Maryville man charged in string of burglaries

Snowstorm slams Northeast. 5A
Man charged
with stealing
PlayStation.
2A
Four friends and dog
closer to their AT
adventure. 8A
BLOUNT
TUESDAY
January 27, 2015
COUNTY’S
N E WS PA P E R
Maryville, TN
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RECORD
SINCE
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thedailytimes.com
US coalition gets victory
Maryville
Kurds oust Islamic State after four-month battle
man charged
in string of
burglaries
BY ZEINA KARAM
The Associated Press
From Staff Reports
A search warrant and a
stolen gun in Knox County led local authorities to
charge a Maryville man in
connection with a rash of
local home burglaries.
Christopher Shane Pack,
31, Sims Road, Maryville,
was charged with seven
counts of aggravated burglary, with other charges
pending, according to a
Blount County Sheriff ’s
Office release. He was
held Monday evening on
a $35,000 bond pending a
Jan. 28 hearing.
The investigation that led
to Pack’s arrest began in
Knox County. According
to reports, Knox County
Sheriff ’s Office deputies
had executed a search warrant on a residence in south
Knox County on Jan. 22.
That search turned up a
gun, which police records
showed had recently been
reported stolen out of
Blount County.
When Knox County officials called to confirm
the theft, a Blount County Sheriff ’s Office detective joined the investigation. Further action on the
aforementioned search
warrant revealed a number of other stolen items —
jewelry, more guns, TVS,
pressure washers — many
of them having reportedly
been taken out of Blount
County.
Further investigation
linked Christopher Shane
Pack to the burglaries,
though Pack was not a resident of the home where the
search took place.
Reports said Pack is
believed to have participated in a series of home
burglaries that occurred
between November and
January, including burglaries on Temple Road, Ellejoy Road, Old Chilhowee
Road, West Vinegar Valley, Jim Norton Loop, Old
Niles Ferry and Sevierville
Road.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KURDS WAVE THE FLAGS of outlawed rebel group of the PKK to celebrate Monday in Istanbul,
Turkey, hours after Kurdish fighters backed by intense U.S.-led airstrikes pushed the Islamic
State group entirely out of a key Syrian town.
Tennessee Promise gears
up for additional students
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — About
90 percent of Tennessee’s
senior class has applied for
the first year of Tennessee
Promise, the program that
offers eligible high school
seniors the chance to go
to a community college or
technical college tuitionfree.
The Tennessean reports
that amounts to about
5 8 ,0 0 0 s t u d e n t s a n d
exceeds predictions by
tens of thousands.
Some of those may decide
to attend four-year schools
instead or go another route,
but in the meantime, community colleges are preparing to educate more
students.
Tennessee Board of
Regents Chancellor John
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A FEMALE KURDISH FIGHTER takes aim in Kobani, Syria, on Nov. 19.
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BEIRUT — Jubilant Kurdish fighters ousted Islamic State militants from the
key Syrian border town of
Kobani on Monday after
a four-month battle — a
significant victory for both
the Kurds and the U.S.-led
coalition.
The Kurds raised their
flag on a hill that once flew
the Islamic State group’s
black banner. On Kobani’s war-ravaged streets,
gunmen fired in the air
in celebration, male and
female fighters embraced,
and troops danced in their
baggy uniforms.
The failure to capture
Kobani was a major blow
to the extremists whose
hopes for an easy victory
dissolved into a costly siege
under withering airstrikes
by coalition forces and an
assault by the Kurdish militia.
For the U.S. and its partners, Kobani became a strategic prize, especially after
they increased the number of airstrikes against IS
fighters there in October.
“Daesh gambled on Kobani
and lost,” said senior Kurdish
official Idriss Nassan, using
the Arabic acronym for the
Islamic State group.
“Their defenses have collapsed, and its fighters have
fled,” he told The Associated Press from Turkey, adding that he would return to
Kobani on Tuesday.
Kobani-based journalis
Farshad Shami said the few
civilians who remained had
joined in the celebration.
Most of the town of about
60,000 people had fled to
Turkey to escape the fighting.
Several U.S. officials
said they couldn’t confirm
that Kurdish fighters have
gained full control of Kobani, but added that they have
no reason to disbelieve the
claims.
A senior U.S. official said
the Kurds controlled most
of the town and have consolidated control particularly in the central and
THE DAILY TIMES
2014
2A | BLOUNT COUNTY
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Man charged with aggravated burglary
Robert Charles
Mitchell Jr.
From Staff Reports
A Knoxville man was arrested on
an aggravated burglary charge Saturday in the wake of an early-January incident wherein he allegedly
took a PlayStation gaming system
at knifepoint from the home of an
ex-girlfriend.
Robert Charles Mitchell Jr. was
arrested Jan. 24 by Blount County Sheriff ’s Office and charged
with one count of aggravated burglary.
According to Blount County
Sheriff ’s Office reports, Mitchell’s charge stemmed from a Jan. 8
incident when deputies answered
a call from a former girlfriend of
Mitchell was charged with
aggravated burglary for
allegedly taking a PlayStation
gaming system at knifepoint.
Mitchell’s, a 19-year-old Louisville woman. Reports said that a
deputy noticed “several PlayStation 3 games scattered in front of
the residence” as he approached
the woman’s home.
The woman reported that
Mitchell had come to her residence uninvited, holding a knife
in each hand. He advanced upon
her, she said, demanding that she
tell him “where his PlayStation 3
was.” She told deputies that she
had purchased the gaming system
while she and Mitchell were living together.
Fearing for her safety, she said
she told him where the PlayStation was located, whereupon he
grabbed the gaming system and
games, throwing the games themselves back at the residence as he
fled the scene.
ORDER OF PROTECTION
The woman said she had filed an
order of protection against Mitchell prior to the incident, due to other instances of volatile behavior.
Deputies observed that the order
had not yet been served.
During the disturbance call,
reports said the alleged victim
received a voice mail message
from Mitchell. A deputy reported listening to the message, which
consisted of a man saying, “You
can bet I’ll be back.”
A witness confirmed the woman’s account of Mitchell’s actions,
saying he, too, had feared for her
safety when Mitchell came to the
home, reports said.
Mitchell was believed to have
fled to Knoxville after the incident.
Blount County authorities issued
an aggravated burglary warrant
immediately upon receiving the
Jan. 8 incident report.
United Way promotes CAPPE sets fundraiser; decision
Wand to director of on parkway extension nearing
community impact
From Staff Reports
Wendy
Wand
From United Way of Blount County
United Way of Blount
County has announced the
promotion of Wendy Wand
to director of community
impact, effective Jan. 1.
She will be responsible
for supporting relationships between United Way
and all community partner agencies, organizing
community volunteer initiatives, supporting community-wide initiatives
based around United Way’s
three focus areas, managing
interns and facilitating the
allocations process. This
position also involves additional administrative management responsibilities.
“Wendy has been a key
part to United Way’s success, and we were thrilled
to promote her to this position,” said Jennifer Wackerhagen, president and CEO.
Wand began working for
United Way of Blount County in 2011 as the community
impact associate. A Blount
County native, she graduated from William Blount
High School and went on
to receive her bachelor’s
degree in child development and family studies
from Middle Tennessee
Wand is a Blount
County native and
William Blount High
School graduate.
‘Wendy has
been a key part
to United Way’s
success, and we
were thrilled to
promote her to
this position.’
Jennifer Wackerhagen
president, CEO of United Way
State University in 2006. She
also received her master’s
degree in public administration with a concentration in
nonprofit management from
the University of TennesseeChattanooga in 2013.
Wand is a Leadership
Blount Class of 2014 graduate and was an honored
recipient of the Blount
Partnership Bright Future
Award in 2012.
CHILIFEST 2015
Citizens Against the Pellissippi Parkway Extension
is planning its 13th annual ChiliFest fundraiser on
Feb. 7 in advance of a decision which may affect the
future of the controversial
project.
ChiliFest will be held at
Stovall Family Life Center in Maryville. Four ribbons and cash prizes will be
awarded as three categories
of chili — beef, other meats
and vegetarian — compete
for the judges’ decisions.
The People’s Choice will be
determined by votes from
the tasting public.
Meanwhile, the Federal
Highway Administration
is expected to issue a decision on the fate of the proposed Pellissippi Parkway
extension that CAPPE has
been opposing for more
than a decade. According
to Tennessee Department
of Transportation, a decision is still expected to be
issued this spring.
The proposal would
extend Pellissippi Parkway
(State Route 162) from Old
Knoxville Highway to East
Lamar Alexander Parkway
321, a length of about 4.4
miles. TDOT’s preferred
route for the proposed
Pellissippi Parkway extension, labeled Alternative
ChiliFest 2015 will be
held from 4 to 7 p.m.
Feb. 7 at the Stovall
Family Life Center
beside First Church of
the Nazarene, 1608 East
Broadway, Maryville.
Contestants must
register and pay the
$20 entry fee by Feb.
4. Entry forms may
be requested from
[email protected].
Admission is $7 at the
door (free for children
ten years of age and
younger). With admission comes a taste of
all entries and a bowl
of chili. Beverages,
quesadillas and homebaked goods will be
available for purchase.
Contact Marian
Fitzgerald at 865983-0298 or Jay Clark
or 931-308-7570 with
any questions.
A, would cross Old Knoxville Highway, Wildwood
Road, Brown School Road,
Sevierville Road and Davis
Ford Road before reaching the terminus at East
Lamar Alexander Parkway
near Morning Star Baptist
Church.
In July 2013, TDOT chose
to propose a 150-foot alignment shift to the west at the
southern end of the route in
order to avoid a sensitive
archeological site. This will
affect some residents of the
Kensington Place mobile
home community.
In July 2014, the FHWA
approved an Environmental
Protection Agency re-evaluation of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement.
The findings were that the
changes to the alternatives
considered in the impact
statement as well as modifications to the preferred
alternative would not result
in significant environmental impacts that were not
evaluated in the impact
statement and that a supplement or a new impact
statement is not required.
The evaluation process
has been ongoing for years.
CAPPE filed a lawsuit in the
early part of the last decade
because the environmental impact statement hadn’t
been done, violating the
National Environmental
Policy Act.
A federal court halted
the project in 2002 with an
injunction. Two years later
the case was remanded to
Tennessee state court and
the injunction was lifted so
officials could begin the
environmental impact
process.
Flights canceled, delayed at McGhee Tyson Airport due to blizzard
From Staff Reports
STORM MAY hit North hard. 5A
Several flights were canceled or delayed Monday
at McGhee Tyson Airport
as airlines braced for the
blizzard bearing down on
the Northeast.
Becky Huckaby, McGhee
Tyson Airport Authority
spokeswoman, said airlines
contacted ticket holders
scheduled for canceled
flights, either to change the
day of the flight or reroute
it in the case of connecting
flights. “Over the years the
airlines have really honed
in their operational plans.
They go ahead and reroute
and rebook rather than
have to put passengers up
in hotels,” she said.
Delta Air Lines canceled
its late afternoon flights to
and from New York. US
Airways canceled flights
from Philadelphia, and
United canceled a flight
from Newark, N.J.
A US Airways departure to
Charlotte, N.C., was delayed,
as was a United Airlines
flight to Washington D.C.
There also were delays in
flights from Chicago, Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver and
Atlanta that may have been
indirectly caused by the
storm as flight schedules
were adjusted.
Most delays were no more
than 30 to 24 minutes, and
some were shorter.
Huckaby said airline travelers who had not been
contacted about the status of their flight could
assume they were probably on time.
“If you are flying (today),
you’ll want to get up early
and monitor our website
(flyknoxville.com),” she
said. “This storm is supposed to be significant.
We’ll just have to wait and
see.”
BRIEF
Kroger donating
$20,000 in food
to Second Harvest
Kroger will donate
$20,000 of nonperishable food items to
Second Harvest Food
Bank of East Tennessee
today thanks to their
Knoxville-area customers and associates who
donated during the grocer’s 2014 “Can Hunger” campaign.
From Nov. 2 to Nov.
22, Kroger customers
and associates purchased $1 or $5 icons
to benefit Second Harvest and other Feeding
America food banks.
“The donations from
the ‘Can Hunger’ campaign come at crucial time for our food
bank,” said Second Harvest Executive Director Elaine Streno. “The
warehouse shelves
are empty following
the holidays, and this
$20,000 donation of food
helps us restock for the
upcoming weeks.
Kroger’s donation will
include spaghetti, spaghetti sauce, mac and
cheese dinners, corn
flakes, canned tuna,
green beans and canned
fruit.
THIS WEEK IN HISTORY
From The Daily Times
on Jan. 24, 1990: Dr.
David Eubanks, a
native Blount Countian who is president of
Johnson Bible College,
will be honored when
the college’s new $2.7
million activities center
is named for him and
his wife, Margaret.
TENNESSEE
LOTTERY NUMBERS
Cash 3 Evening
5-7-4, Lucky Sum: 16
(five, seven, four; Lucky
Sum: sixteen)
Cash 3 Midday
8-6-8, Lucky Sum: 22
(eight, six, eight; Lucky
Sum: twenty-two)
Cash 3 Morning
1-5-0
(one, five, zero)
Cash 4 Evening
4-0-9-0, Lucky Sum: 13
(four, zero, nine, zero; Lucky
Sum: thirteen)
Cash 4 Midday
5-6-7-5, Lucky Sum: 23
(five, six, seven, five; Lucky
Sum: twenty-three)
Cash 4 Morning
9-6-5-8
(nine, six, five, eight)
Officials to meet on reducing sexual assaults at colleges
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — A twoday summit focused on
fighting sexual assaults at
college campuses is drawing about 400 officials from
76 schools across Tennessee.
Media report the meeting
begins today at Tennessee
State University and will
feature national experts
who will offer training on
issues like defining consent, prevention and com-
CLOSING ARGUMENTS begin in
ex-Vanderbilt players trial. 5A
plying with changing federal laws.
“We believe students have
every right to expect to be
safe on our campus,” University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro said last
week in a conference call
with reporters. “We want
to do everything we can to
be there and support our
students when they need
us most.”
THE DAILY TIMES
Blount County’s only daily newspaper,
serving our readers
since 1883.
Your Life. Your Times.
Vol. 71 No. 302
The Daily Times
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is published daily by
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Publishers LLC,
307 E. Harper Ave., Maryville,
TN, 37804. Periodical postage
paid at Maryville TN 37804.
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Maryville, TN, 37804.
The idea for the Tennessee Sexual Assault and
Relationship Violence
Summit came about after
revisions to federal standards and laws on how
schools should respond
to and report assaults.
It is being held in the
midst of a high-profile
rape trial against two former Vanderbilt football
players.
The summit is scheduled
to last through Wednesday.
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“Training on this subject is not just the required
thing to do, it’s the moral
thing to do,” said John Morgan, chancellor of the Tennessee Board of Regents.
“What we believe is that
this summit will help our
campuses meet these
objectives outlined by our
national leaders.”
College leaders say collaboration between schools
on this scale is a first in the
state and shows the urgency of the matter.
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BLOUNT COUNTY | 3A
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
Closing arguments begin in ex-Vandy players’ rape trial
BY SHEILA BURKE
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — The rape trial
of two former Vanderbilt football players began wrapping
up Monday with a prosecutor
telling jurors that video evidence and photographs taken
of the crime would be enough
to convict them on most of the
charges.
Beyond the video footage
and photographs, testimony
from several athletes shows
the players are guilty, Assistant District Attorney Jan Norman told jurors during closing
arguments.
The proceedings capped off
a day of dramatic testimony
during which one of the former players took the stand and
testified that he was so drunk
he could not remember what
happened.
Former players Brandon Vandenburg and Cory Batey are
standing trial on five counts of
aggravated rape and two counts
of aggravated sexual battery. Two
other former players are facing
the same charges. Vandenburg
additionally faces a charge of
unlawful photography and tampering with evidence.
All have pleaded not guilty.
Throughout the trial, jurors
have seen graphic images of
the alleged sexual assault that
police recovered from cellphones and a laptop. Prosecutors said players took pictures
of the assault and one even sent
videos to his friends as it was
happening.
“This is normally the part of
the trial where we might say
that if we had this on photo
or if we had it on video, then
it would make the state’s job a
lot easier,” Norman told jurors
in her closing. “But we actually have this uncontradicted
proof in this case,” the prosecutor said of one of the rape
charges.
DEFENSE: PLAYERS DRUNK
Defense attorneys have claimed
that the players were drunk, one
of them saying his client had an
alcoholic blackout.
“Ladies and gentleman, I submit to you that the only person
who was unconscious and didn’t
know what was going on was (the
victim),” Norman told jurors in
her closing arguments.
A defense attorney for Batey
responded by telling jurors that
they would not see video or photographic evidence of his client
having sex with the coed.
“The testimony was he was crazy drunk and didn’t know what
he was doing,” Robinson told
jurors of Batey. Robinson also
blamed a college culture that
encouraged binge drinking and
sex and said it wasn’t just limited
to Vanderbilt.
SUSPECT TESTIFIES
The closing arguments came
after Batey took the stand and
testified that he can’t remember the alleged sexual assault
that prosecutors say he and three
players carried out.
“I was just drunk out of my
mind,” Batey testified. “This is
something I would never do in
my right state of mind. I’m just
sorry.”
Batey told jurors that he was
horrified when he saw on his
cellphone explicit pictures of a
woman he’d never met.
“I didn’t know how they got
there,” Batey said. “I didn’t know
what happened to the young lady
in the pictures. I immediately
deleted them.”
Batey was a 19-year-old who
had just come out of his freshman year when he and three of
his teammates were charged with
raping an unconscious student
in a dorm in June 2013.
VICTIM CRYING
The alleged victim in the case
was doubled over and crying
in her seat in the courtroom
and appeared to be vomiting
while Batey was on the stand.
She testified last week she had
no recollection of being sexually assaulted. The Associated Press generally does not
identify alleged victims of sex
crimes.
Vandenburg’s defense did not
get a chance to make a closing
argument and is set to do so on
this morning.
Vandenburg is not accused of
having sex with the woman or
penetrating her in any way. But
he has been charged with aggravated rape because he is accused
of encouraging other players to
have sex with her.
Vandenburg and the woman
had gone out earlier in the eve-
COALITION: Town becomes key in fight against ISIS
FROM 1A
southern areas. The official
said Islamic State militants
still have a considerable
presence in outlying areas
around Kobani and are still
putting up stiff resistance
to the Kurds in those pockets outside it.
U.S. Central Central
Command estimates that
90 percent of Kobani is
now controlled by Kurdish forces.
Kurdish officials and
activists said Kobani was
entirely in Kurdish hands,
with only sporadic fighting on the eastern outer
edges where the militants
retained some footholds.
The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human
Rights said fighters of
the main Kurdish militia known as the People’s
Protection Units, or YPG,
where searching houses
in the eastern suburbs of
the town and dismantling
and detonating bombs and
booby-traps left behind.
Capturing Kobani would
have given the IS militants
control of a border crossing with Turkey and open
direct lines for their positions along the frontier.
Now, it is a grave psychological loss for the extremist group, which has been
dealt a series of military
setbacks in both Syria and
Iraq, particularly at the
hands of the Kurds.
Last month, Kurdish
fighters in Iraq retook the
strategic town of Sinjar that
had been home to many of
Iraq’s minority Yazidis.
The focus is now expected to shift to several hundred villages around Kobani still held by the militants.
Kurdish activists said they
expected the fight for those
to be easier than for the
town itself.
In September, Islamic
State fighters began capturing about 300 Kurdish
villages near Kobani and
thrust into the town itself,
occupying nearly half of it
and sending tens of thousands of residents fleeing
into Turkey.
But the once-nondescript
town with few resources
quickly became a centerpiece of the international campaign against the
Islamic State group. TV
crews flocked to the Turkish side of the border and
trained their cameras on
the besieged town, plumes
of smoke rising from explosions. U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry declared
it would be “morally very
difficult” not to help Kobani.
US AIR ASSAULT
The U.S.-led air assault
began Sept. 23, with Kobani
the target of about a halfdozen daily airstrikes on
average. More than 80 percent of all coalition airstrikes in Syria have been
in or around the town.
At one point in October, the U.S. air dropped
bundles of weapons and
medical supplies for Kurdish fighters — a first in the
Syrian conflict. Dozens of
Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga
forces joined their brethren in Kobani, bringing in
heavy weapons that neutralized the Islamic State
group’s artillery advantage.
By early January, more
than 1,000 Islamic State
fighters had been killed
and much of its heavy
weaponry destroyed. The
group continued to invest
in resources, bringing in
med Barkhadan, the Kobani commander of the main
Kurdish militia known as
the People’s Protection
Units, or YPG.
Barkhadan, a well-known
militia commander, led an
offensive in 2013 that ousted Islamic militants from
the northern Syrian town
of Ras Ayn, Aburrahman
said.
Retired Marine Gen. John
Allen, the U.S. envoy for
the international coalition
fighting the IS group, had
predicted in November
that Kobani would be a
defeat for the extremists.
The militant group “has,
in so many ways, impaled
itself on Kobani,” he said
in an interview in Ankara with the Turkish daily
Milliyet.
There also was joy across
the border in Turkey, where
Kurds set off fireworks and
performed a traditional
folk dance to mark the
victory by their brethren
in predominantly Kurdish
Kobani. In Istanbul, police
used tear gas and pressurized water to break up proKurdish demonstrations in
the city.
Shami said it was a triumph for the “entire world”
that had come to Kobani’s
rescue.
“It is a historic victory,
when a small town like
Kobani defeats a formidable criminal force like
Daesh,” he said.
hundreds of reinforcements. Activists said these
included many teenagers
and even children, signaling a shortage in its forces.
The group made a last
stand in the past few
weeks, unleashing more
than 35 suicide attacks in
recent weeks, activists said.
But the advancing Kurdish fighters could not be
stopped.
Nassan said coalition airstrikes intensified in recent
days, helping the Kurds in
their final push toward IS
positions on the southern and eastern edges of
Kobani.
The U.S. Central Command said Monday it had
carried out 17 airstrikes
near Kobani in the last 24
hours that struck IS infrastructure and fighting positions.
Shami, the Kurdish journalist, said the remaining
IS militants in eastern
Kobani vacated quickly,
leaving behind fresh food
and heavy weapons.
“Their morale collapsed,”
he said by telephone as celebratory gunfire echoed in
the background.
MILITANTS FLEE
Gharib Hassou, a representative of Syria’s powerful Kurdish Democratic
Union Party, or PYD, based
in Southern Kurdistan, said
most of the militants fled to
the IS-controlled town of
Tal Abyad to the east.
“There are a lot of dead
bodies ... and they left some
of the weapons,” he said.
Rami Abdurrahman,
director of the Observatory, also confirmed Kobani was entirely in Kurdish
hands. He said the Kurdish
force was led by Moham-
ning, and he can be seen on university surveillance video carrying the unconscious woman
back to his dorm room.
“He didn’t put her in the bed,”
Norman said of Vandenburg
in her closing arguments. “He
wasn’t trying to care for her. He
put her on the floor.”
Norman said that over and
over Vandenburg encouraged
the others to violate the woman. She said the only reason he
didn’t was because he couldn’t
perform.
On Monday evening, a silent
vigil was held on the steps of the
Parthenon in Nashville to call
attention to survivors of rape
and sexual assault and to protest
what organizers said was victimblaming in the trial.
“My ultimate goal here is to
pray for a very wounded community,” said Helen Ressler, a
graduate student at Vanderbilt Divinity School and one of
about 45 people who attended
the vigil. She said she was referring to the Vanderbilt community but also the impact that
the trial is having on survivors
of sexual assault outside the
school.
Police dog helps
in recapture of
Townsend fugitive
Dustin
Skaggs
From Staff Reports
Townsend resident and
recent jailhouse fugitive
Dustin Skaggs was taken
back into custody Saturday after a Sevier County
police dog named Pasco
sniffed out Skaggs as he
hid in a car on the streets
of Sevierville.
Skaggs, 18, and David
Way, 44, of Cosby, escaped
from Sevier County Jail
Friday evening. Sevie r Co u n t y o ff i c i a l s
announced the escape and
their subsequent recapture over the weekend.
But details surrounding the incident were
unavailable before Monday morning.
A search initiated by
Sevier County Sheriff ’s
Office, the U.S. Marshals,
Sevierville Police and an
air support team from
Knox County led to the
recapture of both men.
Reports said Skaggs,
of Old Highway 73, was
found hiding in a car on
Kilby Street in Sevierville
by a pair of local officers
and K-9 partner Pasco.
Skaggs was rearrested
around 11 p.m.
Way was taken the following day when two
Sevier County Sheriff ’s
officers found him hid-
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
Lolita C. Baldor in Washington; Suzan Fraser in Ankara;
and Bram Janssen in Irbil,
Iraq, contributed to this
report.
Skaggs was discovered by a police
dog, hiding in a car
in Sevierville.
David
Way
Sheriff’s officers
found David Way,
of Cosby, hidden
under a bridge.
ing under Gists Creek
Bridge in Sevierville
shortly before 1 p.m.
Sunday.
Both men were taken
fairly close to their point
of escape from the Sevier
County Jail Annex, leading Sevier County Sheriff Ron Seals to speculate
that they were running on
“limited resources.”
The escape came to light
around 11:30 p.m. Friday,
reports said, when a corrections officer discovered a window breach
in a newly constructed
addition to the jail annex.
In addition to their pending charges, both Way and
Skaggs were arraigned on
charges of felony escape.
They were each being held
at Sevier County Jail, each
on a bail of $125,000.
Welcoming New Patients
FOLLOW ZEINA Karam on
Twitter at www.twitter.com/
zkaram.
PROMISE: Other states ask Tennessee about program
Morgan says some campuses may have to schedule
night or weekend classes
to accommodate added
students.
President Barack Obama
has praised the program
and urged Congress to
make community colleges across the U.S. tuitionfree.
Mike Krause, who was
brought in by Gov. Bill
Haslam to oversee the pro-
gram’s beginning, has been
contacted by other states
to ask him about Tennessee Promise.
“States are looking at
what Gov. Haslam has
done, and they are fundamentally going back
and saying can we do
this?” Krause said. “Our
answer to them is, for us
in Tennessee, it was the
right thing to do because
we needed to change the
conversation around the
state.”
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FROM 1A
4A | BLOUNT COUNTY
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
BLOUNT RECORDS
COURT RECORDS
Case filed Jan. 23 in the
Equity Division of Blount
County Circuit Court:
Whitney Lee Gibson vs.
Charles W. Gibson, divorce
™
Case filed Jan. 26 in Blount
County Probate Court:
™
Robert E. Thomas, estate
ARRESTS
™
Rodney Dale Bullock, 36,
Knoxville, was arrested Jan.
26 by Blount County Sheriff’s
Office on a charge of felony
violation of probation. He
was held pending a 9 a.m.
Jan. 30 hearing.
™
Jamey Jeanette Fairbanks,
39, Crye Road, Maryville, was
arrested Jan. 25 by Blount
County Sheriff ’s Office on a
charge of domestic violence
with aggravated assault. He
was released on a $2,500
bond pending a 9 a.m. Jan.
25 hearing.
™
Thomas Howard Polk, III,
Cold Springs Road, Walland,
was arrested Jan. 26 by
Blount County Sheriff’s Office
on a charge of violating an
order or protection. He was
held on a $5,000 bond pending a 9 a.m. Feb. 5 hearing.
™
Johnny Delane Townsend,
52, Haley Way, Maryville, was
arrested Jan. 25 by Blount
County Sheriff ’s Office on
charges of domestic violence
with assault and interfering
with a 911 call. He was held
pending a 9 a.m. Jan. 29
hearing.
Arrested for contempt of
court:
Kara Lynn King, 31, Luther
Mack Lane, Maryville
™
CITATIONS
™
Huey P. Morgan, 61, Springbrook Road, Alcoa, was cited
at 3:50 p.m. Jan. 25 by an Alcoa officer at Walmart, 1030
Hunters Crossing Drive, Alcoa,
for shoplifting merchandise
valued at less than $500. A
store loss prevention officer
said he saw Morgan select a
bag of lime valued at $4.12
and leave the store without
paying for the merchandise.
Morgan was also given a
no-trespass notice on any
Walmart properties.
THEFTS
Blount County
Stephen F. Oakley, Adams
Road, Walland, reported
at 6:10 p.m. Jan. 25, that a
Husqvarna chain saw with
a 16-inch bar, a Husqvarna
chain saw with a 14-inch bar,
and a 16-inch Homelite chain
saw, worth an estimated
$600, were missing from his
pickup truck.
™
™
Lowell Harris Jr., Thornhill
Drive, Maryville, reported
at 8:53 a.m. Jan. 25 to the
Blount County Sheriff’s Office
that someone either used an
unauthorized key or picked
the door lock and deadbolt to
enter his residence and took
a 32-inch Seiki LCD flatscreen
television and at least 10
pairs of men’s flannel shorts,
worth a total estimated value
of $230.
Maryville
A Maryville Police officer
discovered a stolen license
plate on a green Ford F-150 in
a parking lot at 710 Montvale
Road at 9:18 p.m. Jan. 24.
The stolen plate was out
of Washington County. The
vehicle was towed to the
impound lot.
™
™
Jennifer Hixon of Maryville
reported at 8:27 p.m. Jan.
25 that she was walking to
the entrance of Kroger, 730
Watkins Road, when a white
male grabbed her purse and
ran. A witness said the man
was wearing a black shirt,
black jacket and a ball cap.
Total losses were estimated
at $540 for the purse and its
contents.
Alcoa
Two men took four Xbox
controllers valued at $169.84
from the electronics department at Walmart, 1030
Hunters Crossing Drive, Alcoa,
at 6:11 p.m. Jan. 25 and left
the store without paying for
the merchandise, according to
store officials. The theft was
recorded on store security video. A Knoxville Walmart loss
prevention officer was able to
identify one of the suspects.
The local loss prevention officer informed Alcoa police he
intends to prosecute the man
who was identified and the
second man if his identity is
later obtained.
™
VANDALISM
Blount County
Mildred B. Anderson, Pleasant View Avenue, Maryville,
reported at 2:18 p.m. Jan. 24
that she found several broken
eggs that had been thrown at
her garage door. Her neighbor
said he saw a Lincoln Town
Car speeding away from the
home at about 1 a.m. and
that on Jan. 23, he had words
with the driver for speeding
through the neighborhood.
Anderson said he thought
the egging was a case of
mistaken identity since the
confrontation was in front of
her house.
™
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
Blount County
A 43-year-old Maryville
woman reported at 8 p.m.
Jan. 24 that she and her
husband struggled over
her purse. According to the
Blount County Sheriff ’s Office
report, the 51-year-old husband said that while trying
to get his keys from his wife’s
purse, she scratched him.
The husband had scratches
on his lower rear abdomen
and right side of his neck.
The woman was determined
to be the primary aggressor
and was arrested at 8:28
p.m. on a charge of domestic
violence with assault and
taken to the Blount County
Jail. Bond was set at $750
and she must appear in
general sessions court at 9
a.m. Jan. 29.
™
™
A 44-year old Crye Road,
Maryville, man flagged down
a Blount County Sheriff ’s Office deputy at 7:12 p.m. Jan.
25 in reference to a domestic
violence incident. According
to the report, the man had a
laceration above his right eye
and blood on his nose. He
said his estranged girlfriend,
39, also of Crye Road, had hit
him with a laptop computer
after an argument. The man
refused medical treatment.
When deputies interviewed
the woman, she admitted hitting him with the
computer after he had kicked
her. She was determined to
be the primary aggressor, arrested on a charge of domestic violence with aggravated
assault, and taken to Blount
County Jail. Bail was set at
$2,500. She must appear in
General Sessions Court at 9
a.m. Jan. 29.
TRAFFIC
Blount County
Robbie R. Cutshaw, 48,
Katie Brook Lane, Maryville,
and Anthony M. Gugliotta, 19,
Stoneleigh Lane, Maryville,
at 3:54 p.m. Jan. 21, on U.S.
129. Cutshaw was taken to
UT Medical Center by Rural/
Metro Ambulance Service.
Gugliotta was not injured.
™
™
Marvin M. Tipton, 63,
Highway 411 South, Greenback, and Clyde M. Reaves,
82, Murphy Road, Maryville,
at 11:04 a.m. Jan. 23, on Niles
Ferry Road at Polly’s Way,
Maryville. Reaves was taken
by Rural/Metro Ambulance
Service to Blount Memorial Hospital. Passengers in
the Reaves vehicle, Mary C.
Reaves, 82, and Sharon K.
Reaves, 61, both of Murphy
Road, Maryville, were taken
by Rural/Metro Ambulance
Service to Blount Memorial Hospital. Mary Reaves
was admitted. There was no
information available on the
others.
Maryville
Steve Pearson Garnett, 63,
Six Mile Road, Maryville, and
Beverly Elaine Lemings, 69,
Parklane Court, Maryville, on
West Broadway Avenue near
Sandy Springs at 8:34 p.m.
Jan. 25. Lemings was taken
to Blount Memorial Hospital
where she was treated and
released.
Memorial Funeral Home
is in charge of arrangements.
MCINTURFF, MICHAEL SCOTT,
51, died Sunday, Jan. 25,
Haslam making 6 more stops
this week on Insure Tenn. tour
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — Republican Gov. Bill Haslam is
making six more stops
around the state to promote his Insure Tennessee
plan to extend health coverage to more than 200,000
low-income people.
Haslam kicked off his
tour last week at hospitals
in Jackson and Memphis.
He started this week’s
series of events on Monday at Cherokee Health
System.
Today, the governor
heads to Walker Comprehensive Health Center in
Clarksville, followed by
a discussion at Cherokee
Health Systems in Chattanooga on Wednesday.
The Associated Press
BIRTHS
MEMPHIS — Federal prosecutors
say 13 people have been charged with
selling cocaine and marijuana in West
Tennessee.
The U.S. attorney’s office in Memphis
said Monday that 12 people have been
arrested so far.
Three were already in state or federal
custody, and the rest were arrested in
Dyer County. One person named in
the indictments has not been arrested.
™
FUNERAL NOTICES
Blount Memorial Hospital
Jan. 18
Amanda June Potter and
Corey Seth Herin, Greenback,
girl, Barbara Abbygail Grace
Herin
Jan. 19
Jayda Rodriguez Godbey
and Wesley Marcus Godbey,
Loudon, boy, Jackson Robert
Godbey
™
Jan. 20
Amy Rose Crawford Dunn
and Zachary Thomas Dunn,
Madisonville, boy, Hunter
West Dunn
™
™
Amber Nicole Harmon
Cross and Rodney Raymond
Cross, Tellico Plains, girl, Lily
Charlotte Cross
™
Amber Nicole Biggar,
Maryville, boy, Blake Sheilds
Biggar
™
Mykah Reanna Graves
Rose and Dustin Warren Rose,
Maryville, boy, Keller Ward
Rose
™
Kristy Ann Norman
Vanderlip and Mark Roy
Vanderlip, Maryville, boy,
Henry Luke Vanderlip
Jan. 21
Jennifer Lynn Jeffries Olivet
and Kevin Dale Olivet,
Greenback, boy, Jett Patton
Olivet
™
™
Darlene Faye Cardin and
Kyle James Beavers, Maryville,
girl, Emilee Rose Beavers
™
Kelsey Martina Finger
McKelvey, Louisville, girl,
Kaitlyn Ross McKelvey
Jan. 22
Leslie Ann Burgess and
John Clayton Henderson,
Townsend, girl, Jennesis
Phoenix Rose Henderson
™
™
Morgan Lynne Clough
Shaw and Jacob Jerry Shaw,
Madisonville, girl, Cierra Lynne
Shaw
Jan. 23
Jacklyn Elizabeth Sellers
Stanton and Travis Nelson
Stanton, Greenback, boy,
Colton Wyatt Stanton
™
™
Delie Emerson Bancroft
Bullock and Justin Michael
Bullock, Maryville, girl, Ava
Dean Bullock
™
Ashley Renee Sparks and
Jesse Lee Dixon, Maryville,
girl, Addison Leigh Dixon
Jan. 24
Terran Julia Rene Renshaw
Simerly and Richard James
Simerly, Marvyille, girl, Ember
Elise Simerly
™
2015 at UT Medical Center.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced
by Smith Funeral & Cremation Service.
Haslam wraps up the
statewide swing on Thursday, with visits to Johnson
City Community Health
Center, Highlands Medical
Center in Sparta and the
Primary Care and Hope
Clinic in Murfreesboro.
The governor has called
a special session on his
health care proposal that
begins on Feb. 2.
13 face cocaine, marijuana charges
™
DEATHS
MCBRAYER, MADGE, 68, of
Maryville, died Jan. 25, 2015.
A graveside service will be
held at noon Jan. 27, 2015,
at Zion Chapel Cemetery.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
During the arrests, law enforcement
officials seized drugs, money, firearms
and drug paraphernalia.
The indictments were returned by a
federal grand jury in Jackson last Tuesday, but they remained under seal until
Monday’s arrests.
The case was investigated by the FBI’s
Memphis Safe Streets Task Force, which
includes agents from the FBI in Jackson,
the Dyer County Sheriff ’s Department
and the police departments in Dyersburg, Jackson and Lexington.
CHERYL FAYE BURKHART
Cheryl Faye Burkhart, of
Townsend, departed this
life in the waiting arms of
our Heavenly Father on
Jan. 25, 2015. Cheryl was
a devoted wife and mother who loved the Smoky
Mountains. Cheryl hiked
many miles with her husband, Billy, and family and
friends. Preceded in death
by her parents, Virgil and
Helen Ballinger; brother, Rev. Charles Vaughn
Ballinger; and grandson,
Dax Corey Burkhart; also,
Aussie Cat, Max. Survived
by her husband, Billy Burkhart; son, Billy Joe Burkhart; three grandchildren,
Georgia and husband Ben
Lee, Logan Burkhart, and
Haley and husband Mario
Adams; three
great-grandchildren,
Brayden,
Nolan, and
Gracie Lee;
special friend
and daughterin-law, Mary Pat Burkhart;
brothers, Wayne, Johnny
and wife Janie, Mike and
Lee Ballinger; sisters, Marion Banks and Rita Ballinger; special family, Jane
Ballinger, Willa Dean Ballinger; several special nieces, nephews, and special
friends, Ronnie and Jeanne
Hepperly, Melanie, Pam,
Patsy, and L.J.; The family
would like to express their
thanks for the care given
by the staff and doctors of
UT Hospice. A celebration of Cheryl’s life will be
held at 7 p.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. 27, 2015, in the Smith
Trinity Chapel with Rev.
Ronnie Hepperly and Rev.
Pacer Hepperly officiating.
In lieu of flowers, please
make contributions to the
R.I.O. Revolution Church
Building Fund. The family
will receive friends from 5
until 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan.
27, 2015, at Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 983-1000,
www.SmithFuneraland
Cremation.com.
ARTIE MAE DAVIS
Artie Mae Davis, age 76,
of Townsend, died on
Saturday, Jan. 24, 2015, at
the family home. She was
preceded in death by her
son, Allen Hurst Davis,
Jr. Survivors include her
loving companion, Gary
Teague; son and daughter-in-law, Ernie and Lora
Myers; son, Davis Patrick;
daughters and sons-in-law,
Birdell Davis Patrick, and
Cindy and Larry Winters;
many loved grandchildren
and great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan.
28, 2015, in Smith’s Trinity Chapel with the Rev.
Pacer Hepperly officiating. Family and friends will
assemble at 1 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015, at Tuckaleechee United Methodist Church Cemetery for
the interment. Family will
receive friends from 5 to 7
p.m. on Wednesday, Jan.
28, 2015, at Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 983-1000,
www.SmithFuneralAnd
Cremation.com.
JEAN IDA NIEMEYER
Jean Ida Niemeyer passed
away peacefully at her
home on Jan. 24, 2015,
after a short illness. She
was born Nov. 14, 1932,
to Bert and Sue Kinderman. She married Henry
A. Niemeyer in Dec. 27,
1958. She was preceded in
death by her parents and
sister, Rona Kreulen. She
is survived by her husband; sons, Gregg Niemey-
er and Glenn Niemeyer;
four grandchildren, Kristy
Niemeyer, Kyle Niemeyer,
Ali Niemeyer and Scout
Niemeyer; niece, Jeanine
Kreulen McClain; and
nephew Brad Kreulen.
Memorial service will be
private. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations
may be made to Covenant
Homecare and Hospice,
3001 Lake Brook Boulevard
#101, Knoxville, TN 37909.
Arrangements by Cremation By Grandview, 865806-8170; www.Cremation
ByGrandview.com
BILLIE E. WEBB
Billie E. Webb, age 80,
born Sept. 7, 1934, passed
away at 6:30 p.m. on Jan.
25, 2015, at Blount Memorial Hospital, with a brain
tumor. Billie was preceded in death by his parents,
Daniel and Suzie Webb;
brothers, Milton, Harley,
JR and Harold Webb. He
is survived by his loving
wife, Shirley Webb; and
beloved son, Patrick, who
resides in California. Billie was born and raised
in Blount County. Billie
joined the U.S. Army in
OBITUARY POLICY
A funeral notice in The
Daily Times costs 55 cents
per word plus $18 for a
photo. 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. For more information, call 981-1166.
1950. He was in for 20 years
and had two tours in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal
with “V” Device. Billie
retired from the Army in
1977. Billie’s whole life was
golf and he was very good
at it. He had 200 rounds
played last year. In lieu of
flowers, memorial donations may be made to the
Wounded Warrior Organization, P.O. Box 758517,
Topeka, KS 66675. Funeral service will be held 2
p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29,
2015, at Miller Funeral
Home Magnolia Chapel,
Rev. Tom Stanley officiating. Interment to follow
at Bethel Baptist Cemetery in Townsend. Family
will receive friends from
1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday
at Miller Funeral Home,
Maryville, 865-982-6041,
www.millerfuneralhome.
org.
MILLER FUNERAL
HOME
“The Business That Service Built”
Pre-Arrangement Funeral Planning
www.millerfuneralhome.org
915 W. BROADWAY
65061817
982-6041
NATION&WORLD | 5A
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
Drone crashes at White House
BRIEFS
Former CIA officer
convicted of leaking
Iran operation data
ALEXANDRIA, Va.
— A jury has convicted
a former CIA officer
of leaking classified
details of an operation
to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions to a New
York Times reporter.
Jurors convicted
47-year-old Jeffrey
Sterling, of O’Fallon,
Mo., of all nine counts
he faced in federal
court on Monday.
Prosecutors said Sterling disclosed the mission to journalist James
Risen to get back at the
CIA for perceived mistreatment.
Sterling was the handler for a Russian-born
CIA asset nicknamed
Merlin, who was at the
center of an operation
to funnel deliberately
flawed nuclear-weapons blueprints to the
Iranians.
CBO: Deficit to fall
to lowest level of
Obama presidency
WASHINGTON —
Solid economic growth
will help the federal
budget deficit shrink
this year to its lowest level since President Barack Obama
took office, according
to congressional estimates released Monday.
The Congressional
Budget Office also
projects a 14 percent
drop in the number of
U.S. residents without
health insurance, largely because of Obama’s
health law.
For future years however, CBO issued a
warning: Beyond 2018,
deficits will start rising again as more baby
boomers retire and
enroll in Social Security and Medicare. By
2025, annual budget
deficits could once
again top $1 trillion,
unless Congress acts.
Spielberg warns of
rising anti-Semitism
KRAKOW, Poland —
Film director Steven
Spielberg told a group
of Holocaust survivors
on Monday that Jews
are again facing the
“perennial demons of
intolerance” from antiSemites who are provoking hate crimes and
trying to strip survivors of their identity.
His warning came in
a speech to dozens of
Auschwitz survivors
the evening before official commemorations
marking the 70th anniversary of the Soviet
army’s liberation of the
death camp in Nazioccupied Poland.
BY JOSH LEDERMAN
AND JOAN LOWY
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A
two-foot-long drone apparently flown by a hobbyist crashed on the White
House grounds Monday in
an extraordinary, if unintended, breach that raised
fresh questions about the
president’s security — and
a growing threat from the
sky.
A man later came forward
to say he was responsible
for the mishap in the middle of the night and hadn’t
meant to fly the drone over
the complex, officials said.
“Initial indications are that
this incident occurred as a
result of recreational use
of the device,” said Secret
Service spokesman Brian
Leary.
President Barack Obama
and his wife, Michelle, were
overseas when the quadcopter struck the southeast
side of the grounds at about
3 a.m. Daughters Sasha
and Malia stayed behind
in Washington; it was not
known whether they were
at the mansion.
US SECRET SERVICE | THE ASSOCIATED PHOTO
THIS PHOTO SHOWS THE DRONE that crashed Monday onto the White House grounds.
Officials believed the
intrusion to be the first of
its kind on the White House
grounds, although not the
first in the vicinity.
Low-flying drones like
the quadcopter — a craft
lifted by four propellers
— have become increasingly sophisticated and
affordable instruments that
authorities worry could
also become tools for terrorists or others meaning
to do harm.
Police, fire and other emergency vehicles swarmed the
White House just after the
crash, with several clustered
near the southeast entrance
to the grounds.
The White House was
Storm packing major snow
could paralyze Northeast
BY MEGHAN BARR
dark and the entire perimeter was on lockdown until
around 5 a.m. when those
who work there were
allowed inside.
After daylight, more than
a dozen Secret Service officers fanned out in a search
across the White House
lawn as snow began to fall.
They peered down in the
grass and used flashlights
to look through the large
bushes that line the driveway on the south side of
the mansion.
The breach was bound to
reinvigorate a long-running
public debate about the use
of commercial drones in
U.S. skies — as well as concerns about White House
security. At the urging of
the drone industry, the
Obama administration is
on the verge of proposing
rules for drone operations
that would replace an existing ban on most commercial flights.
Although remote-controlled airplanes and related toys have been available for decades, the recent
proliferation of inexpensive drones has prompted
growing fears about potential collisions with traditional aircraft.
Technological advances have also made it easier to equip drones with
advanced capabilities such
as cameras, raising privacy
issues as well as concerns
that such devices could be
used by terrorists to carry
weapons.
Three Russian citizens
charged in New York spy
ring that spoke in code
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — More than
35 million people along
the Philadelphia-to-Boston corridor rushed to get
home and settle in Monday
as a fearsome storm swirled
in with the potential for
hurricane-force winds and
1 to 3 feet of snow that could
paralyze the Northeast for
days.
Snow was blowing sideways with ever-increasing
intensity in New York City
by midafternoon as flurries
began in Boston. Forecasters said the storm would
build into a blizzard, and
the brunt of it would hit late
Monday and into Tuesday.
As the snow got heavier,
much of the region rushed
to shut down.
More than 6,500 flights
in and out of the Northeast
were canceled, and many of
them may not take off again
until Wednesday. Schools
and businesses let out early.
Government offices closed.
Shoppers stocking up on
food jammed supermarkets
and elbowed one another
for what was left. Broadway
stages went dark.
“It’s going to be ridiculous
out there, frightening,” said
postal deliveryman Peter
Hovey, standing on a snowy
commuter train platform in
White Plains, N.Y.
All too aware that big
snowstorms can make or
break politicians, governors
and mayors moved quick-
BY TOM HAYS
The Associated Press
JULIO CORTEZ | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RICK CASO (CENTER) WATCHES as his son Andrew sleds down a
hill, with One World Trade Center obscured in the background,
at Liberty State Park Monday in Jersey City, N.J.
ly to declare emergencies
and order the shutdown
of streets and highways to
prevent travelers from getting stranded and to enable
plows and emergency vehicles to get through.
“This will most likely be
one of the largest blizzards
in the history of New York
City,” New York Mayor
Bill de Blasio warned. He
urged New Yorkers to go
home and stay there, adding: “People have to make
smart decisions from this
point on.”
Up to now, this has been
a largely snow-free winter
in the urban Northeast. But
this storm threatened to
make up the difference in
a single blow.
Boston was expected to
get 2 to 3 feet of snow, New
York 11⁄2 to 2 feet, and Philadelphia more than a foot.
The National Weather
Service issued a blizzard
warning for a 250-mile
swath of the region, meaning heavy, blowing snow
and potential whiteout conditions. Forecasters warned
that the wind could gust to
75 mph or more along the
Massachusetts coast, and
up 50 mph farther inland.
New York City’s subways
and buses planned to shut
down completely by 11
p.m.. Commuter railroads
across the Northeast also
announced plans to stop
running overnight. Most
flights were canceled out
of the region’s major airports.
NEW YORK — Three
Russian citizens were
charged Monday in connection with a Cold Warstyle Russian spy ring that
spoke in code, passed
information concealed in
bags and magazines, and
tried to recruit people
with ties to an unnamed
New York City university,
authorities said.
The defendants were
directed by Russian
authorities “to gather
intelligence on, among
other subjects, potential
United States sanctions
against Russian banks
and the United States’
efforts to develop alternative energy resources,”
according to a complaint
filed in federal court in
Manhattan.
Prosecutors say one
defendant, Yevgeny Buryakov, posed as an employee in the Manhattan office
of a Russian bank. The
others, Igor Sporyshev
and Victor Podobnyy, held
low-level diplomatic positions.
Buryakov, who is in the
U.S. on a work visa, was
arrested Monday in the
Bronx. The name of his
lawyer wasn’t immediately available.
The two other suspects
were protected from prosecution because of their
diplomatic status and are
believed to have returned
to Russia.
Between March 2012
through as recently as
mid-September 2014, the
FBI observed Buryakov
and Sporyshev meeting
48 times in outdoor settings, the complaint says.
Several of the meetings
“involved Buryakov passing a bag, magazine or slip
of paper to Sporyshev,”
it says.
In intercepted telephone
calls made to set up the
meetings, the pair spoke
about exchanging items
“referred to as some nonspecific ticket, book, list
or other ordinary item
(umbrella or hat),” the
complaint says. They also
“discussed their attempts
to recruit U.S. residents,
including several individuals employed by major
companies, and several
young women with ties to
a major university located in New York City,” it
says.
The investigation was
an offshoot of a 2010 case
resulting in the arrest of
10 covert agents who infiltrated suburban America.
All 10 pleaded guilty in
federal court in Manhattan to conspiracy charges
and were ordered out of
the country as part of a
spy swap for four people
convicted of betraying
Moscow to the West.
Ask about our
Natalie McAmis, M.A.,
Paul Rook, M.S.,
John Berry, M.S., &
Beth Galloway, Au.D.
www.bhssinc.com
60020075DT
BLOUNT HEARING & SPEECH SERVICES, INC.
Genuine Care + Advanced Technology
&BTU#SPBEXBZ.BSZWJMMF5Ot
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, JANUARY 27, 2015
OUR VOICE
Yes, for United Way
of Blount County, 2014
was a very good year
T
he most meaningful rewards that come from helping
United Way of Blount County make a difference are
felt in the heart.
Can any award be more touching than one worn on the
face of a smiling child who reaches out for a hug when
learning, “Yes, of course you will have a hot supper and a
warm bed to sleep in tonight”?
United Way does that thousands of times a year, in small
ways that build foothills of hopefulness that grow in to
mountains of joy, both seen and unseen.
The United Way of Blount County held its annual
meeting Friday to look back on a record-giving year
when more than $2 million was contributed to help
neighbors, both known and unknown. In an act of appreciation for those who expect
no recognition, annual
awards were presented.
Jane Tolhurst received the
Best of the Best Board Member award for consistently
working both behind the
scenes and in front of the public.
The LIVE UNITED Volunteer of the Year Award for an
individual went to Tom Eustis, one of the four original
LIVE UNITED volunteers.
The LIVE UNITED Volunteer of the Year Award for
business went to Randy Burleson and Aubrey’s Restaurant, who have helped so many in our community, including Family Promise of Blount County, Leadership Blount,
Blount County 4-H, United Way and numerous local elementary, middle and high schools.
Jennifer Wackerhagen, president and CEO, recounted
United Way’s accomplishments in 2014:
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ner programs, 11 new funding grants and one pilot pro^iXd2
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tries.
Taken together, it all made a difference to the lives of
thousands. It made this special land between the Great
Smoky Mountains and the mighty Tennessee River a better
place for all.
Taken as a community acting as one, these efforts reinforced the social ties Blount Countians develop by working
together.
Taken on faith, the accomplishments continue a legacy of
community pride and reinforced a foundation generations
of Blount Countians will build upon.
It couldn’t have happened without you.
Can any award be
more touching than
one worn on the face
of a smiling child?
OTHER VOICES
Trouble in Ukraine
T
he trouble in Ukraine continues after a year of bloodshed, with the latest fighting near the already leveled
airport of Donetsk.
It started with the blow-up of the corrupt government of
President Viktor Janukovych, who fled to Russia with nearly $17 billion looted from Ukraine’s treasury. He was succeeded in Kiev by President Petro Poroshenko and Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.
Then Russia peeled off Crimea and part of eastern
Ukraine, including the cities of Donetsk and Luhansk,
based on its military strength and the Russian-speaking
Ukrainians it backed and armed. The Ukrainian government has been right to fight to keep its territory.
An accord to end the fighting was reached under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe in September between Russia, Ukraine and the separatists from Donetsk and Luhansk. Sadly, it has not been
respected.
It is time for the OSCE, the United Nations Security
Council and other international elements to insist to all
parties that the killing and destruction in Ukraine stop
now.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
TODAY’S BIBLE VERSE
SUBMITTED BY JOE BRANNON, FRIENDSVILLE
This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him, and saved him
out of all his troubles.
Psalms 34:6
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
Shouting ‘racist’ isn’t answer
T
o appropriate the Franco-centric rallying
cry of those who defend satire even when
they don’t agree with it: Je suis Barbie!
Specifically, the fictional “Six New Barbie
Dolls That Reflect 21st Century Women,” which
Janet Eve Josselyn thought up and listed on the
“Points in Case” blog.
Among these treasures of contemporary femininity are “Facebook Barbie,” which posts “foodporn pictures of desserts she will never eat” and
“copious pictures of herself and Ken in front
of famous sites around the world so everyone
will know that Barbie isn’t stuck at home doing
housework anymore.”
And there’s “Hot Flash Barbie,” which “sports
plastic sweat beads on her brow and a big old
spare tire of belly fat to accompany her saggy
fanny.”
“Lesbian Barbie,” “xBox Barbie” and “Rehab
Barbie” are described in the same vulgar — and
hilarious — terms. But I would never have heard
of them if “Illegal Immigrant Barbie” hadn’t
infuriated the Hispanic blogosphere into losing
any sense of perspective and humor.
“Illegal Immigrant Barbie is tethered to a
bunch of children and comes with a compass
and a coyote,” reads her description. “Her hair
is unkempt and her cheeks lack the rosy glow
of the 20th-century Barbies. She is armed with
wire cutters and sandwiches wrapped in tinfoi.
She clutches Ken’s phone number in the event
that she is detained by the Border Patrol.”
“Illegal Immigrant Barbie” is pregnant, sports
a black eye and is pictured with a shopping cart
full of multi-racial children (one of which looks
remarkably like North Korean Leader Kim Jong
Un) and two six-packs of Budweiser, several
packs of Marlboros, a bottle of Jack Daniels and
a box of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese.
Tasteless? Yes. Offensive? Sure — as offensive
as assuming that all lesbians wear “baggy dark
clothing and military-style boots.”
But is it racist?
That’s the charge among people with no sense
of humor.
A contributor at Latina.com — which features
jlZ_[`^e`]`\[]Xi\XjÇ-:iXqpNXpjkf>\kX
Bigger Butt” and a promo for “Latina’s Hot Papi
Search!” — called the piece racist and declared it
“not funny,” all the while agreeing it was satire.
The piece, written by Cristina Arreola, never
explained the race part since “Illegal Immigrant
Barbie” is tall, blond, blue-eyed and, in all ways
except the pregnant belly, Barbie-ish.
Who’s to say “Illegal Immigrant Barbie” isn’t
Polish or Estonian? (Not all illegal immigrants
are Hispanic or Latino.) Or are we to believe
that Josselyn is prejudiced against white people?
Arreola wrote: “All six entries bleed with
ignorance and intolerance. However, the ‘Illegal Immigrant’ Barbie takes the stupidity to an
entirely new level.”
True.
Then again, overreacting to something silly and smearing its creator for it — Arreola
dropped this little nugget on Josselyn: “Racism
makes you die earlier. Just saying.” — arguably
takes intolerance to a whole
new level as well.
But overreaction seems to
be our default mode these
days.
The “all-white Oscars”
complaint is overblown.
Those who believe we need
more movies that include
actors with ethnicities and
races that are representative of our diverse population aren’t doing their
cause justice by jumping on
this bandwagon.
Just look at the Best Picture nominees.
“Selma” obviously has a diverse cast, but “Whiplash” also features Asian, East Asian and AfricanAmerican actors. Not only was “Birdman” directed
by Alejandro González Inarritu, a Mexican director, but is also features a score by Mexican-born
drummer/composer Antonio Sanchez.
Wes Anderson’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel”
features two magnificent actors in the co-starring role of “Zero”: Guatemalan-American Tony
Revolori and Assyrian-American F. Murray
Abraham.
Yes it would be wonderful, if by some miracle,
the nominees and winners of all awards given in
the United States were not only based solely on
merit and outstanding excellence but were also
\oXZkcp-*g\iZ\ekn_`k\#(.g\iZ\ek?`jgXe`Z#(*
percent black, 5 percent Asian and about 1 percent Native American or Pacific Islander.
But alleging that an awards show is racist
because it’s not delivering on a social justice
ideal is hardly constructive.
Those who are intolerant of everything that
rubs them the wrong way and resort to the most
inflammatory slur modern America has to offer
— “racist” — only make matters worse.
Let’s save the heavy artillery of accusing racism for the most pressing issues that affect real
people daily. Lord knows we have plenty of
those to deal with.
ESTHER
CEPEDA
ESTHER CEPEDA’S email address: estherjcepeda@wash
post.com. Follow her on Twitter, @estherjcepeda
YOUR VOICE
Letters to the Editor reflect the opinions of the writers and are not necessarily those of The Daily Times.
Animals should be
cared for as humans
Compromise can lower
family standards
Dear Editor:
I think Blount County should
have a law that says if you treat
your animals poorly you should
be treated the same way. If
you tie them and don’t feed or
water and keep their surroundings clean, you should be tied
on a leash, not feed or watered
for days. Wonder how long that
would last?
Thanks,
Dear Editor:
In response to the article
on voting for beer sales on
Sunday in Friendsville: Revelations 2:4: Nevertheless I
have somewhat against thee
because thou hast left thy first
love.
This scripture was written to
the church in Ephesus.
In our world today, it is
popular to be open-minded
toward many types of sin,
Iva Christopher calling them personal choic206 Rockford Cedar St. es or alternative lifestyles.
Rockford, TN 37853 But when the body of believ-
ers begins to tolerate sin in
the community (churches),
they are lowering their standards and compromising the
churches witness.
In trying to find a good
answer or solution, we must
be careful not to compromise. We must never lower
our family standards. Christians must begin standing for
what’s right in God’s eyes, not
man’s eyes. We should never compromise the truth of
God’s Word.
Thank You,
Randy Buchanan
863 N. Old Grey Ridge Road
Friendsville, TN 37737
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,
307 E. Harper Ave. Maryville, Tenn., 37804.
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, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
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6 43.22
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7 43.06
2 50.77
8 44.24
0 30.42
0 123.61
8 76.89
9 30.97
3 3.85
0 70.37
9 90.97
0 38.23
0 37.04
0 205.16
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EURO
$1.1266
Interestrates
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+.0018
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1YR
YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
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0.01
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r r r
.04
10 1.88f
6-month T-bill
.07 0.07
... s t s
.06
dd
...
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52-wk T-bill
.15 0.15
... r t s
13 1.10
...
2-year
T-note
.52
0.49
+0.03
s
t
s
.34
The yield on the
85 0.12
5-year
T-note
1.34
1.31
+0.03
s
t
t
1.55
10-year
25 2.08
32 0.40 Treasury rose to
10-year T-note
1.83 1.80 +0.03 t t t 2.72
25 3.16f 1.83 percent
30-year T-bond
2.40 2.38 +0.02 t t t 3.64
25 0.24 Monday. Yields
39 1.36 affect rates on
NET
1YR
20 1.56f mortgages and
BONDS
YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
19
... other loans.
13 0.96
Barclays LongT-BdIdx 2.27
2.26 +0.01 t t t 3.46
45 0.20
Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.14
4.14
... s t t 4.87
25 0.52f
31 0.20
Barclays USAggregate 2.02
2.09 -0.07 s t t 2.38
AAPL
$113.10
$120
PRIME FED
cc
...
Barclays US High Yield 6.52
6.55 -0.03 t t s 5.41
$72.36
RATE FUNDS
18
...
Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.39
3.51 -0.12 t t t 4.43
64 2.60a
95
YEST 3.25 .13
6 0.50
Barclays CompT-BdIdx 1.60
1.60
... s t t 1.77
12
... 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13
’14
Barclays US Corp
2.88
2.95 -0.07 s t t 3.13
1
YR
AGO
3.25
.13
22 1.00
70
18 0.99f
est.
Operating
10 4.28
$2.07 $2.60
EPS
6MO. 1YR.
23 0.80
Foreign
1Q ’14
1Q ’15
MAJORS
CLOSE CH. %CH. AGO AGO
18 0.90
Exchange
USD per British Pound 1.5077 +.0059 +.39% 1.6977 1.6507
18 0.90
Price-earnings ratio: 18
cc 1.00 The dollar
based on past 12-month results
Canadian Dollar
1.2455 +.0031 +.25% 1.0815 1.1066
17 0.42 strengthened
Dividend: $1.88 Div. yield: 1.7%
USD per Euro
1.1266 +.0018 +.16% 1.3433 1.3677
16 2.04 versus the yen
Japanese Yen
118.47
+.73 +.62% 101.80 102.32
43 0.40 and ruble, but
Source: FactSet
16 0.24
Mexican Peso
14.5932 -.0625 -.43%12.9576 13.4235
fell versus the
27 0.68
Housing bellwether
11 1.60f pound and euro. EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST
Israeli Shekel
3.9882 -.0192 -.48% 3.4215 3.4948
The pace of new home sales has
19 1.88f The ICE U.S.
29 0.70 Dollar index
Norwegian Krone
7.7884 +.0239 +.31% 6.2214 6.1431
been sluggish in recent months.
15 3.32 edged higher. It
Rising home values and
South African Rand 11.4575 +.0609 +.53%10.5269 11.0985
12 2.76 measures the
stagnant wages have made it
Swedish Krona
8.2959 +.0018 +.02% 6.8204 6.4398
15
0.24f
dollar against a
more difficult for many would-be
Swiss Franc
.9004 +.0237 +2.63% .9048 .8951
13 1.32 basket of
buyers to purchase a home. New
dd
... currencies.
home sales slid to a seasonally
ASIA/PACIFIC
16 0.92f
Australian Dollar
1.2630 +.0017 +.13% 1.0643 1.1477
adjusted annual rate of 438,000 in
22 2.30
November. That’s significantly
Chinese Yuan
6.2534 +.0260 +.42% 6.1922 6.0489
2.46e
below the annual rate of 700,000
Hong Kong Dollar
7.7516 -.0003 -.00% 7.7500 7.7632
...
seen during the 1990s. The
13 1.64f
Indian Rupee
61.455 +.035 +.06% 60.055 62.780
Commerce Department reports its
24 1.88
Singapore Dollar
1.3440 -.0010 -.07% 1.2416 1.2783
data for December today.
19 2.07f
South Korean Won
1080.84 +3.10 +.29%1027.57 1085.91
22 0.16
New home sales
Taiwan Dollar
31.32
+.05 +.16% 29.97 30.27
26 0.80
seasonally adjusted annual rate in
dd
...
thousands
21 2.72
est.
460
455
16 1.60
FUELS
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD
450
448
445
21 0.74 Commodities
Crude Oil (bbl)
45.15
45.59
-0.97
-15.2
438
26 2.04 The price of oil
Ethanol (gal)
1.44
1.43
-0.91
-11.8
dd
... fell Monday
Heating Oil (gal)
1.64
1.65
-0.42
-11.2
20 6.00f amid
420
Natural Gas (mm btu)
2.88
2.99
-3.52
-0.3
28 0.92 expectations
Unleaded Gas (gal)
1.32
1.35
-2.31
-8.3
399
cc
...
that supplies
5
...
will remain high. METALS
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD
14
1.40
380
Gold (oz)
1279.40 1292.60
-1.02
+8.1
... Heating oil and
J
A
S
O
N
D
24 0.68 natural gas also
Silver (oz)
17.97
18.28
-1.73
+15.4
2014
17 2.80 fell. Among
Platinum (oz)
1254.70 1268.00
-1.05
+3.8
Source: FactSet
22 1.49f crops, wheat
Copper (lb)
2.57
2.54 +1.42
-9.3
14 1.08 and corn edged
Palladium (oz)
783.15 775.40 +1.00
-1.9
A strong encore?
25
... lower.
American Airlines earned an
40
...
AGRICULTURE
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD
dd 0.75
all-time best $942 million in the
Cattle (lb)
1.50
1.50
-0.35
-9.6
dd
...
June-September quarter, aided by
Coffee (lb)
1.62
1.62
-0.37
-2.9
...
higher prices and bookings.
Corn (bu)
3.84
3.87
-0.71
-3.3
23 1.08
Investors find out today whether
Cotton (lb)
0.59
0.57 +2.30
-2.7
17 1.12f
the airline delivered similar results
Lumber (1,000 bd ft)
316.30 311.50 +1.54
-4.5
22 1.28
in the October-December period.
q 1.56a
Orange Juice (lb)
1.44
1.47
-1.97
+3.1
American and other U.S. airlines
q 1.08a
Soybeans (bu)
9.84
9.73 +1.11
-3.5
are soaring as mergers have
16 0.88
Wheat (bu)
5.21
5.30
-1.79
-11.7
helped them limit the number of
12 0.20
flights, keeping fares higher.
58
...
Falling oil prices have given them
dd
...
relief from their largest expense,
18 0.88
PERCENT RETURN
FUND
CAT NAV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR
jet fuel.
28 0.24 FAMILY
11
...
American Funds GrthAmA m
LG 43.06 +.16 +0.9 +12.3 +18.5 +14.2
12 0.80
IncAmerA m
MA 21.91 +.08 +1.5 +11.9 +12.5 +11.7
7 0.40
InvCoAmA m
LB 37.34 +.09 +0.7 +15.8 +18.1 +13.9
14 0.40f
GrowA m
LG 40.96 +.20 +0.4 +11.2 +13.7 +12.6
dd
... Calamos
NYVentA m
LB 36.40 +.09 -1.2 +9.9 +14.8 +11.9
21 2.00 Davis
IntlStk
FB 42.99 +.28 +2.1 +5.7 +13.2 +8.8
24 1.28f Dodge & Cox
42
... Dupree
TNTxFInc
SI
11.81
... +0.9 +7.5 +3.9 +4.9
dd
... Fidelity
Contra
LG 98.70 +.31 +0.7 +13.2 +18.0 +15.8
51 0.24
DivrIntl d
FG 35.16 +.33 +2.1 +1.8 +11.3 +7.5
18 1.92
IntlSmCp d
FR 21.54 +.20 -0.5 -4.7 +12.4 +9.9
25 1.30a
Magellan
LG 92.56 +.39 0.0 +16.7 +19.8 +13.2
27 1.16
Nicholas
Nichol
MG 68.57 +.24 +0.3 +18.9 +21.9 +19.5
22 3.00
Oppenheimer
CapApA m
LG 59.59 +.15 +0.4 +18.8 +17.2 +13.5
Dividend footnotes: a- extra dividends were paid, but are not included b- annual rate plus stock c- liquidating dividend e- amount
GlobA m
WS 77.54 +.51 +2.0 +7.2 +14.9 +11.3
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
9.17
... +0.7 +2.8 +6.9 +7.6
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 10.88
... +2.1 +5.8 +4.4 +5.0
AP 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 14.58
... +0.8 +10.3 +13.2 +11.4
DynAstAlConA m CA 10.85 +.01 +1.4 +9.7 +8.9 +8.2
2,080
4,800
DynAstAlGrA m AL 15.89
... +0.8 +10.1 +15.2 +12.3
S&P 500
Nasdaq composite
Thrivent
BalIncPlsA m
MA 12.95 +.05 +0.9 +7.4 +11.1 +10.3
Close:
2,057.09
Close: 4,771.76
2,020
4,680
U.S. stocks barely budged MonChange: 5.27 (0.3%)
Change: 13.88 (0.3%)
MidCapA m
MB 21.27 +.14 -0.2 +13.6 +17.2 +15.2
day, with the Standard & Poor's
1,960
4,560
MuniBdA m
ML 11.87 +.01 +1.6 +9.0 +4.2 +5.2
10 DAYS
10 DAYS
500 index ending with a tiny
gain. The market spent the day
OpIncPlsA m
MU 10.30
... +0.6 +3.2 +3.1 +4.8
2,160
5,000
drifting between small gains
SmCapStkA m
SB 18.17 +.12 -0.3 +6.1 +13.0 +12.8
and losses as investors surVanguard
500Inv
LB 189.87 +.49 0.0 +17.1 +18.3 +15.7
2,080
4,800
veyed earnings reports, mergExplr
SG 92.57 +.85 -0.5 +5.8 +17.0 +16.9
ers and political news out of EuExtndIdx
MB 67.14 +.72 +0.8 +10.0 +18.1 +17.0
rope
2,000
4,600
GrowthIdx
LG 54.13 +.21 +0.8 +17.3 +18.5 +16.5
ITTsry
GI 11.55 -.02 +1.7 +4.8 +1.7 +4.1
Ocwen Financial
OCN
1,920
4,400
InflaPro
IP 13.40 -.03 +1.7 +3.7 +0.5 +4.0
Close: $6.91 0.56 or 8.8%
IntlGr
FG 22.11 +.24 +2.6 +0.8 +9.5 +8.0
The mortgage loan servicing company agreed to pay $2.5 million as
Prmcp
LG 104.21 +.15 +1.3 +21.5 +22.5 +17.0
1,840
4,200
part of a settlement with California
J
A
S
O
N
D
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
J
REITIdx
SR 29.46 +.25 +9.4 +39.0 +17.1 +20.2
over compliance issues.
HIGH
LOW
CLOSE
CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
SmCapIdx
SB 56.04 +.56 +0.3 +9.6 +17.8 +17.2
$30
TotBdMkInv
CI 11.02 -.01 +1.5 +6.0 +2.9 +4.3
DOW
17696.36
17567.60
17678.70
+6.10
+0.03%
s
t
s
-0.81%
20
NYSE NASD
USGro
LG 30.27 +.12 +1.2 +17.3 +19.8 +16.1
DOW Trans.
9055.84
8957.10
9040.14 +58.20 +0.65% s t s -1.09%
10
Vol. (in mil.)
3,333 1,668 DOW Util.
648.36
641.61
648.12
+0.34 +0.05% s s s +4.86%
ValueIdx
LV 32.81 +.08 -0.4 +16.4 +18.1 +15.0
0
NYSE
Comp.
10848.04
10748.73
10847.16
+58.82
+0.55%
s
t
s
+0.07%
Pvs. Volume
3,536 1,616
Welltn
MA 39.45 +.07 +0.8 +12.1 +12.9 +11.6
N
D
J
s
t
s
+0.75%
NASDAQ
4774.18
4734.20
4771.76
+13.88
+0.29%
52-week range
WndsrII
LV 37.02 +.08 -0.8 +14.0 +17.3 +14.1
Advanced
2150 1782
S&P 500
2057.62
2040.97
2057.09
+5.27 +0.26% s t s -0.09%
$5.66
$47.44
Declined
982
AdvCoBdAd
CI 12.97 -.01 +1.5 +6.1 +3.5 +5.0
985 S&P 400
1472.05
1450.10
1471.99 +16.20 +1.11% s t s +1.35% Wells Fargo
Vol.: 43.4m (6.3x avg.)
PE: 5.9
New Highs
266
94 Wilshire 5000 21688.74
SCpValInv
SB 28.65 +.36 -1.3 -0.2 +7.1 +8.0
21490.25
21685.83 +97.82 +0.45% s t s +0.07%
Mkt. Cap: $869.38 m
Yield: ...
New Lows
47
63 Russell 2000
1200.74
1181.77
1200.74 +11.81 +0.99% s t s -0.33%
SpMdCpValIv
MV 32.09 +.27 -0.1 +14.5 +20.0 +16.8
33.18
19.35
57.14
3.49
16.08
54.44
8.54
159.73
40.91
118.13
58.81
612.14
36.99
15.85
34.83
12.69
10.80
149.70
144.23
52.45
44.40
90.52
23.00
108.88
64.46
56.69
56.38
36.94
35.71
64.48
62.52
118.04
22.42
69.77
59.43
13.41
88.83
91.76
13.31
58.15
17.55
24.59
98.65
45.19
8.67
71.67
106.36
101.89
13.01
82.74
13.43
82.56
54.60
68.92
48.09
2.15
195.68
70.44
4.85
13.02
46.87
27.14
38.03
155.54
44.33
53.58
7.07
63.09
18.92
7.63
9.10
27.37
32.80
40.70
16.68
11.86
71.05
9.08
1.15
6.36
38.27
46.40
25.80
39.82
27.86
41.31
29.35
121.33
71.49
29.00
2.40
70.52
88.63
38.31
36.12
203.07
-.19
+.01
+.30
+.03
+.32
+.25
-.12
-.08
+.10
+.20
+.15
+8.14
+.17
+.12
-.14
+.26
-.19
+.58
+1.56
+.73
+.54
+.98
+.03
+2.03
+.50
+.38
+.30
+.18
+.41
+.71
+.02
+2.11
+.30
+.63
+1.31
+.12
-.77
+.87
+.31
+1.13
-.22
+.11
+.25
+.18
-.19
+.54
+.99
-.61
+.02
-.28
+.11
+.23
+.53
+.96
+.37
-.13
-1.76
+.73
+.04
...
+.24
+.64
+.62
-.65
+.53
+1.23
+.11
+2.56
+.46
+.11
+.07
-.02
+.35
+.01
...
-.05
+.69
+.07
+.01
+.02
-.08
+.62
+.45
+.37
+1.70
+.04
+.05
+1.24
+.36
+.14
-.07
+.78
+.12
+.92
+.08
+2.15
-0.6
+0.1
+0.5
+0.9
+2.0
+0.5
-1.4
-0.1
+0.2
+0.2
+0.3
+1.3
+0.5
+0.8
-0.4
+2.1
-1.7
+0.4
+1.1
+1.4
+1.2
+1.1
+0.1
+1.9
+0.8
+0.7
+0.5
+0.5
+1.2
+1.1
...
+1.8
+1.4
+0.9
+2.3
+0.9
-0.9
+1.0
+2.4
+2.0
-1.2
+0.4
+0.3
+0.4
-2.1
+0.8
+0.9
-0.6
+0.2
-0.3
+0.8
+0.3
+1.0
+1.4
+0.8
-5.7
-0.9
+1.0
+0.8
...
+0.5
+2.4
+1.7
-0.4
+1.2
+2.3
+1.6
+4.2
+2.5
+1.5
+0.8
-0.1
+1.1
...
...
-0.4
+1.0
+0.8
+0.9
+0.3
-0.2
+1.4
+1.8
+0.9
+6.5
+0.1
+0.2
+1.0
+0.5
+0.5
-2.8
+1.1
+0.1
+2.5
+0.2
+1.1
-1.2
+4.2 26768
-4.5 -44.2
580
-5.0 -11.6 2054
-1.7 -14.1 11207
+1.8 +31.6 12312
+10.5 +50.4 6065
-6.3
-8.3
52
+0.3 +31.3 2983
-11.8 +17.2
150
-1.4 +22.9 1497
+5.5 +26.5
419
-1.1 +21.0
245
-4.9
-2.6 4064
-11.4
-6.0 54024
-8.1 +18.6
514
+18.0 -34.6 15561
-1.7 +48.6
11
-0.3 +31.4 2389
+12.1 +40.1
530
+2.3 +22.1 1297
-11.1 -24.5 2646
+0.3 +14.7
659
-1.8
+1.5 2666
-2.9
-6.2 7270
-3.3 +12.3
255
-2.3
+7.8 8293
-2.1 +11.3 1754
+1.8 +13.5 2487
+3.1 +56.5
677
-8.7 -12.5
754
-8.6
-3.7
47
-5.7 +28.1
207
+11.0 +51.9 2978
-8.0
-7.4 1567
-3.7 -11.1 7417
-0.4
-6.5
69
+1.5 +50.6 1197
-0.7
-3.5 10361
-2.0
+9.5 3243
+1.1
-3.4
295
-4.1
+1.0
259
-2.7
-1.7 38377
-7.4 +19.8
866
+5.7 -13.2 3310
-12.2 -24.1
19
+0.5 +24.5
131
+1.3 +33.7 3811
+2.0 +16.2 3282
+2.3 +16.9
6
-1.8
+6.8
822
-1.6 -13.7
379
+6.1 +56.1
184
+1.9 +18.6 3158
+7.3 +88.6 3424
+11.4 +36.8
170
-15.4 -42.6
57
+1.6 +34.8 1334
+2.4 +46.6 5042
+12.5 +12.1
83
-4.3 +10.3
99
-7.2 -23.3 1656
-6.9 -26.8 1067
-0.2 +20.6 1575
+5.5 +35.2 1085
-9.6
-9.7 2579
-8.9 -26.2 1123
-13.1 -26.0
118
+21.7 +202.7
45
+2.9
+7.3
746
+17.7
+9.9 6136
-7.3 -27.6
197
+1.6 +50.2
629
+5.3
+8.0 25709
+3.3 +26.2
358
+4.9
+2.4
180
+0.9 +10.6
51
-5.5
-8.6
178
-14.0 -15.8 20930
-1.7 -56.7
5
-7.0 +13.0
367
-5.9
+5.9
38
+9.6 +116.6 8380
-5.5 -39.9 9363
-5.0
+2.5 3698
-0.5 -11.9 3847
+3.0 +17.2 3568
+3.3 +110.8
65
+1.8 +40.1 3520
-4.6 +24.2 2435
+6.8 +19.0
73
-1.6
-7.1
8
+7.3 +14.1
818
+3.2 +20.6 4626
+9.7 +32.9
915
+0.6 +21.3 2710
+4.8 +32.9
450
MutualFunds
StocksRecap
Industrial Metals 20
NAME
TICKER CLOSE CHG
Alcoa
AllegTch
AlumChina
ArcelorMit
Cameco g
CarpTech
CentAl
FrptMcM
Gerdau
Nucor
POSCO
RelStlAl
SiderurNac
SthnCopper
StlDynam
TeckRes g
Tenaris
Ternium
TurqHillRs
USSteel
AA
ATI
ACH
MT
CCJ
CRS
CENX
FCX
GGB
NUE
PKX
RS
SID
SCCO
STLD
TCK
TS
TX
TRQ
X
16.08 +.32
28.26 +.94
12.09
-.21
9.66 +.38
14.26
-.05
40.01 +.09
23.58
-.02
19.56 +.32
3.47 +.01
44.33 +.53
63.00 +.10
53.70 +1.08
1.88
-.03
27.66 +.54
17.47 +.45
12.73 +.26
28.80 +.76
16.53 +.07
2.82 +.02
21.33 +.75
YTD
+.29
-6.51
+.57
-1.37
-2.15
-9.24
-.82
-3.80
-.08
-4.72
-.81
-7.57
-.20
-.54
-2.27
-.91
-1.41
-1.11
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Every Monday in
Company
Spotlight
Mattel CEO resigns
The chairman and CEO of Mattel resigned after the company disclosed that its profit
fell 59 percent in the fourth quarter. Bryan Stockton will be replaced by longtime
board member Christopher Sinclair as chairman and interim CEO.
The maker of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels cars has been struggling for
some time. To make matters worse, this past holiday season, Barbie
lost its top spot on the crucial holiday wish lists of girls to merchandise from the Disney hit “Frozen.”
Stockton became CEO in January 2012 and then was named
chairman a year later. Sinclair said in a statement from the
company that the Mattel board believed it was the right time for a
change in leadership to maximize the companys potential.
$25
AP
Mattel (MAT)
Monday’s close: $26.64
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio: 13
43
(Based on past 12-month results)
1-yr
Total return
MAT
-35.3%
Div. yield: 5.7%
*annualized
3-yr*
0.3
5-yr*
9.9
Dividend: $1.52
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.
WILL PHIL SEE HIS SHADOW THIS YEAR? LEARN ABOUT GROUNDHOG DAY IN KID SCOOP. 11A
TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2015
THE DAILY TIMES
Starting
a new
journey
MAGGIE SHAW (LEFT) and Christina Simerly grab popcorn just before the AT for Haiti fundraiser
began Saturday night at Sycamore Tree United Methodist Church.
TIM MASSEY | THE DAILY TIMES
ROBIN ROSS (RIGHT) TALKS in depth about the Appalachian Trail for Haiti fundraiser while her husband, Bill, runs the slideslow. Brittany Pritchett (center) also spoke at the event. These
three, along with Jan Pendleton, will be thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail, starting in May. They are doing it to raise money to build a school in Haiti.
Hikers hold fundraiser for project near to their hearts
BY MELANIE TUCKER
TO LEARN MORE
[email protected]
May 23 is the day it will all
become real for friends Brittany Pritchett, Jan Pendleton
and Robin and Phil Ross.
That’s the day they will
start their almost 2,200-mile
journey as thru-hikers along
the Appalachian Trail.
Pritchett and Robin Ross
are teachers at Friendsville
Elementary and Pendleton
works as a science lab teacher at Rockford Elementary.
School is out on May 21 and
they take off on the adventure of their lifetimes two
days later. Bill Ross is retired
from the military.
But this trip is about more
than four people pushing
themselves to their limits
and sharing stories when
they get back. This quartet
of friends is hiking with Haitian children on their hearts
and minds. They hope to
raise funds to build a school
in Haiti as they trek through
14 states and draw attention
to the needs there.
LEADING UP TO THE HIKE
On Saturday night, the
team got together to host a
fundraiser with the theme
“Just Breathe,” at Sycamore
Tree United Methodist
Church in Maryville. The
evening included working
Keep up with these four
hikers as they embark on
their journey to complete
the Appalachian Trail as
thru-hikers, beginning in
May. Visit their website,
www.atforhaiti.org.
MARA WEEKS, 16 (LEFT), and her mom, Missy, participate in an art project for the Appalachian Trail for Haiti
fundraiser held Saturday.
on art projects using river
stones and Bible verses,
learning more about Reach
Haiti Ministries, the organization these friends are
working with, and a time of
worship, along with a popcorn bar. Door prizes were
also given out. Robin Ross
said there were close to 60
in attendance and $1,500 was
raised.
Pritchett shared a personal and inspirational story
of her diagnosis of a pulmonary embolism several
years ago and the problems
it caused her lungs. It took
several months for her to
recover.
“Not many people know
that about me because that
was when I was younger,”
she said. Now. 20 years later
I’m going to hike the AT and
my lungs are perfectly fine.”
It was just a great girls
night out, Pritchett said of
the Saturday event. It was
all about taking the time you
need to just enjoy life and
enjoy the things God has
given you, she said.
over four months until that
load up and head to Harpers Ferry in West Virginia,
where they will enter the AT
and walk to its end in Maine,
on Mount Katahdin. Once
there, they will drive back
to Harpers Ferry and hike
down to Springer Mountain
in Georgia. The estimated
amount of time it will take
is between 140 and 180 days.
The average is somewhere
around 150.
An article about this ultimate challenge appeared in
The Daily Times back in late
October.
Since then, the Rosses,
Pritchett and Pendleton
have been hiking together,
getting in shape and working the kinks out. Pritchett
said she is currently dealing
with plantar fasciitis.
“It’s getting better,” she
said. “I have lived with it
for a year and a half. I don’t
PLAN IN PLACE
The team has just a little
SEE JOURNEY, 10A
8A
LIFE | 9A
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
Woman feels no physical attraction for the man of her dreams
DEAR ABBY: I am considered to
be a quite attractive — easily
a nine or a 10 — professional
dancer here in Las Vegas. I
recently met a guy who has literally met almost all my dream
qualities for a life partner, husband and father of my future
children.
The problem is, I’m not
attracted to him. He’s not ugly;
he has symmetrical features,
straight teeth, nice skin and is
in pretty good shape, if a little
on the skinny side.
I have always dated muscular,
very fit men who get me excited at the sight of them, and I’m
wondering if there’s something
wrong with me because after
nine months I’m still struggling with his looks.
I feel like there is no sexual
chemistry.
But we have another kind
of chemistry because we get
along great, and he motivates
me to be a better person.
Am I shallow, or is the lack
of sexual chemistry a sign that
maintaining a successful longterm relationship won’t happen? — MISS PICKY IN LAS VEGAS
DEAR MISS PICKY: I’m not going
to call you shallow. Whether
lack of sexual chemistry is a
deal-breaker for you depends
upon how important sex is to
you.
From what you have told me,
looks are a primary factor in
what draws you to men. (It
would be interesting to know
how long the relationships you
described lasted.)
Bear in mind that men who
are Adonises can lose their
looks if they don’t consistently work at it — just as women
do. Much as we might wish it,
looks don’t always last forever.
That’s why, if you’re looking
for a long-term relationship,
it’s extremely important to
take into consideration qualities that will last.
DEAR ABBY: My 67-year-old
mother has vascular dementia
and breast cancer. In accordance
with her
living will
and many
conversations
we had
before the
dementia began,
we (Mom,
my sisters and
I) have
decided
to forgo
treatment. She has been widowed for 17 years; she watched
her husband — our father —
die from cancer. She lives in
an excellent health care facility that will provide her with
DEAR
ABBY
palliative care when the time
is right.
My question is, how do we
inform people (family and
friends) of her diagnosis and
of our treatment plan? Without knowing the whole story,
without having seen her very
recently, it seems everyone
has an opinion on what we
“should” do. How do we tell
these people that, while we
appreciate their concern, this
is her decision without hurting
their feelings and our relationships? — FAMILY WITH A DILEMMA
DEAR DILEMMA: How do these
unwanted advice givers know
that you do not plan to subject your mother to treatments
that would only prolong her
decline? If you solicited their
opinion, you made a mistake.
If you didn’t, then the last sentence of your letter — if said
kindly — is an appropriate way
to phrase the message.
Students excited about new school opening
T
he students at Alcoa
Middle School are
into their fourth
week back from Christmas break.
Everyone is of course
excited about the new
high school, which is
almost finished with
construction. Tours are
being given every other
Wednesday. The next
one will be on Feb. 4th.
Eighth-grader Connor
McMurray says, “I think
it’s great. I like seeing a
small school like Alcoa
upgrading its facilities
while still being able
to maintain that ‘small
school’ kind of feel.
“It will give kids the
chance to achieve their
ALCOA
MIDDLE
SCHOOL
JOHANNAH BAY
full academic potential.”
The lunch room is
planning on having an
outdoor dining area. Dr.
Brian Bell, director of
Alcoa City Schools, will
be leading the tours,
which are open to the
public.
Also new at Alcoa Middle School is the RTI
schedule that all the students have begun having
every morning.
This semester, teachers and students began
using RTI (Response to
Intervention), which is
an approach that “incorporates increasing
intensities of instruction offering specific,
research-based interventions matched to student
needs,” according to the
RTI Action Network.
There are RTI classes
for science, math and
reading at Alcoa. Every
morning from 8:10-8:40,
students from all four
grades go to their specific RTI classes.
One class is made up
of the top 10 readers
from each grade. The
rest have only students
from a particular grade.
Every five weeks or so
the classes will switch,
allowing the students to
participate in each subject.
One class just finished reading the book
“Paperboy” by local
Louisville author Vince
Vawter. The students
have been enjoying this
new class.
YLB students tour DENSO, Clayton Homes
A
s the New Year
begins, so do new
opportunities,
experiences and adventures. With the theme
“Career Exploration,”
the 2015 class of Youth
Leadership Blount visited and toured the Tennessee DENSO Manufacturing plant and the
Clayton Homes corporate offices.
Touring DENSO, students experienced the
day of an engineer and
the marvels that DENSO
manufactures and creates.
Although the vocabulary and creations of
the engineers were perplexing and incomprehensible to most, students understood that
accuracy and precision
go hand-in-hand at the
DENSO facility.
After touring the manufacturing facility, YLB
YOUTH
LEADERSHIP
BLOUNT
TAYLOR DRAKE
members learned how
to execute a good interview.
Following the lesson,
students lined up and
experienced a mock
interview with an interviewing team consisting
of human resource professionals from DEN-
SO and the community. Recruiting officers
and leaders at DENSO
gave advice on an ideal
employee.
Leadership, passion for
the position and being
able to collaborate were
repeatedly expressed
qualities of an effective
employee.
After learning these
valuable lessons, students headed to Clayton Homes corporate
offices.
In the conference
room, former Youth
Leadership Blount class
member and Zone 4
Relations Manager at
Clayton Homes, Will
Hammon, spoke to the
class about finance and
leadership.
He articulated good
points about identifying
individual weaknesses
as an employee and considering future careers,
but the idea stressed the
most was making one’s
job or career his or her
passion.
After the lesson, a tour
was given.
After hearing multiple workers in various
departments recount
their experiences with
the company, students
learned that most of
these workers were genuinely happy with their
job,
To some, it had not
only became their
career, but also their
passion. This experience became evidence
to Hammon’s main
point.
Learning all these
valuable lessons
through DENSO and
Clayton Homes opened
new doors for opportunities, experiences and
adventures in 2015 and
beyond.
HOSA students advance to state competition
S
ALCOA
HIGH SCHOOL
LAUREN
DUNN
ixteen Alcoa students are advancing
to HOSA state after
competing at regionals
at Cleveland State earlier this month.
HOSA (Health Occupation Students of
America) is an organization for future health
professionals.
Preceding the regional round, students are
required to take a 100
question exam covering
competition material —
topics such as anatomy
or first aid—to determine if they are eligible
for the next round.
At regionals, students
perform a skills portion
to demonstrate/execute
the knowledge they’ve
acquired.
This round could be
an EMS simulation or a
trivia contest, and the
top five qualifiers in
each category advance
to state.
The Alcoa state qualifiers are as follows: Alec
Ferguson, Robinson
Walsh, Austin Atchley,
Hunter Thomas, Jeremy
Shore, Michaela Salley,
Jada Jackson, Jocelyn
Taylor, Alexis Ferguson,
Kati Townsend, Han-
nah Vititoe, Tori Ogle,
Kylie Winchester, Malia
Ferguson, Natalie Beaty
and Mason McClannahan.
The Alcoa HOSA club,
taught by Julie Bell,
learns basic health skills
to use in health careers,
as well as responses to
emergency situations.
In addition, they learn
how to be positive influences in the community
by creating a safer atmosphere for all.
The state HOSA competition is March 19-21
at the Opryland Hotel in
Nashville.
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.
BRIEFS
MC community band
begins rehearsals
The Maryville College-Community
Concert Band, under
the direction of Tom
Delozier, will begin
spring rehearsals at 7
p.m. Wednesday, Feb.
4, at the Clayton Center for the Arts’ Massey
Family Rehearsal Room.
Rehearsals will be held
from 7 to 9 p.m. on
Wednesdays and will
focus on preparation for
a spring concert, which
will be held at 3 p.m. on
Sunday, April 12, in the
Clayton Center for the
Arts.
Area musicians who
play a wind or percussion instrument are
encouraged to join. Serious high school participants are also welcome.
For more information,
call 414-2215 or contact
Delozier at tom.delozier
@maryville-schools.org.
Applications being
taken for scholarship
Prudentia Lodge No.
719 in Alcoa is accepting freshman scholarship applications for
the James Leonard Jenkins Scholarship. The
Lodge has awarded 18
scholarships in the past
two years totaling more
than $68,000. The applications are for Blount
County Masonic organizations, Blount County
public high schools and
Greenback High School.
To obtain an application, contact your
school counselor or call
Johnny MCulley at 9835598.
Call for free tax
assistance at library
AARP Tax-Aide will
once again help low- to
moderate-income taxpayers file their personal income tax returns
at the Blount County
Library from Feb. 2
through April 14.
Trained volunteers
will be available by
appointment only to
assist in filing the 1040
tax form and basic
schedules. Call 679-4634
or 679-4657 to make
appointments. Calls
will be accepted Mon-
day thru Friday from 9
a.m. until 3 p.m. Taxpayers with complex tax
returns are advised to
seek paid tax assistance.
If you are filing a joint
return, your spouse
should come with you
to sign.
If you cannot keep
your appointment, be
sure to call and cancel
so that someone else
can be helped.
To assist in preparing
your 2014 tax return,
you should bring a copy
of your 2013 return
and all of your 2014 tax
information.
Auditions for talent
show set Feb. 10-11
Auditions for a talent
show hosted by William
Blount High School will
be held from 4 to 6 p.m.
on Tuesday, Feb. 10, and
Wednesday, Feb. 11, at
the WBHS theater. Any
kind of talent is welcome and any community member is welcome
to audition. There are
no age limits.
For more information,
contact Renda Crowe
at 984-5500 ext 57-2162
or renda.crowe@
blountk12.org.
The Blount Has Talent Show will be held at
6 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.
19, in the William Blount
Theatre. Tickets are $5
for students and $7 for
adults.
Still time to donate
books to media sale
The eighth annual
Book/Media Sale hosted
by Mt. Lebanon Baptist
Church’s Relay For Life
team will take place Feb.
20 and 21 at the church,
located at the corner of
Wildwood and Peppermint roads in Maryville.
They are currently
accepting donations of
books, CDs and DVDs.
There will be a great
selection of children’s
books, inspirational
books, Christian novels,
biographies and more.
Those wishing to
donate to the sale can
drop off items at the
church and place in
the collection bins at
the office entrance. For
more information, call
Linda at 705-2213 or visit
mlbctn.org.
Meet the most trusted and
reliable team in housecleaning.
SHARE YOUR HAPPY NEWS!
Engagement, wedding and anniversary (50th and up) announcements will be published
Sundays in the Life section.
Forms are available at The Daily Times reception desk from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday and online at www.thedailytimes.com under “Contact us.”
Forms and photographs, if desired, must be returned at least two weeks prior to the desired
publication date to The Daily Times reception desk or emailed to linda.albert@thedailytimes.
com.
The Daily Times reserves the right to edit for our style, content and space constraints.
Contact Sunday Life Editor Linda Albert at 981-1168 for more information.
Your mother’s treatment plan
is nobody’s business but yours
and your sisters’. If these are
her wishes as stated in her
advance directive for health
care, then you should respect
them. To do otherwise would
be a betrayal of her trust.
READERS: Good advice for
everyone — teens to seniors
— is in “The Anger in All of
Us and How to Deal With It.”
To order, send your name and
mailing address, plus check
or money order for $7 (U.S.
funds) to: Dear Abby, Anger
Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount
Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included
in the price.)
Call for a free, in-home consultation and estimate.
©
865-977-4500
2009 Molly Maid, Inc. Each franchise independently owned and operated.
mollymaid.com
10A | LIFE
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Clayton-Bradley JOURNEY:
Academy to begin Some days,
new building projects hikers may
be walking
20 miles
C
layton-Bradley Academy looks forward
to two new building projects. A new playground will be built for
the lower school. Another building will also be
assembled on campus. It
will connect to the multipurpose building and
classrooms using a system of sidewalks. It is
to be placed in a large
green space surrounded
by existing classrooms
and parking areas. The
building’s layout includes
a two-story structure
containing a new gymnasium, art room, science
lab, cafe, music room,
classrooms and a student
common area. The second floor student common area will contain a
cutout in the floor so students can see to the floor
below.
The children at Clayton-Bradley use a large
green area between
classrooms to play and
take breaks on. Because
the new multipurpose
building will take up the
green space between the
classrooms, the school
intends to create a new
play area. The current
Clayton-Bradley plans
for the playground consist of a main playground.
The playground will have
FROM 8A
CLAYTONBRADLEY
ACADEMY
SARAH GARRIS
two slides, a swing set,
a revolving tire swing, a
small shaded area, several picnic benches to sit
and eat on and a hardtop
area with benches.
Clayton-Bradley Academy adjust the plans for
the new structures until
the board approves of
the given designs. The
construction of the playground and multipurpose
building will begin in
April and be finished for
use by the start of next
school year. Freshmen
and sophomore students
of next year will attend
classes in that part of the
school. A new cafe for
upper school is also in
the plans.
Delegates attend
annual Model United
Nations conference
L
ast Thursday to Saturday, the William
Blount Model United Nations delegates
attended the annual
Maryville Model United
Nations conference.
At the conference, Foster Harris, Emily Griffin
and Caroline Timpson
all received runner up
for Best Delegate in their
respective committees.
Vance Davis received
Best Delegate for his
committee. The Model
United Nations Delegates will also be attending the University of
Tennessee conference in
March.
This Thursday, William
Blount High School will
be having an open house
from 5-7:30.
This is an excellent
opportunity for parents
to meet with their child’s
teachers.
WILLIAM
BLOUNT HIGH
RAIHA
ABBAS
For the month of January the Students of the
Month are Kaylin Bailey
and Allen Davis.
The Students of the
Month are selected with
regards to academic performance, character, and
teacher nominations.
see it will be a major
problem. Once I get
walking ...”
They have a website,
www.atforhaiti.org,
where they will provide
updates on their progress and where those
interested can make a
donation toward their
goal of providing a better future for children
in Haiti. Robin Ross said
they will probably be
planning more fundraisers, like a chili supper,
in the near future.
“There were a lot of
people interested in
this one that didn’t get
to come so I might do
another art one,” Pritchett said.
SETTING
THEIR SIGHTS
Their trail names have
been picked out, except
for Pendleton. Phil is
Philamanjaro, while
Robin is Popsicle. Pritchett has chosen Starshine.
Pearl, Pendleton’s dog,
will go by Cat Herder.
Pendleton said a name
will surely reveal itself
once she gets on the
trail.
Haiti came onto the
radar back in 2010
when an earthquake
struck, killing more than
100,000 people.
There are thousands of
children without parents
and a host of needs still
not met, these four state
on their website.
Some days, they will be
hiking 20 miles, no easy
feat.
What will give them
the strength to push
through is the difference that can be made
in Haiti, one of the poorest nations in the northern hemisphere. People
in Haiti have to walk
20 miles for water, they
said. Those long days
will be these hikers’
‘water days.’
This is a trip they all
know will change their
lives forever. As Pritchett said in the initial
TIM MASSEY | THE DAILY TIMES
JAN PENDLETON AND HER DOG PEARL, a blue heeler, will be hiking the Appalachian Trail with
three others — Robin and Phil Ross and Brittany Pritchett. They are raising money to build a
school in Haiti.
interview, she’s embarking with three good
friends, a dog and the
right mind set.
Their fundraising goal
is $40,000. All of them
believe it’s attainable.
The mothers and
daughters who came Saturday to have fun and
learn more about the
trek are now onboard
with the cause. Word is
spreading about this lifechanger.
“People were really
motivated after that
night (Saturday) to give
and help,” Pritchett said.
EVA WAIDE, 9, (LEFT) works on her art project with her mom,
Julie Ratliff at the AT for Haiti fundraiser.
GET IN CLUB NEWS!
Submit your club news to Sunday Life Editor Linda Albert at [email protected] by 4 p.m. Tuesdays.
Only emailed submissions will be accepted and should be 300 words or less. The Daily Times reserves the right to edit for
our style, content and space constraints.
Call 981-1168 for more information.
DAILY CALENDAR
PLAYTIME
BOBBY WATSON AT THE SQUARE
ROOM: Say this for Blount
County boy Vance Thompson and his group, the
Knoxville Jazz Orchestra:
They’ve got some talented
friends. At 8 tonight, the
KJO will welcome alto sax
player Bobby Watson to
Knoxville for “An Evening
with Bobby Watson,” and
his resume speaks for itself:
“A native of Kansas City,
Kansas, alto saxophonist Bobby Watson came
to prominence in the late
1970s as musical director of Art Blakey’s Jazz
Messengers (a band that
would come to include
Knoxville jazz virtuoso
Donald Brown). In addition to being a tremendous
instrumentalist, Watson is
widely recognized as one of
the great composers of his
generation and brings with
him a wealth of terrific
music for big band, including excerpts from his ‘Gates
Barbeque Suite.’ This piece
was touted by The Wall
Street Journal as ‘the most
Kansas City specific work of
Watson’s career and a worthy companion to Benny
Carter’s “Kansas City Suite”
written for Count Basie.’”
Tonight’s performance
takes place at The Square
Room, 4 Market Square
in downtown Knoxville.
Tickets are $32.50 and just
$15 for students.
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 email
[email protected].
CLUBS,
ORGANIZATIONS
ALCOA KIWANIS CLUB: Meets
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.
JOHN J. DUNCAN SR. MEMORIAL
VFW POST NO. 10855: Meets at
7 p.m. the second Thursday of each month at First
United Methodist Church,
804 Montvale Station Road,
across from Maryville Middle
School. All former veterans
of foreign wars in Blount
County are invited to join.
Bring a copy of D.D. 214, or
orders for current active
military personnel, on any
meeting night. For information call Jim Hoffman at
202-5456.
BLOUNT COUNTY SCOTTISH RITE
CLUB: Meets at 6:30 p.m.
the third Thursday of every
month at New Providence
Lodge in Maryville.
FOOTHILLS KIWANIS CLUB: Meets
at noon the second and
fourth Wednesdays of each
month at the Chocolate Bar
in Townsend.
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.
BLOUNT COUNTY CIVIL WAR
ROUNDTABLE: Meets at 7
p.m. the last Thursday of
the month at Sam Houston
Historic Schoolhouse, Old
Sam Houston School Road,
Maryville.
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.
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 9775744 or visit www.blount
memorial.org.
We’ve moved!
Come visit us at our new location
2725 U.S. Hwy 411 S., Maryville
Half a block past William Blount Drive
Sandy s Lingerie & Gifts
We are open:
Mon. - Sat.
10 am - 7 pm
(865) 981-2845
www.sandyslingerie.com
Find us on
Facebook
| 11A
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
© 2015 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 31, No. 7
On February 2, weather forecasters all over the
United States look to the town of Punxsutawney,
Pennsylvania for a little advice. Legend says that
the groundhog named Punxsutawney Phil can
foretell the weather!
Groundhogs hibernate
all winter long in
burrows they dig.
Excrement
chamber
As the sun rises, I get
ready to emerge from my !
stump. All eyes are on me
On February
Punxsutawn 2, the town of
ey
big Groundhbegins the
og Day
celebration
before sunri
se.
Spy hole
Once my prediction ha
s
been made, the crowd
cheers for me. Then I go
back to sleep until sprin
g!
g,
n’t shinin be
is
n
u
s
e
to
... but if thare no shadows food,
r
then theretay out looking fo soon!
s
ry
I
e
seen. ng will arrive v
and spri
Find the shadow that matches
Phil exactly.
For example,
in the legend
of Groundhog
Day, when the
groundhog sees his shadow,
he goes back in his burrow.
In this case, the effect is that
the groundhog goes back in
his burrow. That is what
happens. What causes him to
go back in his burrow?
Getting frightened by his
shadow.
1. With a parent or learning
buddy at home, select an
article from today’s
newspaper. Read the
headline. Discuss what you
think caused the news
reported in the headline.
Main entrance
Nest
One important thing to
understand when you read is
cause and effect.
2. The headline usually tells
what happened. This is called
an effect. Read aloud to your
learning buddy the first
paragraph of the article. Does
this tell you the cause? Read
the rest of the article aloud.
After each paragraph, stop
and discuss what you have
learned about what caused
the news reported in the
headline.
Complete the following:
HEADLINE (effect):
The legend
says that if
the sun is
out, I see my
shadow, get
scared, and
hide back in
my burrow,
and spring
will not arrive
for another
six weeks ...
CAUSE(s):
Robert Louis Stevenson said a shadow is like a rubber ball
because it grows and shrinks throughout a day. Try this
experiment to find out why shadows change size.
pencil
cup
flashlight
Hold the
flashlight
almost
directly above
the cup. Draw
the shadow
you see.
paper
Hold the
flashlight near
the bottom of
the cup. Draw
the shadow
you see.
Think About It: What time of day would Punxsutawney
Phil have his long shadow?
Early Morning
Noon
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow multiple-step directions.
Here is a guessing
game to play with
one or more friends.
Each player cuts out
shapes and pictures
of objects from the
newspaper and
holds them up, one
at a time, in front of
a light source. Take
turns guessing what
kind of shape or
object is casting
the shadow.
Standards Link: Physical
Science: Objects can be
described in terms of their
physical properties (shape).
NAME:
Spell a message to Punxsutawney Phil by solving these math
problems. Use the number code to see what letter belongs
under each answer.
1,190
+ 530
1,697
+ 234
169
+ 362
2,763
+ 1,226
2,222
+ 1,211
521
+ 213
531 = A 3,989 = P
734 = E 1,931 = U
3,433 = K 1,720 = W
Standards Link: Math/Number Sense: Find the sum of whole numbers to 10,000.
GROUNDHOG
WEATHER
SHADOWS
BURROW
BROWN
LOUIS
CHAMBER
SPRING
SOURCE
FOOD
WEEKS
PHIL
FEBRUARY
SIX
WAKE
Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week’s Kid Scoop
stories and activities.
L I H P F X S K G G
NAME OF LEARNING
BUDDY:
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension:
Distinguish between cause and effect in text.
E K A W O W P N R C
C S I U O L I O N H
R X I D D R U M W A
U C A X P N R G O M
O H B S D Y X U R B
S R E H T A E W B E
BURROW
The noun burrow means a
hole or tunnel that animals dig
for use as a home or shelter.
Y S O W E E K S X R
Climbing out of its burrow,
the groundhog yawned.
F G Y R A U R B E F
Use the word burrow in
a sentence today when
talking with your friends
and family.
Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
Weather Adjectives
Look through the newspaper and choose
five adjectives that describe weather. Then
look through the newspaper for a picture or
cartoon to illustrate each of these adjectives.
Standards Link: Grammar: Identify and use adjectives in writing.
How do you know when
winter is over and spring
has begun? Write a
paragraph to explain.
ANSWER: A B (bee) comes after it!
Sponsored by:
homes
1.800.822.0633
www.claytonhomes.com
12A |
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
New heaters go to Tennessee residents by zip code
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1 0 3 7 4
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©2015 P6853A OF18715R-1
APOLOGY WANTED
Patriots owner says team
will be cleared after
investigation. 5B
PREDATORS EAGER FOR SECOND HALF START. 4B
SUPER BOWL 5B | CLASSIFIEDS 6B |COMICS 8B | PUZZLES 9B
TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2015
THE DAILY TIMES
1B
New-look MC baseball ignores rank
BY DARGAN SOUTHARD
MC BASEBALL
[email protected]
JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES
MARYVILLE COLLEGE FIRST BASEMEN Zack Blonder, left, and infielder Nick Dean
are greeted at home plate by infielder Chris Hamilton (11) after an RBI hit from
John McDermott in a game last year against Transylvania. The Scots open the
2015 season against Hiwassee at 3 p.m. Monday at Scotland Yard.
UTC ‘felt like
home’ for Tyson
BY DARGAN SOUTHARD
[email protected]
Before the countless
rumbles to the end zone,
before the staggering
stat lines that bordered
football insanity, before
any of his passion-filled,
emotionally charged postgame statements that soon
became his trademark of
sorts, Jaquez Tyson made
his mother a promise.
When it came time to
discuss financial options
for college, she wouldn’t
have to open a pocketbook, wouldn’t have to put
ink to a check, wouldn’t
have to swipe any sort of
plastic.
Tyson — despite still
being well absorbed in his
youth — decided he would
take care of it all.
“I told my mom as a little
kid that she wasn’t going
to pay for anything (college related),” Tyson told
The Daily Times, “and
I’m keeping my word with
that.”
On Sunday morning, the
Alcoa running back and
2014 Mr. Football Finalist
made that promise official as he announced his
commitment to Chattanooga, joining Tornado
Nick Dean made sure the news
took center stage.
Just one day after the USA South
Athletic Conference released its
preseason coaches’ poll, which
ranked the Maryville College
baseball squad eighth out of
11 schools, the Fighting Scots’
starting shortstop and offensive
anchor hung the predictions up in
the team locker room for everyone to observe.
His reasoning was simple.
“That’s all we need,” Dean
told The Daily Times last week.
“That’s definitely motivation …
That’s what people think, and
they have no idea what we’re
capable of this year and how dif-
Season Opener
Hiwassee at Maryville College
3 p.m., Monday
Scotland Yard
ferent this year is already.”
Over the past few months,
recent program alterations have
been handled internally. Breaking in a new head coach, dealing
with the loss of four full-time
starters and two primary hurlers from a season ago — as well
as trying to create the perfect
remedy for three straight losing years — all sat atop MC’s
offseason agenda.
But come Monday, any remaining kinks will be addressed with
another team in the opposing
dugout.
First up is Hiwassee, which
serves as the Fighting Scots’ season-opening foe in a 3 p.m. tilt
at Scotland Yard.
“We’re just excited to be able to
get out there and play somebody
in a different jersey,” said firstyear head coach Cody Church,
who was officially hired on June
30 after most recently spending
two years as a Tennessee Tech
assistant.
“Just getting our guys on the
field and see what happens.”
DEAN’S LIST
Arguably the most important
of those players is the redshirt
Calling the Hogs
JAQUEZ TYSON
Position: Running Back
Height: 5-10
Weight: 210
High School: Alcoa
College: Chattanooga
(Committed)
teammates Jake Warwick
(Tennessee Tech) and Kyle
Malik-Mitchell (Navy) as
Division I signees.
The reasoning behind
Tyson’s UTC affection
was rather simple.
“What really took me
over is the fact that it felt
like home,” said Tyson,
who held a scholarship
offer from the University
of the Cumberlands and
had drawn serious interest from Carson-Newman
and Maryville College as
well.
“I told myself that if it
didn’t really feel like home,
then I wasn’t going to have
a good time there, wasn’t
going to be a place that I
could study and excel in
school.”
Accompanied by his
cousin, Taharin, who
is both a former Alcoa
s t a n d o u t a n d U TC
SEE TYSON, 5B
MARK A. LARGE | THE DAILY TIMES
TENNESSEE’S KEVIN PUNTER (0) dribbles up court during Saturday’s 67-61 loss to Texas A&M at Thompson-Boling Arena. The
Vols head to Arkansas for tonight’s 9 p.m. tipoff looking for their fourth straight SEC road win.
Tyndall familiar with Arkansas atmosphere
BY DARGAN SOUTHARD
UP NEXT
[email protected]
Manning pondering
future with Broncos
BY ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Pro Football Writer
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. —
As Peyton Manning considers whether to take the
gold watch or make one
more run at the silver trophy, there are many factors he’s weighing: age,
desire, vitality, security,
relationships.
General manager John
Elway said “the bottom
line is we want him back.”
So, he asked Manning not
to make up his mind until
next month after he’s had
time to process everything.
Back in September, Manning said he liked Tom
Brady’s “When I suck, I’ll
retire” quote.
“That’s a pretty good
rule,” Manning said on the
eve of a season that was
filled with fun (planning
his own prank after breaking Brett Favre’s touchdown record) and frustration (another first-round
flop in the playoffs after a
nagging thigh injury).
He’s surely ponder-
SEE BASEBALL, 4B
ing whether an 18th NFL
season would look more
like the first half of 2014,
when a sixth MVP award
seemed to await, or the
second half, when he
struggled to find rhythm
and receivers alike.
Although the sting of
that last loss — 24-13 to
the Colts — is sure to linger, NFL Network analyst
and Hall of Fame finalist Terrell Davis said he’s
sure Manning is looking
a lot deeper.
“My gut tells me that he
comes back,” Davis said.
“But if he comes back
just because he didn’t
want to go out like this,
I don’t know if that’s the
right reason. You come
back because you love the
game, you want to compete, you enjoy working
out, you enjoy going to
practice.”
Manning has a lot of
things to think about as
he ponders his future:
NEW FACES: Adam
Gase and Manning were
SEE MANNING, 5B
KNOXVILLE — More
than a decade has passed
since his last visit, but
Donnie Tyndall still can’t
forget the noise.
As an LSU assistant
from 1997-2001, he took
four separate trips to
Arkansas’ Bud Walton
Arena — a place Tyndall
pegged as one of the two
loudest places he’s ever
coached. Three times, he
left in defeat, meaning
he’s heard plenty of the
classic “Woo Pig Sooie!”
chants that’s been nearly
a century-long staple of
Razorback athletics.
Now as Tennessee’s
first-year head coach,
Tyndall will revisit that
same setup tonight when
his Volunteers (12-6, 4-2
SEC) travel to Arkansas
(15-4, 4-2) — the orangeclad players looking for
their fourth straight conference road win.
“They get a little crazy in
there,” Tyndall said during Monday’s press luncheon. “It’s just, they love
basketball. Going back to
(former Arkansas head)
coach (Nolan) Richardson’s days, they’ve had
good teams, great players, and their home crowd
has always been very, very
good for them.”
Since Bud Walton Arena opened for the 1993-
UT (12-6, 4-2 SEC)
at Arkansas (15-4, 4-2)
9 p.m., Bud Walton
Arena
Fayetteville, Ark.
TV: ESPNU
Radio: The Vol Network
Online: WatchESPN.
com
TENNESSEE’S ARMANI MOORE (4) goes up for a loose ball during
the Vols’ 67-61 loss to Texas A&M Saturday at ThompsonBoling Arena
94 season, the Vols have
uncovered little success
there, regularly falling
victim to Arkansas’ consistent implementation of
press and speed.
In 10 matchups all-time,
UT is just 3-7, including
three losses by 15 points or
more. It’s most recent trek
to Fayetteville, Ark., generated similar results as
the Razorbacks ran away
with a 73-60 win on Feb.
2, 2013.
“When they make runs,
they start chanting and all
the things those fans do at
Arkansas,” Tyndall said.
“It’s gets pretty electric in
there. It’ll be tough.”
Tonight’s contest will
be the first conference
rematch for UT, which
upended the then-No. 19
Razorbacks, 74-69, on Jan.
13 in Knoxville. Honing in
on Arkansas sophomore
Bobby Portis quickly
became a primary task
— one the Vols’ found
manageable at first but
somewhat challenging
on the back end. With 10
minutes remaining, Portis
had just eight points. He
finished with 17.
But despite his current
title as the SEC’s leading
scorer, Portis’ nightly
point total isn’t the lead
bullet point on Tyndall’s
agenda.
“The biggest thing with
Bobby is keeping him off
the glass,” said Tyndall,
whose Vols allowed Portis
to grab 11 rebounds — five
offensive — in the January
matchup.
“He averages right
SEE TYNDALL, 3B
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YOUR SPORTS. YOUR TIMES.
2B
THE DAILY TIMES
5. University-Jackson
6. Baylor
7. Briarcrest
8. University-Nashville
9. Harpeth Hall
10. Ensworth
ON THE SCHEDULE
PREP BASKETBALL
5 p.m. — Maryville Chr. at Rhea County Acad.
6 p.m. — Knox Catholic at Alcoa
6 p.m. — Hardin Valley at Maryville
6 p.m. — Bearden at Heritage
6 p.m. — Knox West at William Blount
6 p.m. — Seymour at Jefferson County
6 p.m. — TKA at Webb School of Knoxville
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
9 p.m. — Tennessee at Arkansas, ESPNU
Record
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
7 p.m................ Nebraska at Michigan..............................................ESPN
7 p.m................ West Virginia at Kansas St. ..................................ESPN2
7 p.m................ Tulsa at Tulane ................................................ ESPNEWS
7 p.m................ Pittsburgh at Virginia Tech ..................................ESPNU
9 p.m. .............. Xavier at Georgetown.................................................. FS1
9 p.m. .............. Florida at Alabama ..................................................ESPN
9 p.m. .............. Baylor at Oklahoma St................................... ESPNEWS
9 p.m. .............. Tennessee at Arkansas ........................................ESPNU
11 p.m............... Colorado St. at Boise St. ......................................ESPNU
NHL
7:30 p.m.......... Tampa Bay at Carolina .........................................NBCSN
TENNIS
3:30 a.m. ........ Australian Open, quarterfinal..............................ESPN2
9 p.m. .............. Australian Open, quarterfinals ............................ESPN2
WINTER SPORTS
11:30 p.m......... Skiing, FIS, at Schladming, Austria ...................NBCSN
25 YEARS AGO FROM TIMES HISTORY
From the Jan. 29, 1990 edition of The Daily Times: The Tennessee men’s basketball team lost a 1990 matchup to Georgia, 85-77. Freshmen Allan Houston and Carlus Groves led
the Vols, scoring 30 and 15 points respectively.
NFL
FAVORITE ....... OPEN .. TODAY .O/U ..UNDERDOG
New England .... +3 ........1 ...... (48).......Seattle
FAVORITE .................. LINE ................ UNDERDOG
Pittsburgh .....................5 ........ at Virginia Tech
at Kansas St. .............. Pk ........... West Virginia
at Michigan ...................3 ................... Nebraska
at La Salle .................... 6 .......... Saint Joseph’s
at Georgetown .............4 ..........................Xavier
at VCU ..........................8½George Washington
at E. Michigan ...............5 .............................Ohio
at Kent St. ...................3½ ........Cent. Michigan
at Toledo .................... 13½...........Miami (Ohio)
at Buffalo ....................5½ .............W. Michigan
at Akron ........................ 11 ........................ Ball St.
at Bowling Green........10 ................... N. Illinois
at Georgia......................7 ................. Vanderbilt
Tulsa .............................3½ ..................at Tulane
at Evansville ................ 9 ................. Indiana St.
at Utah St. ................... Pk .................. Wyoming
at Arkansas.................9½ ............... Tennessee
at Alabama ................... 1......................... Florida
at Oklahoma St. ..........4 ......................... Baylor
at Auburn .................... Pk ............... Texas A&M
at San Diego St. ..........13...................Fresno St.
UNLV ...............................3 .................. at Nevada
at Boise St. ..................2½ ............ Colorado St.
17-2
19-5
17-3
21-8
16-3
14-5
78 5
66 6
39 10
36 8
34 9
14 NR
Class A
Record Pts Prv
1. Union City (10)
2. Mitchell (4)
3. Cosby
4. Clay County
5. Fayetteville
6. Booker T. Washington
7. Hampton
8. Middleton
9. Grace Christian
10. McKenzie
22-3
15-6
19-4
18-4
19-2
13-8
17-7
17-5
16-6
19-3
133 1
124 2
103 3
88 5
84 4
67 6
62 7
48 8(tie)
23 NR
9 NR
Division II
Record Pts Prv
1. CBHS (11)
22-0 119 2
2. Brentwood Academy (1)18-2 106 1
3. Knoxville Webb
22-4 89 3
4. McCallie
19-4 77 6
5. St. George’s
18-3 75 5
6. Briarcrest
19-8 69 4
7. Franklin Road Academy 19-5 36 9
8. Ensworth
11-8 25 8
9. MBA
13-6 17 7
10. University-Jackson
17-6 15 NR
FAVORITE ..............LINE.... O/U ..........UNDERDOG
Toronto ..................3½ ... (195) ........at Indiana
Cleveland ..............4½ ... (202) ....... at Detroit
at Miami .................4½ ... (184½) .. Milwaukee
at Dallas ................5½ ... (200)........ Memphis
Washington ..........7½ ... (201) . at L.A. Lakers
at Golden State .. 9½ ... (210) ............Chicago
NHL
FAVORITE ..............LINE.... UNDERDOG .........LINE
at Philadelphia ..-165 ... Arizona ............. +145
at N.Y. Islanders .-125 ... N.Y. .... Rangers +105
Washington ....... -140 ... at .... Columbus +120
at Pittsburgh .......-115 ... Winnipeg .......... -105
Detroit .................. -135 ... at ...........Florida +115
Tampa Bay ......... -160 ... at .......Carolina +140
at Montreal ........ -160 ... Dallas................+140
at Nashville.........-170 ... Colorado .......... +150
at Calgary ...........-280 ... Buffalo ............ +230
Minnesota ...........-130 ... at ....Edmonton +110
at Vancouver .......-110 ... Anaheim ............-110
BASKETBALL
BOYS’ PREP POLL
Class AAA
Record Pts Prv
23-1 130 2
19-2 121 3
20-2 109 4
15-3 89 5
2-15 82 1
19-5 68 6
21-2 58 7
21-4 47 8
19-4 29 10
18-3
9 NR
GIRLS PREP POLL
Class AAA
Record Pts Prv
1. Blackman (13)
2. Ridgeway
3. Dyer County
4. Oakland
5. Mt. Juliet
6. Riverdale
7. Dickson County
8. Bearden (1)
9. White County
10. Southwind
19-2 136 1
17-0 117 2
23-0 111 3
18-4 82 5
21-2 64 7
18-5 61 6
21-2 60 4
22-3 58 8
21-2 34 9
13-8
9 NR
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Class AA
Record Pts Prv
1. Elizabethton (12)
2. CPA (2)
3. Martin Luther King
4. East Nashville
5. Upperman
6. Jackson South Side
7. Murfreesboro Central
8. Grainger
9. Dyersburg
10. Livingston Academy
21-0
19-0
17-4
19-2
21-4
18-4
18-4
19-3
19-3
17-7
138
128
109
81
73
60
57
38
36
20
1
2
4
3
7
8
9
10
5
6
Others receiving 12 or more points: McMinn
Central 14.
Class A
Record Pts Prv
1. Middleton (13)
2. Houston County (1)
(tie) Clarkrange
4. South Greene
5. Gibson County
6. West Carroll
7. Community
8. M.Tennessee Christian
9. Pickett County
10. Perry County
22-0 139 1
24-1 110 4
20-5 110 3
20-4 85 5
24-3 76 2
23-0 74 6
16-6 67 7
19-3 47 8
17-7 24 10
19-1 10 NR
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Division II
Class AA
Record Pts Prv
1. CPA (12)
2. Creek Wood (2)
3. Haywood County
4. East Nashville
20-4 133
21-0 125
22-2 111
21-2 101
1
2
3
4
Record Pts Prv
1. Brentwood Academy (11)20-1
2. Knoxville Webb
20-4
3. Franklin Road Academy 21-2
4. Northpoint
16-4
110
98
88
59
1
2
4
5
Pts
Prv
1. Kentucky (64)
19-0 1,624
1
2. Virginia (1)
19-0 1,561
2
3. Gonzaga
20-1 1,476
3
4. Duke
17-2 1,402
5
5. Wisconsin
18-2 1,351
6
6. Arizona
18-2 1,300
7
7. Villanova
18-2 1,187
4
8. Notre Dame
19-2 1,139
8
9. Kansas
16-3 1,120
11
10. Louisville
16-3 1,027
10
11. Utah
16-3 996
12
12. Wichita St.
18-2 893
14
13. North Carolina
16-4 878
15
14. VCU
16-3 734
16
15. Iowa St.
14-4 719
9
16. Maryland
18-3 715
13
17. West Virginia
16-3 558
18
18. N. Iowa
18-2 440
20
19. Texas
14-5 431
17
20. Baylor
15-4 407
21
21. Georgetown
14-5 334
—
22. Indiana
15-5 165
23
23. Miami
14-5 164
—
24. Oklahoma
12-7
90
19
25. Butler
15-6
70
—
Others receiving votes: Colorado St. 57,
Arkansas 54, Ohio St. 43, SMU 43, Providence 29, Dayton 28, Georgia 28, Stanford
16, Wyoming 14, LSU 10, Seton Hall 10, San
Diego St. 4, Texas A&M 2, Tulsa 2, Davidson
1, Green Bay 1, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 1, Stephen
F. Austin 1.
WOMEN’S TOP 25
Record
Pts
Prv
1. South Carolina (27) 18-0 867
1
2. UConn (8)
18-1 848
2
3. Baylor
18-1 799
3
4. Notre Dame
19-2 770
6
5. Maryland
17-2 699
7
6. Tennessee
17-3 684
5
7. Oregon St.
18-1 672
9
8. Louisville
18-2 653
4
9. Florida St.
19-2 525
17
10. Kentucky
16-4 513
14
11. Arizona St.
18-2 494
13
12. Stanford
15-5 416
11
12. Texas A&M
16-4 416
10
14. Texas
14-4 390
8
15. Nebraska
15-3 383
16
16. North Carolina
17-4 376
12
17. Duke
14-6 327
15
18. Mississippi St.
20-2 321
18
19. Princeton
17-0 255
19
20. Iowa
15-3 240
20
21. Georgia
17-4 183
22
22. Rutgers
14-5
118
25
23. Syracuse
15-5
114
23
24. Oklahoma
13-5
73
—
25. Chattanooga
17-3
60
—
Others receiving votes: George Washington
32, Minnesota 31, Green Bay 27, Seton Hall
26, Washington 15, South Florida 12, W. Kentucky 12, Iowa St. 9, LSU 8, Florida Gulf Coast
3, Middle Tennessee 3, DePaul 1.
MEN’S USA TODAY TOP 25
Record
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
NBA
1. Bearden (7)
2. Southwind (3)
3. Oak Ridge
4. Blackman
5. Hamilton (4)
6. Jefferson County
7. White County
8. Brentwood
9. Station Camp
10. Dyer County
Fulton
6. Westview
7. Lexington
8. Ripley
9. Cheatham County
10. Brainerd
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
NCAA BASKETBALL
6
3
9
8
7
10
MEN’S TOP 25
5.
GLANTZ-CULVER LINE
57
55
41
34
33
10
Others receiving 12 or more points: None.
ON THE AIR
ODDS
18-4
14-4
14-6
13-4
15-6
10-8
Pts
Pvs
1. Kentucky (32)
19-0 800
1
2. Virginia
19-0 767
2
3. Gonzaga
20-1 728
3
4. Duke
17-2 682
6
5. Wisconsin
18-2 681
5
6. Arizona
18-2 634
7
7. Villanova
18-2 600
4
8. Notre Dame
19-2 556
9
9. Louisville
16-3 532
10
10. Utah
16-3 481
11
11. Kansas
16-3 476
14
12. Wichita State
18-2 449
13
13. Maryland
18-3 414
8
14. North Carolina
16-4 403
15
15. VCU
16-3 336
16
16. Iowa State
14-4 308
12
17. West Virginia
16-3 300
17
18. Northern Iowa
18-2 231
19
19. Baylor
15-4 216
21
20. Texas
14-5 183
18
21. Indiana
15-5
75
23
22. Georgetown
14-5
72
—
23. Miami
14-5
59
—
24. Colorado State
18-2
58
—
25. Arkansas
15-4
50
—
Others receiving votes: Oklahoma 48, Ohio
State 47, Dayton 43, Stanford 42, SMU 28,
Butler 21, Wyoming 17, Providence 13, Kansas
State 12, San Diego State 7, Tulsa 7, George
Washington 6, LSU 6, Saint Mary’s 5, Georgia
4, Texas A&M 2, Davidson 1.
BOWLING
MONDAY MORNING COFFEE
LEAGUE
AT CREST LANES
Monday
HIGH SERIES
Carolyn Heaton 557, Melissa Ownby 506,
Doris Long 484, Sandy Herr 471, Dot Day
465
HIGH GAME
Carolyn Heaton 192, Melissa Ownby 189,
Doris Long 188, Dot Day 171, Kathie Jakobsen 170
GOLF
PGA TOUR STATISTICS
Scoring Average
1, Webb Simpson, 68.93. 2, Ryan Palmer,
69.68. 3, Robert Streb, 69.72. 4, Russell
Henley, 69.75. 5, Jason Day, 69.76. 6, Will
MacKenzie, 69.78. 7, Jimmy Walker, 69.78. 8,
Harris English, 69.85. 9, Jason Bohn, 69.85.
10, Fabian Gomez, 69.86.
Driving Distance
1, Brooks Koepka, 317.3. 2, Ryan Palmer,
312.2. 3, Morgan Hoffmann, 311.3. 4, Charlie Beljan, 309.5. 5, Tony Finau, 309.0. 6,
Keegan Bradley, 307.6. 7 (tie), Hiroshi Iwata
and Gary Woodland, 307.5. 9, Cory Whitsett,
306.7. 10, Paul Casey, 306.6.
Driving Accuracy Percentage
1, David Toms, 77.84%. 2, Ben Crane, 77.39%.
3 (tie), K.J. Choi and Jason Knutzon, 75.89%.
5, Jason Dufner, 75.82%. 6, Steve Alker,
75.18%. 7, Kevin Chappell, 74.29%. 8, Ben
Curtis, 73.57%. 9, Antonio Lascuna, 73.21%.
10, Colt Knost, 72.75%.
Greens in Regulation Pct.
1, Geoff Ogilvy, 80.56%. 2, Hunter Mahan,
79.44%. 3, Kevin Chappell, 77.78%. 4, Robert Allenby, 77.16%. 5, Jason Day, 77.08%.
6, Stewart Cink, 76.90%. 7 (tie), Will MacKenzie, Sang-Moon Bae and Kevin Stadler,
76.85%. 10, Seung-yul Noh, 75.56%.
Total Driving
1, Kevin Chappell, 35. 2, Charlie Beljan, 46.
3 (tie), Bubba Watson and Chez Reavie, 68.
5, Paul Casey, 77. 6, Keegan Bradley, 82. 7,
Lucas Glover, 85. 8, Harrison Frazar, 91. 9,
Davis Love III, 98. 10, Brooks Koepka, 99.
Putting Average
1, Jason Day, 1.658. 2, Bryce Molder, 1.659.
3, Hiroshi Iwata, 1.660. 4, Jonas Blixt, 1.667.
5, Jason Dufner, 1.679. 6, Fred Funk, 1.681. 7,
Ryan Palmer, 1.683. 8, Justin Thomas, 1.684.
9, Lee Janzen, 1.685. 10, Troy Kelly, 1.688.
Birdie Average
1, Bubba Watson, 5.88. 2, Jason Day, 5.38. 3,
Jimmy Walker, 5.05. 4, Seung-yul Noh, 5.00.
5, Webb Simpson, 4.94. 6, Ryan Palmer,
4.83. 7, Tony Finau, 4.79. 8 (tie), Francesco
Molinari and Russell Henley, 4.75. 10, Bryce
Molder, 4.73.
Eagles (Holes per)
1, Brooks Koepka, 48.0. 2, Aaron Baddeley,
57.6. 3, Jarrod Lyle, 66.0. 4, 9 tied with 72.0.
Sand Save Percentage
1, Brendon Todd, 90.91%. 2, Patrick Reed,
87.50%. 3, Fred Funk, 83.33%. 4, Sung
Joon Park, 81.48%. 5, Chad Collins, 78.13%.
6, Chris Kirk, 75.00%. 7, Lee Westwood,
73.33%. 8 (tie), Cory Whitsett and Cameron
Smith, 71.43%. 10, John Daly, 70.59%.
All-Around Ranking
1, Robert Streb, 271. 2 (tie), Webb Simpson
and Jimmy Walker, 336. 4, Ryan Palmer, 352.
5, Shawn Stefani, 397. 6, Jason Day, 420. 7,
Matt Kuchar, 421. 8, Paul Casey, 446. 9, Lee
Westwood, 447. 10, Charley Hoffman, 465.
Money Leaders
1, Jimmy Walker, (5), $2,003,607. 2, Robert Streb, (7), $1,572,408. 3, Sang-Moon
Bae, (5), $1,571,967. 4, Charley Hoffman,
(6), $1,568,475. 5, Bubba Watson, (2),
$1,560,000. 6, Ryan Moore, (5), $1,408,500.
7, Ben Martin, (7), $1,372,800. 8, Patrick Reed, (4), $1,312,870. 9, Bill Haas, (3),
$1,122,060. 10, Tim Clark, (6), $997,715.
FedExCup Leaders
1, Jimmy Walker, 956.5. 2, Robert Streb,
813.833. 3, Charley Hoffman, 741.75. 4, SangMoon Bae, 721. 5, Ben Martin, 655.25. 6,
Patrick Reed, 635. 7, Bubba Watson, 625. 8,
Ryan Moore, 591. 9, Bill Haas, 565.5.
TENNIS
AUSTRALIAN OPEN RESULTS
Tuesday
At Melbourne Park
Melbourne, Australia
Purse: $32.9 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Women
Quarterfinals
Ekaterina Makarova (10), Russia, def. Simona Halep (3), Romania, 6-4, 6-0.
Doubles
Men
Quarterfinals
Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut,
France, def. Julien Benneteau and Edouard
Roger-Vasselin (2), France, 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-3.
Women
Quarterfinals
Michaella Krajicek, Netherlands, and Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (13), Czech Republic,
def. Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears
(5), United States, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3).
Legends Doubles
Round Robin
Men
Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde,
Australia, def. Michael Chang, United States,
and Wayne Ferreira, South Africa, 4-2, 4-3
(5-2), 4-3 (5-2).
Thomas Enqvist and Mats Wilander, Sweden, def. Goran Ivanisevic, Croatia, and Justin Gimelstob, United States, 4-3 (6-4), 4-3
(6-4), 2-4, 4-3 (5-3).
Junior Singles
Boys
Second Round
Marko Osmakcic, Switzerland, def. Juan Jose
Rosas (13), Peru, 6-1, 6-2.
Lee Duck Hee (6), South Korea, def. Domagoj
Biljesko, Croatia, 6-2, 6-1.
PREP WRESTLING
TENNESSEE STATE POLL
Pl. School (Previous)
1. Baylor (1)
2. Father Ryan (2)
3. Cleveland (4)
4. Brad. Central (3)
5. Montgomery Bell Acad. (5)
6. Wilson Central (6)
7. McCallie (7)
8. Soddy Daisy (10)
9. Christian Brothers (8)
10. Beech (9)
11. Pigeon Forge (11)
12. Siegel (N/A)
Others Receiving Votes: Arlington, Brentwood, Dobyns-Bennett, Halls, Summitt,
Tullahoma
NASCAR keeps championship format for 2015
BY JENNA FRYER
AP Auto Racing Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. —
NASCAR won’t change
its new championship format, which chairman Brian France said Monday is
“overwhelmingly popular”
with fans.
The Chase was revamped
last year into an elimination-style system that created a winner-take-all final
race among four drivers.
Kevin Harvick won the season finale at Homestead in
November to claim his first
Sprint Cup title.
France called it “perhaps
the best Chase ever” and
said the excitement will
carry into this season.
“It’s overwhelmingly popular with our most important stakeholder, the fans,”
France of the Chase during
the kickoff to the annual
NASCAR media tour.
“They (fans) like the fact
that it tightened up competition. They liked the
drama down the stretch.
They like the emphasis on
winning. And one of the
things they told us that
they really liked is the
idea that we weren’t going
to change anything. And
they strongly suggested
that we didn’t. And we’re
not going to.”
NASCAR first debuted
the Chase in 2004 and
tweaked it several times
in the first 10 years. But
it got a dramatic overhaul before the 2014 season, when the driver field
was expanded to 16 with
four eliminated after every
third Chase race.
The final four drivers
then went to Homestead
even in the standings, with
the highest finisher guaranteed the championship.
The system worked in creating an eventful finale in
which all four contenders
raced for the win.
France said he believed
the a simple formula that
did not require following
points — drivers made the
Chase by winning a race,
and advanced through the
rounds with wins — was
embraced by fans.
“One of the magical parts
of this Chase, and we want
to make sure we keep it
this way, is the simplicity
of it: Win and you’re in,”
said France.
One change coming into
2015 will be that NASCAR
will no longer permit
teams to alter their car’s
side skirts during a race.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2015
RICK SCUTERI | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BASEBALL COMMISSIONER ROB MANFRED speaks during a Jan. 15
news conference at the Major League Baseball owners meeting in Phoenix.
Manfred expects hits
at MLB commissioner
BY RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK — Rob
Manfred knows he’ll get
pounded now that he’s
baseball commissioner
— his name is printed in
blue script on the sweet
spot between the seams of
every big league ball.
“Probably good if I get
hit hard,” he said, smiling
and laughing, during an
interview with The Associated Press. “A little more
offense. We don’t have to
deal with that issue.”
Manfred’s desk on the
31st floor of baseball’s Park
Avenue offices was tidy
on Monday morning, the
first business day after he
succeeded Bud Selig and
started a five-year term
as commissioner. Having
worked for MLB since
1998 as an executive vice
president and then as chief
operating officer, he didn’t
have to move into a new
office.
The issues are piled up,
perhaps not physically, but
the to-do list is lengthy:
Oakland and Tampa Bay
want new ballparks; negotiations are ongoing with
players over pace of play
and domestic violence;
Baltimore and Washington
are fighting in court over
broadcast revenue; there is
widespread agreement initiatives must be undertaken to develop young fans
and players.
A pitch clock must be
considered and decreased
offense scrutinized along
with increased defensive
shifts.
Tighter balls? Shorter
fences? A lower mound?
Banning defensive shifts?
Perhaps they can be talked about in the future.
“I do think it’s important
for the game to continue to
modernize,” he said. “That
modernization has to proceed at a pace that allows
us to be very respectful of
the traditions of the game
and keeps us from making a hasty error, as they
say.”
He opened his regime
Sunday by releasing an
open letter to fans, promising development in
urban areas and increased
emphasis on partnering
with high school, college
and amateur ball.
He left his home early
on a snowy Monday and
took the commuter train
from Tarrytown to Grand
Central Terminal, as he
has most days since he
was hired by MLB after 11
years as an outside counsel with Morgan, Lewis &
Bockius.
Born Sept. 28, 1958, Manfred grew up in Rome, New
York, and is thought to be
the first commissioner to
have played Little League
Baseball. He started when
he was seven and quit when
he was 12 or 13 because it
conflicted with tennis.
“It was a painful and
not-particularly successful experience,” he said.
“I played some shortstop,
some second base.”
He attended his first big
league game on Aug. 10,
1968, sitting in the lower
deck between home plate
and first base at Yankee
Stadium for New York’s 3-2
loss to Minnesota. Mickey
Mantle went deep twice
in his last multihomer
game.
He wears conservative
suits and has a gap-toothed
smile and a receding hairline, looking every bit the
corporate lawyer he was.
His Cornell undergraduate
and Harvard Law School
diplomas are on the wall
behind his desk, to the
side of his computer. A
flat-screen television on
another wall broadcasts
sports news.
The contrast between
the 56-year-old Manfred
and the 80-year-old Selig
is clear. The longtime
Brewers owner ruled baseball from Milwaukee with
grandfatherly charm. Selig
claims to have never sent
an email during his 22-plus
years in charge.
BRIEFS
Vols’ coordinator search continues on road
Tennessee’s search for its next offensive coordinator continued Monday on the road, where head
coach Butch Jones is reportedly conducting interviews in the midst of recruiting trips.
With Mike DeBord still thought to be the frontrunner for the job, VolQuest.com reported Monday night that new candidates could be Boise State
offensive coordinator Mike Sanford and Southern
Cal offensive coordinator Clay Helton.
According to VolQuest, DeBord, an administrator of Olympic sports at Michigan and former head
coach at Central Michigan that Jones coached under,
could have NFL coaching options, but those could
be resolved by midweek.
Scots can’t hold on to 19-point lead
The Maryville College men’s basketball team built
a 19-point advantage just before halftime, but Methodist University rallied in the second half to drop
the Scots, 68-62, in a key USA South match up Monday night at Methodist.
The Scots (8-9, 3-3 USA South) jumped out to a
17-4 lead in the first six minutes of the game. Behind
Jaumonee Byrd’s 12 points and Spencer Shoffner’s 13
points, Maryville took a 42-26 lead into the break.
Methodist (7-10, 3-4) exploded with a 19-5 run to
begin the final period bringing the score to 47-45 in
the first ten minutes. A Tabias Hilliard three-pointer at 8:41 gave the Monarchs their first lead of the
game, 50-49.
SPORTS | 3B
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
TYNDALL: Depleted roster poses challenge
FROM 1B
around f ive offensive
rebounds a game in conference, which is maybe the
most amazing stat of anyone in our league. That’s a
heck of a stat.”
‘A TOUGH CALL’: Tyndall calls
it “the million-dollar question.”
With just 10 healthy scholarship players — only nine
of which have consistently
seen the floor — do you rest
guys more often during the
week and hope nobody loses their edge?
Or do you keep the practice
intensity high and take the
chance of having a fatigued
performance come tipoff?
“That’s a tough call,” Tyndall said. “I wrestle with
that.”
Leading up to last Saturday’s 67-61 loss to Texas
A&M, the first-year head
coach chose the former.
Tyndall said he gave his
team “basically two days
off” in preparation for the
Aggies, hoping the added
freshness would translate
into victory. Since it didn’t,
Tyndall’s future approach
on the issue remains in
question.
“You’ve just got to trust
your instincts and have a
good feel for your team,”
Tyndall said. “Let the assistants talk to the players
when I’m not around and
see how they’re feeling, and
then add it all up and make
a decision.”
MISSING MCGHEE: While
Tyndall continues to hint
that Jabari McGhee’s sea-
son is likely finished — the
freshman forward injured
his foot on Dec. 17 and
hasn’t played since — a
clearer update on the situation won’t arrive until “the
end of next week.”
To date, McGhee has
played in just eight contests, making him a likely
medical redshirt candidate if his injury doesn’t
improve.
“I really don’t want to
use that kid’s year unless
we have to,” Tyndall said
in regards to burning
the potential redshirt if
McGhee does return. “I
just think he’s going to be a
good player for us down the
road. As well as recruiting
is going right now, I’d just
like to probably save him as
we move forward.”
MARK A. LARGE | THE DAILY TIMES
TENNESSEE’S DEFENDERS JUMP to block Texas A&M guard Alex Caruso (21) Saturday in Knoxville.
Kentucky, Virginia
lead AP Top 25 poll
BY AARON BEARD
AP Basketball Writer
There’s no argument
among AP Top 25 voters
about the top two teams
in the country.
Things get a bit trickier
at the bottom of the rankings.
For the third straight
week, Kentucky and Virginia are ranked 1-2 in the
poll, with the nation’s last
AP TOP 25 polls. 2B
On the right road now
Vols finding success away from home in SEC play
BY STEVE MEGARGEE
SEC STANDINGS
AP Sports Writer
KNOXVILLE — Tennessee is finding life on the
road easier than the supposed comforts of home
thus far in Southeastern
Conference competition.
The Volunteers (12-6,
4-2 SEC) are undefeated
in SEC road games so far
but have won just one of
their first three home conference matchups. They’ll
put that perfect SEC road
record to the test Tuesday
at Arkansas (15-4, 4-2).
The last time Tennessee won its first four SEC
road games in a season was
1982, when the Vols went
on to finish tied for first
in the conference.
“The last couple of games
— two of the three at least
— we’ve almost played a
little bit more nervous in
front of our home crowd
than we have on the road,”
Tennessee coach Donnie Tyndall said. “I don’t
know if that’s purely coincidental or if guys do feel
a little more pressure at
home because all the fans
are here and they want to
do so well to keep them
coming out.”
Tennessee’s recent home
struggles are unusual for a
Tyndall-coached team.
Tyndall headed into
SEC competition having
gone 34-1 in regular-season home games since the
start of the 2012-13 season.
That included a 27-1 record
in two seasons at Southern Mississippi and a 7-0
mark in Tennessee’s nonconference schedule this
season.
Although Tyndall was
careful to say he doesn’t
know whether his players
SEC Overall
Kentucky
6-0
Arkansas
4-2
LSU
4-2
Georgia
4-2
Texas A&M
4-2
Tennessee
4-2
Alabama
3-3
Ole Miss
3-3
Florida
3-3
Auburn
2-4
Mississippi St 2-4
Vanderbilt
1-5
South Carolina 1-5
Missouri
1-5
19-0
15-4
15-4
13-5
13-5
12-6
13-6
12-7
10-9
10-9
9-10
11-8
10-8
7-12
Strk
W19
W2
W2
W4
W4
L1
W1
W1
L3
L2
L1
L5
L3
L5
Saturday
Kentucky 58 , South Carolina 43
Texas A&M 67, Tennessee 61
Arkansas 61, Missouri 60
Georgia 72, Mississippi St. 66
LSU 79, Vanderbilt 75
Ole Miss 72, Florida 71
Alabama 57, Auburn 55
TENNESSEE’S DEREK REESE (CENTER) competes with Missouri’s
Keith Shamburger (right), Jakeenan Gant (23) and Johnathan
Williams III (3) for a rebound Jan. 17 in Columbia, Mo.
are more nervous at home,
he acknowledges that’s
something he wonders.
“That’s a question I ask
myself and ask our staff,”
Tyndall said. “I’m not one
of those guys where we lose
one and all of a sudden I’ve
got 20 different excuses.
That’s not what I’m about,
and I don’t want to make
it sound that way. I just
think that maybe because
we are at home and they
want to play so well for
our home fans, they play a
little bit tight, if you will. I
don’t know that that’s the
case.”
In its three conference
home games, Tennessee
lost 56-38 to Alabama in,
beat Arkansas 74-69 and
lost 67-61 to Texas A&M.
In three SEC road games,
Tennessee beat Mississippi State 61-47, Missouri
59-51 and South Carolina
66-62.
Tennessee has shot 45.1
percent (23 of 51) from
3-point range in its three
SEC road games.
“We just play together
when are on the road,”
sophomore guard Robert
Hubbs said. “We know it’s
going to be tough each and
every night when we go on
the road, so we just have
to play together.”
The level of competition
probably has made a difference. Tennessee’s three
SEC road foes - Mississippi
State, Missouri and South
Carolina - have a combined
conference record of 4-14.
The three SEC teams Tennessee has hosted - Arkansas, Texas A&M and Alabama - are a combined 11-7
in league play.
Tennessee faces its
toughest conference road
test Tuesday at Arkansas,
which owns a 62-7 home
record since Mike Anderson took over as coach in
2011. Tyndall remembers
the raucous atmosphere
of Arkansas’ Bud Walton
Arena from his years as
an LSU assistant.
“We played at Arizona
a couple of years ago,”
Tyndall said in a reference to his Southern Mississippi tenure. “Those
two places in my opinion
were the loudest two places I’ve ever (coached) in.
I’m sure it will be another
very crazy atmosphere on
Tuesday.”
Zach Osterman
Indianapolis Star
eastern Conference teams.
But Virginia had to rally
Sunday to beat a Virginia
Tech team that’s winless
in the ACC.
“My rationale for knocking Kentucky down at the
time was because I wasn’t
impressed with them that
week, relative to Virginia,” Osterman said in an
email. “Would have to say
the same about the Cavs
after a tight game against
Virginia Tech.”
RISING AND FALLING: There
were no big climbers in
this week’s poll. Six teams
moved up two positions,
led by No. 9 Kansas and
No. 12 Wichita State.
On the other side, No. 15
Iowa State had the biggest
drop of six spots in a wild
month in the poll. The
Cyclones started January
at No. 9, fell eight spots
to No. 17, bounced up six
spots the next week to No.
11 then two more last week
to No. 9 before a loss to
Texas Tech dropped them
again.
THE NEWCOMERS: No. 21
Georgetown and No. 23
Miami joined Butler as
newcomers to this week’s
poll, though they’re hardly
new faces this year. All
three were ranked in
December.
FAREWELL FOR NOW: Dayton, Seton Hall and Iowa
fell out of the rankings,
with the Pirates and
Hawkeyes losing twice
last week.
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TENNESSEE COACH DONNIE TYNDALL (right) argues a call with a referee during a timeout Jan. 17 in Columbia, Mo. Tennessee won
the game 59-51.
two unbeatens topping all
65 votes cast Monday.
The Wildcats (19-0) were
the unanimous choice for
five straight weeks before
losing a pair of first-place
votes to the Cavaliers (190) two weeks ago, though
Kentucky reclaimed one
of those this week.
Gonzaga stayed at No.
3 while Duke moved up a
spot to fourth after coach
Mike Krzyzewski earned
his 1,000th career victory
against St. John’s on Sunday. Wisconsin rounded
out the top five.
But with nine ranked
teams losing last week,
six of the last seven teams
in the Top 25 have at least
five losses. That includes
a six-loss Butler team at
No. 25, while No. 24 Oklahoma (12-7) stayed in the
poll after losing to two
ranked opponents last
week.
The Sooners are only
the fourth team to be
ranked with seven losses
in January since the 198182 season, according to
STATS.
John McNamara of the
Capital Gazette of Annapolis, Maryland, and John
Feinstein of the Washington Post both said they do
more than automatically
move teams up or down
based on whether they
won or lost a game.
As Feinstein said: “I
think it’s total picture and
it’s also a more detailed
picture.”
“It’s a little bit less black
and white and a little bit
more shades of gray,”
McNamara said. “It just
seems like who you played
and where you played and
the scoring margin of the
game are all things that
come into play for me
in terms of figuring out
who to drop and how far
to drop them.”
BACK TO UK: After two
weeks with Virginia at
No. 1, Zach Osterman of
The Indianapolis Star
went back to Kentucky
this week.
Osterman switched after
the Wildcats survived a
pair of overtime wins
against unranked South-
‘My rationale
for knocking
Kentucky down
at the time was
because I wasn’t
impressed with
them that week,
relative to
Virginia.’
4B | SPORTS
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
BASEBALL: Dean decides to
play final year for Scots
FROM 1B
senior Dean, who surprised
many when he opted to
return for his final year of
eligibility. Following his
graduation last May, the
reigning USAC player of
the year admitted he had
thoughts of calling it a
career.
Baseball had been good to
him, but maybe it was time
for something else.
As the summer weeks
drifted by, that mindset
ultimately shifted. Having
already received his diploma, Dean, who batted .401
with three homers and 29
RBI in 2014, was somewhat
of a free agent. He could
try to find another home
— possibly even a Division
I institution — or he could
return to MC for one final
shot at the postseason.
With just a handful of
weeks remaining until
the start of the fall semester, no decision had been
finalized.
Larger schools showed
interest. Dean eventually
chose otherwise.
“With the new changes,
the new coach and the guys
coming back this year, my
goal is to do whatever it
takes to get our team to win
the conference and get a
bid to go to regional and
ultimately go to a World
Series,” Dean said.
“That’s really what I came
back for.”
Although not initially
sold on pushing his baseball career one year further, Dean’s decision to do
so may extend his playing
days even longer. After having draft conversations with
a handful of MLB teams,
including the Chicago Cubs
and Boston Red Sox, Dean
said he was “really close” to
being drafted last year.
Nothing ever materialized, but another breakout
season could potentially
change that.
“There’s no question in
my mind,” Church said
when asked if Dean has a
future in professional baseball. “I look at a five-tool
guy. I don’t know what he
can’t do. He can run. He can
hit for average. He can hit
for power. He can defend.
He’s got the arm strength.
I don’t know what tool
he’s lacking. I’m surprised
somebody didn’t give him
an opportunity this past
year to be honest.
“At the end of the day, a
lot of it comes down to the
team’s success. A team’s
got to be successful for
some guys to get a shot at
professional baseball.”
‘WINNING
THE WHOLE THING’
A helping hand in trying
to generate that success is
junior first baseman Zack
Blonder, who’ll likely hit
behind Dean in either the
four- or five-hole. In 2014,
the former USAC Rookie of the Year batted .293
and drove in a team-high
33 RBI, all while starting 36
of MC’s 38 contests.
Blonder will make up
a quarter of the Fighting
Scots’ upperclassmendominated infield, which
also consists of Dean,
senior corner-infielderturned-second-baseman
John Andrew McDermott
and either junior Chris Evrin or redshirt junior Jesse
Crisp at the hot corner.
Ervin arrives in Maryville
‘I look at a
five-tool guy.
I don’t know what
he can’t do. He
can run. He can hit
for average. He
can hit for power.
He can defend. ’
Cody Church
MC coach, about senior
Nick Dean
after spending two seasons
spent at Alabama Southern
Community College, while
Crisp — a 2011 William
Blount High School graduate — makes his return
to the diamond following
a one-year reprieve.
“This is my third season,
and this is the best team I’ve
seen here,” Blonder said.
“So we’re capable of winning the whole thing.”
On the mound, MC is now
without departed graduates Matt Dyer and Trevor Brackett, who tossed a
combined 125 1/3 innings
and owned the Fighting
Scots’ second- and thirdlowest ERA respectively
last year. In their final collegiate campaigns, Dyer
racked up a team-high four
saves, while Brackett led
MC in both starts (11) and
wins (5).
Those absences mean a
large portion of the mound
responsibilities will fall on
the shoulders of sophomore
hurler Seth Debity, who
tossed 58 innings, made
10 starts and generated a
3-4 record in his freshman
season.
“He’s a guy that’s had a
lot of college experience,
a lot of weekend starting
experience, and he’s just
steady,” Church said. “You
know what you’re going to
get with Debity out there,
and he’s going to give you
a chance to win every time
he’s on the mound. So I
think that’s the direction
we’d go right now.”
DIFFERENT
DIRECTION
As far as the team’s overall
direction, that’s still to be
determined under Church’s
guidance. The former Seymour High School standout is MC’s third different
coach in the last five years
and is now tasked with
rebooting a program that
finished eighth in conference a season ago.
That last fact is why
Church wasn’t surprised
to see his team slotted
near the bottom of the preseason poll. In fact, he said
he “expected” it.
But that’s where all concern stops. Like his star
player, Church isn’t buying
stock in outside opinion.
“Ferrum was picked to
finish eighth last year, and
that shows how much that
means because Ferrum was
a co-champion last year,”
Church said. “Preseason
is exactly what it is. When
I was at Tennessee Tech,
we were picked to finish
eighth my first year, and
that team went on to win
the conference.
“Preseason honors are
great and all that, but that
doesn’t really have a lot of
validation.”
RAYN REMIORZ | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NASHVILLE PREDATORS’ SETH JONES (3) celebrates with teammates Mike Ribeiro (63), Craig Smith (15) and Filip Forsberg (9) after
a Predators goal against the Montreal Canadiens Jan. 20 in Montreal.
Looking for seconds
Predators eager to build on franchise-best start
BY TERESA M. WALKER
UP NEXT
AP Sports Writer
NASHVILLE — The Nashville
Predators are back at work ready
to prove the best start in franchise
history is no fluke, even with goaltender Pekka Rinne still sidelined.
And they want a fast start coming
off the All-Star break.
“It’s very critical,” forward James
Neal said Monday. “I think everyone’s got the same mindset coming
back from the break. We want to gain
ground, and you want to make up
as many points as you can. ... We’ve
got to be ready here, and ... I think
everyone just kind of recharged,
really got their energy back and
ready to go.”
Well, not everyone got to rest over
the long All-Star weekend.
Coach Peter Laviolette and his
assistants worked the game and
got the win with Team Toews in
Columbus along with defenseman
Shea Weber, who won the hardest
shot competition with a 108.5 mph
blast, and rookie Filip Forsberg who
scored the first goals by a Predator
in an All-Star game.
At the All-Star break, the Predators
lead the NHL with a .722 winning
percentage. Anaheim has a leaguebest 68 points — three ahead of
Nashville, which has two games in
Predators vs. Colorado Avalanche
8 p.m. tonight, FSTV
hand on the Ducks. Nashville (30-105) has gotten at least a point in 11 of
the last 12 games going into the break
and also lead the Central Division at
12-3-2, matching the wins they got in
the division all last season.
Laviolette tried to help his Predators get back up to speed Monday
by pushing them through practice
and drills quickly.
“It gets harder and harder,” Laviolette said. “The more is at stake
as the season winds on here. The
teams always will be fighting for
something now. The playoffs, once
you get through January and reach
the halfway point of February, it
starts to really narrow in on the playoff picture and what’s happening
around the league. So it doesn’t get
any easier than that.”
Rinne skated Monday, but the
league’s top winning goalie’s return
from an injured knee remains
unchanged. He hurt his knee Jan. 13
and still is expected to miss between
three and five weeks. The Predators
managed three points in three games
without him before the break.
Carter Hutton at least got his first
Williams sisters join Aussie final eight
The Associated Press
MELBOURNE, Australia — Fireworks lit up
the sky above Rod Laver
Arena the moment Venus
Williams completed her
fourth-round win at the
Australian Open on Monday night.
It’s been that kind of
tournament so far for the
34-year-old, seven-time
Grand Slam winner. Williams advanced to her first
quarterfinal in a major
since Wimbledon in 2010
and she’ll be joined by her
younger sister, Serena, in
the final eight.
As multi-colored pinwheels and other fireworks
celebrating the Australia
Day holiday cascaded from
the sky, Venus took time
on court to credit Serena
for her support and inspi-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
VENUS WILLIAMS CELEBRATES
AFTER winning over Agnieszka
Radwanska Monday in Melbourne, Australia.
ration. In 2011, Venus was
diagnosed with the energy-sapping Sjogren’s syndrome, a major reason for
her absence from the late
stages of big tournaments
— until now.
Where Service Matters Most
here before so it’s not like
I’m jumping up and down
for joy.”
Venus will next face Madison Keys, a 19-year-old
American who was inspired
to play tennis by watching
the Williams sisters.
“It’s definitely been an
experience, really playing
well, kind of living up to
what people have been saying,” Keys said. “I’m just
really happy that it’s finally
here and that I’m doing so
well.”
Serena Williams had a 2-6,
6-3, 6-2 win over Garbine
Muguruza, motivated by a
loss to the Spanish player at
the 2014 French Open.
“She made me play a lot
better,” Serena Williams
said. “I had to play the
best match of the tournament or else I was going
to be out.”
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“Definitely my sister Serena, she’s just the ultimate
champion, and definitely a
lot of inspiration from all
my fans who have stayed
behind me through thick
and thin,” Venus said.
On the men’s side, No.
1-seeded Novak Djokovic,
defending champion Stan
Wawrinka, U.S. Open runner-up Kei Nishikori and
Canadian Milos Raonic
won their fourth-round
matches. That sets up a
pair of compelling quarterfinals: Djokovic vs.
Raonic, and Wawrinka vs.
Nishikori.
Venus Williams, asked if
her 6-3, 2-6, 6-1 win over
Agnieszka Radwanska was
her biggest in a while, said
“from the outside looking
in, I guess it could be like
that.
“(But) I feel like I’ve been
Where Service Matters Most
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win in net for Nashville this season
with a 4-3 victory over Washington
on Jan. 16 and just missed a second
in a 2-1 overtime loss at Montreal
last week. Laviolette said Hutton
has given the Predators a chance to
win and thinks they will play hard
in front of the goaltender.
The Predators also recalled Marek
Mazanec from Milwaukee in the
AHL on Monday. Laviolette declined
to say whether Hutton or Mazanec
will be in net Tuesday night against
Colorado. Hutton is 1-4-3 this season.
“He definitely deserves better,”
center Mike Fisher said. “He’s played
some good games where we couldn’t
score in front of him. We know he’s
a good goaltender. We’ll focus on
what we need to do as a team no
matter who’s back there.”
Nashville currently leads the league
allowing only 2.24 goals per game
and ninth scoring an average of 2.96
goals per game.
The Predators take a seven-game
winning streak on home ice into
Tuesday night’s game, and another
win will tie the franchise record
set between Jan. 6 and Feb. 8, 2007.
Then Nashville hits the road for
three straight road games at St. Louis, Colorado and Pittsburgh as part
of a tough stretch of four games in
six nights.
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THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
MC women rally
for 16th straight win
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON REDSKINS QUARTERBACK DOUG WILLIAMS is surrounded by members of the media after he led the Redskins to a
42-10 victory over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXII Feb. 1, 1988, in San Diego, Calif.
Let the insanity begin
Outrageous the norm at Super Bowl Media Day
BY ROB MAADDI
AP Pro Football Writer
PHOENIX — Tom Brady already
had a child with actress Bridget Moynahan and was dating supermodel
Gisele Bundchen when a Mexican
television personality created one
of the wildest moments in Media
Day history here in Arizona before
the 2008 Super Bowl.
Ines Gomez Mont, a reporter for
TV Azteca, showed up wearing a
white wedding dress and veil and
proposed to Brady, who was trying to
lead the New England Patriots to the
first 19-0 season in NFL history.
“Tom, I’m in love with you! Will
you marry me please?” the immodest
brunette shouted from the crowd.
“I’m the real Miss Brady.”
Brady politely declined her proposal, saying: “I’ve got a few Miss
Bradys in my life. I’m a one-woman
man. But you’re beautiful. Anybody
who would have the opportunity to
marry you would be a lucky man.”
Maybe Gomez Mont put a hex on
Brady. The Patriots lost to the New
York Giants to ruin their perfect season. They lost again to the Giants in
the Super Bowl four years later.
Outrageous scenes like this have
become the norm at the Media Day
extravaganza. The event is a circus.
More than 5,500 journalists, pseudojournalists and other credentialed
“media” are expected to gather for
Tuesday’s celebration at the US Airways Center.
Last year in New York, an Austrian
man dressed as Mozart, another guy
wore a Waldo costume, Nickelodeon’s Pick Boy was in the house and
Michelle Williams, former Destiny’s
Child singer, asked players to sing.
At least both teams are quite familiar with the silliness.
The Seahawks played along nicely
with the odd requests last year. A
man asked Seahawks center Max
Unger if he could touch his long,
scruffy beard. He said yes. A woman asked Seahawks defensive lineman Brandon Mebane for a kiss. He
politely declined.
Richard Sherman drew the largest crowd and he spoke for an hour.
Marshawn Lynch predictably walked
out and spoke only to NFL Network’s
Deion Sanders.
All eyes will be on both players
Tuesday, but it’s usually a non-player
who steals the spotlight.
Here’s a list of the wildest moments
in Super Bowl Media Day history:
VOODOO: St. Louis Rams quarterback Kurt Warner was outspoken
about his Christian faith, but that
didn’t stop someone from making
an unusual request in Atlanta in
2000.
“Do you believe in voodoo, and
can I have a lock of your hair?” Warner was asked. His response was a
simple, polite “No.”
The Rams beat the Tennessee
Titans 23-16 and Warner was MVP.
[email protected]
D3 WOMEN’S TOP 25
The Maryville College
Scots used a stingy defense
in the final 10 minutes, as
well as a career-high 16
points from Rachel Hawn
to overcome an 11-point
deficit and continue their
15-game winning streak.
A flurry of Maryville
turnovers gave Methodist (2-12, 2-6 USA South)
an opening, as the Monarchs took advantage for
a 46-35 lead with just over
six minutes remaining in
the game.
Over the next six minutes, though, Scots coach
Darrin Travillian turned up
his team’s defensive effort
after a timeout. Behind the
team’s full-court press, the
Scots rallied for an 18-2
run over to close the contest — holding Methodist
scoreless over the final 4:39
to secure the 53-48 USA
South win.
“I’m so proud of my girls
tonight,” Travillian said in a
press release. “We dug ourselves a hole, but we kept
digging in and believing.
We finally applied enough
pressure to turn the game
around in the closing minutes.”
Mindy Brackins came
alive during the comeback
surge for Maryville (16-1,
8-0), scoring eight of the
Scots’ 18 points. She went
3-of-3 from the free-throw
strip, hit a 3-pointer and
converted an old-fashioned
3-point play.
Lauren Trent and Alex
Bond each converted on
long-range shots, while
Bond and Hawn netted layups. Jordan Ballard also tallied three charity tosses in
the final run.
The come-from-behind
victory continues the
Scots’ historic start, moving their record to 16-1.
That start ranks as the best
No. 23 MARYVILLE 53,
Methodist 48
in school history for the
women’s basketball team,
topping the 14-1 mark set
in 2012-13.
Maryville’s defense
stepped to the plate, on a
night the team could only
muster a 32.8 percent outing (20 of 61), while the
Scots could only convert
on 4-of-20 3-point field
goals (20 percent).
Maryville converted 9
of 10 free throws, two of
those coming from Ballard in the final two seconds, while the Monarchs
could only convert on 7 of
14 attempts.
Hawn led all scorers with
her career-high 16 points.
She added six rebounds to
her total, as well. Brackins totaled 14 points for
Maryville, while Linley
Dunn tallied eight.
Bond had five points, six
rebounds and two assists,
while Ballard had three
points, three steals, two
rebounds, two assists and
two blocks. Trent added
three points of her own,
with three rebounds, three
assists and two steals.
Mackenzie Puckett and
Joanna Young each added
two points.
For Methodist, it was
Sydney Bryan that led the
way with 10 points. Jalisa
Campbell pulled down 11
rebounds to go with her
seven points off the bench,
while Jasmine Canaday and
Bryan each tallied three
blocks.
Maryville advanced to
8-0 in USA South play with
the win, leading the conference’s South Division
rankings. MC will travel
to Southern Division foe
Piedmont (14-2, 7-1) Saturday for a 4 p.m. start.
Randolph, Gasol
TYSON: Heritage game convinced UTC to begin process work magic for Griz
FROM 1B
fullback, Tyson officially
visited the Mocs this past
weekend, soaking up all
that both the city and campus had to offer.
The sights, however, were
quite familiar.
“Taharin, I made sure he
was with me the whole
weekend, and with him
being there four years
before me, I had already
known the players pretty
well because I’d go down
there some and stay with
them,” Tyson said. “It was
just really like another
Alcoa team.”
After leading the Tor-
nadoes to a state title in
his junior season, Tyson
ripped through the initial
part of his senior campaign
with authority, rumbling
for more than 700 yards
and 12 touchdowns through
Alcoa’s first five games.
It was the following week
— just days prior to the Tornadoes’ Sept. 26 showdown
with Heritage — that UTC
first began to take a liking
to the 5-foot-10, 210-pound
running back.
“(UTC wide receivers)
coach Will Healy, my recruiter, he came to (Alcoa) that
week,” Tyson said. “He told
me he’d be back to watch me
that Friday.”
Healy certainly got his
money’s worth.
On 33 carries, Tyson bulldozed his way to 276 yards
and five touchdowns, nearly single-handedly lifting
Alcoa to a 52-35 win over the
crosstown Mountaineers.
Healy had witnessed all
he needed. It was time to
inform the boss.
“After that,” Tyson said,
“(Healy) told (UTC head)
coach (Russ) Huesman that
he’d be crazy not to recruit
me after watching me play
in that game.”
From there, Tyson’s relationship with UTC only
strengthened. He visited
a handful of Mocs football
games — including their
Oct. 11 showdown in Knoxville — and took countless
trips down to Chattanooga
to visit his cousin.
Tyson even got a brief
taste of UTC’s Finley Stadium, where he carried a
career-high 50 times for
266 yards and three touchdowns en route to a 28-19
win over Notre Dame in the
Class 3A semifinals.
“We’ve kept the (Alcoa)
legacy going of just being
pretty good athletes,”
Tyson said. “That says a
lot about the people that
have come before us.
“They’ve showed us the
way, and we followed it.”
MANNING: Injuries late in season remain a big concern
FROM 1B
the perfect pair in Denver.
Two mad scientists who
liked to floor the highoctane offense. Now, Gase
is in Chicago with John
Fox, and Gary Kubiak is
the Broncos coach and Rick
Dennison his top offensive
assistant.
Although Kubiak’s West
Coast offense doesn’t at
first glance seem to jibe
with Manning’s improvisational style, Kubiak said it’s
“easy to build a playbook
for him.”
Sure, he’s going to be 39,
Kubiak said, “but he threw
35 touchdowns last year.”
Thirty-nine, actually.
“Thirty-nine? Look what
he continues to do. The
offense Peyton runs, he’s
tremendous at it, back
there in the gun controlling the game, controlling
the line of scrimmage.
Nobody has ever done it
better and he’s the master
at it,” Kubiak said.
BETTER PROTECTION: Manning paid a big price for
Denver’s trouble-filled
offensive line, and Elway
said he’ll fix it this offseason.
Two starters — center
Will Montgomery and left
guard Orlando Franklin —
are among Denver’s dozen
unrestricted free agents.
The other starters: Ryan
Clady, Louis Vasquez and
Manny Ramirez will be
trying to recapture their
old form after substandard
seasons.
AGE OR INJURY: Was that
fizzling finish an omen
or an aberration? Even
if Manning determines
it was health, not age, to
blame, he has to decide
if he’s willing to put his
body and mind through
the grind of another season.
“I could see Peyton going
both ways,” Davis said.
“There’s no guarantee that
if Peyton comes back he’s
going to be in any better
situation.”
But the reality is that’s
not how most of us leave
this game.
“And so, that’s really the
question that only Peyton
can answer: How does he
feel right now? And not
right now, give him about
a month or so and get away
from this stuff, detox and
heal up.”
Patriots owner stands up for team, coach
The Associated Press
CHANDLER, Ariz.
— New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft
demanded an apology
from the league once the
Patriots are found to be
not guilty of breaking
any rules regarding using
under-inflated footballs
in the AFC championship
game.
A conclusion Kraft is
certain will occur.
“I believe unconditionally that the New England
Patriots did nothing wrong
in this process that was in
violation of NFL rules,”
Kraft said at the team’s
first media availability in
Arizona.
“If the (Ted) Wells investigation is not able to definitively determine that our
organization tampered
with the air pressure in the
footballs, I would expect
and hope the league would
apologize to our entire
team, and in particular
to coach (Bill) Belichick
and Tom Brady, for what
they’ve had to endure this
week,” Kraft added.
BY CLAY BAILEY
The Associated Press
FINAL
MEMPHIS 103, Orlando 94
MEMPHIS — Zach Randolph had 24 points and 10
rebounds, Marc Gasol added 16 points and 10 boards,
and the Memphis Grizzlies
beat the Orlando Magic 10394 on Monday night.
Beno Udrih added 15
points and Jeff Green finished with 12. Randolph
also had six assists for
Memphis, which won its
third straight.
Orlando, which dropped
its sixth in a row, got 18
points and 12 rebounds from
Nikola Vucevic. Victor Oladipo also had 18 points and
Elfrid Payton had 12 points
and six assists, but shot 5 of
14 from the field. Dewayne
Dedmon had 10 points and
10 rebounds.
Memphis led by as many
as 20 and held a doubledigit advantage through
much of the game. Both
teams shot 47 percent for
the game.
Memphis seemed in control in the fourth, still holding the double-digit lead
it had since the midway
point of the second quarter. Orlando cut it to 101-91,
thwarting Memphis coach
Dave Joerger’s plan to rest
most of his starters for the
bulk of the final period.
Inserting a couple of
starters was enough to
send Memphis to its eighth
straight win over the Magic, who outscored the Grizzlies 21-14 in the fourth.
By halftime, Memphis
already was ahead 67-48,
the Grizzlies’ highest point
total for a half this season.
Randolph had 18 points and
Gasol 10 as Memphis shot
just under 60 percent.
The shooting and only six
turnovers allowed Memphis to take the lead to 20
in the first half.
Meanwhile, Orlando
shot 47 percent with Payton missing seven of his 10
shots in the half.
TIP-INS: Magic — The sixgame losing streak matches
Orlando’s longest slide of
the season. .Vucevic has 27
double-doubles this season.
Orlando reserve Tobias
Harris finished with eight
points, marking only the
second time in 41 games.
GO ONLINE TO
photostore.thedailytimes.com
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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
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Medical / Dental
Daily Bridge Club
FULL TIME LPN
Trials and errors
By FRANK STEWART
Tribune Content Agency
“Your honor,” the District Attorney
stated, “we will prove that South
committed a felony in that he booted
a cold game.”
“Proceed,” the judge instructed,
and the court kibitzed the evidence.
“Against four spades,” the DA said,
“West led a trump. Declarer won in
dummy and led a heart to his king,
and West took the ace and led a
second trump. South won that and led
a second heart, but East won and led
a third trump, removing dummy’s
last trump. Then declarer’s third heart
was a loser, and he also lost a club.”
overcalls one spade. What do you
say?
ANSWER: This is a problem that
negative doubles were devised to
handle. You hold enough values to act
but have no appropriate bid at the two
level. A double, by agreement, shows
length in hearts plus either diamonds
or club support. But if your opponent
had jumped to two spades, your hand
would be too weak to act.
South dealer
N-S vulnerable
DAILY QUESTION
You hold: 5 4 A 10 8 4
Q 10 8 6 3 J 8. Your partner
opens one club, and the next player
WEST
5 4
A 10 8 4
Q 10 8 6 3
J 8
SANDY SPRINGS TOWNHOUSES 2
& 3Bd, 1.5Ba, W/D connection.
$675/mo., $250 deposit. 1485 Lori
Lea Dr., Maryville City. 984-2466
JOIN OUR AWESOME TEAM
WALNUT SQUARE Commercial
Rental Spaces available. Call 865981-8954.
1 year Assisted Living/Memory Care
experience preferred.
*PRN LPN positions all shifts.
*FT, PT & PRN CARE ATTENDANT
positions all shifts.
Must pass drug & background
screens. EOE
EAST
7 6 2
Q J 6 5
K J 9
Q 7 5
SOUTH
K J 9 8 3
K 9 2
A
A K 10 4
South
1
4
Chota Community Health
Services, Madisonville, TN,
is seeking full-time LPN.
Requires Tennessee
License, current CPR
certification; experience
preferred. Competitive
wages and benefits, health
insurance, 401K.
Send resume to
[email protected].
Bring all pertinent documentations
such as IDs, certificates & licenses to:
Williamsburg Villas, 3020 Heatherton
Way, Knoxville, TN 37920.
NORTH
A Q 10
7 3
7 5 4 2
9 6 3 2
FIRST HEART
“It is our contention,” the DA went
on, “that South should play his nine
on the first heart. West wins with the
ten and leads a second trump, and
South wins in dummy and leads a
heart to his king. When West wins, he
has no trumps left, and South ruffs
his last heart in dummy.”
How would you rule?
Find South guilty of a misplay. His
actual play could have been right if
East held the ace of hearts and the
clubs broke badly but was against the
odds.
West
North
Pass
2
All Pass
REQUEST FOR BID
2015 John Deere 997 Z-Trac Commercial Mower with 72 inch side discharge deck. ROPS and roof canopy,
liquid cooled, hydrostatic transmission, suspension seat. Plus mulch kit.
Bids must be received in a sealed envelope by 2:00PM February 10th at:
Maryville-Alcoa-Blount County Parks
& Rec c/o Tom Sims, Maintenance
Superintendent
316 S. Everett High Rd.
Maryville, TN 37804
If additional information is needed,
please contact Tom at 865-805-2789.
January 27, 2015
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Alcoa City Schools is currently
seeking technology bids. More information can be found on
www.alcoaschools.net.
January 27, 2015
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Maryville is looking for a
location to dispose of waste dirt which
may contain clay, rock and asphalt.
Anyone willing to accept this type of
soil can contact Scotty Martin, City of
Maryville Water and Sewer Department at 865-273-3365.
January 23-27, 2015
CDL CLASS A
DRIVER
Local only, $14/hr.
Benefits available.
4 Years Experience
Kellems Recycling
865-740-7990
Food Services
METZ CULINARY MANAGEMENT
at Maryville College is now hiring for the
following positions: Full time Grill Operator and Part time Supervisor. If interested send e-mail to [email protected]
General Help Wanted
BICYCLE ENTHUSIASTS
Cade's Cove Trading Co. is looking
for mechanically inclined individuals
willing to be trained and certified on
bike building, maintenance and safety. Seasonal jobs begin Mar.1 and
end Oct 31. Salary $8-$10/hr depending on exp. 303-258-6720 or apply on line at cadescovetrading.com
Entry level, operating mower, trimmer,
chainsaw, litter clean-up, athletic field
maintenance, painting, etc. 40 hrs/wk,
$24,100/yr + full benefits. Apply or send
resume: Maryville-Alcoa-Blount Co.
Parks & Rec., 316 S. Everett High Rd.,
Maryville, TN 37804. Applications also
available online at www.parksrec.com,
About Us, Employment Opportunities.
Apartment / Duplexes
DISHWASHER
Lost and Found
MISSING PET?
Be sure to check with the
local animal shelter.
Maryville Animal Shelter
865-681-2241
Blount County Animal Shelter
865-980-6244
Of Interest
PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD
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.
FOR 10 YEARS, our trained,
bonded and insured CAREGivers
have provided home care services
for local seniors. Call us.
Home Instead 865-273-2178.
Child Care
3RD SHIFT CHILDCARE for ages 4
to 13. For safe, dependable child care
call now, 865-936-0511.
FIND IT!!! SELL IT!!!
Whatever you need...
THE DAILY TIMES
Classifieds can help!
1 & 2 BR, C/H/A, W/D conn., referencess & lease, no pets. Starting at
$275/mo. + deposit. 982-6446
1 BEDROOM on small farm. Utilities &
W/D included. Fenced yard, pet welcome. Avail. Feb. 1. $650 660-5732
1-2 BR APTS.
$325-$395, No Dogs.
865-977-4300
1354 LODWICK DR.
2BR, 1BA DUPLEX. Both units for
rent immediately! Quiet with large
yard, new paint & floors. $600/mo.
+ $600 deposit. Call 865-978-2070
or muna.tn.properties@ gmail.com.
NOW HIRING FT & PT Cleaners.
Background check & drug testing required. Call 865-556-0459.
2BR, 2BA 1200 SF, appliances, CH/A,
water & lawn care furnished. $700/mo.
+ dep. No pets. Call 865-363-8847.
Medical / Dental
627 GRANT ST Alcoa schools! Remodeled 2BR, 1BA with new CH/A &
W/D connection! $550 per month. Call
Bill Mclain with Realty Executives at
865-454-1451 or 865-983-0011
NEED NIGHT CAREGIVER for Fri.Sun., 7pm-7am. Must be able to
transfer patient from lift chair to
wheelchair and to bed. Patient has no
strength to assist with caregiving.
Paid weekly. Call 865-256-8807.
ORAL SURGERY OFFICE seeks
RDA. FT Position. Fax Resume to
865-977-4132.
NOW HIRING:
We are hiring for positions in Packing, Picking
Mushrooms, Forklift Driving, and Truck Drivers. If you
have a great attitude and strong work ethic, come by
our facility and apply in person: 19748 Hwy 72 N in
Loudon. EEO M/F/D/V
TRABAJO DISPONIBLE
Estamos buscando personas para trabajar en
los siguientes áreas: Empaque, Piscar Hongos,
Montecargas y Conductores. Si tiene buena actitud y
una ética de trabajo fuerte, viene por la facilidad paras
aplicar: 19748 Hwy 72 N, Loudon. EEO M/F/D/V
3BD/2BA SINGLEWIDE in Friendsville.
Not in park. $450/mo., $450 deposit.
No pets, references. 865-582-5411
2BD, 1BA All appliances & lawn care
included. No pets, no smoking inside.
$700 per month. 865-982-2039
3 OR 4 BED/OFFICE, 2 bath, 2 car
garage, open floor plan, hardwood.
$1500/mo. + $1500/dep. 865-257-7503
3BR/2 BA Double Wide $5000
down (Why rent when you can
own). Owner Finance with monthly
payments.
3BR, 2BA, CH/A, totally remodeled
throughout. $850 mo. + dep. 865-9847495.
3BR/2BA “Great Community
near Walmart” $3,000 down &
own it in 5 yrs.
3BR, 2BA, MARYVILLE CITY, large,
like new. No Pets. $1000 mo. Call
865-406-3166.
**YOU CAN Rent It or YOU CAN Buy
It!** “WE FINANCE” Regardless of
Credit! Many Available 865-696-2571
3BR, 2BA, next to Eagleton Elem.
School. No pets, no smoking. $850
mo. + dep. Call 865-216-1118.
FIRST TIME BUYERS
Why rent when you can own?
No money down & under $850
1-800-899-4057 ID#1052
RE/MAX FIRST
612 Crawford St.
Maryville, TN 37804
(865) 981-1004
www.maryvillerentalproperties.com
2363 SKYVIEW DR (HOUSE)
3Bd, 2Ba $1250/mo., $1250 dep.
153 S. MAGNOLIA ST (APT)
1Bd, 1Ba $395/mo., $395 dep.
EXPERIENCED climber, bucket operator & grounds person for Tree Service
needed immediately. 865-977-1422
ORAL SURGERY OFFICE seeks AR
clerk for Ins. Dept. FT position. Must
have experience with medical and
dental insurance. Fax resume to 865977-4132.
Houses For Rent
314 RUSSELL RD (HOUSE)
3Bd, 1Ba $850/mo., $850 dep.
2BR, 1BA Very clean, W/D conn., all
appliances, eat in kitchen. 1 level.
No pets/smoking. $600 977-7831
Deadline for Corrections:
Noon 1 day prior to publication.
865-981-1170
Classified hours are:
Monday-Friday 8am-5pm
Adult Care
$345 - $450 GREAT VALUE,
RIVERSIDE MANOR, Alcoa Hwy.
865-970-2267 1, 2 & 3 BR's
riversidemanorapts.com
NOW HIRING Cashier, day & night
shift. Exp. a plus. Apply at Rite Stop,
102 Calderwood Hwy., 865-977-0124
CHIROPRACTIC ASSISTANT & CNA
needed. Drug test may be required.
Call 865-977-0916 for appointment.
LAKEFRONT - Attractive Townhouse,
2Bd, 1.5Ba, 1 mi. off Airport Hwy. on
Little River. W/D hookup, balcony, boat
dock. 1 yr. lease $850. Larry Henry
865-607-3472.
3BR, 2BA, CH/A, all appliances, very
nice. Lawn care furnished. $850 mo.
+ dep. No pets. Call 865-363-8847.
Shannondale of Maryville is currently
looking for a Dishwasher. We offer
competitive pay and benefits. Apply in
person to Shannondale Way. EOE
FT NANNY NEEDED by professional couple in Maryville to care
for girl (4) and boy (2) during afternoons and early evenings. Catfriendly, non-smoker, laundry/light
housekeeping.
$15-20/hour.
Please email [email protected].
Condominium Rental
3BD, 1BA 807 Mountain View near
Maryville High School. $800/mo., references/deposit. No pets. 982-3244
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
We have a great team and want you
to be a part of it! FT/PT flex hours
available in outbound call center.
Will train! BI-LINGUAL candidates
also needed. 865-246-1823 or send
resume: [email protected]
Mobile Manufactured
Home Rentals
2BR, 1BA Mobile Home, good condition, 1 mi. from Lanier School. No
pets. $500mo./$500dep. 389-5404
CONTENT MANAGER
The
(Maryville,
TN)
Daily
Times/TheDailyTimes.com,
an
award-winning multimedia outlet
near Knoxville, has an opening on its
Newsroom content management
team. The preferred candidate will
have keen news judgment; excellent
grammatical and writing skills; excellent knowledge of software and processes related to preparing content
for print and online production, including Adobe InDesign, InCopy and
Photoshop; and basic knowledge of
Web-related technologies. The preferred candidate will have a bachelor's degree in communications or an
equivalent degree. He or she will be
deadline conscious, objective and
able to accept constructive criticism.
Send non-returnable PDFs of a cover letter, resume and samples of
your print page design and/or online
work to [email protected].
The Daily Times is an equal-opportunity employer.
MOBILE HOME LOTS $200
www.edgeotownmhc.com
Or 865-719-1467
FULL-TIME
MAINTENANCE WORKER
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Driver OTR / Delivery
Commercial Rental
LOT FOR RENT Maximum size,
14x60. Garbage pick up included.
No outside pets. $150/mo. 982-5222
2 or 3 BR, $400-$550 mo.
Rent to own, Friendsville.
No pets. Call 865-995-2825.
East
Pass
Opening lead — 4
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.
Mobile/ManufacturedHome Lots
Professional
General Help Wanted
Public Notices
Apartment / Duplexes
GRAYSON APTS. in Alcoa. 2BR,
$550/mo., 3BR, $650/mo. Housing
accepted. Showing 7 days/week by
appt. 865-982-3427
NO RENT TIL FEBRUARY 1st. New
spacious, upscale Condo. City of
Maryville, loaded with extras. 2BR,
2.5BA, $850 mo. 865-216-3983
325 ROCKFORD CEDAR ST (MH)
2Bd, 2Ba $650/mo., $650 dep.
322 RUSSELL RD (HOUSE)
2Bd, 1Ba $700/mo., $700 dep.
447 PINE LAKES LANE (CONDO)
2Bd, 1.5Ba $825/mo., $825 dep.
1910 E. BROADWAY (HOUSE)
3Bd, 1Ba $850/mo., $850 dep.
MOBILE HOME PARK located off
Hwy 411 S. 2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes.
$400-$500 month. Call 865-856-0639.
WHY RENT when you can own?
Small down payment, no banks.
2BR/1BA in Walland. 865-548-2021
WHY RENT when you can own?
Small down payment, no banks.
2BR/2BA Louisville. 865-548-2021
Mobile/Manufactured
Home Sales
1989 16x80 MOBILE HOME 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace. $7,000. 865983-5272
I BUY OLDER
MOBILE HOMES
Any size, age considered.
Call 865-207-8825
USED 14X60 Set up in Little River
MHP. 2Bd, 2Ba with all appliances &
H/AC. Only $8,995. 865-207-8825
Shared / Roomates
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share large
country home. $450 mo. for lg. furnished BR with private kitchen, bath &
entrance. For more info 865-984-7495.
Antiques
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TRADIN' TREASURES
Vacation / Time Share
BEAUTIFUL OCEANFRONT
2Bd, 2Ba, sleeps 8 on beautiful Cocoa Beach. Steps from Cocoa
Beach Pier. Recently remodeled.
1st & 2nd weeks in May. $6000 per
week or $10,000 for both.
423-949-9114
on AM 1470
Saturdays
9am to 10am
To Hear YOUR Ad!
Appliances
M&D APPLIANCE Paying $20-$30.
Kenmore, Whirlpool, Roper Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Fridges.
Steve 253-6172 or Ernie 659-9198.
Monterey Mushrooms is seeking Class A
CDL Drivers to join their growing team!
REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER Side by
side with water & ice dispenser, lazy
Susan & can holders. Very Good condition. $249 cash. 865-679-8102
Local, overnight, regional, and team routes
are available. We also offer a BONUS PROGRAM!
Baby Items
0)'(-&'## '' "'
"*!#"('#*&/ ,$&""($'(
!#"('+("#!#&("!#*"
*# (#"'+("(&-&'
NEWBORN up to 12 mos baby girl
clothes, walker, car seat, Pack N Play &
more, like new. 336-2286 or 244-8188
0 (#(* -"(&(+()'(#!&'"$&'#""#"(
( $#"
Building Materials
0''&)('("*"#$&#&$#'(*('('#&&)' '
"(#"(#$''"&"#!&)" ## ('('
BAMBOO 1-3 inches diameter. Up to
15 feet long. 40 pieces. Can be cut
on site. $100 865-982-9460
0)'(#&"."( #&"(
0 (-(# ()$(#
')" #"'($&#)((#
)'(#!&'&%)&!"('
Clothing
0 (-(#&"(&$&("$$ - +'&) '"&) (#"'
Z-COIL SPRING Shoes, men's sz.
14, like new worn 1 time. Paid $250,
asking $100. Call 865-977-4366.
0' (&#" #"'-'(!(#)&( -&#& - #'
#&#")(-&*"#)&'#")(-"#"&*"#)&'#)(-
#)&'"' $&&(#)&'
Firewood
For questions or more information, please contact Casey
Long at (865) 408-1857 or Bob Carey at (865) 408-1843. To
pick up an application, please visit our facility at 19748 Hwy
72 N Loudon, TN 37774.EOE/AA Employer /D/M/F/V
PAYING TOP DOLLAR for standing
timber, hardwood & pine, 5 acres or
more. 865-982-2606.
Furniture
2 LARGE RATTAN CHAIRS Faux
red leather seats. $200 865-748-5574
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Furniture
Lawn & Garden
Miscellaneous
3 TALL (34”) Bar Stools, special order, bronze metal, never used. $350
for all 3. Call 865-983-6345 for pics.
GARDEN TRELLIS All wood. In good
condition, like new. 50 inches x 7
feet. $5 865-982-9460
ANTIQUE ARMOIRE made into TV
and stereo center. $75 865-748-5574
Miscellaneous
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.
CHAIR All wood with padded seat.
Very sturdy and beautiful. Beige fabric, dark wood. Solid oak construction.
$65 865-705-3792
CHILD'S DESK Small, antique, very
unique, excellent condition. All wood.
24" tall X 24" wide X 12.5" deep. $85
865-705-3792
LARGE WALL MIRROR 24" wide x
51.5" tall. All Wood. Dark stain. $45
865-705-3792
OBLONG COFFEE TABLE & square
end table. Both glass and wrought
iron. $150 865-748-5574
CLASSIFIEDS | 7B
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
ANNUALS OF AMERICA 1976 Encyclopedia Brittanica. Like new condition. $25 865-724-7711, leave message.
BURN BARRELS, $12. Call 865-9820522 or 292-8798.
WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIAS
1973 with year books 1974-1987.
Like new condition. $25 865-7247711, leave message.
Looking for that second vehicle?
Check out The Daily Times’
TRANSPORTATION section
for the Best Deals in Town!!!
Musical Instruments
GUTIAR Yamaha FG 700S. Mint
condition. 865-724-7711, leave message.
Sporting Goods
2 GOLF CARTS (1) Yamaha gas cart
& (1) Club Car battery cart. $1700
each. 865-684-8158
Automotive Parts /
Accessories
Want To Buy
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
Domestic Pets
We buy scrap cars.
PAYING CASH
CABLE'S RECYCLING
Mon-Fri. 9a-5:00p & Sat, 9a-3p
*Cans .55/lb., *Batteries $10/$13
*Computer Towers $2 ea.,*Alum. .45/lb.
*Scrap Metal $7/$9. Now Buying Gift
Cards, Cell Phones & Catalytic Conv.
JUNKERS &
CLUNKERS!
ASCA REG. AUSSIE PUPS 6 wks.
old, Black tri's, male & female. 1st
shots. 865-250-0403
865-556-8812 or 865-556-8845
FREE TO LOVING HOME Female
Chihuahua, white, loves being with
kids. Approx. 6 years old. 865-3081695
WE BUY Used Furniture, Antiques,
Estates. Hall's Furniture & Auction
865-983-1598 or 865-983-2465
Pet Supplies
DOG HOUSE Homemade. All wood.
$150 865-982-9460
Farm Equipment /
Supplies
HIGHEST price
paid in East TN!
WE ALSO BUY
YOUR OLD
CLUNKER!
865-856-4590
LIKE NEW 2003 Chevy fiberglass low
top bedcover for a pick-up truck, red.
New $1200, asking $700. 659-9481
SET OF 20” Mag. Wheels, fits Chevy
pickup, excellent condition. New
$1200, asking $600 obo. 659-9481
Autos - Imports
100 PLUS cars $5,995 or less.
DougJustus.com New location:
Airport Motor Mall.
Midland Plaza
Tractor Parts,
Accessories &
Farm Antiques
984-6385
Hay, Feed, Grain
Just Cut - HAY ROLLS, $35 ea.,
Square bales, $4/bale & Construction
Hay, $4/bale. Call 865-235-2357.
Antique / Collector
Vehicles
87' TOYOTA 4x4, x-tra cab, AC, auto,
many new parts, low miles, sharp,
$5000. Call 865-242-6210.
Automotive Parts /
Accessories
$3000
$2000
You Know Better
JUNK CARS
Call for best
CASH offer.
1995 OLDSMOBILE CIERA SL Cold
air, super nice, good mileage. $2990
865-308-2743
FSOB 2000 Jag “S” model. V8, very
good condition, low miles. $5750
865-233-3352 or 865-850-4786
watersmotorsinc.com
3019 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy.
A short drive to Waters Motors
will save you money!
Motorcycles
GREAT RIDE
Under 7,000 miles! 2009 Yamaha VStar 250, rides smoothly and quietly.
Under the KBB, asking only $1,900.
Call 865-724-7788.
SUVs / Jeeps
2007 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER SS V8,
red, 4 door, tilt cruise, power seat/windows, loaded. 20” wheels with 4 new
tires with less than 300 miles. Excellent
cond. 74K miles. $16,000 970-7422
Trucks - Domestic
2007 CHEVY 2500, Allison auto
trans., 2WD, dual max diesel, 4 new
tires, extra clean, $8500. 308-2743
Trucks - Imports
Free Pick up!
865-216-5052
04 TOYOTA TACOMA 4x4 double
cab, 3.4 V6, ARE camper shell, Yahoma roof rack, sprayed bed liner,
160K. $13,000 Call 865-742-3013
Adult Care
Drywall
Home Improvements
Masonry
Plumbing
Roofing
CHORE & HOMEMAKER
ASSISTANCE
Need help with daily tasks?
I clean homes, have car to run errands to store, pharmacy & doctor.
Also do yard work or clean gutters,
etc. Call 6am-2pm, 983-0382 or
2pm-10pm, 244-0520.
ALL DRYWALL REPAIRS,
patching, finish, texturing. Small
jobs OK. Rocky Top Drywall
865-335-4877 or 865-771-0812
*HELP IS A PHONE CALL AWAY
Carpentry, screening, painting,
plumbing, pressure washing
& miscellaneous repairs.
Honesty & Integrity, Lic. & Ins.
BRICK/BLOCK MASON
SANDS PLUMBING
TERRY MORTON
Air Conditioning
SUTTON'S AIR COMFORT
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
Excavating
FARMERS EXCAVATING
*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
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
Concrete Services
BILL'S CONCRETE SERVICE
Grade, Form, Pour, Finish,
30 Years Experience
Bill Correll 865-856-8632
CUSTOMS CONCRETE
SERVICES
Grade, Form, Pour & Finish
Driveways, Slabs, Patios & More
No Job Too Small!
Licensed & Insured
865-266-0293 865-801-5597
STORY CONCRETE
Form, grade and finish, driveways,
slabs, parking lots, etc. 25 plus
years' experience. 865-977-4373
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
The Handi-Helper
865-681-8298
KENNY'S HOME REPAIR
& REMODELING
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
Lawn Maintenance
BLOUNT LAWN SERVICE, LLC
All lawn care, All landscape.
Licensed General Contractor
Irrigation Specialist
Tree Removal & Stump Grinding
Free estimates, Lic. and Ins.
(865)805-4572 or 805-1147
www.blountlawnservice.com
20 YEARS MAINTENANCE EXP.
No Job Too Small!
Free Estimates, Vietnam Vet.
865-388-0029
FULL SERVICE LAWN CARE,
LLC. Licensed & Insured,
ONE MAN HANDYMAN
Painting, flooring, baths, kitchens &
more. Very experienced, take pride in
workmanship. Call 865-320-7267.
Call Taylor or Josh
Free Estimates.
Trust us for all your
lawn care needs.
865-776-5791 or 865-776-7328
[email protected]
All Types Brick Work & Repair
Quick, Professional Service
35 Years Experience
Christian Ethics
Licensed & References Available.
Please Call 865-216-7474
Miscellaneous
MURPHY'S
BOBCAT
Fill dirt and gravel. Year round
dry topsoil. Mushroom Compost
by scoop or dump truck load.
865-389-7231
Painting
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
PAINTING – Interior & Exterior,
Pressure Washing. 40 yrs. exp.
Terry Morton 865-661-1015
or 865-984-5059.
Paving
SEALCOATING
Dedicated to excellence
& service!
™FrdoZcPipes
™Free:htimates
™DraicCleaning
™ResidentialCommercial
™LicensZYInsured
™Caaa24/7
CdJdWIddSmall/TodBig
865-209-5195
Remodeling
BUILD DECKS & REMODELING
Best carpenter in town. Hire the
best, not the rest. Terry Morton
865-661-1015 & 865-984-5059.
ROCKY TOP BUILDING
& REMODELING
Painting, Doors/Windows, Honey-Do
List, Drywall, Siding, Trim Work, Fixtures. Licensed & Insured 254-3455
Restoration
DAVID LEE NICHOLS
Roofing/Siding Replace & Repair
Int. & Ext. Paint & Stain
Chem prep Mold Removal System
Complete Home Restorations
Debris cleaning & removal
Walker Home & Business Sec.
Guards. All local workforce,
$20 hr. 865-210-3005
Roofing
™Driveways
™Parkin\Lots
™HoiRubberized
Crac`Sealing
™Striping/Pavement
Markings
LiXZchZYInsured
www.asphaltmaintenanceoftn.com
865-719-2340
**2014 Reader's Choice
Runner-up**
SAVE UP TO 20%
on your energy bills with added
attic insulation.
R19 insulation at 90¢/sq. ft.
CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
™Hhingles ™Betal Roofing
™Eressure Washing
Free Estimates
38 yrs. experience
References on request.
865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059
Siding
AFFORDABLE SIDING
AND GUTTERING
Call James Stinnett
at 865-977-9092
Tree Services
!! 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
GOT STUMPS?
™Hmall $5 and up
™Bedium $25 and up
™AVg\Z$40 and up
Job minimum $50.
865-984-8815
Its Pruning Season. We have 2
Certified Arborist on staff to help
you. We have Workers Comp...
do they? 865-980-1820
JIM'S TREE SERVICE
AND LANDSCAPING
™Igee Removal
™8lean-up ™Ig^bb^ng
™Lot 8aeag^ng
;gee Esi^mates, Ins. & Ref.
865-233-4212 or 865-209-3864
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, January 27, 2015
WEATHER, PUZZLES | 9B
THE DAILY TIMES
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
www.thedailytimes.com
Today
Wednesday
Mostly cloudy
Thursday
Mostly sunny
Light wind
Friday
Partly cloudy
Chance
showers
Saturday
Mostly cloudy
Light wind
TEMPERATURES
,- +1#$"#&)/ 44°/32°
Normal high/low........................ 48°/29°
Record high.............................. 74° (1950)
Record low ................................. 5° (1940)
41 22 43 31 4934 4327 4433
-# +,1,- ',(*+ $*$--$)(!)+ ,-!)+())(-)1 '* +-.+ )&)+(,+ -)13,*+ $- #$"#,
Billings
63/38
Minn. St. Paul
35/26
San
Francisco
62/49
Los
Angeles
67/52
Denver
69/38
H
H
H
H
Anchorage
9/-3
Juneau
29/22
#!"
() **,)
'.
() **,)
'$
)'&+
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1075'
# +)% 1002'
)."&,
1710'
)(-(
)+-).).( 813'
$/,, 1526'
&-)($&& 795'
1020'
)++$,
(- -&# 1941'
Atlanta
52/33
Houston
75/50
Honolulu
79/65
Miami
70/54
NEWSMAKERS
++#'&)0
)'&+
"'. )*
*+')%*
#&
$,))# *
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*
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For Tennessee, low clouds are
expected to return to eastern areas
Tuesday morning.
'0 '%'))'.
#+0
#'/ #'/
Bristol
36/17/fl
40/25/s
Chattanooga
46/28/pc 47/33/pc
Crossville
37/21/sn 44/33/pc
Gatlinburg
39/22/fl
45/29/s
Jackson
48/29/pc 54/45/pc
Johnson City
36/19/fl
42/26/s
Kingsport
38/19/fl
42/26/s
Knoxville
41/22/pc 44/31/pc
Memphis
53/33/pc 57/48/pc
Nashville
43/27/pc 48/38/pc
HOROSCOPE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015:
This year you have an unusual
opportunity to go for what you
want, especially in your personal
life. You are also likely to change
residences or remodel your home.
Typically you back away from
major changes, but the next 12
months will change your perspective on many things.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
★★★★ You might be overthinking an investment or an interaction
with a higher-up, so much so that
an obsessive quality could emerge.
Consider taking a walk or joining a
friend for a leisurely lunch.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
★★★★★ Be willing to push
back if someone tries to run an
idea or plans over you. This person
can be extremely domineering. You
might wonder when to put a halt
to this behavior.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
★★★ You could be taken aback
by how demanding a key person
in your life might be. You’ll wonder what is going on, but it would
be best to neutralize the situation
for now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
★★★★ You might want to distance yourself from a difficult person. Try to do some research and
investigate a situation involving
both of you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
★★★ You might sense that it is
time for a change in your daily life.
The area you’ll opt to transform
could be your health, your routine
or a new hobby.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
★★★★ Allow your creativity to
open you up to a new approach in
your life. You will have more confidence than you have had in years.
If you feel scattered, stop and refocus as well as prioritize.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
★★★ You have a tendency to
be too serious at times. When you
feel cornered by an aggressive
associate or loved one, you might
add a lot of chaos to what could
be simple.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
★★★★ You might want to loosen up and rethink a decision, especially if a close associate or loved
one chooses to challenge you. Ask
yourself when it would be appropriate to step back and say “no.”
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
★★★★ Pace yourself, and get
as much done as possible. Someone you care a lot about could be
very distracting. Make more time
to be with this person, and clear
out what is on your mind.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
★★★★ You could be overwhelmed by what is happening
between you and someone else.
Don’t back away, which probably is
what you usually do.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
★★★★ You’ll open up new
doors through a long-overdue conversation. This important interaction might come out of a disruptive
situation. Both of you could be on
the defensive. Clear your head and
go for a walk. You will see the matter quite differently as a result.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
★★★★★ Share more of your
feelings with someone who cares a
lot about you. You might discover
that you are on target with an
important situation.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
'0 '%'))'.
#+0
#'/ #'/
Atlanta
52/33/pc
52/29/s
Atlantic City
32/16/sn
29/9/pc
Baltimore
35/19/fl
33/18/s
Birmingham
53/31/pc 54/39/pc
Boston
25/11/sn
24/8/sn
Charleston, SC 53/31/pc
51/30/s
Charlotte
46/26/pc
47/29/s
Chicago
31/18/cd 37/33/pc
Cincinnati
29/15/pc 34/29/pc
Dallas
74/49/pc 75/50/pc
Denver
69/38/pc 55/29/pc
Destin
63/42/pc
57/48/s
Houston
75/50/pc 75/55/pc
'0
#+0
#'/
Jacksonville
59/35/pc
Las Vegas
64/45/sh
Los Angeles
67/52/pc
Louisville, KY
37/20/pc
Miami
70/54/s
Myrtle Beach
48/30/pc
New Orleans
64/45/s
New York City
24/18/sn
Orlando
64/42/pc
Philadelphia
31/16/sn
Raleigh
45/26/pc
San Francisco
61/50/pc
St. Louis
45/30/pc
Washington, DC 37/24/fl
'%'))'.
#'/
57/33/s
65/48/pc
70/55/pc
40/33/pc
68/57/pc
45/33/s
60/47/s
26/11/pc
63/43/s
30/14/pc
43/26/s
60/49/pc
54/40/pc
37/26/s
'+#'&
-&$(.+"
**&#$(
-&))# %$ #
* ,&*
.......... 8
26 - 36"
........ 12
40 - 65"
.......... 17
55 - 61"
...........11
14 - 42"
GOOD
#&'$$,+&+ PM2.5
'0 good
7:39
a.m. 5:57 p.m.
12:18 p.m. 1:09 a.m.
Feb. 3
Full
Feb. 11 Feb. 18 Feb. 25
Last
New
First
Trivia Fun by Wilson Casey
In 1998 what became the first TV series to win five Emmy Awards in one year?Seinfeld, Friends,
Simpsons, Frasier
Who gets credit for the invention of swim fins? Robert Fulton, Charles Darwin, Benjamin Franklin,
Mark Twain
During which century did Columbus make his 4th trip to the New World? 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th
More teasers? Comments? [email protected] — See answers below Sudoku
NEED ADVERTISING?
Call us
!!
today! Advertising Team
865-981-1150
CRYPTOQUOTE
,)) &+ ")
- $ "&!
1045.0'
0.3'
'
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1653.4'
0.4'
809.6'
0.2'
1484.5'
0.5'
794.2'
0.2'
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1939.1' -1939.1'
'++ *+ 80° at Santa Ana, CA
''$ *+ -24° at Saranac Lake, NY
)%
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PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 6 p.m..................... 0.10"
Month-to-date.................................. 3.33"
Normal month-to-date....................3.61"
Year-to-date...................................... 3.33"
Normal year-to-date........................ 3.61"
--$,-$,+ -#+)."#'1 ,- +1
Washington D.C.
37/24
Kansas City
54/37
DFW
Metroplex
72/46
HUMIDITY
*'-)1 82%
Chicago
31/18
H
H
offthemark
LL
New York
24/18
Detroit
25/11
$(",,)!*'1 ,- +1
McCain gives thumbs
up to ‘Sniper’ movie
WASHINGTON —
The chairman of the
Senate Armed Services
Committee says critics
of U.S. foreign policy
are disparaging
the movie
“American
Sniper”
and deniJohn
grating the
McCain
memory
of Chris
Kyle, the
U.S. serviceman depicted in the film.
In a statement Monday, Sen. John McCain
congratulated director
Clint Eastwood and
the cast and crew of the
movie for honoring the
life of Kyle whom he
calls an American hero.
The Arizona Republican says the film offers a
compassionate portrayal of service members,
their wartime experiences, the burdens they
often bear upon returning home and untold
sacrifices of their families.
To critics like Michael
Moore, a documentary
maker, the film glorifies
violence.
Moore, a staunch
opponent of the U.S.
invasion of Iraq in
2003, tweeted about the
movie: “Snipers aren’t
heroes, and invaders are
worse.”
Watson set to play
Belle in ‘Beast’
NEW YORK — Emma
Watson will play Belle
in Disney’s live-action
remake of “Beauty of the
Beast.”
The Walt Disney Co.
announced the casting of the “Harry Potter” star Monday, setting
the prettier half of the
romance at the center of
the fairy tale. Who will
play the Beast hasn’t yet
been announced.
In a Facebook message, Watson said that
she was a huge fan of the
tale while growing up
and that her “six-yearold self is on the ceiling.” She added: “Time
to start some singing
lessons!”
Watson had long been
attached to the project, but it’s taken several years for the film to
come together.
10B | CLASSIFIEDS
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
OPEN
t)JHIXBZ4PVUI.BSZWJMMF5/
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TRUCKS
WE BUY CARS
WE BUY TRUCKS
MANAGERS SPECIAL
4x4, Auto #7369
#7293
$ 4 ,9 9 5 .B[EB4QPSU
5SVDL
6 cyl, 2wd, Good Tires, 61k
Auto, 4x4, Local Trade #7290
$ 3 ,9 9 5
%PEHF3BN
3FH$BC
%PEHF3BN
&YU$BC
%PEHF3BN
MANAGERS SPECIAL
$8 ,2 5 0
Ext Cab, 2WD, PL-PW
2wd, Running Boards #7081
$ 8 ,9 9 5 $IFWZ4JMWFSBEP 'PSE'&YU$BC
Camper Top, Auto, 101k,
Auto, 6.0, 72k #C8396
Auto, 87k, 2WD #7132
$ 7 ,9 9 5
'PSE'&YU$BC
$IFWZ
'MBUCFE
#6837
$9 ,9 9 5
$1 0 ,9 9 5
%PEHF3BN
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4,
Local Trade #7387
Auto, 2wd, 81k, Air,
PL-PW #7264
$1 0 ,9 9 5
$1 1, 4 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
%PEHF3BN
Ask
Open
%PEHF3BN
'PSE'
'PSE'
'PSE'
Open
$SFX$BC
'PSE'
$SFX$BC%JFTFM
4VQFSEVUZ&YU$BC
for
lana
Sunday
5.9
Cummings
Diesel,
4x4,
4QPSU
Auto,
4x4,
Air
8am-7pm
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, 5 cyl,
Auto 2WD, 4-Door, Local
2-Wheel Drive, PL-PW, Air
-POH#FE3FH$BC Auto, Powerstroke Diesel,
4x4, Auto, 122k
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local
#7403
12-5:30
#7121
4x4, New Tires #7305
91k, Auto, 2WD #7255
Lift Kit, New Tires #7384
Trade, PL-PW, Air #7381 or Nick
#7028
Daily
Trade #7366
$1 3 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 3 ,9 9 5 $1 2 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 4 ,9 9 5 $1 1, 9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5
$IFWZ
3FH$BC
72k Miles, Auto #7410
$1 1, 9 9 5
$IFWZ4JMWFSBEP 'PSE'$SFX
&Y$BC-4
$BC'MBUCFE
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, 109k
#C3456
Auto, 6.0 Powerstroke Diesel #402
'PSE'&YU$BC
4x4, PL-PW, 6 Speed, Power Stroke
'PSE'
'PSE'$SFX$BC'9
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4
Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4,
Navigation, Sunroof #7199
#7320
$2 2 ,9 9 5
$1 7 ,9 9 5
'PSE'$SFX
$BC,JOH3BODI
15$SVJTFS
$4 ,9 95
Auto, PL-PW, Local Trade
Auto, PL-PW, Air
#7216
#7135
$6 ,4 95
Auto, Leather, 4x4, PL-PW,
Air #7365
Auto, V8, PL-PW, 4x4, 5.7
Hemi, Leather #7277
$1 9 ,9 9 5
$2 4 ,9 9 5 $6 ,4 95
$2 6 ,9 9 5
$1 9 ,9 9 5
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, 4k, Lift
Kit, Chrome Rockstar Wheels
#7270
$3 2 ,9 9 5
LOW, LOW RATES
MANAGERS SPECIAL
MANAGERS SPECIAL
'PSE'PDVT4&4
.FSDFEFT4-
Leather, Auto, PL-PW,
2 Door #7236
Auto, 126k, PL-PW #7086
$7 ,9 95
#C2121
Crew Cab, 90k Miles,
Leather, Power Sunroof,
4x4, PL-PW #C7889
%PEHF3BN$SFX$BC
Auto, 4x4, Leather, PL-PW, Air
$2 5 ,9 9 5
-JODPMO.BSL
-5
$1 9 ,9 9 5
'PSE'$SFX
$BC
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, PS,
CD, 43k, Local Trade #7364
CARS
7PMLTXBHFO+FUUB
/JTTBO4FOUSB
%PEHF3BN
$SFX$BC
'PSE'$SFX$BC
-BSJBU
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 109k, 4x4
#7178
$IFWZ4JMWFSBEP
$SFX$BC-5
$1 8 ,9 9 5 %PEHF3BN$SFX$BC
$2 3 ,9 9 5
WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS
Air, Auto, Leather, PL-PW,
Sunroof, 81k Miles #7219
$1 8 ,9 9 5
Auto, 6,0, Pl-PW, Leather #7396
$2 3 ,9 9 5
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air,
4x4, Z71 #7385
7.3 Powerstroke Diesel,
4x4, PL-PW #7406
4x4, Crew Cab #6953
$1 6 ,9 9 5 (.$4JFSSB
&YU$BC
'PSE'
&Y$BC
Auto, 111k, PL-PW, Air,
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 WD,
Diesel Powerstroke 6.0 #7319
$IFWZ4JMWFSBEP-5
Diesel #7309
$2 1, 9 9 5
'PSE'$SFX$BC
'9
$1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 %PEHF%BLPUB
$SFX$BC
$IFWZ$PMPSBEP$SFX$BC
$IFWZ.BMJCV
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 cyl
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Local
Trade #7172
#7391
$8 ,0 00
/JTTBO"MUJNB
$8 ,9 95
$9 ,9 95
MANAGERS SPECIAL
.FSDFEFT#FO[4
'PSE-JNJUFE
7PMLTXBHFO#VH
-JODPMO-4
Auto, 68k, Leather, Pl-PW, Air
Auto, Leather, Sunroof
Auto, PL-PW, 54k Miles, 4 door #7411
#7246
#7376
$9 ,9 95
$1 0, 99 5
/JTTBO4FOUSB
)POEB"DDPSE
%PEHF$IBSHFS
Auto, 52k Miles, 2-Door, Air #7183
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 62k #7249
$1 2 ,4 95
"VEJ"5
12 7PMLTXBHFO+FUUB4&
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air
#7211
#C4132
'PSE&YQFEJUJPO
#7343
#7344
Auto, PL-PW, Air
$5 ,9 9 5
#7054
$1 7, 99 5
46k, PL-PW, Air, Black Leather, 6-Speed
#C1122
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather
Auto. PL-PW, Air, Leather, 88k
$1 0, 99 5
$ISZTMFS$
*OGJOJUJ4
Auto, 4 Door, PL-PW, Leather, Power
Sunroof, Heated Seats #C8888
#7100
$1 3, 99 5
.JOJ$PPQFS$POWFSUJCMF
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, 57k Miles, Local Trade
6-Speed, 43k, Leather #C9876
.FSDVSZ.BSJOFS
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Local Trade
#7217
$6 ,4 9 5
$7 ,9 9 5
'PSE&YQMPSFS
$IFWZ5BIPF
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air
135k, Leather, Sunroof, 2WD,
PL-PW, Air #C3555
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air,
New Tires, Local Trade #7298
$8 ,9 9 5
$8 ,9 9 5
$1 4 ,9 95
$IFWZ$BNBSP44;-
25k, Auto, PL-PW, Leather #C7777
$2 8, 00 0
SLASHED PRICES
$IFWZ5BIPF
#7253
#C7771
$2 5 ,9 95
$1 1, 4 95
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 89k
$1 4 ,4 95
$2 5 ,9 95
5PZPUB"WBMPO-JNJUFE
*OGJOJUJ(
$PVQF$POWFSUJCMF
#7407
#7254
$1 1, 30 0
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof
$2 2 ,9 95
#VJDL-BDSPTTF
SUVs & VANS
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 2wd
$1 3, 99 5
LOW, LOW RATES
'PSE&TDBQF
#C55572
$IFWZ$PSWFUUF
2.5, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 Door, 27k
$1 5 ,9 95
$1 3, 5 00
$IFWZ.POUF$BSMP44
$1 0, 99 5 Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 34k
#7214
75k Miles, Auto, Leather, PL
$8 ,9 9 5
+FFQ8SBOHMFS
5 Speed, 6 cyl, 4x4
#7328
+FFQ(SBOE
$IFSPLFF-BSFEP
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air,
6 cyl #7291
$9 ,9 95 $1 0 ,9 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
'PSE&YQMPSFS9-5
V6, Auto, PL-PW, Air,
4x4 #7200
$1 0 ,9 9 5
'PSE&TDBQF
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 94k
#7198
$1 2 ,9 9 5
'PSE&YQMPSFS
Auto, Eddie Bauer, 3rd Row, 2wd #7195
$1 3 ,9 9 5
'PSE&EHF
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, AWD
#7377
$1 3 ,9 9 5
+FFQ(SBOE
$IFSPLFF-BSFEP
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #C7654
$1 7 ,9 9 5
$BEJMMBD&TDBMBEF
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Third
Seat #7321
$1 7 ,9 9 5
+FFQ8SBOHMFS9
2wd, Unlimited Sport, 4 Door Soft
Top #C4567
$1 7 ,9 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
+FFQ8SBOHMFS
5 speed, 78k Miles, 4x4, Air
#7345
$1 8, 9 9 5
$IFWZ5BIPF-5
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat,
Leather, 4x4, CD #7259
$1 8, 9 9 5
+FFQ8SBOHMFS
Auto, 67k Miles, 4x4, Air
#7356
$1 9 ,9 9 5
$IFWZ4VCVSCBO-5;
Auto, Third Seat, Leather, 4x4,
PL-PW #7355
$2 1, 9 9 5
,JB4FEPOB
'PSE&DPOPMJOF7BO
%PEHF(SBOE$BSBWBO
Auto, 68k, PL-PW, Local Trade
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade,
Great Shape #7367
Auto, Stow & Go Seats, PL-PW,
Air, 75k #6670
#7174
$6 ,4 9 5
$6 ,9 9 5
$6 ,9 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
$7 ,2 5 0
'PSE&YQMPSFS7BO
Auto, Leather, Captain Chairs,
PL-PW, Air, 57k Miles #7408
$8 ,9 9 5
%PEHF(SBOE$BSBWBO
7PMLTXBHFO3PVUBO
89k, Auto, Third Seat, PL-PW #7339
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat
$8 ,9 9 5
#7338
$1 0 ,4 9 5
All prices include $250.00 doc fee. Not included TT&L.
/JTTBO2VFTU
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 92k,
Local Trade #7161
$1 1, 4 9 5
$ISZTMFS5PXO
$PVOUSZ
Auto, 3rd Seat, PL-PW, Air #7294
Not Actual Colors Shown in pictures above.
$1 3 ,9 9 5
)POEB0EZTTFZ&9Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof,
Power Doors & Hatch, 82k, DVD #7017
$1 6 ,9 9 5
45026149DT
'PSE'SFFTUZMF
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Third
Seat #8978