Douglas Cooperative on move with new county director. 8A BLOUNT COUNTY’S TUESDAY N E WS PA P E R OF November 18, 2014 A.J. Johnson Johnson, a senior linebacker from Gainesville, Ga., leads Tennessee and is second in the SEC in tackles with 101 through 10 games. RECORD SINCE Maryville, TN Lady Vols do battle with Oral Roberts. 1B 1883 $1.00 thedailytimes.com �Once we have all that appropriate information we will act in a very decisive manner, which we have proven over time to do here at the University of Tennessee.’ Michael Williams Williams, a redshirt cornerback from Laurel, Md., has made five starts this year and recorded 23 tackles. He also runs track for UT. Butch Jones, UT head football coach UT players suspended Vehicle burglaries continue to rise. 2A 2 arrested in purse snatching in Alcoa From Staff Reports Knoxville Police Department spokesman Darrell Debusk A Jefferson City couple were arrested on robbery charges in Alcoa Sunday after a wrestling match over a purse in a parking lot. Melissa Fern Ledford, 46, and Joshua Thomas Presley, 31, were arrested shortly before 6 p.m. Sunday by Alcoa Police Department. Both suspects were charged with a count of robbery; Presley was also charged with three counts of violation of probation. Louisville resident Tyronda Coffin told police that she was loading groceries into her car Sunday afternoon at the Food City on North Hall Road, when a woman grabbed her purse from her shopping cart. Coffin said she grabbed the purse, too, hoping to stop the theft. Reports said the two women struggled over the handbag, with Ledford pulling the purse in the direction of a Chevrolet Malibu. Finally wresting the purse from its owner, Ledford jumped into the passenger’s seat of the car, which was driven by a man. In another part of the Food City SEE PLAYERS, 5A SEE PURSE SNATCHING, 5A JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES TENNESSEE LINEBACKER A.J. JOHNSON (45) tries to tackle Kentucky running back Braylon Heard during the first quarter of Saturday’s 50-16 win over Kentucky. Johnson and Michael Williams are being investigated after an alleged sexual assault incident. Two being investigated after alleged sexual assault BY GRANT RAMEY [email protected] KNOXVILLE — Two Tennessee football players are being investigated after an alleged sexual assault incident over the weekend, Tennessee head coach Butch Jones and the Knoxville Police Department confirmed on Monday. The Tennessee football program’s Twitter account, @Vol_ Football, tweeted at 4 p.m. Monday that senior middle linebacker A.J. Johnson and redshirt sophomore cornerback Michael Williams had been suspended from “all team-related activities.” “I am aware of the alleged incident that occurred over this weekend,” Jones said Monday, during his regularly scheduled weekly press conference. “Right now we’re in the process of gathering all the information. “Once we have all that appropriate information we will act in a very decisive manner, which we have proven over time to do here at the University of Tennessee.” Johnson, a four-year starter at linebacker from Gainesville, Ga., leads Tennessee and is second in the Southeastern Conference in tackles, with 101 through 10 games. Williams, a former walk-on from Laurel, Md., who also runs track for Tennessee, has played in all 10 games this season, making five starts and recording 23 tackles. WNML-FM’s Jimmy Hyams reported two unnamed Tennessee football players were “involved in alleged rape Sunday at 2:57 a.m.” following a party at a football player’s apartment. Tennessee beat Kentucky, 50-16, Saturday night at Neyland Stadium. The Vols host Missouri at 7:30 p.m. this Saturday. TWO VICTIMS Doctor who died from Ebola endured delays BY JOSH FUNK AND NELSON LAMPE The Associated Press OMAHA, Neb. — A surgeon who contracted Ebola in his native Sierra Leone did not receive aggressive treatment until nearly two weeks after he first started showing symptoms — a delay that doctors said probably made it impossible for anyone to save his life. Dr. Martin Salia was in the 13th day of his illness when he reached Omaha on Blount Records . . . . 4A Bridge . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A Classified . . . . . . . . . 6B Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . 8B Saturday. He had waited three days to be formally diagnosed after an initial test for Ebola came back negative. He then waited five more days to be flown to the United States. By the time the 44-year-old Maryland man got to the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, the deadly virus had done too much damage, shutting down Salia’s kidneys and making breathing difficult, doctors said. He died Monday. Crossword . . . . . . . . . 9B Daily Calendar. . . . . 9A Dear Abby . . . . . . . . . 8A Deaths . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Football Contest . . 5B Horoscope . . . . . . . . 9B Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8A Money & Markets . 7A “In the very advanced stages, even the modern techniques we have at our disposal are not enough to help these patients once they reach a critical threshold,” said Dr. Jeffrey Gold, chancellor of the medical center. The virus has already killed more than 5,000 people in West Africa. UNITED METHODIST NEWS SERVICE | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Salia, who chose to work in his homeland despite more lucrative opportunities DR. MARTIN SALIA IS SEEN in April at the United Meth- Newsmakers . . . . . . 9B Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . 6A Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1B Sudoku . . . . . . . . . . . . 9B odist Church’s Kissy Hospital outside Freetown, Sierra SEE EBOLA, 5A Leone. Salia Monday died as a result of Ebola. Mostly sunny skies today High 29 | Low 17 30026651TDT Your Clear Choice Jack Raby Optical BRING US YOUR RX Buy first pair and get TFDPOEQBJSBUQSJDF *Insurance restrictions may apply. First pair must be complete purchase of frames and lenses. Second pair must be of equal or lesser value - Same day purchase and same RX. 4FSWJOH#MPVOU$PVOUZ4JODFt5IF#FTUJO4JHIU Get The Daily Times sent to your email box every day with a digital subscription at TheDailyTimes.com. 9B .0/%":'3*%": ".1. We are a LAB (JMM4U"MDPBt www.jackrabyoptical.com THE DAILY TIMES 2014 2A | BLOUNT COUNTY THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Weekend car burglaries hit city, county From staff reports Car burglaries continues to plague Blount County residents, with the Blount County Sheriff ’s Office reporting at least 16 breakins in the vicinity of the Highland Acres community Sunday morning. Maryville Police also reported answering a couple more such calls — a truck break-in on the Maryville College Campus and a $100 car battery stolen from the East Tennessee Human Resource Agency on Lamar Alexander Parkway. Maryville Police also answered several car burglary calls on Saturday evening and Sunday morning. Since September, rashes of car break-ins have taken place all over the county, including the Rock Gardens neighborhood in Alcoa; the Druid Hills area of Maryville; the Little Brook and Fox Trace subdivisions in Rockford. Most of the thefts have targeted unlocked cars, and most have netted fairly small returns, in the form of loose change and inexpensive personal items. The Highland Acres thefts followed the same pattern, with most victims reporting the loss of small sums of money, usually in the form of coins. Several reported that car doors or glove boxes had been left open, but that nothing was actually taken. There have been exceptions to the pattern, though. A Maryville man reported earlier in the weekend that two crossbows and some accessories, valued at more than $1,000, were missing from his truck, parked overnight outside his home on Leconte Drive. That crime harkened back to mid-October, when a spate of area break-ins included the theft of a $500 hunting bow from a pickup parked on Grant Avenue. And a couple of the past weekend’s reports involved vehicles that had been secured, but were forcibly entered. One respondent, a Maryville College student, said the lock on his truck was destroyed in thieves’ attempt to gain entry while it was parked outside the college’s Beason Hall. City police and Blount County Sheriff’s Department officials have said they are still looking into possible connections between these crimes. They believe some of the incidents are related, but the evidence isn’t definitive. BRIEF TV ’Millionaire’ sentenced in Y-12 extortion case KNOXVILLE — An East Tennessee man who appeared as “the Beverly Hillbilly” on television’s “The Millionaire Matchmaker” has been sentenced to three months in prison for trying to extort $2.5 million from a nuclear weapons plant. Prosecutors say Adam Winters in May emailed Babcock and Wilcox, the contractor operating the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge. In his email, Winters demanded money in exchange for 1,200 slides that he claimed would be damaging if released publicly. The email was THIS WEEK IN HISTORY Cash 3 Midday 6-6-5, Lucky Sum: 17 (six, six, five; Lucky Sum: seventeen) Sum: fourteen) Cash 4 Midday 0-6-7-9, Lucky Sum: 22 (zero, six, seven, nine; Lucky Sum: twenty-two) Cash 4 Morning 4-3-4-4 (four, three, four, four) Cash 3 Morning 4-1-3 (four, one, three) Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $35 million Cash 4 Evening 7-1-5-1, Lucky Sum: 14 (seven, one, five, one; Lucky Powerball Estimated jackpot: $60 million Blount County’s only daily newspaper, serving our readers since 1883. Your Life. Your Times. Vol. 71 No. 232 The Daily Times (USPS# 332-320) is published daily by Blount County Publishers LLC, 307 E. Harper Ave., Maryville, TN, 37804. Periodical postage paid at Maryville TN 37804. Send correspondence to: The Daily Times P.O. Box 9740 Maryville, TN, 37802-9740 BY ROBERT NORRIS [email protected] The Condry Building in downtown Maryville is under new ownership. David Shanks, of Shanks and Associates, purchased the three-story, brick office building from Ruby Tuesday Inc. The 14,400-square-foot building is located at 108 W. Church Ave. at the corner of Church Avenue and Cusick Street. The selling price was $725,000 for the 0.268-acre property. Shanks, a real estate and appraisal professional, said Monday that he closed on the deal Oct. 30. He intends to move his investment firm into the Condry and possibly lease out a floor. “We’ve had positive interest in the space because it’s the only Class A office in downtown with walkout access to the Greenbelt and Pistol Creek,” Shanks said. “I have to admit the mural on the rear wall is what originally attracted me to the building. Like many, an RC Cola and a Moon Pie were part of my childhood. Not sure I would’ve bought it otherwise.” �We’ve had positive interest in the space because it’s the only Class A office in downtown with walkout access to the Greenbelt and Pistol Creek.’ David Shanks of Shanks and Associates A cost restructuring of Ruby Tuesday Inc. has resulted in the company laying off employees at the Restaurant Support Center and selling off property assets. For years, the Condry Building housed Loveday Hardware, which was owned by Sam H. Loveday Jr. and John L. Loveday. Primo’s Gym was located there until Ruby Tuesday purchased the building in 1999. In the previous year, Ruby Tuesday had relocated its corporate head- quarters from Mobile, Ala., into a new building at 150 W. Church Ave. Ruby purchased the adjacent Condry Building because the new office was “bursting at the seams” as the company grew, Ruby founder and former CEO/Chairman Sandy Beall told The Daily Times at the time. Shanks said Ruby Tuesday did a complete renovation. “They pretty much gutted the building and rebuilt it into a Class A office. They do a class job, and took care of it for 15 years,” he said. The restoration earned a Bravo Award for Ruby Tuesday in 2002 for the new landscaping of the Condry Building. The award read: “This �old-timer’ stood on the corner in a �nobody loves me’ condition. It has had a �make over!’ The planting area is minimal, but illustrates how design, originality, color, appropriateness of plant material contribute to long term improvement to the site. These are criteria for our judging nominees. Plants incorporated in the design include cloeus, parsley, sweet potato vine, laurel, ornamental grass, hydrangea and magnolia. The Condry Building is proud again.” From Staff Reports also sent to the FBI’s Knoxville office and to Vice President Joe Biden. Prosecutors said the slides referred to showed nuclear testing. The 26-year-old from Robbins pleaded guilty to extortion in July and was sentenced on Monday. After his prison sentence, he will spend one year on probation. THE DAILY TIMES Ruby Tuesday sells Condry Building Clayton, Regal create endowment for academy From The Daily Times on Nov. 17, 1989: An Alcoa man was injured and was charged with driving while under the influence following a collision that came at the end of a high-speed chase on Wildwood Road. TENNESSEE LOTTERY NUMBERS Cash 3 Evening 3-9-7, Lucky Sum: 19 (three, nine, seven; Lucky Sum: nineteen) TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES THE CONDRY BUILDING at 108 W. Church Ave. in downtown Maryville has been sold by Ruby Tuesday Inc. The Clayton Family Foundation and Regal Foundation have partnered to create a $500,000 scholarship endowment for the Clayton-Bradley Academy. Innovative Education Partnership Inc., the governing board of Clayton-Bradley Academy, announced Wednesday the creation of the Clayton Regal Scholarship Endowment. The Regal Foundation pledged $250,000 to provide scholarship support for the private school’s students, and the Clayton Family Foundation matched the donation for a total endowment of $500,000. “From the beginning, our board has been focused on making this school as accessible as possible,” said Mary Bogert, IEP vice chairwoman, in a press release distributed Sunday night. “We have never thought of Clayton-Bradley Academy as a school for a privileged few. We want to be a resource for the community and as our purpose states: ignite the power of learning. As an independent school, we never want tuition to be a barrier for children who will thrive in this amazing educational setting.” Kevin Clayton, president Subscriptions: 981-1160 Paid-in-advance 7-day print delivery: Monthly (via auto draft): $12 13 weeks: $44 26 weeks: $81 52 weeks: $152 Electronic (E-edition) subscriptions: $5.95 per month Other subscription packages available CONTRIBUTED PHOTO MARY BOGERT, Innovative Education Partnership Inc. vice chairwoman, and Clayton-Bradley Academy Executive Director Pat Bradley address guests at Wednesday’s presentation. and CEO of Clayton Homes and director of Clayton Family Foundation, and Regal Entertainment Group CEO Amy Miles and President and COO Greg Dunn were recognized at the presentation. To commemorate the endowment gift, IEP board member Sarah Herron unveiled a customdesigned movie poster. “At Clayton-Bradley, when a student raises their hand, it isn’t about giving the teacher the correct answer because problems in the real world don’t always have one right answer. More often than not, there are several possibilities and exploring those ideas — in collaboration with others — that is innovation. And Clayton-Bradley is about Administration President: Gregg K. Jones Publisher: Carl Esposito 865-981-1137 [email protected] Executive Editor: Larry Aldridge 865-981-1115 [email protected] Managing Editor: Frank “Buzz” Trexler 865-981-1139 [email protected] Circulation: 981-1160 Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you have any delivery concerns, you can call from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday and 7 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Advertising Classified Marketplace: 865-981-1170; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday Retail: 865-981-1152; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday Advertising Director: Evelyn Sandlin 865-981-1152 [email protected] Circulation Director: Bryan Sandmeier 865-981-1196 [email protected] equipping students with skills, confidence and character.” The Regal Foundation is a nonprofit charity established by Regal Entertainment Group, the largest motion picture exhibitor in the world. The company’s theater circuit comprises Regal Cinemas, United Artists Theatres and Edwards Theatres, operating 6,782 screens in 550 locations in 39 states and the District of Columbia. The Clayton Family Foundation (CFF) is a private foundation, established in 1992 by James L. Clayton. Its mission is to support and build strong, vibrant communities, by enhancing the quality of life through the funding of programs in the areas of youth, education, arts, and human services. MK Russell & Abbott Heating & Air $ 100 value for $50 Newsroom Arts & Entertainment: 981-1144 Business: 981-1143 LifeTimes: 981-1149 News: 981-1143 Photography: 981-1167 Sports: 981-1145 Blount Life: 981-1168 Web: 981-1131 Deadlines Obituaries: 6 p.m. for paid funeral notices to be published in next day’s edition. Weddings/Engagements: Tuesday prior to Sunday publication. Anniversaries/Birthday: Monday prior to Wednesday or Thursday publication in Applause. Other Applause items: No deadline, but published on space-available basis. Submitting News To have your story considered for publication in The Daily Times, email it to the appropriate department editor under the Newsroom listing in this index, fax it to 865-981-1175, or mail it using our postal address. If you are not sure where to send your idea, email it to editor@ thedailytimes.com. Please be sure to include a contact name and phone number in case we need to get in touch with you. If you have a news tip, call 865-981-1115 in the daytime, or 865-9811143 in the evening. Corrections The Daily Times strives for accuracy. If you see an error in the newspaper, call Larry Aldridge at 865-981-1115, or Frank “Buzz” Trexler at 865-981-1139. Check us online for updates throughout the day: thedailytimes.com BLOUNT COUNTY | 3A THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com Former SEAL tries to help families Maryville, Alcoa Bin Laden shooter wants to comfort relatives of Sept. 11 victims by going on the field to hang out, I was signing more footballs than the Redskins were. That’s new.” BY JOEL DAVIS [email protected] Former Navy SEAL Robert O’Neill, the man who reportedly killed Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in 2011, hopes his story can help bring peace to those scarred by terrorism. O’Neill, whose Nov. 6 appearance in Blount County for the Best of Blount Awards came as national media began discussing his identity, decided to go public after speaking with the families of the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. It was on the occasion of donating a uniform shirt to the 9/11 Memorial Museum. “I told them the story and afterwards I had people tell me it was such a help in the healing process,” he told The Daily Times during a telephone interview on Monday. “If I could help these 25 families, it would be irresponsible of me not to use this platform to help.” He confirmed his role in bin Laden’s death to The Washington Post in a story published Nov. 6, the same day that he spoke at the Best of Blount Awards at the Clayton Center for the Arts. He also appeared in an in-depth, two-part series broadcast on Fox News on Nov. 11-12. When asked what he thought of most of when remembering that mission, O’Neill said, “I remember the first thought when I was walking through the main driveway and looking at my left up at the house and thinking, man, it was so cool we were there.” After helicoptering to the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, assaulting the house and killing three men and a woman, some of the SEALs reached the third floor, where a CIA analyst had told O’Neill that bin Laden would be. O’Neill followed an unnamed point man into bin Laden’s bedroom, he told the AP, and the point man tackled two women, believing they had a bomb, in what O’Neill calls an incredibly selfless act. “A few feet in front of me, on two feet, was Osama bin Laden,” O’Neill said. “I shot him three times in the head, and I killed him.” SOME SEALS ANGRY TIM MASSEY | THE DAILY TIMES FORMER NAVY SEAL ROBERT O’NEILL is facing praise and scrutiny after publicly talking about his role in killing terrorist leader Osama bin Laden in 2011. News of O’Neill’s identity began to break during his visit to Blount County on Nov. 6. �I remember the first thought when I was walking through the main driveway and looking at my left up at the house and thinking, man, it was so cool we were there.’ Robert O’Neill former Navy SEAL promoted three months before leaving the military and that career advancement issues did not factor into his decision to leave. “I did the last deployment to show I had no hard feelings. I came in the front door, and I was going to leave by the front door.” He has been decorated more than 52 times with honors, including two Silver Stars, four Bronze Stars with Valor, a Joint Service Commendation Medal with Valor, three Presidential Unit citations, and two Navy/ Marine Corps Commendations with Valor. �ACCEPTED DEATH’ Before embarking, O’Neill and his fellow SEALs made their peace with the outcome of the mission. “We accepted death,” he said. “We accepted it was a oneway mission. The reason we did was for the innocent people who jumped to their deaths on a Tuesday morning as an alternative to burning alive when they should have been working.” After the bin Laden mission, O’Neill went on one last deployment. “Before I left the Navy, I told them a year away just because of a sense of doing what we came to do and just a personal choice. I had stopped getting adrenalin in gunfights and that’s bad. It leads to complacency. I wasn’t going to take a desk job. That’s not how I roll.” O’Neill said that he was NOTHING CLASSIFIED Speaking to the Associated Press on Friday, O’Neill said he believes the American public has a right to more details about the operation that killed the al-Qaida leader and other important military adventures. And he insisted he is taking pains not to divulge classified information or compromise the tactics SEALs use to get the drop on their enemies. “The last thing I want to do is endanger anybody,” he said. “I think the good (of going public) outweighs the bad.” O’Neill said he is prepared for any possible repercussions from the government because of confidentiality concerns. “I hope it won’t happen. To the best of my judgment, I’ve only told my portion of a great story. I haven’t told anything classified. I still respect the Pentagon. ... If they do decide and want to investigate, I’ll be cooperative and talk to them if they come.” Since going public, O’Neill has seen his visibility increase. “I am taking security more seriously,” he said. “I am getting recognized a lot more than I’m used to on the street at games and stuff, but it’s been positive, though.” At a Washington Redskins football game on Sunday, O’Neill received an indication of how far his name had spread. “Just * START NOW * HOLIDAY FESTIVITIES!!! 984-8300 Need a Back Doctor? Maryville, Madisonville and Knoxville Chiropractic Clinics NOW!!! We accept most insurance and cash plan available. Maryville Madisonville Knoxville 1812 E Lamar Alexander Parkway Maryville, TN 37804 3912 Highway 411 Madisonville, TN 37354 259 North Peters Road, Suite 101 Knoxville TN 37923 (865) 977-0916 (423) 442-4153 865-690-6898 Hablo Español (865) 696-8187 50027265TDT XXXESCBDLDPN Why suffer needlessly...CALL An online ranking and review site has named two of Blount County’s three school districts in the state’s top 10. Maryville City Schools was named the top school district in Tennessee, according to the Best Public High Schools rankings released by Niche, a company founded in 2002 as CollegeProwler.com. Alcoa City Schools was named No. 9, and Blount County Schools was named No. 80. Maryville City Schools received an overall Niche grade of A. It received: ›8`eXZX[\d`Zj2 ›8`eX[d`e`jkiXk`feXe[ gfc`Z`\j2 ›8$`e\[lZXk`feXcflk$ Zfd\j2 ›9`e\okiXZlii`ZlcXij2 ›8$`e]ff[2 ›8$`e_\Xck_Xe[jX]\$ kp2 › 9" `e i\jfliZ\j Xe[ ]XZ`c`k`\j2 › 8$ `e jgfikj Xe[ ]`k$ e\jj2 ›9$`ejkl[\ekZlckli\Xe[ [`m\ij`kp2 ›Xe[8"`ek\XZ_\ij% A l coa Ci ty S c h o o l s received an overall Niche ^iX[\f]9"%@ki\Z\`m\[1 ›9`eXZX[\d`Zj2 ›9"`eX[d`e`jkiXk`feXe[ gfc`Z`\j2 ›9"`e\[lZXk`feXcflk$ Zfd\j2 ›9"`e\okiXZlii`ZlcXij2 ›9"`e]ff[2 ›9"`e_\Xck_Xe[jX]\$ kp2 › 9" `e i\jfliZ\j Xe[ ]XZ`c`k`\j2 › 8 `e jgfikj Xe[ ]`k$ e\jj2 ›8`ejkl[\ekZlckli\Xe[ [`m\ij`kp2 ›Xe[9"`ek\XZ_\ij% Blount County Schools received an overall Niche grade of C. It received: ›9$`eXZX[\d`Zj2 ›:$`eX[d`e`jkiXk`feXe[ gfc`Z`\j2 ›:`e\[lZXk`feXcflk$ Zfd\j2 ›:`e\okiXZlii`ZlcXij2 ›:`e]ff[2 ›:"`e_\Xck_Xe[jX]\$ kp2 › :$ `e i\jfliZ\j Xe[ ]XZ`c`k`\j2 › :$ `e jgfikj Xe[ ]`k$ e\jj2 ›:`ejkl[\ekZlckli\Xe[ [`m\ij`kp2 ›Xe[:$`ek\XZ_\ij% The Best Public High Schools ranking provides a comprehensive assessment of the overall experience at public high schools in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, according the company’s website. It uses data sourced from various government and public data sets, Niche’s own proprietary data, and 4,625,227 opinion-based survey responses across a variety of topics from 287,560 current students, recent alumni and parents. Maryville City Schools had a 4.0 — out of a possible 5.0 — rating from 220 reviews. Alcoa City Schools had a 4.0 rating from 65 reviews, and Blount County Schools received slightly higher than a 3.0 ranking from 234 reviews. ( 1).+# &* www.olympiaathleticclub.com t#BDL1BJOt/FDL1BJOt)FBEBDIFT t"VUP"DDJEFOUTt4MJQTBOE'BMMT t1BJOJO+PJOUTBOE&YUSFNJUJFT From Staff Reports '*-1(-+1.($,-+$.- , !)),% -,-)( 1&).(- ).(-1+ ,$ (-,-#+$,-', TO SHAPE UP FOR Dr. Woodrow W. Gwinn, Jr. Owner & Director of Clinics Doctor of Chiropractic The public disclosure has apparently rankled some current and former SEALs by violating their code of silence. “We work in secret and we pride ourselves on that, so if somebody comes out and spills this much, it angers the rest of us,” Jonathan Gilliam, a former SEAL, said in an interview. According to the Associated Press, one current and two former SEALs, declining to be quoted talking about a sensitive matter, say it is not disputed that O’Neill shot at bin Laden. But Pentagon officials say it’s not clear whose shots were the lethal ones. Another SEAL, Matt Bissonnette, wrote a book about the raid, “No Easy Day.” Bissonnette’s account suggests the point man fired the fatal shots, and that he and a second SEAL, presumably O’Neill, shot bin Laden when he was already down. O’Neill disputed the account of his former teammate, whom he calls a hero. Everyone who was a part of the bin Laden operation and others like it deserve recognition, he said. “All we were we were a means to an end, there were so many people who didn’t get a lot of credit for this,” he said. “... It was a team effort.” “I got there because amazing men did amazing things,” he said. “These are real people that have real families — that mow their lawns, can barely pay their mortgages and then they get called.” rank in top 10 in site’s rankings # %,'1 ' -) # '*-1(-+1.()# $&1$' , )0+1/$&& )' 1 # $&1$' ,)!!$ - +* +/ #+)."# 4A | BLOUNT COUNTY THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com BLOUNT RECORDS COURT RECORDS Charged with driving under the influence of an intoxicant: Blount County Nikita Renee Snoderly, 28, Hopewell Road, Maryville ™ Case filed Nov. 17 in Blount County General Sessions Court: Larry Branton vs. Debbie Branton, divorce ™ Case filed Nov. 17 in Blount County Chancery Court: ™ Regarding: Mary Eloise West, estate Case filed Nov. 17 in the Equity Division of Blount County Circuit Court: ™ Natasha R. Virgilio vs. James C. Virgilio, divorce Case filed Nov. 17 in Blount County Probate Court: Regarding: Mildred Yearout, estate ™ ARRESTS ™ Felipe Vazquez, 26, Georgia, was arrested Nov. 16 by Blount County Sheriff’s Office on a charge of felony evading arrest. He was released on a $1,000 bond pending a 9 a.m. Nov. 24 hearing. ™ Roger Dale Weeks II, 39, Miser Station Road, Louisville, was arrested Nov. 16 on charges of theft of more than $500, theft of more than $1,000, and forgery. He was held on a total $4,000 bond pending a 9 a.m. Nov. 19 hearing. THEFTS Alcoa A manager at Walmart, ™ FUNERAL NOTICES The damage was estimated at $1,200. RECORDS POLICY Information contained in Blount Records is compiled from official public records available for inspection at city/county governmental and public safety offices, as well as the various judicial offices. Births are provided by area hospitals. 1030 Hunters Crossing Drive, Alcoa, reported at 5:56 p.m. Nov. 16 that a woman had taken a queen mattress top from the merchandise aisle and tried to exchange the item for money at the customer service desk. According to the report, the clerk refused to exchange the item. The woman then left the store with the mattress top, valued at $129.96. Blount County ™ Robert J. Stempfloy, Dingo Road, Friendsville, reported at 6:56 p.m. Nov. 14 that his Samsung Galaxy tablet was stolen about three weeks ago. According to a Blount County Sheriff ’s Office Report, the tablet had allegedly been traded for pills and pawned at Cash America, Midland Plaza, Maryville. VANDALISM Blount County Kimberly D. Myers, John Noah Myers Road, Maryville, reported at 9:52 a.m. Nov. 16 that someone damaged the interior of a mobile home she owns on Ruth Riggs Way, Maryville. According to the Blount County Sheriff ’s Office, damaged items include sheet rock on the wall, the front door, glass window, closet door, bedroom door and a General Electric stove. ™ RECOVERED PROPERTY Alcoa Victoria G. Tucker, Garfield Street, Alcoa, reported at 1:56 a.m. Nov. 17 that she had located a woman’s wallet on the sidewalk near a bridge on Faraday Street, Alcoa. The wallet contained $3 and a debit card. The wallet and contents were given to Alcoa Police Department officers. ™ DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Blount County Brandon Lee Forrester, 26, Zina Lane, Maryville, was arrested by Blount County Sheriff ’s deputies on Nov. 16 on a charge of domestic violence with aggravated assault. Forrester was free on $5,000 bond pending a 9 a.m. Nov. 20 hearing in Blount County General Sessions Court. ™ OTHER REPORTS Alcoa An employee of Dollar General Store, 901 Hall Road, Alcoa, reported at 8:18 p.m. Nov. 16 that a woman came into the store and asked the clerk to check whether a $10 bill she had received as change at Walmart was counterfeit. According to an Alcoa Police Department report, the woman did not pay for her merchandise with the $10 bill that was determined to be counterfeit. The woman showed the employee the Walmart receipt to prove that she had just left the store, and the clerk allowed her to make a copy of the receipt. The money was seized by the police department personnel and put in evidence. ™ Republican legislators file bill to repeal Common Core BY LUCAS L. JOHNSON II The Associated Press NASHVILLE — Two Republican state senators filed legislation Monday to repeal the state’s Common Core standards even though Gov. Bill Haslam has called for a public review of the higher benchmarks in English and math. The proposal would set up a Tennessee Standards Commission that would recommend to the State Board of Education new standards to be used in the state’s K-12 public schools. Senate Education Committee Chairwoman Dolores Gresham and Senate Government Operations Committee Chairman Mike Bell said the move is designed to ensure Tennessee students continue to improve by applying the highest standards while exerting state control over education. “It is the next logical step that will take us into the future and ensure that we as Tennesseans have control over our education system,” Gresham told The Associated Press. Common Core is a set of English and math standards that spell out what students should know and when. The standards — which have been adopted by most of the states — are intended to provide students with the critical thinking, problem solving and writing skills needed for college and the workforce. The standards were scrapped this year in Indiana and Oklahoma. Governors in North Carolina, South Carolina and Missouri have signed legislation to reconsider the standards, even though they’re still being used in those states. Last month, Haslam, a Republican, announced the formation of panels to review the math and English components of the Common Core standards and to report their recommendations at the end of next year. FUNERAL NOTICES MARY JOYCE (ALLEN) CARROLL Mary Joyce (Allen) Carroll left this world for a better place and to join her husband, Murphy, on Nov. 11, 2014. Joyce, fondly known as “Monk,” was born Oct. 25, 1927, in Maryville. She is survived by her children, Jimmie Carroll of Maryville; d a u g h t e r, Bianca Elmer of Amboy, Wash.; four g ra n d c h i l dren; six great-grandchildren; and many nieces and nephews. Survivors include sisters, Louise Tindell, Ernestine Owen (William), Ann Bennett (Clayton). Preceded in death by sister, Trula Hall; brothers-in-law, Ted Tindell and Carl Hall. No services are planned. For anyone who does not wish to purchase a funeral notice, The Daily Times will run a free death notice as a public service, containing basic information such as survivors and funeral arrangements. All information is verified through the funeral home handling arrangements. For more information, call 981-1166. OBITUARY POLICY A funeral notice in The Daily Times costs 55 cents per word plus $18 for a photo. The notice will appear in both our print and online editions. DEATH SENESAC, ROBERT RAYMOND, 81, of Maryville, died Friday, Nov. 14, 2014, at Blount Memorial Hospital. His wishes were to be cremated, and no services are planned at this time. Arrangements by Cremation By Grandview Tuesday, November 18, 2014 MILLER FUNERAL HOME “The Business That Service Built” Pre-Arrangement Funeral Planning www.millerfuneralhome.org 915 W. BROADWAY 65061817 982-6041 GEORGE RICHARD CHAPMAN George Richard Chapman, 68, of Alcoa, passed away peacefully on Sunday, Nov. 16, 2014. He was born in Greenback on May 28, 1946, and was a member of Alcoa First United Methodist Church. He served three years in the U.S. Navy, 10 years with the San Diego Police Department, and 25 years with ALCOA. Preceded in death by parents, Clyde and Edith Chapman. George is survived by his wife, Peggy Chapman; children, Pamela (Greg) Hathcock, Teresa (Mike) Casner, Jeff (Casey) Chapman, and Scott Chapman; grand- children, Anna and Ethan Hathcock, Laurel Chapman, Me ga n a n d Braden Casner; siblings, Bertha (US) Shown and Leroy (Susie) Chapman; and loving companion, Molly. George’s words of wisdom and humor will be greatly missed by us all. Special thanks to the UT Hospital MCC Unit doctors and nursing staff. Funeral service will be at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, at Smith Trinity Chapel with Dr. Bruce Marston officiating. Family and friends will assemble for entombment at 11 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 20, 2014, at Grandview Mausoleum Chapel. Family will receive friends from 5 until 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov.19, 2014, at Smith Trinity Chapel. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you make a donation to the charity of your choice. Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 9831000, www.SmithFuneral andCremation.com JOHNNY WILLIAM FULLER Johnny William Fuller, 78, of Alcoa, went to be with the Lord on Sunday, Nov. 16, 2014. He was preceded in death by his parents, Homer and Cora Thomas Fuller; mother and fatherin-law, Clyde and Mary Henry; infant son, Johnny Jr., daughter, Janie; brothers, Clyde and Ronnie; sisters, Alma White, Geneva Pickens, and Betty Tipton. He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Peggy Henry Fuller; children, Judy, Melissa, Kel- ly, Cora and Lee Handley, Curtis and Melody Fuller, Chelsea and Taylor Grindstaff, and Katrina; brothers, Lee and Norma Fuller, Billy and Linda Fuller, Ellis Fuller; sister, Connie and Dave Helton, 17 grandchildren, 32 great-grandchildren, two great-great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, at Memorial Funeral Home in Maryville with Rev. Lee Fuller and Rev. Grover Bolden offi- ciating. The family and friends will meet at 1:15 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, at the funeral home to proceed to Clarks Grove Cemetery for a 2 p.m. graveside service. The family will receive friends from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Condolences may be expressed by visiting www.memorialfuneral homemaryville.com. GARRALD BLAIN �GARY’ PHILLIPS Garrald Blain “Gary” Phillips, age 77, of Maryville, passed away Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014, at his home. He was honorably discharged as aviation machinist mate 3rd class U.S. Naval Reserve and retired from Civil Service with the U.S. Army as facilities engineer. He was chief of Building and Grounds Division, Land Management Branch, Ft. Belvior, Va., with 25 years of service. Survivors include his wife, Sandra Porter McCraw Phillips; sons, Eric Phillips and wife Sheila of Maryville, Richard Phillips of Locust Grove, Va., R. David McCraw of Maryville, Mark McCraw of Dayton, Ga.; grandchildren, Joshua McCraw, Michael McCraw, Timothy McCraw, Catherine McCraw, Aaron Phillips, Lindsay Phillips and Codey Phillips; sister, Karen Smith and husband Charley of Hampton, Va.; special relatives, Charles and Vicky Phillips of Harrisburg, Va., and Ed and Sue Witherell of Bridgewater, Va. The family will receive friends from 5-7 p.m. Wednesday at Oakland United Methodist Church. McCammonAmmons-Click Funeral Home, Maryville, 982-6812, www.mccammonammons click.com HARRIETTE ANN PROFFITT Harriette Ann Proffitt of Knoxville went to be with the Lord on Thursday, Nov. 13, 2014. Family and friends will assemble for interment at 11 a.m. Tues- day, Nov. 18, 2014, at Niota Cemetery, Niota, Tenn., (McMinn County). Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 9831000, www.SmithFunera- landCremation.com SARAH �RUBY’ STOGNER TRENTHAM Sarah “Ruby” Stogner Trentham, age 96, born Dec. 10, 1917, in Gurley, Madison County, Ala., died at her home in Maryville, and went to reside with her Lord and Savior on Nov. 16 2014. She was a loving and beloved wife, mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother. She was a faithful member of Madison Avenue Baptist Church in Maryville for over 54 years, where she taught Sunday school for more than 49 years. She and husband, Sam, enjoyed camping and were members of the Ft. Loudoun Camping Club for many years. She was employed by Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., Cliff Dwellers in Gatlinburg, Tenn., and St. Mary’s Hospital in Knoxville, before she married in 1946, and was a dedicated homemaker for her entire married life. She wrote many poems during her lifetime and submitted numerous articles that were published in various magazines and newspapers. She loved genealogy and spent over 30 years researching her family history and collecting family data. She was a great letter writer and corresponded with family and friends all over the USA. Predeceased by her husband of 66 years, Sam E. Trentham, son of Noah and Mary Jane Ogle Tr e n t h a m ; grandparents, Wi l l i a m Andrew and Sarah Evelyn Gardiner Stogner and John Wesley and Mary Eliza Clark Ikard, Jr.; parents, James DeWitt and Naoma Lenora Ikard Stogner of Pigeon Forge, Tenn.; siblings and spouses, Shelby S. Stogner (Geneva Browning) of Ilinois, William Aubray Stogner died at 7 months old in Alabama, Comer Baxter Stogner (Levyrn McBee) of Alabama, Mamie Elizabeth (Olin) Watson of Gatlinburg, Tenn., Rev. Hulett Stogner (Kate Trentham) of Rogersville, Tenn., Lillian Marie (Jack) Crossley of Pensylvania; son-in-law, Howard “Earl” Lancaster, Louisville; daughter-in-law, Kathy Runyan Overstreet, Warren, Ore.; grandsons, Ryan Overstreet, Warren, Ore.; Thomas Bright, Maryville. Survivors include devoted children, Lillian Lancaster, Louisville, Michael and Cynthia (CA) Trentham, Bulls Gap, Tenn., Pat and Tom Carver, Maryville; and stepson, Jack Overstreet, Warren, Ore.; grandchildren: Annie O. (Joe) Harrison and Cindy Flukinger Overstreet of Oregon; Tina C. (Chris) Collins, Greenback, Cindy C. (Brett) Norrod and Stacie C. Bright, Maryville, L i a n a L . a n d Ja m e s Pesterfield, Louisville; great-grandchildren, Josi Harrison, Hayden and Kendall Overstreet, Oregon, Kaitlyn and Olivia Collins, Brittany, Fletcher and Benjamin Norrod, and Julie Bright, Maryville, B ethany and Gabriel Pesterfield, Louisville; numerous special nephews and nieces. Special thank you to Frances Williams and other UT Hospice c a r e g i ve r s f o r t h e i r exceptional care during her final months. The family will receive friends 4-6 p.m. Thursday with funeral service to follow at 6 p.m. at Madison Avenue Baptist Church, 1918 Madison Avenue, Maryville. Dr. Glenn Cummings and her nephew, Rev. Terry Russell, will officiate. Family and friends will meet 11:30 a.m. Friday in Atchley’s Smoky Mountain Chapel in Pigeon Forge with interment to follow at noon in Smoky Mountain Memory Gardens. Arrangements by Atc h l ey Fu n e ra l Home, 118 E. Main St, Sevierville, Tenn., www. atchleyfuneralhome.com BRENDA JOYCE TYLER Brenda Joyce Tyler, age 72, of Maryville, passed away Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014. Brenda was a member of Central Point Baptist Church. Preceded in death by her parents, Raymond Becher Hill and Joyce Mae Hill; sister, Ethelene Relation; brother, Larry (Blue) Hill; and great-grandson, Michael Allen Chase Bales. Survived by brother, Raymond W. Hill of Lufkin, Texas; son, Terry Pass of Maryville; daughter, Zina Pass of Roane County, Tenn.; lifelong friend and companion, Harold Wheeler of Maryville. S h e wa s a proud grandmother to seven grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren, several nieces, nephews and great-nieces. Family and friends will gather at Central Point Baptist Church in Rockford on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, from 5-7 p.m. for a celebration of life with Reverend Chris Cupp officiating. Arrangements by Cremation By Grandview, 806-8170; www.Cremation ByGrandview.com BLOUNT COUNTY | 5A THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com FROM 1A issued a statement saying “officers and investigators responded to White Avenue to investigate a rape and sexual assault allegation” around 3 a.m. Sunday at the Woodlands Apartment complex. “When officers arrived on the scene they located two 19-year-old female victims,” the statement read. “One victim indicated she had been raped by two males and the second female indicated she was a victim of a sexual assault.” Both females were transported to UT Medical Center as part of the ongoing investigation, according to the statement, and two male suspects, both University of Tennessee students, have been identified. The victim of the sexual assault is not a Tennessee student, but was in Knoxville over the weekend visiting a friend. “That victim has decided not to prosecute at this time and has returned to Florida,” the statement said. “A search warrant was conducted last night on the apartment at the Woodlands Apartment Complex. “The investigation is ongoing. The incident report has not been completed at this time. The names of the suspects cannot be released because they have not been charged.” Jones confirmed that two football players were being investigated but would not take questions on the matter. NO PRACTICE He said players under police investigation aren’t allowed to practice but added that he would be cautious in his discipline for the players involved. “Every situation is different in and of itself,” Jones said. “I say no (they won’t practice), but I’m still going to gather the information and, the thing I want to do, I want to be right rather than fast. “We’ll continue to gather information and based on what we have at that particular time we will determine whether or not they will practice. But if there is anything of it, they won’t practice. “I think we’ve proven since we’ve been here,” Jones added, “that we’re always going to act accordingly and we’re going to act swiftly.” Jones dismissed freshman running back Treyvon Paulk in September amid allegations of domestic assault, an incident where charges were not filed. Johnson was one of two Tennessee football players arrested in January on alcohol-related charges and resisting arrest. Johnson, with 425 career tackles, would become the first player in Tennessee football history to lead the team in tackles for three straight seasons should he end the 2014 season as the team leader. Saturday night against Kentucky he became the first Tennessee player since Andy Spiva to record three straight seasons with 100 or more tackles. Jones said he would address his team about the ongoing investigation. JONES: �TEACHING OPPORTUNITY’ “Every situation that occurs, just like in life, I treat it like a teaching opportunity, a teaching moment,” Jones said. “We spend an inordinate amount of time in our �Vol For Life’ program, our character education program, all of that. “We’ll discuss it, but it will be business as usual. I’m not into speculation. But we talk about instances all the time. It will just be another point of contention, another point of emphasis, which it is all the time in our football program.” Tennessee, after wins over South Carolina and Kentucky over the last three weeks, is one win away from being bowl eligible for the first time since 2010 with two games left on the schedule. The Vols travel to Vanderbilt in two weeks, after Saturday’s home game against Missouri. “We have a lot on the line,” Jones said. “We’re representing the state of Tennessee, Vol nation, the city of Knoxville, our student body, our fan base, our boosters, our alumni. “We have a lot of positive momentum and energy going right now. We can’t let that derail us.” EBOLA: Officials in Sierra Leone promise investigation into care doctor received FROM 1A elsewhere, was first tested for Ebola on Nov. 7, but the test was negative, and he was discharged from a treatment center in Sierre Leone. It’s not unusual to see false negative tests for Ebola in the early stages because the amount of the virus in the bloodstream is still low, said Dr. Phil Smith, the infectious-disease expert who leads the Nebraska Medical Center’s biocontainment unit. The U.S. government warns doctors to be wary of possible false negative tests for Ebola. Salia tested positive for the disease on Nov. 10 but did not arrive at an Omaha hospital until Saturday. Two other Ebola patients treated in Omaha this fall arrived at the hospital roughly a week earlier in their illnesses, before nausea, vomiting and more serious symptoms set in. Both of those men recovered. Government officials in Sierra Leone promised a full investigation into the treatment Salia received. “At this point, we can’t say for certain whether it was this misdiagnosis or not that led to his death,” Deputy Information Minister Theo Nicol said in a statement to The Associated Press. The government planned to request a full medical report from the hospital where he was last treated. Salia, a permanent U.S. resident, was reportedly receiving blood from an Ebola survivor while in Sierra Leone, the government statement said. The treatment is believed to provide antibodies to fight the virus. The government statement questioned whether “the strain of the 16-hour trip could have had a negative impact on his recovery.” Doctors with an air-transport service assessed Salia in Sierra Leone last week before deciding he was stable enough for the long flight to Nebraska. In Omaha, Salia was placed on kidney dialysis and a ventilator and was given several medications, the hospital said. He was given the experimental Ebola drug ZMapp and received another plasma transfusion from an Ebola survivor. “I know that we gave him every possible chance to survive. I think that his family feels confident in that as well,” Dr. Daniel Johnson said Monday at a news conference. Salia’s wife, Isatu Salia, who lives in New Carrollton, Maryland, said Monday that the family believed he was treated “in the best place possible.” But by the time her husband arrived in Omaha, he was already unresponsive, doctors said. In a Friday telephone interview, she said she had spoken to her husband and prayed with him. Although his voice sounded weak and shaky, she said he told her “I love you” in a steady voice. Salia graduated from the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons training program in 2008. He was free to practice anywhere he wanted, but he chose to stay in Sierra Leone, where the need for surgeons is immense. “He honestly believed that’s what God wanted him to do,” said Bruce Steffes, executive director of the academy. Salia was a member of a United Brethren Church congregation in Sierra Leone, and the church helped support his medical training. Christmas Candlelight Tribute Grandview Cemetery would like to invite you and your family to our annual holiday event. The event is scheduled for Tuesday, December 9th. For those that make a donation to The Empty Pantry Fund, candles will be placed on your loved one’s memorial site. New this year will be cookies, coffee, cider and music at the Historic Stephens family cabin at the main entrance of the Cemetery from 6:00 pm until 8:00 pm. Santa will be at the cabin as well, so please include your children this year. In case of inclement weather, the evening will be rescheduled for Thursday, December 11th. Deadline for candle orders will be Monday, December 1st. PURSE SNATCHING: Man on motorized scooter almost rammed by vehicle Melissa Ledford FROM 1A lot, Louisville resident Stanley Wallace was sitting on his motorized scooter when he reported hearing a female voice scream, “She stole my purse!” Wallace said a car then barreled down the row he was in and came close to ramming his scooter. Another witness, Matthew Cope of Greenback, told police that he, too, heard the scream, and then saw the fleeing car narrowly miss striking Wallace. Cope said he ran across the lot, attempting to record a license plate number. That wasn’t possible, he said, because the alleged perpetrators had placed a bag over their plate. He was able to get a vehicle description, however, and told police to look for a grey/brown Chevrolet Malibu with a brake light out. An Alcoa Police officer picked up the Malibu’s trail soon after. “It was good police work by the patrolman,” said Alcoa Police Detective Jeff Parsons, who investigated the inci- y, Ledford, 46, was charged with robbery. She was held on $5,000 bond. Joshua Presley Presley, 31, was charged with robbery and violation of probation. dent. “He got behind them less than five minutes after they pulled out.” T h e p a t r o l o ff i c e r stopped the Malibu driven by Presley and Ledford without incident. Ledford was held at Blount County Jail on a $5,000 bond. Presley was also held, his bond set at $5,645. OTHER REPORTS There were other, similar incidents of theft over the weekend, although the Food City purse-snatching was the most brazen. A Maryville woman reported Saturday that two men in their early 20s distracted her in the vitamin aisle of K-Mart on McCammon Avenue, then stole her wallet and cash out of a shopping cart. Another Maryville woman reported on Friday that someone had apparently taken her wallet and cell phone while she was in the parking lot of Walmart, 2410 U.S. Highway 411. And yet another Maryville woman reported shortly after 9 p.m. Sunday that her purse was stolen while she was loading shopping bags into her car at Kroger on Watkins Road. Maryville Police Chief Tony Crisp said that although crimes such as purse-snatchings aren’t necessarily common nowadays, they do tend to crop up during the holiday season, especially in the parking lots of shopping centers and big-box stores. “It happens a lot at grocery stores,” Crisp said. “Very often, they work in pairs. Someone distracts the victim, then someone else fulfills the crime. And around the holidays, more people are out spending money. It’s a busier time of year.” , Daily Bridge Club Play or defend? By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency If you like to bet, look at today’s deal. West leads the king of spades against 3NT. Decide whether you would back declarer or the defense. As a side bet, can you spot the card that makes all the difference? South wins the second spade as East discards a club. South leads a club to the queen, and East takes his king and leads ... the king of diamonds. He can force out South’s last entry to his hand while the clubs are blocked. ANSWER: I would take a slightly conservative view and raise only to three hearts. Though the hand has 19 high-card points, there are three queens and two jacks, and many of the honors are stuck in short suits. Moreover, the queen of hearts may be wasted: If partner has J-x-x-x-x, he may be able to pick up the trumps without the queen. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 9 6 5 2 A K Q 3 Q J A Q J FOURTH HEART South plays low and wins the next diamond in dummy. He takes the A-J of clubs and the three top hearts and exits with the fourth heart. East must then lead a diamond, and South takes the ace — and a good club for his ninth trick. Did you bet on declarer? Under the A-K-Q of hearts, East plays his J-10-9. Then South doesn’t “exit” with a heart at Trick 11 since East can slide his deuce under dummy’s three. Dummy is left with two losing spades, and South goes down. If East held a heart higher than the deuce, declarer could prevail. DAILY QUESTION You hold: 9 6 5 2 A K Q 3 Q J A Q J. You open one club, and your partner bids one heart. What do you say? WEST K Q J 10 4 3 8 7 7 6 5 3 4 EAST 8 J 10 9 2 K 10 9 2 K 8 7 2 SOUTH A 7 6 5 4 A 8 4 10 9 6 5 3 North 1 2 3 NT East South Pass 2 Pass 2 NT All Pass West Pass Pass Opening lead — K (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC Learn more about how to freeze away your fat with No needles, No diets, No downtime. Monday, November 24, 2014 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Live demonstrations, refreshments and a drawing for a FREE Coolsculpting session. Call to reserve your spot! R. Paul Unkefer, M.D. 30028044TDT PLAYERS: Incident occurs at Woodlands Apartment complex on White Avenue 133 Associates Blvd, Alcoa, TN 37701t(865) 233-7351 ! " Your newspaper of record since 1883 ON THE WEB: Editorials, letters and other opinions, archived for your review. www.thedailytmes.com/opinion Scan this QR code to go to the Web page. 6A THE DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2014 OUR VOICE Get ready for the next mass confusion from above: drones T he gist of a recent radio transmission from a public communications center to an area law enforcement agency was this: A citizen had complained about a drone flying over private property. Expect similar scanner traffic to become more common as drone technology improves, as the cost goes down and as people figure out more ingenious ways to utilize unmanned aircraft. The scanner traffic elicited a response from a newsroom compatriot who’d previously discussed that problem with a friend. The friend had his own solution to unwanted drones — a four-letter word, “Pull!” To be immediately followed by a shotgun “blast!” Extreme? Maybe, but consider that the most world-altering uses of drones today are for destruction and surveillance. A quick check of recent Associated Press stories sent during a recent news cycle turned up a wide variety of drone references. ›K_\Fi^Xe`qXk`fe]fiJ\Zli`kpXe[:ffg\iXk`fe`e Europe reported that a drone flying over a rebel-controlled area in Ukraine had come under aircraft gunfire. ›8:fcfiX[fdXe`jj\XiZ_`e^]fiXgfjj`Yc\ZiXj_qfe\ after his $1,000 drone with a special camera went missing. ›8<lifg\Xe:_Xdg`fej_`ghlXc`]p`e^jfZZ\idXkZ_ was played before an empty stadium because at a previous match players and fans skirmished when a drone flew an Albanian flag over the stands. ›:fekifcc\ijXkZ\ekiXc=cfi`[XÊjXggifXZ_Zfekifc]XZ`c`kp received a report from the pilots of an Airbus A319 airliner that they had sighted a drone below the plane at about ((#''']\\kXe[(,d`c\jn\jkf]FicXe[f% ›=i\eZ_j\Zli`kpf]]`Z`XcjXi\`em\jk`^Xk`e^XjgXk\f] mysterious flights by drone aircraft over more than a dozen nuclear power stations. Three men with a drone were arrested near one nuclear reactor. ›I\j`[\ekj`eefik_n\jk\ieJpi`Xei\gfik\[j\\`e^X drone fire two missiles that struck an al-Qaida base. ›G`cfkjf]Xi\^`feXcX`ic`e\i]cp`e^XkXYflk('#''']\\k near Pittsburgh reported seeing at least one drone pass less than 500 feet above the plane. ›=Xid\ij`e:Xc`]fie`XÊjn`e\ZflekipXi\g`fe\\i`e^k_\ use of drones for crop monitoring, irrigation and spraying. ›K_\L%J%^fm\ied\ekgXkifcje\Xicp_Xc]k_\D\o`ZXe border with drones flying over desolate stretches where there are no agents, camera towers, ground sensors or ]\eZ\j%E\okgcXe6<ogXe[k_\jkiXk\^pkf:XeX[X% ›8`ikiX]]`ZZfekifcc\ij`e9liYXeb#:Xc`]fie`X#i\Z\`m\[X report from a helicopter pilot of a camera-equipped drone flying near the giant Hollywood sign. ›@iXeÊjjkXk\KMYifX[ZXjk]ffkX^\f]X]cp`e^X`iZiX]k`k jXpj`jXe@iXe`Xe$Yl`cki\gc`ZXf]XL%J%jk\Xck_[ife\ZXg$ tured in 2011. ›8jljg\Zk\[L%J%[ife\jki`b\feXjgiXnc`e^KXc`YXe hideout in Pakistan near the Afghanistan border killed six militants, intelligence officers said. ›M`[\f^Xd\jXi\Y\`e^j\k`edfi\\ofk`ZcfZXc\j#n`k_ Ç:Xccf];lkp18[mXeZ\[NXi]Xi\ÈY\`e^j\k`ek_\jgiXnc`e^ j_fgg`e^[`jki`Zkf]J\flc#Jflk_Bfi\X1Çk_\g\i]\Zkjgfkkf unleash a swarm of enemy drones 50 years in the future.” ›9i`kX`eÊj;\]\ej\D`e`jkipjX`[k_Xk]fik_\]`ijkk`d\`k _X[lj\[fe\f]`kjI\Xg\i[ife\j`ek_\ZXdgX`^eX^X`ejk \oki\d`jd`e@iXh% ›K_\g`cfkjf]Xi\^`feXcX`ic`e\ii\gfik\[jgfkk`e^X drone 500 feet to 1,000 feet off the plane’s right side during XcXe[`e^XggifXZ_kfilenXp+f]k_\>i\\em`cc\$JgXikXe$ Yli^@ek\ieXk`feXc8`igfik`eJflk_:Xifc`eX%K_\[ife\ was described as the size of a large bird. ›K_\Le`m\ij`kpf]D`Xd`?lii`ZXe\jXi\lj`e^XZXd$ era-carrying drone to capture footage from unusual vantage points of the football team’s practices. :fe^i\jjdXe[Xk\[k_Xkk_\=\[\iXc8m`Xk`fe8[d`e`jkiX$ k`fej\kilc\jYpJ\gk\dY\ik_Xknflc[XccfnZfdd\iZ`Xc use of drones. The deadline passed without new regulations. A member of a drone trade group said that with more than a million small drones sold worldwide in the past few years it is inevitable that some will misuse them because they don’t understand the safety risks or simply don’t care. Exactly. And sooner or later, regardless of regulations, drones are going to be considered fair game by annoyed folks who yell, “Pull!” With more than a million small drones sold worldwide in the past few years it is inevitable that some will misuse them. B New start on foreign policy XiXZbFYXdXÊjZfd`e^i\hl\jk]fi:fe^i\jj to “right-size and update” the Authorization ]fiLj\f]D`c`kXip=fiZ\8LD= X^X`ejk terrorism will be constitutionally fastidious and n`ccZXkXcpq\X[\YXk\k_Xkn`cc`ccld`eXk\I\glY$ lican fissures. They, however, are signs of a healthy development — the reappearance of for\`^egfc`Zp_\k\if[fop`eI\glYc`ZXeiXebj% DXep\m\ekjL%J%d`c`kXipd`jX[m\ekli\j j`eZ\)''(#k_\Jpi`XeZ`m`cnXi#k_\i`j\f]k_\ @jcXd`ZJkXk\#k_\jg`ee`e^Z\eki`]l^\jf]@iXeÊj elZc\Xin\Xgfejgif^iXd Xe[fe\j\eXkfi IXe[GXlc _Xm\i\fg\e\[XI\glYc`ZXe[\YXk\ k_Xk\jj\ek`XccpZcfj\[n_\e;n`^_k<`j\e_fn\i won the party’s presidential nomination in 1952. Fe\i\Xjfe_\jfl^_k`knXjkfYcfZbF_`fÊjJ\e% IfY\ikKX]k% KX]kÊjjb\gk`Z`jdXYflkE8KFXe[Zfcc\Z$ tive security was not quite isolationism — a label bandied carelessly today by promiscuous interventionists — but was discordant with k_\gfjknXi`ek\ieXk`feXc`jdf]k_\I\glYc`ZXe establishment and the nation. Eisenhower’s vickfipXe[KX]kÊj[\Xk_k_\e\okp\Xi j\Xc\[k_\ I\glYc`ZXejÊe\Xi$leXe`d`kpk_Xk_X[Y\^lekf form in January 1945 when another Midwestern I\glYc`ZXej\eXkfi#D`Z_`^XeÊj8ik_liMXe[\e$ berg, changed his mind. He had been a senator since 1928 and an isocXk`fe`jkXcnXpj%K_\e_`jAXe%('#(0+,#J\eXk\ jg\\Z_i\gfj`k`fe\[_`dXe[_`jgXikp1Ç@[fefk believe that any nation hereafter can immunize `kj\c]Yp`kjfne\oZclj`m\XZk`fe%%%%FlifZ\Xej have ceased to be moats.” K_\I\glYc`ZXejZ_`jdf]k_\(0-'j#Y\kn\\e k_\9Xiip>fc[nXk\iXe[E\cjfeIfZb\]\cc\i]XZ$ tions — itself a reprise of the 1912 intra-party Zfe]c`ZkY\kn\\eK_\f[fi\Iffj\m\ckXe[Gi\j`$ [\ekN`cc`Xd?fnXi[KX]kÆgi`dXi`cpZfe$ cerned the proper scope and actual competence f]^fm\ied\ek`e[fd\jk`ZX]]X`ij%IfZb\]\cc\iÊj Zi\[\ek`XcjXjX:fc[NXii`fi#]ifdd`c`kXip spending to fallout shelters for civil defense, were impeccable. Now, however, Americans generally, but I\glYc`ZXej\jg\Z`Xccp#Xi\k_`eb`e^X]i\j_XYflk k_\nfic[%?\eipB`jj`e^\iÊje\nYffb#ÇNfic[ Fi[\i#È[\]kcp[`X^efj\j8d\i`ZXÊjY`gfcXid\e$ tal condition regarding foreign policy, a condition that is perennial because it is congenital. “The conviction that American principles are le`m\ijXc#ÈB`jj`e^\ijXpj#Ç_Xj`ekif[lZ\[X challenging element into the international system because it implies that governments not practicing them are less than fully legitimate.” This “suggests that a significant portion of the world lives under a kind of unsatisfactory, probationary arrangement, and will one day be redeemed; in the meantime, their relations with the world’s strongest power must have some latent adversarial element to them.” 8ÇZ_Xcc\e^`e^\c\d\ek#È`e[\\[%@k_Xj# B`jj`e^\ini`k\j#dX[\k_\Le`k\[JkXk\jleZfd$ fortable with “foreign policy as a permanent endeavor for contingent aims.” Fek_\fk_\i_Xe[#Ç8d\i`ZXÊj]XmfiXYc\^\f^$ raphy and vast resources facilitated a perception that foreign policy was an fgk`feXcXZk`m`kp%È9\ZXlj\ L%J%gi`eZ`gc\jXi\Xjjld\[ to be universal, the inclination to cooperate is assumed to be at least gen\iXccpcXk\ek%?\eZ\=iXeb$ c`eIffj\m\ckÊji\gfik\[ assurances to his former ambassador to Moscow, N`cc`Xd9lcc`kk1Ç@k_`eb`] @^`m\JkXc`e \m\ipk_`e^ k_Xk@gfjj`YcpZXeXe[Xjb nothing from him in return, noblesse oblige , he won’t try to annex anything and will work for a world of democracy and peace.” The last 11 years have been filled with hard c\Xie`e^%K_\)''*`emXj`fef]@iXh#k_\nfijk ]fi\`^egfc`Zp[\Z`j`fe`eL%J%_`jkfip#Zf`e$ Z`[\[n`k_d`jj`feZi\\gÇeXk`feYl`c[`e^È `e8]^_Xe`jkXe%9fk_jki\e^k_\e\[n_XkZXeY\ ZXcc\[k_\I\glYc`ZXejÊAf_eHl`eZp8[Xdj]XZ$ tion: America “goes not abroad, in search of dfejk\ijkf[\jkifp%J_\`jk_\n\cc$n`j_\ikf k_\]i\\[fdXe[`e[\g\e[\eZ\f]Xcc%J_\`jk_\ champion and vindicator only of her own.” K_\Zfd`e^[\YXk\XYflkXefk_\i8LD=n`cc Zfd\`eXZfek\okZfe[`k`fe\[YpFYXdXÊjX^^i\j$ sive use of his expansive understanding of execuk`m\gfn\ij#Xk_fd\Xe[XYifX[%DfccpFÊKffc\# ni`k`e^]fi;\]\ej\Fe\`e8l^ljk#efk\[1 ÇK_\)''(8LD=k_Xk:fe^i\jjgXjj\[`ek_\ ]\Xi]lc[Xpj]fccfn`e^k_\J\gk%((XkkXZbj_Xj been called the most far-reaching, open-ended \ogXej`fef]k_\\o\Zlk`m\Êjgfn\ij`eL%J%_`j$ kfip%K_fl^_k_\8LD=Êjd\i\-'nfi[jdX[\ no mention of al-Qaeda or Afghanistan, they gifm`[\[Gi\j`[\ek>\fi^\N%9lj_k_\jkXkl$ tory authority for the war in Afghanistan and on �terror,’ and the legal underpinnings for almost Xeplj\f]L%J%d`c`kXip]fiZ\kfZflek\ik\iifi$ ism anywhere across the globe for the past 13 years.” K_\)''(8LD=Zflc[efk_Xm\Xek`Z`gXk\[ kf[XpÊjmXi`XYc\j%K_\8LD=f])'')@iXh ]fc$ cfn\[k_\@iXhC`Y\iXk`fe8Zkf](00/#n_`Z_ gXjj\[k_\?flj\*-'kf*/Xe[k_\J\eXk\leXe$ `dfljcpXe[[\ZcXi\[`kL%J%gfc`ZpkfÇi\dfm\ k_\i\^`d\_\X[\[YpJX[[Xd?ljj\`e%È FYXdX`ji`^_kk_Xkk_\i\`jdlZ_kfi\k_`eb% GEORGE WILL GEORGE WILL’S email address: georgewill@washpost. com YOUR VOICE Letters to the Editor reflect the opinions of the writers and are not necessarily those of The Daily Times. TODAY’S BIBLE VERSE SUBMITTED BY JOE BRANNON, FRIENDSVILLE In thee, O Lord, do I put my trust: let me never be put to confusion. Psalms 71:1 THE DAILY TIMES Blount County’s only daily newspaper, serving our readers since 1883 Published by Blount County Publishers LLC Gregg K. Jones President Carl Esposito Publisher Frank Trexler Managing Editor Richard Dodson News Editor Dean Stone Editor Melanie Tucker LifeTimes Editor Robert Norris City Editor Larry Aldridge Executive Editor Marcus Fitzsimmons Sports Editor Daryl Sullivan Photo Editor Retired BMH employees enjoy annual luncheon ;\Xi<[`kfi1 The retired employees from 9cflekD\dfi`Xc?fjg`kXc 9D? _\c[k_\`iXeelXccle$ Z_\fei\Z\ekcp%@k`jXcnXpjjlZ_ a pleasure to see our past coworkers and friends to talk over good times we had together. 8D\dfi`Xc9fXi[#jg\Xi$ headed by Helen Abbott, called attention to the people who have already passed. They are forever memories for us as the list gets cfe^\i\XZ_p\Xi%Jfd\f]fli folks in their 80s and 90s are still attending the event gung-ho. @n`j_kfk_XebXe[XZbefnc$ edge the following people who have made this event possible for us: ›=fle[Xk`fej;`i\Zkfif]9D? Jane Andrews and her staff for their support and gifts. ›K_\=`ijk:_liZ_f]k_\EXq$ Xi\e\N`ccfn[\Xe;`j_dXe# :XifcpeG_`cc`gj ]fiXccfn`e^ us the use of their facility. ›K_\DXipm`cc\;X`cpK`d\j for their wonderful press coverage by Melanie Tucker, and various photographers. ›K_\Zfdd`kk\\n_fnfib\[ tirelessly to make this event jlZZ\jj]lc9i\e[XK_fdXj# G\^^p:ffg\i#:Xk_pJ_Xm\i# :Xifcpe:i`jg#J_`ic\pF^c\# M\c[XGfn\cc#?\c\e8YYfkk# N`cdXDX[`jfeXe[Af8ee\ Pierce, our mentor. Gerrae Messer, Chair BMH Retirees Luncheon 2015 Cheltenham Road Maryville, TN 37804 VOICE YOUR OPINIONS Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must be signed and include your address and a telephone number where the writer may be reached. Those longer than 300 words normally will not be considered for publication. Address letters: Editor, The Daily Times, P.O. Box 9740, Maryville, Tenn., 37802-9740. Letters may be submitted via email to [email protected] with verification included. In addition, a signed copy of the email must be forwarded to the above postal address. We do not accept letters via fax or by comments posted to our websites or Facebook page. | 7A THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com S&P 500 2,041.32 p +1.50 NASDAQ 4,671.00 Today Better quarter? q -17.54 p +13.01 The stock market eked out a tiny gain Monday. Utilities and health care stocks, two of this years best performing sectors, were among the top three sectors as the Standard & Poor’s 500 index closed at a record. Energy stocks fell the most as the price of oil dropped. Halliburton HAL Close: $49.23 -5.85 or -10.6% The oilfield services company is buying rival Baker Hughes in a cash-and-stock deal worth $34.6 billion as oil prices tumble. $70 60 50 40 A S O 52-week range $47.60 N $74.33 Vol.: 80.2m (5.9x avg.) PE: 12.8 Mkt. Cap: $41.72 b Yield: 1.5% TICKER CLOSE CHG Alcoa AllegTch Alumina AlumChina ArcelorMit Cameco g CarpTech FrptMcM Gerdau Nucor POSCO RelStlAl SiderurNac SthnCopper StlDynam TeckRes g Tenaris Ternium TurqHillRs USSteel AA ATI AWC ACH MT CCJ CRS FCX GGB NUE PKX RS SID SCCO STLD TCK TS TX TRQ X YTD 16.83 -.11 +6.20 32.92 +.07 -2.71 4.48 ... +.52 10.71 -.96 +2.01 12.30 +.05 -5.54 19.00 +.10 -1.77 50.72 -.92 -11.48 28.42 +.12 -9.30 4.10 -.09 -3.74 54.14 +.23 +.76 69.49 +1.64 -8.51 64.58 +.16 -11.26 2.60 -.05 -3.60 30.38 -.15 +1.67 22.64 -.10 +3.10 16.20 +.17 -9.81 36.26 -.61 -7.43 20.48 -.12 -10.82 3.55 -.04 +.25 36.11 -.13 +6.61 30-YR T-BONDS 3.06% p +.01 CRUDE OIL $75.64 q -.18 8 37.48 1 39.30 5 76.28 4 4.68 0 17.36 0 50.09 3 11.12 0 164.65 8 45.68 9 113.99 9 54.92 0 576.00 5 41.04 8 18.03 0 36.81 2 21.45 0 9.63 0 146.48 9 129.61 9 49.44 2 74.89 0 90.67 8 25.75 4 135.10 9 67.60 7 57.49 8 57.16 0 34.94 9 34.20 9 82.00 6 69.74 7 125.17 9 19.73 7 90.55 5 70.66 3 18.77 0 84.58 5 104.76 8 13.23 8 69.87 3 19.77 7 28.09 0 101.07 3 56.73 3 15.17 0 69.59 0 99.36 9 98.09 5 12.45 8 82.75 6 15.91 0 74.12 0 54.85 0 58.82 9 42.64 2 6.85 9 192.94 0 58.76 5 5.50 3 17.51 2 68.43 4 37.73 0 35.43 9 139.47 7 58.76 4 84.44 4 11.03 9 45.31 6 21.80 4 11.30 3 14.07 0 27.92 6 32.96 9 38.48 6 19.38 7 12.67 6 80.41 5 11.54 1 3.50 9 8.22 8 43.22 0 40.06 2 49.16 8 41.26 5 50.77 0 44.24 9 19.57 0 121.82 0 71.66 5 30.97 5 3.41 8 69.50 0 83.15 9 37.13 0 34.60 0 177.21 t t t s t s t s t t s s t t t s s t s t t s s t t s s s t t t t t t s t s r t t t s s s s s t t s t t s s s s s t s t t t t s t s t t t t t t s t s t t s t s s t s t t s s t t s s s t s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s t s s s s t s s s s s s s s s t s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s t s s t s t s s s s s s s s t s s s s s s s s t s s s s s s s s s s t s s s s s s s +2.0 +7.3 s -50.9 -44.3 s -2.8 -7.0 s -28.2 -25.2 s +58.3 +90.0 s +27.8 +34.6 s -6.7 +7.3 s +39.5 +38.7 s +25.7 +35.7 s +12.4 +21.9 s +17.7 +16.4 s +18.9 +23.7 s +0.1 +14.4 s +9.8 +16.4 s +26.7 +43.0 t -29.3 -31.1 s +8.5 +6.0 s +22.6 +25.8 s +26.0 +29.1 s +3.8 +7.3 t -2.6 +5.7 s +13.1 +23.7 t +5.2 +0.2 t -7.3 +0.8 s +2.5 +12.5 s +4.2 +15.3 s +8.2 +17.5 s +3.7 +8.1 s +33.6 +36.9 s +7.3 +15.2 s -4.8 +6.5 s +13.0 +22.0 s +25.3 +22.5 s +4.0 +8.0 s -9.2 -2.7 s -20.0 -15.9 s +31.6 +33.6 s -6.0 +4.9 s +9.4 +16.2 s +24.3 +25.8 s -10.0 -6.9 s -5.1 +1.3 s +20.1 +23.4 t -14.1 -7.2 t -2.3 +4.5 s +15.8 +15.6 s +19.1 +26.7 s +5.6 +11.2 s +2.7 +5.6 s +3.2 +12.3 s -0.6 +13.4 s +33.3 +30.8 s +13.5 +25.7 s +47.5 +36.8 s +16.7 +10.9 t -21.1 -39.5 s +24.8 +38.8 s +18.8 +14.3 s -3.6 +23.4 s -2.2 -4.6 t -20.8 -14.4 t -17.4 -23.8 s +9.9 +18.7 s +18.6 +26.0 t +1.4 +4.3 s -12.9 -16.1 s -21.7 -16.9 s +102.3 +136.8 s +0.7 +15.9 t -20.7 -15.1 s -21.0 -25.7 s +42.9 +47.3 s -1.0 -1.9 s +12.6 +14.9 s +4.4 +18.0 s +7.3 +15.8 s -1.9 -2.4 s +2.1 +5.3 t -58.4 -61.2 s +12.3 +18.3 s +8.9 +22.4 s +107.4 +115.3 t -14.5 -6.1 s +7.1 +11.7 t +30.1 +26.1 s +28.6 +43.1 s +37.8 +32.1 s +43.2 +54.8 s +14.4 +28.4 t +5.7 +15.7 s +15.5 +24.3 s +11.1 +18.8 s +6.2 +7.3 s +31.0 +23.2 s +7.8 +16.9 s +11.9 +17.7 EURO $1.2453 Interestrates q TREASURIES 3-month T-bill GOLD $1,183.00 -.0072 q -2.00 NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO .01 0.01 ... r s t .07 11 1.84 6-month T-bill .05 0.06 -0.01 r r r .09 dd ... .12 52-wk T-bill .13 0.14 -0.01 s s s 14 1.10 0.18e 2-year T-note .51 0.52 -0.01 t s s .29 The yield on the 27 0.12 5-year T-note 1.63 1.61 +0.02 t s s 1.34 10-year Trea23 2.08f 26 0.40 sury rose to 10-year T-note 2.34 2.32 +0.02 t s t 2.71 25 2.44 2.34 percent 30-year T-bond 3.06 3.05 +0.01 t s t 3.79 26 0.24f Monday. Yields 36 1.36 affect rates on NET 1YR 18 1.56f mortgages and BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 18 ... other consumer 13 0.96 loans. Barclays LongT-BdIdx 2.89 2.85 +0.04 t s t 3.58 16 0.20f Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.40 4.39 +0.01 s s t 5.09 25 0.50f 30 0.20 Barclays USAggregate 2.26 2.27 -0.01 s s s 2.32 PRIME FED cc ... Barclays US High Yield 5.97 5.91 +0.06 s t s 5.77 RATE FUNDS 17 ... Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.94 3.97 -0.03 s s t 4.67 56 2.60a YEST 3.25 .13 5 0.50 Barclays CompT-BdIdx 1.91 1.91 ... t s s 1.61 16 ... 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.07 3.08 -0.01 s s s 3.21 1 YR AGO 3.25 .13 22 1.00 19 0.95 11 4.28 6MO. 1YR. 25 0.80f Foreign MAJORS CLOSE CH. %CH. AGO AGO 17 0.90 Exchange USD per British Pound 1.5642 -.0038 -.24% 1.6821 1.6112 17 0.90 44 1.00 The dollar rose Canadian Dollar 1.1310 +.0027 +.24% 1.0867 1.0450 15 0.42 modestly USD per Euro 1.2453 -.0072 -.58% 1.3698 1.3490 19 2.04 against other Japanese Yen 116.48 +.23 +.20% 101.51 100.23 44 0.40 major curren15 0.24 Mexican Peso 13.5870 +.0576 +.42%12.8936 12.9385 cies, including 23 0.68 the euro, JapaEUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST 13 1.40 Israeli Shekel 3.8286 +.0123 +.32% 3.4598 3.5193 21 1.88f nese yen and 27 0.70 British pound. Norwegian Krone 6.7898 +.0352 +.52% 5.9356 6.1056 14 3.32 The dollar is South African Rand 11.1428 +.0515 +.46%10.3588 10.1595 12 2.76 close to its Swedish Krona 7.4356 +.0445 +.60% 6.5616 6.6328 14 0.20 highest level .9647 +.0056 +.58% .8919 .9152 15 1.32 against the yen Swiss Franc dd ... since 2007. ASIA/PACIFIC 19 0.88 Australian Dollar 1.1481 +.0061 +.53% 1.0678 1.0683 22 2.30 Chinese Yuan 6.1247 -.0048 -.08% 6.2337 6.0925 2.46e Hong Kong Dollar 7.7546 -.0001 -.00% 7.7521 7.7538 ... 12 1.48 Indian Rupee 61.810 +.080 +.13% 58.575 62.985 23 1.88 Singapore Dollar 1.2980 +.0014 +.11% 1.2507 1.2465 18 2.07f South Korean Won 1100.74 +1.48 +.13%1023.90 1062.85 20 0.16 Taiwan Dollar 30.71 -.09 -.29% 30.15 29.60 26 0.80 dd ... 18 2.72 16 1.60f FUELS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 19 0.74f Commodities Crude Oil (bbl) 75.64 75.82 -0.24 -23.2 23 2.04 The price of Ethanol (gal) 2.05 2.02 -0.79 +7.3 dd ... natural gas Heating Oil (gal) 2.40 2.42 -0.50 -21.9 19 6.00f surged to its Natural Gas (mm btu) 4.34 4.02 +7.99 +2.6 24 0.92 biggest one-day Unleaded Gas (gal) 2.03 2.04 -0.79 -27.3 cc ... gain since Feb5 ... METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 15 1.40 ruary on expecGold (oz) 1183.00 1185.00 -0.17 -1.6 ... tations that 23 0.68 colder temperaSilver (oz) 16.05 16.31 -1.58 -17.0 15 2.80 tures will mean Platinum (oz) 1201.30 1213.10 -0.97 -12.4 27 1.48 stronger deCopper (lb) 3.05 3.06 -0.28 -11.4 18 1.08 mand. Crude oil Palladium (oz) 768.35 771.00 -0.34 +7.1 21 ... dipped. 27 ... AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD dd 0.75 Cattle (lb) 1.71 1.70 +0.47 +27.1 dd ... Coffee (lb) 1.88 1.92 -2.34 +69.4 dd ... Corn (bu) 3.78 3.82 -1.11 -10.6 23 1.08 Cotton (lb) 0.59 0.60 -1.66 -30.5 16 1.04 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 315.90 317.40 -1.26 -12.3 20 1.28 q 1.56a Orange Juice (lb) 1.34 1.31 +2.33 -1.7 q 1.08 Soybeans (bu) 10.36 10.21 +1.35 -21.1 16 0.88 Wheat (bu) 5.52 5.61 -1.56 -8.8 12 0.20 59 ... dd ... 25 0.88 PERCENT RETURN FUND CAT NAV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR 23 0.24 FAMILY 15 ... American Funds GrthAmA m LG 46.87 -.15 +9.0 +13.4 +21.3 +13.6 13 0.80 IncAmerA m MA 21.91 +.01 +8.6 +10.4 +14.4 +11.4 9 0.40 InvCoAmA m LB 41.01 +.06 +13.0 +17.0 +21.2 +13.7 16 0.40f GrowA m LG 50.70 -.26 +7.9 +12.2 +15.3 +11.7 dd ... Calamos NYVentA m LB 40.35 -.13 +5.7 +9.7 +18.1 +11.5 22 2.00f Davis IntlStk FB 44.04 -.28 +2.3 +5.4 +16.3 +8.1 24 1.28f Dodge & Cox 35 ... Dupree TNTxFInc SI 11.62 ... +7.0 +7.0 +4.4 +4.6 dd ... Fidelity Contra LG 103.07 -.34 +8.3 +12.3 +19.5 +14.9 48 0.24 DivrIntl d FB 36.15 -.18 -2.1 +1.6 +13.3 +6.5 17 1.92 IntlSmCp d FR 25.07 -.16 -6.4 -3.9 +14.0 +9.5 23 1.30 Magellan LG 97.54 -.21 +12.5 +16.5 +22.3 +12.7 26 1.16 Nicholas Nichol MG 68.73 -.04 +11.4 +16.1 +23.8 +18.6 19 3.00 Oppenheimer CapApA m LG 67.36 -.24 +12.5 +17.8 +18.5 +12.7 Dividend footnotes: a- extra dividends were paid, but are not included b- annual rate plus stock c- liquidating dividend e- amount GlobA m WS 80.51 -.01 +2.2 +5.9 +16.3 +10.5 declared or paid in last 12 months f- current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement i- sum of div- PIMCO HiYldA m HY 9.56 ... +4.3 +5.4 +8.2 +8.8 idends paid after stock split, no regular rate k- declared or paid this year - a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears m- current TotRetAdm b CI 10.93 -.01 +3.9 +2.8 +4.4 +4.7 annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement p- initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown r- declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend t- paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date Putnam DynAstAlBalA m MA 15.06 ... +8.3 +10.7 +13.8 +11.2 DynAstAlConA m CA 11.33 ... +7.3 +8.4 +9.2 +8.1 2,080 4,720 DynAstAlGrA m AL 18.06 ... +8.2 +11.3 +16.3 +12.1 S&P 500 Nasdaq composite Thrivent BalIncPlsA m MA 13.47 -.02 +5.2 +7.1 +12.7 +10.2 Close: 2,041.32 Close: 4,671.00 2,040 4,640 Change: 1.50 (0.1%) Change: -17.54 (-0.4%) MidCapA m MB 23.64 -.01 +9.5 +13.2 +19.6 +15.1 2,000 4,560 MuniBdA m ML 11.63 ... +8.4 +8.4 +4.7 +4.9 10 DAYS 10 DAYS OpIncPlsA m MU 10.37 ... +3.9 +4.2 +3.4 +5.3 2,050 4,800 SmCapStkA m SB 20.08 -.11 +2.3 +7.7 +16.1 +12.7 Vanguard 500Inv LB 188.82 +.15 +12.3 +15.7 +21.2 +15.2 2,000 4,600 Explr SG 104.94 -.79 +1.5 +5.3 +19.7 +16.8 ExtndIdx MB 65.95 -.31 +5.1 +9.1 +20.8 +17.0 1,950 4,400 GrowthIdx LG 53.32 -.11 +12.2 +16.7 +20.9 +16.0 ITTsry GI 11.36 -.01 +3.9 +2.4 +1.3 +3.6 1,900 4,200 InflaPro IP 13.41 -.04 +4.2 +2.1 +0.6 +3.8 IntlGr FG 22.72 -.14 -2.7 +1.0 +12.7 +7.2 Prmcp LG 107.44 -.24 +16.4 +20.0 +24.1 +16.4 1,850 4,000 M J J A S O N M J J A S O N REITIdx SR 26.16 +.10 +24.8 +21.2 +17.0 +17.4 HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD SmCapIdx SB 55.31 -.24 +5.0 +8.6 +20.6 +17.0 TotBdMkInv CI 10.84 -.01 +4.9 +4.2 +2.4 +3.8 17675.07 17606.81 17647.75 +13.01 +0.07% s s s +6.46% NYSE NASD DOW USGro LG 32.01 -.07 +11.6 +16.6 +21.9 +14.7 DOW Trans. 9056.52 9006.78 9012.63 -48.90 -0.54% t s s +21.78% Vol. (in mil.) 3,052 1,645 DOW Util. 594.34 585.02 593.59 +7.55 +1.29% t s s +21.00% ValueIdx LV 32.76 +.08 +11.8 +14.4 +21.5 +14.6 10847.01 10883.25 +2.62 +0.02% t s t +4.64% Pvs. Volume 3,126 1,701 NYSE Comp. 10895.36 Welltn MA 40.59 +.01 +8.9 +10.9 +14.9 +11.1 NASDAQ 4689.53 4655.20 4671.00 -17.54 -0.37% s s s +11.84% WndsrII LV 40.20 +.13 +10.6 +13.1 +20.8 +13.9 Advanced 1400 911 S&P 500 2043.07 2034.46 2041.32 +1.50 +0.07% s s s +10.44% Declined 1754 1776 S&P 400 AdvCoBdAd CI 12.72 -.01 +5.1 +4.5 +3.3 +4.7 1431.86 1426.18 1428.81 -2.04 -0.14% t s s +6.43% Wells Fargo New Highs 157 83 Wilshire 5000 21486.40 SCpValInv SB 35.26 -.14 +4.8 0.0 +11.2 +10.0 21398.28 21461.91 -5.86 -0.03% s s s +8.91% New Lows 43 62 Russell 2000 1175.18 1164.18 1164.23 -9.58 -0.82% t s s +0.05% SpMdCpValIv MV 35.05 ... +11.2 +14.7 +23.3 +17.4 35.85 18.17 61.60 3.16 16.83 49.05 9.21 159.14 42.33 109.11 53.47 568.06 37.34 17.09 35.85 12.47 9.44 145.37 126.43 47.82 58.00 89.80 24.38 115.75 65.97 54.15 53.99 34.95 32.12 79.87 64.65 109.82 18.84 83.95 63.74 14.01 83.27 95.11 12.75 64.83 16.22 26.61 99.92 45.88 11.98 69.16 98.03 96.53 11.70 79.76 14.19 72.54 54.84 58.29 41.31 2.85 185.51 58.89 4.05 12.54 51.41 28.15 35.62 135.91 54.14 68.70 7.13 41.91 19.43 7.26 9.59 27.34 30.32 37.35 18.02 12.14 72.29 10.10 1.17 7.78 40.44 39.07 33.61 39.43 35.47 43.03 18.44 120.32 71.32 24.48 2.65 66.00 83.57 35.93 34.03 175.55 -.05 -.40 -.14 +.04 -.11 +.27 -.06 +1.46 -.28 -.37 +.18 +.95 -.09 -.05 -.27 +.19 +.07 -.15 +.09 -.09 -.24 +.45 +.34 -.57 -.20 +.05 +.22 +.22 -.17 -.18 -.08 -1.97 -.08 -.23 +.12 -.31 +1.82 +.02 -.13 -.33 -.19 +.15 +.24 +.14 +.61 +.16 -.21 -.26 +.03 -.60 -.15 +.96 +.41 +.58 +.08 +.21 -1.09 +.31 -.01 -.04 -.53 -.10 +.79 -.16 +.23 -.34 -.07 -.74 -.15 -.12 -.19 +.06 -.02 +.58 -.08 -.08 +1.17 -.07 +.01 +.09 -.66 +.12 -.14 -.13 +.16 +2.37 -.01 -.39 +.32 +.74 +.09 -.31 +.61 +.33 +.13 +2.28 -0.1 -2.1 -0.2 +1.3 -0.6 +0.6 -0.6 +0.9 -0.7 -0.3 +0.3 +0.2 -0.2 -0.3 -0.7 +1.5 +0.7 -0.1 +0.1 -0.2 -0.4 +0.5 +1.4 -0.5 -0.3 +0.1 +0.4 +0.6 -0.5 -0.2 -0.1 -1.8 -0.4 -0.3 +0.2 -2.2 +2.2 ... -1.0 -0.5 -1.2 +0.6 +0.2 +0.3 +5.4 +0.2 -0.2 -0.3 +0.3 -0.7 -1.0 +1.3 +0.8 +1.0 +0.2 +8.0 -0.6 +0.5 -0.2 -0.3 -1.0 -0.4 +2.3 -0.1 +0.4 -0.5 -1.0 -1.7 -0.8 -1.6 -1.9 +0.2 -0.1 +1.6 -0.4 -0.6 +1.6 -0.7 +0.9 +1.2 -1.6 +0.3 -0.4 -0.3 +0.5 +5.8 -0.1 -0.3 +0.5 +3.1 +3.5 -0.5 +0.7 +0.9 +0.4 +1.3 10664 345 1316 5127 7514 5924 27 2591 326 667 807 208 2943 41214 253 15456 19 2329 709 1137 1917 246 2940 5518 186 12682 2068 1811 812 371 11 414 2370 638 2214 67 1845 8454 1480 159 141 23956 337 3114 1 159 8480 1700 2 551 416 328 1626 2433 148 166 1148 4643 50 106 1071 1680 2087 749 1377 1329 132 13 447 13297 181 1217 25588 362 192 95 354 10220 5 400 35 6220 5037 1676 1880 8529 38 2539 1032 302 7 883 6871 526 1903 751 MutualFunds StocksRecap Industrial Metals 20 NAME q -.01 Stocks of Blount Interest AT&T Inc T 31.74 Acxiom Corp ACXM 16.04 Albemarle Corp ALB 51.35 Alcatel-Lucent ALU 2.28 Alcoa Inc AA 8.93 Altria Group MO 33.80 Am Softwre AMSWA 8.47 Amgen AMGN 108.20 Arkansas Bst ARCB 29.88 Ashland Inc ASH 88.31 ATMOS Energy ATO 43.50 AutoZone Inc AZO 454.88 BB&T Corp BBT 33.65 Bank of America BAC 14.37 HD $98.03 $100 Bank of the Ozarks OZRK 25.28 $78.94 Barrick Gold ABX 10.90 Bear State Financial BSF 7.00 86 Berkshire Hath B BRK/B 108.12 Boston Prop BXP 98.04 ’13 Brunswick Corp BC 38.17 72 Cameron Intl CAM 54.13 est. Operating Carlisle Cos CSL 71.51 $0.95 $1.13 EPS CenterPoint Energy CNP 21.07 3Q ’13 3Q ’14 Chevron Corp CVX 106.65 Clarcor Inc CLC 52.70 Price-earnings ratio: 23 Comcast Corp A CMCSA 46.76 based on past 12 month results Comcast Spl CMCSK 45.76 Dividend: $1.88 Div. yield: 1.9% ConAgra Foods CAG 28.09 Cooper Tire CTB 20.55 Source: FactSet Cullen Frost CFR 69.87 Deltic Timber DEL 58.05 Inflation monitor Dillards Inc DDS 82.75 Duke Realty Corp DRE 14.18 A measure of prices that producEastman Chem EMN 70.38 ers receive for their goods and Emerson Elec EMR 57.76 services has barely budged Ennis Inc EBF 12.53 recently. Entergy ETR 60.22 Falling gasoline and food costs Exxon Mobil Corp XOM 86.91 have lowered the prices that U.S. Fst Horizon Natl FHN 10.93 companies received for their GATX GMT 47.84 goods and services in recent GenCorp GY 15.11 months. In the past year, producer Gen Electric GE 23.69 prices have risen just 1.6 percent, Genuine Parts GPC 76.50 GlaxoSmithKline PLC GSK 41.91 slightly below the Federal Grupo Simec SIM 10.62 Reserve's target. Did the trend Hanover Insurance THG 52.86 continue in October? Find out Home Depot HD 73.96 today, Honeywell Intl HON 82.89 HopFed Bancorp Inc HFBC 10.97 Producer price index seasonally adjusted percent change Hunt, JB Transport JBHT 69.33 iStar Financial STAR 12.30 0.3% Integrys Energy TEG 52.08 Intl Paper IP 44.24 0.2 Kroger Co KR 35.13 LTC Prop LTC 34.77 Lo Jack LOJN 2.38 0.1 Lockheed Martin LMT 135.39 LOW 44.13 est. Lowes Cos flat 0.0 Martha Stewart Liv MSO 2.94 Modine Mfg MOD 10.79 Murphy Oil Corp MUR 49.38 -0.1 M J J A S O NCR Corp NCR 22.83 2014 Newell Rubbermaid NWL 28.27 NOC 107.21 Source: FactSet Northrop Grumman Nucor Corp NUE 46.39 Oceaneering Intl OII 58.54 Builders’ confidence Omnova Solutions OMN 5.15 A key gauge of U.S. homebuildPAM Transp PTSI 16.72 Parkway Properties PKY 16.93 ers’ confidence in the housing Penney JC Co Inc JCP 4.90 market is due out today. Pep Boys PBY 8.36 The National Association of Pepco Holdings Inc POM 18.50 Home Builders/Wells Fargo Pfizer Inc PFE 27.51 Housing Market Index slipped to Piedmnt Nat Gas PNY 31.94 54 last month, the first drop after Pimco Corp &Inco Opp PTY 16.08 four months of gains which had Pimco Income Strat PFL 11.07 pushed the indicator to the highest Regal Beloit RBC 62.15 point in nine years. Readings Regions Fncl RF 8.85 above 50 indicate more builders Reliv Intl RELV 1.14 view sales conditions as good Ruby Tuesday RT 5.14 rather than poor. Simmons Fst Natl SFNC 32.01 Swst Airlines LUV 17.73 Sthwstn Energy SWN 30.60 Suntrust Bks STI 33.97 Trinty Inds TRN 24.38 Tyson Foods TSN 29.03 USA Truck USAK 11.95 Union Pacific Corp UNP 78.72 VF Corp VFC 55.14 Vascular Solutions VASC 18.42 Virco Mfg VIRC 2.00 Vulcan Matl VMC 53.55 WalMart Strs WMT 72.27 Weingarten Rlty WRI 27.21 Weyerhaeuser WY 27.48 Whirlpool WHR 124.39 AP 6-MO T-BILLS .05% 52-WK RANGE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR CHG%RTN (Thous) P/E DIV NAME Wall Street anticipates that Home Depot’s earnings and revenue improved in its fiscal third quarter. The nation’s largest home improvement retailer, due to report financial results today, has benefited this year from an improving U.S. housing market. Many homeowners also are spending more to renovate their homes. In August, Home Depot raised its annual profit guidance. DOW 17,647.75 Money&Markets Automobiles & Parts Travel & Leisure NAME TICKER CLOSE CHG AmAirl n BurgerKng Carnival CarnUK Chipotle DeltaAir Hilton n LVSands MarIntA McDnlds MelcoCrwn Priceline RylCarb Ryanair SwstAirl Starbucks StarwdHtl UtdContl Wynn YumBrnds YTD AAL 43.69 -.32 +18.44 BKW 32.14 -.15 +9.28 CCL 41.51 +.01 +1.34 CUK 41.33 +.16 -.12 CMG 658.32 -11.48 +125.54 DAL 43.43 -.32 +15.96 HLT 25.42 -.39 +3.17 LVS 62.52 -.99 -16.35 MAR 77.17 -.79 +27.82 MCD 95.97 -.24 -1.06 MPEL 25.97 -.56 -13.25 PCLN 1166.41 -6.55 +4.01 RCL 68.54 -1.03 +21.12 RYAAY 61.33 -.11 +14.40 LUV 39.07 +.12 +20.23 SBUX 77.83 -.29 -.56 HOT 76.85 -1.65 -2.60 UAL 55.99 -.11 +18.16 WYNN 182.63 -1.36 -11.58 YUM 73.99 -.79 -1.62 NAME TICKER CLOSE CHG Autoliv BorgWrn s DanaHldg DelphiAuto FordM GenMotors Gentex GenuPrt Goodyear HarleyD Honda JohnsnCtl LKQ Corp LearCorp MagnaInt g TRWAuto TeslaMot Toyota Visteon WABCO ALV BWA DAN DLPH F GM GNTX GPC GT HOG HMC JCI LKQ LEA MGA TRW TSLA TM VC WBC 96.72 55.97 20.77 70.85 15.54 32.31 34.88 99.92 25.34 68.64 31.51 49.72 28.77 93.72 103.90 102.39 253.98 118.59 95.27 102.14 Every Monday in -.52 +.79 +.12 +.17 +.40 +.52 +.19 +.24 -.28 +.24 -.48 +.31 -.21 +.10 -.02 +.12 -4.70 -1.23 -1.16 +.98 Company Spotlight YTD +4.92 +.06 +1.15 +10.72 +.11 -8.56 +2.04 +16.73 +1.49 -.60 -9.84 -1.58 -4.13 +12.75 +21.84 +28.00 +103.55 -3.33 +13.38 +8.73 Alternative cigarette Reynolds American plans to introduce a cigarette that heats tobacco, rather than burns it, early y next year. The nation’s second-biggest tobacco company announced Monday it is launching Revo in Wisconsin in early 2015. The cigarette uses a carbon tip that heats tobacco after being lit. Reynolds says it’s a “repositioning” of its Eclipse product first launched in the mid-1990s. Eclipse had minimal success but Reynolds American (RAI) 52-WEEK RANGE $47 AP 66 Price change through Nov. 17 has remained in very limited distribution and is one of top-selling brands at the company’s headquarters. the top sell popular e-cigarettes that use liquid nicotine, Unlike p Revo contains real tobacco, which could make them more attractive to cigarette smokers. Officials have said that the growth of electronic cigarettes has reinvigorated the appetite for alternatives to traditional cigarettes, including products that smokers once considered foreign. Monday’s close: $64.70 Price change YTD Price-earnings ratio: 22 RAI 29.4% 17.2 20.4 Div. yield: 4.1% Dividend: $2.68 (Based on past 12 month results) *annualized 3-yr* 5-yr* Source: FactSet In Elizabethan days, fools were the only people who could get away with telling the truth to the King or Queen. The Motley Fool tells the truth about investing, champions shareholder values and advocates tirelessly for the individual investor. They hope you’ll laugh all the way to the bank. P.U. STENCHMUCH TALKS ABOUT HIS PUNGENT SPECIES. 11A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2014 THE DAILY TIMES 8A Widow in love with young man now uneasy DEAR ABBY: I am a widow who has fallen in love with a wonderful man who is almost 30 years my junior. He proclaims his love for me every day, and I know it’s real. I have been warned by others to be aware of “devious males on the make for comfortably situated widows.” After discussing it with the man, I have determined this is not his motive. Right now, we’re good friends who love each other’s company. If marriage is in the future for us, I’m afraid of the age factor. He is not. Could you comment and give me some guidance? — CAUTIOUS IN KANSAS DEAR CAUTIOUS: Everyone knows there are devious males — and females — out there, but not all men are predators. If your friend is financially independent, then it’s unlikely he’s looking for a sugar mama. While it is unusual, I know several couples in which the wife is considerably older than the husband, and they seem very happy together. If and when you plan to marry, it makes sense to discuss this with your attorney and have a prenuptial agreement created. If your friend has no ulterior motives, he will understand it’s for the protection of both of you and sign it. You have only one life to live — so live it without worrying about what others may think. DEAR ABBY: I just opened my social media account and saw a friend had posted her daughter’s report card — all A’s. She then went on to say how proud she was of her because she is also co-captain of her school’s volleyball team, and mentoring other students, etc. You get the picture. My son is suffering from depression and social anxiety, and we are fighting to keep him from failing all his classes. He’s going to therapy and is on medication. Abby, isn’t it in poor taste to publicly show your child’s report card? My son used to get straight A’s before his depression, and I would have never posted his grades. Now I am becoming resentful of friends whose kids are doing well. What advice can you give me besides not opening up my social media account again? — BAD FEELINGS DEAR BAD FEELINGS: I hope you realize that what this friend is doing is the same as parents who plaster bumper stickers on their vehicles that read “MY CHILD IS AN HONOR STUDENT.” If this woman’s posts upset you because of the challenges your son is dealing with, customize your social media feed to omit posts from her. That way you won’t have to cut yourself off from social media entirely. DEAR ABBY JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES DOUGLAS COOPERATIVE MARKETING COORDINATOR ROY HAMLIN (RIGHT) plays a game of cards with Tom Woolf at the facility Monday morning. M AKING EVERY DAY COUNT Co-op provides new opportunities for disabled adults BY MELANIE TUCKER [email protected] After being named the new county director for Douglas Cooperative Inc. here in Maryville, Amy Hymel has a pretty simple aim on the surface — to make every day meaningful for the 30 disabled adults who spend their days under her care. The participants here range in age from 22 up to their 80s and include both men and women with a wide range of disabilities. Some are autistic, wheelchair-bound or are faced with learning difficulties. Hymel, who taught special education for years in public schools in Tennessee, Florida and Kentucky, feels ready to take on the challenge. MAKE IT COUNT “My goal is to make sure our people have a meaningful day every day so they have a meaningful life,” she said. She took over as country director in August and is the first new director in more than 20 years. Her enthusiasm is evident, and she’s put into place new programs her participants are excited about. Hymel and her staff have set up learning and vocational centers. In one area, three new computers are available for these participants to train on, search the Internet and fill out job applications. There’s a library center for reading and relaxing and a sensory room to aid those with autism. Douglas Cooperative also has an arts and crafts room and a nutrition center where the adults in the program can learn how to measure, read recipes and labels and make healthy food choices. A dentist also comes in on a regular basis to take about proper hygiene. The 30 men and women who come to Douglas arrive about 9 a.m. and leave by 3 p.m. each Monday through Friday. Some days, they go out into the community and visit places like McClung Museum at the University of Tennessee. Some of them also volunteer for the Meals on Wheels program. Through a partnership with First Baptist Church of Maryville, Hymel is able to take these program participants to the church’s exercise facility three days per week. KERRY ROBERTSON (STANDING) HELPS John Martin do some work on the computer at Douglas Cooperative in Maryville. The nonprofit provides services to disabled adults. TIM MASSEY | THE DAILY TIMES AMY HYMEL IS THE NEW COUNTY DIRECTOR for Douglas Cooperative in Maryville. FOR MORE INFORMATION Douglas Cooperative Inc. is a nonprofit that serves disabled adults in the community. It is located at 416 Home Ave., Maryville. For more information, call them at 983-5544. EARNING A PAYCHECK Some of them also have jobs through Douglas Cooperative. For instance, the agency has teamed up with DENSO Manufacturing Tennessee. Parts from the car parts manufacturer are brought to Douglas and sanded, then taken back. Those who do the work get a paycheck. There is also a group at Douglas that strips and sands furniture for the community. They are paid as well. Recently, Hymel got in touch with the Blount County Public Library to see if some of Douglas’ participants can come there for computer classes. It’s all about finding new ways to challenge them and providing a full day of activities, Hymel said. “I have a great staff. We are all focused on this meaningful day.” Upcoming projects include a horticulture club where Douglas participants will be planting gardens. One of the female participants has even started writing a newsletter. A singing group will be out in the community soon, sharing the sounds of the season. “They are important,” Hymel said. “We need to build them up. They need to know that when they come here they are loved and there will be exciting things to do each day.” Roy Hamlin Jr. is the marketing coordinator for Douglas. He said there was already a good foundation before Hymel came and she has worked tirelessly to make it even better. He said the social aspect of being here is just as important as the skills they learn. “They can get cut off from the world because they aren’t talking to people or going anywhere,” he said. DECADES OF CARE Douglas has been in this community for more than 30 years. It is located on Home Avenue in Maryville. The agency also has a group home located in the Everett area. It has six residents with room for nine. There are also Douglas Cooperative facilities serving Cocke, Jefferson and Sevier counties. Hymel has hired a retired teacher and has plans to hire more. She said her years working with special education students has served her well in this position. She was a case manager for Douglas for two years before being named county director. “When I taught school, I worked with students in ninth grade through age 22,” Hymel said. When they graduated, they had nowhere to go. They would go home and sit on the couch. I really saw a need for people once they got out of high school.” On any given day, there might be a group of Maryville High School students here leading arts and crafts or playing basketball. Maryville College students volunteered SEE CO-OP, 9A DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. LIFE | 9A THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com Union Grove learns, leads DAILY CALENDAR PLAYTIME MARYVILLE COLLEGE JAZZ BAND FALL CONCERT: A little bit of the Big Easy comes to Blount County this week when the Maryville College Jazz Band offers up its fall concert. Directed by Bill Swann, chairman of the college’s Division of Fine Arts and an accomplished pianist in the local jazz scene, the ensemble’s fall concert — which takes place at 7 tonight in the Lambert Recital Hall of the Clayton Center for the Arts, 502 E. Lamar Alexander Parkway on the MC campus — will feature a program heavy with New Orleans music. “Widely acknowledged as the birthplace of jazz, New Orleans’ musical contribution to American music is undeniable,” Swann said in a press release. Band members include electric bassists Noah Cantrell and Tyler Davis; pianist Kelby Fruecht; electric guitarists Austin Loo and Cory Pardue; trumpeters Rebecca Plowman and Jack Townsend; soprano saxophonist Carrie West; and drummer Kyle Rydell. Songs on the program will include “Blue In Green” and “Solar,” by Miles Davis; “Cissy Strut,” by Modeliste, Neville, Nocentelli and Porter; “St. Louis Blues,” by W.C. Handy; “Birdlike,” by Freddie Hubbard; “Bye Bye Blackbird,” by Ray Henderson and Mort Dixon; “Cotton Tail,” by Duke Ellington; and the traditional “When the Saints Go Marching In.” Admission to the performance is free. CLASSES OFFERED BEGINNER BELLY DANCE CLASSES: Are being held at 6 p.m. Tuesdays and also at 10:30 a.m. Saturdays at a location just off Alcoa Highway. Call Alexia at 898-2126 or e-mail [email protected]. CLUBS, ORGANIZATIONS ALCOA KIWANIS CLUB: Meets W at noon each Thursday at Airport Hilton. For more information, visit www. alcoakiwanis.org. AMERICAN LEGION POST 13: Meets at 7 p.m. the third Thursday of every month at the American Legion, 224 Waters Road, Maryville. The Auxiliary meets at 6 p.m. the same day. For more information, call the American Legion at 984-0233 or Auxiliary President Sandy Whitehead at 254-1110. BLOUNT COUNTY SCOTTISH RITE CLUB: Meets at 6:30 p.m. the third Thursday of every month at New Providence Lodge in Maryville. THE FOOTHILLS QUILTERS: Will meet at 10 a.m. the first and third Thursdays of each month at Maryville Church of The Nazarene, 1610 E. Broadway, Maryville. BETRAYED RETIREES ORGANIZATION: Meets at 11 a.m. each Wednesday at the United Steelworkers of America Local 309 Union Hall, lower level, Hall Road, Alcoa. For information write to P.O. Box 427, Alcoa, TN 37701, call 207-4184 or fax 977-9510. MARYVILLE-ALCOA-BLOUNT COUNTY RETIRED TEACHERS ASSOCIATION: Will meet 11 a.m. today at Green Meadow Country Club. The speaker will be state Sen. Bob Ramsey. FOOD EVENTS THE WELCOME TABLE: New Providence Presbyterian Church, located at 703 W. Broadway in Maryville offers a free meal to the community from 5 to 6 p.m. each Tuesday. The Welcome Table is also offered from 5 to 6 p.m. each Thursday at Maryville First United Methodist Church, 804 Montvale Station Road. All are welcome. GREENBACK SENIOR CITIZENS FELLOWSHIP CLUB: Will meet on the third Friday of each month at the Greenback Community Building for a potluck and program. New members, both men and women, are welcome. For more information, contact Sandra Sowders at 8562355. MUSIC, DANCING KARAOKE: Is held at 6:30 p.m. on Thursdays and Saturdays at Alnwick Community Center in Maryville. SENIOR CITIZEN DANCE: Will be held Wednesdays at Everett Senior Center, 702 Burchfield St., Maryville. Free ballroom dance instructions will be from 1 to 2 p.m. and ballroom dancing will be from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Anyone who has ever danced or would like to learn is welcome. SELF HELP, SUPPORT GROUPS GIFT OF GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: Meets the third Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at Monte Vista Baptist Church in Maryville. For more information, call the church office at 982-6070. HAVEN HOUSE: Offers an educational class for victims and survivors of domestic violence and community members who are interested in learning about the cycle of violence and how they can help loved ones. For more information, contact the outreach office at 983-6818. A 24-hour crisis hotline is also available at 982-1087. EDITOR’S NOTE: For a listing of Alcoholics Anonymous, Al-Anon and Al-Ateen meetings, please see this section every Wednesday. NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS (NAMI): Meets the fourth Thursday of each month from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church, 429 Sandy Springs Road, Maryville. For more information, call Jackie at 995-9933 or Kim at 579-5165. BLOUNT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL’S CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: Meets from 6-7 p.m. Wednesdays on the hospital’s 3-east floor. The group is a free service for any adult who cares for elders. For information call 977-5744 or visit www. blountmemorial.org. Literature classes make Atlanta trek for �Macbeth’ ith approximately one month of classes remaining in the semester, the high school students of Blount Home Education Association are busy with homework, studying for exams, and gaining theatrical experience. On Monday, Oct. 27, BHEA’s British Literature and Classic Literature classes, both taught by Sarah Small, braved the rush hour traffic to make an overnight trip to Georgia. Their reward? The opportunity to see “Macbeth” performed at the New American Shakespeare Tavern in downtown Atlanta. After studying the Scottish play for several weeks, the group of 30 high schoolers was delighted to see it live on BC HOME SCHOOL LYDIA HARRISON stage. Senior Aaron Barlow stated, “What I most enjoyed about �Macbeth’ was listening to the actors bring life to the play by fluently quoting Shakespeare.” Not only did the teens spend part of their afternoon at the theatre, but their fearless leaders later took them on a quick tour of the city, stopping by landmarks such as The Varsity and Centennial Olympic Park. After returning home from the field trip, many of the students headed to rehearse for their own show. On Dec. 5 and 6 at 7 p.m., the BHEA Drama Class Players will be presenting the show “Dorothy in Wonderland” at River Oaks Community Church. This hilarious mash-up of two classic stories contains all of your favorite L. Frank Baum and Lewis Carroll characters, and is great fun for “kids” of all ages. Admission is free, but donations are gratefully accepted. CO-OP: State and private clients welcome FROM 8A recently to help paint. Last week, Sherman Turner, manager for GCA Services Group, was there for two days volunteering his services to clean and buff the floors at Douglas. Hymel had contacted ALCOA Inc. to see if anyone could help and the company told them about Turner. “We couldn’t have done this without them,” Hymel said. LOOKING AHEAD The average age for Douglas participants is mid-40s and the ratio of men to women is about �All they need is to have someone believe in them. Then they believe in themselves.’ Amy Hymel County director for Douglas Cooperative equal. Many of these clients are here because the state pays for the program through the Tennessee Division of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. But, Hymel pointed out that private pay clients are also welcome and the cost isn’t that high. Moving forward, Hymel said she will continue to add to the list of programs available at Douglas Cooperative. Partnerships with the community are a way to do that. Whether it’s playing Wii games, learning to write a resume, baking a cake or getting hands-on vocational training, the goal remains the same. “All they need is to have someone believe in them,” Hymel said. “Then they believe in themselves.” U nion Grove Middle School is learning today, leading tomorrow. While students, faculty, and staff are focused on academics, clubs are actively engaged in helping the community. At the request of students, UGMS has now formed a Student Council. Teacher sponsors Kari Hodson and Tina Crye selected 17 students to participate on the council. These students include eighthgraders Aspen Cooper, Stephanie Lakins, Bennie Ann Witten, Madison Jennings, William Pugh, Dylan Bryant, Gracey Hackler, Shane Nuchols, Alaina Webster, and seventhgraders Sara Kagley, Rebecca Moler, Tommy Bond, Dalton Hammer, Ben Kenny, Julianna Hotchkiss, Parker Cupp and Leann McLemore, They are charged with improving and supporting school programs UNION GROVE MIDDLE SARAH MOLER through fundraising and participation. Beta Club members are preparing for the National Beta Convention on Nov. 23. Students compete in art, photography, quiz bowl, and academic tests. Beta Club is also collecting toys for the Toys for Tots campaign through Dec. 5. To support Second Harvest Food Bank, FCA is sponsoring a canned food drive. Students are encouraged to place the canned goods in a collection box with a teacher’s name on it. These teachers are Jack Casteel, Leah England, Rebecca Sneed and Mary Jo Willocks. The lucky teacher who has the most canned food items on Dec. 21 will wear a turkey costume the next day. Since the Veterans Day celebration earlier this month, band students are now preparing for Junior Clinic tryouts. A student is required to sight read music, play musical scales, and perform a prepared piece of music. The students will also present their Christmas Concert at 7 p.m. on Dec. 1, in the school’s gymnasium. As part of the annual Thanksgiving lunch, the UGMS cafeteria served parents, grandparents, and siblings a delicious meal on Nov. 12. Students wrote essays about their favorite healthy meal. These essays were displayed in the cafeteria. Students sell poetry anthology A s part of their technology requirements, Maryville Junior High School students have written a poetry anthology. To promote the sales of the book, the order form advertises “heartwarming and humorous poetry in #beyondwords.” Jody Dyer, a technology teacher at MJHS, came up with the idea for a poetry anthology. “As I toiled in my spare time on the intricacies of proofing, editing, revising, formatting and marketing �The Eye of Adoption’ and two subsequent works (�Field Day’ and �Parents, Stop and Think’), I realized that the academic work I was doing met almost all of my course (9th Grade Computer Applications) standards,” she said. After running the idea past fellow tech teacher Sherri McCall and principal Lisa McGinley, Dyer MARYVILLE JUNIOR HS LAUREN MAGILL was given full support in her pursuit of a student poetry anthology. Students were encouraged to participate in the planning and publishing of the anthology. Freshman Lauren Hamby came up with the title, #beyondwords, and fellow freshman Haley Kratz designed the cover in her Art I class. All 9th grad- ers were encouraged to participate, with permission slips sent home to parents. Students able to participate in this project were encouraged to send in more than the one required poem. The results that Dyer and McCall received far exceeded their expectations. “The freshmen of MJHS wowed Ms. McCall and me with their soulful and humorous writing,” Dyer said. “I would absolutely love to see the Student Anthology Project become an annual experience for MJHS students.” If all goes well with this project, Dyer’s hope may become a reality. Copies of the anthology are available through any Maryville Junior High freshman for $8 each. For further information about this project, contact Sherri McCall at shari. mccall@mary ville-schools.org. MCS hosts fall sports banquet A s the annual Maryville Christian School fall sports banquet nears, student athletes are both happy to celebrate a great season, and sad to see the season go. Many of the teams had a very successful season this fall. The high school soccer team was undefeated in league play and won the SCAA Conference, and the high school girls’ volleyball team made it all the way to the finals in their league. All of the fall sports teams are honored at this banquet. It’s Spirit week, which means students and faculty will be dressed in “not-so-normal” attire. Each day of the week is given a theme, and students wear clothing that corresponds with that theme. This festive week MARYVILLE CHRISTIAN KAYLA WOOD isn’t without cause. The purpose of spirit week is to support and encourage all of Maryville Christian School’s diligent athletes as they strive to do their best and to give God glory in everything they do. Spirit week celebrates the basketball players in particular as they prepare for homecoming. The holidays come right around the corner while basketball season continues to move along. Following spirit week is a three-day break for Thanksgiving: a nice rest for students and faculty alike. Although Thanksgiving festivities are always fun, MCS tries to keep the focus on what the holiday is truly all about: being thankful for what we have. Soon after Thanksgiving, MCS has its annual Christmas Program. The Program will be held at 6:30 on Friday, Dec. 5, at First Baptist Church of Maryville. The elementary students, drama department, and music department work hard on this program, and always strive to bring honor to Jesus. Campus visits an eye opener BY EMILY MCTYRE Youth Leadership Blount T his past Tuesday, the Youth Leadership Blount class took tours of each other’s schools. The class was able to visit William Blount, Alcoa, Maryville and Heritage High School along with Maryville Christian and Apostolic Academy. A group of students took the rest of the class through each school showing the best parts of their educational environment. The class was able to go behind the scenes and see our county’s schools from a new angle. The class began its tours at Maryville Christian School and was able to walk in a classroom to see how the school works. Also, the class learned about William Blount High School’s CTE building and the variety of classes provided there. The class heard about Apostolic Academy’s history and daily activities. Alcoa High School showed the class the layout for the school’s new building. The class stopped off on its tour to eat lunch at Maryville High School’s Café LeReve, a student managed restaurant on campus. Heritage High School’s barn was definitely a hit. The class loved seeing the farm animals being part of a learning environment. The school’s 3D printer gained some “oohs and “aahs,” too. Not only did going from school to school give the class a new perspective of the county, but it also brought the students closer on a more personal level. 10A | LIFE/NATION&WORLD THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Study lifts cloud over heart drugs BY MARILYNN MARCHIONE AP Chief Medical Writer CHICAGO — A major study lifts a cloud around Zetia and Vytorin, blockbuster drugs for lowering cholesterol. The study found that these pills modestly lower the risk of heart attacks and other problems in people at high risk for them — evidence that’s been missing for more than a decade as the drugs racked up billions in sales. Doctors have long focused on lowering LDL, or bad cholesterol, to prevent heart disease. Statins like Lipitor, Crestor and Zocor are the main medicines for this, and a lot of research shows they work. Merck & Co.’s ezetimibe, which went on sale in 2002, lowers cholesterol in a different way. It’s sold as Zetia and, as a combo pill with Zocor, as Vytorin. The drug won Food and Drug Administration approval for lowering LDL, but some studies suggested that might not translate to fewer heart attacks and strokes. One study even questioned whether it raised the chance of cancer. The new study found that people at high risk of heart problems who took Vytorin for seven years cut their risk of suffering one by 6 percent — by 8 percent if they took the drug most faithfully — compared to others taking just Zocor. Vytorin also proved safe. “We’ve answered all the questions. Now we know that with this different way of lowering cholesterol, you can in fact prevent heart attacks and strokes,” said one study leader, Dr. Christopher Cannon of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “This is the first time that something added to statins has been shown to be beneficial,” he added. Results were revealed Monday at an American Heart Association conference in Chicago. “I’m impressed” that a non-sta- tin can help, said Dr. Sidney C. Smith Jr., a former Heart Association president from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “It expands the options,” especially for the many people who can’t tolerate a statin or get their cholesterol low enough on one, said Dr. Neil Stone, a Northwestern University cardiologist. Even a longtime Vytorin critic, the Cleveland Clinic’s Dr. Steven Nissen, said the study gave “a solid result” and evidence that very low cholesterol cuts heart risks. To be clear: The study doesn’t mean that Zetia and Vytorin can help people who have not yet suffered a heart problem. The 18,000 study participants either had a recent heart attack or worsening chest pain from a severely clogged artery. About 1.1 million people face this situation in the United States alone each year. Half were given Vytorin and the THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THIS FILE PHOTO PROVIDED by Schering-Plough Corp. shows the cholesterollowering drug Vytorin. rest were given Zocor alone. Average LDL levels went from 95 at the start of the study to 70 with Zocor and 54 with the combo pill Vytorin. About 15 percent of Zocor users had a heart attack versus 13 percent of those on Vytorin. Other heart-related problems also were less common with Vytorin. For every 56 people taking Vytorin for seven years, one additional heart attack, stroke or heart-related death would be prevented. Airline fares: Sky is the limit Low oil prices do not parlay to cheap tickets BY SCOTT MAYEROWITZ AP Airlines Writer NEW YORK — U.S. airlines are saving tens of millions of dollars every week because of lower prices for jet fuel, their largest expense. So why don’t they share some of the savings with passengers? Simply put: Airlines have no compelling reason to offer any breaks. Planes are full. Investors want a payout. And new planes are on order. In fact, fares are going higher. And those bag fees that airlines instituted in 2008 when fuel prices spiked aren’t going away either. In the 12 months ended in September, U.S. airlines saved $1.6 billion on jet fuel. That helped them post a 5.7 percent profit margin in the first three quarters of this year, robust for the industry but lagging behind the 10 percent average for the Standard & Poor’s 500. In the past six years, airlines have done a great job of adjusting the number of flights to fall just short of demand. As a result, those who want to fly will pay a premium to do so. Airlines are selling a record 85.1 percent of their domes- BRIAN MCDERMOTT | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A WORKER HOOKS UP a fuel hose to an airplane June 12, 2008, at Tampa International Airport in Tampa, Fla. tic seats. Thanks to several mega-mergers, four big airlines control the vast majority of flights, leaving very little room for another airline to undercut fares. With that in mind, here’s a closer look at what’s going on with airfare and the price of jet fuel: ›K_\Xm\iX^\[fd\jk`Z airline ticket during the 12-month period ending in September rose 3.5 percent to $372.21, according to an Associated Press analysis of data from the Airlines Reporting Corp., which processes ticket transactions for airlines and trav- el agencies. That figure doesn’t include another $56 in taxes and fees that passengers pay. ›@ek_\()$dfek_g\i`f[ ending in September, U.S. airlines burned through nearly 16.2 billion gallons of fuel. They paid an average of $2.97 a gallon — down from $3.07 the prior year, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. That 10-cent drop saved the industry $1.6 billion. Fuel prices have since fallen further. United Airlines estimates it will pay $2.76 to $2.81 a gallon during the last three months of the year. ›GlkXefk_\inXp1L%J% airlines burn through 311 million gallons of fuel in a week. Lower fuel prices are saving them $31 million a week. ›>iXek\[#n`k_.,*d`c$ lion passengers carried last year that averages out to a savings of $2.15 for each leg of a trip a passenger takes: $4.30 on a roundtrip nonstop ticket or $8.60 on a roundtrip connecting itinerary. ›=l\cXZZflekj]fi*+g\i$ cent of an airline’s operating costs. The non-fuel costs include salaries and benefits, lease payments on airplanes, maintenance and fees for landing at airports. That doesn’t include the cost of reservation systems, marketing or food and drinks. ›8`ic`e\jXi\Xcjfi\`e$ vesting in their planes, airport terminals and computers. In the first nine months of this year, U.S. carriers spent $10.2 billion on capital improvements, according to the industry’s trade and lobbying group, Airlines for America. That more than $1 billion a month, the highest pace since the 9/11 terrorist attacks. NOSW at Maryville College accepting applications From Maryville College The New Opportunity School for Women (NOSW) at Maryville College is accepting applications for its second program to be held on the Maryville College campus July 12 through Aug. 1, 2015. The school is designed to improve the educational, financial and personal circumstances of low-income, under-educated, middle-aged women in the Appalachian region. The Women’s Fund of East Tennessee, a fund of the East Tennessee Foundation, along with donors, are providing support for the 2015 program. Out of an urgent need to help women in Appalachia become better educated and employed, the program was founded in 1987 by Jane Stephenson at Berea College in Kentucky. Building on its success, two additional programs were established at Lees- McRae College in North Carolina and Bluefield College in Virginia. Maryville College is the fourth NOSW program, which serves East Tennessee. The program was established at Maryville College in 2013 and welcomed its first class in July 2014. Through a 21-day residential program and continuing support, women develop essential tools for advancing their education, gaining sustainable employment and rebuilding self-esteem. NOSW’s innovative approach to weaving together education and job readiness with personal development in a supportive residential environment helps graduates to realize successful and satisfying lives. NOSW will accept 14 women into the 2015 program, which is offered at no cost to the participants. Applicants must be between the ages of 30 and 55; have graduated from high school or have a GED or certificate of equivalency; have low income; and highly motivated to change their lives. Classes are taught by college instructors and community professionals. To learn more about the NOSW program or attending the three-week program at Maryville College, please visit maryvillecollege.edu/ nosw or contact Linda Ueland at 981-8123 or lin da.ueland@maryvillecol lege.edu. Scientists ’confident’ comet lander will wake up, function The Associated Press BERLIN — A burst of sunshine in the spring could be just the wakeup call for Europe’s comet lander. Scientists raised hopes Monday that as the Philae lander nears the sun its solar panel-powered battery will recharge, and the first spacecraft to touch down on a comet will send a second round of scientific data back to Earth. Since landing with a bounce on the comet Wednesday, Philae has already sent back reams of data that scientists are eagerly examining. But there were fears its mission would be cut short because it came to rest in the shadow of a cliff. Its signal went silent Sat- urday after its primary battery ran out. Shortly before that happened, the European Space Agency decided to attempt to tilt the lander’s biggest solar panel toward the sun — a last-ditch maneuver that scientists believe may have paid off. “We are very confident at some stage it will wake up again and we can achieve contact,” Stephan Ulamec, the lander manager, told The Associated Press. That should happen next spring, when Philae and the comet it’s riding on — called 67P/ChuryumovGerasimenko — get closer to the sun, warming up a secondary battery on board and bringing it out of its unplanned hibernation. A few days of sunshine on the solar panels should be enough to charge the battery sufficiently to resume collecting scientific data, Ulamec said. Philae’s position in the shadows may even prove to be a blessing in disguise. Shielded from the sun’s rays, the lander could survive for longer as the comet approaches perihelion — its closest point to the sun. BRIEFS Free holiday concert at Pellissippi State Pellissippi State Community College will present its popular Holiday Spectacular concert at 6 and 8 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 4, in the Clayton Performing Arts Center on the Hardin Valley Campus, 10915 Hardin Valley Road, Knoxville. The presentations are free, but attendees should arrive early to guarantee seating. Complimentary tickets will be handed out to the first 485 guests, and having a ticket guarantees a seat. Suggested arrival time is 30 minutes before the concert. The theme for the year is “A Candlelight Christmas Evening.” The concert features 150 Pellissippi State students and faculty in eight different musical ensembles, performing classical choral numbers, bluegrass and jazz. For more information, call 694-6400 or visit www.pstcc.edu/arts. Student art exhibit starts Nov. 28 The Knoxville Museum of Art and the Tennessee Art Education Association present the ninth annual East Tennessee Regional Student Art Exhibition Nov. 28-Jan. 11,2015. The exhibition features artwork created by middle and high school students. Students, school administration, family, friends and the public are invited to a reception and awards ceremony from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9, at the Knoxville Museum of Art, 1050 World’s Fair Park Drive. There is no cost to attend. The show is open to students attending public, private or home schools in 32 counties across East Tennessee. Fewer than a third of the more than 1,500 entries will make it through the rigorous jury process. Candlelight tours at Marble Springs Marble Springs State Historic Site will present Christmas Candlelight Tours from 4 to 8 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 13. The historic buildings will be decorated with fresh greenery. Music, open hearth cooking, baked goods and warm drinks will be part of the festive evening. There is a suggested $2 donation. All activities will take place at Marble Springs State Historic Site, 1220 W. Governor John Sevier Highway, Knoxville. | 11A THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com © 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 49 To find each answer, start at the compass square each time and follow the directions. What if you could ask a skunk any question you wanted? What would you ask? Kid Scoop spoke with skunk authority P.U. Stenchmuch to learn about these smelly creatures from a safe distance. Q: Do skunks ever run out of stinky spray? A: Start at compass. Go 3 squares north, then 1 square west, then 1 square north. We skunks are shy and gentle creatures. Yet the sight of a skunk is a fearful sight to many animals! Q: Where is the skunk’s secret weapon? A: Start at compass. Go 3 squares north. Next, go 1 square east. Then go 1 square south. That’s because skunks have a powerful and stinky weapon right under our tails – a VERY stinky spray! However, we only use this weapon when threatened. Even then, we do everything possible to avoid sending the final stinky spray. Q: How far can skunks spray? A: Start at compass. Go 1 square north, then 1 square west. We hiss and stamp our feet. If this doesn’t work, we raise our tail over our head as a threat. Q: What color is the musk skunks spray? A: Start at compass. Go 4 squares north. Then go 1 square west. Next, go 1 square south. Q: What are baby skunks called? A: Start at compass, go 2 squares north. Q: What is another name for a skunk? A: Start at compass and go 1 square north. Next, go 1 square west. Then go 2 squares north and then 1 east. Q: A skunk is about the same size as a ____________. A: From compass, go 2 squares north. Then, go 1 east and 1 south. If those warnings don’t work, well, LOOK OUT! Oops! Someone put some of the capital letters in the wrong places. Read the article below. Circle the mistakes and underline the letters that should be capitalized. Chi Ca Go an Ojibwa legend Tells the story of a Hunter and his wife who lived on the Shores of lake michigan. one day, the hunter’s wife caught a Beaver by the Tail and called to her husband to come and kill it before it could escape. but the hunter refused. He had already killed many beaver in his Traps and said if he killed Another one, The others would all run away. she let the beaver go but she was very Angry and that Night, When her husband had gone to sleep, she ran away. the next morning the Hunter There are three kinds of skunks. Do the math problems to match the name of each kind of skunk with its description. saw her Tracks in the snow 15. It has a broad, hairless muzzle, like that of a pig. The back and tail are white. and feeling badly about their quarrel, decided to follow 10. The smallest of all skunks, it has a dot in the middle of its forehead. The stripes go in lots of different and wiggly directions. them. as he followed the tracks, They gradually 23. The face is black except for one white stripe that runs from the nose to the shoulders. At the shoulders, the stripe splits in two parts, one running down each side of the body. changed and became the tracks of a Skunk. the trail ended in a Marsh where there Standards Link: Life Science: There is variation among individuals of one kind within a population. were many skunks. Black & White and Read All Over Select a page of the newspaper. Find all of the words you can read, and if you know what they mean, circle them in red. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Use context to understand meaning. Standards Link: Social Science: Students use map skills to find the absolute locations of places. he turned and went home but called the Place, “The Place of Lots of animals have bodies that blend into the world around them. This is called camouflage. But the bold black and white markings on a skunk make them easy to spot. They don’t need to hide. Other animals know to leave them alone. Find the differences between the two pictures. Standards Link: Investigation: Find similarities and differences in common objects. SKUNKS SMELLY STINKER PUTRID COMPASS MUSTY DISTANCE WEAPON SOUR POLECAT BLACK MARKINGS WHITE WEST STRIPES Find the words in the puzzle, then in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities. the Skunk” and it is where chicago now stands. T A C E L O P W S S S S N O P A E W K K G E P U M S C U K R N P U Y T P N C R E I Complete the grid by using all the letters in the word SPRAY in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only be used once in each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you. I T L N K A K U K K R R L S L T S O N R T I E B S S T S I A S D M W H I T E T M Y T S U M D E L S Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognizing identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns. Stinky Words Make a list of words that describe how things smell – for example: odor, putrid, musty, sour. Using one page of the newspaper, have students find and circle the letters that spell five of the smelly words. Tell a tale of a little stinker! Standards Link: Vocabulary: Understand and explain synonyms. Reading Comprehension: Follow multiple step directions. ANSWER: A phew! Sponsored by: homes 1.800.822.0633 www.claytonhomes.com 12A | THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Tuesday, November 18, 2014 UNITED WAY OF BLOUNT COUNTY NEEDS YOUR HELP! GOAL 75% Currently at 87.74% of our $2,014,000 goal, the United Way of Blount County is asking that you stand up with us and help make a change in our community. 50% 25% We only have 3 days left! <UP[LK>H`VM)SV\U[*V\U[`Z[YP]LZMVYHOLHS[O`^LSSLK\JH[LKHUKZLSMZ\ɉ JPLU[)SV\U[*V\U[`WVW\SH[PVU ¸;OL3P[[SL;OPUNZ¹[OH[THRL[OPZ]PZPVUWVZZPISL^VU»[OHWWLU^P[OV\[@6< What do YOU want for Blount County? CARE MORE SMILES SUCCESS OPPORTUNITY SUPPORT INDEPENDENCE FRIENDSHIP GOOD HEALTH HAPPINESS 3OHDVHFRQVLGHUPDNLQJDJLIWWR8QLWHG:D\RI%ORXQW&RXQW\WRKHOSWKHOLWWOHWKLQJVPDNHELJGLσHUHQFHV /V^>PSS@V\Y+VUH[PVU4HRL(+PɈLYLUJL& ^PSSWYV]PKLH`LHYVMIVVRZ[VOLSWLK\JH[LHJOPSK ^PSSWYV]PKL\[PSP[`HZZPZ[HUJLMVYHMHTPS`PUKHUNLYVML]PJ[PVU ^PSSWYV]PKLH^LLRVMTLHSZHUK^LSSULZZJOLJRZMVYHZLUPVY ZO\[PU ^PSSWYV]PKL.,+HUKJVTW\[LYZRPSSZJVHJOPUNMVYHUHK\S[ ^PSSWYV]PKLZP_TVU[OZVM[YHUZWVY[H[PVU[VKPHS`ZPZ[YLH[TLU[Z For more information, please call 865-982-2251 or visit www.liveunitedblount.org. By check (make check payable to United Way of Blount County) I/We wish to support this community with a pledge through United Way. Please call 865-982-2251 or visit www.liveunitedblount.org to schedule a payment Name: Please bill me: (check one) By credit card quarterly annually month Address: $50 minimum gift for credit cards and direct bills Email: I have been giving to United Way for 10 years or more. Please include me as a Loyal Contributor. Phone: Please contact me about a possible planned gift and/or bequest for United Way. Gift Amount: $ I would like to volunteer my time. UNITED WAY Thank you for giving to United Way of Blount County. The United Way does not provide goods or services in whole or partial consideration for any contributions made to the United Way. Please mail this form along with your donation to the following address: United Way of Blount County 1615 East Broadway Avenue Maryville, TN 37804 OF BLOUNT COUNTY MAKING MOVES St. Louis, Atlanta finalize four-man trade. 4B APPEALS PROCESS NOT GOING VOLS’ WAY. 3B TENNESSEE 3B | BRAVES 4B | COMICS 8B | PUZZLES 9B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2014 THE DAILY TIMES 1B Tyndall wants Vols to �go hit a guy’ BY GRANT RAMEY UP NEXT [email protected] KNOXVILLE — Donnie Tyndall’s rebounding philosophy doesn’t require much explanation. “Our rule is quite simply, �go hit a guy,’ ” Tennessee’s first-year basketball coach said Monday at Pratt Pavilion. “If three of our guys hit the same guy, I’m OK with that. Just go hit somebody.” Tyndall’s Vols didn’t hit enough Virginia Commonwealth players Friday night in an 85-69 seasonTOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES opening loss in the Veterans ClasTENNESSEE HEAD COACH DONNIE TYNDALL calls out plays to his team during the sic at Annapolis, Md. The Rams had 49 total rebounds, 23 coming Nov. 3 exhibition game against Pikeville. Tennessee won that game 80-62 Conley scores 19 as Grizzlies rout Rockets BY CLAY BAILEY NBA The Associated Press TEXAS SOUTHERN (0-1) AT TENNESSEE (0-1) 7 p.m. Thursday TV: Fox Sports Net RADIO: Vol Radio Network on the offensive glass. “Five guys need to be in the paint,” Tyndall said. “A lot of times guys will contest a shot at 22 feet and then start drifting down the floor. No, you’ve got to contest and then get back in the paint. We call it �rebounding down.’ “Our guards aren’t doing that well enough but we’re not doing a good enough job in general. It may be more challenging to do it in a zone but at the end of the day if you hit someone you’ll be fine and we’re not doing it now.” Rebounding has been one of the biggest talking points for Tyndall since he was hired away from Southern Miss in April. His teams play hard, they play a zone defense and they attack the glass. Apparently the latter needs some brushing up. “I thought I’d emphasized it since Day 1 but I obviously haven’t done a good enough job,” Tyndall said. “I’m going to continue to emphasize in the film room, on the practice floor, add a couple SEE TYNDALL, 3B All systems go MEMPHIS 119, Houston 91 MEMPHIS — Mike Conley scored 19 points and the Memphis Grizzlies easily defeated the Houston Rockets 119-93 on Monday night in a matchup of the teams with the NBA’s best records. Whatever showdown was expected from the two 9-1 teams and among the best defensive squads in the league never materialized as Memphis took a 16-point lead in the first quarter and extended it in each of the remaining periods, until it reached 36 points in the fourth frame. Seven players finished in double figures for Memphis which won its fourth straight overall. Courtney Lee finished with 15 points, while Zach Randolph added 14. Quincy Pondexter, Beno Udrih and Jon Leuer had 13 points each. Trevor Ariza led the Rockets with 16 points, while Dwight Howard had 15 points and nine rebounds. Patrick Beverly managed 10 points. James Harden had six points, going 1 of 8 from the field. T h e Ro c k e t s , w h o entered the game allowing a league-low 89 points a game, had given up that many by the end of the third quarter. Houston, which was coming off a 69-65 win Sunday night at Oklahoma City, was a step off all night. Through three quarters, Harden, having to deal with Tony Allen, was misfiring and appeared frustrated. Turnovers plagued the Rockets from the start and the shooting hovered around 40 percent as Memphis took the lead to as many as 31 in the third quarter. Houston coach Kevin McHale considered it pointless after three with Memphis leading 97-66 and sat his key players for the fourth. SEE ROUT, 2B Broncos share blame, promise to get better BY ARNIE STAPLETON AP Pro Football Writer ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Suddenly, the Denver Broncos have a whole lot more to worry about than their spongy offensive line, and testy coach John Fox said Monday he wants frustrated fans to know he feels their pain. “We’re not too happy with the results, either,” Fox said in the wake of Denver’s second double-digit road loss in three weeks. But, he added: “There’s no panic inside the building.” And he stressed that Denver’s latest loss can’t just be pinned on his scuffling, shuffling O-line, either. “Offensively we didn’t execute enough,” Fox said. “It’s not all on the O-line. I want to make that point.” The Broncos’ latest loss, a 22-7 stunner at St. Louis, proved extra costly. They TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES UP NEXT MIAMI (6-4) AT DENVER (7-3) 4:25 p.m. Sunday TV: CBS not only fell into a tie atop the AFC West with Kansas City, but they lost Julius Thomas, Emmanuel Sanders and Montee Ball to injuries. Thomas’ sprained left ankle was deemed less serious than feared, and he is day to day. Sanders is in the league’s concussion protocol and a long shot to play in Sunday’s showdown against Miami (6-4). And Ball appears headed for more time off after aggravating a strained right groin in his first action since Oct. 5. The three were injured SEE BRONCOS, 4B TENNESSEE LADY VOL ALEXA MIDDLETON shoots over the hands of Oral Roberts’ Jordan Doyle Monday night at Thompson Bowling Arena in Knoxville. Lady Vols cruise past Oral Roberts BY JESSE SMITHEY The Associated Press KNOXVILLE — Tennessee junior Nia Moore didn’t expect the spotlight this season, but her play so far has garnered it. Moore continued her strong start to the season, leading the No. 4 Lady Volunteers to a 91-39 win Monday night over Oral Roberts with 20 points, nine rebounds and four blocks. “I just try to go out there and play hard,” Moore said. “I’m not focused on how many points I LADY VOLS NO. 4 LADY VOLS 91, Oral Roberts 39 score or whatever stat there is.” Senior point guard Ariel Massengale scored a game-high 21 points for Tennessee to end a long layoff. Massengale missed the final 16 games of the 2013-14 season with a head injury and was suspended from Friday’s season-opening victory over Penn due to missing a class. Bashaara Graves had 12 points and 10 rebounds. NEW BERN ARMS /PSUI1BSL#MWE"MDPBt (Behind West Chevrolet - At the corner of Northpark Blvd & Regal Drive) Check us out on facebook for more info, photos and more! www.facebook.com/NewBernArms Kortney Dunbar added 10 points. The Lady Vols (2-0) played without senior center Isabelle Harrison, senior forward Cierra Burdick and junior forward Jasmine Jones. Burdick served the final half of a two-game suspension for missing curfew. Harrison and Jones had both left the Penn game with injuries. Tennessee coach Holly Warlick said Harrison had a mild knee sprain and Jones had a mild concussion. Neither player is expected to be out for long. “I don’t have a set date,” Warlick said. “It looks very positive for both to be back soon.” Their absences didn’t matter much Monday. Oral Roberts (0-2) shot just 25 percent overall and was 1 of 16 from 3-point range. Tennessee also forced 30 turnovers. Moore, who shot 9 of 15, spurred a 16-2 close to the first half with eight points in that span, including a steal and transition layup with eight seconds left in the half. Moore averaged 2.5 SEE CRUISE, 3B NEW ARRIVALS! Kel-Tec Sub 2000 40SW Savage Arms 410/22 WMR Combo FOLLOW US: @TDT_Sports for scores, links, delays, thoughts WRITE US: [email protected] YOUR SPORTS. YOUR TIMES. 2B THE DAILY TIMES National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Traded OF Jason Heyward and RHP Jordan Walden to the St. Louis for RHP Shelby Miller and RHP Tyrell Jenkins. ON THE SCHEDULE PREP BOWLING 4 p.m. — TKA at Sevier County 4 p.m. — Seymour vs. Bearden PREP BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — Maryville at Oak Ridge 6 p.m. — Seymour at Heritage 6 p.m. — Berean at TKA 6 p.m. — xx at Alcoa girls MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 p.m. — Maryville at Emory & Henry ON THE AIR COLLEGE FOOTBALL 8 p.m. ............. N. Illinois at Ohio...................................................... ESPNU MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7 a.m............... Iona at Wofford.........................................................ESPN2 9 a.m. ............. N. Iowa at Stephen F. Austin..................................ESPN2 11 a.m.............. Manhattan at Massachusetts ...............................ESPN2 Noon .............. Baylor at South Carolina...........................................ESPN 2 p.m. ............. Wichita St. vs. Memphis ............................................ESPN 4 p.m. ............. Utah at San Diego St. ................................................ESPN 6 p.m. ............. Toledo at VCU........................................................... ESPNU 7 p.m............... Michigan St. vs. Duke .................................................ESPN 7 p.m............... Long Beach St. at Xavier ............................................... FS1 7:30 p.m......... Marquette at Ohio St...............................................ESPN2 9 p.m. ............. Kansas vs. Kentucky ..................................................ESPN 9 p.m. ............. Drake at DePaul .............................................................. FS1 9:30 p.m. ....... Texas Tech at LSU.....................................................ESPN2 NHL 7:30 p.m......... San Jose at Buffalo ................................................. NBCSN SOCCER 11:55 a.m. ....... Men’s national teams Belarus vs. Mexico ... ESPNEWS 2:30 p.m. ....... Men’s national teams, Ireland vs. U.S. .................ESPN2 25 YEARS AGO FROM TIMES HISTORY From the Nov. 20, 1989 edition of The Daily Times: The 1989 Tennessee Volunteer football team rallied for a 33-21 win over SEC foe Ole Miss. Freshman running back Chuck Webb ran for a Volunteer record 294 yards and helped the Vols boost their record to 8-1. ODDS GLANTZ-CULVER LINE NCAA FOOTBALL FAVORITE ....... OPEN .. TODAY .O/U ..UNDERDOG at Akron .......... OFF .... OFF ... UMass N. Illinois ...............4 .....21⁄2.... at Ohio Tomorrow at Buffalo .............7 ....... 7 ...... Kent St. at Toledo ........ OFF .... OFF ... Bowling Green Thursday at West Virginia ...1 ....... 2...... Kansas St. at Duke ..................7 .....61⁄2 ... North .. Carolina Arkansas St. ... 51⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... at Texas St. Friday at Rice..................10 ....... 9...... UTEP at San Diego St. ..3 .....31⁄2.... Air Force at Utah St. .......111⁄2 .....111⁄2 ... San Jose St. Saturday Virginia Tech ...... 14 ...... 15 ..... at Wake .Forest Miami .....................7 ....... 6...... at Virginia at Tennessee .......3 .....31⁄2.... Missouri at S. Carolina . OFF .... OFF ... S. Alabama at Ball St. .............17 .......17 ..... E. Michigan at Michigan St. . 22 ......22 .... Rutgers at Nebraska ...101⁄2 .......11 ..... Minnesota at Mississippi St.30...291⁄2 .. Vanderbilt at Ohio St. ..... 331⁄2 ....331⁄2 .. Indiana at Michigan ..........4 .....41⁄2 ... Maryland at Oklahoma . OFF .... OFF ... Kansas at Pittsburgh . OFF .... OFF ... Syracuse Northwestern......3 ....... 2...... at Purdue at Cent. Michigan 1 ..... 11⁄2 .... W. Michigan at East Carolina .17 .......17 ..... Tulane at Florida St. ..... 20 .... 191⁄2... Boston .College Penn St............. 61⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... at Illinois Wisconsin ........ 91⁄2 .....91⁄2 ... at Iowa Marshall ............. 20 ......20 .... at UAB Louisiana Tech .. 13 ...... 13 ..... at OldDominion at Colorado St. .. 21 ......22 .... New Mexico at W. Kentucky... 8 ....... 9...... UTSA Boise St. .............. 14 ...... 13 ..... at Wyoming at Iowa St. ........ 11⁄2 ..... 11⁄2 .... Texas Tech Mississippi ............3 ....... 3...... at Arkansas at Baylor ........261⁄2 ...... 27..... Oklahoma St. at Houston ........ 20 ......20 .... Tulsa at Oregon ....... OFF .... OFF ... Colorado at Notre Dame 41⁄2 .....31⁄2.... Louisville at North Texas ....3 .....21⁄2.... FIU Stanford .......... 61⁄2 ....... 6...... at California at La.-Lafayette 11 .... 101⁄2... Appalachian St. at Utah ..................3 .....31⁄2.... Arizona at Washington61⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... Oregon St. at Clemson ......... 41 ...... 41 ..... Georgia St. at Arizona St..161⁄2 .... 161⁄2... Washington St. at Memphis ....181⁄2 .... 181⁄2... S. Florida at Middle Tenn.61⁄2 ....61⁄2 ... FAU Cincinnati ........111⁄2 .... 101⁄2... at UConn ULM ....................... 8 .......8...... at New Mex St. at UCF ............. 251⁄2 ...... 27..... SMU at UCLA ............ 31⁄2 ....... 3...... S.ern Cal at Nevada............ 8 .......8...... Fresno St. at Hawaii ............10 ...... 10 ..... UNLV Off Key UMass QB questionable NFL Thursday FAVORITE ....... OPEN .. TODAY .O/U ..UNDERDOG Kansas City ......... 6 ....... 7 ...... (43) at Oakland Sunday at Atlanta .............3 ....... 3...... (47) ..Cleveland at Philadelphia101⁄2.....11 ..... (47 1⁄2) ......Tenn. at New England51⁄2 ..... 7 ...... (48)....... Detroit Green Bay ...........10 ...... 10 ..... (48 1⁄2) at Minn. at Indianapolis .. 14 .... 131⁄2 ... (50)Jacksonville at Houston ............1 ....... 2...... (43 1⁄2) ......Cincy at Buffalo .............4 .....41⁄2 ... (40)..... N.Y. Jets at Chicago ......51⁄2 .......6...... (46 1⁄2) ........ T.B. at Seattle ........ 61⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... (42) ...... Arizona at San Diego ....... 6 .......6...... (44) .....St. Louis at Denver ............. 8 ..... 71⁄2.... (49) ......... Miami at San Francisco 9 .......8...... (44)Washington Dallas ....................3 ....... 3...... (47) .... at N.Y. G. Monday at New Orleans ...3 ....... 4...... (49 1⁄2).......Balt. NCAA BASKETBALL FAVORITE .................. LINE ................ UNDERDOG Baylor ............................. 1............. at S. Carolina Wichita St.-x ................ 9 .................... Memphis at San Diego St............... 41⁄2 .......................... Utah at VCU ........................... 11 .........................Toledo at Old Dominion ..............11⁄2................. Richmond at Cent. Michigan .....41⁄2 .... Youngstown St. at Indiana St. .............. Pk ................Saint Louis at Xavier ....................... 9 ......... Long Beach St. Duke-y ............................5 .............. Michigan St. at Florida St. ................16 ...........Northeastern at Ohio St. .................. 111⁄2 ............... Marquette at Minnesota ............... 11 ..............W. Kentucky Buffalo ........................... 1...at Texas-Arlington at DePaul...................... 6 ...........................Drake at BYU ...........................16 .......................... UALR at LSU .............................7 .................Texas Tech Kentucky-y................. 41⁄2 ......................Kansas at Saint Mary’s (Cal) 51⁄2 .......New Mexico St. at Hawaii .................... 21⁄2 ................High Point Iona ...............................11⁄2................at Wofford at Stephen F. Austin 31⁄2 ......................N. Iowa at UMass ....................... 6 ................ Manhattan at UNC Greensboro .. 21⁄2 ....UNC Wilmington at Penn........................ 21⁄2 ..........................Rider at Quinnipiac ................ 1........................La Salle at Middle Tenn. ............3 .................. Murray St. S. Illinois ....................... 8 ...... at Tennessee St. at Butler......................161⁄2 ......... Chattanooga at Boise St. .................181⁄2 ................. Montana at Georgia...................121⁄2................ Stony Brook x-at Sioux Falls, S.D. y-at Indianapolis NBA FAVORITE ..............LINE.... O/U ..........UNDERDOG at Atlanta ................. 9 ... (210) ...... L.A. Lakers at Milwaukee ....... 31⁄2 ... (190).........New York at Utah ...................... 4 ... (190)Oklahoma City at Sacramento ........ 2 ... (198)...New Orleans NHL FAVORITE ..............LINE.... UNDERDOG .........LINE at Boston.............-120 ... St. Louis ...........+100 at N.Y. Islanders .-145 ... Tampa Bay .......+125 Detroit ..................-120 ... at Columbus....+100 San Jose ..............-280 ... at Buffalo ....... +230 Pittsburgh ...........-120 ... at Montreal .....+100 at Toronto ...........-120 ... Nashville ..........+100 at Winnipeg ........-130 ... New Jersey ....... +110 at Dallas .............. -175 ... Carolina .............+155 Anaheim ..............-125 ... at Calgary ........ +105 at Arizona .............-115 ... Washington ..... -105 at Los Angeles .. -190 ... Florida .............. +165 BASKETBALL NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W Toronto 8 Brooklyn 4 Boston 3 New York 3 Philadelphia 0 Southeast Division L Pct GB 2 6 6 8 10 .800 .400 .333 .273 .000 — 4 41⁄2 51⁄2 8 W L Pct GB Washington Atlanta Miami Orlando Charlotte Central Division 7 5 6 5 4 2 4 5 7 7 .778 .556 .545 .417 .364 — 2 2 31⁄2 4 W L Pct GB Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Indiana Detroit 7 5 5 4 3 3 4 5 7 8 .700 .556 .500 .364 .273 — 11⁄2 2 31⁄2 41⁄2 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W Memphis 10 Houston 9 Dallas 8 New Orleans 5 San Antonio 6 Northwest Division L Pct GB 1 2 3 3 4 .909 .818 .727 .625 .600 — 1 2 31⁄2 31⁄2 W L Pct GB Portland Utah Denver Oklahoma City Minnesota Pacific Division 7 4 3 3 2 3 7 7 8 7 .700 .364 .300 .273 .222 — 31⁄2 4 41⁄2 41⁄2 W L Pct GB Golden State L.A. Clippers Sacramento Phoenix L.A. Lakers 8 5 6 6 1 2 3 4 5 9 .800 .625 .600 .545 .100 — 2 2 21⁄2 7 Detroit Green Bay Chicago Minnesota West Arizona San Francisco Seattle St. Louis W L T Pct PF 7 7 4 4 3 3 6 6 0 0 0 0 .700 .700 .400 .400 188 156 330 225 215 290 181 220 W L T Pct PF 9 6 6 4 1 4 4 6 0 0 0 0 .900 .600 .600 .400 237 176 211 212 260 215 185 258 PA Thursday Miami 22, Buffalo 9 Sunday Chicago 21, Minnesota 13 Kansas City 24, Seattle 20 Cincinnati 27, New Orleans 10 St. Louis 22, Denver 7 Houston 23, Cleveland 7 Atlanta 19, Carolina 17 Tampa Bay 27, Washington 7 San Francisco 16, N.Y. Giants 10 San Diego 13, Oakland 6 Arizona 14, Detroit 6 Green Bay 53, Philadelphia 20 New England 42, Indianapolis 20 Open: Baltimore, Dallas, Jacksonville, N.Y. Jets Monday Pittsburgh at Tennessee, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20 Kansas City at Oakland, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23 Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Houston, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Tennessee at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Detroit at New England, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. St. Louis at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. Washington at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m. Miami at Denver, 4:25 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. Open: Carolina, Pittsburgh Monday, Nov. 24 Baltimore at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m. GOLF 1, Robert Streb, 681.333. 2, Sang-Moon Bae, 605.000. 3, Ben Martin, 574.250. 4, Bubba Watson, 550.000. 5, Ryan Moore, 540.500. 6, Charley Hoffman, 518.750. 7, Shawn Stefani, 368.250. 8, Tim Clark, 365.500. 9, Brendon de Jonge, 363.333. 10 , Kevin Streelman, 355.500. SCORING AVERAGE 1, Bubba Watson, 68.526. 2 (tie), Graeme McDowell and Rickie Fowler, 68.776. 4, Chris Kirk, 68.985. 5, Webb Simpson, 69.097. 6, Fred Funk, 69.186. 7 (tie), Ian Poulter and Martin Kaymer, 69.276. 9, Fabian Gomez, 69.308. 10, Tony Finau, 69.497. Driving Distance HOCKEY NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 19 14 4 Tampa Bay 19 13 4 Boston 19 11 8 Detroit 17 8 4 Ottawa 17 8 5 Toronto 18 9 7 Florida 15 6 4 Buffalo 19 4 13 Metropolitan Division BOWLING 1 2 0 5 4 2 5 2 29 28 22 21 20 20 17 10 55 71 51 45 47 56 33 30 47 49 49 42 45 51 37 68 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Melissa Ownby 525, Sandy Herr 498, Carolyn Heaton 483, Dora Headrick 480 Pittsburgh N.Y. Islanders New Jersey N.Y. Rangers Washington Philadelphia Columbus Carolina HIGH GAME WESTERN CONFERENCE Melissa Ownby 237, Carolyn Heaton 183, Ruth Trussler 180, Dora Headrick 179, Brenda Felty 179 Central Division MONDAY MORNING COFFEE LEAGUE Nov. 17 At Crest Lanes HIGH SERIES FOOTBALL NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England Miami Buffalo N.Y. Jets South 8 6 5 2 2 4 5 8 0 0 0 0 .800 .600 .500 .200 323 218 249 180 200 204 174 265 W L T Pct PF Indianapolis Houston Tennessee Jacksonville North 6 5 2 1 4 5 7 9 0 0 0 0 .600 .500 .222 .100 310 253 229 204 144 223 158 282 W L T Pct PF Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland West 6 6 6 6 3 4 4 4 1 0 0 0 .650 .600 .600 .600 224 221 261 181 261 239 216 195 W L T Pct PF 7 7 6 0 3 3 4 10 0 0 0 0 .700 .700 .600 .000 293 224 241 171 218 192 152 265 Denver Kansas City San Diego Oakland PA FEDEXCUP SEASON POINTS PA PA PA PA NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF 7 7 3 3 3 3 7 7 0 0 0 0 .700 .700 .300 .300 299 251 261 212 205 263 204 256 TRANSACTIONS American League DETROIT TIGERS — Exercised the 2015 contract option on C Alex Avila. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Named Brook Jacoby hitting coach. W L T Pct PF Atlanta New Orleans Carolina Tampa Bay 4 4 3 2 6 6 7 8 0 0 1 0 .400 .400 .318 .200 238 255 261 252 215 300 194 279 MLB North PGA TOUR Sunday New York 109, Denver 93 Milwaukee 91, Miami 84 Houston 69, Oklahoma City 65 Golden State 136, L.A. Lakers 115 Monday Dallas 107, Charlotte 80 Denver 106, Cleveland 97 Orlando 107, Detroit 93 Phoenix 118, Boston 114 Miami 95, Brooklyn 83 Memphis 119, Houston 93 San Antonio 100, Philadelphia 75 New Orleans at Portland, late Chicago at L.A. Clippers, late Today L.A. Lakers at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. New York at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at Utah, 9 p.m. New Orleans at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Wednesday Boston at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Orlando, 7 p.m. Charlotte at Indiana, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Memphis at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. New York at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at Denver, 9 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Houston, 9:30 p.m. Philadelphia Dallas N.Y. Giants Washington South BASEBALL TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2014 PA PA 16 17 18 18 17 16 17 17 12 11 8 7 7 7 6 5 3 1 6 0 8 2 7 4 7 3 7 2 10 1 9 3 25 22 18 18 17 16 13 13 60 54 46 50 50 51 44 37 35 50 53 58 49 53 59 51 GP W L OT Pts GF GA St. Louis 17 Nashville 17 Chicago 18 Winnipeg 19 Minnesota 17 Colorado 19 Dallas 18 Pacific Division 12 11 10 9 10 6 6 4 4 7 7 7 8 8 1 2 1 3 0 5 4 25 24 21 21 20 17 16 49 43 51 37 50 47 49 33 35 36 42 39 61 61 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim Vancouver Calgary Los Angeles San Jose Arizona Edmonton 19 18 19 18 20 18 18 11 12 11 9 10 8 6 4 4 6 0 6 2 5 4 8 2 9 1 10 2 26 24 24 22 22 17 14 51 53 59 45 56 47 44 46 52 50 40 53 57 60 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday San Jose 2, Carolina 0 Minnesota 4, Winnipeg 3, OT Montreal 4, Detroit 1 Chicago 6, Dallas 2 Florida 6, Anaheim 2 Arizona 2, Edmonton 1 Monday Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Rangers 1 Today St. Louis at Boston, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Detroit at Columbus, 7 p.m. San Jose at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m. Nashville at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. New Jersey at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Carolina at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 9 p.m. Washington at Arizona, 9 p.m. Florida at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 8 p.m. BRANDON DILL | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES FORWARD ZACH RANDOLPH grabs a defensive rebound between Houston Rockets forward Donatas Motiejunas (20), Memphis Grizzlies center Marc Gasol and Houston Rockets center Dwight Howard (12) Monday in the first half in Memphis. ROUT: Memphis extends home streak to 20 wins FROM 1B The Rockets finished the game shooting 44 percent and committing 21 turnovers, leading to 31 Memphis points. Memphis dominated the first half on both ends of the floor. The Grizzlies shot 58 percent for the half, including 5 of 11 from outside the arc. Conley had 15 points and Pondexter scored 13 off the bench. Defensively, Memphis forced the Rockets into 10 turnovers in the first quarter enroute to 15 for the half. Add to that Houston shooting 41 percent, and Memphis held a 65-42 lead at halftime in what was the Grizzlies best overall performance for a half this season. Ariza led the Rockets with 12 points. Memphis lost a bit of focus to start the second half, committing four turnovers in the first 3 minutes. Despite the miscues, Houston couldn’t capitalize and get the deficit to a manageable point. Once Memphis withstood that run, the Rockets had little left to push again. Memphis finished the game shooting 54 percent against a Houston team that entered the game allowing only 40.3 percent, best in the league. TIP-INS Rockets: The Rockets have two former University of Memphis post players — rookie Tarik Black and Joey Dorsey. Black, who left Memphis for one year at Kansas, was booed when he entered in the first quarter. Dorsey received a nice ovation when he came in. Howard entered the game averaging 8 points and 7.6 rebounds in the last seven games against Memphis. The loss was the Rockets first on the road this season after winning their first six. Memphis’ 10-1 record extended its franchisebest start to a season. Memphis also extended its regular season home winning streak to 20 straight, the last loss coming in February to Dallas. The 26-point winning margin was the largest of the season for Memphis, more than double its previous best of 12 over New Orleans on Nov. 3. UP NEXT Rockets: Host Lakers on Wednesday night. Grizzlies: Visits Toronto on Wednesday night. BRIEFS Vols’ Barnett brings home weekly SEC award Tennessee freshman defensive end Derek Barnett has been named the SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week. The Nashville native had seven tackles, 4.0 TFLs and 2.0 sacks in the win over Kentucky. Barnett, who ranks third in the SEC in sacks with nine, is the first Tennessee player to be named Defensive Lineman of the Week since Corey Miller earned the award following the finale at Kentucky in 2013. He is the eighth to earn that award dating to its inception in 2004, when Turk McBride first won it. Batteries Where Service Matters Most GARNER BROS. AUTO PARTS 2816 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy., Maryville TN 60015564DT Ph. 865-233-7166 / Fax: 865-233-5885 Where Service Matters Most SMOKY VIEW AUTO PARTS 2104 W. Lamar Alexander Pkwy., Maryville TN Ph. 865-984-9875 / Fax: 865-984-7858 SPORTS | 3B THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com Sean Karl [email protected] The Tennessee athletic department announced Monday the passing of sophomore men’s tennis player Sean Karl. Karl died Sunday in Knoxville after a two-year battle with Ewing’s Sarcoma, a rare type of tissue and bone cancer that predominately attacks adolescents and young adults. A memorial service will be held on campus at Goodfriend Tennis Center on Thursday from 4-6 p.m. The family and team have asked all attendees to wear Tennessee orange. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be posted when they are finalized. “We all loved Sean,” Tennessee head coach Sam Winterbotham said in Tennessee release. “He impacted us all in such an amazing way. His outlook on life and his infectious positivity made people around him better. He is without doubt the toughest person I’ve ever had the pleasure to meet. “We are all hurting right now, but we are all left with the knowledge that Sean helped us become better people. We miss him.” Sean was an absolute Karl, a member of the UT tennis team, passed away Monday. competitor, from the tennis courts where he outwilled and outworked any opponent he faced to his courageous fight against the disease that ended his life at age 20. “Our hearts are heavy today with the news of Sean Karl’s passing,” Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics Dave Hart said. “Our entire department has Sean’s family, friends and teammates in our thoughts and prayers as we remember the lives he has touched in such a positive manner.” In October 2012, a month before his national signing day, Karl was diagnosed with cancer after experiencing back pain at a tennis tournament. The diagnosis spawned an immediate outpouring of support from the tennis community in Tennessee, the United States and far beyond. At junior tournaments around the South, players would tie up their shoes with “Pray for Sean” laces. On the college courts, the Vols wrote Karl’s name on their shoes. Even 17-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer filmed a get-well video. Rafael Nadal sent Sean a signed racquet. Long before he was ever diagnosed, Karl was known across the country as a great tennis player. One of the best. Karl could also more than hold his own in hockey, but it was tennis where he made his name. He won three consecutive Tennessee Class AAA state singles titles for Ravenwood High School in Brentwood. He was ranked No. 1 in the country at age 16 and was the sixth-ranked player in his entire national signing class. On the court, Karl was a big-swinging, smart baseliner with a renowned fighter’s spirit, an attitude that served him well when he stared down his battle against cancer. Although his situation had changed radically, his plans to play college tennis at Tennessee had not. Sean signed with Tennessee on Nov. 15, 2012, at a ceremony at Ravenwood high school to a standing ovation. After months of radiation, chemotherapy and prayers, Karl was cleared to play tennis and join the team in Knoxville before the 2013-14 season. His body had not rebounded entirely to where it was before, but his progress back to playing shape was remarkable and his fight was already back in full. Karl never let his condition be an excuse for not competing to the best of his abilities. Forget redshirting. He was ready to play. During the 2013 fall tournament season, Sean logged five victories. His first came in his debut at the Southern Intercollegiate Championships, incredibly a mere two months after being cleared to return fulltime to tennis. The next week, he logged two victories at the SEC Fall Classic in front of family and friends in Nashville. His final tournament came in Knoxville on his home courts at the USTA/ ITA Ohio Valley Regional Championships, where he won a pair of matches to reach the round of 16. But in November 2013, the cancer had returned. Karl’s second battle was a more private one, a journey shared mostly by his family, teammates and coaches. �A point of emphasis’ JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES TENNESSEE HEAD COACH BUTCH JONES reacts to a call during the second quarter of Saturdays’ game against Kentucky. TYNDALL: Coach wants to see Vols be more physical FROM 1B more rebounding drills to practice. It’s got to be a point of emphasis.” It doesn’t help that Tennessee returns only four players from last year’s team — two of those being guards — that made a run to the NCAA tournament’s �Sweet 16’ under former coach Cuonzo Martin, leaning on big bodies like Jarnell Stokes and Jeronne Maymon in the post. This year the Vols are relying on the likes of freshmen Jabari McGhee, Tariq Owens and Willie Carmichael in the paint, �That comes with youthfulness and inexperience and guys who kind of shy away from getting hit or wanting to.’ Donnie Tyndall Tennessee head coach along with Memphis transfer Dominic Woods, a sophomore. “We don’t have a team that likes a lot of contact,” Tyndall said. “That comes with youthfulness and inexperience and guys who kind of shy away from getting hit or wanting to hit somebody. That’s part of blocking out.” Tennessee had 16 offensive rebounds against VCU, with McGhee grabbing five. He didn’t hesitate Monday when asked the biggest takeaway from his first college basketball game. “Boxing out, just playing, giving everything you’ve got, like coach is saying,” McGhee said. “Most of that stuff is just effort. Our effort wasn’t there the first half.” Added junior guard Kevin Punter: “We gave CRUISE: Moore continues to produce in new role FROM 1B No appeals process for Vols safety Randolph BY GRANT RAMEY [email protected] KNOXVILLE — There’s nothing Tennessee head coach Butch Jones can do about starting safety Brian Randolph being suspended for the first half of Saturday’s game against Missouri. “There is no appeals process,” Jones said Monday. “A couple years ago there was an appeals process. It’s a point of emphasis. It’s unfortunate.” Randolph was ejected during the second half of Tennessee’s 50-16 win over Kentucky last week after being called for a targeting penalty on a hit to Wildcat quarterback Patrick Towles. The penalty and ejection carries a suspension, one Jones said after the game Saturday night that he’d review and possibly try to appeal. “Brian wasn’t being malicious,” Jones said. “He was playing with great effort running to the football, quarterback slides, he had already left his feet so he was actually going low. “ ... But you know, it is the rule. It is a point of contention and a point of emphasis. You will have to sit out for the first half.” Randolph is second on the team in tackles, with 76, having started nine of 10 games this season. The redshirt junior had an interception return for a touchdown in the first half against Kentucky, putting Tennessee up 14-3. True freshman Todd Kelly Jr., who replaced Randolph in the second half again Kentucky, will start in his place Saturday against Missouri (7:30 p.m.; TV: ESPN). “I think he did some good things,” Jones said of Kelly. “He was forced UT VOLS (4-5, 1-4) 08.31 Utah State W 38-7 09.06 Arkansas St. W 34-19 09.13 at Oklahoma L 10-34 09.27 at Georgia* L 32-35 10.04 Florida* L 9-10 10.11 Chattanooga W 45-10 10.18 at Ole Miss* L 34-3 10.25 Alabama* L 34-20 11.01 at S Carolina* W 45-42 11.15 Kentucky* W 50-16 11.22 Missouri* 7:30 p.m. ESPN 11.29 at Vandy* 4 p.m. SECN *SEC opponent into a challenging situation. TK prepares every week as though he’s the starter.” Kelly received more playing time earlier in the season, but had seen his snaps diminish following Tennessee’s Sept. 13 loss at Oklahoma. Jones said they’ve been looking for “a high level of consistency from Kelly. “TK is an individual who takes great pride in his performance,” Jones said. “I think the repetitions that he got in the bye week really helped him in moving forward in the Kentucky game.” INJURY REPORT: Starting center Mack Crowder suffered a high-ankle sprain against Kentucky and is questionable for Saturday’s game against Missouri, Jones said, adding that the injury was “a high-ankle sprain, a little bit with his knee, a knee sprain.” Sophomore Dylan Wiesman, who replaced Crowder against Kentucky, will start if Crowder can’t play. Starting guard Marcus Jackson and reserve tackle Coleman Thomas are also options at center, Jones said. Sophomore receiver Marquez North (shoulder) played sparingly in the win over Kentucky, a game in which he did not record a catch. Jones said he could’ve played more if needed. “Marquez had dinged his shoulder up a little bit earlier in the week,” Jones said. “We had the luxury, the game afforded us to pick our spots with him to try to get him back and be as healthy as you can possibly be for this stretch run, so we weren’t going to risk anything.” SPOILER ALERT: Second-place Georgia needs a loss over the next two weeks from SEC East-leading Missouri if the Bulldogs want to get back to Atlanta for the SEC championship game. When asked Monday, Jones said he hadn’t received any “good luck texts” from Georgia coaches as the Vols attempt to play the spoiler role this week. “We’re here to win and develop our football team,” Jones said. “I don’t think about anything else but putting our players in positions to succeed on game day with our preparation.” VON BEING VON: Jones wasn’t caught off guard when he saw post-game comments from Tennessee receiver Von Pearson saying he “felt sorry for Missouri” because, after two straight wins, the Vols are “hot.” “That’s Von being Von,” Jones said. “It was the emotion of the game. I think that’s his excitement with what’s going on. We understand what Missouri is all about so it’s not a big thing. “It’s just him showing confidence in his teammates, and that’s Von. He’s very upbeat. He’s very positive all the time.” up 24 offensive rebounds, 23, something like that. So we have to box out more if we want to win that game. Just like any other game.” FOR STARTERS: Tennessee could have a new starting five against Texas Southern Thursday night at Thompson-Boling Arena, with Josh Richardson, Armani Moore, Willie Carmichael, McGhee and Punter being the possible lineup like it was during Sunday afternoon’s practice. Richardson, Punter, Robert Hubbs, Derek Reese and Armani Moore started against VCU. “(Sunday) we went with a group that looked like Richardson, Punter, Moore, McGhee and Carmichael,” Tyndall said. “That was kind of the group (Sunday). They had a pretty good day and like we say, everything gets sorted out in practice and we’ll see who steps up today.” Carmichael played only four minutes against VCU, registering one rebound. But Tyndall said what happens through the week determines starters. “The biggest thing is that he was practicing harder and better than Dom Woodson (Sunday),” Tyndall said. “We had a day off on Saturday. If you can’t come back after a tough loss and a day off ready to pop and go in practice then someone else is probably going to move in front of you.” NO COMMENT: Reports surfaced last week that the NCAA would be in Knoxville early this week to speak with Tyndall regarding the ongoing investigation into the Southern Miss basketball program for possible violations during Tyndall’s tenure at the school. When asked Monday if he could confirm those reports Tyndall said he couldn’t “comment on that.” Andraya Carter, a redshirt sophomore guard who missed the season opener after missing a curfew, had eight points, six steals, four assists and four rebounds. QUOTE OF THE NIGHT: Cussen on facing Baylor and Tennessee to start the regular season: “I’ve been questioned several times on our sanity for doing that. But the way it turned out, the scouting report was very similar for both teams.” Oral Roberts lost 101-60 to Baylor on Friday, UP NEXT: Oral Roberts: Faces local rival Tulsa on Friday. Tennessee: Hosts Winthrop on Friday. points and 2.0 rebounds her first two seasons for Tennessee. She has averaged 22 points, 11.5 rebounds and 4.0 blocks through the first two games this season. “I wouldn’t say anything has changed (for me mentally),” said Moore. “I still have the same focus, so when my name gets called I just try to go out there and help my teammates out and coaches any way possible. Just try to get a win.” Oral Roberts center Vicky McIntyre had 10 points and 13 rebounds. She scored the first six points for the Golden Eagles, but that sixth point didn’t come until the 10:01 mark of the first half. Oral Roberts didn’t record its 10th point until 8:27 remained in the first half. “We’re just turning the ball over too much,” Oral Roberts coach Misti Cussen said. “We had the same story line happen 72 hours Your Hometown ago when we were in Waco Pest Control (against No. 8 Baylor).” Company! TIP-INS: Oral Roberts: The Golden Eagles’ last win over a ranked opponent remains a 78-75 victory over No. 25 Kansas State on Jan. 8, 1986. Oral Roberts has lost all three of its meetings with Tennessee. Tennessee: The Lady Volunteers scored 41 509 W. Lamar Alexander Pkwy. points off Oral Roberts turnovers, while Oral Roberts did not score off 13 Tennessee turnovers. T.D.A. 381 MICE MUNCHING? 982-0000 30017498DT Tennessee tennis player dies of cancer 4B | SPORTS THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Harvick finds happiness long before title BY JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer It was some six hours after Kevin Harvick had won his first Sprint Cup championship when he was finally able to peel off his beer-soaked firesuit, take a shower and begin celebrating the biggest moment of his career. Harvick had changed into shorts and a T-shirt, and wandered through the infield at HomesteadMiami Speedway wearing flip-flops looking for some friends and a cold Budweiser. He munched on a plate of hot dogs, smiled ear-toear, but didn’t seem able to process what he’d just accomplished. “Can you believe this?” NASCAR’s newest champion asked almost every well-wisher. Sure they could, Happy. He was a worthy winner of NASCAR’s revamped Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, which successfully put the emphasis on victories over the final two races. Harvick had been forced to win at Phoenix just to advance to Sunday’s finale against Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano and Ryan Newman. All four teams were on top of their game, and it became apparent as they ran in order at the front of the pack that it would likely take a victory to wrap up the title. So Harvick used a masterful drive through the field, using restarts and four fresh tires to pick his way from 12th to victory lane over the final 15 hectic laps. The reward was a championship he had chased for 13 years at Richard Childress Racing before making the life-changing decision to move to Stewart-Haas Racing this season. “Tony was pretty adamant that we could race for wins and championships,” Harvick said, explaining he’d reached a point where he no longer enjoyed his job at RCR. “Whether I finished third or fourth ... I just wasn’t excited about going to work. I needed to be excited about going to work, and this just gave me an opportunity to race with one of my good friends.” Once Harvick was on board, SHR began the process of finding him a crew chief to help build his team. “It’s not about me right now; it’s about us as a group,” Stewart said. “I’m really proud to not only have a teammate, but most of all, one of my best friends be out there taking pictures as champion this year. That’s a great feeling to be up here and be a part of that with both of these guys.” JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES FLORIDA HEAD COACH WILL MUSCHAMP on the sideline Oct. 4 during the Gators’ 10-9 win at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville. Florida not looking for defensive coach BY MARK LONG AP Sports Writer JOHN BAZEMORE | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ATLANTA BRAVES RIGHT FIELDER JASON HEYWARD (22) driving in a run with a base hit Aug. 10 in the fourth inning of a game against the Washington Nationals in Atlanta. St. Louis bound Four-man deal sends Heyward to Cards BY PAUL NEWBERRY AP Sports Writer ATLANTA — Jason Heyward stirred up enormous expectations when he joined the Atlanta Braves at age 20. He homered in his first big league at-bat. He was voted to the All-Star Game as a rookie. He was hailed as the future of the game by Hank Aaron. Heyward never quite lived up to the hype, and now he’s heading to a team looking to bounce back from tragedy. Concerned that Heyward would leave as a free agent after next season and rebuilding with an eye toward their new stadium, the Braves dealt their right fielder and reliever Jordan Walden to the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday for promising pitcher Shelby Miller and a minor-leaguer. “It’s very difficult to trade Jason Heyward,” said John Hart, the Braves’ new general manager. “But the deal was made to help us not only in the short term but the long term.” The NL Central champion Cardinals felt compelled to pursue Heyward after top prospect Oscar Taveras was killed in a car crash last month in the Dominican Republic. The team hopes to sign Heyward to a long-term extension but didn’t want to go into next season without adding to the offense. “The reality is we have to move on,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said. Heyward said he was not surprised by the trade, especially since there were never any serious talks on a new deal with the Braves. He is due to make $7.8 million in the final season of a two-year contract. “This is a business,” said the 25-year-old Heyward, who grew up in the Atlanta area and was one of the team’s most popular players. “I was definitely open to long INSIDE THE TRADE Atlanta Braves traded OF Jason Heyward and RHP Jordan Walden to the St. Louis Cardinals for RHP Shelby Miller and RHP Tyrell Jenkins. term, but that conversation never took place.” The deal signals a long-term strategy for rebuilding the roster by the time the Braves move into their new suburban ballpark in 2017. By trading Heyward and Walden, the team shed what could have been as much as $10 million from next season’s payroll while acquiring a 24-year-old pitcher who is not yet eligible for arbitration and can’t become a free agent until after the 2018 season. “We want to build something that’s going to sustain,” Hart said. After his promising rookie year, Heyward was plagued by injuries and struggled to put up the sort of power numbers that the Braves expected. He’s had only one season with at least 20 homers and 80 RBIs; this past year, he batted .271 with 11 homers, 58 RBIs and 20 stolen bases, though he did win his second Gold Glove. Heyward frequently batted leadoff for the Braves, which the Cardinals believe hurt his power production. After the Braves slumped to their first losing season since 2008, general manager Frank Wren was fired. Hart took over and is looking to build depth throughout the organization, with a focus on starting pitching. Atlanta is hampered by bad contracts, which will limit Hart’s flexibility in the short term. B.J. Upton is owed more than $46 million over the next three years, and the Braves are still responsible for the final $13 million of Dan Uggla’s deal, even though he was released this past season. An anemic offense was the big- gest problem as the team collapsed down the stretch, but Hart didn’t sound overly optimistic about addressing those needs. “Some guys are going to have to have better years,” he said. “You can’t go out and replace your entire club.” For now, it looks like catcher Evan Gattis will move to left field, clearing the way for 23-year-old Christian Bethancourt to take over behind the plate, with slugger Justin Upton moving over to replace Heyward in right. Then again, both Gattis and the younger Upton have been mentioned prominently in trade speculation. Like Heyward, Justin Upton is also eligible for free agency after next season. Ervin Santana and Aaron Harang, who combined for 26 wins last season, were on one-year deals with the Braves and unlikely to return next season. With that in mind, Hart was looking to land at least two starting pitchers this offseason. He’s halfway there. Miller went 10-9 with a 3.74 for the Cardinals, after going 15-9 with a 3.06 ERA as a rookie in 2013. He joins a rotation that also includes young starters Julio Teheran, Alex Wood and Mike Minor. Walden made $1.49 million this past season and could have earned a raise in arbitration. He was 0-2 with a 2.88 ERA and three saves as a set-up reliever for closer Craig Kimbrel. Atlanta also acquired right-hander Tyrell Jenkins, who pitched for Class A Palm Beach this past season. “The Braves have always been a pitching organization,” Hart said. “We have the makings of a quality young rotation.” St. Louis felt it had the pitching depth to deal Miller. Youngsters Carlos Martinez and Marco Gonzales will get a chance to fill the rotation spot. GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida’s next football coach will have a “track record of success on the offensive side of the ball.” Athletic director Jeremy Foley said Monday that Florida fans want that and “we’re certainly going to try to provide for them.” Foley didn’t rule out a defensive coach, but made it pretty clear the Gators don’t plan on hiring another defensive coordinator without head-coaching experience. Florida failed miserably with former defensive coordinators Ron Zook (2002-04) and Will Muschamp (2011-14). Foley fired coach Muschamp on Sunday, a day after a 23-20 loss to South Carolina that was Florida’s third straight at home and knocked the Gators out of contention in the Southeastern Conference’s Eastern Division. “We would obviously like an individual that’s been successful on the offensive side of the ball,” Foley said. “I think obviously that’s what the Gator Nation wants, and we see that, and that’s what we’re certainly going to try to provide for them.” Muschamp will coach the final two regular-season games, against Eastern Kentucky and Florida State, but won’t stick around for a potential bowl game. The Gators (5-4, 4-4) need to win one of the two to become bowl eligible. “Our guys will respond the right way and handle it with class, like they always have in all situations,” said Muschamp, who seemed to handle the decision as professionally as possible. “It’s important for us to get these seniors a win here in the Swamp.” Foley, Muschamp and outgoing school president Bernie Machen spoke at the news conference. Foley choked back tears while talking about how difficult a decision it was to fire Muschamp, who cleaned up a program rampant with arrests and did everything right off the field. But Muschamp couldn’t get the results on the field, and Foley said he likely would have needed to win out to save his job following last month’s 42-13 debacle to Missouri on homecoming. BRONCOS: Fox says team must �run the ball more’ FROM 1B when the Broncos (7-3) lost to a sub-.500 team on the road for the first time since Tim Tebow was their quarterback in 2011. Just as he had after a big loss at New England three weeks ago, Peyton Manning took the blame. “I’ve got to play better,” Manning said three times after Sunday’s loss. On Monday, Fox said he and his staff have to coach better. This marked just the sixth time in Manning’s 250 career regular-season games that his team scored seven points less. Two of those came in the first month of his rookie season in 1998, two came in meaningless regularseason finales (1999 and 2009), and another came in 2001, at Miami. Manning was sacked twice, knocked down four times and watched a dozen of his passes get batted down. He threw 54 passes and handed off just nine times, a formula Fox admitted wasn’t a good recipe. “There’s no doubt that to be the kind of team we want to be we have to run the ball more,” Fox said. Center Will Montgomery smiled at the thought. “Yeah, I think we definitely prefer running the ball versus trying to backpedal with those athletes for that many snaps,” he said. “We’d like to take the fight to them.” C.J. Anderson said offensive coordinator Adam Gase apologized for the run-pass disparity, but the running back noted it was the players who didn’t make it work, and “whether it’s 90 passes and one run, whatever’s called, you’ve just got to go out there and execute.” In addition to the runpass ratio that was offkilter, Fox lamented his offense failing to reach the red zone after entering the game with the league’s second-highest scoring average (31.8). Fox defended his decisions to forgo long field goal tries, saying Brandon McManus’ range was only 50 yards inside the dome. He stressed, “It has nothing to do with confidence level of anybody.” McManus has been dealing with a strained groin and that might have been a factor in Fox’s thinking. But the Broncos went 0 for 3 on fourth downs in Rams territory. “We did what I would consider being aggressive,” said Fox, who’s been labeled as a coach who’s too conservative. “You could punt for field position. You know, going for it on fourth down is in my mind more aggressive than kicking a field goal.” | 5B THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com FO TBALL Contest The Pot Grows Every Week There’s No Winner So You Can Score Big With a Win! WEEKLY GRAND PRIZE 100 2nd Place 50 / 3rd Place $ (for a perfect ballot) $ 25 $ Michelin Brand Tires are engineered to give you and * those around you the freedom to drive with confidence. ** ^^^+LIYH>OHSL`JVT 24/7 ... ALWAYS OPEN FOR YOU! 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On the final contest of the season, if there is no perfect entry, the prize money will be awarded to the entry with the most correct picks. There will be no more than three winners each week, one of $100, one of $50 and one of $25. In case of ties in any category, a tie-breaker will be used. For the tie-breaker, write in the total points in the game designated in the entry form. In the event a tie still exists, the winner will be determined by random drawing. Only one entry per person per week. Anyone submitting multiple entries will be disqualified. You may not submit entries using names other than members of your household. Entries must be submitted on entry forms printed in The Daily Times. Entries must be typed or done in ink. Those filled in with pencil will not be accepted. Entries received after 5PM on Friday will not be considered. Postmarks will have no bearing on whether the deadline is met. 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Missouri at Tennessee (B) ENTRIES MUST BE RECEIVED BEFORE 5PM FRIDAY 11/21/14 Drop entry by The Daily Times office, or mail to The Daily Times, P.O. Box 9740, Maryville TN 37802 Tie Breaker: Total points scored in Missouri @ Tennessee _______ YOUR SOURCE FOR VOL NEWS The BEST Coverage of the VOLS and ONLY in Name Address Zip Phone Vanderbilt at Mississippi St. Subscriber Non-subscriber Restaurant 766 E. Lincoln Rd. Maryville, TN 37804 865-984-7117 Open 6 Days / Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner, Closed on Sunday Stanford at California Ben R. Long, Agent 732 W Lamar Alexander Pkwy, Maryville, TN 37801 Bus: (865) 982-3935 [email protected] Hours: M-F 9:00 am – 5:00 pm Get to a better State. Get State Farm. ® )PNFt"VUPt-JGF Oklahoma St. at Baylor Do you want to put your advertising message in front of thousands of motivated readers and get a great rate? Call 981-1150 today and ask about advertising on the Football Contest Page! South Florida at Memphis (C) Call 865-981-1170 to place your ad Fax: 865-981-1117 On the web: thedailytimes.com/classifieds E-mail: classifi[email protected] 6B THE DAILY TIMES Public Notices Public Notices NOTICE TO SEEK TITLE 1999 Harley Davidson XL2 VIN# HD4CLM11YK1147340899 Any person(s) holding any claim to this vehicle should contact Judy Foster Harmon via certified mail, return receipt requested, at 113 Park Drive, Maryville, TN 37804 no later than 10 days from the date of this notice. November 18, 25, 2014 PUBLIC NOTICE The Town of Louisville Board of Zoning Appeals will meet Tuesday, November 25, 2014 at 6:00 PM at the Louisville Town Hall. On the agenda is a request for approval of a special exception for a customary home occupation at 2848 Ty Drive, Woodthrush Subdivision, Louisville, Tennessee. November 18, 2014 NOTICE OF MEETING The Blount County Planning Commission will meet in holiday schedule regular session on Monday, November 24, 2014 at 5:30 PM in Room 430 of the Blount County Courthouse. On the agenda will be the following. Site plans: Koide Tennessee, Inc. at 339 Dunavant Drive in the Stock Creek Industrial Park; Tex Orr addition to an existing business at 116 Orr Circle off Middlesettlements Road. Long Range: Discussion of first draft of new commercial zone for two lane arterial roads; Discussion on design guidelines for commercial uses; discussion of possible additional amendment to the newly adopted campground and RV parks zoning regulations. Staff reports. Memos and other information available at www.blounttn.org/planning under the meetings button. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! On-Line & in Print SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE Default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by a certain Deed of Trust executed November 16, 2007 by Delta K. Derrick and Earl Derrick, wife and husband, (Delta K. Derrick being one and the same person as Delta Derrick) to Emmett James House or Bill R. McLaughlin, as Trustee, as same appears of record in the office of the Register of Blount County, Tennessee, in Record Book 2179, Page 2012, and the undersigned having been appointed Substitute Trustee by instrument recorded in the said Register's Office, and the owner of the debt secured, Everbank, having requested the undersigned to advertise and sell the property described in and conveyed by said Deed of Trust, all of said indebtedness having matured by default in the payment of a part thereof, at the option of the owner, this is to give notice that the undersigned will, on Wednesday, December 10, 2014 commencing at 01:00 PM, at the Front Door of the Courthouse, Maryville, Blount County, Tennessee proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property, to wit: Public Notices Of Interest NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE PUBLIC BUILDING AUTHORITY OF BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE The Board of Directors of The Public Building Authority of Blount County, Tennessee (the “Authority”) will hold a special meeting on November 24th, 2014 at 10:00am, local time, in the Blount County Courthouse, Room 315, Maryville, Tennessee. There will be considered at such meeting such business as may properly come before the Authority including, but not limited to, consideration of (i) the approval of the execution of amendments to documents relating to the Local Government Public Improvement Bonds, Series A-4-A that were previously issued by the Authority for the benefit of the City of Knoxville and (ii) the approval of the assignment and/or termination of certain interest rate swap agreements previously entered by the Authority for the benefit of Blount County, Tennessee. This notice is published in compliance with Sections 8-44-101 to 8-44-106, inclusive, Tennessee Code Annotated. PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD THE PUBLIC BUILDING AUTHORITY OF BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE Bob Kidd, Chairman November 18, 2014 Tax Parcel ID: 037C-A-003.13 Property Address: 2615 Druid Hill Drive, Maryville, TN. All right and equity of redemption, homestead and dower waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. ARNOLD M. WEISS, Substitute Trustee Weiss Spicer Cash PLLC 208 Adams Avenue Memphis, Tennessee 38l03 90l 526 8296 File # 7134-117425-FC Published: November 18, November 25, December 2 Green Tree Servicing LLC/Delta Derrick Lost and Found The following describe(sic) premises, to wit: SITUATED in District No. Nine (9) of Blount County, Tennessee, within the 6th Ward of the City of Maryville, and being all of Lot No. 56, Unit 2, Springfield Subdivision, as shown by plat of record in Map Book 9, page 43, in the Register's Office for Blount County, Tennessee, and being more particularly bounded an(sic) described as follows: BEGINNING at an iron pin in the Northerly edge of Malvern Circle Turn-Around, corner to Lot NO. 55 of said Subdivision; thence with line of Lot No. 55, North 10 deg. 3 min. West 116.84 feet ot(sic) an iron pin, corner to Lot 52, Unit 2; thence with line of No. 52, Unit 2 in part and Lot No. 51, Unit 2, In part and Lot NO. 50 Unit 2, in part, South 79 deg. 30 min. East 132 feet to an iron pin, corner to Lot No. 57 Unit 3; thence with the line of Lot No. 57, South 37 deg. 18 min. West 114.7 feet to an iron pin in the Northerly edge of the Malvern Circle Turn-Around; thence with the Malvern Circle Turn-Around in a Westerly direction on a radius of 50 feet, an arc distance of 40 feet to the point of BEGINNING, as shown by survey of Mortimer Compton, Surveyor, dated October 4, 1971; said premises are improved with dwelling house. Being the same property conveyed to Doug Broadway, Chris Broadway and Mark Broadway, as tenants in common for life with the remainder to the survivor in fee, by Quit Claim Deed from Charles Ray Herron, an Unmarried Widower, dated June 27, 2001 and recorded in WD Book 657, Page 393, Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee and also being the same property conveyed to Old Republic National Title Insurance Company by Quitclaim Deed from Doug Broadway dated June 30, 2014 and recorded in Record Book 2391, Page 2860 and further conveyed to The Bank of New York Mellon f/k/a The Bank of New York, as Trustee for the benefit of the Certificateholders of The Swabs, Inc., Asset-Backed Certificates Series 2007-BC3, by Quitclaim Deed from Old Republic National Title Insurance Company dated August 20, 2014 and recorded in Record Book 2396, Page 1560, Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee. This is improved property known as 612 Malvern Circle, Maryville, Tennessee 37801. Said sale is subject to any and all unpaid taxes and any other prior claims, liens, easements, set back lines and restrictions. THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER DAY, TIME AND PLACE CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR THE SALE SET FORTH ABOVE. THE TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE. IN THE EVENT THE HIGHEST BIDDER DOES NOT HONOR THE HIGHEST BID WITHIN 24 HOURS, THE NEXT BIDDER AT THE NEXT HIGHEST BID WILL BE DEEMED THE SUCCESSFUL BIDDER. __________________________ JOEL E. JORDAN Substitute Trustee STELTEMEIER & WESTBROOK, PLLC 3326 Aspen Grove Drive, #604 Franklin, Tennessee 37067 Insertion Dates: November 4, November 11 and November 18, 2014. THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE Deadline for Corrections: Noon 1 day prior to publication. 865-981-1170 Classified hours are: Monday-Friday 8am-5pm Houses For Rent 2BR, 2BA 1200 SF, appliances, CH/A, water & lawn care furnished. $700/mo. + dep. No pets. Call 865-363-8847. PIEDMONT AIRLINES, INC, a subsidiary of American Airlines, is currently hiring PT Ramp Agents for our McGhee Tyson location in Alcoa. All applicants must have a HS Diploma or GED, a valid drivers license, and must be able to pass background checks. FLEXIBLE AVAILABILITY IS A MUST! Interested applicants are invited to apply online at: www.piedmont-airlines.coms/jobs EOE 3BD, 2BA Brick rancher in Rockford. $850 per month, $850 deposit. No pets or smoking. 865-983-2518 3BR, 2BA, Mtn. view near Heritage, full basement. No pets, no smoking. $950 mo. + dep. Call 865-679-8947. 3BR/2BA MARYVILLE Carport, stove, fridge, washer/dryer hookups. $750/month. + $600 deposit. No pets. 566-3690 or 660-6842 FIRST TIME BUYERS Why rent when you can own? No money down & under $850 1-800-899-4057 ID#1052 Adult Care PT CASHIER NEEDED Weekly pay. Evening & weekend shift. Drug test & background check required. Apply at Mr Gas Marathon, 312 E Lincoln Rd. FOR 10 YEARS, our trained, bonded and insured CAREGivers have provided home care services for local seniors. Call us. Home Instead 865-273-2178. SITTER NEEDED for elderly mom. Approx. 45-50 hours per week, $9 per hour. Experience preferred. Call Craig at 242-0255 after 5pm. 612 Crawford St. Maryville, TN 37804 (865) 981-1004 www.maryvillerentalproperties.com Medical / Dental 546 LONGHOLLOW RD (MH) 2Bd, 1Ba $500/mo., $500 dep. House Cleaning HOUSE CLEANING – Honest and dependable. Reasonable rates. Call 865-243-1241. CHIROPRACTIC ASSISTANT needed. Drug test may be required. Call 865-977-0916 for appointment. Driver OTR / Delivery Apartment / Duplexes RE/MAX FIRST 3030 ELLEJOY RD (MH) 3Bd, 2Ba $675/mo., $675 dep. WILLIAM BROOK One level home, 3BR/2BA, Approx. 1400SF, 2 car garage, conv. location. $1,000/mo Ref. checked. Call Quint Realty Exec. Assoc. 865-693-3232 General Help Wanted LOST CAT Male, gray & black stripes, white patch under his chin. Declawed, answers to “Fred”. Please call 865776-3680 LOST DOG Female Wolf/Huskey mix. No collar. Answers to “Lexi”. Missing form the Rockford area. Call 865679-3074 LOST DOG Female Yorkie. Mostly blonde/gray. 5-6 pounds, missing from Pleasant Hill Rd area in Maryville. Wearing Turquoise collar with diamond studs. Call 705-6844 DISABLED/ELDERLY MAN needs help/housekeeper 5 days a week. Needs experience, male or female. Must be able to lift. Call after 3pm 865-387-2567. INSULATION HELPER Must have a current driver's license and good driving record. Know how to drive a truck while pulling a trailer. Help the lead man with cell foam insulation and installation and crawl space encapsulation. FOAM WORKS of East TN 865-268-5316 MISSING PET? LAWN & LANDSCAPE help needed. Must have exp., transportation & DL. Drug free, pay DOE. 995-2815 or 582-5411 Be sure to check with the local animal shelter. Maryville Animal Shelter 865-681-2241 Blount County Animal Shelter 865-980-6244 LOCAL COMMERICAL Janitorial Business has an opening for weekend parttime work (4 hrs. each Sunday morning). Experience preferred but not required. Must complete background check and drug screening. Call 865-740-1202. LOOKING FOR Responsible Steward/Food Prep to work in kitchen at sustainable farm. Duties include cleaning kitchen & preparing food. Call 7241203 or [email protected] NOW HIRING FOR FT help, exp. needed. Apply at Rite Stop, 102 Calderwood Hwy., 865-977-0124. PROFESSIONAL CLEANING Monday-Friday, days only. Paid weekly. West Knox. location. 865-670-0025 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE STATE OF TENNESSEE, BLOUNT COUNTY Cemetery Lots $34.99 DAILY; $150 WEEKLY; $549 (4) weeks., 1 person. Budget Inn, 865-251-2525 or 865-300-2855. $345 - $450 GREAT VALUE, RIVERSIDE MANOR, Alcoa Hwy. 865-970-2267 1, 2 & 3 BR's riversidemanorapts.com 1 & 2 BR, C/H/A, W/D conn., ref's & lease, no pets. Starting at $375/mo. + dep. 1258 Upton, Alcoa. 982-6446 1-2 BR APTS. $325-$395, No Dogs. 865-977-4300 1BR DUPLEX between mall & airport. $500/mo., includes electric & water. No pets. Call or text 865-640-6656. 1BR DUPLEX, no W/D hookups, no pets. $500 mo. Call 865-982-4363 or 865-719-2650. 2BR, 1BA, 1 level, very clean, all appliances, lg. rooms, W/D conn., patio. No pets, no smoking. $600 977-7831 3BR, 1BA, upstairs. $675 mo., $350 dep. Housing approved. Call 865-9825482. FOREST HILL APARTMENTS 2 BR $525 & 3 BR $600, $300 dep. No pets. Call 865-740-1745 Grayson Apartments in Alcoa. 2 BR, $575 mo., 3 BR, $675 mo. Housing accepted. 865-982-3427 WHEREAS, Tamatha L. Nichols executed a Deed of Trust to CitiFinancial Services, Inc., Lender and Jamie Becraft, Trustee(s), which was dated October 20, 2009 and recorded on October 22, 2009 in Book 2247, Page 2485, Blount County, Tennessee Register of Deeds. MARYVILLE CITY – 1BR apts starting at $375. Clean, safe, 7 close to everything. No pets. 865-272-9809 or [email protected]. WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debt(s) and obligation(s) thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the current holder of said Deed of Trust, CitiFinancial Servicing LLC, (the “Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Blount County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and MENTOR RD. 2BR, $500 mo., $250 dam. dep. No W/D hookups. No pets. LAKEMONT 2BR, $500/mo, $250 dep. No pets, no W/D hookup. 518-1200 NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Holder, and that as agent for the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on December 9, 2014, at 1:30PM at the usual and customary location at the Blount County Courthouse, Maryville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Blount County, Tennessee, to wit: 3902 HWY 411 SOUTH (HOUSE) 2Bd, 1Ba $700/mo., $700 dep. 2717 JEFFERSON ST (HSE) KNOX 3Bd, 1Ba $800/mo., $800 dep. DRIVER CLASS A Spectra needs Class A Drivers with HazMat and Tanker. Full time Permanent Positions. Apply in person at 225 Brookdale Rd. Maryville, Tn. FORECLOSURE SALE Default having been made by failure to comply with the terms and conditions of a certain Deed of Trust dated February 28, 2007, executed by Chris Broadway and Mark Broadway, as Tenants in Common for life with the remainder to the survivor in fee, recorded in Record Book 2149, Page 291, Register's Office for Blount County, Tennessee, and wherein the said Chris Broadway and Mark Broadway, as Tenants in Common for life with the remainder to the survivor in fee conveyed the property therein described to R. Kirkland Moser, Trustee, to secure the indebtedness therein described, and the entire indebtedness having been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust and note, and payment not having been made as demanded; and the undersigned, Joel E. Jordan, of 3326 Aspen Grove Drive #604, Franklin, Tennessee 37067, having been appointed as Substitute Trustee in the place and stead of R. Kirkland Moser, Trustee, said appointment being set forth in the Register's Office for Blount County, Tennessee, notice is hereby given that I, Joel E. Jordan, Substitute Trustee, having been requested so to do by the lawful owner of said indebtedness, will on Wednesday, December 3, 2014, at 1:00 p.m. at the Front door of the Blount County Courthouse, Maryville, Tennessee, sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, free from equity of redemption, homestead and dower, and all other exemptions of every kind, all of which are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, the following described real estate in Blount County, Tennessee: for errors the FIRST DAY it appears in print. Our paper will not be liable for incorrect ads after the first day of publication. You may request a proof of your ad be sent to you by fax or email before it prints to correct any errors. General Help Wanted 528 FRANCE LANE (HOUSE) 3Bd, 1Ba $875/mo., $875 dep. Situated in County of Blount, State of Tennessee. Situate in the 9th Civil District of Blount County, Tennessee, and being all of Lot 1, Block B of Druid Hill Subdivision, Phase 1, as shown by map of the same of record in Map File 1102B in the Register's office for Blount County, Tennessee, to which map specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description thereof and according to the survey of Wade B. Nance, Surveyor, 901 East Summit Hill Avenue, Knoxville, Tennessee 37915, RLS # 856, dated April 13, 1998 and bearing file # A-18057; said premises improved with dwelling. SUBJECT to Restrictions filed of record in Misc. Book 105, Page 830 in said Register's Office. SUBJECT to all matters appearing on the plat of record in Map file 1102B; and any restrictions, easements or setback lines ancillary thereto, said Register's Office. Tuesday, November 18, 2014 6 CEMETARY PLOTS at Pleasant Grove Church (Tuckleechee Pike), $800 each plot. Call 865-659-6454. GRANDVIEW 4 plots together, $2000 each. Call 865-604-2739. Commercial COMMERCIAL WAREHOUSE Commercial property, City of Maryville, .65 acres. Powered drive thru overhead doors. Electrical up to code. Square ft. 5,000 plus, Rubber roof, loading dock. 900 Sevierville Road. Maryville, TN 37803. $195,000 Contact: (865) 292-5056 Houses For Sale ALL BRICK RANCHER 3Bd, 2Ba, 2 half baths. Granite counter tops. Hardwood & tile throughout. $309,900 Call Blake Rickels with Keller Williams at 865-207-4283 Mobile/ManufacturedHome Lots LOT FOR RENT Maximum size, 14x60. Garbage pick up included. No outside pets. $150/mo. 982-5222 MOBILE HOME LOTS $200 www.edgeotownmhc.com Or 865-719-1467 Mobile Manufactured Home Rentals SPACIOUS LAKESIDE LIVING! 2BR Garden Style Apts., off Alcoa Hwy. New Saltwater pool, Basketball & Tennis courts, dock for fishing. Call for more details. 865-982-9678. Commercial Rental SPACE FOR LEASE at Walnut Square, 544 SF. Previously was Pet Grooming. Call 865-984-8954. All that certain parcel of land in District No. 9 6th Ward, Blount County, State of TN, as more fully described in Book 573 Page 463 ID#047OF012, being known and designated as Lots 2A and 2B Block 2 Hanna, Everett and Clark Addition recorded in Map File 137B. According to the survey of Wade B. Nance, RLS No. 856,901 Summit Hill Dr, Suite LL100, Knoxville, TN. 37915, dated April 14,1995, bearing File No. A-14301. Condominium Rental Being the same Fee Simple Property conveyed by Warranty Deed from Stella Evelyn Tilley and Juanita Gibson Plemmons AKA Juanita Beulah Plemmons, et al to Tamatha L. Nichols, dated 04/17/1995 recorded on 05/08/1995 in Book 573, Page 463 in Blont County Records, State of TN. Same property also conveyed by Warranty Deed from Crowder Gleason Gibson AKA Crowder G. Gibsonheir at Law of Liddie E. Gibson to Tamatha L. Nichols dated 04/17/1995 recorded 05/08/1995 in Book 573, Page 461. CONDO – Conveniently located, City of Maryville. 2 story, 2 BR, 2.5 BA, $830 mo; Security Deposit negotiable. Call 865-982-3427. 2BR, 1.5BA, City of Maryville, W/D Connection, CH/A. Please call 865-977-5489. Houses For Rent 3BR/2 BA Double Wide $5000 down (Why rent when you can own). Owner Finance with monthly payments. Parcel ID Number: 047O-F-012.00 Address/Description: 719 Front Street, Maryville, TN 37804. Current Owner(s): Tamatha L. Nichols. Other Interested Party(ies): N/A The sale of the property described above shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any and all liens against said property for unpaid property taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; a deed of trust; and any matter than an accurate survey of the premises might disclose; and All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. This office is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee c/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department 277 Mallory Station Road Suite 115 Franklin, TN 37067 PH: 615-550-7697 FX: 615-550-8484 File No.: 14-23128 November 18, 25 & December 2, 2014 3BR/2BA “Great Community near Walmart” $3,000 down & own it in 5 yrs. **YOU CAN Rent It or YOU CAN Buy It!** “WE FINANCE” Regardless of Credit! Many Available 865-696-2571 1365 REMSEN STREET Alcoa schools! 3 BR, 2 bath totally remodeled home! 1746 sq ft. $975/mo. Call Bill Mclain with Realty Executives at 865-454-1451 or 865-983-0011 2 BR, Section 8 welcome. No pets. $550 per month. 865-405-1327 2 or 3 BR, $400-$550 mo. Rent to own, Friendsville. No pets. Call 865-995-2825. 1936 HUGHES LOOP RD 3Bd, 2Ba, fully refurbished. $950/mo. Plus deposit. No pets. 865-984-7495 3 BR, Section 8 welcome. No pets. $650 per month. 865-405-1327 2BD, 1BA Convenient to schools. All appliances, new living room carpet. $800/mo., lawn care incl. 982-2039 3BR, 2BA, 16x80 on large corner lot. $500 per month plus lot rent & utilities. Call 865-982-7614. 2BD, 1BA, 2002 Sevierville Rd. CH/A, W/D conn., gar., basement. $700 mo., $500 dep. No pets. 982-6446 MOBILE HOME PARK located off Hwy 411 S. 2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes. $400-$500 month. Call 865-856-0639. Tuesday, November 18, 2014 Mobile Manufactured Home Rentals RENT TO OWN - 2BR, 1BA, 14x60 mobile home. 124 Zina Ln. $490 mo. + down payment. Call 865-982-1516. WHY RENT when you can own? Small down payment, no banks. 2BR/1BA in Walland. 865-548-2021 Mobile/Manufactured Home Sales I BUY OLDER MOBILE HOMES Any size, age considered. Call 865-207-8825 Clothing Miscellaneous CLOTHING Boys size 5 & 6 jeans, pants & shoes. $1 each. 865-9847542 JAGUAR LUGGAGE Beautiful tapestry softside, very good condition. Two wheeled pullmans, garment bag, weekender, carry on and cosmetic bag. $35 for set. 983-1533 MENS' BOOTS Black, fits size 11-12. Double H brand, oil & chemical resistant. $40 OBO 865-983-5945 Electronics NEW STAND for slim line TV. Use on table or wall. Call 865-995-2426. Firewood FIREWOOD FOR SALE $60 per rick. 865-681-6675 SEASONED FIREWOOD Oak & Hickory. $60 per rick, delivered. 865-3062430, leave message if no answer. Antiques Furniture Tune In To 2 BLACK BAR STOOLS 31” high. $40 865-518-1260 TRADIN' TREASURES on AM 1470 Saturdays 9am to 10am To Hear YOUR Ad! Appliances DEEP FREEZE, $100. Call 865-3100705. Good Things To Eat APPLE STACK CAKE, Turtle Cake, German Chocolate Cake & Red Velvet Cake. Call 865-448-6417. SWEET POTATOES ($20/bushel; $10/½ bushel), both red & white at Rutherford's Farm, 3337 Mint Rd. 9825891; 441-1388. Also mixed greens. LUGGAGE Sir Bentley, new. 865-681-0418 Autos - Imports Domestic Pets QUALITY & NEW Christmas items! Decorated and lighted trees and wreaths, feather trees, feather wreaths and other excellent misc. Christmas decor. 865-233-3153 or 865-228-0268 Musical Instruments CASH FOR BROKEN, damaged guitars for parts. Gibson, Martin, Yamaha, others. Ask for Dale, 865-307-6530. MUST SELL 1986 Ebony Kawai upright Piano with bench. Excellent condition. $750 OBO 865-803-8123 Sporting Goods BEAUTY SALON SUPPLIES Dryer, curlers, rollers, scissors, brushes, combs, etc. $150 865-681-0418 Miscellaneous JUNK CARS AUSSIE PUPS, 8 wks. old, 3 tri-red males. They have had 1st shots and are registered. Call 865-250-0403. Call for best CASH offer. CHIHUAHUA'S Registered, dewormed, vaccinated, M & F, short hair, all colors, small. $100 & up. Some less than 3.5 lbs grown. 865-232-8243 Free Pick up! CHIHUAHUA, 2 yr. old male, all shots. Needs good indoor home. Tabby Cat, 2 yr. old female, dark gray, friendly. Needs good indoor home. Call 865-977-4366. GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, $300. Parents on premise. Call 865984-9556. Farm Equipment / Supplies LARGE MICROWAVE $50 865-3100705. M&D APPLIANCE Paying $20-$30. Kenmore, Whirlpool, Roper Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Fridges. Steve 253-6172 or Ernie 659-9198. MICROWAVE 600 watt Turn table microwave. Great shape. $25 cash. 865-335-0645 Baby Items BABY GATE Use for children or pets. White. $10 865-983-5945 UMBRELLA STROLLER Folds up, good condition. $10 865-983-5945 Clothing 16 BOXES of clothes, 2 bags purses and linens. All in excellent condition, $20. Call 865-995-2426. TREADMILL Like new T6.1 “NordicTrack”. Walk, jog or run. Changes speed at a button touch. $275 865233-4825, Maryville Tools FOR SALE high speed, Dot Matrix Printers by GENICOM for information processing, distribution networks. business computing systems, mail processing, bar codes, labels, and forms. Model 4840e: Out of working order; good for parts $65 Model 5000 Series 500 LPM printer. Out of working order; good for parts $75. Greeneville, Tennessee, 423359-3151 or 423-359-3172. TERRY'S FURNITURE & AUCTION A Family Tradition since 1958 We are a consignment auction, accepting new consignments daily! We buy antiques, used furniture, glassware & estates. (865) 681-7228 or (865) 973-4577 TFL# 2485 CULTIPACKER HAS DOUBLE rollers, excellent condition, $3500. Call 865-856-3689. PAYING CASH Just Cut - HAY ROLLS, $25 ea., Square bales, $3/bale & Construction Hay, $3/bale. Call 865-235-2357. HARLEY DAVIDSON picture Red Harley 1953 panhead in Calif. Coastal setting. Frame 38”x3”, like new, $75. 865-805-5884 LITTLE TYKES DOLL HOUSE Play house for kids. $100 865-518-1260 CABLE'S RECYCLING Mon-Fri. 9a-5:30p & Sat, 9a-3p *Cans .60/lb., *Batteries $10/$13 *Computer Towers $2 ea.,*Alum. .45/lb. *Scrap Metal $7/$8. Now Buying Gift Cards, Cell Phones & Catalytic conv. 865-556-8812 Or 865-556-8845 WE BUY Used Furniture, Antiques, Estates. Hall's Furniture & Auction 865-983-1598 or 865-983-2465 984-6385 Hay, Feed, Grain 5X6 HAY ROLLS, $25 per roll. Good cow & horse hay. Call 865-856-3689. ATV'S 2011 HONDA 4 WHEELER Serviced & tuned up. $2500 865-898-6109 100 PLUS cars $5,995 or less. DougJustus.com New location: Airport Motor Mall. 97 MERCEDES BENZ E320, 168K mi., clean Carfax report, leather interior, PW/PDL, ABS, $3500 obo. Call 865-963-7024. watersmotorsinc.com 3019 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy. A short drive to Waters Motors will save you money! SUVs / Jeeps 1999 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE Good condition. 146,000 miles, good tires. $2000 865-388-8747 TOYOTA 4 RUNNER 2007 SR5, 4WD, 69K, excellent condition, new tires. $16,000 Call after 4pm, 865-740-5996 Trucks - Imports DON'T GET PLAYED GET PAID! TOYOTA TACOMA 2002, Extended cab, 4WD, 79K, new 35 tires/wheels, 6" lift, excellent cond. $13,500. Call after 4pm, 740-5996 Buying Repairable or Runable Autos. NO JUNK OR SCRAP 1999 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER Less than 90,000 miles, 1 owner, good condition. $1650 865-309-9123 Midland Plaza Tractor Parts, Accessories & Farm Antiques ASSORTED TOOLS $100 OBO 865310-0705 HAND MADE, cream colored Afghan, 100”x80”, never used, $30. Would make great Christmas gift. Call 865983-7776. 865-216-5052 865-237-2773 A CHRISTMAS STORY Leg Lamp & Leg stocking. Great for decorating, excellent condition. Both $30. 865981-8846 Want To Buy $2000 You Know Better NICE BOY'S CHRISTMAS present. Blue space ship ceiling fan/light, excellent condition, $20. Call 865-9818846. PERRY'S MILL Painting by Lyda Plemons, signed & numbered. Frame size 36”x29”, like new, $75. 865-8055884. Automotive Parts / Accessories $3000 $65 Health & Beauty FREEZER 1.3 cu. ft., holds approximately 46lbs. of food. $120 cash. 865-335-0645 CLASSIFIEDS | 7B THE DAILY TIMES |thedailytimes.com/classifieds JUNKERS & CLUNKERS! We buy scrap cars. Vans / Mini Vans IF HIGHEST price paid in East TN! WE ALSO BUY YOUR OLD CLUNKER! 865-856-4590 Autos - Domestic 04 CHEVY IMPALA, looks & runs like new. All options, 96,000 mi., $8000. Call 865-380-9755. Air Conditioning Excavating Home Improvements Lawn Maintenance Plumbing Siding SUTTON'S AIR COMFORT FARMERS EXCAVATING KENNY'S HOME REPAIR & REMODELING Rob's Lawn & Handyman Service SANDS PLUMBING AFFORDABLE SIDING AND GUTTERING Call James Stinnett at 865-977-9092 Its Fall! Service & Sales of most name brands. Also, Mobile Home parts and some mixed matches. R-22 equipment. Call us for questions. Call 865-216-5028. TENNAIR – 1 HEATING/AIR Fast, reliable service. Installations. Professional duct cleaning. We service all brands. 865-983-1384 or 865-995-9660 Car Wash / Detailing AUTO CLEAN & SHINE Complete Auto Clean-up 10% off full detail with this Ad. ™LVming ™7uffing ™Hhining ™+time Readers Choice Linner ™777 Accredited Teds Auto Detailing 2532 E. Broadway Ave 865-982-3600, owner Ted McKee Cleaning Services MAID 2 SHINE CLEANING SERVICE ™8VW^ns™GZciVa=dbZs ™8ondos ™;orZXadsugZs ™6eVgibZcis ™IownhousZh ™Dff^XZh™8]jgX]Zh ™CZl8dchigjXi^dc™=dVgY^ng LZXVn iV`Z XVgZ of 6LL your XaZVc^ng cZZYs. A^ghi8aZVc^cg or 9ZZe 8aZVc^cg. ;gZZ Esi^bViZs GZh^YZci^Va& 8dbbZgX^Va Give us a call today! 865-254-4690 Concrete Services BILL'S CONCRETE SERVICE Grade, Form, Pour, Finish, 30 Years Experience Bill Correll 865-856-8632 BRIAN OWNBY CONCRETE 865-765-8387 Commercial & Residential, Stamped Concrete, Driveways, Patios, Slabs, Garages & Basements, Form & Finish, Tearout & Replace. Quality work by an experienced finisher. STORY CONCRETE Form, grade and finish, driveways, slabs, parking lots, etc. 25 plus years' experience. 865-977-4373 Drywall ALL DRYWALL REPAIRS, patching, finish, texturing. Small jobs OK. Rocky Top Drywall 865-335-4877 or 865-771-0812 *Bobcat *Backhoe *Tractor *Bushhog *Dump Truck *Tree/Stump Removal No Job Too Small, Reasonable Rates, Licensed & Insured 865-661-2565 or 865-705-5403 MURPHY'S BOBCAT Your complete excavating and hauling company. No job too big or small. Free estimates. Licensed & Insured. 865-389-7231 Fencing RC CALDWELL & SON The Fence Specialist ™6luminum Fence ™Galvanized and Vinyl Coated Chain Link Fence ™Kinyl Picket and Privacy Fence 865-850-1289 WWW.FENCEPROS.COM Handy Man 1. HONEY DO HANDYMAN ™Painting ™Pressure Washing ™Odd Jobs™Light Carpentrn™Landscaping Free Estimates, Gutter Cleaning. Army Vet. Call Mike at 865-724-6817 20 YEARS MAINTENANCE EXP. No Job Too Small! Free Estimates, Vietnam Vet. 865-388-0029 24/7 HANDYMAN “Quality Service, Honest Price” *Premium Remodeling *Deck Repair/Staining *Roofing *Flooring *Plumbing *Landscaping *Painting *Electrical Odd Jobs! On Call 24/7 Free Estimates (865) 236-7787 (865) 323-0767 ONE MAN HANDYMAN Painting, flooring, baths, kitchens & more. Very experienced, take pride in workmanship. Call 865-320-7267. Home Improvements *HELP IS A PHONE CALL AWAY Carpentry, screening, painting, plumbing, pressure washing & miscellaneous repairs. Honesty & Integrity, Lic. & Ins. The Handi-Helper 865-681-8298 American Owned LIBERTY CONST. Specializing in Insurance Claims. *Painting *Remodeling *Ceiling & Wall Repair. Call 865-242-7370. Lic. & Ins. Painting, drywall, tile, flooring, all carpentry & much more. Quality work, reliable contractor. Lic. & Ins. Call 865-268-9854. Located in Friendsville, TN SLANSKY BUILDERS HOME IMPROVEMENTS (865) 983-6144 *Decks *Screen/Sun Rooms *Kitchens *Bathrooms *Flooring *ADA compliant and Custom Tile Showers *Small Projects Welcomed! No money down. FREE Estimates Family owned and operated in Blount Co. since 2001. TN Contractor, licensed, & insured to $1,000,000. Call now to speak to a live person. www.slanskybuilders.com Landscaping Free Estimates, No Job Is Too Small Call Rob or Randy ™;gozZcPipes™9gaicCleaning ™6aaHobZRepaigh ™ResidentialCommZgcial ™Aic#>ch#™;gZZEstimateh™8ala24/7 865-255-8699 or 865-304-7413 865-209-5195 Legal Services LAW OFFICE OF GENA LEWIS Criminal Defense. Flat fees for General Sessions Court, $750-$3500. Call 865-268-9911 for an appointment. Masonry Family Owned & Operated Comm./Res., Lic. & Ins. 865-982-5946 Lawn Maintenance AFFORDABLE LAWN SERVICE Mowing, Trimming, Mulching. Leaf clean-up & any other lawn care services needed. Free Estimates. Call 865-455-4014 BLOUNT LAWN SERVICE, LLC All lawn care, All landscape. Licensed General Contractor Irrigation Specialist Free estimates, Lic. and Ins. (865)805-4572 or 805-1147 www.blountlawnservice.com FULL SERVICE LAWN CARE, LLC. Licensed & Insured, Free Estimates. Trust us for all your lawn care needs. Call Taylor or Josh 865-776-5791 or 865-776-7328 [email protected] JETT LAWN CARE ™;VaaLeaf8aean-up ™Holiday Lighting ™PreshjgZWashin\ ™Landscaping 865-661-6872 or 865-414-4510 ™Drivewayh™Parkic\Lots FrZZestimates,Lic.Ins. SPECIALIZING IN LOW-PRESSURE SOFT WASH! ChrihMars]865-253-3075 All Types Brick Work & Repair Quick, Professional Service 35 Years Experience Christian Ethics Licensed & References Available. Remodeling Please Call 865-216-7474 PROGREEN CALL FOR ALL YOUR LAWN AND LANDSCAPING NEEDS M3 PRESSURE WASHING ™Roofh™Siding BRICK/BLOCK MASON Miscellaneous ™Cew lawns from seed & sod ™AVcYhcapes Designed & Installed ™Irim & Shape and mulching ™7ushhogging & Adiclearing Pressure Washing MURPHY'S BOBCAT Fill dirt and gravel. Year round dry topsoil. Mushroom Compost by scoop or dump truck load. 865-389-7231 Painting BUILD DECKS & REMODELING Best carpenter in town. Hire the best, not the rest. Terry Morton 865-661-1015 & 865-984-5059. Tree Services ARBORSCAPES TREE SERVICE Over 26 yrs exp. Hazardous Tree removal, Pruning, Trimming. Lic. & Ins. Give Us A Call. 865-679-7540 !! BUBBA'S !! TREE & STUMP REMOVAL Licensed and Insured. Proudly serving Blount County for 20 yrs. Specializing in all types of tree work. No tree too tall, No limb too small, We do it all! Local References. 24 hr. Emergency Service 865-977-1422 ROBERT BREHM REMODELING, PAINTING AND PLUMBING. 40 years' experience. References. Licensed and Insured. 865-556-1738. DEWAYNE'S TREE SERVICE Take downs, trimming, all types of tree work. 24 hour emergency service. Free estimates. 865-681-6861 ROCKY TOP BUILDING & REMODELING Painting, Doors/Windows, Honey-Do List, Drywall, Siding, Trim Work, Fixtures. Licensed & Insured 254-3455 GOT STUMPS? Roofing ™Hmall $5 and up ™Bedium $25 and up ™AVg\Z$40 and up Job minimum $50. 865-984-8815 COLONIAL PAINTING & WATERPROOFING Interior, exterior, residential, commercial. Quality, creative, affordable, solutions for your home and business needs. 30 years exp. Free Estimates. US Navy Vet. Ken Bear ™ 865-982-8840 ABOVE ALL ROOFING All types of roofing. All work guaranteed. References available. Licensed & insured. 865-321-3532 Its Pruning Season. We have 2 Certified Arborist on staff to help you. We have Workers Comp... do they? 865-980-1820 PAINTING & PRESSURE WASHING Interior/Exterior. Hollis Morton & Son. 100+ years combined experience. 865-984-3329 or 865-332-9168 PAINTING – Interior & Exterior, Pressure Washing. 40 yrs. exp. Terry Morton 865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059. As low as Zero % Financing available on all home improvements. Free Estimates! Call 865-233-5888 Paving SEALCOATING ™Driveways ™Parkin\Lots ™HoiRubberized Crac`Sealing ™Striping/Pavement Markings LiXZchZYInsured www.asphaltmaintenanceoftn.com 865-719-2340 **2014 Reader's Choice Runner-up** “Roof it right. Call Jim White!” JIM WHITE BUILDERS INC. Owens Corning Preferred Contractor License # 42429 Since 1999 ™Windowh™Painting ™Insulation ™Siding™Decks ™Gutters ™Roofing 865-977-0769 JimWhiteBuilders.com TERRY MORTON ™Hhingles ™Betal Roofing ™Eressure Washing Free Estimates 38 yrs. experience References on request. 865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059 PREMIERE TREE SERVICE Over 25 Years Experience *Hazardous Tree Removal *Trimming *Pruning *Brush Clearing & Chipping *Firewood For Sale 24 Hour Emergency Service Licensed & Insured Free Estimates 865-306-2430 Looking for that second vehicle? Check out The Daily Times’ TRANSPORTATION section for the Best Deals in Town!!! 8B | COMICS THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com BETWEEN FRIENDS WUMO PEARLS BEFORE SWINE PEANUTS ADAM@HOME THE AMAZING SPIDERMAN SHOE THE DUPLEX GARFIELD HAGAR THE HORRIBLE SHERMAN’S LAGOON PICKLES PRICKLY CITY MALLARD FILLMORE BEETLE BAILEY DUSTIN BABY BLUES SNUFFY SMITH HI AND LOIS B.C. Tuesday, November 18, 2014 WEATHER, PUZZLES | 9B THE DAILY TIMES Tuesday, November 18, 2014 www.thedailytimes.com Today Wednesday Mostly sunny Thursday Mostly sunny Partly cloudy Friday Slight chance of rain Saturday Partly cloudy Light wind TEMPERATURES ,- +1#$"#&)/ 46°/34° Normal high/low........................ 60°/39° Record high.............................. 78° (1958) Record low ................................ 17° (1883) 29 17 4428 4629 4933 53 41 -# +,1,- ',(*+ $*$--$)(!)+ ,-!)+())(-)1 '* +-.+ )&)+(,+ -)13,*+ $- #$"#, H H Billings 39/19 H H Minn. St. Paul 15/10 H H San Francisco 70/56 H H Denver 45/18 Juneau 40/36 #!" () **,) '. () **,) '$ )'&+ ')%$ ,)) &+ ") / - $ "&! 1075' 1047.7' 0.5' # +)% 1002' 958.6' 0.3' )."&, 1710' 1658.2' 0.5' )(-( 811.2' 0.1' )+-).).( 813' 0.7' $/,, 1526' 1488.2' 794.4' 0.1' &-)($&& 795' 1020' 1001.9' 0.8' )++$, ' 0' (- -&# 1941' Atlanta 37/22 Honolulu 83/67 Miami 75/59 '++ *+ 89° at West Palm Beach, FL ''$ *+ -20° at Greybull, WY )% )'&+ ++#'&)0 )'&+ "'. )* *+')%* #& $,))# * &'. * * * * * * * * * * * * Key: 0/ -# +,.,.((1!+!$+**+-&1&).1&&).1#2#2 !"!)",#,#)/ +,++$(2+$22& -,-#.( +,-)+',,(,()/,!4.++$ ,$$ ,& -)+!+ 2$("+$(/$/$(1'0/$(- +1'$0+$((,()/ HOROSCOPE HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014: When you make a commitment this year, it is as good as done. Be careful, as you could become overburdened as a result. You might want to look at your daily life and ask yourself whether it is reasonable to have so much going on each day. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ���� Today you’ll demonstrate a propensity to walk right into controversial discussions. If you don’t want to get caught up in this type of uproar, it would be wise to hightail it out of the situation. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ���� You might want to run away from several people in your life who are adding only chaos to various situations. A meeting could highlight a general awkwardness between you and others. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ����� You could be tired of pushing so hard to get to the bottom of a problem. A friend is likely to add his or her two cents, which could point you toward the correct path to a solution. CANCER (June 21-July 22) ���� Your emotional nature will permit you to launch into action and handle a domestic problem. Stay detached from other personal issues. A partner could be difficult. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ���� You could be taken aback by a situation that forces you to deal with a unique issue. Ask questions, and you’ll help center the people involved. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ���� Buy a little token of affection for someone in your daily life. This person probably needs to feel valued. Unexpected developments are likely when dealing with money. Count your change twice. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ���� You might want to rush through a situation that makes you uncomfortable. You could get an unexpected reaction from someone who could stop you dead in your tracks. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ��� You easily could feel out of sorts, which could color what otherwise would be a wonderful, exciting day. Take a walk, schedule a massage or go to the gym -- do whatever you can to change your mood. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ����� Expect to be busy, and you won’t be disappointed. Whether you’re eating lunch or doing research, it will seem as if friends want to find you to get some feedback. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ��� Your ability to take a stand and command a situation with ease marks your personality. You might want to recognize how much friction this could cause on the homefront. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ���� Assess the cost of a plan you are in the process of hatching. You could be taken aback by the financial implications, and you might want to back off. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ���� A partner will push you beyond your limits. You might need to take a stand to let this person know that you have reached your boiling point. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult '0 '%'))'. #+0 #'/ #'/ Atlanta 37/22/s 44/21/s Atlantic City 34/17/s 33/29/pc Baltimore 31/21/pc 34/28/pc Birmingham 36/22/s 48/31/pc Boston 38/23/pc 35/29/pc Charleston, SC 49/24/s 51/30/s Charlotte 39/20/s 42/27/pc Chicago 19/15/pc 30/17/sn Cincinnati 19/13/pc 36/22/pc Dallas 51/34/s 57/41/pc Denver 45/18/pc 45/23/pc Destin 48/29/s 55/39/s Houston 54/36/pc 64/54/pc '0 #+0 #'/ Jacksonville 51/26/pc Las Vegas 64/44/pc Los Angeles 80/58/pc Louisville, KY 23/16/pc Miami 75/59/ts Myrtle Beach 47/24/pc New Orleans 47/36/s New York City 31/21/pc Orlando 56/38/sh Philadelphia 32/21/pc Raleigh 36/18/s San Francisco 70/53/pc St. Louis 30/25/pc Washington, DC 33/24/pc '%'))'. #'/ 54/33/s 65/45/pc 73/58/pc 41/25/pc 73/64/sh 48/33/s 56/45/s 31/31/pc 65/46/pc 32/29/pc 44/28/s 67/54/r 41/23/pc 36/30/pc '+#'& -&$(.+" **&#$( -&))# %$ # * ,&* -.................. N/A -.................. N/A ......... 10 16 - 30" ...........11 14 - 42" GOOD #&'$$,+&+ PM2.5 '0 good 7:14 a.m. 5:26 p.m. 3:19 a.m. 3:14 p.m. Nov. 22 Nov. 29 Dec. 6 New First Full Dec. 14 Last Trivia Fun by Wilson Casey The last thing to happen is the ultimate, but what is the next-to-last called? Postultimate, Antepenultimate, Dultimate, Penultimate What was the nationality of piano composer Frederic Chopin? German, Polish, French, Italian How many different vice presidents did FDR have during his terms? 1, 3, 5, 7 More teasers? Comments? [email protected] — See answers below Sudoku 404 Greenbelt Dr., Maryville, TN 37804 www.waterfrontmaryville.com LUNCH SPECIALS Smoking Restaurant. Must be 21 to enter Non-Smoking Section Available MONDAY - FRIDAY 681-1212 CRYPTOQUOTE For Tennessee, surface high pressure over the southern U.S. will keep the state dry. '0 '%'))'. #+0 #'/ #'/ Bristol 27/12/pc 39/25/s Chattanooga 33/19/pc 44/29/pc Crossville 25/16/pc 41/26/pc Gatlinburg 29/14/pc 43/27/s Jackson 30/23/pc 50/29/pc Johnson City 27/12/pc 39/23/s Kingsport 27/12/pc 39/25/s Knoxville 30/17/pc 43/28/pc Memphis 34/28/s 52/33/pc Nashville 29/20/s 46/29/pc NEWSMAKERS PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 6 p.m.......................1.01" Month-to-date................................... 1.52" Normal month-to-date................... 2.07" Year-to-date................................... 36.85" Normal year-to-date......................41.42" --$,-$,+ -#+)."#'1 ,- +1 Washington D.C. 33/24 H Houston H 54/36 Anchorage 38/32 HUMIDITY *'-)1 79% Kansas City 32/24 DFW Metroplex 51/36 offthemark New York 31/21 Detroit 23/15 Chicago 19/15 Los Angeles 80/58 $(",,)!*'1 ,- +1 Corden set to visit Letterman show NEW YORK — Before he begins his own late-night show, James Corden is paying a visit to David Letterman. Corden is replacing Craig Ferguson next year on “The Late Late Show,” the CBS late-night program that immeJames diately Corden follows Letterman on the schedule. Ferguson is signing off on Dec. 19, and Corden makes his debut on March 9. Corden’s first appearance on the “Late Show” is scheduled this Friday. The Tony Award-winning actor has some product to promote besides his upcoming program, since he’s featured in the new film “Into the Woods,” opening on Christmas Day. Television producer Norman Lear and musicians TV on the Radio will also be on Letterman on Friday. Dropkick Murphys’ bus involved in crash AUSTIN, Texas — The Dropkick Murphys have canceled a concert after a tour bus carrying the band struck and killed a pedestrian near Austin, Texas. The Massachusettsbased Celtic punk group announced on its Facebook page that a man darted in front of the bus early Sunday as the vehicle was headed to the Dallas airport to drop off one of the band members. The band performed Saturday night in San Antonio, and the rest of the group had planned to bus to Tulsa, Oklahoma, for a concert Sunday night. The Facebook page says that concert was canceled because the driver was “severely shaken up” and the bus was damaged. A Round Rock, Texas, police spokeswoman didn’t immediately return a call late Sunday from The Associated Press. 10B | CLASSIFIEDS THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds Tuesday, November 18, 2014 t8FTU#SPBEXBZ.BSZWJMMF5/ G R E AT D E A L S! DEAL FRESH MARKDOWNS! SLASHED PRICES! AUTO SALES Come in and check out our new location! Ask for lana or Nick WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS OPEN 8-7pm M-Saturday Sunday 12-5:30pm WE BUY TRUCKS VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WWW.IDEALAUTOSALESONLINE.COM TRUCKS WE BUY CARS MANAGERS SPECIAL 01 Dodge Ram Ext Cab Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade Auto, 4x4, Local Trade #7290 #7046 $ 4 ,9 9 5 $6,995 MANAGERS SPECIAL $5,995 $1 2 ,9 9 5 04 Chevy Silverado 2500 Auto, 4x4, Leather, PL-PW, 8.1, Air, Crew Cab #7263 $15,995 Auto, Powerstroke Diesel, 4x4, New Tires #7305 Auto, PL-PW, Air $23,995 $2 2 ,9 9 5 $18,995 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, FX4, 107k #7324 Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Navigation, Sunroof #7199 $2 4 ,9 9 5 $25,995 $2 4 ,9 9 5 $25,995 08 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 2500 Auto, PL-PW, 2wd, Air, Leather, 68k, 4.7L #7196 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 109k, 4x4 $2 4 ,9 9 5 $26,995 Auto, 77k, Pl-PW, Air, 4 cyl, Local Trade #7287 #7219 $5 ,9 95 $6,995 $6,995 $5 ,9 95 #7178 $26,995 $2 4 ,9 9 5 76k, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7295 $1 8 ,9 9 5 10 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 5 Speed, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 121k #7235 $6 ,9 95 $7,995 09 Chrysler PT Cruiser Touring 07 Ford F250 Ext Cab 4x4, PL-PW, 6 Speed, Power Stroke Diesel #7309 $1 9 ,9 9 5 $22,995 $3 4 ,9 9 5 $35,995 $1 6 ,9 9 5 $2 1, 9 9 5 11 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 2500 Diesel Turbo Big Horn, 87k, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7162 $3 5 ,9 9 5 $39,995 04 Volvo S560 TL 07 Ford Fusion 99 Mercedes SL 500 05 Lincoln LS Auto, Leather, PL-PW Auto, PL-PW, Air Leather, Auto, PL-PW, 2 Door #7236 Leather, PL-PW, Air, 78k, V8 #C9999 $7 ,9 95 #7319 LOW, LOW RATES Auto, PL-PW, Air #7083 $9,995 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 WD, Auto, V8, PL-PW, 4x4, 5.7 Hemi, Leather #7277 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, 4k, Lift Kit, Chrome Rockstar Wheels #7270 $2 9 ,9 9 5 04 Ford F250 Crew Cab FX4 $17,995 $16,995 14 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 1500 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, 5.7, 58k #C3232 $1 2 ,4 9 5 $13,995 Crew Cab, Auto, 135k, 4x4, Leather, Air, PL-PW #7092 $1 9 ,9 9 5 $20,995 $20,995 $30,995 $1 2 ,4 9 5 $13,995 08 Dodge Ram Crew Cab 06 Ford F150 Crew Cab CARS 05 Volkswagen Beetle Convertible 03 PT Cruiser Air, Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Sunroof, 81k Miles #7280 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $16,995 Powerstroke Diesel, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Leather 12 Dodge Ram Crew Cab SLT WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS 03 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS $16,995 Auto, 2wd, 81k, Air, PL-PW #7264 05 Ford F150 Lariat 4x4, Auto, 122k #7028 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 8 ,4 9 5 $19,995 $1 7, 99 5 $19,995 $18,995 08 Ford F150 Crew Cab Lariat $1 4 ,9 9 5 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Leather, Sunroof, 87K #7166 Auto, Leather, V8, 4x4, Sunroof #7315 $1 7 ,9 9 5 05 Ford F150 Sport Auto, 5 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Z71, 122k, Power Sunroof #7027 04 Dodge Ram Reg Cab, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 84k, 2WD #7244 $1 1, 4 9 5 $12,995 07 Ford Explorer Trac 04 Ford F350 Crew Cab 04 Toyota Tundra Crew Cab Limited 06 Ford F150 $1 0 ,9 9 5 06 Chevy Colorado 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7121 $1 4 ,9 9 5 $15,995 $15,995 Auto, 111k, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Crew Cab #6953 07 Ford F150 Crew Cab FX4 09 Chevy Silverado #7320 $1 6 ,9 9 5 5 Speed, 2wd, PL-PW, Air #7182 06 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab, Auto, PL-PW, 4x4, Air #7307 #6837 $12,995 10 Dodge Dakota Crew Cab 04 Ford Superduty F350 Crewcab $1 3 ,9 9 5 $14,995 Ext Cab, 2WD, PL-PW $1 0 ,9 9 5 $11,995 05 Chevy Silverado 2500 05 Chevy Silverado Auto, PL-PW, 4x4, Local Trade #7317 $9 ,9 9 5 $11,995 Nismo, PL-PW, 6 cyl, CD, 115k, 4WD #7322 06 Ford F250 Superduty Ext Cab $1 6 ,9 9 5 $17,995 $9 ,9 9 5 05 Nissan Frontier Ext Cab $1 3 ,5 0 0 05 Chevy Colorado Crew Cab 03 Ford F150 Ext Cab Camper Top, Auto, 101k, 2wd, Running Boards #7081 Auto, 87k, 2WD #7132 $11,995 Auto, 5.9 Diesel, 4x4 #7131 91k, Auto, 2WD #7255 $17,995 $ 6 ,4 9 5 01 Dodge Ram 2500 Ext Cab 11 Ford F-150 Long Bed Reg Cab $14,995 07 Mazda Sport Truck 00 Dodge Dakota Crew Cab $9,995 #7159 $7 ,9 95 $7 ,9 95 $8,995 #7323 $8 ,9 95 $9,995 $8 ,9 95 $9,995 MANAGERS SPECIAL 08 Ford Focus SES 08 Nissan Altima 08 Chevy Malibu Auto, 126k, PL-PW Auto, PL-PW, Air, 106k, Local Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, #7086 Trade #7232 Local Trade #7172 $10,995 $9 ,9 95 $10,995 MANAGERS SPECIAL Auto, 68k, Leather, Pl-PW, Air $9 ,9 95 $10,995 11 Chevy HHR 08 Honda Civic EX Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 78k #7042 #7030 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Sunroof, 2 Door #7012 $12,995 $1 0, 99 5 10 Dodge Charger 07 Chrysler 300-C Auto, PL-PW, Air, 62k Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Navigation, 85K #7100 #7249 $14,995 $1 3, 99 5 $1 4 ,9 95 $16,995 $1 1, 4 95 $11,995 08 Audi A4 2.0T Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air #7211 $16,995 2 Door, Auto, 4x4 $4,995 #7313 $3 ,9 9 5 06 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, 6 cyl #7291 $1 0 ,9 9 5 $11,995 08 Ford Explorer Auto, Eddie Bauer, 3rd Row, 2wd $15,995 #7195 $1 4 ,9 9 5 05 Hyundai Tucson Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7191 $5 ,9 9 5 $7,995 05 Ford Expedition Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7283 $11,995 $1 0 ,9 9 5 09 Toyota Highlander 99k, Auto, PL-PW, Air #C3131 $1 6 ,9 9 5 $17,995 MANAGERS SPECIAL MANAGERS SPECIAL 06 Dodge Grand Caravan 06 Dodge Grand Caravan Auto, Stow & Go Seats, PL-PW, Air, 75k #6670 $8,995 $6 ,9 9 5 Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, 48k #6635 $9,995 $11,995 07 Cadillac DTS Auto, PL-PW, Air, 84k, Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 87K #6871 4 cyl #7289 $11,995 $1 0, 99 5 08 Buick Lacrosse 09 Toyota Camry XLE Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather 06 Chevy Monte Carlo SS Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 129k Auto. PL-PW, Air, Leather, 88k #7260 #7054 #7254 $1 1, 4 95 $12,995 $12,995 $1 1, 99 5 08 Toyota Avalon Limited 04 Chevy Corvette Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather, Power Sunroof #3232 46k, PL-PW, Air, Black Leather, 6-Speed #C1122 $1 8, 99 5 $1 6, 4 95 $19,995 $2 3, 99 5 $24,995 $13,995 $1 2 ,4 95 09 Mercedes CL 550 55k, Leather, Sunroof #7276 $3 1, 99 5 $32,995 CD, Auto, Leather, PL-PW #7282 $11,995 $1 0, 99 5 03 BMW X5 AWD 06 Ford Explorer Auto, Leather, V8, PL-PW, 4x4, Air, Third Seat #7302 05 Mercury Mariner 03 Chevy Tahoe Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Local Trade #7217 Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air $10,995 $8,995 $7 ,9 9 5 $9,995 07 Ford Explorer XLT V6, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7200 $1 1, 9 9 5 $12,995 05 Porsche Cayenne Auto, Leather, PL-PW-PS, Power Sunroof, 93k, V6 #c6767 $1 7 ,9 9 5 $19,995 $9 ,9 9 5 05 Chevy Tahoe Z71 Auto, Leather, 4x4, Third Seat, DVD, Power Sunroof #7089 $1 2 ,9 95 $13,995 07 Jeep Wrangler #c4444 $20,995 $8 ,4 9 5 $9,995 $8 ,9 9 5 10 Ford Escape Auto, PL-PW, Air, 2WD Auto, PL-PW, Air, 94k #7208 $13,995 $1 2 ,9 9 5 51k, PL-PW, 4x4, Air $1 8, 99 5 #7253 08 Honda CR-V 12 Jeep Liberty 6 Speed, Leather, 86k $21,995 10 Nissan Sentra Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 34k $13,995 #7214 $1 2 ,9 95 10 Chevy Camaro SS ZL427 25k, Auto, PL-PW, Leather #C7777 $2 9, 99 5 $31,995 SLASHED PRICES Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof, 3.0, Extra clean #c9595 #7777 $2 0 ,9 9 5 #7198 $15,995 Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, New Tires, Local Trade #7298 $9 ,9 9 5 $10,995 07 Chevy Tahoe Auto, Leather, 3rd Seat, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7128 $1 4 ,9 9 5 $1 3 ,9 9 5 $15,995 07 Chevy Tahoe LT Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, Leather, 4x4, CD #7259 $22,995 03 Chevy Tahoe $2 0 ,9 9 5 05 Kia Sedona Auto, 68k, PL-PW, Local Trade $7,995 #7174 $6 ,9 9 5 MANAGERS SPECIAL 09 Volkswagen Routan Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat #7338 $8 ,9 9 5 05 Mercedes E500 4 Matic $1 0, 99 5 $12,495 SUVs & VANS LOW, LOW RATES 95 Chevy Tahoe $9 ,9 95 $1 0, 99 5 10 Dodge Avenger MANAGERS SPECIAL Auto, 96k, PL-PW $1 0, 99 5 73k, Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade #7312 #7246 08 Honda Civic $12,995 10 Chevy Impala LT $13,995 $1 2 ,9 9 5 08 Nissan Quest 10 Chrysler Town & Country Auto, PL-PW, Air, 92k, Local Trade $13,995 #7161 $1 2 ,9 9 5 All prices include $250.00 doc fee. Not included TT&L. Auto, 3rd Seat, PL-PW, Air #7294 $14,995 $1 3 ,9 9 5 09 Honda Odyssey EXL Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof, Power Doors & Hatch, 82k, DVD #7017 $18,995 Not Actual Colors Shown in pictures above. $1 6 ,9 9 5 07 Jeep Wrangler 5 speed, 78k Miles, 4x4, Air #7345 $19,995 $1 9 ,9 9 5 45026149DT $8 ,9 95 $10,995 05 Ford 500 Limited
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