most by
any FBS team since North
Carolina had seven in 2013,
according to STATS LLC.
“He has a great drive to be the
best,” Tennessee coach Butch
Jones said.
See BERRY, Page 15
Lady Flames ready for Volley for A Cure
From Lee Sports Information
In what has become a staple
of the Lee Homecoming
Festivities the Lee volleyball
team will once again host its
annual Volley For A Cure
match on Friday at 7 p.m. as it
welcomes the University of
West Georgia to the sport
court at Walker Arena.
This season marks the
eighth year coach Andrea
Hudson and her club have
hosted the benefit match
which raises money for the
Mary Ellen Locher Scholarship
Foundation. The funds help a
family affected by breast cancer and the scholarship is
always awarded in a special
presentation in between sets
two and three of the match.
"The goal is to raise $25,000
this year," noted Hudson.
"Last year we raised $23,000
and I would estimate we've
raised about $130,000 since
we began the event."
Volley For A Cure has
turned into much more than
simply a volleyball match. The
team hosted a special luncheon on Thursday to honor
breast cancer survivors and
their friends. This year, Sonya
Jones, runner up on NBC's
Biggest Loser, was the special
guest speaker.
Fans interested in helping
to support Volley For A Cure
can do so by buying t-shirts at
the match and by participat-
ing in the silent auction which
will be set up in the Walker
Arena concourse throughout
the evening.
The night will also feature a
special ceremony to honor this
year's senior class. Libero
Stephanie Hernandez, setter
Haley Foote and defensive specialist Sarah Davis will be recognized as they conclude their
senior campaigns.
"We want everyone to wear
pink to our game Friday
night," concluded Hudson.
"Let's paint the town pink."
THE MATCHUP
The Lady Flames will host
Gulf South Conference opponent, West Georgia in the
match itself. Lee defeated the
Wolves on the road earlier in
the season in a five-set nail
biter.
Red-shirt Freshman Silvia
Sartori leads the offensive
attack for the Lady Flames
with 287 kills, averaging just
over three per set. Sartori has
also provided a powerful serve
with
27
aces.
Junior
Catherine Conley follows with
225 slams while sophomore
Brooke Wilsman has recorded
198 kills.
Freshman Hillary Hoffpauir
has settled into the full-time
setter role and leads the team
with 498 assists. Sadie
Johnson has added 308
See CURE, Page 15
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Kisner opens 2-shot lead in China
SCOREBOARD
On Air
sports on Tv
Friday, nov. 6
AUTO rACinG
12:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Fort
Worth, TX
2 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, practice, at Fort
Worth, TX
4:30 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, qualifying, at
Fort Worth, TX
6:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, qualifying, at Fort
Worth, TX
8:30 p.m.
FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, The WinStar
World Casino 350, at Fort Worth, TX
2:30 a.m. (Saturday)FS1 — FIA Formula E Championship,
at Putrajaya, Malaysia
COLLeGe BAsKeTBALL
6 p.m.
ESPNU — Exhibition, Kentucky State at Kentucky
COLLeGe FOOTBALL
8 p.m.
ESPN2 — Temple at SMU
8 p.m.
NBCSN — Cornell at Dartmouth
GOLF
1:30 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour: Sanderson Farms Championship, second-round, at Jackson, Miss.
4:30 p.m.
GOLF — Champions Tour: Charles Schwab Cup
Championship, second-round, at Scottsdale, Ariz.
10 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour: WGC-HSBC Champions, third-round,
at Shanghai
nBA BAsKeTBALL
8 p.m.
ESPN — Miami at Indiana
10:30 p.m.
ESPN — Houston at Sacramento
sOCCer
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — Hertha Berlin at Hannover 96
saturday, nov. 7
AUTO rACinG
11 a.m.
CNBC — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Fort
Worth, Texas
12:15 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, qualifying, at Fort
Worth, Texas
2 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Fort
Worth, Texas
3:30 p.m.
NBC — NASCAR XFINITY Series, The O’Reilly Auto Parts
Challenge, at Fort Worth, Texas
BOXinG
9 p.m.
NBCSN — Premier Champions, welterweight, Kevin Bizier
(24-2) vs. Frederick Lawson (24-0), at Miami
9:30 p.m.
HBO — World Championship, welterweight, Timothy
Bradley (32-1-1) vs. Brandon Rios (33-2-1) at Las Vegas
COLLeGe FOOTBALL
12 p.m.
ESPN — Vanderbilt at Florida
12 p.m.
ESPN2 — Duke at North Carolina
12 p.m.
ESPNU — Penn State at Northwestern
12 p.m.
ESPNEWS — UCF at Tulsa
12 p.m.
ABC — Notre Dame at Pittsburgh
12 p.m.
FS1 — Texas Tech at West Virginia
3 p.m.
NBCSN — Richmond at New Hampshire
3:30 p.m.
ESPN — Iowa at Indiana
3:30 p.m.
ABC — Florida State at Clemson
3:30 p.m.
ESPNU — Army at Air Force
3:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Cincinnati at Houston
3:30 p.m.
CBS — Arkansas at Ole Miss
3:30 p.m.
FOX — TCU at Oklahoma State
3:30 p.m.
FS1 — Arizona State at Washington State
4 p.m.
ESPNEWS — UConn at Tulane
7 p.m.
ESPNU — Iowa State at Oklahoma
7 p.m.
ESPN — Michigan State at Nebraska
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — Navy at Memphis
7:30 p.m.
FOX — Utah at Washington
8 p.m.
ABC — Minnesota at Ohio State
8 p.m.
CBS — LSU at Alabama
10:30 p.m.
ESPN — Arizona at USC
10:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — California at Oregon
GOLF
8 a.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, WGC-HSBC Champions, third-round,
at Shanghai (tape)
1:30 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, Sanderson Farms Championship, thirdround, at Jackson, Miss.
4:30 p.m.
GOLF — Champions Tour, Charles Schwab Cup
Championship, third-round, at Scottsdale, Ariz.
7 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, Sanderson Farms Championship, thirdround, at Jackson, Miss. (tape)
10 p.m.
GOLF — PGA Tour, WGC-HSBC Champions, final-round, at
Shanghai
nBA BAsKeTBALL
9 p.m.
NBA — Memphis at Utah
sOCCer
7:40 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Newcastle United at
Bournemouth
9:30 a.m.
FS1 — Bundesliga, Stuttgart at Bayern Munich
9:55 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, West Brom at Manchester
United
10 a.m.
USA — Premier League, Everton at West Ham
12:30 p.m.
NBC — Premier League, Chelsea at Stoke City
On TAP
Friday, nov. 6
BAsKeTBALL
Cleveland State at Southwest Tennessee, 6:30
FOOTBALL
TssAA Playoffs
Class 5A (all games at 7)
Gibbs at Sevier County
Tennessee High at Knoxville Halls
Heritage at Morristown West
Morristown East at Knox West
Cleveland at Farragut
Cane Ridge at Independence
Shelbyille at Hendersonville
Beech at Lincoln County
LaVergne at Hillsboro
Southwind at Centennial
Brentwood at Memphis Central
Munford at Henry County
Clarksville Northeast at Brighton
Class 6A
Warren County at Maryville
Hardin Valley at Cookeville
Siegel at Bearden
Dobyns-Bennett at Blackman
Coffee County at Science Hill
Jefferson County at Smyrna
William Blount at Oakland
Bartlett at Ravenwood
Nashville Overton at Germantown
Arlington at McGavock
Lebanon at White Station
Houston at Franklin
Wilson Central at Cordova
Collierville at Mt. Juliet
Antioch at Whitehaven
vOLLeYBALL
volley For A Cure
West Georgia at Lee, 7
saturday, nov. 7
BAsKeTBALL
Maryville College at Lee University (Women), 12
Martin Methodist College at Lee University (Men), 2:30
Cleveland State at Dyersburg State, 3
CrOss COUnTrY
TSSAA State Meet, Percy Warner Park, Nashville
vOLLeYBALL
West Alabama at Lee, 7
BAsKeTBALL
Thursday’s Games
Chicago 104, Oklahoma City 98
Miami 96, Minnesota 84
Charlotte 108, Dallas 94
Utah 96, Denver 84
Portland 115, Memphis 96
Friday’s Games
Toronto at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Miami at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Detroit at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m.
Denver at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Houston at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
saturday’s Games
Minnesota at Chicago, 6 p.m.
Orlando at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Charlotte at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Brooklyn at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Memphis at Utah, 9 p.m.
Golden State at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
FOOTBALL
national Football League
AMeriCAn COnFerenCe
east
W
L
T Pct
New England
7
0
0 1.000
N.Y. Jets
4
3
0 .571
Buffalo
3
4
0 .429
Miami
3
4
0 .429
south
W
L
T Pct
Indianapolis
3
5
0 .375
Houston
3
5
0 .375
Jacksonville
2
5
0 .286
Tennessee
1
6
0 .143
north
W
L
T Pct
Cincinnati
7
0
0 1.000
Pittsburgh
4
4
0 .500
Cleveland
2
6
0 .250
Baltimore
2
6
0 .250
West
W
L
T Pct
Denver
7
0
0 1.000
Oakland
4
3
0 .571
Kansas City
3
5
0 .375
San Diego
2
6
0 .250
nATiOnAL COnFerenCe
east
W
L
T Pct
N.Y. Giants
4
4
0 .500
Washington
3
4
0 .429
Philadelphia
3
4
0 .429
Dallas
2
5
0 .286
south
W
L
T Pct
Carolina
7
0
0 1.000
Atlanta
6
2
0 .750
New Orleans
4
4
0 .500
Tampa Bay
3
4
0 .429
north
W
L
T Pct
Green Bay
6
1
0 .857
Minnesota
5
2
0 .714
Chicago
2
5
0 .286
Detroit
1
7
0 .125
West
W
L
T Pct
Arizona
6
2
0 .750
St. Louis
4
3
0 .571
Seattle
4
4
0 .500
San Francisco
2
6
0 .250
Thursday, nov. 5
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 8:25 p.m.
sunday, nov. 8
Tennessee at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Washington at New England, 1 p.m.
Miami at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Tampa Bay, 4:05 p.m.
Denver at Indianapolis, 4:25 p.m.
Philadelphia at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Open: Arizona, Baltimore, Detroit, Houston,
Seattle
Thursday’s scores
PreP FOOTBALL
Dickson County 48, Community 0
Powell 25, Lenoir City 0
Division 1 Class 1A
Fayetteville 48, Grace Baptist 19
Oneida 31, Oakdale 6
South Pittsburg 56, Mt. Pleasant 18
Division 1 Class 2A
Boyd Buchanan 41, Eagleville 0
Forrest 28, Bledsoe County 13
Manassas 75, Martin Luther King 21
Memphis Academy 40, Westwood 0
Trezevant 54, Oakhaven 0
Division 1 Class 5A
Oak Ridge 45, Soddy Daisy 33
Ooltewah 40, Clinton 21
Rhea County 35, Campbell County 0
Division 1 Class 6A
Maryville 35, Warren County 7
Riverdale 38, Bradley Central 34
Division 2 Class A
Friendship Christian 35, Ezell-Harding 0
Division 2 Class AA
McCallie 54, Pope John Paul II 21
PF
249
172
176
154
PA
133
139
173
173
PF
173
174
147
125
PA
203
205
207
159
PF
198
168
167
190
PA
132
147
216
214
PF
168
178
195
191
PA
112
173
182
227
PF
215
148
160
133
PA
208
168
137
171
PF
191
213
213
163
PA
136
173
234
199
PF
174
147
140
149
PA
130
122
202
245
PF
263
135
167
109
PA
153
125
140
207
Daniel Summerhays
Hunter Mahan
Matthew Fitzpatrick
Louis Oosthuizen
Chris Wood
Jordan Spieth
Bubba Watson
Daniel Berger
Soren Kjeldsen
Scott Hend
Sergio Garcia
Richard T. Lee
Rickie Fowler
Rory McIlroy
Marc Leishman
James Morrison
Emiliano Grillo
Byeong Hun An
36-32—68
35-33—68
35-33—68
33-35—68
36-32—68
33-35—68
33-35—68
34-34—68
33-35—68
34-34—68
33-35—68
37-31—68
34-34—68
34-34—68
34-35—69
35-34—69
36-33—69
36-33—69
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
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LOCAL nOTes
BAseBALL
BAseBALL insTrUCTiOn
Cleveland State Community College assistant
baseball coach Ryne Foster will be offering baseball
instruction and lessons for individuals or small
groups. Lessons will be offered on weeknights and
weekends for hitting, catching, infield play, outfield
play and pitching. For times and pricing, contact
coach Foster at (317)650-1064 or email
[email protected].
BAsKeTBALL
COMMUniTY CenTer YOUTH BAsKeTBALL
Registration for the Cleveland Community Center Youth
Basketball Program for boys and girls ages 7-12 will continue
through Nov. 23. The fee for the program is $20. For more
information, contact the Community Center at 559-3322 or
email [email protected].
KiLBY inDiviDUAL insTrUCTiOn
Individual basketball instruction for male and female elementary, middle school, high school and post graduate athletes is being offered by Cleveland State assistant men’s
coach L.J. Kilby. Coach Kilby brings 10 years of head coaching
experience as well as 30 years experience in junior college,
NAIA and NCAA Division I basketball. The cost is $25 per each
hour of instruction. For more information, contact Coach Kilby
at 423-596-2515.
YMCA YOUTH BAsKeTBALL
The Cleveland Family YMCA will be holding evaluations
for its youth basketball league on Nov. 7 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
Any child interested in playing must attend one evaluation session. The evaluation schedule is as follows: Kindergarten from
9-10, first grade from 10-11, second/third grade from 11-noon,
fourth/fifth grade from noon-1 p.m. and sixth through eighth
grade from 1-2 p.m. The season consists of eight games and
the cost is $50 for YMCA members and $75 for non-members.Volunteer coaches, clock operators and referees are still
neeeded. Contact Martez Barber at 423-476-5573 or by email
at [email protected] for more information.
FisHinG
Kansas City,
WresTLinG
PriDe WresTLinG siGnUP
The Pride Wrestling Club will hold registration thought the
months of September and October. Registration will be held
Oct. 27, 29 from 6-7 p.m. Registration will also be held Oct. 17,
24 from 10-12 a.m. The cost for beginners to two years of age
is $65. The cost for advanced is $75. The cost includes shorts,
shirts and AAU card. For more information, contact Lee Varnell
at (423)650-2142 or Ryan Ensminger at (423)716-1198.
Lady Colts win
big over GPS
GOLF
WGC-HsBC Champions Par scores
Thursday
At sheshan international Golf Club
shanghai
Purse: $8.5 million
Yardage: 7,261; Par: 72 (36-36)
First round
Branden Grace
32-31—63
Kevin Kisner
32-32—64
Steven Bowditch
32-32—64
Thorbjorn Olesen
30-34—64
Danny Willett
33-32—65
Patrick Reed
34-31—65
Dustin Johnson
31-34—65
Haotong Li
34-32—66
Thomas Pieters
34-33—67
Xinjun Zhang
33-34—67
Harris English
34-33—67
Russell Knox
34-33—67
Paul Casey
35-32—67
Tommy Fleetwood
34-33—67
Trevor Fisher Jr.
34-33—67
Charl Schwartzel
34-34—68
CLeveLAnD BAssMAsTers
The Cleveland Bassmasters meet the first Thursday of
each month at South Cleveland United Methodist Church at 7
p.m. Cleveland Bassmasters includes boaters and nonboaters and are associated with FLW. The club fishes and
holds tournament on Chickamauga Lake, Nickajack Lake,
Lake Guntersville, Lake Weiss, Watts Bar and Neely Henry.
Dues for the Bassmasters are $35 quarterly. Other fees
include $35 FLW joining fee, $8 insurance, $20 per year for
biggest largemouth or smallmouth bass and $15 for tournament largemouth or smallmouth prize. For more information,
contact Dewayne Lowe at 423-715-5772.
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From Staff Reports
The Ocoee Middle School Lady
Colts ran away with a 45-13 win
over Girls Preparatory School
Thursday night.
Cambered Mayo led the OMS
girls with 12 points including a 3pointer. Laney Harris and Kate
Ford each dropped in eight points
for the Lady Colts while Chloe
Williams ended her night with five
points include a trey.Marlee
Montgomery and Amelia Reuter
scored four points apiece in the
win and Carissa Frost and Baylee
White each scored two.
Houston racking up honors
From UCFKnights.com
ORLANDO — A day after
learning UCF football ranked
sixth in the country and first
among FBS public institutions
with a 90 percent Graduation
Success Rate, the Knights
received even more prestigious
academic news on Thursday.
UCF junior punter Caleb
Houston and junior defensive
end Luke Adams were both
voted on to the College Sports
Information
Directors
of
America (CoSIDA) Academic AllDistrict Team. By being named
all-district, both student-athletes will now be on the CoSIDA
Academic All-America ballot.
The last time UCF placed two
Knights on the Academic AllDistrict squad was in 2009
when Alex Thompson and
Rocky Ross were named to the
team.
Houston carries a 3.39 gradepoint average while majoring in
accounting. He also has been
on the UCF’s Dean’s List and
the President’s Honor Roll, as
well as the American Athletic
Conference All-Academic Team.
On the field, Houston has been
having a career year. A native of
Cleveland, Tenn., he has booted
49 punts for a 44.4 average,
which would rank as the second
highest in UCF single-season
history if the year ended today.
Houston has placed 21 punts
inside the 20, has caused only
two touchbacks and punted 12
times that went at least 50
yards.
A sport and exercise science
major with a 3.36 GPA, Adams
is a two-time member of the
American Athletic Conference
All-Academic
Team.
The
Pensacola native has been a
staple on the defensive line
since his redshirt freshman
season in 2013. In 2015,
Adams has started eight games
and notched 23 tackles, a sack,
2.5 tackles for loss and a pass
break-up.
Bradley bowlers split week
From Staff Reports
It has been a busy week for the
Bradley Central bowling as they
took on East Ridge on Tuesday
and Rhea County on Thursday.
Both Bradley squads fell to
their Rhea counterparts, with the
boys losing by a total pinfall of
3114-2771 and the girls by a
total pinfall of 2799-1335.
In the boys’ match, the Bears
picked up a total of seven match
points, while the Eagles won 20.
Jeremiah Sims bowled a 563
series, which included a 221 in
game three. Tyler Parris followed
with a 539 series, and Ryan
Chapman finished the match
with a 506.
Hayden Ware bowled a 403,
and Trevor Kennedy had a 398
series. Devin Farmer bowled a
214 in two games, and Darius
O’Brien had a 138 in game three.
The Bradley girls, who are still
two girls short of a full team,
were only able to pick up one
point against Rhea County.
Leah White finished the night
with a 425 series, and Angel
Anderson bowled a 398 series.
Emily Mooneyham had a 303
series, and Sierra Baker finished
with a total of 209.
TUESDAY
The Bear bowlers defeated the
Pioneers by a total pinfall of
2825-1016 and took 26 of the 27
match points.
Jeremiah Sims led Bradley
with a 604 series for his high
score of the year. Sims bowled a
229 in the first game, which was
the highest of the night for either
team.
Hayden Ware had a career high
total of 548 that was bolstered by
a pinfall of 214 in game two.
Tyler Parris bowled a 537
series, and Ryan Chapman finished with a total of 417.
Rounding out the scoring for
Bradley Central were Devin
Farmer with a 376 and Darius
O’Brien with a total of 343.
SHANGHAI (AP) — Two par
saves in the middle of his round
and two birdies at the end put
Kevin Kisner in a place he has
never been.
And that has nothing to do
with his first trip to China.
Kisner put together another
bogey-free performance Friday in
the HSBC Champions for a 6under 66 and a two-shot lead
over Russell Knox going into the
weekend of the World Golf
Championship. He was at 14under 130, the lowest 36-hole
score of his career, and he was
the 36-hole leader for the first
time in his career.
It was more than Kisner
expected
at
Sheshan
International, mainly because he
didn’t have any expectations.
A sore back kept the 31-yearold American from seeing the golf
course until he teed it up in the
opening round on Thursday. He
was so lost that walking off the
eighth green, he wasn’t sure how
to get to the next hole. None of
that seemed to matter.
“It’s just golf, man,” Kisner
said. “Doesn’t matter if it was
here or wherever. Still get the ball
in the hole as fast as you can.”
That proved far more difficult
Friday than in the opening round,
mainly because the still, soft conditions gave way to a strong wind
that never relented. Kisner twice
saved par, with a 20-foot putt on
the par-3 fourth and a 15-foot
putt on the par-4 15th hole.
Only 16 players shot in the 60s
on Friday, compared with 41 in
the opening round.
Knox started his round with a
40-foot birdie putt that set the
tone for the day. He wound up
with the low round of the day at
7-under 65, leaving him two
shots behind Kisner and with his
own tale about being a little
unprepared for his first World
Golf Championship.
Knox only found out last week
in Malaysia that he was in the
HSBC Champions when J.B.
Holmes withdrew. That was the
good news. The problem was getting a visa for China, so wife
Andrea came to rescue — twice.
AP photo
Kevin Kisner of the United States hits a shot on the fourth
hole during the second round of the HSBC Champions tournament
at the Sheshan International Golf Club in Shanghai, China Friday.
First, she filled out all his forms
while he played the CIMB Classic
and arranged for the meeting with
the Chinese consulate in Kuala
Lumpur on Monday. Then, she
filled in as a caddie for his practice round at Sheshan because
Knox’s caddie took an extra day
to arrange for his visa.
“My wife was a superstar,”
Knox said.
One job apparently was easier
than the other.
“We got a stand bag from the
pro here and played the quickest
practice round ever, and she complained heavily for the last nine
holes,” he said with a laugh. “But
it was nice to run around quickly,
so I did get to see the course. My
caddie did not, so I told him what
we were going to do.”
The top two players on the
leaderboard going into the weekend have never won on the PGA
Tour, and both know so much
can change over the next two
days. Even so, Kisner’s solid play
has created a little bit of separation.
Branden Grace of South Africa,
who opened with a 63, added
three birdies through 10 holes
until he forced the issue trying to
get further ahead and wound up
playing the final eight holes in 2
over. He had to settle for a 71 and
was four shots behind.
The buzz came from Li Haotong
of China, who spent the afternoon
chasing the lead and thrilling the
hometown gallery. A bogey on the
final hole gave him a 69, and he
joined Patrick Reed (70) at 9under 135.
Li played the PGA Tour China
series last year and had a chance
midway through the Web.com
Tour season to earn a PGA Tour
card until fading. Playing at home
in a World Golf Championship, he
enjoyed the moment — especially
seeing his name on the leaderboard.
“Almost every hole,” Li said
with a big smile. “Very cool. Very
fun.”
It wasn’t a lot of fun for some of
the biggest names.
Jordan Spieth missed a few
good opportunities at the turn,
and then ran off three straight
bogeys and wondered if he would
make another par. He salvaged
his day with birdies on the final
two par 5s for a 72, though he
was 10 shots behind.
“When I get into the breeze, I
hit some shots that I was very
shocked with today,” he said.
“But I lost a lot of focus there,
too. I felt like I was very lazy in
my routine, very lazy in picking
targets. And it bit me with three
unforced errors in a row on the
back nine there. But I am
pleased with the way that we
did rebound, because it looked
like I could have just bogeyed
in.”
Kenseth loses final suspension appeal
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — His
appeals rejected, Matt Kenseth
defiantly vowed Thursday to
race as he always has and
accused NASCAR of “unfairly”
making an example out of him
with a two-race suspension for
intentionally wrecking Joey
Logano over the weekend at
Martinsville.
Kenseth will miss the next
two races, at Texas and
Phoenix, and is eligible to
return for the Nov. 22 season
finale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. The national motorsports appeals panel denied
Kenseth’s appeal Thursday and
a few hours later so did final
appeals officer Bryan Moss,
who did reduce Kenseth’s probation from six months until
the end of this year.
Kenseth said he was “unfairly made the example” because
NASCAR had no clear rule on
what the penalties are for
intentionally wrecking another
driver in an act of retaliation.
“I am not going to change
who I am, I’m not going to
change what I stand for, I’m not
going to change how I race,”
Kenseth said. “I’ve been in this
business a long time, I feel I’ve
had a pretty good career to this
point and I feel like I’m going to
continue to have the respect on
the race track that I feel I
deserve.”
NASCAR has not been consistent over the years in punishing drivers who exact
revenge. Kenseth was spun out
three races ago by Logano as
both raced for the win at
Kansas, ruining a chance to
advance in NASCAR’s championship playoffs. On Sunday, he
deliberately
crashed
into
Logano at Martinsville and
Logano lost a shot at an automatic berth in the final four.
Danica Patrick was fined
$50,000 for wrecking another
driver in retaliation on Sunday,
but it was Kenseth’s penalty
that raised eyebrows.
Kenseth was harshly punished to deter any driver from
doing the same thing, NASCAR
chairman Brian France told
SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on
Wednesday. France referenced
the 2013 cheating scandal at
Richmond, where Michael
Waltrip Racing manipulated a
series of events to ensure its
driver made the playoffs.
France warned the entire
industry after Richmond that
manipulating races would not
be tolerated — and he indicated
what
Kenseth
did
at
Martinsville fit that category.
“Going back to Richmond,
we’ve been very clear when anybody in the industry, any driver
or participant, intentionally
tries to alter the outcome of
events or championships, that
crosses a different line than a
racing problem between two
drivers,” France said. “So obviously the significance of what
was on the line had to be taken
into consideration.”
Jeff Gordon was fined
$100,000 but avoided suspension for intentionally wrecking
Clint Bowyer in a move that
ended Bowyer’s 2012 title
chances. Reigning champion
Kevin Harvick had no action
taken against him two weeks
ago at Talladega when he triggered a race-ending crash that
preserved his spot in the play-
offs.
France said the only difference between what Kenseth
and Patrick did on Sunday
were the stakes for Logano,
who was on his way to a fourth
straight victory and a berth in
the championship finale for the
second consecutive year.
Kenseth, the last series
champion before the Chase was
introduced in 2004, was
uncharacteristically angry after
he was wrecked at Kansas. It
was no secret he was fuming,
but NASCAR, Joe Gibbs Racing
and Team Penske all allowed
the feud to simmer rather than
intervene before Martinsville.
Kenseth passed on a chance
to knock Logano out of his way
earlier Sunday, but he finally
snapped after he was wrecked
while racing Logano and his
Penske
teammate
Brad
Keselowski for position. The
teammates had been working
together on restarts, strategy
that angered other drivers who
believed the Penske drivers
were monkeying around.
Kenseth and Keselowski
made contact that sent both
cars to the garage, and Kenseth
didn’t buy the in-race explanation from Keselowski’s camp
that it was an accident.
Kenseth then returned to the
track in a wrecked car, down
nine laps, and drove Logano’s
car into the wall as Logano
tried to lap him. Instead of winning the race and earning a
spot in the finale, Logano is
now last in the eight-driver
field.
France argued that a deliberSee KENSETH, Page 15
AP File Photo
Joey Logano (22) and Matt Kenseth (20) tangle in Turn 1 during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
race at Martinsville Speedway this past Sunday.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—15
Late goal lifts Preds past Wild
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The
Minnesota Wild lost more than a
game Thursday night. They also
lost their top goal scorer.
They just aren’t sure for how
long.
Cody Hodgson scored the
tiebreaking goal late in the third
period to lift the Nashville
Predators over Minnesota 3-2
after Wild star Zach Parise was
injured.
Mike Fisher and Roman Josi
also scored for Nashville, which
went 2-1-1 on a nine-day road
trip that began with three games
in California.
“We got points in three of the
four games. We played some
tough teams and I thought we
did a good job,” defenseman Seth
Jones said.
Marco Scandella and Matt
Dumba had goals for the Wild,
who lost for the first time in six
home games.
Minnesota’s leading goal-scorer with seven, Parise left with a
lower-body injury after getting
hit on his first shift. Battling for
the puck near the right wall in
the offensive zone, Parise went
awkwardly into the boards when
James Neal hit him from behind,
possibly knee-to-knee.
“Cheap? I don’t know. Running
around reckless? Yeah. But I
guess that’s part of the game,”
Minnesota defenseman Ryan
Suter said.
No penalty was called.
“Looked like a good hit to me,”
Nashville coach Peter Laviolette
said.
Parise limped off favoring his
right leg and briefly went down
the tunnel toward the dressing
room. He returned and played
five more shifts, then went back
to the locker room with about 2
minutes remaining in the first
period. He did not return after
that.
Wild coach Mike Yeo said he’d
have an update Friday, but ruled
Parise out of Saturday’s home
game against Tampa Bay.
“There’s no excuses,” Yeo said.
“The bottom line is we’re losing
Zach and we’re probably going to
lose some offense.”
Hodgson provided a late boost
for Nashville with his first goal of
the season.
On the rush, his shot from just
inside the blue line was stopped
by goalie Devan Dubnyk. But the
puck bounced free, allowing
Hodgson to swoop in and poke it
into the net with 5:21 remaining.
“We’ve got a good team here,”
he said. “It’s fun to be part of this
team, and I just want to help and
contribute.”
Nashville had a couple of players head to the locker room, only
to return soon thereafter.
Paul Gaustad briefly left in the
third period after taking a slapshot to the head. Callie Jarnkrok
left for a short time in the second
after a shoulder-to-shoulder hit.
“Gutsy by both of them,”
Laviolette said.
Josi gave Nashville a 2-1 lead
12 seconds into the third period.
Gathering an errant clearing
attempt by Mikko Koivu inside
the blue line, the defenseman
sent a slapshot from high in the
left circle that went between the
pads of Dubnyk for his fifth point
in four games.
On the power play, Dumba
one-timed a shot from the blue
line past Pekka Rinne at 6:51 to
tie it.
Fischer broke a scoreless tie
with just under 4 minutes to play
in the second period when his
wrist shot from the slot beat
Dubnyk on the stick side for his
second goal of the season.
Scandella responded on the
power play 90 seconds later.
On a pretty passing play, the
puck went to Koivu in the slot.
He quickly passed to Suter at the
blue line, and he found Scandella
alone in the right circle.
Scandella’s slapshot beat Rinne
high on the stick side.
NOTES: Nashville was playing
its first game within the Central
Division; Minnesota is 3-2-1 in
division games. ... Thursday
marked the 10-year anniversary
of Koivu making his NHL debut.
The team captain is the franchise
leader in assists (364) and points
(511), and ranks second in goals
(147) and games played (692). ...
Nashville assistant coach Phil
Housley, who will be inducted
into the Hockey Hall of Fame on
Monday, grew up a few minutes
from the Xcel Energy Center in
South St. Paul. He dropped a
ceremonial first puck. ...
Predators LW Eric Nystrom
missed his second straight game
with an upper-body injury.
Lillard leads Trail Blazers past Grizzlies
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Even
early in the season, Damian
Lillard can see good things ahead
for the young Portland Trail
Blazers if they keep playing the
way they did against the Memphis
Grizzlies.
Lillard scored 27 points, including seven 3-pointers, and Portland
used its speed, athleticism and
long-range shooting touch to beat
Memphis 115-96 on Thursday
night.
Fourteen of Lillard’s points
came during a stretch of just
under 7 minutes in the third
quarter, when the Blazers
outscored the Grizzlies 28-9.
From there, Portland cruised to
the win.
“We’ve just got to keep on going,
and keep playing hard,” Lillard
said about his team’s surprising
4-2 start after losing four starters
in the offseason. “That’s where
our strength is.”
It was the second game of a
back-to-back for the Blazers, who
have strung together a modest
three-game winning streak. C.J.
McCollum added 20 points and a
career-high five assists.
Courtney Lee led the Grizzlies
with 18 points while Zach
Randolph, who played for the
Blazers for the first six years of his
career, had 16 points and 10
rebounds.
Lillard’s seven 3s included one
that put Portland ahead 95-71
early in the fourth quarter, and
another that pushed the lead to
112-87 with 3:53 to go.
“I was going to take him out but
he told me not to,” Blazers coach
Terry Stotts said.
Portland was coming off a 10892 victory at Utah on Wednesday.
Lillard and McCollum combined
for 62 points against the Jazz.
The Grizzlies, in the midst of a
five-game road trip, were routed
by reigning NBA champion Golden
State 119-69 on Monday, but
rebounded to beat Sacramento
103-89 on Tuesday.
“They’re a young team, they’re
athletic,” Memphis coach David
Joerger said about the Blazers.
AP photo
MEMPHIS GRIzzLIES GuARd Courtney Lee, left, dribbles past
Portland Trail Blazers guard C.J. McCollum during the first half of an
NBA game in Portland Thursday.
“We’re a little older and slower,
but they beat us to every single
ball. They got whatever they
wanted.”
The Grizzlies defeated the
Blazers in the first round of the
playoffs last season in five games.
Lillard is the only starter that
remains with Portland from that
team, following the offseason
departures of LaMarcus Aldridge,
Nicolas Batum, Wesley Matthews
and Robin Lopez.
Lee and Randolph iced their
knees on the Memphis bench to
start the second quarter, but
Lee’s 3-pointer gave the Grizzlies
a 35-32 lead midway through the
period.
Jeff Green hit a half-court shot
at the buzzer that was originally
called good, but a replay review
showed time had run out. So the
Blazers led 50-46 at halftime.
Lillard hit a 3 and Portland
added free throws to pull in front
67-62 midway through the third
quarter. Maurice Harkless dunked
to extend it to 71-63, and Portland
led by as many as 26 points.
“That’s the kind of team we
need to be,” Lillard said.
UP NEXT
Trail Blazers: Host Detroit on
Sunday.
Grizzlies: At Utah on Saturday.
Cure
Kenseth
From Page 13
From Page 14
helpers and Foote has chipped
in 101.
ate wrecking of Logano’s race,
and perhaps his season, can’t be
tolerated.
“I know there’s a lot of discussion about consistency in our
penalties and there should be
and that’s part of the equation,”
France said. “We issue penalties
for two reasons: We’ve got to
punish you for what we think
you’ve done wrong, and we have
to make sure that we deter
somebody else from doing exactly what you did or worse. That’s
why we can’t be consistent with
every single penalty because
sometimes we’ve got to up the
ante with a penalty because we
don’t believe the current remedy
is a deterrent.”
After he was spun out at
Kansas, Kenseth argued that it
was a cheap move by Logano,
who was already assured of
advancing to the next round.
Other drivers seemed to believe
that the arrogance shown by
Hernandez paces the club
with 385 digs. Junior Blaire
Beamer provides a defensive
presence at the net with 48
blocks while Conley leads the
team with 70.
West Georgia (3-23, 0-16) is
still searching for its elusive first
From Page 13
conference win of the season.
The Wolves are led by Tiffany
Berry also brings a bit of per- Ancrum's 243 kills. Kelcie
sonality to the Vols, which Zimmer sets up the offensive
became apparent last week when with 408 assists on the season
he wore a gorilla mask into the and Casey Roethler anchors the
postgame interview room. Berry back line with 340 digs.
The Lady Flames (11-15, 6said he brought the mask to celebrate Halloween because he felt 10) sit just one game out of the
guilty about forgetting to leave sixth and final spot in the GSC
Tournament. Lee will turn
candy for trick-or-treaters.
His outgoing approach is around on Saturday night and
something Berry learned from his battle the team right in front of
them in the standings, West
family.
Eric “and my dad always tell Alabama at 7 p.m. The regular
me just saying ‘Hi’ to someone season wraps up next week with
could make their day,” Berry a home date against rival
said. “You never know what kind Shorter (Nov. 10) and a visit to
Mississippi College on Nov. 13.
of mood someone’s in.”
Berry
AP photo
NASHvILLE PREdATORS CENTER Mike Fisher (12) reacts after scoring on Minnesota Wild goalie
Devan Dubnyk, right, during the second period in St. Paul, Minn., Thursday.
Bears
From Page 13
Bradley’s Copeland and the
Bears were up to the challenge.
Copeland, working out the of
shotgun,
completed
three
straight passes on the Bears’
next possession and mixed in a
pair of running plays to take his
team to the Riverdale 39-yard
line. From there, the Bears overcame a five-yard penalty and
Copeland found Tyler Carpenter
for strikes of 31 and 20 yards,
the second one good for Bradley’s
third TD of the night and a 21-13
lead with 1:18 left in the half.
Once again, the Warriors
answered with 60-yard drive that
culminated with a 36-yard field
goal to make a 21-16 game at
halftime.
Copeland threw for for 218
yards and rushed for 51 of the
Bears 54 yards on the ground
with two TDs in teh first half. The
strong armed junior ended his
night with 331 yards through the
air. Trevon Ware was on the
receiving end of nine Copeland
tosses for 126 yards and a touchdown.
The Bears, who won the coin
toss but deferred to the second
half, saw a different look from
the Warriors’ defense and were
forced to punt from their own 29yard line. Riverdale stayed on the
ground for five of seven plays
after the Bears’ punt and took a
24-21 lead with a 21-yard score.
“They ran a totally different
defense. They came out in a nickel package. A lot of people don’t
understand that but it is what it
is,” Floyd said, contradicting any
thought of flat play by his Bears
to open the second half. “We
adjusted and scored 34 points.
We had enough to win. Every
possession is important.”
It took the Bears just over
three minutes to adjust to the
different Riverdale look and
retake the lead.
Cason Still set the Bears up at
their own 49 with a 34-yard kick
return. Copeland and Carpenter
converted a third-and 7 with
Carpenter going high in the air to
wrestle the ball frorm the
Riverdale defender for a 22-yard
gain Four plays later, a Copeland
to Carpenter to Trevon Hill combination was good for 24 yards to
the Warriors 3-yard line.
Copeland completed the drive
with his second TD on a keeper
up the middle and the Bears held
a 27-24 lead with 6:16 left in the
third quarter.
Logano after the spin — he was
shoulder-shrug unapologetic —
had shattered a driver code.
France, however, praised
Logano for the shrewdness he
showed in chasing a win that
blocked one of his top competitors for the title, and the aggression Logano showed to move
Kenseth after Kenseth blocked
him several times.
“To not have to deal with Matt
Kenseth, that’s smart,” France
said. “You can drive aggressively
and if there’s a little bit of contact, then we understand that.
There’s nothing new that went
on at Kansas that doesn’t go on
all the time. Now it was very
unfortunate with the circumstances Matt got dealt on that
particular day because he needed to win, he was trying move on
in the round, we understand
that. What happened, frankly,
as I said before, was quintessential NASCAR.”
WARRIORS 38, BEARS 34
Riverdale
6 10 15 7 — 38
Bradley Central
7 14 6 7 — 34
First Quarter
R — Austin Bryant 1 run (kick failed), 4:17
BC — Nick Howell 10 pass from Cole Copeland
(Anthony White kick), 1:01
Second Quarter
BC — Copeland 47 run (White kick), 6:35
R — Bryant 10 run (Connor Ott kick), 3:49
BC — Tyler Carpenter 18 pass from Copeland (White
kick), 1:18
R — Ott 33 field goal, 0:06
Third Quarter
R — Marquise Cantrell 21 pass from Brandon Bea (Ott
kick), 9:29
BC — Copeland 3 run (White kick), 6:16
R — Bea 14 Run (Brown kick), 1:46
Fourth Quarter
BC — Ryan Still 43 pass from Carpenter (White kick),
8:08
R — Bea 1 run (Brown kick), 1:14
R
BC
First downs
24
17
Rushes-Yards
24-70
5 3 311
Passing
249
331
Total yards
560
403
Comp-Att-Int
22-28-0
2 2 36-2
Punts. Avg.
3-32
4-34
Fumbles-Lost
1-1
1-0
Penalties-Yards
6-55
5-32
HIGHLIGHTS
Rushing: Copeland 19-65 (BC). Passing: Copeland
22-36, 331, Carpenter 2-2-0, 81 (BC). Receiving:
Carpenter 9-126, Hill 2-67, Still 1-57 Howell 4-42,
Lameric Tucker 6-39 (BC). Records: Riverdale 6-5,
Bradley Central 7-4.
The Bradley Central defense
stepped up big again on the
Warriors’ next possession after
Riverdale moved from its own 22
to the Bears’ 18. The Bears’
Hunter Duggan pounced on a
Riverdale fumble to stop the drive.
But the Bears gave the ball back
on an interception and Riverdale
retook the lead, 31-27 with a 14yard run.
Riverdale again stopped the
Bears with a second interception
but were forced to punt the ball
back to Bradley to open the fourth
quarter.
“That (passing) is what we do.
We have a Mr. Football semifinalist at quarterback. We’re not
going to change,” said Floyd. “We
play good athletes every Friday.
They made two plays that were
pretty big, the two picks. But that
(passing) is our strength.”
Copeland and the Bears
stepped away from the passing
game for six plays on their next
touch and lined up in punt formation after looking at a fourth-and3 situation at the Warriors’ 43.
The Bears caught the entire stadium by surprise when Carpenter
took the snap and heaved the ball
to a speeding Ryan Still for a first
down and more. Still, wrapped up
by a Riverdale defender, never
touched the ground as he rolled
over the top of the Warrior,
regained his feet and raced
untouched the rest of the way for
the TD giving the Bears a 34-31
lead with 8:08 left to play.
“We just felt like we needed a
little momentum. It’s was kind of
do-or-die at that point, I felt like.
it’s something we practice and
when we have a certain look we
are going to run it. It’s a good
thing we executed it,” said the
Bears’ coach.
The Bradley Central defense
flexed its muscles once agan after
the Warriors moved to the Bears’
1-yard line stuffing Riverdale on a
try up the middle. The Bears,
however, were unable to move the
ball and punted it away with just
over three minutes left on the
clock. This time, the Warriors did
not let the opportunity slip away
and pushed into the end zone for
the go-ahead touchdown again
from 1-yard out with 1:14 left in
the game.
“Everybody in the stadium
knew what was coming, they just
did a good job of getting into the
end zone,” stated Floyd.
Still once again provided a solid
return to the Bradley 40, but four
straight passes fell to the
Davenport Field turf and the
Warriors were able to run out the
clock to secure the win.
“I told them I loved them and
appreciate everything they did for
Bradley. They represented us with
class. We just came up short
tonight but I appreciate their
fight,” said a proud Floyd. “It’s
tough right now, but I think the
thing we have to remember is the
type of kids, this senior class
especially, these kids are. They
have class and character, the way
they represented Bradley Central
for their four years here. As the
head coach I’m really proud to
coach those guys. It’s friendships
that will last a lifetime and bonds
we have made throughout four
years that will never be broken.”
Lameric Tucker
Congratulations to Bradley Central’s Lameric Tucker for
being named the Check Into Cash Player of the Week.
Tucker played a huge role in the Bears 59-21 win over
William Blount, scoring a total of four touchdowns in the
game. Tucker had a total of 144 yards and three
touchdowns on five receptions and 45 yards and a
touchdown on three carries.
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
Viewpoint
www.clevelandbanner.com
Enjoying autumn as it should be
I invite all to partake of this splendid season
“That life is worth living is the most necessary of assumptions and, were it not
assumed, the most impossible of conclusions.”
I have come to love autumn. My apprecia— George Santayana (1863-1952) tion for the colors and crisp air has grown
Bob Corker: ‘Tennessee
has lost a great son’
O
n Tuesday from the
Senate
floor
in
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Sen. Bob Corker (RTennessee) paid tribute to the
life, and the memory, of former
Sen. Fred Dalton Thompson
(D-Tennessee).
On the same day, U.S. Sen.
Lamar
Alexander
(DTennessee) also eulogized
Thompson during the Senate
session. Those remarks were
published in the “Viewpoint”
section in Thursday’s edition of
the Cleveland Daily Banner.
Today, Corker’s tribute is
published.
In his remarks, Corker said
of Thompson, “Tennessee has
lost a great son, as has our
nation. Fred had this extraordinary ability to capture people’s
imagination. And Fred was
unabashedly proud of our
nation and never apologized
for what our nation has done
around the world to make the
world a better place.”
He added, “We will miss
him. He is a rare talent. He is
one of those people that just
makes you want to do better
when you're around him. I
thank him for his tremendous
service to our country. I thank
him for the tremendous and
deep friendships that he created all around our state. And I
thank him for causing all of us
to constantly remember where
we come from.”
The full transcript of Corker’s
remarks can be found below.
*********
I rise to share my voice with
[Sen.] Lamar Alexander’s at
the loss of a great Tennessean
and a great American.
I appreciate so much
Senator Alexander chronologically going through much of
the great Senator Thompson’s
life, and talking about the personal experiences.
Elizabeth and I, too, want to
share our condolences with
Jeri, Hayden and Sammy,
along with Tony and Dan, his
sons by his first marriage with
Sarah, and his brother Ben.
I was able to talk to Tony last
week as Fred was in hospice
care, and as you would expect
– Fred being the kind of person
that he was, never forgetting
where he came from – they
wanted to spend those last
days together in quiet and didn’t want a lot of phone calls or
a lot happening to make people aware of what was happening. But Fred had reached
his end, and no doubt, again,
Tennessee has lost a great
son, as has our nation.
Fred was one of those people, as Lamar just mentioned,
that had extraordinary talent,
and the thing that, to me, was
so unique about him having
that extraordinary talent is he
also had the gift of knowing
when and how to use it.
His extraordinary ability, as
has been chronicled, as a
lawyer; his ability when faced
with a case that became
something of national notoriety; to becoming an actor and
playing the role that he was in
this case in real life; and then
to serve in the United States
Senate in the way that he did.
I, too, had the extraordinary
privilege – as I have had in
knowing someone like Lamar
Alexander who is one of the
great public servants of our
state, Howard Baker who has
been a mentor to all of us and
had such an impact on myself,
on Lamar, and on Fred – but
also to know Fred.
Back in 1994, as I was telling
some Tennesseans earlier
today, I was also running for
the Senate in a race that no
one remembers because
of the results.
But as Lamar
mentioned,
everywhere
you went, people wanted to
see Fred.
Fred had
Corker
this extraordinary ability to
capture people’s imagination.
And Fred
w
a
s
unabashedly
proud of our
nation
and
Thompson
never apologized for what our nation has
done around the world to make
the world a better place.
But I was able to travel
around and see these hordes
of people gather around Fred.
People would pat Bill Frist
and myself and the other folks
running in the other primary on
the head and say, “Someday
you, too, might be a United
States senator.”
Fred was somewhat criticized that year because of the
way he was going about the
race. And again, it reminds me
of how much talent he had,
and his ability to know how to
use it.
He told people, “Look, the
first time I run a television ad,
this race will be over.” He did,
and it was.
As Lamar mentioned, he
went on to win by 20 points
because of the way people felt
about him, not only around our
state but around our country.
Fred was very impatient with
serving in the Senate, and I
had multiple conversations
with him about that.
And actually, you know,
serving here, one can understand with someone like Fred,
who constantly wanted to
make something happen, how
that was a frustration.
But I know for a fact, in
watching his early days coming
in and heading the Homeland
Security Committee and doing
the many things that he did,
that he affected our state and
country in a very positive way,
something that all of us would
hope to emulate.
We will miss him.
He is a rare talent.
He is one of those people
that just makes you want to do
better when you're around him.
I thank him for his tremendous service to our country.
I thank him for the tremendous and deep friendships that
he created all around our
state.
And I thank him for causing
all of us to constantly remember where we come from.
I join Senator Alexander in
expressing our deep condolences again to his family and
all who were around him,
especially when the end came.
With that, I yield the floor.
———
(About the writer: U.S. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tennessee, chairs
the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee. U.S. Sen. Lamar
Alexander, whose tribute to former U.S. Sen. Fred Thompson
was published in Thursday’s edition, is a former governor of
Tennessee. The Cleveland Daily Banner shares the sentiments
of both Corker and Baker, and extends its thoughts, prayers and
condolences to the Thompson family and to all Tennesseans.)
as I have nestled firmly into the throes of
middle age.
Fall is a time of celebration for me. It’s
when I mow the yard for the last time of the
year. It’s when the heat pump doesn’t run
for days at a time. It’s the season when we
set our clocks back, and daybreak comes
when daybreak should.
Some of you will enjoy it with me, but
many will not. For some reason, we simply
seem to be incapable of savoring this magical time before Thanksgiving.
Here’s proof. Last Friday — which was
Oct. 30 — someone asked me if I had finished my Christmas shopping.
Are you kidding? At the time, I hadn’t
even bought Halloween candy.
Come to think of it, I’m not entirely sure
which Christmas she was even referring to.
The Christmas season should not start
until after all the leftover turkey sandwiches
have been eaten, period. But, again this
year, I saw Christmas decorations in stores
in September.
Why can’t we enjoy Thanksgiving as the
stress-free day it should be?
We don’t gloss over Memorial Day by buying our Independence Day picnic supplies in
May. We don’t have Valentine’s Day chocolates sitting around everywhere before we
STorieS of
a world gone
mad
Barry Currin
ring in the new year.
It would be different if we Christians
couldn’t wait for Dec. 1 because it meant we
were going to go out of our way to love thy
neighbor in the spirit of the season.
Instead, with all the stresses involved with
the way we do it these days, we become
even snippier toward each other than we are
during the rest of the year.
And, why are we stressed? We’re stressed
because we’re busy plotting our strategy to
buy the cheap Black Friday 50-inch flatscreen TV before thy neighbors do.
A couple of national retailers have made
news this year because they have
announced they will not be open on
Thanksgiving. We’re supposed to be happy
about this, and I suppose I am.
You won’t find me jumping up and down
about it, because it never should have been
an issue to begin with. It’s like hugging a
total stranger in a parking lot just because
they didn’t ding your car door.
When I was a child, one of my fondest
holiday activities was when we would
unpack my three Christmas Little Golden
Books and my big “’Twas the Night Before
Christmas” book — which had felt glued on
the front cover for Santa’s hat and
Rudolph’s nose.
It was magical to read them. And, I appreciated it more simply because they never
appeared until December — though I wouldn’t have admitted it at the time.
Most weeks when I sit down to write this
piece, I end up gravitating toward pointing
out how much better things were “back in
the day.”
Obviously, this week is no exception. In
fact, as long as I’ve been doing this, I have
written a similar take on the same subject
each year, hopefully with a few original
thoughts here and there.
This year, though, I did it earlier than
ever.
But, I’m still going to enjoy fall. And, I
invite you to do the same.
———
(About the writer: Barry Currin runs
BeaverDamUSA.com, a humor, sports and
entertainment website. “Stories of a World
Gone Mad” is published in the Friday edition
of the Cleveland Daily Banner. Email the
writer at [email protected].)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 6, the
310th day of 2015. There are 55
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Nov. 6, 1860, former Illinois
congressman Abraham Lincoln
defeated three other candidates
for the presidency: John
Breckinridge, John Bell and
Stephen Douglas.
On this date:
In 1632, King Gustavus
Adolphus of Sweden was killed in
battle.
In 1854, America’s “March
King,” John Philip Sousa, was
born in Washington, D.C.
In 1861, Confederate President
Jefferson Davis was elected to a
six-year term of office.
In 1928, in a first, the results
of Republican Herbert Hoover’s
presidential election victory over
Democrat Alfred E. Smith were
flashed onto an electric wraparound sign on the New York
Times building.
In 1934, Nebraska voters
approved dissolving their twochamber legislature in favor of a
nonpartisan, single (or “unicameral”) legislative body, which was
implemented in 1937.
In 1944, British official Lord
Moyne was assassinated in Cairo,
Egypt, by members of the Zionist
Stern gang.
In 1956, President Dwight D.
Eisenhower won re-election,
defeating Democrat Adlai E.
Stevenson.
In 1962, Democrat Edward M.
Kennedy was elected Senator
from Massachusetts.
In 1977, 39 people were killed
when the Kelly Barnes Dam
burst, sending a wall of water
through Toccoa Falls College in
Georgia.
In 1984, President Ronald
Reagan won re-election by a landslide over former Vice President
Walter Mondale, the Democratic
challenger.
In 1990, about one-fifth of the
Universal Studios backlot in
southern
California
was
destroyed in an arson fire.
In 2012, President Barack
Obama was elected to a second
term of office, defeating
Republican challenger Mitt
Romney.
Ten years ago: An overnight
tornado killed 25 people in southwestern Indiana. In a clear jab at
Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez, President George W.
Bush, in Brazil, called on Latin
Americans to boldly defend
strong democratic institutions.
French President Jacques Chirac
promised arrests, trials and punishment in the wake of urban
unrest that had spread to central
Paris.
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama opened his 10day Asia trip on a somber note in
Mumbai, India, where he memorialized victims of devastating terror attacks two years earlier,
declaring, “We’ll never forget.” A
Yemeni judge ordered police to
find Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical
U.S.-born cleric, “dead or alive”
after the al-Qaida-linked preacher failed to appear at his trial for
his role in the killing of foreigners. (Al-Awlaki was killed in a
U.S. drone strike in the mountains of Yemen on Sept. 30,
2011.)
One year ago: The march
toward same-sex marriage across
the U.S. hit a roadblock when a
federal appeals court upheld laws
against the practice in four
states: Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky
and Tennessee. (A divided U.S.
Supreme Court overturned the
laws in June 2015.) Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
reassured
Jordan’s
King
Abdullah that he would not yield
to increasing demands by some
members of his center-right
coalition to allow Jews to pray at
a Muslim-run holy site in
Jerusalem.
Today’s Birthdays: Actress
June Squibb is 86. Country
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The Banner welcomes letters to the editor. The
guidelines call for letters to be in good taste and no more than 300
words. Some minor editing, not affecting the meaning, may be
required. All letters must include the author’s signature, address
and a telephone number for confirmation. Since letters must have
a signature, they cannot be emailed. Letters reflect the opinion of
the writer. Letters may be sent to Letters to the Editor, Cleveland
Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600.)
singer Stonewall Jackson is 83.
Singer Eugene Pitt (The Jive Five)
is 78. Singer P.J. Proby is 77.
Country singer Guy Clark is 74.
Actress Sally Field is 69. Pop
singer-musician Glenn Frey (The
Eagles) is 67. Singer Rory Block
is 66. Jazz musician Arturo
Sandoval is 66. TV host
Catherine Crier is 61. News correspondent and former California
first lady Maria Shriver is 60.
Actress Lori Singer is 58. Actor
Lance Kerwin is 55. Rock musician Paul Brindley (The Sundays)
is 52. Education Secretary Arne
Duncan is 51. Rock singer Corey
Glover is 51. Actor Brad
Grunberg is 51. Actor Peter
DeLuise is 49. Actress Kelly
Rutherford is 47. Actor Ethan
Hawke is 45. Chef/TV judge
Marcus Samuelsson is 45.
Actress Thandie Newton is 43.
Model-actress Rebecca Romijn is
43. Actress Zoe McLellan is 41.
Actress Nicole Dubuc is 37.
Actress Taryn Manning is 37.
Basketball player Lamar Odom is
36. Actress Patina Miller (TV:
“Madam Secretary”) is 31. Actress
Katie Leclere is 29. Singer-songwriter Ben Rector is 29. Singersongwriter Robert Ellis is 27.
Actress Emma Stone is 27.
Actress Mercedes Kastner is 26.
Dear Annie: My 28-year-old
son, “Jack,” was married six weeks
ago. He and his bride have known
each other since high school, so I
thought I knew her pretty well.
Her parents paid for the majority
of the wedding, and during the
planning, I made myself available
for any task that came my way,
offering to take care of many odds
and ends. My three best friends
gave the bride an elaborate shower
at my home. My brother volunteered to become certified to perform the ceremony and they eagerly accepted. It was a destination
wedding, so we all had to set aside
a few days for the event. My husband and I went there two days
early to help set up and to assist in
any way possible without butting
in too much.
Everything was going well until
the day after the wedding, when
the bride stopped all communication with me. Before then, she
would call and text, and often ask
to get together to do fun things.
She even asked for my opinion.
Now, nothing.
I have never been a clingy mother to any of my sons, and I am baffled by this. Am I wrong to think
she should have called a few days
after the wedding to thank us for
everything we did and maybe ask if
we had a good time? I don’t expect
a reward for our help, but what
happened to common courtesy?
Maybe a little show of appreciation? I’ve seen my son a couple of
times since the wedding, though
there has been no mention of the
estrangement.
What did I do to turn her against
me like that? — Hurt Mother-inLaw
Dear Hurt: First of all, both the
bride and groom should have
thanked you for your help, but not
all couples think this is necessary.
Many assume that helping (and
paying) is the parents’ responsibility and requires no expression of
appreciation. They are wrong, but
we hope you will let that go. The
more serious problem is the bride’s
sudden lack of communication.
Have you been texting her? Calling
her? Did you tell her what a beautiful wedding it was and that you
are so happy she is your daughterin-law? You should be doing these
things instead of waiting for her. If
she still refuses to communicate,
talk to your son and ask what’s
going on.
Cleveland Daily Banner
– Established in 1854 –
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
Stephen L. Crass
GENERAL MANAGER
Jim Bryant
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR
Herb Lacy
OFFICE MANAGER
Joyce Taylor
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Rick Norton
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Gwen Swiger
LIFESTYLES EDITOR
William Wright
SPORTS EDITOR
Richard Roberts
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Jack Bennett
RETAIL SALES MANAGER
Sheena Meyer
PRESS SUPERVISOR
Richard Yarber
423-472-5041
Telephone
423-614-6529
Newsroom Fax
423-476-1046
Office & Advertising Fax
1505 25th Street N.W. - Cleveland, TN 37311 • P.O. Box 3600 Cleveland, TN 37320
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—17
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
SATURDAY, NOV. 7, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Jason and Jeremy London, 43;
David Guetta, 48; Joni Mitchell, 72.
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Happy Birthday: Get involved and
make a difference. What you have to
offer your community, organization or a
charitable cause will be what pushes
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
you into new endeavors. Do your best to
map out a direction that will stimulate
your mind and inspire you to take on
more responsibility. It's onward and
upward from this point. Your success will
be determined by your tenacity. Your
numbers are 6, 10, 21, 26, 33, 38, 44.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Learn
from any criticism you encounter. Don't
let your emotions take over. Arguments
will be a waste of time and energy. Keep
an open mind and work to bring about
the changes that you know you can live
with regardless of the results.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Completing projects will bring you a
sense of satisfaction. Whether it's finishing a course or tidying up your home or
finances, finding a relief from stress will
give you a new lease on life. Romance
is highlighted.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don't let
your generosity be your downfall. Use
your imagination and you'll discover a
plan that isn't costly. Be true to yourself
and save for the future. Charity begins
at home, and using your intelligence to
build equity is encouraged.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don't
feel pressured by someone who is
questioning or criticizing you. If you procrastinate, you will give others a reason
to doubt you. Do something out of the
ordinary and take everyone by surprise.
Make positive changes at home.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A little discipline will go a long way. Demonstrate
your dedication and desire to help make
improvements to your neighborhood,
community or a group you belong to.
Don't let anyone you live with interfere
with your plans.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Surprise
the people you care about most with an
outing that will encourage healthy relationships. Share your feelings and find
out where you stand and how you can
improve your current personal situation.
A promise or commitment will help seal
a deal.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Keep a
secret you've been trusted with and
maintain an open mind when dealing
with others. Only share knowledge you
know to be true and ideas that are workable. Problems at home will fester if you
let someone else dictate what you can
do.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Find a
new way to help others and to bring you
satisfaction. People from your past will
have an impact on you now. Working in
a group will allow you to voice your creative ideas and acquire greater recognition.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Keep your plans a secret. Personal
information will be used against you.
Focus on home, family and keeping the
peace. Protect your reputation and your
position. Take care of business before
you go out to play.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Don't let emotional issues stand in your
way. Focus on what you need to get
done and follow through with your promises. Expect someone to cause uncertainty regarding your plans. Ignore any
negative influences and forge ahead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Share
your feelings, but don't get angry if
someone gives you advice you don't
want to hear. Listen and learn from
someone with experience, and you will
find a way to bring about the changes
needed to satisfy your current situation.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stick
close to home and avoid dealing with
institutions or people who will cause
problems for you. Love is highlighted,
but it's up to you to plan something special. Reminisce about the past while
anticipating what the future brings.
Birthday Baby: You are relentless,
inspiring and loyal. You are responsive,
secretive and mysterious.
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Review: ‘Peanuts Movie’ a worthy romp for the beloved gang
By SaNDY COHeN
AP Entrtainment Writer
Maybe the Peanuts gang
didn’t come to the big screen
before because they’ve had so
much success on the small one,
with specials like “The Great
Pumpkin” and “A Charlie Brown
Christmas” that have been
annual TV traditions since the
1960s.
Thankfully, “The Peanuts
Movie” isn’t just a small-screen
special writ large. The filmmakers take advantage of their cinematic scope with a bigger story,
more sophisticated animation
and effective use of 3-D that
gives new depth to the Peanuts
world. But the characters loved
by generations of fans — Lucy,
Linus, Snoopy, Woodstock and
beloved blockhead Charlie
Brown — are as charming and
timeless as ever.
“The Peanuts Movie,” written
by the son and grandson of
Peanuts creator Charles M.
Schulz, doesn’t cover new thematic territory, but it doesn’t
really need to. Relying on 50
years of character development,
AP photo
In thIs Photo provided by Twentieth Century Fox & Peanuts Worldwide LLC, Lucy, right, is none
too happy about Charlie Brown’s newfound status in the new film, “The Peanuts Movie.” The movie
releases in U.S. theaters today.
the Peanuts gang stays true to
their original selves — there’s
no new edge or post-modern
snark in the mix. The central
concepts (be honest, be yourself, do your best) are as gentle
as the curves of Charlie Brown’s
silhouette.
There are two simultaneous
stories at play in the film: one
set in the “real world” of Charlie
Brown and his friends, and a
more fantastical tale of Snoopy
as his alter-ego, the Flying Ace.
“The Peanuts Movie” opens
during wintertime, and a snowy
introductory
scene
with
Woodstock sets viewers up for
the 3-D experience. Charlie
Brown and the gang are excited
about a new kid moving into
their neighborhood. She turns
out to be the Little Red-Haired
Girl, and Charlie is instantly
smitten.
School starts up again, bringing a series of challenges. First
of all, the Little Red-Haired Girl
is in Charlie’s class.
“I just came down with a serious case of inadequacy,” he
says.
Then there is the talent show,
school-wide tests, book reports
and other kid-sized hurdles to
overcome. The story follows the
gang through the school year,
focusing on Charlie’s foibles.
Sally Brown plays a supporting
role. Everything looks as colorful and round as the comic
strip.
Meanwhile, Snoopy types
himself into a high-flying adventure atop his doghouse as he
battles his nemesis, the Red
Baron. These sequences are distinguished by more realistic
background animation — snowy
mountains and grassy landscapes that look more like the
world outside the movie theater.
Snoopy’s Flying Ace, aided by a
team of Woodstock mechanics,
flies off in pursuit of his love,
Fifi, just as Charlie Brown tries
to work up the nerve to introduce himself to the Little RedHaired Girl.
Director Steve Martino cast
child actors to voice the Peanuts
gang, and used vintage recordings of late actor-producer Bill
Melendez to realize Snoopy and
Woodstock’s inimitable expressions. A catchy new song contributed by pop star Meghan
Trainor is a bouncy bonus.
While “The Peanuts Movie”
may lack the wink-wink wisdom
aimed at adults often found in
Pixar releases, it retains the
wholesome appeal of those stalwart TV specials. The 3-D
Science Channel series tells of close calls in space
By DaviD BauDer
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) — Lunch with
former
astronauts
Robert
Curbeam, Jerry Linenger and Yi
So-yeon feels a little like eavesdropping on the meeting of a special club.
Bring up the reason they’re
together — to discuss the near
misses that have them featured
on the Science Channel’s upcoming series “Secret Space Escapes”
— and the club would seem even
more exclusive. But not as much
as you’d think, since the danger of
space travel probably isn’t fully
appreciated by the general public.
For many reasons, incidents
are often minimized at the time.
Space agencies don’t want the bad
publicity, no one wants to scare
families back home and astro-
nauts are trained to fix problems
and move on.
“Whenever you’re operating on
the edge of human ability, you’re
going to have close calls,”
Linenger said. “We’ve had quite a
few. But because we usually come
out of them successfully people
say that it’s fine when it’s actually
quite hairy.”
Linenger’s close call, part of the
series that premieres Nov. 10 at
10 p.m. EST, came when he and
the other five men onboard had to
put out a fire on the Russian
space station Mir in 1997.
Russian press reports at the time
dismissed it as akin to a cigarette
burning; in reality it was like a
sparking blowtorch so hot it melted metal. There aren’t many
places to escape a serious fire on
a spaceship.
Most astronauts are at peace
with the danger they face, they
say, believing the importance of
the missions makes the risk worth
it.
Curbeam was on a spacewalk
in 2001 when a valve leaked,
spilling toxic ammonia flakes all
over his spacesuit. He had to fix
the leak, then stay outside the
International Space Station for
See SPACE, Page 22
makes it look modern, but the
Peanuts’ sweetness is satisfyingly old-fashioned.
“The Peanuts Movie,” a
Twentieth Century Fox release,
is rated G by the Motion Picture
Association
of
America.
Running time: 92 minutes.
Three stars out of four.
—MPAA definition of G: General
audiences. All ages admitted.
I-75 AT EXIT 20
Fri. Nov. 6 thru Thurs. Nov. 12
Last Witch The Peanuts
Hunter
Movie 3D
7:20-9:35 3:00
1:00-5:15
Burnt
Spectre
12:00-3:15
6:30-9:40
Spectre
12:30-3:45
7:00-10:00
The Peanuts
Movie
1:30-3:30
5:30-7:30
9:30
GooseBumps
12:30-2:45
5:10-7:30
9:50
Bridge
of Spies
1:00-4:00
7:00-10:00
Martian
1:00-4:00
7:00-10:00
NO SHOWS
AFTER 7:30
PM MONDAYTHURSDAY.
NO SHOWS
BEFORE 4 PM
MONDAYFRIDAY
Friday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WTVC)
Last Man Standing
Mike’s (Tim Allen) response to Kristin’s
(Amanda Fuller) desire to run the opening
of another Outdoor Man Grill surprises her
in the new episode “The Dad Hat.” She believes he’s viewing it more from a paternal
stance than a professional one. Mandy and
Kyle (Molly Ephraim, Christoph Sanders)
want to help in getting Ed (Hector Elizondo)
and his ex (guest star Joely Fisher) together again. Nancy Travis and Kaitlyn Dever
also star.
8:30 p.m. on (WRCB)
Truth Be Told
As a mixed-faith couple, Mitch and Tracy
(Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Vanessa Lachey)
debate what to tell Sadie (guest star Sophie
Mackenzie Nack) after her favorite chicken
at school dies in the new episode “Psychic
Chicken.” Things get nutty when Mitch’s
sister (guest star Ashley Tisdale) brings her
psychic boyfriend (guest star Ryan Cartwright, “Bones”) to a family dinner. Angie
and Russell (Bresha Webb, Tone Bell) have
different takes on religion, too.
9 p.m. on (WRCB)
Grimm
Parenthood proves to have more than the
usual concerns for Nick (David Giuntoli) in
the new episode “Clear and Wesen Danger.” Otherworldly enemies make him even
more fearful for the safety of Adalind (Claire
Coffee) and their child. Monroe and Rosalee (Silas Weir Mitchell, Bree Turner) try
to help. Hank (Russell Hornsby) gets a new
partner to probe a murder at an investment
firm. Sasha Roiz and Reggie Lee also star.
9 p.m. on (WDEF)
Hawaii Five-0
Going on a date with McGarrett (Alex
O’Loughlin) might not be the typical social
engagement, as Lynn (guest star Sarah
Carter) discovers in the new episode “Na
Kama Hele” (Hawaiian for “Day Trippers”).
He takes her to a deserted island, which
might seem romantic, but it also turns out
to be the hiding place of a Mob kingpin
determined to keep his whereabouts secret.
A high-school athlete’s father becomes a
gambler’s target. Grace Park also stars.
FRIDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
WELFTBN
WTNB
WFLICW
WNGHPBS
DAYSTAR
WTVCABC
WTCIPBS
WDSIFOX
WDEFCBS
QVC
CSPAN
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HSN
E!
ESQTV
LIFE
TLC
TBS
TNT
USA
FX
ESPN
ESPN2
FSTN
SEC
GOLF
FS1
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CNBC
MSNBC
CNN
HDLN
FNC
HIST
TRUTV
A&E
DISC
NGC
TRAV
FOOD
HGTV
ANPL
FAM
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NICK
TOON
TVLND
AMC
TCM
HALL
OXYGEN
BRAVO
SYFY
SPIKE
COM
MTV
VH1
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BET
SCIENCE
CSPAN2
EWTN
WPXA ION
DISXD
GSN
COOK
WE
GALA
TELE
UNIV
NBCSP
DLC
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
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83
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144
153
163
217
223
224
311
319
4:30
5 PM
10 p.m. on (SYFY)
Z Nation
Things take a decidedly weird turn —
even for this series — as the heroes drive
through New Mexico, where they witness
bright lights in the sky and encounter a
beautiful but distracted woman named Bernadette, who leads them on an adventure
through an abandoned Air Force base. As
they search for zombie aliens, the team
discovers what looks like alien technology,
which could shed insight into the question
of whether mankind is alone in the universe.
NOVEMBER 6, 2015
5:30
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
11:30
12 AM
12:30
The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Entertainment Inside Edition Undateable Truth Be Told Grimm (N) ’ Å (DVS)
Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Dr. Chris Hill Praise the Lord Å
Supernatural! Potters
Trinity Family Hal Lindsey Harvest
Perry Stone Billy Graham 97th Birthday Special (N)
F.K. Price
L. Fontaine
Around Town
Body
Southern-Fit Game of the Week
Around Town Around Town
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends
Friends ’
Mod Fam
Family Feud Family Feud The Middle Reign “The Price” (N) Å
America’s Next Top Model FOX61 First Crazy Talk
Hollywood
Tosh.0 Å
Anger
Paid Program
Martha Speak Odd Squad Wild Kratts Wild Kratts PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
All Access
High School Football Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live)
All Access
High School Football Teams TBA. ’
Sam Adeyemi Bill Winston Love a Child Reflections Z. Levitt
Creflo Dollar Jewish Voice John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni Lamb
Marcus and Joni
J. Van Impe Jewish Jesus Hour of Sal K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
News
News
World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) Last-Standing (:31) Dr. Ken Shark Tank (N) ’
(:01) 20/20 ’ Å
News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious
Curious
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Washington Charlie Rose Great Performances (N) ’
Streets to the Stage
Robin Williams Remembered Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å
››› “Great Balls of Fire!” (1989) Dennis Quaid. Å
›› “Yor, the Hunter From the Future” (1983) Reb Brown. ›› “Sci-Fighters” (1996) Roddy Piper, Billy Drago. Å
›› “Krull” (1983, Fantasy) Ken Marshall, Lysette Anthony. Å
Spacehunter
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith The Amazing Race (N) ’
Hawaii Five-0 (N) ’ Å
Blue Bloods (N) ’ Å
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
The Dish With Rachael Ray Clever Creations By-Greiner Beauty Gifts
The Dish With Rachael Ray Clever Creations By-Greiner Beauty Gifts
Holidays With Jill Bauer (N) Friday Night Beauty
Computers & Tablets
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods “Leap of Faith” Blue Bloods “The Job” ’
Blue Bloods “Parenthood”
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
Person of Interest ’ Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
Electronic Gifts “Canon” (N) Soft & Cozy Gifts (N)
Gadget Gifts (N)
Electronic Gifts “HP” (N)
Soft & Cozy Gifts (N)
Soft & Cozy Gifts (N)
Jewels by Jen Premiere
Jewels by Jen Premiere
Electronic Gifts (N)
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
E! News (N) Å
Botched “Breast Greedy”
Botched Å
The Soup (N) The Soup
E! News (N) Å
Incredible Hulk Å
Incredible Hulk Å
Incredible Hulk “Free Fall”
Incredible Hulk “Dark Side” Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Car-Year
Car-Year
Car-Year
Car-Year
The Jacksons: Next
The Jacksons: Next
The Jacksons: Next
Step It Up Å
Step It Up (N) Å
Step It Up (N) Å
The Jacksons: Next
The Jacksons: Next
(12:02) Step It Up Å
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
90 Day
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Say Yes
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Big Bang
Big Bang
›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler. Å
Cougar Town Cougar Town
Bones “A Boy in a Tree” ’
Bones ’ Å
› “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan. Å (DVS)
›› “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. Å (DVS)
›› “The Replacements” (2000, Comedy) Keanu Reeves. Å (DVS)
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Satisfaction (N) Å
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Two Men
Two Men
› “R.I.P.D.” (2013, Action) Jeff Bridges, Ryan Reynolds.
›› “Men in Black 3” (2012, Action) Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin.
›› “Men in Black 3” (2012, Action) Will Smith.
NFL Live (N) Questionable Around/Horn Interruption SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
NBA
NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Indiana Pacers. (N) (Live)
NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Sacramento Kings. (N) (Live)
SportsNation (N) Å
First/Re-Take Questionable Around/Horn Interruption College Football Countdown College Football Temple at Southern Methodist. From Gerald J. Ford Stadium in Dallas.
SportsCenter (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) Å
College Field Hockey
Game
UEFA Mag. ACC Access Bull Riding Championship.
UEFA Europa Lg. Highlights UEFA Mag. UFC Insider ACC Gridiron Live ’
World Poker Tour
NHL Hockey
Finebaum
Women’s College Soccer SEC Tournament: Teams TBA.
SEC Now (N) Women’s College Soccer SEC Tournament: Teams TBA.
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Film Rm SEC Inside College Football
PGA Golf
PGA Tour Golf
Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Sanderson Farms Championship, Second Round.
PGA Tour Golf WGC-HSBC Champions, Third Round. (N) (Live)
Soccer
NASCAR Racing
The Best Thing I Herd
The Ultimate Fighter Å
Setup
NASCAR Racing Camping World Truck Series: Texas. (N)
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
FOX Sports
Jimbo Fisher Georgia
Auburn Foot The Season: Georgia Tech C-USA Show. ACC Access Hawks Live! NBA Basketball Atlanta Hawks at New Orleans Pelicans. (Live)
Hawks Live! NBA Basketball Atlanta Hawks at New Orleans Pelicans.
(3:00) Weather Center Live (N) Å
(5:59) Weather Underground (N)
Weather Caught on Camera Weather Gone Viral
Weather Gone Viral
Weather Gone Viral
Weather Gone Viral
(3:00) Closing Bell (N) Å
Fast Money Option Action Mad Money (N)
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed
American Greed (N)
American Greed
American Greed
MSNBC Live W/ Kate Snow MTP Daily (N)
MSNBC Live (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
First in the South Democratic Candidates Forum (N) (Live) Hardball Chris Matthews
Life After Lockup
Lockup: Raw
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon Anthony Bourdain Parts
This Is Life With Lisa Ling CNN Special Report
Dr. Drew
CNN Special Report
The Situation Room (N)
Erin Burnett OutFront (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 (N)
CNN Tonight w/ Don Lemon Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File CNN Special Report
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Greta Van Susteren
The O’Reilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor Å
The Kelly File
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens “Aliens B.C.” Ancient Aliens ’ Å
Ancient Aliens ’ Å
(:03) Ancient Aliens Å
(12:01) Ancient Aliens Å
Pawn
Pawn
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest
Nightwatch ’ Å
Nightwatch ’ Å
Criminal Minds “The Fight”
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
(:01) Criminal Minds “JJ” ’ (12:01) Criminal Minds Å
Pacific Warriors ’ Å
Pacific Warriors ’ Å
Gold Rush “Gold Ship” ’
Gold Rush ’ Å
Gold Rush - The Dirt (N) ’ (:01) Gold Rush (N) ’ Å
(:04) Pacific Warriors (N) ’ (:05) Gold Rush ’ Å
(12:08) Pacific Warriors ’
The Truth Behind...
Area 51: The CIA’s Secret
Drain the Bermuda Triangle StarTalk “Larry Wilmore”
Breakthrough
Conquering Niagara
Climbing Redwood Giants Conquering Niagara
Climbing Redwood Giants
Mysteries at the Castle
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Chopped “Big Hitters”
Chopped
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive BBQ Blitz (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Hunters
Hunters Int’l Hunters
Hunters Int’l Tiny House Tiny House
To Be Announced
Tanked: Unfiltered (N) ’
(:01) Restoration Wild (N) ’ (:02) Tanked (N) ’
(:05) Restoration Wild ’
(12:06) Tanked ’
(3:30) ›› “Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous”
›› “Nanny McPhee” (2005, Comedy) Emma Thompson.
(:15) ›› “Nanny McPhee Returns” (2010) Emma Thompson, Maggie Gyllenhaal.
The 700 Club ’ Å
“A Boy-Charlie”
K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
›› “The Game Plan” (2007, Comedy) ’ ‘PG’ Å
Bunk’d (N) ’ Girl Meets
Liv-Mad.
Best Friends Star Wars Rebels ’ Å
Bunk’d Å
Girl Meets
Liv-Mad.
Best Friends
SpongeBob SpongeBob Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Nicky, Ricky Henry Danger Thundermans SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Pig Goat Ban. Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Teen Titans Teen Titans Ninjago Mstr Ninjago Mstr Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
Regular Show King of Hill Burgers
Cleveland
Cleveland
Family Guy Family Guy Black Jesus Loiter Squad Pretty Face Aqua Teen
Bonanza “Inger, My Love”
Bewitched
Bewitched
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life ››› “My Cousin Vinny” (1992, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Marisa Tomei. Å
King
King
King
King
Old Christine
(3:00) ›› “On Deadly Ground” (1994) ‘R’
››› “Under Siege” (1992, Action) Steven Seagal, Gary Busey. ‘R’ Å
›› “Hard to Kill” (1990, Action) Steven Seagal. ‘R’ Å
›› “Out for Justice” (1991) Steven Seagal. ‘R’ Å
The Walking Dead Å
Somewhre
››› “The Clock” (1945) Judy Garland.
(:15) ››› “Vacation From Marriage” (1945) Å
››› “Charade” (1963, Suspense) Cary Grant. Å
››› “And Then There Were None” (1945, Mystery) Å
“It! The Terror”
››› “All I Want for Christmas” (2007) Gail O’Grady.
›› “A Princess for Christmas” (2011) Katie McGrath.
“’Tis the Season for Love” (2015) Sarah Lancaster.
“A Cookie Cutter Christmas” (2014, Drama) Erin Krakow.
“Annie Claus Is Coming”
Top Model
America’s Next Top Model (:35) ›› “Stepmom” (1998, Drama) Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon. Å
(:15) ›› “Stepmom” (1998, Drama) Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon, Ed Harris. Å
(10:50) ›› “He’s Just Not That Into You” (2009) Å
Housewives/Atl.
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Vanderpump Rules
TBA
Below Deck
››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph.
GoldenEye
›› “The World Is Not Enough” (1999, Action) Pierce Brosnan. Å
››› “Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen. Å
Z Nation “Rozwell” (N)
Haven “Perditus” Å
Z Nation “Rozwell” Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Bellator MMA Live (N) ’ (Live)
(12:15) Cops Cops Å
South Park South Park Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Nightly Show Daily Show (6:56) ›› “Jackass 3D” (2010) Johnny Knoxville. Å
Futurama ’ Futurama ’ South Park South Park Archer Å
Archer Å
Triptank (N) Moonbeam
(:15) Ridiculousness ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. ››› “8 Mile” (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger. ’
Follow the
(3:50) › “When in Rome” (2010) Kristen Bell. ’
›› “The Dilemma” (2011, Comedy) Vince Vaughn. ’
››› “Back to the Future” (1985) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd. ’
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989, Comedy) Michael J. Fox. ’
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Reba Å
Reba Å
I Love Kellie I Love Kellie ››› “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Bill Pullman.
Cops Rel.
House/Payne House/Payne House/Payne House/Payne The Westbrooks
Being Mary Jane
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
The Wendy Williams Show
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
All-American Makers Å
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
(3:00) U.S. Senate The Senate assembles for a legislative session. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Catholic
Cross
Grandparents Church Poor EWTN News Catholic
Daily Mass - Olam
Life on the Rock (N)
EWTN News Holy Rosary The Church Lord, Mercy Bridegrm
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Criminal Minds “Zugzwang” Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds “Broken” ’ Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Criminal Minds ’
Saving Hope ’ Å
Saving Hope “Heartsick” ’
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Yo-Kai Watch Lab Rats
Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Mighty Med Mighty Med Mighty Med Mighty Med Mighty Med Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud The Chase (N) Å
Family Feud Family Feud Hellevator Å
The Chase Å
Family Feud Family Feud
Eat St. Å
Eat St. Å
Unique Eats Unique
Donut
Best Thing
Unwrapped Fact or Fict Carnival Eats Sinful Sweets Best Thing
Best Thing
Cupcake Wars
Dinner: Impossible
Carnival Eats Sinful Sweets
House “Last Resort” Å
House “Let Them Eat Cake” David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations David Tutera’s CELEBrations
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
Chapulín
Chapulín
El Chavo
El Chavo
El Chavo Ani El Chavo Ani Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
Familia Diez Familia Diez Familia Diez Guereja
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Guereja
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Decisiones Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Celia (N) ’ (SS)
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (N) ’
Señora Acero (N) ’ (SS)
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
Antes Muerta que Lichita (N) Pasión y Poder (N)
Yo No Creo en los Hombres Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
NASCAR
Mecum Auto Auctions
NASCAR
NASCAR Racing
College Football Cornell at Dartmouth. From Memorial Field in Hanover, N.H. (N) ’ (Live)
Turning Point USA T&F Induction
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
Trauma: Life in the ER ’
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
Save My Life: Boston
Save My Life: Boston
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
Save My Life: Boston
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—19
SATURDAYDAYTIME
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7:30
NOVEMBER 7, 2015
8 AM
8:30
9 AM
9:30
10 AM
10:30
11 AM
11:30
12 PM
12:30
1 PM
1:30
SATURDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
WELFTBN
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DAYSTAR
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HSN
E!
ESQTV
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TLC
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USA
FX
ESPN
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FSTN
SEC
GOLF
FS1
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CNBC
MSNBC
CNN
HDLN
FNC
HIST
TRUTV
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NGC
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CSPAN2
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DISXD
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3:30
Eyewitness News: Weekend Today (N) ’ Å
Tree Fu Tom Ruf-Tweet
Astroblast
Clangers (N) Luna!
LazyTown
English Premier League Soccer: Stoke City vs Chelsea
Goal Zone
Countdown NASCAR
VeggieTales Dr. Wonder Kids Club
Storykeepers RocKids TV Auto B. Good Paha. Is.
VeggieTales Monster
Mary-Hopkins Lassie Å
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(6:00) Around Town
Dragon
Pancakes
Real Life 101 Mouse in the Think Big
Real Life 101 Dog Tales
Game of the Week
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dog Town
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Save-Shelter Hatched (N) Dream Quest ACC Blitz
College Football ACC Game of the Week: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Pursuit
Bob Builder Thomas & Fr. Martha Speak Curious
Arthur ’ (EI) Wild Kratts Edison’s Lab Odd Squad 30 Days to a Younger Heart With Dr. Steven Masley, MD
JJ Virgin’s Sugar Impact Secret Dropping hidden sugar. ’ Healing ADD With-Amen
(6:30) “The Good Book” (2014) BK Bomar
Word Alive
Dr. Wonder My Destiny Gospel Bill Maralee
Donkey Ollie Adventures Ishine Knect Scaly
Kerry Pharr Last Days Si. Guillermo
Lakewood
Cld. Freidzon Cash Luna
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Coll. Football Football
Arthur ’ (EI) Wild Kratts Curious
Sewing
Love Quilting Joy/Painting Gardener
Live Green
Test Kitchen Cook Country Lidia Kitchen A Chef’s Life Garden Home Martha Bakes Cooking
Dowdle
Old House
This Old H’se
“Pursuit of the Graf Spee” ›› “Submarine X-1” (1968, War) James Caan. Å
›› “Warriors Five” (1962, War) Jack Palance. Å
›› “1918” (1984, Drama) William Converse-Roberts. Å
›› “The Boost” (1988) James Woods, Sean Young. Å
Lucky Dog
Dr. Chris-Vet Innovation
Inspectors
CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å
Hidden
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Football
Col. Football Football
Computers & Tablets
AM Style With Leah Williams
Saturday Morning Gifts “All Special Offers” Weekly gifts showcase.
Computers & Tablets
Philosophy: Beauty
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Washington This Week ’
Paid Program Cook/Pro
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Law & Order “Punk” Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Walker, Texas Ranger Å
Holiday Home Solutions (N) Electronic Gifts (N)
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Signature Club A-Adrienne Signature Club A-Adrienne Electronic Gifts (N)
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Teeter Hang Ups by Roger Aetna Making Sense
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Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
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Car-Year
Car-Year
Car-Year
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol
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“The Surrogacy Trap” (2013, Drama) Adam Reid. Å
“Sole Custody” (2014) Julie Benz, Rick Ravanello. Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program 7 Little Johnstons ’ Å
7 Little
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Seinfeld ’
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Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
›› “Bedtime Stories” (2008) Adam Sandler. Å (DVS)
›› “Drillbit Taylor” (2008, Comedy) Owen Wilson. Å
›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler. Å
Friends
Friends
Law & Order Å (DVS)
Law & Order Å (DVS)
Law & Order Å (DVS)
Law & Order Å (DVS)
Law & Order “Possession”
Law & Order Å (DVS)
›› “The Replacements” (2000, Comedy) Keanu Reeves. Å (DVS)
All About
Paid Program Paid Program Pastor Chris Paid Program Chrisley
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English Premier League Soccer (N) (Live)
NCIS “Squall” ’
NCIS “Devil’s Triad” ’
NCIS A mysterious illness.
NCIS “Double Back” ’
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Anger
Anger
Two Men
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Two Men
›› “Death at a Funeral” (2010, Comedy) Keith David.
› “R.I.P.D.” (2013, Action) Jeff Bridges, Ryan Reynolds.
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
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College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
Football
First/Re-Take NFL Live Å
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Score
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Game 365
N.C. State
Inside FB
Duke
ShipShape
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College Football From Nov. 8, 2014.
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PGA Tour Golf WGC-HSBC Champions, Third Round. From the Sheshan International Golf Club in Shanghai, China.
Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Sanderson Farms Championship, Third Round. (N) (Live)
FOX Sports Live Å
FOX Sports Live Å
Match Day
Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs VfB Stuttgart. (N) College Ftball College Football Texas Tech at West Virginia. From Milan Puskar Stadium in Morgantown, W.V. (N) (Live)
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Strangest Weather on Earth
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Weekends With Alex Witt
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Melissa Harris-Perry (N)
Weekends With Alex Witt (N)
Caught on Camera
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New Day Saturday (N)
New Day Saturday (N)
Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell CNN Newsroom
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CNN Newsroom
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Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell HLN Weekend Express
Forensic File Forensic File CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
(6:00) FOX and Friends Saturday (N)
Bulls & Bears Business
Forbes/FOX Cashin’ In (N) Bob Massi Is Jour.
America’s News Headquarters (N)
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America the Story of Us ’ Killing Zone Atlantic Battle of the Atlantic. ’ Å
WWII In HD: The Air War ’ Å
Third Reich “The Rise” A look at the rise of Nazi Germany.
Third Reich: The Fall ’ Å
Football
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Road Spill
Road Spill
Road Spill
Road Spill
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
››› “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) George Clooney, Matt Damon. ’ Å
››› “Ocean’s Thirteen” (2007) George Clooney, Brad Pitt. ’ Å
››› “The Patriot” (2000, War) Mel Gibson, Heath Ledger, Joely Richardson. ’ Å
››› “Air Force One”
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Alaskan Bush People Å
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
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Southern Justice
Southern Justice
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
When Vacations Attack
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Expedition Unknown Å
Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Best- Made Guy’s, Bite Barbecue
Southern
Trisha’s Sou. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse The Kitchen (N)
P. Heaton
Valerie Home Holiday Baking
Chopped
Chopped Junior
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
My Cat From Hell “Bitten”
My Cat From Hell
To Be Announced
››› “A Boy Named Charlie Brown” (1969, Comedy)
››› “Holes” (2003, Adventure) Sigourney Weaver, Jon Voight.
››› “Casper” (1995) Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman.
››› “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” (2005) Johnny Depp.
Sofia
Mickey
Never Land Tmrrwland
Jessie Å
Austin & Ally Bunk’d ’
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Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
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Girl Meets
Girl Meets
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Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence
Clarence
Gumball
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Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud (:36) Reba ’ (:12) Reba “Sister Act” ’
(10:48) Reba (:24) Reba ’ Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman ››› “Shanghai Knights” (2003) Jackie Chan. Premiere. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “Godzilla” (1998, Science Fiction) Matthew Broderick, Jean Reno. ‘PG-13’ Å
(6:00) “The White Angel”
››› “The Prowler” (1951, Suspense) Van Heflin. Å
Batman
›› “Live Wires” (1946) Leo Gorcey. Å
››› “Love Crazy” (1941) William Powell.
(:45) ››› “The Producers” (1968) Zero Mostel. Å
36 Hours Å
“All I Want for Christmas” “Hats Off to Christmas!” (2013) Haylie Duff, Antonio Cupo. “Naughty or Nice” (2012) Hilarie Burton, Gabriel Tigerman. “The Christmas Parade” (2014) AnnaLynne McCord.
“’Tis the Season for Love” (2015) Sarah Lancaster.
Paid Program Paid Program ›› “Booty Call” (1997, Comedy) Jamie Foxx. Å
Fix My Mom
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
(:45) Sex and the City Å
Sex-City
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Million Dollar LA
Million Dollar LA
Million Dollar LA
Below Deck
Below Deck
Après Ski
Paid Program Paid Program › “An American Werewolf in Paris” (1997, Horror) Å
››› “GoldenEye” (1995) Pierce Brosnan. A weapon’s theft sends Agent 007 to Russia.
›› “The World Is Not Enough” (1999, Action) Pierce Brosnan. Å
Casino R
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Paid Program Paid Program Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue “Twin vs. Twin” Bar Rescue ’
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Cops Å
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
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Paid Program Com. Central (:18) Archer (8:50) Archer (:22) Archer (9:54) Archer (:26) Archer (10:56) Archer (:26) Archer (11:56) Archer (:29) Archer (:02) Archer (:35) Archer (:08) Archer (:41) Archer (:14) Archer “Coyote Lovely”
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VH1 Plus Music ’
VH1 Plus Music ’
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The 20 (N) ’ (Part 2 of 2)
››› “Back to the Future” (1985) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd. ’
(:40) ››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989) Michael J. Fox. ’
CMT Music ’
CMT Music ’
Hot 20 Countdown “From the CMA Awards” The 20 best videos of the week. (N) Å
I Love Kellie I Love Kellie ››› “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Bill Pullman.
Footloose
Paid Program Peter Popoff › “How to Be a Player” (1997) Bill Bellamy, Natalie Desselle. Å
›› “Deliver Us From Eva” (2003, Romance-Comedy) LL Cool J, Gabrielle Union. Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
To Be Announced
Survivorman “Arctic” Å
Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman “Lost at Sea”
Survivorman “Mountain” ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Book TV ’
In Depth “Walter Williams” ’
BookTV in Sacramento, CA (N) ’
Soda Politics (:15) Michael Weiss on ISIS National Press Club
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Farm Bureau Worship Hour Pastor Chris Law & Order: SVU
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Law & Order: SVU
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Yo-Kai Watch Yo-Kai Watch Ultimate
Star-Rebels Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb (:45) Phineas and Ferb “Star Wars” Å
Droid Tales Droid Tales
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
Newlywed
The Chase Å
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Chain Rea.
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Sinful Sweets Siba’s Table Simply Ba.
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Paid Program Paid Program Medicare
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent
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Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
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Cándido
Cándido
Hotel Todo
Hotel Todo
Chespirito
Chespirito
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Chapulín
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Pagado
Raggs ’
Noodle
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LazyTown ’ Pagado
Pagado
Pagado
Criss Angel SOS: Salva Mi Casa (SS)
› “Primeval” (2007, Suspenso) Dominic Purcell. ’ (SS)
“The Forbidden Kingdom”
Pagado
Pagado
Pocoyo (SS) Sesame
Mickey
Mickey
Handy Manny Handy Manny Pagado
Pagado
Netas Divinas
LAnzate!
Roxanna
Premier
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Premier
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Premier
NASCAR Racing
NASCAR
NASCAR Racing
College Football
Addicted Heroin addict. ’
Addicted “Anne & Michael”
Addicted “Josh” ’ Å
My Addiction My Addiction My Addiction My Addiction My Strange Addiction Å
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
4:30
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5:30
NOVEMBER 7, 2015
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
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Bless Lord
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Billy Graham 97th Birthday Special
Precious Memories
In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour Power: Schuller
Graham Classic Crusades ››› “Love’s Long Journey” (2005)
The Visitor
Game
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First Baptist Church
Around Town Around Town
Around Town Around Town
››› “Troy” (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana. Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War.
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Big Bang
Big Bang
NC9 First at 2 Broke Girls Two Men
Two Men
TMZ (N) ’ Å
Healing ADD With-Amen
Europe
Yanni: World Without Borders ’ Å
Aging Backwards-M. Esmonde-White
Trans Siberian Orchesta
Dr. Fuhrman’s End Dieting Forever! ’ Å
JJ Virgin’s Sugar Impact
Sid Roth’s
Amer. Gos. Gospel Music Huch
Jewish Jesus Israel News “The Good Book” (2014, Drama) Jenn Gotzon, BK Bomar.
Kenneth W. Jay Sekulow In Touch W/Charles Stanley Perry Stone Green Room Hillsong TV Joel Osteen
(3:30) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
News
Outdoorsman College Football Minnesota at Ohio State. From Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. (N) (Live) Å
News
Wheel
Jeopardy! ’
Hometime
Tennessee
Weekend
Southern
Classic Gospel ’ Å
Wait for God Wait for God Keeping Up Keeping Up As Time...
As Time...
Call the Midwife ’ Å
Music
Underground Austin City Limits (N) Å
››› “Best Seller” (1987) James Woods. Å
››› “Rush” (1991, Drama) Jason Patric. Å
››› “The Devil’s Own” (1997) Harrison Ford. Å
›› “Mr. Brooks” (2007, Suspense) Kevin Costner, Demi Moore. Å
Blood Simple
(3:30) College Football Arkansas at Mississippi. (N) (Live) Å
Paid Program Paid Program College Football LSU at Alabama. From Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (N)
News
Titans All
Paid Program Paid Program
(3:00) Philosophy: Beauty
Clever Creations By-Greiner Computers & Tablets
Great Gifts
Computers & Tablets
Our Best Black Friday “A Month of Holiday Deals”
Dyson: Designs for Living
Washington This Week ’
Communicat Washington Landmark Cases ’
Washington Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “In the Box” ’ Blue Bloods “Bad Company” ›› “Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason” (2004) Å
Electronic Gifts (N)
Electronic Gifts (N)
Signature Club A-Adrienne Signature Club A-Adrienne Aetna Making Sense
Teeter Hang Ups by Roger Electronic Gifts (N)
Electronic Gifts (N)
Keith Urban’s 2nd
Kardashian
Kardashian
› “Big Momma’s House 2” (2006) Martin Lawrence. Å
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence. Å
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence. Å
› “Big Momma’s House 2”
Bomb Patrol Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan
›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008) Keanu Reeves. Å
(9:50) ›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008) Å
Car-Year
Car-Year
“The Surrogate” (2013, Suspense) Cameron Mathison. Å
“Til Death Do Us Part” (2014) Haylie Duff, Ty Olsson. Å
Movie
(:02) ›› “A Deadly Adoption” (2015) Will Ferrell. Å
(12:02) Movie
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Friends ’
Friends ’
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Big Bang
Billy-Street Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
›› “Lottery Ticket” (2010, Comedy) Bow Wow. Å
(3:30) ›› “All About the Benjamins” Å
›› “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. Å (DVS)
›› “The Fast and the Furious” (2001, Action) Vin Diesel.
›› “Bad Boys II” (2003, Action) Martin Lawrence, Will Smith, Jordi Mollà. Å (DVS)
NCIS “Bulletproof” ’
NCIS “Dressed to Kill” ’
NCIS ’ Å (DVS)
NCIS “Crescent City”
NCIS “Crescent City: Part II” NCIS “Page Not Found” ’
NCIS “Alleged” ’
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
›› “Real Steel” (2011, Action) Hugh Jackman, Evangeline Lilly, Dakota Goyo.
››› “Captain Phillips” (2013, Docudrama) Tom Hanks, Catherine Keener.
››› “Captain Phillips” (2013, Docudrama) Tom Hanks, Catherine Keener.
(3:30) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å
Score
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å
(3:30) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å
Score
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Å
(3:00) College Football Virginia at Miami. (N) (Live)
Driven
Snapshot
Predators
NHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Nashville Predators. (N) (Live)
Postgame
College Field Hockey
College Football
College Football South Carolina at Tennessee. From Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn.
SEC Now (N) College Football Auburn at Texas A&M. From Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (N)
SEC Now (N) (Live)
SEC Now
SEC Now
PGA Golf
PGA Tour Golf
Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Sanderson Farms Championship, Third Round.
PGA Tour Golf WGC-HSBC Champions, Final Round. (N) (Live)
(3:30) College Football Arizona State at Washington State. (N) (Live) Å
UFC Prefight Show (N) (Live) UFC Fight Night Belfort vs. Henderson - Prelims. (N) Å
UFC Fight Night Belfort vs. Henderson. (N) (Live) Å
(3:30) College Football Marshall at Middle Tennessee State. (N) (Live)
Hawks Live! NBA Basketball Washington Wizards at Atlanta Hawks. (Live)
Hawks Live! SportsMoney NBA Basketball Washington Wizards at Atlanta Hawks.
Strangest Weather on Earth Strangest Weather on Earth Tornado Alley Å
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
Secrets of the Earth
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Medicare
Paid Program Paid Program Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Caught on Camera
Buried Secrets
I Married the Beltway Sniper
Chasing the Devil
Lockup: Raw (N)
Lockup
Lockup
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
Smerconish
CNN Special Report
››› “Glen Campbell... I’ll Be Me” (2014, Documentary)
››› “Glen Campbell... I’ll Be Me” (2014, Documentary)
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Smerconish
CNN Special Report
››› “Glen Campbell... I’ll Be Me” (2014, Documentary)
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Anthony Bourdain Parts
America’s News HQ
The Five
America’s News HQ
FOX Report (N)
Stossel
Justice With Judge Jeanine The Greg Gutfeld Show
Red Eye With Tom Shillue Justice With Judge Jeanine
The World Wars A global war is ignited. Å
The World Wars Tension simmers throughout the world.
The World Wars War breaks out again under new leaders.
The Liberators
(:03) American Pickers ’
(12:01) The World Wars
truTV Top Funniest
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
(3:00) ››› “Air Force One” (1997) Å
››› “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) George Clooney, Matt Damon. ’ Å
Movie ’
(:01) Nightwatch ’ Å
(:02) Nightwatch ’ Å
(12:01) Movie ’
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
To Be Announced
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Drugs, Inc. “Super Meth”
Drugs, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Drugs, Inc.
Underworld, Inc.
Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Ghost Adventures Embarking on a quest into Deadwood.
Ghost Adventures Å
Ghost Adventures (N) Å
Dead Files Revisited (N)
The Dead Files Å
Ghost Adventures Å
Chopped (Part 3 of 4)
Restaurant: Impossible
Cutthroat Kitchen
Diners, Drive BBQ Blitz
Unwrap2.0
Unwrap2.0
Holiday Baking
Holiday Baking
Holiday Baking
Holiday Baking
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Desperate
Desperate
Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers: Buying House Hunters International Hunters
Hunters Int’l Property Brothers: Buying
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet (N) ’
To Be Announced
(:02) Pit Bulls and Parolees (:04) Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet ’ Pit Bulls and Parolees ’
›› “Mars Needs Moms” (2011) Voices of Seth Green.
›› “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” (2009) Premiere.
››› “Tangled” (2010) Voices of Mandy Moore.
(:10) ››› “Sleeping Beauty” (1959, Fantasy) Bill Shirley
› “The Smurfs” (2011)
Jessie Å
Jessie Å
Best Friends Best Friends Best Friends Bunk’d Å
K.C. Undercover ’ Å
“Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl”
Mighty Med Kirby Buckets Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
SpongeBob SpongeBob Game Shakers “Sky Whale” Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger Game
100 Things Thundermans Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:33) Friends
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Movie
Dragon Ball Z King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Dragon Ball Z Akame
Reba Å
Reba Å
Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne
Roseanne
Instant Mom Instant Mom Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
›› “Out for Justice” (1991) Steven Seagal. ‘R’ Å
›› “Hard to Kill” (1990, Action) Steven Seagal. ‘R’ Å
› “Max Payne” (2008) Mark Wahlberg. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “Conan the Barbarian” (2011) Jason Momoa. Premiere. ‘R’ Å
››› 300
(3:30) ››› “36 Hours” (1964) Å
(:45) ›› “The Last of Sheila” (1973) James Coburn, Dyan Cannon. Å
››› “Norma Rae” (1979) Sally Field, Ron Leibman. Å
(:15) ›› “Marie: A True Story” (1985) Sissy Spacek.
“Blossoms in the Dust”
“Help for the Holidays” (2012) Summer Glau, Eva La Rue. “Let It Snow” (2013) Candace Cameron Bure, Jesse Hutch. “Ice Sculpture Christmas” (2015) Rachel Boston. Premiere. “Matchmaker Santa” (2012, Romance) Lacey Chabert.
“Hats Off to Christmas!”
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
(:25) ›› “He’s Just Not That Into You” (2009) Ben Affleck. Å
›› “He’s Just Not That Into You” (2009) Ben Affleck. Å
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
(12:14) Sex and the City ’
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Vanderpump Rules
››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph.
› “I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry” (2007) Adam Sandler.
(3:30) ››› “Casino Royale” (2006) Daniel Craig, Eva Green. Å
››› “The Fifth Element” (1997) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman. Å
›› “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid. Å
›› “Timeline” (2003) Paul Walker. Å
Cops Å
Cops ’
Cops Å
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops (N) ’ Cops Å
Vegas
Jail ’ Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
››› “Gladiator” (2000) Russell Crowe. ’
(3:46) Archer (:18) Archer (4:50) Archer (:21) Archer (5:52) Archer (:24) Archer (6:56) Archer (:28) Archer Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
Archer Å
(:32) Archer
(3:05) ›› “What’s Your Number?” (2011) Anna Faris.
Are You the One? ’
››› “8 Mile” (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger. ’
› “21 and Over” (2013) Miles Teller. Premiere. ’
South Park South Park South Park
Back-II
(:20) ››› “Back to the Future Part III” (1990) Michael J. Fox. ’
›› “Tower Heist” (2011, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy. ’
›› “Nothing to Lose” (1997) Martin Lawrence, Tim Robbins. ’
›› “Peeples” (2013)
(3:30) ›› “Footloose” (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon. Å
››› “Jerry Maguire” (1996, Romance-Comedy) Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding Jr.
›› “Where the Heart Is” (2000, Comedy-Drama) Natalie Portman, Ashley Judd. Å
I Love Kellie I Love Kellie
Martin Å
Martin Å
Martin Å
›› “Roll Bounce” (2005, Comedy-Drama) Bow Wow, Chi McBride.
›› “Madea’s Family Reunion” (2006) Tyler Perry, Blair Underwood.
›› “Deliver Us From Eva” (2003) LL Cool J, Gabrielle Union. Å
Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman “Arctic Tundra” Survivorman “African Plains” Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman “South Pacific” Survivorman ’ Å
Survivorman (N) ’ Å
Survivorman “South Pacific” Survivorman ’ Å
(:01) Book TV ’
After Words ’
On the Brink ’
Book TV ’
Web of Faith 2.0 Å
Bridegrm
Bookmark
Worth Living Heroic Media Mother Angelica Live
Pius XII: Under The Roman Sky
Living Right With Dr. Ray
Russia’s Catholics
Daily Mass - Olam
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Droid Tales Droid Tales Droid Tales Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Pickle-Peanut Gravity Falls Ultimate
Guardians
Star-Rebels Pickle-Peanut Gravity Falls Ultimate
Guardians
Star-Rebels
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest Å
Idiotest Å
Chain Rea.
Chain Rea.
MasterChef Canada ’
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Unique
Sugar
Cutthroat Kitchen
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order “Navy Blues”
Law & Order “Harvest” ’
Law & Order “Nullification”
Law & Order ’ Å
Law & Order “Blood” Å
Law & Order “Shadow” ’
Law & Order “Burned” ’
Law & Order “Ritual” Å
Chapulín
El Chavo
El Chavo
El Chavo
La Rosa de Guadalupe
Como Dice el Dicho (SS)
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
35 y Soltera
Ellas Son...La Alegría Del
“The Forbidden Kingdom” Noticiero Tel. Videos Asom. Se Anunciará ’ (SS)
·Qué Noche! con Angélica y Raúl ’ (SS)
››› “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” (2011) ’ (SS)
T. Telemundo Videos Asom. Decisiones Extremas (SS)
(3:55) La Banda
P. Luche
Noticiero
Fútbol Mexicano Primera División: Azul vs Toluca
Sabadazo
P. Luche
Noticiero
Estrellados (N) (SS)
(3:00) College Football Richmond at New Hampshire. (N) ’ (Live)
College Hockey Minnesota at Notre Dame. (N) ’ (Live)
Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. (N) ’ (Live)
Premier League Match of the Day ’
Save My Life: Boston
Save My Life: Boston
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’
Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’
Sex in Public Sex in Public Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’
Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’
20—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
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AmAndA CAntrell, left, a geoscience collections manager at the New Mexico Museum of Natural
History and Science, looks at the museum’s latest find with docent Dick Yeck before a public unveiling
in Albuquerque, N.M., on Thursday. The baby Pentaceratops skull on display in the museum’s preparation room, is the first ever to be discovered.
N.M. museum unveils rare fossil find
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —
Paleontologists with the New
Mexico Museum of Natural
History and Science on
Thursday unveiled the first baby
Pentaceratops skull ever discovered as hundreds of people lined
up to get a look.
Scientists had cut open the
giant plaster jacket that protected the skull as it was airlifted
out of the desert badlands of
northwestern New Mexico and
trucked to the museum.
They revealed the shield-like
part of the dinosaur’s skull,
some teeth, an arm bone, a rib
and what looked like a vertebrae, but museum curator
Spencer Lucas said there’s still
much work to be done.
Now, technicians will begin
the painstaking work of digging
out the fossils from the rock in
which they have been encased
for some 70 million years.
The process will take many
months, but the public will be
able to watch from windows that
offer a view into the museum’s
preparation room.
Hundreds of people, including
parents with their children,
lined up along the windows during a free public viewing
Thursday evening. Some children were able to get an up-close
look as museum staff showed off
the find, while other visitors held
up their smartphones on the
other side of the glass.
Lucas said the fossils are significant and sure to provide new
insight into the rhinoceros-like,
plant-eating dinosaurs that
roamed North America tens of
millions of years ago.
Less
than
10
adult
Pentaceratops skulls have been
unearthed over the past century, and this marks the first baby
skull to ever be recovered, Lucas
said.
“So here now we have the first
glimpse at growth and the early
stages of life of this dinosaur,”
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE
Default having been made in the payment of the
debts and obligations described in and secured by a
certain Deed of Trust executed by MARVIN A.
KASSNER and wife, NONA KASSNER to William H.
Curtis, Trustee, recorded November 13, 2008 in
Bradley County Register's Office at Book 1871,
Page 882, Inst#08017144, and the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust is owned by CARRINGTON
MORTGAGE SERVICES, LLC, and the undersigned
having been appointed Successor Trustee by instrument recorded in said Register’s Office, this is notice that the undersigned will on December 8, 2015
at 1:00 PM local time, at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee will proceed to sell at
public outcry to the highest and best bidder for
cash the following property located in Bradley
County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call
bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and
encumbrances of record.
Described property is located in the 2nd Civil District of Bradley County, Tennessee, on Banther
Road,
and
assigned
Tax
Map/Parcel
No.
055-019.07, as shown by survey of Jimmy L. Richmond, Tennessee License No. 917, Richmond Surveying Company, Cleveland, Tennessee, dated 1
March 2002. Being the same property conveyed to
Marvin A. Kassner and wife, Nona Kassner by Warranty Deed dated November 7, 2008 and recorded
in Book 1871, Page 880, in the said Register’s Office.
Property Address: 905 Banther Road, McDonald, TN
37353
TAX ID: 055 019.07 000
Current Owner(s) of Property: MARVIN A. KASSNER
and wife, NONA KASSNER
The street address of the above described property
is believed to be 905 Banther Road, McDonald, TN
37353 but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the
event of any discrepancy, the legal description referenced herein shall control.
SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION.
If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A.
35-5-117 have been met.
Other Interested Parties: None
All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said
Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good,
but the undersigned will sell and convey only as
Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn
the sale to another day, time and place certain
without further publication, upon announcement of
the time and place for the sale set forth above. If
you purchase the property at the foreclosure sale,
the entire purchase price is due and payable at the
conclusion of the auction in the form of certified
bank check made payable to Solomon Baggett, LLC
Escrow Account. No personal checks will be accepted. You must bring sufficient funds to outbid
the lender and any other bidders. Insufficient funds
will not be accepted. Amounts received in excess of
the winning bid will be refunded to the successful
purchaser at the time the foreclosure deed is delivered. This property is being sold with the express
reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation
by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded
by the Substitute Trustee at any time.
THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR
AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
Robert J. Solomon
Substitute Trustee
Solomon | Baggett, LLC
40 Technology Parkway South, Suite 202
Norcross, Georgia 30092
(678) 243-2512
Our File No. CMS.00994
11/6/15; 11/13/15; and 11/20/15
November 6, 13, 20, 2015
he said.
Experts say Pentaceratops
was one of the largest, if not the
largest horned dinosaur that
ever lived. It could be up to 27
feet long and weigh 5 tons or
more.
Paleontologists
suspect
Pentaceratops may have used
its five horns for defense.
Evidence also suggests the
horns and the shield-like part of
the skull could have been used
to attract mates.
The remains of the young
Pentaceratops appear to have
been washed through a
streambed, as some of the
skeleton has fallen apart. But
how the animal met its demise
is up for investigation, scientists
said.
Muddy conditions last week
prevented the team from transporting the plaster jacket that
contained the remainder of the
baby’s skeleton. That will happen later.
!
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LEGAL PUBLICATION
FORECLOSURE NOTICE
DEFAULT having been made in the terms, conditions and payment provided for in a certain note
dated May 7, 2010 executed by Christopher Justin
Davis and Courtney Ann Crick, the owner and
holder of said note having declared the entire unpaid principal balance of said note, together with
all accrued and unpaid interest, due and payable, as
provided in said note, which note is mentioned in
and secured by a certain deed of trust dated May 7,
2010 executed by Christopher Justin Davis and
Courtney Ann Crick, unto David S. Humbard, of record in Deed Book 1971, Page 690, and unto Robert
G. Norred Jr. appointed successor Trustee by instrument of record in Book 2331, page 561, of the
Register's Office of Bradley County, Tennessee,
conveying the real estate therein and hereinafter
described:
NOW, THEREFORE, the undersigned Robert G.
Norred, Jr., Successor Trustee under said deed of
trust, having been requested so to do by the said
holder and owner of said note, and by virtue of the
power and authority vested in the undersigned by
the aforesaid deed of trust, hereby gives notice that
he will on November 30, 2015, at 12:00 o'clock
Noon at the door of the Bradley County Courthouse
in Cleveland, Tennessee, sell the real estate conveyed by the aforesaid deed of trust and hereinafter
described to the highest bidder for cash and free
from the equity of redemption, homestead, dower
and all other exemptions of every kind, which are
expressly waived by the terms of said deed of trust,
the following described real estate situated in Bradley County, Tennessee, with a street address of
2613 Lynda Circle, S.E., Cleveland, Bradley County,
TN 37323, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
LOTS
TWENTY-FIVE
(25),
TWENTY-SIX
(26),
TWENTY-SEVEN (27) AND TWENTY- EIGHT (28) in
BLOCK “A” of the CARL WATTENBARGER SUBDIVISION a plat of which is recorded in the Register’s
Office for said County in Plat Book 2, page 41.
Said LOTS lie in one body and together are more
particularly described as BEGINNING in the West
line of Lynda Street, 100 feet South of where said
line of said Street intersects the South line of Rodney Drive, on the Southeast corner of Lot 29 in said
Block, and running thence with said line of said
Street, South 3º 53’ West, 100 feet to the Northeast
corner of Lot 24 in said Block; thence with the
North line of said Lot 24, South 88º 33’ West, 150
feet to the Southeast corner of Lot 9, in said Block;
thence with the East lines of Lots 9, 10, 11 and 12
in said Block, North 3º 53’ East, 100 feet to the
Southwest corner of said Lot 29; thence with the
South line of said Lot 29, North 88º 33’ East, 150
feet to the beginning as shown by survey of Neal
Sanders dated December 4, 1970 dwg. No. 3008.
Subject to restrictions of record in MB 35, page 71
as amended by instrument of record in MB 39, page
353, ROBCT.
Other interested parties include Courtney Crick,
who was a potential transferee of the property by
the Juvenile Court of Bradley County Custody Order recorded at Book 2330, Page 949 in the Bradley
County Register’s Office. While there are the known
interested parties, this notice is provided to all
other persons or entities who have a claim against
debtors or the property described.
Said sale will be made subject to all existing highway, roadway and utility easements; applicable
building and zoning regulations; such state of facts
as an accurate survey would disclose; to all unpaid
taxes and mechanics' and materialmen's liens; and
real estate taxes. Said trustee reserves the right to
postpone or reschedule sale date and time in his
discretion.
DATED at Cleveland, Tennessee, this the 30th day
of October, 2015.
_______________________________________
ROBERT G. NORRED, JR., Successor Trustee
November 6, 13, 20, 2015
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LEGAL PUBLICATION
PUBLIC AUCTION
Court Ordered Property Sale
Saturday, November 14, 2015
At 10:00 A.M.
On the premises in Bradley County
2670 Woodland Drive SE, Cleveland TN
In compliance with the Orders of the Chancery
Court of Bradley County, Tennessee entered on
July 15, 2015, Estate of Dorothy Weiner, Chancery
Court Docket P-92-036, the following property located in Bradley County, TN will be sold to the
highest bidder.
The property to be sold is known as 2670 Woodland Drive SE, Cleveland, TN and referenced by
Tax Map 065 F, Group E, Parcel 013.00 to wit being:
LOCATED IN THE THIRD WARD OF THE CITY OF
CLEVELAND AND IN THE FOURTH CIVIL DISTRICT
OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE:
Lots One Hundred Seven (107) and One Hundred
Eight (108), SOUTH GATE SUBDIVISION, as shown
by plat of record in Plat Book 2, Page 62, in the
Register's Office for Bradley County, Tennessee.
Being the same real estate conveyed to Alan R. Jarman and wife, Paula J. Jarman by deed dated July
20, 1988 and recorded in Deed Book 315, page 76,
in the said Register's Office.
SUBJECT to restrictive convenants as set out in instrument recorded in Misc. Book 33, page 389, in
the said Register's Office.
SUBJECT to any governmental zoning and subdivision ordinances or regulations in effect thereon.
The sale shall be subject to confirmation by the
Court. The purchaser shall receive a Clerk's Deed
from the Clerk and Master upon payment of the
sale price balance due after confirmation.
The terms of the sale are ten percent (10%) of the
purchase price to be paid the day of the sale by
cash, (cash, cashier's check, or personal check with
blank letter of guaranty) with the balance to be paid
upon deliver of the Clerk & Master's Deed.
The ten percent (10%) deposit shall be retained as
liquidated damages in the even the highest bidder
is unable to comply with the terms of the sale.
The property is being sold in bar of redemption and
"as is" without warranties of title or seisin. All parties wishing to bid must register and receive a bidder number prior to the announced time for the
start of the sale.
The final terms will be announced prior to the sale
and all terms and conditions announced at the sale
shall take precedence over any prior representations.
Sarah E. Coleman, Clerk and Master.
October 23, 30, 2015; November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015—21
14. Want To Buy
18. Articles for Sale
30. Help Wanted - full Time
45. vacation Rentals
52. Sleeping Rooms
I BUY junk cars, trucks, motorcycles
from $150 up to $450 I will pick up.
Call Donny at 423-404-1488.
8' X 9' Garage door with hardware
and opener. $300 or best offer.
Left over after remodeling. local
call 423-299-4294
fEDEx GROUND Contractor
CDL Drivers Needed
Seeking experienced CDL Drivers
for local runs. Home every night.
Most loads are Drop and hook with
some live loads. Full and part time.
Very competitive pay. Minimum requirements: Class A CDL, double
and triple endorsement, No DUIs,
No moving violations or accidents
in the last 3 years. Minimum 1 year
experience within the past 3 years
or 5 years experience in the past
10 years. Must be safe and dependable. Contact James at
423-827-9463 before 10pm. E O E
BEAR PAW COTTAGES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
$149 PLUS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
46. Storage Space for Rent
EXTENDED STAY Suites. 550
square feet, furnished, cable, internet, utilities, kitchen. 423-584-6505.
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!!
NEED USED
423-595-4508.
Kitchen
cabinets.
15. Yard Sales
2023 HARLE AVENUE NW, Large
Yard Sale, Rain or Shine. Friday,
and Saturday, 8am-2pm.
BIG GAMERS SALE! Saturday &
Sunday 9am-5pm. Xbox 360s,
PS3s, Ds, Nintendo Gameboys.
Huge variety of games for: PS2s,
360s, ps3s, and much more! Get
your Christmas shopping done early
& save big this weekend! at the Big
Flea Market on 64 Highway, across
from Thomas Metal Supply.
GARAGE SALE: 3000 Tomahawk
Circle,
NW.
Furniture,
lamps,
clothes, collectables, much more.
Friday and Saturday 8am-?
HUGE 8 fAMILY YARD SALE
Don't miss this one!! 300 Belleview
Drive. Friday and Saturday, 8am-?
Off Dalton Pike, turn beside market
on right. Apple wireless keyboard,
2 car grilles- 1 Chevy and 1 GMC,
lamps, name brand purses, coffee
table, end tables, Wavemaster
portable training bag, Stereocaster
guitar and amps, Christmas decorations- inside and out, household
items, craft supplies, gaming chair,
floral pick machine, oak desk chair,
2 nice living room chairs, 2 ice
cream makers, VHS/ DVDs, orange plastic separation fence, 4
foot angel for decorating, girls
clothes size 4-5, lighted reindeersoutdoor set, clothes, shoes, just
can't list it all!! Don't miss out!! Do
your Christmas shopping here!!
Lots of new items.
BUSINESS CLOSING. Have 4 sets
of nice office furniture for sale. Can
be seen at 128 Market Street,
Charleston
MondayFriday
9am-4pm. 423-780-9871.
LOSE 30 lbs. in 30 days! Medical
doctors say the only way to lose
weight is to eat less and exercise
more.
Learn
how
to
avoid
weight-loss scams. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
PALLETS!!!
fREE WHILE THEY LAST!
Cleveland Daily Banner
19. Estate Sales
ESTATE SALE: 1748 Highland Avenue, November 7th through November 21st. 11am-7pm Sunday through
Friday and 9am-7pm Saturday.
Cash only please.
HUGE ESTATE of Barbara Fuchs,
November 7, 9am-4pm, Sunday
1pm-4pm Monday 10am-2pm. 91
pieces furniture, jewelry, art, treasures. 8438 Forest Breeze Drive,
Harrison,
TN
37341.
www.welchsantiques.com Welch's
Antiques & Estates, 423-304-6032.
28. Cemetery Lots for Sale
2 CEMETERY Lots for sale Sunset
Memorial Gardens in the Garden
Chapel area $1,000 for both
423-400-0786.
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
CAREGIVERS AT HOME is hiring
part- time caregivers or CNAs in
Bradley and Polk County. Apply online at www.cgathome.com or call
the office at 423-503-4851.
HUGE MOVING Sale, 3690 Willow
Oaks Circle NW in Summerfield subdivision off Freewill Road. Saturday,
9am-3pm.
NEEDED PART time cook American
Legion, Friday & Saturday evening
6:30pm to 10pm. Starting pay $8 per
hour. 423-476-4451 ask for Kim.
MOVING SALE Next Week! 103
Ravenwood Lane, Cleveland, TN
Friday, November 13th 8 am to 3 pm
Saturday, November 14th 9 am to
12noon. Dining room table, 2 leafs ,
6 chairs, china hutch. step ladder,
lawn mower, patio furniture, golf
clubs, fine china, collectibles, microwave, numerous household items.
NEEDING A sign holder for Capstone Finance at 2538 Keith Street
NW # 4. Part- time with 15- 20
hours weekly. Apply in person. No
phone calls please.
RAIN OR shine! Multi family sale:
Household items, Christmas decorations, glassware, toys, clothing, exercise equipment, books, more. You
won't believe this sale! Decluttering!
1675 Peach Orchard Hill Road, NE
37323, Charlie's Tires. Saturday
8am-?
SIX FAMILY garage sale: Saturday
8am-? Off Michigan Avenue Road
on private drive near Benton Pike
and Whirlpool parking lot. Furniture,
clothing, appliances, glass, tools.
30. Help Wanted - full Time
AIR CONDITIONING Sales Professional needed. Please call 336-5958
or
e-mail
resume
to
[email protected].
CARPENTER NEEDED full time,
need hand tools and transportation.
Call Chris 423 715-1596.
CHEMICAL TANK Driver CDL Class
A with Hazmat/ Tanker. Clean motor
vehicle record, 2 years driving experience. Tank experience preferred.
Call 423-364-3046.
CLERICAL HELP needed: Bookkeeping experience helpful. Apply in
person: Scott’s Furniture Company,
1650 South Lee Hwy, Cleveland.
DRIVERS: SE DEDICATED RUN
NC, SC, FL, GA, TN, MS, AL Areas. Home weekly/ full benefit
package 100 % no touch/ 75 %
drop & hook. CDL A with 1 year
experience 888-406-9046.
DUMP TRUCK Driver Full and Part
time available. Must have experience spreading rock and clean
driving record. Starting pay $16
hour. Must be able to work early
mornings
and
weekends.
423.580.1205 Hourly based on experience. CDL and Dump Truck
Experience.
EARN THOUSAND$ from home. Be
careful of work-at-home schemes.
Hidden costs can add up, and requirements may be unrealistic.
Learn how to avoid work-at-home
scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission. 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner
and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
* * Experienced Roofers Wanted
Accepting applications for commercial roofer/ foremen positions. Drug
Free Workplace, benefits, competitive pay. For more information
please call 865-408-0035 Monday–
Friday 8am to 4pm.
Clearing It All To The Bare Walls
HUGE YARD/WAREHOUSE SALE
Thursday-Saturday 8am-5pm
• RACKS
• DISPLAY CASES
• HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
• CLOTHING
Final Push To Clear The Building
Today’s Fashions
6878 NORTH LEE HIGHWAY - CLEVELAND
CASH ONLY PLEASE
FOWLERS CONSTRUCTION is
looking to hire a skilled carpenter,
Needs experience in drywall, tile,
hardwood flooring, framing and all
basic remodel/ new construction
skills. Must have a valid Driver’s license and have reliable transportation. Pay rate will be based on experience. Apply in person at 411 North
Congress Parkway Athens, TN
37303. 423-649-2961.
FULL TIME Grill Cook, Cleveland
423-355-2416.
GROWING BEDDING company
based in Cleveland looking for a delivery driver, must have an F- endorsement. Work every other Saturday. Please no phone calls, apply at
2401 Georgetown Road, 10am-5pm
or email resume to:
[email protected].
EXPERIENCED CAREGIVERS and
CNAs who are available to work
2nd, 3rd, or weekends. Please apply
in person at 60 25th Street NW #3,
in Cleveland. Monday- Friday from
11am-5pm.
NEEDING A caregiver for my parents in Cleveland. CNA and LPN experience is a must and reliability.
References required. Salary negotiable. Email contact information and
references to [email protected]
PALLET HANDLERS, General
Cleaners and Recyclers: Full time/
days or nights. Must maintain work
area and following all safety procedures, Monday- Friday and every
other weekend, $8.50 to start. Call
Jamie 423-598-0634.
SERVPRO IS looking to hire production technicians, must have a valid
drivers license, pass a back ground
check, and have reliable transportation. Apply in person at 411 North
Congress Parkway Athens, TN
423-745-4165. Specializing in Fire
and water cleanup. This is hard
physical labor.
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].
33. Business Opportunities
INvESTIGATE BEfORE
YOU INvEST!
Always a good policy, especially for
business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer
Affairs at (800) 342-8385 or the Federal Trade Commission at (877)
FTC-HELP for free information. Or
visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov
PROCESS MEDICAL claims from
home? Chances are you won’t make
any money. Find out how to spot a
medical billing scam. Call the Federal Trade Commission,
1-877-FTC-HELP.
A message from
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
Federal Trade Commission. Or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
34. Money To Lend
* LOANS up to $1,250 *
Quick Approval
423-476-5770
NEED CA$H fast but can’t get a
loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a
loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP to learn
how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. A message from Cleveland
Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit
our Web site at www.ftc.gov
40. General Services Offered
* GOT leaves? Call for removal
423-716-5259.
Prompt
service.
Reader's Choice Winner.
BOBCAT FOR Rent or Hire with
trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with
boxscrape
or
bushhog.
423-478-2724.
BOX TRAILERS, 40' goose neck
trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for
rent. 423-478-2724.
DANNY'S TREE SERVICE: Tree removal, shrubbery trimmed and
planted. Senior Discounts. 30 years
experience. 423-244-6676.
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.
NOW HIRING CAREGIVERS!
Are you a CNA or
experienced Caregiver?
HELPING PEOPLE,
CHANGING LIVES!
We are looking for Qualified Caregivers in your area!
Medical, Dental, Vision & Life Insurance available.
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
47. Business Property for
Rent
OFFICE/ RETAIL- Star Vue Square
7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly.
Owner/ Agent 423-987-9232.
48. Office Space for Rent
$1,600: LARGE 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath
home, large shade trees in Sullivan
Subdivision,
great
location.
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
$695: 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, hardwood,
tile, new carpet in bedrooms, new
paint, screened porch, big yard, NO
pets. PROVISION REAL ESTATE
AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT,
LLC 423-693-0301.
NORTH KEITH Street: First month
free rent with acceptable application
and paid deposit. Owner/ Agent
STONY
BROOKS
REALTY
423-479-4514.
OFFICE AVAILABLE. Multiple sizes,
423-991-4984.
OFFICE/ RETAIL 1,100 square feet,
large windows on North Ocoee
Street, $900 monthly, $400 deposit.
423-421-4079.
OffICE/ RETAIL Space Available,
short and long term lease. Several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
49. Apartments for Rent
$1,800: LUXURY Apartment, fully
furnished, utilities paid. Located on
quiet side street. Contact Jones
Properties 423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz
$600: 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, with
basement/ garage. 423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
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.
1722 NEW Castle Drive 2 bedroom
Townhouse, $875 monthly. Call
423-618-0823.
2 BEDROOM, 2.5 bath, living room,
kitchen, great location. Quiet area,
secluded street, close to all amenities. Approximately 1,600 square
feet, $975 monthly. Please call
210-316-3232.
2031 WYNWOOD- 2 bedroom, den,
living room, stove, refrigerator, water
furnished. $600 monthly, $275 deposit. No pets. Noon to 6pm call
423-310-0742.
BLYTHEWOOD- STEEPLECHASE
APARTMENTS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2
Bedroom ($429- $599). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
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
LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex,
cathedral ceiling in living room with
fireplace, large down stairs area with
patio, deck, large laundry room with
cabinets and sink, 2 car garage,
abundant kitchen cabinets with all
appliances,
$795
monthly.
423-339-3983.
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.
3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, totally remodeled, fenced in backyard. 3001
Clearwater Drive. BODAJO RENTALS LLC. 423-310-3046.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, small
kitchen, family room, living room,
laundry room. 22nd Street NE. $800
monthly, lease, deposit. No smoking/
No pets. 423-284-8448.
4 BEDROOM, 2 bath, bonus room, 2
car garage, NE, $1,350 monthly.
423-829-0447.
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE, 2 bedrooms,
1.5 bath, newly remodeled! $895
monthly. No pets/ No smoking.
Beautiful lot, 2 car garage, in town,
great location! 423-478-5868
COMPLETELY FURNISHED home
including utilities, 2 bedroom, 2 bath,
references and background check
required. $1,200 monthly, plus deposit, 423-595-7578.
COZY COTTAGE, $700 monthly,
Cleveland, exit 25, 3 bedroom,
washer/ dryer, off- street parking,
storage building. 423-472-3499.
56. Houses for Sale
NEW 3 bedroom, 2 bath house,
1723 square feet, with full unfinished
basement, just off 25th Street. Carpet, tile, laminate floors, granite in
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Herb Lacy Cell # 423-593-1508
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Century 21 first Choice Realtors
2075 Ocoee Street
478-2332
59. Mobile Homes for Sale
LIKE NEW! Mobile home with appliances. Must be moved by November
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423-339-0058.
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425 25th Street
LOOKING FOR
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Are You 62 Years or Older?
• Conveniently Located
• Activities Provided
• Utilities Included in Rent
North Cleveland
Towers
Call (423) 479-9639
1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311
Accepting
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Rent Based On Income
72. Cars for Sale
*Income Restrictions Apply
JUNK CARS, wrecked cars, trucks,
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50. Mobile Homes for Rent
• Forklift Operators
• Production Operators
APPLY IN PERSON AT:
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Visit our website for additional details
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2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, 2670 Strawhill
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COLLEGETOWN
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EQUAL HOUSING
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Monday
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Apply online at WWW.FHCSLLC.COM or Call 423-744-4674 Ask for Brandy
53. Houses for Rent
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22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, November 6, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
‘Happiness advantage’
over age 30 is vanishing
Clinton faces
tough question:
What to call
Bill if she wins
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hillary
Rodham Clinton is facing a question with global implications as
she seeks the White House: What
do you call the husband of a U.S.
president?
First man? First gentleman?
Funnyman Jimmy Kimmel
asked the Democratic presidential contender about that
quandary Thursday should her
husband, former President Bill
Clinton, become the official White
House spouse.
Appearing on “Jimmy Kimmel
Live,” she offered a couple of
ideas with a smile: “first dude”
and “first mate.”
“We have to really work on what
to call him,” she quipped.
Clinton could become the first
woman in charge of the White
House, and she said breaking
barriers has been on the former
president’s mind, too. She said
her husband has told her that
he’s determined to break the “iron
grip” that women have had on
being the spouse of a president.
Late-night comedy shows have
been a staple for presidential candidates for years, allowing them
to display a looser side for a
younger audience that might not
find time for a presidential
debate.
Kimmel wanted to know if Bill
Clinton would pick out the official
china pattern for the White
House, and a male sidekick
dressed in a pantsuit gently
ribbed Clinton for her signature
wardrobe choice.
Clinton maneuvered around a
question about the last time she
was drunk — “a long time ago” —
and didn’t appear to have much
sympathy for the struggling candidacy of Republican rival Jeb
Bush.
“It’s really hard to do this and
people’s campaigns change,” she
said. “You start with something,
that doesn’t necessarily mean
you’ll stick with it all the way.”
Clinton has been a favorite target of Donald Trump and other
Republican candidates, but she
told Kimmel the criticism is just
election-season noise. Actually,
Republicans like her, she said.
When she’s not on the ticket
“Republicans say nice things,”
Clinton told Kimmel.
“We have a long list of the nice
things Republicans have said
about me,” she added. “You may
be hearing more about it.”
She wasn’t necessarily kind in
return.
Clinton said watching the
Republicans debate left her
“being appalled and being
amused.”
“I disagree with a lot of what
they are saying,” she said. “I wish
they would actually address the
problems America is trying to
face.”
Carson might have
taken ‘different
approach’ on rap ad
MIAMI (AP) — Even Republican
presidential candidate Ben
Carson doesn’t seem to think his
campaign ad featuring rap lyrics
is the best idea.
Carson said Thursday he
“probably would have taken a little different approach,” when
asked about the new ad during
book-signing events in Miami and
Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
By Martha IrvIne
AP National Writer
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
COUNTRY SINGER Rachel Holder and her band perform during the second annual Alumni &
Friends Celebration hosted by Cleveland State Community College. The Birchwood native and
CSCC student has been taking part in a unique extracurricular activity — working to make her
mark on the Nashville music scene.
CSCC ALUMNI & FRIENDS
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
RACHEL HOLDER, a Cleveland State Community
College student and country artist signed to Curb
Records, goes for a high note during the college’s
Alumni & Friends Celebration on Thursday.
Down in polls, Christie at risk
of missing debate main stage
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Chris
Christie could be bumped from
the main stage at next week’s
GOP presidential debate, and
Bobby Jindal and George Pataki
risk being left out altogether.
They’re potential victims of poor
showings in national polling and
the way those surveys are being
used.
Fox Business is to announce
Thursday evening the candidates
who will appear on stage in
Milwaukee next Tuesday, a decision based on a selection of polls.
Should the line-ups change
from the party’s earlier debates, it
will further underscore concerns
about the pivotal role such surveys have played in shaping the
contest for the GOP nomination.
Statistically, there is no significant difference between candidates lumped together near the
bottom of the pack in national
polls, which typically have a margin of error of 3 percentage points
or more.
“I tell people, ‘Ignore the
national polls and just follow
those early states,’” said
Republican pollster Frank Luntz,
who argues early opinion surveys
are notoriously unreliable.
“Except that now national polls
drive the debates, and debates
drive the polling.”
According to debate criteria
issued by Fox last week, candidates must score 2.5 percent or
higher in an average of the four
most recent major polls conducted through Nov. 4 to be featured
in the prime-time debate.
After a Fox poll released
Wednesday evening, Christie’s
average stood at 2.25 percent in
recent surveys that the network
says meet its criteria. The exact
polls that will be used to determine who makes the cut have not
been announced, however, giving
the network some flexibility in
shaping the field.
Getting booted to the debate
undercard earlier in the evening
would be a major blow for the
New Jersey governor, whose
struggling
campaign
has
appeared to be on the cusp of an
upswing following strong debate
performances and good reviews
from New Hampshire, where he’s
been spending much of his time.
Space
From Page 18
two extra orbits around the Earth,
waiting for the sun to melt away
the ammonia crystals. He was
protected by his space suit, but
exposure to the ammonia would
have put his colleagues at risk if
he couldn’t clean himself off.
During the incident, Curbeam
said he put aside negative
thoughts to get to work.
“It wasn’t like, ‘I’m going to die,’”
he said. “It’s just that I have a job
to do. It’s all business.”
To a certain extent, the survival
skills give the astronaut a certain
cache, as Yi found out. As a young
scientist, she became the first
South Korean in space when she
flew on the space station in 2008.
She was a national hero back
home, but the Russians she flew
and trained with didn’t warm to a
young Korean woman joining their
club. She was just 29 at the time.
Her problems came during reentry, when a malfunction briefly
subjected her and crewmates to
eight times the force of gravity.
The simple act of pushing her
Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
DR. BILL SEYMOUR, president of
Cleveland State Community College,
welcomes guests to the second annual Alumni & Friends Celebration,
which took place Thursday night at the
Old Woolen Mill.
chest up and down to breathe
became difficult.
Back on Earth, a conservative
Russian military officer, his uniform bedecked with medals,
knocked on her door and wanted
to hear her story.
“He accepted me as one of his
colleagues after the accident,” she
said. “I thought, ‘that’s good, as
long as I survived.’”
She’s never told her mother
much about the incident, however, particularly after hearing that
mom fainted in fear while witnessing her takeoff.
“I just told my mom, ‘Mom, I’m
home. That’s enough. You don’t
have to know,’” said Yi, who lives
now in the Pacific Northwest. “For
her, I’m just a little girl.”
Curbeam’s family watched his
space walks back home and, naturally, were nervous.
“I’ve always told my mother that
I’m one of the few persons on
Earth where there are literally
thousands of people looking out
for my safety every time I go to
work,” he said.
The former astronauts all still
support the space program, and
bristle when confronted with people who wonder whether it’s worth
the expense. They saw the chance
to tell their stories as a way of
helping the program.
Set aside the dangerous incidents, and their stories of space
travel will bring out the excited kid
in anyone. They remember staring
out the windows of their vehicles
in wonder at all that passed by,
the unexpected colors and vast
amounts of non-twinkling stars.
Photos of Earth from space are
always lovely; imagine seeing it in
real time, with cloud formations
swirling above the surface.
“Everybody tells you it’s so captivating, that it’s 100 times better
than anything you’ve ever seen,”
Curbeam said. “They’re wrong. It’s
much better than that.”
—Online:
http://www.sciencechannel.co
m/
Christie also appears to have
struck a nerve with a video on the
pain of drug addiction that has
been viewed more than 5 million
times. While Christie has told the
story of a law school friend’s
deadly addiction to prescription
painkillers dozens of times at
town hall events, the video’s popularity underscores the unpredictable nature of a crowded race
in which minor slip-ups or breakthrough moments can quickly
change a candidate’s prospects.
During an appearance on Fox
News Thursday morning, Christie
seemed resigned to the fact that
he might be forced into an earlier
match-up that has been derisively referred to at times as the “kiddie table.”
Are you happy? Very happy? If
you’re in your 30s or older, a new
study has found that you’re less
likely to answer “yes” than your
parents were.
The findings, being published
online Thursday in the journal
Social
Psychological
and
Personality Science, come on the
heels of another recent report
that found that death rates of
middle-aged white Americans
have been rising, largely due to
suicide and substance abuse.
“Age is supposed to bring happiness and contentment. For that
not to be true anymore is somewhat shocking,” says Jean
Twenge, a professor at San Diego
State University who is the
study’s lead author. She also
wrote the book “Generation Me,”
a look at young adults and the
attitudes and influences that
have helped shape them.
Starting with data in the early
1970s, Twenge and her colleagues found that adults 30 and
older used to be happier than
younger adults and teens. But
that “happiness advantage” has
steadily declined as the older
adults have expressed less satisfaction with their lives and the
younger cohort has gotten a little
happier.
Other experts who study happiness say the findings fit with
their own research. They attribute the shift to everything from
growing financial pressures —
and what some call “economic
insecurity” — to the fact that real
life has been a rude awakening
for a generation of young adults
who were told they could do anything and are discovering that
often isn’t true.
Geena Kandel, a senior at
Washington University in St.
Louis, says she and her peers
already worry that even a good
college education won’t be
enough to help achieve what
their parents have. “It puts a lot
of pressure on people my age,”
the 21-year-old says.
Before you get too bummed
out, consider another finding of
the study: One in three of all
American adults still report being
“very happy.”
Twenge and her colleagues
found, for instance, that 30 percent of those in the 18- to 29year-old range gave that
response in the 2010s, compared
with 28 percent in the early
1970s.
There’s also been a notable
uptick in “very happy” teens. In
the 1970s, for instance, 19 percent of 12th graders chose that
response, compared with 23 percent in the 2010s.
Adults age 30 and older, however, have seen a five-percentagepoint drop, from 38 percent in
the early 1970s to 33 percent
today.
The findings — which are from
University of Chicago’s longstanding General Social Survey
and the University of Michigan’s
Monitoring the Future survey —
ring true for Emily Valdez, a 49year-old mom in Seattle.
“I thought that life would be
simpler,” she says. “My parents’
marriage, children, child-rearing
. just seemed - and still seems in
their eyes - less fraught with
indecision, second-guessing and
maybe just less insecurity.”
Some say the onslaught of
information at our fingertips
every day is one factor making us
feel overwhelmed.
“I think we are no longer keeping up with the Joneses but
rather keeping up with the
world,” says Satu Halpin, a 37year-old mother in Olympia,
Washington, who tunes out to
stay happier.
It is, of course, also impossible
to ignore the economic downturn
in the last decade. Shigehiro
Oishi, a researcher at the
University of Virginia, has documented a growing dissatisfaction
with the widening gap between
the wealthy and everyone else.
Others have linked unhappiness to “income insecurity.”
“The more competitive and
market-driven society becomes,
the more people are on their own
to survive and flourish, the more
insecure they are in their day-today lives, the more unequal
things become — quality of life
tends to decline,” says Benjamin
Radcliff, a professor of political
science at the University of Notre
Dame who has researched this
topic.
Twenge, the study’s author,
also said that, beyond income
factors, people who were single
parents, and presumably had
fewer social supports, said they
were less happy. She and her coauthors also speculated that
young people were less stressed
by economic factors until they hit
adulthood.
In addition, Tim Bono, a psychologist
at
Washington
University who teaches and studies happiness, thinks there’s
something to that “rude awakening” theory for his generation of
young adults.
A while back, the 32-year-old
professor came across a box of
school papers and other relics
from his past — worksheets,
assignments and notes sent
home that all reinforced “how
special I was and how I could
do anything I set my mind to.”
He also found many of the ribbons and trophies he’d received
as a kid, not only for winning
but for simply participating in
sports.
“My generation has been
bathed in messages of how great
we are and how anything is possible for us,” Bono says, noting
that that mindset can easily lead
to disappointment.
A 30-year-old father from
Texas, who served in the Army
before enrolling at the University
of Puget Sound in Washington,
Daniel Trapp says his life experience has helped him feel happier
than some of his peers, “despite
the stress that I have in my life.”
But he’s also noticed “a delay
in acceptance of an adult role”
from his fellow college students,
some of whom have chosen graduate school to avoid the working
world.
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