Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Page 1

The Mountain Press ■ Sevier County’s Daily Newspaper ■ Vol. 25, No. 287 ■ October 14, 2009 ■ www.themountainpress.com ■ 50 Cents

Wednesday

Not guilty plea for Carter in sex case

INSIDE

Local doctor will stand trial in December for rape, aggravated sexual battery By JEFF FARRELL Staff Writer

5Thumbs up for Lady Tigers Pigeon Forge drops Grainger County on Senior Night Sports, Page A8

SEVIERVILLE — The attorney for Dr. Rodney Carter officially entered a plea of not guilty Tuesday for the physician on charges of improper sexual conduct with patients at his clinic. A Sevier County Grand Jury returned a sealed presentment in March charging Carter with three counts of rape and three counts of

aggravated sexual battery. Attorney Bryan Delius entered the not guilty plea in Sevier County Circuit Court on Tuesday. The charges arose after one of his Carter alleged victims told another physician about one of the encounters with Carter. Sevierville Police investigated the allegations

and eventually took their evidence to the grand jury. Carter’s trial is slated for Dec. 9. In the meantime, he remains free on $200,000 bond and is working toward getting his license reinstated. The Board of Medical Examiners suspended his license shortly after his arrest. Delius will present the case for his reinstatement to an administrative law judge in Sevier County later this month.

n jfarrell@themountainpress.com

Ex-supervisor at jail pleads to sex charge

5Good news, bad news ... Contraceptive use up worldwide; thousands of women die in abortions WORLD, Page A18

Lintner faces 1-2 years for illegal contact with inmate

State

UT at Knoxville getting good books

By JEFF FARRELL Staff Writer

Late Memphis professor arranged to sell part of rare Bible collection Page A6

Weather Today Rain High: 57°

Tonight Mostly cloudy Low: 50° DETAILS, Page A6

Obituaries Edward Wear, 56 W.D. Kilby, 79 Robert Sommer, 89 Helen Younes, 84 James Rolen, 82

DETAILS, Page A4

Index Local & State . A1-A4,A6 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . A3 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . A7 Sports . . . . . . . . . . A8-A11 Money . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Advice . . . . . . . . . . . A16 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . A16 Classifieds . . . . . A12-A15 Nation . . . . . . . . . A5,A17 World . . . . . . . . . . . . A18

Corrections Due to incorrect information provided to The Mountain Press, the name of one of the contestants in the Sevier County Right To Life Cutest Baby Contest story in Monday’s edition was misspelled. Brady Salisbury, whose parents are Kevin and Trina Salisbury, was a contestant. The Mountain Press is glad to set the record straight.

He has said in the past that they immediately began gathering evidence for that hearing as well as the criminal trial, and look forward to the opportunity to present that evidence at the appropriate time. Carter is the owner of Leconte Family Practice on Upper Middle Creek Road. Another physician, Dr. James Foster, joined the clinic so that it could remain open during the suspension.

Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press

Paul Lintner looks over at the prosecution table during the plea agreement Tuesday.

SEVIERVILLE — A former kitchen supervisor at the Sevier County Jail pleaded guilty Tuesday to a single count of having sexual contact with an inmate. Paul Lintner faces one to two years in jail and a fine of up to $3,000 for the felony charge. His sentence was not set in the plea agreement; Circuit Judge Richard Vance will determine that at a Dec. 8 hearing. With the guilty plea, the state dropped five additional charges against Lintner. District Attorney General Jimmy Dunn said the state wants Lintner to serve time in jail. The attorney represent-

ing the former inmate that Lintner victimized said they were satisfied with the plea. “We are happy with the guilty plea, and it reflects what our investigation showed,” Dana Pemberton said. “We appreciate the efforts of the district attorney’s office and particularly Assistant District Attorney Steve Hawkins.” The Mountain Press generally does not identify victims of sex crimes. The victim in this case has filed a federal complaint against the county seeking $15 million in damages. A second inmate has filed a complaint claiming Lintner harassed him, but did not have intercourse with him. While Lintner announced he was pleading guilty, his See SUPERVISOR, Page A5

Kodak man charged with criminal homicide Staff report A Sevier County man has been charged with criminal homicide in connection with the death of a 76-year-old Knoxville woman, Blount County Sheriff James Berrong said Tuesday. Tracy Lynn Fox, 37, of Kodak was found in Chattanooga early Sunday

morning in possession of Wanda D. Britt’s vehicle. Britt had been reported missing in Knox County Friday. Saturday her body was found in a remote location off Quarry Hollow Road in Friendsville, a community southwest of McGhee-Tyson Airport. Fox was named a person of interest Saturday, and

authorities in Chattanooga and Knoxville began looking for the vehicle. Fox had been held for questioning Fox Sunday night in the Blount County Jail in connection with the death of

United Way Oktoberfest gets new home, lower price Fundraiser set for Thursday at 5 p.m. at Ober Gatlinburg By DEREK HODGES Staff Writer GATLINBURG — It’s not exactly the Bavarian Alps, but Ober Gatlinburg seems to be about as close as you can get in Sevier County to a German landscape. That’s why it seems fitting to United Way supporters that they hold their annual Oktoberfest celebration at the ski resort starting at 5 p.m. Thursday. The event, which is only a few years old, is modeled after the traditional German celebration of the same name, United Way Director of Marketing Elaina DeLozier explains. “Guests will enjoy traditional

German food, beverages, polka music and games, not to mention the breathtaking views of the Smoky Mountains from Ober Gatlinburg,” DeLozier says. “This event will feature traditional German fun and games like the chicken dance, a live auction and more.” Among the items set to be included in the auction are vacation packages, sports memorabilia, artwork from local artists and leather goods. Additionally up for sale will be a “No- kill bear hunt,” in which participants will stalk the Smokies’ best-known and mostpopular wildlife inhabitants. This is the first year the event has been held at Ober Gatlinburg and attendees will also find a change in the bill, with the price of tickets slashed by a third, down to $50 per person. All See OKTOBERFEST, Page A4

Britt. Blount County investigators said Fox was located in Chattanooga at 5:15 a.m. Sunday. He became a person of interest when he was seen driving the murdered woman’s 2009 Dodge Caliber in Knox County on Saturday afternoon. Blount County authorities said Fox has a criminal

record in Sevier and Knox counties. Britt’s body was reportedly found by a man on a fourwheeler at around 11 a.m. Saturday in Friendsville. Sevier County dispatchers received a call early Saturday afternoon saying the SUV had been seen on Styles See HOMICIDE, Page A4

Wears Valley Methodist fundraiser

Derek Hodges/The Mountain Press

Shoppers browse the rummage sale during Wears Valley United Methodist Church’s fall festival this weekend. See article on Page A3.


A2 â—† Local

The Mountain Press â—† Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Arrest report Editor’s Note: The following information was taken from the intake reports at the Sevier County Jail. All people listed within this report are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law. u Joshua Allen Brantley, 20, of Knoxville, was charged Oct. 12 with DUI and financial responsibility law. He was being held in lieu of $3,500 bond. u John Michael Brennan, 23, of 5019 Bogart Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with domestic violence assault and theft of property worth $500 to $1,000. He was being held in lieu of 5,000 bond. u Tiffany L. Brennan, 23, of 5019 Bogart Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with theft of property worth $500 to $1,000. She was being held in lieu of 2,500 bond. u Rebecca Gail Bright, 25, of Bedias, Texas, was charged Oct. 11 with two counts of theft of property worth $500 to $1,000. She was being held. u Jonathan Andrew Coley, 31, of Rock Hill, S.C., was charged Oct. 11 with domestic violence assault, vandalism $500 to $1,000 and assault. He was being held in lieu of $15,000 bond. u Sammy Lee Gibson, 21, of 2412 Big River Overlook Drive in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held. u Luis Alberto Guerra, 23, of 3105 Clintwood Way #19 in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 10 with driving on a revoked license and criminal impersonation. He was being ehld in lieu of $2,500 bond. u Emilio Guiterrez, 59, of 3029 Jess Wilson Road #15 in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 11 with DUI. He was being ehld in lieu of $2,500 bond. u Coby Ray Hartsell, 30, of 415 Dumplin Creek Treaty Drive in Kodak, was charged Oct. 12 with unlawful possession of a weapon and traffic violations. He was released on $5,000 bond. u Randy Hayes, 46, of 802 Holbert Lane in Kodak, was charged Oct. 11 with violation of probation. He was released. u Michael Darren Jones, 47, of 225 Byrd Farm Lane in Kodak, was charged Oct. 11 with violation of probation. He was being ehld. u Daniel Fredrick Lewis, 28, of Dandridge, was charged Oct. 11 with violation of probation. He was being held. u Ronald Lee Mason, 35, of 345 Happy Trails Way in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 11 with violation of parole. He was being held. u Julie Amber McManes, 32, of 2403 Waldens Creek Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with reckless endangerment, child restraint law, violation of implied consent law and a second count of DUI. She was being held in lieu of $10,000 bond.

u Rusty Sahne Ott, 21, of Knoxville, was charged Oct. 10 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held. u Hope Suzanne Pierce, 23, of Marvyille, was charged Oct. 11 with public intoxication. She was released. u Kevin Randall Pruitt, 31, of Dahlonega, Ga., was charged Oct. 12 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held. u Joanna Marie Quint, 21, of 2240 Binginham Island in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with theft of property. She was released on $2,500 bond. u Bengie Ray, 34, of New Market, was charged Oct. 11 with a circuit court warrant. He was released. u Bryan Tate Shultz, 35, of 605 Railroad St. in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with public intoxication. He was released. u James Edward Sizmemore Jr., 36, of 729 Posty Way in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 11 with theft of property. He was being held in lieu of $3,000 bond. u Joseph Ray Struth, 32, of 1199 Robinson Gap Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 11 with shoplifting, two counts of violation of probation and a juvenile court warrant. He was being held. u Jennifer Renee Walling, 24, of 2328 Big River Overlook in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 11 with shoplifting. She was released. u Dana Watkins, 27, of Strawberry Plains, was charged Oct. 11 with theft of property worth $500 to $1,000. She was being ehld. u Russell Wayne Webster, 53, of Jefferson City, was charged Oct. 9 with DUI. He was released on $1,500 bond. u Chad Erick Bolin, 36, of Strawberry Plains, was charged Oct. 12 with burglary. He was being held in lieu of $5,000 bond. u Michael Dennis Brooks, 40, of Louisville, Tenn., was charged Oct. 13 with carrying a weapon while under the influence, possession of drug paraphernalia and sample possession. He was being held in lieu of $1,250 bond. u Miguel Calderon, 22, of 1558 Middle Creek Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court and criminal impersonation. He was being ehld in lieu of $250 bond. u Donovan James Davis, 23, of 4124 Briggs Loop in Kodak, was charged Oct. 12 with a misdemeanor warrant from general session court. He was being held. u Bryan James Johnson, 39, of 4325 E. Scenic Drive in Gatlinburg, was charged Oct. 13 with three counts of writing

worthless check worth $1,000 to $10,000 and two counts of writing worthless checks worth $500 to $1,000. He was being held in lieu of $6,000 bond. u Jessica Dan McQueen, 27, of 2020 Ridge Road in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 12 with DUI. She was released on $2,500 bond. u Tiosha Lovette Repass, 33, of Strawberry Plains, was charged Oct. 13 with burglary. She was being held in lieu of $2,500 bond. u Adam Lee Spurgeon, 23, of 1303 Gnatty Branch Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 13 with aggravated burglary, theft of property worth $10,000 to $50,000, burglary and aggravated burglary. He was being held in lieu of $50,000 bond. u Millard Ellis Spurgeon, 19, of 1303 Gnatty Branch Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with aggravated burglary and theft of property worth $10,000 to $50,000. He was being held in lieu of $40,000 bond. u Kasheef Tawheed, 34, of 3846 Hickman Road in Kodak, was charged Oct. 12 with aggravated burglary. He was being held. u Holly Ann White, 35, of 1528 Seagle Hollow Road in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 12 with theft of property. She was released on $1,500 bond. u Earl Victor Williams, 38, of Lenoir City, was charged Oct. 13 with driving while revoked and a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held.

Knox man charged with sale, delivery of cocaine Being held on bond of $50K Submitted reports A Knoxville man has been arrested for sale and delivery of crack cocaine. Sheriff Ron Seals said Tuesday that Brian Allen Spears, 29, of 3829 Speedway Circle, Knoxville, was arrested after he delivered approximately three grams of

crack cocaine to an undercover agent of the Sevier County Sheriff’s Office Street Crimes Unit. The Monday arrest was a result of an ongoing investigation of crack cocaine being delivered into Sevier County from the Knoxville area, Seals said. Spears was taken into custody without incident and transported to Sevier County Jail where he was charged with one count of sale and delivery of a

Schedule II drug (crack cocaine) and was arraigned before a m a g i s trate. Bond was set at Spears $50,000. A Nov. 4 hearing date has been set in General Sessions Court. The Street Crimes Unit was assisted in the arrest by the Sevierville Police Department.

Wild Game Cookout to benefit United Way From Submitted Reports SEVIERVILLE — On Nov. 14 from noon to 5 p.m., New Orleans on the River will host “The 407 Wild Game Cookout� benefiting the United Way of Sevier County. Area entertainers will perform all afternoon. An auction of items from area businesses will also be conducted. A variety of wild game dishes will be served with other traditional dishes. Tickets can be purchased at the door or in advance at the restaurant, BB&T

Bank on Winfield Dunn Parkway and from various Sevierville 407 Merchants. Tickets are $15 for adults and $7.50 for children 10 and under. Call 933-7244 for additional information or to get tickets. The cookout is sponsored

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Local â—† A3

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 â—† The Mountain Press

WSCC will ‘Rock On’ Thursday, Friday

COMMUNITY CALENDAR Editor’s Note: The community calendar is printed as space permits. Only noncommercial, public events held in Sevier County will be considered. They are listed by date. To place an item phone 428-0748, ext. 214, or e-mail to editor@themountainpress.com. Items may be faxed to 453-4913.

Wednesday, Oct. 14 Lost Cajuns

Social group of Louisiana natives, The Lost Cajuns, meet for dinner 7 p.m. at Popeye’s, 601 Parkway, Sevierville. RSVP required to 748-7122 or e-mail to lostcajuns@hotmail.com.

Gatlinburg Golf

Rotary golf tournament at Bent Creek to benefit Gatlinburg Rotary Foundation for community projects. Fax

request for registration to 430-4488.

Sevierville Garden Club

Sevierville Garden Club meets at noon, Senior Center. Speaker will be Dustin Manning from D. Garden on unique flower arranging using fall flowers. Lunch provided. Board meeting 11 a.m.

Sevierville Story Time

Preschool story time 10:30 a.m. at Sevier County Main Library with The Puppet Lady. 453-3532.

Angel Tree

Salvation Army Angel Tree assistance sign-ups 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Friday. Bring Social Security cards for all in the household, proof of income and expenses, and picture ID to 806 W. Main St. in Sevierville.

Thursday, Oct. 15 Hot Meals

Smoky Mountain Area Rescue Ministries hot meals canceled this week at First United Methodist Church in Sevierville and will resume Oct. 22.

Amateur Radio

Sevier County Emergency Radio Services meet at 7:30 p.m. at Emergency Operations Center, Bruce Street. E-mail to n4jtq@live. com or call 429-2422.

ABWA

American Business Women’s Assn. meets at Holiday Inn Pigeon Forge. Networking 6 p.m., $13 dinner meeting 6:30. RSVP to 933-4048 or visit www.abwasevier.org.

DAV

Disabled American Veterans and Auxiliary meet 6 p.m. for potluck dinner and 7 p.m. for meeting at Fort Sanders Sevier Senior Center.

Angel Tree

Salvation Army’s Angel Tree sign-ups 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Friday. Bring Social Security cards for all in household, proof of income and expenses, and picture ID to 806 W. Main in Sevierville.

Submarine Veterans

Smoky Mountain Sub Vets meet 6 p.m at the Islamorada Restaurant in Bass Pro at Exit 407. All Submarine Veterans welcome. www. SmokyMountainBase.com, 429-0465 or 692-3368.

Human Resources

The Human Resources Association of the Smoky Mountains meets 8 a.m. in the Citizens National Bank Training Room located upstairs in the Courthouse Plaza at 130 Bruce Street, featuring Mike Hudson, SHRM Region Rep, who will be discussing affiliation with the National association of the Society for Human Resources. 607-1194.

Friday, Oct. 16 Smoky Mountain Bazaar

Smoky Mountain Bazaar 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Saturday at St. Mary’s Church, Gatlinburg. Includes bake sale, wreaths, handcrafted items. Proceeds benefit local charities. 436-4907.

Women’s Bible Study

Haunted House at Kodak Boys & Girls Club 7:30-11 p.m. today and Saturday, 4125 Douglas Dam Road. $5. 933-3718.

Rummage/Bake Sale

TOPS

TOPS weight loss chapter meets at 6 p.m., Parkway Church of God in Sevierville. 755-9517 or 429-3150.

Tan Son Nhut

Tan Son Nhut Assn. meets today through Oct. 18 at MainStay Suites in Pigeon Forge. Retired Navy Lt. Michael Thornton, last Medal of Honor awarded for Vietnam, will speak. 870-9328085 or www.tsna.org.

GateKeepers

Gatekeepers Men’s Community Bible studies: n 6:30 p.m., 2445 Scenic Mountain Drive, Sevierville. 310-7831. n 6:30 p.m. Seymour UMC, Chapman Highway. 436-0313.

Community rummage/bake sale 8:30-4:30 today and Saturday, Methodist Church pavilion in Wears Valley. Proceeds used for Mattox Cemetery. Items needed to sell. 453-2558, 654-7005 or 453-3095 after 5 p.m.

SEVIERVILLE — The Professional Entertainment Department at Walters State presents “Rock On!�, a celebration of rock ‘n’ roll ranging from “Blue Suede Shoes to “Bohemian Rhapsody,� on Thursday and Friday in the Conner-Short Center. The Thursday performance will feature appetizers prepared by students of the Rel Maples Institute for Culinary Arts. The cost for performance and food is $35, and service begins at 7 p.m. Audience members just wishing to hear the music can come at 8 p.m. Thursday or 7 p.m. Friday for $10. “The appetizers are so heavy that many would consider it a meal,� said Deborah Hicks, director of the Professional Entertainment Program. “We also wanted to provide options for people who just wanted to enjoy the music.� Many of the musical numbers are performed as full productions, choreographed

Church holds two-day festival as missions fundraiser WEARS VALLEY — Wears Valley United Methodist Church’s fall festival is a melding of missions fund raiser, community gathering and ministry outreach that is so much of a mainstay that no one can exactly remember how or when it started. The annual celebration was held this weekend, with church members and visitors alike braving the cool weather and soggy church yard to take part in what, for some, has become a yearly tradition. “We have people who plan their vacations around it,� event volunteer Chris Fitzpatrick said. “It’s a great event.� The 2009 festival filled the church’s yard and fel-

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Fall Harvest Festival 5 to 8 p.m. at Catlettsburg Elementary School. Free admission: games, cake walks, concessions, haunted house, duck pond, photo booth and more.

Aero Club

Smoky Mountain Aero Club meets 7 p.m. at the Sevierville Community Center. 604-5211 or 4283663.

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The cast of “Rock On!� rehearses a number from a set of 1950s music. The show will be performed Thursday and Friday at Walters State Community College in Sevierville. with performers dressed in costumes. Others feature soloists. The show begins with the birth of rock ‘n’ roll, including “Blue Suede Shoes,� “Whole Lot of Shakin’� and “Sixteen Candles.� The concert then pays tribute to the Beatles.

Hicks said the Beatles tribute will end with a rendition of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band� complete with uniforms courtesy of the Sevier County High School Band. Student performers will be backed by musi-

cians who play for various theaters in Pigeon Forge. Choreography was done by Pedro Tomas, an adjunct faculty member. For more information or to make reservations, call 7745800 or e-mail to Deborah. Hicks@ws.edu.

Wears Valley Methodists welcome fall By DEREK HODGES Staff Writer

Garlands of Grace women’s Bible study: n 9 a.m. UMC Pigeon Forge n 2 p.m. Blue Mountain Mist B&B, Pullen Road, Sevierville

Kodak Haunted House

From Submitted Reports

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Several upscale home sites are still available and Cool Springs offers good views, swimming pool, street lights, sidewalks and many other amenities! Let your kids check out our playground while you enjoy free hot dogs. For more information call 755-5325. Owner/agent

lowship hall for two days with crafts, food, baked goods and a rummage sale. The church’s singing quartet, the Valley Voices, which spends most of its time ministering at nursing facilities and other local gathering places, also provided entertainment. Money raised during the event, which goes to the church’s United Methodist Women organization, will be used to supplement missions activities throughout the year. As Fitzpatrick explained, that means the benefit will accrue to Sevier County Food Ministries, Mountain Hope Good Shepherd Clinic, Safe Space, Wearwood Elementary School students who each year receive coats from the church and a list of other local ministry efforts.

Beyond those, the festival itself has its way of reaching people with the church’s message. “It brings people together,� Volunteer Mary Ann Everett said. “There’s great cooperation.� Organizers recount stories about the event’s history, like the one about the man from Georgia who had stopped going to church but, after experiencing the hospitality and generosity of the local folks, started attending services again with his wife. Even Everett herself, who moved to the area from New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina ravaged that city, made her decision to join the church based in part on the festival activites. “This is a great community event,� she said. “We probably do get a lot of

new members from this.� That community spirit may just be one of the most important things about the event. In unincorporated Wears Valley, most folks used to know all their neighbors. Now, with new people moving in every day, it seems, and rental cabins dotting the landscape, it can sometimes be hard to find community among the somewhat loose assortment of people. For those in the church and those who have made a habit of coming to the festival, the event is one of those times when Wears Valley most feels like a community. “The fellowship is unbelievable,� volunteer Barb LeGrand said. n dhodges@themountainpress.com


A4 â—† Local

The Mountain Press â—† Wednesday, October 14, 2009

OBITUARIES

In Memoriam

Edward Robert Wear M.D.

Edward Robert Wear M.D., age 56 of Sevierville, passed away Thursday, October 8, 2009. Dr. Wear served Sevier County as a physician for almost 29 years. Ed was often seen by his friends at Gatlinburg Country Club and was a member of First United Methodist Church, Sevierville. He was preceded in death by his father Robert Edward Wear and niece Jessica Leigh Shilling. Survivors: wife, Charlotte Greene Wear; sons, Robert and Eddie Wear; mother, Margaret Waters Wear; sister and brother-in-law, Gloria and Howard Shilling; father-in-law, Howard Greene and wife Joe; brothers and sisters-in-law, Deborah and Joel Goldberger, David and Sandy Greene, Danny Greene and Deborah Mollish, Kenneth and Jill Greene; nephews and nieces, Jamie and Alex Goldberger, Adam Greene, Andrew and Katrina Shilling; special friends, Bob Reagan, Gene Griffitts, Phil Williams. Memorial donations may be made to First United Methodist Church, Sevierville, 214 Cedar Street, Sevierville, TN, 37862 or Dr. Robert F. Thomas Foundation, P.O. Box 4395, Sevierville, TN, 37864. Memorial service 7 p.m. Thursday at First United Methodist Church, Sevierville with Rev. Charles C. Harrison, Sr. and Rev. Bruce Adams officiating. A eulogy will be delivered by Phil Williams. The family will receive friends 4-6:30 p.m. Thursday at First United Methodist Church, Sevierville. Arrangements by Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville. n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

In Memoriam

Helen Deeb Younes, age 84 of Seymour, Tennessee, formerly of Bridgeport, Connecticut, daughter of the late John and Mary Coury Deeb, passed away Sunday, October 11, 2009, at the University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, Tennessee. She was a member of St. Nicholas Syrian Antiochian Orthodox Church in Bridgeport and attended St. George Greek Orthodox Church, Knoxville. Helen retired as a bookkeeper with the Bridgeport Plating Company. She was also preceded in death by her husband, George Rashid Younes and sister, Julia O’Connell. Helen is survived by her loving family: daughter, Dr. Marcelle (Marci) Savoy; son-in-law, Dr. Hugh Savoy all of Seymour; grandchildren, Jonathan, Rachel and Kristen Savoy; brother and sister-in-law, Jack and Rosemond Deeb of Stratford, Connecticut; several nieces and one nephew. Mrs. Younes will be taken to Commerce Hill Funeral Home in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where a funeral service will be Saturday, October 17, at St. Nicholas Syrian Antiochian Orthodox Church with burial following at Mountain Grove Cemetery in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Local arrangements by Rose Mortuary Mann Heritage Chapel. n www.rosemortuary.com

3From Page A1

Road just north of Interstate 40 in Kodak. As police closed in on the area, another motorist apparently turned around after seeing the vehicle and pursued it. It was reported that the SUV was also seen in Strawberry Plains before being located in Chattanooga.

Rev. Robert David Sommer

Rev. Robert David Sommer, age 89 of Sevierville passed away Sunday, October 11, 2009. The son of pioneer missionaries Rev. Emil A. and Lydia Augspurger Sommer, he was born on February 10, 1920, in Belgium Congo in Africa. Bob grew up in Topeka, IN, attended Bluffton College in Bluffton, OH, and continued his studies in Wilmore, KY, graduating with a B.A. from Asbury College. A descendant of a long line of ministers, he pursued and received a Master of Divinity from Asbury Theological Seminary. He served pastorates in Florida for more than 25 years and was a member of the Florida Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Bob also served as pastor in non-denominational churches in North Carolina before retiring to Gatlinburg, TN, and retained his ordination as an Elder until his death. Bob’s contagious laughter, unrivaled Santa Claus performances, and unique ability to bring enjoyment to everyone around him will be truly missed. He was preceded in death by his wife Sunny Sommer and daughter Carole Sommer. Survivors include his children, Jeannie DeGrasse of Clyde, NC, Candy Bridges of Lexington, KY, Tommy Sommer of Greer, SC, Susan Skolrood of Roanoke, VA; 8 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren; brother, Gordon Sommer of Northville, MI; special friend, Reba Loveday, a dear friend with him for the last years of his life, to whom he often referred to as “his angel.� Funeral service 2 p.m. Saturday in the Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Rev. Kent Loveday officiating. Interment will follow in Middle Creek Cemetery. The family will receive friends noon to 1:45 p.m. Saturday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville. n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

Helen Deeb Younes

HOMICIDE

In Memoriam

Authorities also said Britt’s credit card was reportedly used in Blount County and then later in Kodak on Saturday morning. Her cell phone was apparently found in a Dumpster at a store in Maryville. — The Daily Times in Maryville contributed to this story.

OKTOBERFEST 3From Page A1

proceeds from those sales will go to the United Way thanks to contributions from Ober Gatlinburg that underwrite the cost of the event. That means all the money raised Thursday will help more than 20 local community service agencies provide assistance to Sevier County residents. Plus, United Way Gatlinburg Campaign Co-Chair Jackie Leatherwood says, the event will be a lot of fun.

“We’re so excited about this upcoming event,� Leatherwood says. “This is a fun way to support the United Way campaign and it’s an event that you won’t want to miss.� Tickets are available from United Way representatives, on the Web site www.uwosc.org and over the phone at 453-4261. Additionally, they’re being sold at the Gatlinburg Chamber of Commerce office, the Greystone Lodge and at the door the night of the event.

In Memoriam

W.D. “Sonny� Kilby W.D. “Sonny� Kilby, age 79 of Sevierville, passed away Monday, October 12, 2009, at Fort Sanders Regional Medical Center. He served 4 years in Korea with the United States Navy, and was retired from Western Electric after 28 years of service. He was a member of LuRetta United Methodist Church. He was preceded in death by his parents, Troy and Oda Kilby and brother, Chandler Kilby. Survivors: wife, Eleanor Sharp Kilby; daughter, Kathy Kilby; sisters, Elizabeth Condry and Casina Huff; brothers-in-law, Gary Sharp, Jimmy Sharp and wife Peggy; several nieces and nephews. Funeral service 1 p.m. Wednesday in the West Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Rev. Earl Parker, Rev. Janet Edward, and Rev. John Clark officiating. Interment will follow in Smoky Mountain Memory Gardens. Serving as pallbearers will be, Claude Huff, Jack Martin, Mike Kilby, Coyle Fox, R.B. Newman, and Hollis McCroskey. The family will receive friends 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Wednesday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville. n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

James Otto Rolen James Otto Rolen, 82, of Wenatchee, Wash., died Oct. 3, 2009. He was born July 4, 1927, to Alvin and Hattie Rolen in Sevier County. He attended school in Sevier County then enlisted in the Army during World War II. He was honorably discharged in 1947. He returned to Tennessee and married Letha Jane Barnes on Nov. 19, 1948. Otto worked for Blalock Construction. They moved to Washington State in 1958 and made their home in Peshastin, Wash., where he found his niche in the timber business. The various companies he worked for were Earl Marcelles, Burgess Logging and Newell Logging. He retired

from logging in 1994. Survivors: wife, Letha; sons, Ron, Jerry, Roger and daughter Tina; eight grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; three sisters from Tennessee, MayNell Leweling, SaraMay Whaley, and Joyce Helton. Services were held Friday, Oct. 9, 2009, at the Eastmont Baptist Church with Pastor Steve Brewer officiating. Interment was in the Evergreen Memorial Park Cemetery in East Wenatchee. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to Eastmont Baptist Church, 400 S. Kentucky Ave. East Wenatchee, WA 98802-5670. Arrangements by Wards Funeral Chapel of Leavenworth.

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Money/Nation/Local â—† A5

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 â—† The Mountain Press

Hardly bipartisan, Senate health bill moves ahead

1

reled triumph that propelled President Barack Obama’s signature issue toward votes this fall in both houses of Congress. “When history calls, history calls,� said Maine Republican Olympia Snowe, whose declaration of support ended weeks of suspense and provided the only drama of a 14-9 vote in the Senate

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS DOW JONES

1

NASDAQ

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Name

Last

AFLAC INC 45.15 ALCOA INC 14.11 ALCATEL LUCENT 4.74 ALLSTATE CORP 31.02 ALTRIA GROUP INC 18.06 APPLE INC 190.02 AT&T INC 25.90 BANK OF AMERICA 17.81 BB&T CORP 27.77 BOEING CO 51.90 BRISTOL-MYERS 22.60 CRACKER BARREL 36.28 CHEVRON CORP 74.07 CISCO SYSTEMS INC 23.89 COCA-COLA CO 54.80 CONSOLIDATED ED 40.96 DUKE ENERGY CORP 15.61 EASTMAN CHEMICAL 53.90 EXXON MOBIL CORP 70.26 FIRST HORIZON 13.24 FORD MOTOR CO 7.62 FORWARD AIR CORP 24.53 GAYLORD ENT 18.58 GENERAL ELECTRIC CO16.39 HOME DEPOT INC 27.53 IBM 127.02 INTEL CORP 20.49

%Chg

Name

Last

Chg

%Chg

-1.23% -0.98% -0.42% -2.02% -0.33% -0.41% 1.17% -1.22% 0.00% 0.46% -0.44% -0.87% 0.54% 0.45% 0.02% -1.28% -0.19% -1.55% 0.19% -0.75% 0.00% -1.29% -3.53% 0.37% 1.81% -0.02% 0.44%

JC PENNEY CO JPMORGAN CHASE KELLOGG CO KRAFT FOODS INC KROGER CO MCDONALD’S CORP MICRON MICROSOFT CORP MOTOROLA INC ORACLE CORP PHILIP MORRIS PFIZER INC PROCTER & GAMBLE REGIONS FINANCIAL SEARS HOLDINGS SIRIUS XM RADIO INC SPECTRA ENERGY SPEEDWAY MTRSPTS SPRINT NEXTEL CORP SUNOCO INC SUNTRUST BANKS TANGER FACTORY TIME WARNER INC TRACTOR SUPPLY TRW AUTOMOTIVE WAL-MART STORES YAHOO! INC

35.68 45.66 49.58 25.99 22.59 57.05 8.66 25.81 8.23 20.91 49.88 16.78 57.26 5.96 69.72 0.56 19.76 14.95 3.41 30.01 22.01 36.63 30.60 53.19 17.05 50.34 16.88

0.14 -0.42 -0.10 -0.20 -0.14 0.37 -0.22 0.09 -0.09 0.19 -0.57 -0.32 -0.24 -0.04 0.61 0.00 -0.17 -0.10 -0.17 0.19 -0.50 -0.51 0.32 -0.52 -0.71 0.73 0.13

0.39% -0.91% -0.20% -0.76% -0.62% 0.65% -2.48% 0.35% -1.08% 0.92% -1.13% -1.87% -0.42% -0.67% 0.88% 0.74% -0.85% -0.66% -4.75% 0.64% -2.22% -1.37% 1.06% -0.97% -4.00% 1.47% 0.78%

UNCH

-0.32 -0.68 0.06 0.49 -0.02 0.09

A DAY ON WALL STREET 10,000

Oct. 13, 2009

&QY ,QPGU KPFWUVTKCNU

9,000 8,000 7,000

-14.74 9,871.06

J

J

Pct. change from previous: -0.15%

A

S

High 9,895.09

O

2,400

0CUFCS EQORQUKVG

2,200 2,000 1,800 1,600

+0.75 J

J

A

S

High 2,146.35

Pct. change from previous: +0.04%

O

Oct. 13, 2009

-3.00 J

J

Pct. change from previous: -0.28%

A High 1,075.30

1,400

Low 2,128.44

5VCPFCTF 2QQTÂśU 1,073.19

6,000

Low 9,815.06

Oct. 13, 2009

2,139.89

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bill, which was an attempt at a middle-of-the-road measure fashioned by the committee under Baucus’ leadership. Still, nearly nine months after the president pledged in his Inaugural Address to tackle health care, legislation to expand coverage to millions who lack it has now advanced further than

President Bill Clinton’s illfated effort more than a decade ago — or any other attempt in more than a generation. The next move in the Senate is up to Majority Leader Harry Reid, whose office said the full Senate would begin debate on the issue the week of Oct. 26.

SUPERVISOR

the man was released, although the man wanted no further contact with Lintner, Hawkins said. Hawkins also said that another former inmate would have testified to having seen Lintner and the victim having sex. Lintner became kitchen supervisor after serving time at the jail for forgery. According to documents from the state court of appeals, he had also been convicted of tax evasion, but was actually believed to have taken almost $800,000 from a previous employer. “Appellant was apparently never punished directly for his embezzlement of $785,731 from his previous employer, rather he was convicted of federal tax evasion in connection with the embezzled funds,� Appellate Judge Jerry Smith wrote. Lintner was sentenced to 21 months in prison for that conviction, and then placed on probation. “While on federal probation he committed the instant (forgery) offenses using forgery to steal from his subsequent employer,� Smith wrote. “It is clear that measures less restrictive than continuous con-

finement have not made an impact on appellant.� The court was actually ruling on an appeal by Lintner for alternative sentencing on the forgery conviction. It ruled he should complete his sentence. Lintner served his time for that forgery conviction in the Sevier County Jail. Upon his release, he was hired as the jail’s kitchen supervisor, where he was placed in charge of county funds and of trusties. He was hired during the tenure of the late Sheriff Bruce Montgomery. Current Sheriff Ron Seals declined to comment on the specifics of the case. He did say it would have been a violation of the rules for Lintner to take an trusty for a visit with family. “It would be out of the

realm to go to the mom’s house,� he said. Former sheriff’s deputy and sheriff candidate Kim Pierce has been outspoken about Lintner’s hiring and behavior. “I feel very vindicated,� she said Tuesday. “There were a lot of people who were passing me off as crazy.� She said she preferred to see Lintner convicted on all counts against him. “Ultimately I guess I’m disappointed with only one count,� she said. “I am happy that he owned up to what he’d done.� She credited the victim for coming forward when many men in similar situations wouldn’t. “There’s a lot of men who wouldn’t do what (he) did,� Pierce said.

Chg

0.24 -0.10 -0.32 0.40 0.11 0.01 -0.53 -0.03 -0.85 0.13 -0.10

remaking the nation’s health care system. He praised Snowe as well as Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the committee, and declared, “We are going to get this done.� There were fresh challenges. Within minutes of the vote, labor unions and large business organizations both demanded changes in the

3From Page A1

-0.56 -0.14 -0.02 -0.64 -0.06 -0.79 0.30 -0.22 UNCH

Finance Committee. With her decision, the 62-year-old lawmaker bucked her own leadership on the most highprofile issue of the year in Congress, and gave the drive to remake health care at least a hint of the bipartisanship that Obama seeks. At the White House, Obama called the events “a critical milestone� toward

O

Mice, Roaches, Bugs?

1,200 1,100 1,000 900 800 700 600

Low 1,066.71

SOURCE: SunGard

defense attorney, Charles Sexton, indicated Lintner was taking the plea because it was in Lintner’s best interest. Neither Linter nor Sexton answered questions as they left the courthouse. Lintner remains free on bond pending sentencing. As Hawkins outlined the state’s case against Lintner, he indicated Lintner was exchanging favors for trusties for sex. “Mr. Lintner was over the kitchen and also had under his command several trusties who lived separately and worked under his supervision,� Hawkins told Vance. He once took the victim to Food City to visit the inmate’s mother, who worked there, and also took the victim to visit his family on Christmas while he was incarcerated. The victim’s family took pictures that day with Lintner visible in the photographs, Hawkins said. Lintner also paid the victim’s mother about $2,500 while the man was in jail. Lintner continued trying to call the victim after

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A6 ◆

The Mountain Press ◆ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

sunrise in the smokies

TODAY’S Briefing Local n

KODAK

Boys/Girls Club has haunted house

The Boys & Girls Club in Kodak will host a Haunted House on Friday and Saturday from 7:30 to 11 p.m. at 4125 Douglas Dam Road. Admission is $5. For more information, call 933-3718.

n

GATLINBURG

Oktoberfest to benefit United Way Oktoberfest will be celebrated Thursday at Ober Gatlinburg beginning at 5 p.m., with all proceeds benefiting the United Way of Sevier County. There will be traditional German food, beverages, polka music and games, plus a live auction. Tickets are $50 per person and can be purchased from a United Way representative, online at www.uwosc. org, by calling 4534261. Individuals are asked to purchase tickets in advance or RSVP to the United Way of Sevier County by today. For more information or to sign up, call 4534261.

n

Tanger Outlet’s first 5K run/walk will be held at 8 a.m. Oct. 24 at the shopping center. Preregistration costs $20 by Saturday or $25 the day of the race. The first 350 registrants will receive a gift bag and T-shirt. Information about how to form a team or become involved is available from Charisse Tinker at 453-1053, or at wwwtangeroutlet. com. SEVIERVILLE

Senior Center to host flu shot clinic

Fort Sanders Sevier Medical Center and Covenant Senior Services are holding a senior flu shot clinic Tuesday from 9 a.m. to noon at the Senior Center, 1220 West Main St. Only the seasonal flu shot will be offered (No H1N1 vaccinations). Insurance can be filed for the shot. Members must present their insurance cards when they register. The cost without insurance is $30 cash. For information call 453-9355.

n

SEVIERVILLE

Resources group meets Thursday

The Human Resources Association of the Smoky Mountains meets at 8 a.m. Thursday in the Citizens National Bank training room located upstairs in the Courthouse Plaza at 130 Bruce Street. St. The HRSM meetings are held each third Thursday. This meeting will feature Mike Hudson, SHRM Region Representative, who will be discussing affiliation with the National Association of the Society for Human Resources. For more information call 607-1194.

n

Lottery Numbers

Rare Bibles going to UT-Knoxville MEMPHIS (AP) — A University of Memphis professor who died last month arranged to sell a portion of his rare Bible collection to the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Dr. Naseeb Shaheen died Sept. 26 from complications of heart surgery. The 78-year-old English professor had taught for 40 years in Memphis. Shaheen’s brother said his collection includes 115 pre-King James Bibles that are worth $2,000 to $15,000 each. Shouky Shaheen of

Atlanta expects UT will get about 75 of the Bibles. The rest will go to the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. Two of the Bibles, including the first Geneva Bible the professor brought, will stay at the Memphis university. Shaheen said his brother outlined his intentions in his will and knew that the University of Memphis didn’t have the funds to buy the collection. “It was probably more suited for the University of Tennessee,” he said. UT Libraries’s develop-

TODAY’S FORECAST

LOCAL:

ment director Amy Yancey said it was the professor’s goal to make sure the books were available to the public. Shaheen “expressed the hope the collection would not fall into private hands and out of the reach of scholars. He also hoped the collection could remain at home in Tennessee where he conducted his life’s work,” she said. His colleagues in Memphis remembered his commitment to his study of Shakespeare. He became an internationally known authority on

Today's Forecast

Rain

SEVIERVILLE

Salvation Army Angel Tree sign-up

The Salvation Army’s Angel Tree Christmas Assistance sign-ups are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. today through Friday. Bring Social Security cards for all in household, proof of income and expenses, and a picture ID to 806 W. Main Street in Sevierville.

the subject and documented more than 1,200 biblical references in his writings. “This university was his life,” said Susan Fitzgerald, assistant to the English Department chairman. “He was often in his office at 2 or 3 in the morning. I used to grade papers on the weekend, and I knew he would be up here.” At the age of 68, he finished a 880-page reference book, called “Biblical References in Shakespeare’s Plays,” which took 23 years to compile.

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Wednesday, Oct. 14 Chicago 47° | 41°

Washington 54° | 43°

High: 57° Low: 50° Memphis 61° | 56°

Wind 5 mph

Chance of rain

Raleigh 50° | 49°

100%

Atlanta 61° | 58° High: 61° Low: 51° ■ Friday

New Orleans 85° | 76°

Mostly cloudy

High: 59° Low: 45°

Miami 92° | 79°

■ Lake Stages: Douglas 983.7 D0.6

Primary Pollutant: Particles

Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow

Ice

Cautionary Health Message: None

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Weather Underground • AP

quote roundup “We’ve got ourselves a real health care shooting war now. The industry has come to the conclusion that the way things are going in Congress, we’ll have a ... formula that will be disastrous for their business, so they can’t stand on the sidelines any longer.” — Former health insurance executive Robert Laszewski in a statement after insurance companies warned that health care legislation will drive up premiums for people who already have coverage.

“This distorted report, written by this distorted committee, undermines Israel’s right to defend itself. This report encourages terrorism and threatens peace. Israel will not take risks for peace if it can’t defend itself.” — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in remarks during his speech at the opening of parliament’s winter session where he vowed never to allow Israeli leaders or soldiers to stand trial on war crimes charges over their actions during last winter’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip.

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The Mountain Press Publisher: Jana Thomasson Editor: Stan Voit Production Director: Tom McCarter Advertising Director: Joi Whaley Business Manager: Mary Owenby Circulation Distribution Manager: Will Sing (ISSN 0894-2218) Copyright 2008 The Mountain Press. All Rights Reserved. All property belongs to The Mountain Press and no part may be reproduced without prior written consent. Published daily by The Mountain Press. P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN, 37864, 119 River Bend Dr., Sevierville, TN 37876. Periodical Postage paid at Sevierville, TN.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009 Midday: 3-2-2-6 Evening: 0-4-8

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13 12

This day in history Today is Wednesday, Oct. 14, the 287th day of 2009. There are 78 days left in the year. n

Locally a year ago:

The Sevier County High School boys cross country team turned in one of their best performances of the season. They finished second of 13 teams at the Seven Islands All Comers 5K meet. SCHS girls team placed third out of five complete teams. Today’s highlight:

In 1947, Air Force test pilot Charles E. (“Chuck”) Yeager broke the sound barrier as he flew the experimental Bell XS-1 (later X-1) rocket plane over Muroc Dry Lake in California.

n

© 2009 Wunderground.com

■ Air Quality Forecast:

18 6

On this date:

In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the presidency, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee. Despite the wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech. In 1944, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide rather than face execution for allegedly conspiring against Adolf Hitler.

Showers likely

Staff

Midday: 8-1-9 Evening: 2-1-3

n

■ Thursday

Mountains: Good Valley: Good

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

n

SEVIERVILLE

5K run/walk set Oct. 24

n

top state news

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Ten years ago:

President Bill Clinton accused Senate Republicans of recklessness and irresponsibility for defeating the nuclear test ban treaty, and pledged the United States would refrain from testing despite the treaty’s rejection. n

Five years ago:

The Treasury Department announced that the federal deficit had surged to a record $413 billion in fiscal 2004. A suicide bomber killed four Americans in the U.S.-guarded “Green Zone” of Baghdad. n

Thought for today:

“To think is to speak low. To speak is to think aloud.” — F. Max Mueller, German philologist (1823-1900).

Celebrities in the news

n

Jon, Kate Gosselin

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Estranged reality couple Jon and Kate Gosselin are back in court over their acrimonious split. The stars of “Jon and Kate Plus 8” appeared briefly in court Tuesday in the Philadelphia suburb of Norristown. Details of the court appearance were not immediately available. The couple have been locked in a divorce battle since announcing their separation during an episode in June. Kate Gosselin has claimed her husband took $230,000 from a joint account, leaving her unable to pay household bills. And just days after TLC announced it would rename the show “Kate Plus Eight,” Jon Gosselin sent the network a ceaseand-desist letter.


Mountain Views

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peacably to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.” —United States Constitution, Amendment One

■ The Mountain Press ■ Page A7 ■ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

commentary

Red Sox fan right to the end It was a great run while it lasted. To be a Boston Red Sox fan meant your team — especially when matched against the too rich, too arrogant and altogether too successful New York Yankees — was predictably cast as the gutsy outsider David against baseball’s overbearing Goliath. Ever since the Revolutionary War, when a rag-tag collection of farmers and firebrands defeated the 18th century’s superpower, the British Empire, Americans have rooted for the gutsy underdog. Underdogs, it turns out, are underdogs for a good reason: They usually lose. Between 1921 and 2003, the Yankees won the American League championship 39 times and won the World Series 26 times (17 more times than any other team in baseball history), while in that same 83-year span, the Red Sox were league champions only four times and never won a World Series. That all changed at 12:01 a.m. on Oct. 21, 2004, in Yankee Stadium (where I was fortunate to be), when Boston’s long-shot also-rans became the first team in baseball history to rally from a 3-0 playoff game deficit and win four consecutive games. That memory — and the repeat World Series victory in 2007 — is today no longer magic, devalued by subsequent disclosures that the two principal Red Sox stars of that miracle comeback, Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz, have tested positive for performanceenhancing drugs. When Yankees Jason Giambi, Alex Rodriguez, Andy Pettite and (ex-Red Soxer) Roger Clemens were all tagged for illegally using steroids, we Red Sox fans had felt, let’s be honest, morally superior. That was misconduct to be expected from the Yankees, the AIG of baseball, not from anyone wearing the uniform of our virtuous Red Sox nation. But it turns out our Boston guys — even the lovable Big Papi — were “juicing,” too. Yes, the soulless, corporate Yankees do have the highest payroll in baseball. But it’s impossible to portray the Red Sox as some 98-pound weakling having beach sand kicked in his face by the muscle-bound bully when a check of the American League’s records reveals that the team with the second-highest payroll — as well as the second-highest ticket prices — is in fact the Red Sox. The New York-Boston competition begins to look more like Goldman Sachs versus Citigroup or Microsoft against Google. Or maybe ExxonMobil against Chevron. Facts like these all combine to sabotage the treasured narrative of the lifelong Red Sox fan — of our outgunned Little Guys against the haughty millionaires of the Evil Empire. Sorry, but that dog won’t hunt anymore. None of this makes the Yankees more appealing. I still endorse the profound wisdom of Bill Mead when he wrote in his “Official New York Yankees-Hater’s Handbook”: “Most all good Americans hate the Yankees. It is a value we cherish and pass on to our children like decency and democracy and the importance of a good breakfast.” Why do so many people share that enmity? “Because,” according to Bill Mead, “they’re spoiled rotten. They think they’re such hot stuff. Their owner is obnoxious. Their fans are gross and crude.” I have no doubt that the typical Red Sox fan is still more likely to take the time to escort an unsure grandmother across the busy city intersection. And, yes, cheering for the Yankees is still a lot like pulling for OPEC. But now, after Boston’s championships have been both sullied and compromised by the steroid reports and when Red Sox company pockets are shown to be deeper than any other organization’s in the playoffs (except the Yankees), it is impossible for this Red Sox fan to pretend any longer that we enjoy some moral superiority over our New York counterparts. Because, truth be told, we don’t. — Mark Shields is a veteran political campaign manager and frequent television talk show commentator. Column distributed by Creators Syndicate. (C)2009 Mark Shields.

Editorial

The stage is set A bare-bones stage in downtown Sevierville may not be sufficient The idea of a stage in downtown Sevierville to serve various events and musical performances is one that deserves support. The Public Building Authority is moving ahead with the project following action it took on Monday. The plan is to put a stage in the parking lot off Bruce Street. It would come in handy for such events as Bloomin’ Barbeque & Bluegrass, but might also lead to other activities not even created yet. If you’re going to attract people to downtown Sevierville for festivals, fairs, car shows and other events, you need to have a stage for musical acts and other things that go with such attractions. The steps of the courthouse just don’t cut it.

The PBA plans a basic stage. The stage won’t include sophisticated lighting, dressing rooms or storage — just space for local events. That might be a mistake. If the PBA sees the need for a stage, it should go ahead and make it a stage complete with the amenities that go with such an outdoor venue, and that includes dressing rooms and some modest lighting for nighttime performances. There are concerns with doing that, of course, not the least of which is the added expense. But if you’re going to do it at all, do it right. A basic stage will elevate whoever is on it, but not offer the kind of added features that many musical groups and even static display people

would like and often need. Bloomin’ Barbeque has attracted a number of great musical acts over the years, from Ricky Skaggs to Doyle Lawson. They’ll love the stage, but wonder why it doesn’t have what ought to go with a stage. The parking lot area will include electrical outlets and water service, and that’s a critical need. But if you’re going to include a stage, you ought to spend a little bit more and make it first-class. It could make the difference between luring a great act or convincing that act to come back again. Let’s hope the PBS will revisit the stage project and consider some minor amenities that would make it much more attractive and user-friendly.

Political view

Reader praises sports coverage found in The Mountain Press

Editor: In last week’s paper there was a letter complaining about local sports coverage in our daily paper. Every morning when I read The Mountain Press I feel so blessed to live in a community that still has a daily local paper. I read The Mountain Press every day, and USA Today and The Knoxville News Sentinel almost every day, and I can truly say I like The Mountain Press the best. Why? I love reading

Public forum about the people in our community. The sports page follows all high school, middle school, and any other sports events one would like to submit. One has to remember, there are many teams in Sevier County, and only so many sports writers at The Mountain Press. The sports writers at The Mountain Press cover each team equally, and one can see that if you read the paper daily. The Mountain Press will also publish articles submitted by coaches, parents and others sent to the sports section. One may not agree with everything

that is written, but isn’t that what makes us the United States of America? The Good News section is another great feature of our paper. Want to see more good news? Then submit it. In today’s world we are so blessed to live in a community that still has a daily newspaper. Watch the news or read a newspaper, and see how many papers have already had to close their doors. Thank you to all staff at The Mountain Press. Helen Meehan Sevierville

Letters to the editor policy and how to contact us: ◆ We encourage our readers to send letters to the editor. Letters must contain no more than 500 words. No more than one letter per person will be published in a 30-day period. Letters must be neatly printed or typed and contain no libel, plagiarism or personal attacks. All letters are subject to editing for style, length and content. Statements of fact must be attributed to a source for verification. All letters must be signed and contain a phone number and address for verification purposes. No anonymous or unverified letters will be printed. No letters endorsing candidates will be considered. The Mountain Press reserves the right to refuse publication of any letter. E-MAIL LETTERS TO: editor@themountainpress.com or MAIL LETTERS TO: Editor, The Mountain Press, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN 37864. For questions, call (865) 428-0748, ext. 214. The Mountain Press and its publishers do not necessarily agree with the opinions expressed in letters and columns on this page.

Editorial Board:

State Legislators:

Federal Legislators:

◆ Jana Thomasson, Publisher ◆ Stan Voit, Editor ◆ Bob Mayes, Managing Editor ◆ Gail Crutchfield, Community News Editor

◆ Rep. Richard Montgomery

◆ U.S. Sen. Bob Corker

1-800-449-8366 Ext. 1-5981; 207 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN 37243 rep.richard.montgomery@capitol.tn.gov

◆ Rep. Joe McCord

(202) 224-3344; Dirksen Senate Office Bldg., B40A, Washington, D.C. 20510

◆ U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander

(202) 224-4944; S/H 302, Washington, D.C. 20510

1-800-449-8366 Ext. 1-5481; 207 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN 37243 rep.joe.mccord@capitol.tn.gov

◆ U.S. Rep. Phil Roe

1-800-449-8366 Ext. 10981; 320 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN 37243 sen.doug.overbey@capitol.tn.gov

◆ U.S. Rep. John J. Duncan Jr.

◆ Sen. Doug Overbey

(202) 225-6356; 419 Cannon House Office, Washington, D.C. 20515 (202) 225-5435; 2267 Rayburn Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20515


Sports

Visit: The Mountain Press.com View/Purchase Sports & News Photos

■ The Mountain Press ■ A8 ■ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Lady Highlanders’ season ends with loss to Fulton G-P loses tough “That final game to 15 five-game was as good of match to Lady a game as you Falcons could want to By COBEY HITCHCOCK Sports Writer KNOXVILLE — The Gatlinburg-Pittman Lady Highlanders volleyball team saw their season come to an end Tuesday night with a first-round District 3-AA tournament loss to the rival Fulton Lady Falcons at Gibbs High School. The No.4 seed Lady Highlanders (9-10) fell to the No.5 seed Lady Falcons in five games, losing the match 25-21, 28-26, 21-25, 19-25, 14-16. “When you are up two games on an opponent, you should win,” said G-P coach Mike Rader. “We just made too many mistakes. “But that final game to 15 was as good of a game as you could want to see.” The Lady Highlanders survived a nip-and-tuck first game that saw ties at 11-11 and 17-17. G-P held a slim 20-19 edge before closing the match by four points, led by the powerful spikes of senior All-District team

see.”

G-P coach Mike Rader, on his team’s close loss to Fulton in the deciding fifth game of the match, 16-14

representative Alisha Johnson. Fulton built a 14-8 lead over the Lady Highlanders in game two, but three late clutch serves by senior AllDistrict team member Aleah Bryan gave G-P a 25-24 edge in route to a 28-26 final. The Lady Falcons wouldn’t go down easily, however, and won two straight to force a deciding game five. G-P held the serve at match point 14-13, but failed to close out the win after a Fulton kill knotted it a 14-14. Two G-P errors led to the deciding match point for the Lady Falcons. The Pigeon Forge Lady Tigers, the tournament’s No.2 seed, will play Thursday at 6 p.m. at Gibbs High School against three-seeded Union County. chitchcock@themountainpress.com

Cobey Hitchcock/The Mountain Press

G-P senior Alisha Johnson (5) makes a play during her final game as a Lady Highlander volleyball player. Gatlinburg-Pittman’s season ended Tuesday night with a 5-game loss to Fulton. PREP SOCCER

PF Lady Tigers tame Grizzlies 8-0 Seniors enjoy scoring bonanza on their night By JASON DAVIS Sports Editor

Jason Davis/The Mountain Press

Pigeon Forge senior Kayla Oulette (above) passes through to Kelsey Brooks during the Lady Tigers win over Grainger on Tuesday. Lady Tigers (below) swarm on the ball at the Grainger goal following a corner kick.

PIGEON FORGE — The Grainger Grizzlies didn’t provide much of a challenge for the Pigeon Forge Lady Tigers Tuesday night, but they did provide some memories for the Orange and Black seniors on Senior Night. Playing their final game in front of a regular season home crowd at Pigeon Forge, seniors Cheyenne Montgomery, Anna Johnson and Megan Kelly all scored goals in the team’s 8-0 rout of the Grizzlies. Johnson and Kelly’s goals were especially memorable, as the duo rarely get scoring opportunities because of their primarily defensive positions on the soccer field. Montgomery and teammate Haley Doane pushed the Lady Tigers out to an early 2-0 lead by halftime, and after the intermission things snow-balled for Grainger, as Pigeon Forge scored three goals in the first five minutes of the second half. Underclassman Dani Montgomery found her older sister Cheyenne for a goal just moments in to make the score 3-0. The scoreboard operator had barely changed the score when junior Kelsey Brooks found the net on a beautiful rebound to up the tally to 4-0.

Jason Davis/The Mountain Press

Senior goalie Megan Kelly got a chance to play forward, and then celebrated her senior night goal.

One minute later Autumn Wilkinson tacked on another goal against the exasperated Grizzlies, puttin ghe score at 5-0. After Brooks added another score shortly after on a magnificent arching shot on a free kick, coach Billy Mosely pulled all his starters. After substantial work for the subs, Mosely reinserted the seniors, allowing them to play different positions and get scoring opportunities. Anna Johnson, who’s normally a defender, scored a goal that sent her into a frenzy, and fellow senior Megan Kelly, the team’s starting goalie, banged in a goal moments later to make the final margin of victory 8-0. The non-district win improved the Lady Tigers to 10-4-2 overall. They are 6-0-1 in district play. mpsports@themountainpress.com


Sports ◆ A9

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 ◆ The Mountain Press SEC BASKETBALL

PREP BASEBALL

Kentucky settles suit with Gillispie

Angels, Dodgers step closer to Freeway Series By BETH HARRIS AP Sports Writer

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Former Kentucky coach Billy Gillispie and the university have settled their cases over his firing earlier this year for nearly $3 million. Gillispie sued the university for breach of contract and fraud in May, and the university then countersued. In a statement Tuesday night, the university said the lawsuits were settled through mediation and that Gillispie would receive $2,984,536.07. Another $260,000 will be James Crisp/AP paid by the university for Former Kentucky basketball coach Billy attorney’s fees, as well as Gillispie and the university have settled for $5,623.75 for mediation. nearly $3 million. TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS FOOTBALL

Injured Vols rest while backups get more practice By BETH RUCKER Associated Press Writer KNOXVILLE — Just because it’s a bye week doesn’t mean practice is going to be any less physical for the Tennessee Volunteers. “We have to have physical practices,” coach Lane Kiffin said. “It’s about the whole team. If we limited and made it soft practices and then came out physical, we’d have a lot of guys suffering from not getting better and not keeping that competition going.” Kiffin sat defensive end Chris Walker, defensive tackle Wes Brown, running back Montario Hardesty and offensive tackle Chris Scott during parts of Tuesday’s practice to rest them. He’s also focusing on getting second- and thirdteam players more opportunities in practice in hopes of developing more depth before the Vols (3-3, 1-2 Southeastern Conference) travel to No. 2 Alabama on Oct. 24. “It’s a valuable week

Coach Lane Kiffin

for all of us — first, second and third teams — but especially for some younger guys and some guys who haven’t had a chance to do a lot,” Kiffin said. The coach has also relieved some of his assistants of their practice duties this week, but that doesn’t mean they’re not working. Instead they’re spending the week recruiting while Kiffin, defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, offensive coordinator Jim Chaney and running backs coach and special teams

coordinator Eddie Gran run practice. In fact, Lane Kiffin and Gran were away Tuesday morning and arrived back in Knoxville just in time for afternoon team meetings. Kiffin kind of likes practicing with fewer assistants. It means players spend less time with their position coaches and more time as a team. “It’s actually kind of fun because individual is not that long. That’s the boring part of practice for me, so we just get to do a bunch of team stuff,” he said. “Our guys are everywhere around the country seeing the best players. The reception has been phenomenal, especially after the last game,” Kiffin said of Tennessee’s 45-19 win over Georgia on Saturday. COUPON REQUIRED

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In 1962, both teams relocated to the current site of Dodger Stadium, only the Angels called it Chavez Ravine on the days they were playing. Interleague play was still decades away, so there was no confusion about the stadium’s identity. In 1966, the Angels moved down Interstate 5 to Anaheim Stadium (now known as Angel Stadium). That’s where a Freeway World Series would begin and end because the American League won the All-Star game in July. “I’m pretty sure it’s never been done before,” said Hunter, who came to Anaheim from Minnesota. “But we can’t get too far ahead of ourselves.” Ah, but in a town that manufactures movie fantasies, everyone can dream. ——— AP Sports Writer Greg Beacham in Anaheim and Associated Press Writers John Rogers and Sue Manning contributed to this report.

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MORRISTOWN — The Seymour Lady Eagles volleyball team’s season came to an end in the District 2-AAA Tournament on Monday night against Jefferson County at Morristown East, falling in three sets 21-25, 15-25, 20-25. “The match started out really well for us,” said Seymour coach Ed Irvin. “We were leading 15-4 in the first set, but the next thing I knew we were only ahead 16-14. “I had taken both of my time-outs but couldn’t stop the Lady Patriot momentum.” Andrea Markowitz led the Seymour (9-18) effort with 27 sets, 21 digs, eight points, seven assists and two aces. Kasey Norman added 19 spikes, nine kills, eight points and three aces in the losing effort.

LOS ANGELES — Ssshhhh, don’t let it get out, but the prospect of a Freeway World Series is a tantalizing prospect to Torii Hunter, of all people. With the Angels and Dodgers in their respective league championship series for the first time in the same season, Angelenos and their counterparts in Orange County are chatting up the idea. The teams separated by 31 miles of freeway both swept their division series, with the Angels dispatching longtime nemesis Boston and the Dodgers finishing off St. Louis. Taking the onramp to a Freeway World Series would require the Angels to get by the Yankees, beginning Friday in New York. The Dodgers would need to beat Philadelphia, something they failed to do a year ago. They open Thursday at Dodger Stadium. “You kind of catch yourself rooting for the Dodgers, and I’m sure the Dodgers are rooting for us,” Hunter said Tuesday during a workout in Anaheim. “It’d be kind of awesome to have a Freeway Series.” The teams have a few things in common, starting with Los Angeles being the official name of the clubs, even if the Angels play in another county and survived a court battle to keep it. They both have former catchers as managers. The Angels’ Mike Scioscia played on the Dodgers’ 1988 World Series title team, the last time the Dodgers have been in the championship. The Dodgers’ Joe Torre was an All-Star catcher back in his day, who last man-

aged a World Series champion in 2000, with the Yankees. Mickey Hatcher, the Angels’ hitting coach, and Alfredo Griffin, their first base coach, both starred alongside Scioscia in ’88. Scioscia’s dislike of looking ahead is wellknown, so he wouldn’t bite on the chance of facing his old team for baseball’s biggest prize. “Believe me, our plate is full,” he said. “As long as you keep winning, it’s a lot of fun. We’re going to have to keep our play at a certain level to even make it a conversation.” If the teams do meet, they each boast potential Hall of Fame sluggers in Vladimir Guerrero and Manny Ramirez. A Freeway World Series might be hardest of all on the parents of Jered and Jeff Weaver. Jered will start Game 2 of the ALCS for the Angels, while brother Jeff is a former Dodgers starter who now works out of the bullpen. Longtime fans of both teams will recall they once shared a home field. The Angels began as an expansion team in 1961, playing at the old Wrigley Field, while the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn after the 1957 season and played in the Los Angeles Coliseum.

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A10 â—† Sports

The Mountain Press â—† Wednesday, October 14, 2009

SCOREBOARD t v s p o rt s Today

COLLEGE FOOTBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Boise St. at Tulsa SOCCER 7:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Men’s national teams, World Cup qualifier, Costa Rica vs. U.S., at Washington 10 p.m. ESPN2 — MLS, New York at Real Salt Lake UNITED FOOTBALL LEAGUE 9 p.m. VERSUS — Florida at Las Vegas

mlb postseason

(x-if necessary) DIVISION SERIES American League NEW YORK 3, MINNESOTA 0 Wednesday, Oct. 7 New York 7, Minnesota 2 Friday, Oct. 9 New York 4, Minnesota 3, 11 innings Sunday, Oct. 11 New York 4, Minnesota 1

Philadelphia 6, Colorado 5 Monday, Oct. 12 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 4 ——— LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES American League Friday, Oct. 16 Los Angeles (Lackey 11-8) at New York (Sabathia 19-8), 7:37 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 17 Los Angeles at New York, 7:37 p.m. Monday, Oct. 19 New York at Los Angeles, TBA Tuesday, Oct. 20 New York at Los Angeles, TBA Thursday, Oct. 22 x-New York at Los Angeles, TBA Saturday, Oct. 24 x-Los Angeles at New York, TBA Sunday, Oct. 25 x-Los Angeles at New York, TBA

National League Thursday, Oct. 15 Philadelphia (Hamels 10-11) at Los Angeles (Wolf 11-7 or Kershaw 8-8), 8:07 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16 Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4:37 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 8:07 p.m. LOS ANGELES 3, BOSTON 0 Monday, Oct. 19 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, Thursday, Oct. 8 TBA Los Angeles 5, Boston 0 Wednesday, Oct. 21 Friday, Oct. 9 x-Los Angeles at Philadelphia, Los Angeles 4, Boston 1 TBA Sunday, Oct. 11 Friday, Oct. 23 Los Angeles 7, Boston 6 x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles, TBA National League Saturday, Oct. 24 LOS ANGELES 3, ST. x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles, LOUIS 0 TBA Wednesday, Oct. 7 ——— Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 3 WORLD SERIES Thursday, Oct. 8 Wednesday, Oct. 28 Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 National League at American Saturday, Oct. 10 League, (n) Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 1 Thursday, Oct. 29 NL at AL, (n) PHILADELPHIA 3, Saturday, Oct. 31 COLORADO 1 AL at NL, (n) Wednesday, Oct. 7 Sunday, Nov. 1 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 1 AL at NL, (n) Thursday, Oct. 8 Monday, Nov. 2 Colorado 5, Philadelphia 4 x-AL at NL, (n) Saturday, Oct. 10 Philadelphia at Colorado, ppd., Wednesday, Nov. 4 x-NL at AL, (n) weather Thursday, Nov. 5 Sunday, Oct. 11 x-NL at AL, (n)

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local bowling Pigeon Forge Bowling Center Results through Monday. Monday Afternoon Ladies High scratch game: Ernie James, 228 Wilma McConville, 186 Caroline Kent, 181 (tie) Zenaida Rodriquez, 181 (tie) High scratch series: Ernie James, 581 Liz Catlett, 534 Wilma McConville, 523

nfl g r i d i r o n

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East

N.Y. Jets New England Miami Buffalo

W L T 3 2 0 3 2 0 2 3 0 1 4 0

Pct .600 .600 .400 .200

Indianapolis Jacksonville Houston Tennessee

W L T 5 0 0 2 3 0 2 3 0 0 5 0

Pct PF PA 1.000 137 71 .400 97 127 .400 115 120 .000 84 139

Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland

W L T 4 1 0 3 2 0 3 2 0 1 4 0

Pct .800 .600 .600 .200

Denver San Diego Oakland Kansas City

W L T 5 0 0 2 2 0 1 4 0 0 5 0

Pct PF PA 1.000 99 43 .500 101 102 .200 49 130 .000 84 138

N.Y. Giants Philadelphia Dallas Washington

W L T 5 0 0 3 1 0 3 2 0 2 3 0

Pct PF 1.000 151 .750 127 .600 122 .400 73

South

North

West

PF PA 101 88 104 91 112 106 77 116

PF PA 101 90 138 97 113 98 55 121

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East PA 71 86 98 82

South

W L T New Orleans 4 0 0 Atlanta 3 1 0 Carolina 1 3 0 Tampa Bay 0 5 0

Pct PF PA 1.000 144 66 .750 102 63 .250 57 104 .000 68 140

Minnesota Chicago Green Bay Detroit

Pct PF PA 1.000 156 90 .750 105 78 .500 104 93 .200 103 162

North

W L T 5 0 0 3 1 0 2 2 0 1 4 0

West

W L T San Francisco 3 2 0 Arizona 2 2 0 Seattle 2 3 0 St. Louis 0 5 0

Pct .600 .500 .400 .000

PF PA 112 98 85 89 115 82 34 146

Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh 28, Detroit 20 N.Y. Giants 44, Oakland 7 Cleveland 6, Buffalo 3 Dallas 26, Kansas City 20, OT Minnesota 38, St. Louis 10 Cincinnati 17, Baltimore 14 Carolina 20, Washington 17 Philadelphia 33, Tampa Bay 14 Atlanta 45, San Francisco 10 Seattle 41, Jacksonville 0 Arizona 28, Houston 21 Denver 20, New England 17, OT Indianapolis 31, Tennessee 9 Open: San Diego, Chicago, Green Bay, New Orleans Monday’s Game Miami 31, N.Y. Jets 27 Sunday, Oct. 18 Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m. N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Houston at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Washington, 1 p.m. Carolina at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 4:15 p.m. Tennessee at New England, 4:15 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m. Open: Indianapolis, Miami, Dallas, San Francisco Monday, Oct. 19 Denver at San Diego, 8:30 p.m.

NFL Punt, Pass and Kick

The recreation departments of Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge and Sevierville will host the local NFL Punt, Pass and Kick Competition for boys and girls 8-15 at the Pigeon Forge City Park on Saturday, Oct. 17 at 9 a.m. All participants must provide a copy of their birth certificate. For more information, call Dave Anderson at the Gatlinburg Community Center at 436-4990.

COED volleyball league

Gatlinburg Recreation Department is now accepting rosters for the fall 4-vs-4 Coed Volleyball League. The league will be open to players 13-and-up and will play on Tuesday and Thursday nights from 6-9. Registration is $75, with a deadline of Oct. 16. The league will begin Oct. 20. For more information, call Dave Anderson at 436-4990.

Basketball league forming

Gatlinburg Rec Department is accepting rosters for a 5-on-5 mens basketball league. The league is for players 18-and-up and will play on Wednesdays from 6-10 p.m. The cost is $250 per team, and the deadline for entry is Oct. 19. The season will run from Oct. 21 to February.

Gatlinburg tennis round-robin events

There will be another tennis round-robin event 3 p.m. this coming Sunday at the Don Watson Tennis Center at Mynatt Park. It will be a doubles format for players 16-years and above, limited to the first 24 players to arrive. Interested players are asked to bring a dessert or an appetizer to share. For more information or to preregister for a guaranteed spot, call G Webb at 368-3433 or 436- 3639.

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Sports â—† A11

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 â—† The Mountain Press RACING WITH RICH

Chase is becoming a choice of sentiment vs. history When it was announced over a year ago that Mark Martin would be joining Hendrick Motorsports hopes sprang that the long time favorite would have yet another chance at a Sprint Cup title. As it turns out, Martin does indeed have one of his best chances at a championship. After qualifying for the Chase for the Championship the driver of car 5 has placed himself right in the thick of contention. With six races remaining, the venerable 50 year old star sits in second place, just twelve points out of first. Martin has finished second in the final standings four times and third another four times over the course of his career. Some would

championships, which last year tied him with the legendary Cale Yarborough with three titles in a row. A fourth consecutive Chase win would certainly rank among the great feats in the sport’s history. argue that he should A first win by Martin have won a title at least once but was denied due would rank as a favorite among many long time to penalties imposed by followers of this form of NASCAR for questionracing. able violations. So, for many racing This time around there fans the choice becomes is one major problem with Martin’s sentimen- one of witnessing history vs. seeing a sentimental tal journey toward his favorite finally earn a much awaited crowning as NASCAR’s top driver. title. But there is one Jimmie Johnson, the more thing to consider. current points leader, Another segment of seems to believe he has fans may opt to cheer a date with history. The for neither. Both of reigning champ stands squarely in the way of Martin’s trophy. Johnson has won the last three Sprint Cup

Richt has no plans to demote defensive coordinator Martinez By GEORGE HENRY Associated Press Writer

ATHENS, Ga. — Georgia coach Mark Richt insists his longtime friendship with Willie Martinez hasn’t clouded his ability to assess the job performance of the Bulldogs’ embattled defensive coordinator. Last week’s 45-19 loss at Tennessee marked the eighth time in 15 games that Georgia has allowed 37 or more points, but Richt has no immediate plans to demote Martinez. “If you coach, you’re going to get criticized,� Richt told The Associated

these drivers race for Hendrick Motorsports. The behemoth team has established itself as the dominate force in NASCAR over the past several years and in so doing has gained many fans but also many detractors. Neither history nor sentiment may be enough to get some fans to root for this team to take yet another trophy. While it is certainly not a given that one of these two drivers will ultimately be crowned as the season victor, the odds are increasingly working in their favor. Each week more and more drivers fade from contention. Right now,

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the Johnson vs. Martin scenario is the most likely to play out right down to the end race in Homestead, Florida. So, would you rather witness history or witness a feel good moment? — To contact me go to my website at RacingWithRich.com.

OCTOBER IS TRUCK MONTH

Press on Tuesday. “You’re going to get criticized when you win. You’re going to get criticized when you lose. “So whether a guy is your friend or not, they have taken on a certain responsibility where they know that they’re going to be in a situation where they know they can be criticized and they know they’ve got to do their job regardless of who the boss is.� Entering this weekend’s game at Vanderbilt, the Bulldogs rank last in the Southeastern Conference and 100th nationally in allowing an average of 30.7 points.

Juan Pablo Montoya remains within striking distance, just 58 points behind Johnson. With six races remaining there will be plenty of opportunities for these two leaders to come back to the pack. But for now at least, it appears as though

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12 Classifieds

The Mountain Press Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Legals 100 Announcements

600 Rentals

200 Employment

700 Real Estate

300 Services

800 Mobile Homes

400 Financial

900 Transportation

LEGALS NOTICE The contents of Leased space of the units listed below will be sold to satisfy the owners lien. The entire contents shall be sold at Parkside Self Storage, 4515 E. Parkway, Gatlinburg, TN. On Saturday,October 24, 9:30 AM until sold. Rights reserved to reject any and all offers. Cash sale only. James Upshaw unit 57 Michell Hicks unit 11 Ken and Marsha Goss units 201 and 248 Kathleen Castell units 202 and 205 James McGuire units 18, 27 and 40 10-7-09 10-14-09

110 SPECIAL NOTICES

Classifieds Corrections

After the first insertion, want ads scheduled to be published again on Tue., Wed., Thu., or Fri. may be canceled or corrected between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. on the day prior to publication. For ads on Sat., due Thu. prior to 3 p.m.; for Sun., Fri. prior to 10 a.m. and Mon., prior to 11 a.m. Notice of typographical or other errors must be given before 2nd insertion. The Mountain Press does not assume responsibility for an ad beyond the cost of the ad itself and shall not be liable for failure to publish an ad for a typographical error.

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Edition Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Good News in the Smokies

Deadline Friday, 10 a.m. Friday, 11 a.m. Monday, 10 a.m. Tuesday, 10 a.m. Wednesday, 10 a.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. Friday, 10 a.m. Thursday, 10 a.m.

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http://www.themountainpress.com OR, www.adquest.com All line ads published in The Mountain Press are placed FREE on a searchable network of over 500 newspapers’ classifieds located at http://www.themountainpress.com. WANT TO KNOW WHEN A CLASSIFIED ITEM IS AVAILABLE? Go to http://www.adquest/request/ to register your request and we will notify you by e-mail when it becomes available in the Classifieds.

107 LOST & FOUND Reward: Lost Diamond Bracelet at Food City in Pigeon Forge. 865654-6298 110 SPECIAL NOTICES

Unauthorized use of The Mountain Press tubes for circulars or any other advertisement authorizes a minimum $250 charge for which the advertiser will be billed.

does not recommend or endorse any product, service or company. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of FINANCING, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES AND WORK AT HOME OPPORTUNITIES, this newspaper urges its readers to contact the Better Business Bureau, 2633 Kingston Pike, Suite 2, Knoxville, TN 37919, Phone (865)692-1600.

PHOTOS SUBMITTED If you submit a photo for publication, please pick it up after it runs in the paper within ONE MONTH of publication date. Our photo files will be discarded each month. Thank You!

112 STATEWIDES

Adoption LOOKING TO ADOPT YOUR Child: Young, loving, educated couple looking to offer a lifetime of happiness. Legal/ Medical expenses covered. Please Call Alyse/ Seth 1-8774 7 2 - 2 9 7 9 (TnScan) Announcements DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT Children $95.00. With Free name change documents (wife only) and marital settlement agreement. Fast and easy. Call us 24hrs./ 7days: 1888-789-0198. (TnScan) Apts. for Rent **HUD HOMES** 4BD 3BA $444/mo or $55,900. 4bd 2ba $293/mo or $36,900. More 14bds Available! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%. For listings 800-546-3120 ext. T695 (TnScan) Business Opportunities ALL CASH VENDING! DO you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 25 Machines and Candy All for $9,995. 1888-745-3351 (TnScan) Career Training ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE FROM Home. *Medical *Business *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 888-738-0607, www.CenturaOnline.com (TnScan) AIRLINES ARE HIRING- TRAIN for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if

Online

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500 Merchandise Edition

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112 STATEWIDES qualified - Housing available.. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance (888) 3 4 9 - 5 3 8 7 (TnScan)

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112 STATEWIDES ing freight & stability Great Pay and Benefit Package. Call 800-828-6452 www.wtitransport.c om (TnScan)

112 STATEWIDES alEstateAuctions.c om; 1-800-7119175 David Hudgins TNAULIC 5232 (TnScan) Miscellaneous

Cars for Sale *POLICE IMPOUNDS!* 2000 HONDA Civic $800! 2000 Ford Escort $800! 1998 Toyota Camry $999! More cars available! For Listings 800-546-3091 ext. N263 (TnScan) Equipment For Sale SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $2,990.00 -Convert your Logs To Valuable Lumber with your own Norwood portable band sawmill. Log skidders also available. norwoodsawmills.com/300n. Free information: 1-800-578-1363 Ext 300-N. (TnScan) Health Insurance HEALTH INSURANCE FOR PRE-existing Conditions / Affordable. *No Medical Questions. *All Pre-existing OK. *Hospitalization / Doctor visits. *Surgery / Dental / Vision / RX. Real Insurance - Not a discount plan. Licensed Agent 763829. Call 1866-584-9817. (TnScan) Help Wanted "CAN YOU DIG IT?" Heavy Equipment 3wk Training Program. Backhoes, Bulldozers, Trackhoes. Local job placement asst. Could Qualify For GI/VA Benefits. 866-362-6497 (TnScan) HELP WANTEDCOMPANIES NEED employees to assemble their products. No Calling-No Selling. Make up to $500 a week. Call for booklet 601-7492290. (TnScan) Help Wanted - Drivers PTL OTR DRIVERS. NEW Pay Package! Great Miles! Up to 46cpm. 12 months experience required. No felony or DUI past 5 years. 877-7406262. www.ptlinc.com (TnScan) BIH TRUCKING COMPANY. DRIVER Trainees Needed! No CDL- No Problem! Earn up to $900/ week. Company endorsed CDL Training. Job assistance. Financial assistance. 888-780-5539 (TnScan) CDL/A FLATBED DRIVERS UP to .40¢. Good Benefits, Home Time, Paid Vacation. Lease Purchase Available. OTR experience required. No felonies. 800441-4271 x TN100 (TnScan) WTI TRANSPORT FLATBED CARRIER of Choice for O/O's & Company Drivers. We want highly motivated, professional flatbed drivers. Offer-

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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WORKS! ONE call & your 25 word ad will appear in 91 Tennessee newspapers for $265/wk or 30 East TN newspapers for $115/wk. Call this newspaper's classified advertising dept. or go to www.tnpress.com. (TnScan)

**HUD HOMES** 4BD 3BA $444/mo or $55,900. 4bd 2ba $293/mo or $36,900. More 14bds Available! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%. For listings 800-546-3120 ext. T695 (TnScan) Homes for Sale FORECLOSED HOME AUCTION TENNESSEE Statewide 400+ Homes Must Be Sold! REDC / Free Brochure www.Auction.com RE Brkr 317462 (TnScan) Lake Property THE GREATEST LAKE VALUE in All of Tennessee! 4.1 AC Prime Lake Lot w/ Free Boat Slips Only $22,500 (was $49,900) Sale Sat 10/24! Huge price reductions on estate-size lake access lots on spectacular recreational lake in Tenn! Close to all conveniences. Now is the ideal time to own lake property! Excellent financing. Call now 1-888792-5253, x.3282 www.indianlaketn.c om (TnScan) Mobile Homes Sale

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GOVERNMENT LOANS ON 2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms.. Limited Credit. OK Call Pre-approval Hotline 423-2479185 (TnScan) Pet Supplies HAPPY JACK® FLEA BEACON®: controls fleas in the home without expensive pesticides! Results overnight! At TFC County Coops. www.happyjackinc.com (TnScan) Real Estate 7998+/- AC TENNESSEE LAND Auctions Oct 24th 10AM, Large Tracts. Small Tracts 5Ac-2699+/Ac. Waterfront, Pasture, Hunting, Lake, Homesites. www.CertifiedRe-

All line ads published in The Mountain Press are placed FREE on a searchable network of over 500 newspapers’ classifieds located at http://www.themountainpress.com WANT TO KNOW WHEN A CLASSIFIED ITEM IS AVAILABLE? Go to http://www.adquest/request/ to register your request and we will notify you by e-mail when it becomes available in the Classifieds.

236 GENERAL

242 RESTAURANT

Manager needed. Cabin rental experience a plus. Please send resume to amazingviews@charterinternet.com or apply in person at Amazing Views of the Smokies-376 East Parkway Suite 2, Gatlinburg. No phone calls please.

Now Hiring: Experienced Bartenders & Servers, Apply in person at: Blaine’s Grill & Bar light #8 Gatlinburg Mon-Fri 11:30am3pm

Office Assistant Needed. Computer and People Skills Required. Hospitality Experience Preferred. Fax Resume to 865-908-1247 Papa Johns Gatlinburg now hiring all positions. Please apply in person. Personal Assistant wanted by disabled man for cooking, cleaning, driving etc. Male preferred. References required. 654-8247

Homes for Rent **FORECLOSURES/ BANK REPOS** 3BD 2ba $199/mo or $24,900! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%. For Listings 800-5463120 ext. S139 (TnScan)

Corrections

236 GENERAL A Great Earning Opportunity! Avon Only $10 to start. 1-888-781-0487 or 681-0487 Cabin rental company seeking part time Guest Services Staff for 2nd shift. Weekends required. Please apply at 170 Showplace Blvd, Pigeon Forge. 774-5545. CAREER OPPORTUNITY Funeral Pre-arrangement Agent If you are: Energetic and assertive Warm and caring Willing to work hard and learn an interesting new field Insurance licensed/ licensable Bi-lingual skills a plus. We offer: Professional training Comprehensive support staff Excellent earnings potential Flexible hours Please call 1-888-922 2292 or e-mail directconnectrc@ bellsouth.net. All replies held in strict confidence.

Grand Crowne Resorts in Pigeon Forge now hiring sales reps. Experienced or Inexperience . Commission up to 25% partial pd next day. Full benefits. Call 865-851-5105 or 865-804-5672 Help Wanted: Now Hiring for Cashier & Management Positions. Apply in person at Golden Eagle Headquarters in Sevierville. Management applicants please bring resume. Immediate Openings for Box Office Personnel. Apply in person at 2330 Parkway, Pigeon Forge. No phone calls please. Local cabin company taking applications for Reservationist, Assistant Manager, and Cleaners. Apply in person at: 333 Ski Mtn. Rd. Gatlinburg.

238 HOTEL/MOTEL CLARION INN & SUITES Looking for dependable, detailed and customer service oriented personnel. Now accepting applications for the following full time positions: •Front Desk Excellent wages, bonus and benefits! Please apply in person M - F, 9:30am - 3pm. 1100 Parkway Gatlinburg, TN

Four Seasons Motor Lodge in Gatlinburg hiring 2nd Shift Desk Clerk. Apply in person. Now hiring Housekeeping. Apply in person Park Tower Inn, 201 Sharon Dr, Pigeon Forge. Riverside Motor Lodge Gatlinburg now hiring experienced 311 Desk Clerk. Please apply in person. 241 PROFESSIONAL Executive Assistant Position Sevier County management company seeks executive assistant. Must have excellent computer, verbal and written communication skills and experience in handling multiple tasks in a fast paced environment. Experience in Marketing a plus! This position is key within the company, requiring a person with special skills in dealing with both internal staff and contacts outside the company. Must be able to react quickly and interpret the needs of management in a timely manner. Benefits include Excellent Salary, Medical Insurance, Vacation and 401k Plan. Qualified applicants should submit a resume and cover letter detailing skills and experience as well as compensation expectations to ex.assist@hotmail. com.

307 CHILDCARE

COZY CABIN CHILD CARE Open 24 Hours. Mon.-Fri. Sat. Hrs. available Low weekly rates CPR/First Aid Certified 13 yrs. exp.

Michele Price 851-5028 Bertram Family Childcare 2 openings for newborn-5 yrs. $99 wk includes all meals & snacks. Teacher with 35 years experience. Excellent references. Early Start Preschool Curriculum. For loving care when you’re not there. Call 428-7155 or 382-0579. State Licensed Daycare has openings M-F 7am-5:30pm. EOA. 865-4369442 356 STORAGE BUILDINGS

1ST MONTH FREE R&E STORAGE plus refundable cleaning deposit

Jay Ell Road 429-0948 Commercial storages

After the first insertion, want ads scheduled to be published again on Tue., Wed., Thu., or Fri. may be canceled or corrected between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. on the day prior to publication. For ads on Sat., due Thu., prior to 3 p.m., for Sun., Fri., prior to 10 a.m. and Mon., prior to 11 a.m. Notice of typographical or other errors must be given before 2nd insertion. The Mountain Press does not assume responsibility for an ad beyond the cost of the ad itself and shall not be liable for failure to publish an ad for a typographical error.

555 GARAGE & YARD SALES

610 DUPLEX FOR RENT

Garage Sale Fri 10/16 & Sat 10/17 9am3pm 2150 Red Bank Circle

1BR 1BA Duplex Apt off 416. $475 mth. $300 damage. 1 yr lease. No pets. 680-4290 or 428-1297

Huge Multi Family Garage Sale Knick knacs, clothes, furniture, display cabinets, lots of tattoo stuff, camper, too much stuff to mention. Don’t miss this one. Wed thru Sat. Rain or shine. 737 Smoky Mtn. View Dr., Sevierville. Take Dolly Parton Parkway to New Center Rd. Follow signs to behind New Center School. 429-8117 9 to 5 557 MISC. SALES King Sealy Luxury Plush Pillowtop. 15 inches thick. New in plastic. $499. 474-1495

10X10 or 10x20

7ff$" M%: >eeakf" <[dY[Z OWhZ$ 9bei[ je >eif_jWb$ .&& ! ZWcW][ Z[f$ B[Wi[ je emd$ ,+*#-(-( W\j[h *FC ,+*#()-*

693 ROOMS FOR RENT

DOWNTOWN SEVIERVILLE

428 Park Rd. near trolley stop CHEAP$100 weekly Includes All Utilities. Cable, Laundry, Kitchens, Clean Rooms, NO PETS.

800-359-8913

King Serta Plush/Firm new in plastic. 12 inches thick. Perfect for cabin rentals. $349. 4741495 Store fixtures for sale. Smoky Mtn Forge Gift Shop. Light #7 Pigeon Forge 4281875.

589 FURNITURE

For Sale

A-1 pre-owned dryers, washers, ranges & refrigerators All with warranty. Cagles Furniture and Appliances

453-0727

FOR SALE: 2 pcs. solid wood end tables Each a single front drawer. Lazy Boy Double End Recliner Sofa Love seat to match...Dk. Gold color. $500 for all. 654-1430.

590 APPLIANCES From 800 to 3200 sq ft 16 ft high building, 14 ft garage doors. Each building has separate 3 ft door. Good for motor homes, regular storage, etc. Electric furnished. Dynamite Storage 428-1774

)8H%(87 eh (8H%(87

Commercial Pizza Oven for sale, Bakers Pride $1200 OBO. Standup refrigerator $100 OBO Standup Freezer $100 OBO. All from local restaurant that has closed. Mike 865850-7236

SELF STORAGE

Weekly Rentals Includes Phone, Color TV, Wkly Housekeeping Micr./Frig. Available $169.77+ Family Inns West

Pigeon Forge 865-453-4905 •

Affordable Housing in Gatlinburg Rooms for rent, weekly rates, furn., cable TV, same rent all year.

436-4471 or 621-2941

696 APARTMENTS FOR RENT

$550 Move in Today. Ideal, quiet location. 2BR/1.5BA. Living room, kitchen. W/D included. No pets. 850-6123.

1 & 2 BR luxury apts. Jacuzzi, indoor pool. Moving van available. 3898918

1BR Apt. near Gat. W/D, DW, water, private ent. $160 wk./$575/mo.,$575 dep. 556-1929.

Convenient Location! 411 South, left on Robert Henderson Rd., 1/4 mile on right at Riverwalk Apts. 429-2962

2BR 1.5BA Townhouse

601 TOWNHOUSES FOR RENT Traditional townhouse 2BR 1.5BA Smoke free & pet free. $550 mth + $550 dep. Call 4285781. 500 MERCHANDISE

605 BUSINESS RENTALS

Central H/A. All appliances + W/D. Very nice. Great location. PF City Limits. $650/mth + damage dep. No pets. 428-1951 Ask for Ron

2BR/1BA Like New ALL Appliances Special Fall Rates

453-6823 FREE

First Months Rent

2BR Apts Sevierville $600/mo. + Sec. Dep. water & sewer incl. W/D Hookup, Pet Policy

429-2475


Classifieds ‹ 13

The Mountain Press ‹ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

1 BR / 1 BA IN SEVIERVILLE $380.00 + DEPOSIT NO PETS 865-712-5238

Kellum Creek Townhomes 1 BR - $450.00 2 BR - $645.00

696 APARTMENTS FOR RENT

697 CONDO RENTALS

BIG BROKER BOB’s REALTY 865-774-5919

APTS. AVAILABLE 1BR/1BA to 2BR/2BA $415.00 &UP. Many styles to choose from. 865-429-2962

Gatlinburg Beautiful 2BR 2BA Furnished Condo with Fireplace, Overlooks stocked trout stream and has heated pool. Walk to downtown Gatlinburg, includes water, cable, Flat screen TV. Immediate occupancy, Minimum 1 Year lease $950 mth. 865-771-9600

SILO APARTMENTS in Sevierville Offers 1/2 BR Units Pet Friendly

PIGEON FORGE 2BD/2BA APARTMENT

Beautiful 1BR furnished apt. 1 person only. No pets. Gated. 865-228-8414 BEAUTIFUL VIEW. Condo 2BR 1.5BA furnished. 2BR 1BA apt 680-5322.

incl. water & sewer.

865-908-6789

HOMES 2BR/2BA

Apt for Lease in Wears Valley 1 Month Free Excellent Mountain Views.

329-7807

Pigeon Forge 4BD/3BA 1 block off parkway

Wears Valley 1BR/1.5BA Apt. Pet Friendly

Kodak area. 2BR 1.5BA. All appliances furnished. No pets. 865-5480032.

Kodak 2BR/2BA, Washer/Dryer Hook-up 1 level, covered porch No Pets, 1 yr lease $500/$500 dep. 932-2613

Mountain View Townhome apartment for rent 2BR 1.5BA. Newly remodeled with hardwood flooring & new carpet. Located in Gatlinburg. 1st mth rent & security deposit required. For more information call 865-868-0449 Mon-Fri 8:30am5:30pm or 865356-3015 after hours & weekends

2BR/2BA located in New Center area. $$500/mo / & upp + $300 damage g dep. No Pets Call for appt. p pp 428-5157

Glenn Meadows, Glenn Vista & now Ruth Villas Hard wood oors, plus many extras, 1 year lease, no pets, TVA energy efďŹ cient.

865-453-8947 865-776-2614

2BR 1.5BA Sev. 1BR 1BA New Center. Stove & refrigerator furn. 453-5079. 2BR/1BA apt $675 mth. 2BR/2BA cabin $775 mth. 6BR/5BA house $1200 mth. 9244761.

For Rent: 16x80 Mobile Home, 3BR/2 Full Baths, No pets. Must have refs. (865) 428-3096

BEAUTIFUL 2-3 BEDROOM HOMES STARTING AT

$495/MO

865-933-0504 Fall Special

Kodak No Security Deposits 2BR/2BA $465 C H/A & decks No Pets 865-368-6602

OPEN HOUSE 15 NEW HOMES s .EVER "EEN 6IEWED s /NE 3TOP 3HOPPING

Murrell Meadows 1BR/1BA $415 Perfect for college students. Call 865-429-2962

865-453-0086

New 2BR 1.5BA Walking distance to Gatlinburg. Jeff 865-850-0840.

2BR 1BA mobile home on Indian Gap Cir. 933-5509 or 7552402

Small 1BR apt. in Gat Utilities included. No pets $485 mth + deposit. 404663-6362 Spacious 2BR/2BA Apt 1100 sq ft. Close to town & school. $700 mon. 9ft ceiling. Call 742-6176 697 CONDO RENTALS

$99 move in Special + Deposit 1 Condo left 2BR/2BA with Pool Access Contact Kim 654-2850

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by authority of a Deed of Trust executed by Charles Miller, II and wife, Jennifer R. Miller, to M. Coppley Vickers, Trustee, dated March 17, 2006, and recorded in Book 2488, Page 399, as modified in Book 3326, Page 453 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness due from Charles Miller II to Citizens National Bank, which has become due and payable by virtue of default in the Deed of Trust on the property hereinafter described; and Citizens National Bank, the true and lawful owner and holder of said indebtedness, having exercised its option to declare the indebtedness due and payable and having made demand for foreclosure pursuant to the Deed of Trust; I, the undersigned, acting under the authority of the Deed of Trust, by virtue of appointment as substitute trustee recorded in Book 3419, Page 734 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, will be at the front door of the Sevier County Courthouse, 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee, on the 9th day of November, 2009, at 10:45 a.m. to sell to the highest bidder for cash in bar of all rights waived by said Deed of Trust, the following described property to wit Which is believed to have an address of 212 Prince Street Sevierville, Tennessee 37862 SITUATED in the Fifth (5th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee in the town of Sevierville on the north side of Prince adjoining said street on the south, A. J. Ingle on the west, Mrs. A. W. Trotter on the east and W. G. Caton on the north and fronting 50 feet on said Prince Street and running back northward between parallel lines 142 feet. SUBJECT to a Right of Way Agreement of record in Book 1269, Page 81, in the said Register s Office. BEING the same property conveyed to Charles Miller II, a married person, by Warranty Deed from James B. Wallace and wife, Kathy Wallace, dated March 17, 2006, of record in Book 2488, Page 336 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day and time certain, without further publication and in accordance with law, upon announcement of such adjournment on the day and at the time and place of sale as set forth above. Wear Development Group, LLC, David W. Wear and wife, Keesha M. Wear, and John Wear and wife, Jessica Wear, may assert an interest in the above-described property by virtue of a recorded judgment lien and they have been notified of this sale. The above-described property will be sold subject to unpaid taxes, prior deeds of trust, all easements and restrictions, the rights of tenants in possession of said premises, if any, prior claims, or matters of record. The proceeds of the sale will be applied first to discharge the costs and charges of executing this trust, including attorney s fees; next, to all indebtedness remaining unpaid and secured thereby, including all indebtedness owing to Citizens National Bank, by the grantors; and next, the balance, if any, shall be paid to those legally entitled thereto. This _9___ day of October, 2009.

THOMAS H. DICKENSON Substitute Trustee Hodges, Doughty & Carson P. O. Box 869 Knoxville, Tennessee 37901 (865) 292-2307

s 3PACIOUS "EDROOMS s 7ASHER $RYER (OOKUPS s #EILING &ANS s &ULLY %QUIPPED +ITCHEN

s #LUB (OUSE s 3WIMMING 0OOL s -INI "LINDS s 0ETS !SK

2IVER #OUNTRY !PARTMENTS /LD .EWPORT (WY 3EVIERVILLE 4.

-+1 -,

1

699 HOME RENTALS

699 HOME RENTALS

New Rental Energy Eff. Geo-

HOUSE FOR LEASE W/OPTION TO BUY

Thermal H/A, Gated, Pvt. On 2.8 Acres, Mt. View! 2BR/2BA plus Attic BR, fp, furnished. Ref Required. Credit Check. Courtyard Seperation.

$875 mo. 1st & last deposit water & sewer no charge and cantilever barn.

(865) 428-7747 Cell: 207-2719 Optional Connected In-Law Apt. (Extra Charge)

in Sev./PF area. New 1900 sq. ft. 3BR/3 1/2BA, garage Central H/A. $1100/mo. Call 740-9850.

Drive A Hard Bargain... Advertise in the Classifieds!

1BR 30 ft travel trailer Like new on Sharp Rd in Sevierville. $200 mth. No pets. 865-254-1684.

CALL PINE KNOB

(865) 850-0278

698 MOBILE HOME RENTALS

s "EDROOMS s #AR 'ARAGE s 'RANITE #OUNTERTOPS s (ARDWOOD &LOORS s 'ARDEN 4UB s 'AS &IREPLACE s 3TAINLESS !PPLIANCES s %XTREMELY #ONVENIENT ,OCATION s 9EAR ,EASE s -ONTH s 2EFERENCES 2EQUIRED

GATLINBURG 2BR furn, water/elec inc, no pets, dep req. 865-621-3015. Gatlinburg 2BR/1.5BA Wd. Fire place. Quiet & safe neighborhood. Kit appliances , w/d connections. No Pets $600 Mo. $400 deposit. 1 yr lease 865-654-3615.

WALK TO WALMART Furn, W/D On Trolley Route Large 2 Bed Weekly, Bi-Weekly or Monthly 865-789-1427

Brand New Luxury Townhouse

CROSSCREEK 2BR/1.5BA $545 2BR/2BA Large Garden apartment $570.00 to $580.00 865-429-4470

Classifieds 428-0746

NICE, CLEAN

696 APARTMENTS FOR RENT

MAKE YOUR POINT!

696 APARTMENTS FOR RENT

2BR 1BA on private lot in Seymour. $450 mth includes city water. 1 block from Chapman Hwy. 654-1391

Call

428-0746

699 HOME RENTALS $700 to $1000+. Wanda Galli Realty Exec. 680-5119 or 774-4307.

2 Bedroom, No pets. $350 plus deposit. 850-4964.

2 story home with central heat & air. 2BR 1.5BA stackstone fireplace. Lake access. Appliancesstove, refrigerator, laundry room. 1010 Timberlake Circle. $675 mth, 1st & last & deposits. No pets. 865654-8716 or 865453-7715.

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE Sale at public auction will be on October 28, 2009 at 12:00 pm Eastern Standard Time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Michael Todd Ryan and wife, Reba Ann Ryan to Title Professionals Inc., Trustee, on July 26, 2006 at Volume 2586, Page 223and conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register s Office. Owner of Debt: U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee, on behalf of the holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-FF14 Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-FF14 The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record: Described property located in the Tenth (10th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit:Lot 17, in Twin Pond Estates Subdivision, a subdivision to Sevier County, Tennessee, as shown by map of said subdivision record in Large Map Book 2, Page 15, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, to which map reference is here made for a more particular description thereof.Together with easements for ingress, egress and utilities upon and over Leroy Way and Lela Way as shown on the aforesaid plat and as established by Declaration of Easement of record in ROW Book 17, Page 18, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. Street Address: 1059 Lela Way Seymour, TN 37865 Current Owner(s) of Property: Michael Todd Ryan and wife, Reba Ann Ryan Other interested parties: Covenant Health Credit Union The street address of the above described property is believed to be 1059 Lela Way, Seymour, TN 37865, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee Law Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP 6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410 Memphis, TN 38119 Phone 901-767-5566 Fax 901-767-8890 File No. 09-020843

October 7, 14 and 21, 2009 Kodak 3 homes 3+2 $500 2+2 $450 2+1 $425 + dep No pets. 933-6544. LEGALS

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE Sale at public auction will be on October 21, 2009 at 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Equity Trust Company Custodian FBO Jeffrey A. McQueary, IRA to Sevier Title, Inc., Trustee, on February 16, 2005 at Book Volume 2184, Page 452 and conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register s Office. Owner of Debt: National City Bank The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record: Described property located in the Sixteenth (16th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: Lot 222 of Hidden Mountain View Extended Subdivision as the same appears of record in Map Book 13, Page 54 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows : Beginning at an existing iron pin in the Northeastern Right-of-Way of variable width, said existing iron pin being a common corner to Lot 221 of Hidden Mountain View and also being located approximately 376.08 feet from the intersection of said Right-of-Way and Ridgecrest Lane; thence from said point of beginning and with the line of Lot 221, North 69 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds East 254.26 feet to an iron pin set in the line of Lot 215; thence with the line of Lot 215, South 16 degrees 47 minutes 21 seconds East 89.59 feet to an iron pin set, a common corner to Lot 223 Hidden Mountain View; thence with the line of Lot 223, South 69 degrees 43 minutes 28 seconds West 239.60 feet to an iron pin set in the Northeastern edge of a Right-of-Way of variable width; thence with said Right-of-Way, North 26 degrees 09 minutes 28 seconds West 89.90 feet to the point of Beginning.

Street Address: 2312 Bonnie Lane Sevierville, TN 37876 Current Owner(s) of Property: Equity Trust Company Custodian FBO Jeffrey A. McQueary IRA Other interested parties: The street address of the above-described property is believed to be 2312 Bonnie Lane, Sevierville, TN 37876, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee Law Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP 6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410 Memphis, TN 38119 Phone 901-767-5566 Fax 901-767-8890 File No. 09-018207

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by authority of a Deed of Trust executed by Walden Creek Holdings, LLC, a Florida limited liability company, to M. Coppley Vickers, Trustee, dated June 8, 2007 and recorded in Book 2839, Page 306 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness due from Waldens Creek Holdings, LLC to Citizens National Bank, which has become due and payable by virtue of default in the Deed of Trust on the property hereinafter described; and Citizens National Bank, the true and lawful owner and holder of said indebtedness, having exercised its option to declare the indebtedness due and payable and having made demand for foreclosure pursuant to the Deed of Trust; I, the undersigned, acting under the authority of the Deed of Trust, by virtue of appointment as substitute trustee, in Book 3417, Page 432 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, will be at the front door of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee on the 9th day of November, 2009, at 10:30 a.m. to sell to the highest bidder for cash in bar of all rights waived by said Deed of Trust, the following described property to-wit

Which is believed to have an address of Lot 5, Eldridge Ownby Farm Pigeon Forge, TN 37863 SITUATE in the Sixteenth (16th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being all of Lot 5 of the Eldridge Ownby Farm, as the same is depicted on a plat of record in Map Book 27, Page 108, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description; and BEING the same property conveyed to Waldens Creek Holdings, LLC, a Florida limited liability company, by general warranty deed of Brenda F. Ownby, individually and as executrix, and Anita F. Holt (formerly known as Anita F. Montgomery), dated the 8th day of June, 2007, of record in Book 2839, Page 303, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. TOGETHER with access to the French drain installed along Lot 7 as noted on plat of record in Map Book 27, Page 108, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. SUBJECT to all matters noted and/or depicted on plat of record in Map Book 27, Page 108, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. SUBJECT to restrictions of record in Misc. Book 184, Page 789, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day and time certain, without further publication and in accordance with law, upon announcement of such adjournment on the day and at the time and place of sale as set forth above. The Tennessee Department of Revenue has filed a lien in Book 3420, Page 774; the notice required by Tenn. Code Ann. Ă&#x; 67-1-1433(b)(1) has been timely given to the State; and the sale of the property herein described will be subject to the right of the state to redeem pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. Ă&#x; 67-1-1433(c)(1). The above-described property will be sold subject to unpaid taxes, prior deeds of trust, all easements and restrictions, the rights of tenants in possession of said premises, if any, prior claims, or matters of record. The proceeds of the sale will be applied first to discharge the costs and charges of executing this trust, including attorney s fees; next, to all indebtedness remaining unpaid and secured thereby, including all indebtedness owing to Citizens National Bank, by the grantor; and next, the balance, if any, shall be paid to those legally entitled thereto. This 9th day of October, 2009.

THOMAS H. DICKENSON Substitute Trustee Hodges, Doughty & Carson P. O. Box 869 Knoxville, Tennessee 37901 (865) 292-2307

September 30, October 7 and 14, 2009 October 14, 21 and 28, 2009

October 14, 21 and 28, 2009


14 ‹ Classifieds

The Mountain Press ‹ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

699 HOME RENTALS

699 HOME RENTALS

699 HOME RENTALS

1BR Gatlinburg Trolley Rt. No Pets. $500 1st & Last.$500 Damage 453-8852

1BR 1BA cabin w/ fireplace. Very private. Pigeon Forge. Call Mark 7am-1pm 453-5500 $600 mth.

3BR/2BA For Rent/Sale in Country in Dandridge. 20 mins from Pigeon Forge. 561866-1291

1344 sq ft 3BR/2BA $800 a month. 5 min from Hospital 1st & last. 931215-4614 2BR house in Gatlinburg for rent. Call 436-5385 or 8507256 3BR cabin furnished on stream. $250 per week. All utiltiies furnished. Off Hwy 321 in Cobbly Nob area. 8502487

3BR 1BA Gatlinburg $850 mth. 1st, last & sec. 599-7514 Mtn Ministries 3BR 2BA $675 mth 2BR 1BA $525 mth Lake access-Parking, appliances,private. Clean. Sec dep $750. Call Frank (865) 919-3433. 3BR/2BA + Bonus Room in Kodak $975/Mo + dep. 865-748-2684

4BR 3BA Cobbly Nob area. No pets. $1700 mth. 1st & last. 305-274-9110

A Perfect Location 1 Block off Pkwy, near Walmart. 2BR/1BA Double Carport, Sun room, extra storage. Nonsmoking Environment. No Pets please. $745 mo/yr lease. 453-5396

LEGALS

Who ya gonna call? If you have a problem with the delivery of your morning Mountain Press, please call the Circulation Department at 428-0746, ext. 239 & 231 Monday - Friday and your paper will be delivered to you on the same day. Newspapers from calls after 10:00 a.m. will be delivered with the next day’s paper. On Saturday, Sunday and holidays you may dial 428-0748 extensions 239 & 231. If complaints are received between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m., papers will be delivered the same day. Newspapers from calls received after 10:00 a.m. will be delivered with the next day’s paper. This applies to in-county home delivery only. Sevier County’s Only Daily Newspaper

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE TENNESSEE, SEVIER COUNTY DEFAULT having been made in the terms, conditions and payments provided in certain Deed of Trust executed by Steven McGill and Leesa McGill to Transcontinental Title, Trustee dated September 15, 2006 in the amount of $127,500.00, and recorded in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee in Deed Book 2627, Page 613, (“Deed of Trustâ€?); and, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust having been last transferred to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-10 by assignment; and, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-10, as the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust (the “Owner and Holderâ€?), has appointed as Substitute Trustee the undersigned, Patrick A. Taggart, Laura A. Grifka, Sidney A. Gelernter, or J. Michael Dugan, any of whom may act, by instrument filed for record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; therefore, NOTICE is hereby given that the entire amount of said indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Owner and Holder, and the undersigned as Substitute Trustee, or a duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested by the Appointment of Substitute Trustee, will on Thursday, October 22, 2009 commencing at 12:00 PM at the front steps of the Sevier County Courthouse in Sevierville, Tennessee; sell to the highest bidder for cash, immediately at the close of sale, the following property to-wit: The following described land in the County of Sevier, State of Tennessee: SITUATED in District No. Nine (9) of Sevier County, Tennessee, and without the corporate limits of any municipality and being known and designated as Lot 17, revised Section, Chilhowee Overlook, unit 4, as shown on the map of the same of record in Map Book 6, Page 35, Registers Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, and being more fully bounded and described according to the survey of Wade B. Nance, Surveyor, dated April 4, 1997, and bearing Drawing No. A-16850 as follows, to-wit: BEGINNING at an existing iron pin in the northwest right-of-way of Hamilton Lane, corner to Lot 18, said iron pin being located in a northeasterly direction 420 feet, more or less, from the point of intersection of the northwest right-of-way of Hamilton Lane and Cherokee Hills Boulevard; thence from said point of beginning and running with Lot 18, North 26 deg. 47 min. West, 243.65 feet to an existing iron pin, corner to Lot 26; thence with Lot 26 and in part with a fence, North 56 deg. 38 min. East, 100.84 feet to an existing iron pin, corner to Lot 16; thence with lot 16, South 26 deg. 45 min. East, 256.37 feet to an existing iron pin in the northwest right-of-way of Hamilton Lane; thence with the said right-of-way South 63 deg. 53 min. West 100.03 feet to the point of beginning. Being the same property conveyed to Steven McGill and wife, Leesa McGill by deed from Timothy John Williams and wife, Sarah Jean Williams recorded 09/30/2005 in Deed Book 2354 Page 193, in the Registers Office of Sevier County, Tennessee. Map & Parcel No.: 045P/A/006.00 PROPERTY ADDRESS: 406 Hamilton Lane Seymour, Tennessee 37865 CURRENT OWNER(S): Steven McGill & L eesa McGill SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: N/A OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, however, the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The sale will be held subject to any unpaid taxes, assessments, rightsof-way, easements, protective covenants or restrictions, liens, and other superior matters of record which may affect said property; as well as any prior liens or encumbrances as well as priority created by a fixture filing; and/or any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. If the U.S. Department of Treasury/IRS, the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue, or the State of Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development are listed as Interested Parties in the advertisement, then the Notice of this foreclosure is being given to them and the sale will be subject to the applicable governmental entities` right to redeem the property, as required by 26 U.S.C Ă&#x; 7425 and T.C.A. Ă&#x; 67-1-1433. The sale will be conducted subject (1) to confirmation that the sale is not prohibited under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and (2) to final confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the holder of the Deed of Trust. Substitute Trustee reserves the right to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by authority of a Tennessee Construction Mortgage Deed of Trust (ĂŹDeed of TrustĂŽ) executed by Marrell Jerkins, Laurence Steinbaum and Sidney J. Corley, to M. Coppley Vickers, Trustee, dated May 17, 2007 and recorded in Book 2823, Page 214 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, and assumed by Waldens Creek Holdings, LLC by Loan Assumption of Note and Deed of Trust of record in Book 3189, Page 443 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, and modified by Modification of Note, Deed of Trust and Related Documents of record in Book 3213, Page 405 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness due from Walden s Creek Holdings, LLC to Citizens National Bank, which has become due and payable by virtue of default in the Deed of Trust on the property hereinafter described; and Citizens National Bank, the true and lawful owner and holder of said indebtedness, having exercised its option to declare the indebtedness due and payable and having made demand for foreclosure pursuant to the Deed of Trust; I, the undersigned, acting under the authority of the Deed of Trust, by virtue of appointment as substitute trustee, in Book 3416, Page 94 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, will be at the front door of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee on the 9th day of November, 2009, at 10:15 a.m. to sell to the highest bidder for cash in bar of all rights waived by said Deed of Trust, the following described property to-wit Which is believed to have an address of Goose Gap Road at Waldens Creek Road Sevierville, TN 37863 SITUATE, LYING and BEING in the Sixteenth (16th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being Lot 6 of the Eldridge Ownby Farm, as the same is shown on plat of record in Map Book 27, Page 108, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at an iron pin found, a common corner with Lot 7 of Eldridge Ownby Farm and a common corner with Lot 5 of Eldridge Ownby Farm; thence leaving the line of Lot 7 and with the line of Lot 5, South 83 deg 07 min 29 sec East 228.82 feet to an iron pin found on the western line of Goose Gap Road; thence leaving the line of Lot 5 and with the western line of Goose Gap Road, South 02 deg 09 min 42 sec East 161.10 feet to a point; thence continuing with the line of Goose Gap Road South 02 deg 09 min 42 sec East 22.08 feet to an iron rod found, said pin being 39.70 feet from the intersection of Goose Gap Road and with Waldens Creek Road North 80 deg 13 min 24 sec West 227.57 feet to an iron pin set, a common corner with Lot 7 of the Eldridge Ownby Farm; thence leaving Waldens Creek Road and with the line of Lot 7, North 03 deg 26 min 03 sec West 150.00 feet to the Point of Beginning, containing 0.88 acres, according to survey of Michael K. Suttles, RLS #1452, Vision Engineering and Development Services, Inc., 229 Prince Street, Sevierville, TN 37862, 865774-7771, dated November 17, 2004, and bearing Drawing No. 02111007SV00. BEING the same property conveyed to Marrell Jerkins, a 1/3 undivided interest, Laurence Steinbaum, a 1/3 undivided interest, and Sidney J. Corley, a 1/3 undivided interest by deed from CBR Properties, LLC, a Tennessee limited liability company, dated December 19, 2006, of record in Book 2696, Page 489, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee. The sale of the above-described real estate will include a Uniform Commercial Code Sale of all fixtures attached to the real estate and all inventory, equipment, accounts, general intangibles, instruments, documents and chattel paper located at, used in or related to the real property being foreclosed. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day and time certain, without further publication and in accordance with law, upon announcement of such adjournment on the day and at the time and place of sale as set forth above. The Tennessee Department of Revenue has filed a lien in Book 3420, Page 774; the notice required by Tenn. Code Ann. Ă&#x; 67-1-1433(b)(1) has been timely given to the State; and the sale of the property herein described will be subject to the right of the state to redeem pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. Ă&#x; 67-1-1433(c)(1). The above-described property will be sold subject to unpaid taxes, prior deeds of trust, all easements and restrictions, the rights of tenants in possession of said premises, if any, prior claims, or matters of record. The proceeds of the sale will be applied first to discharge the costs and charges of executing this trust, including attorney s fees; next, to all indebtedness remaining unpaid and secured thereby, including all indebtedness owing to Citizens National Bank, by the grantor; and next, the balance, if any, shall be paid to those legally entitled thereto. This 9th day of October, 2009.

Patrick A. Taggart, Laura A. Grifka, Sidney A. Gelernter, or J. Michael Dugan McCurdy & Candler, L.L.C. (404) 373-1612 www.mccurdycandler.com File No. 07-17357 /CONV

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NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE WHEREAS, by Deed of Trust dated March 6, 2008 of record in Book 3036, page 57, in the Sevier County Register of Deeds Office, Allen L. Hood, unmarried, conveyed in trust to T. Mike Estes, Trustee for Farm Credit Services of Mid-America, FLCA, certain real estate hereinafter described, to secure the payment of the principal sum of $153,294.50, evidenced by a certain Promissory Note, said instruments being incorporated herein by reference; and WHEREAS, by instrument recorded in Book 3410, page 780, in the Sevier County Register of Deeds Office, Farm Credit Services of MidAmerica, FLCA, the owner and holder of said indebtedness, appointed James E. Bondurant, Jr., Substitute Trustee; and WHEREAS, default has been made in said Deed of Trust referenced above and the owner and holder of the Note described above has declared the entire balance due and payable and has instructed the undersigned Substitute Trustee to foreclose said Deed of Trust in accordance with their terms and provisions. NOW, THEREFORE, by the authority vested in me as Substitute Trustee under said instruments, I will on the 2 9 th day of October, 2009, at 2:00 p.m. at the front door of the Sevier County Courthouse, facing Court Avenue, located in Sevierville, Sevier County, Tennessee, offer for sale and sell the property to the highest bidder for cash, free from the equity of redemption and all statutory rights of redemption, homestead, dower and curtesy, all of which are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, property therein conveyed, which is more particularly described as follows: SITUATED in the Thirteenth (13th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, without the corporate limits of any municipality and being all of Unit CC (formerly known as Lot 29) and Unit GG (formerly known as Lot 33) of SUMMIT VIEW, A Horizontal Property Regime, and being more particularly described and defined in the Master Deed of SUMMIT VIEW CONDOMINIUM of record in Book 2520, page 339, as amended in Book 2572, page 419, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which Master Deed specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description. BEING the same property conveyed to Allen L. Hood by Quit Claim Deed from Incred-I-Builders, LLC, dated March 6, 2008, and recorded in Book 3036, page 55, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee; and for further reference see deed to Incred-I-Builders, LLC by deed from Allen L. Hood, dated January 6, 2006 and recorded in Deed Book 2438, page 816, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. THIS PROPERTY is subject to all applicable easements, permissive use agreements and restrictions of record in the register s office. Also conveyed are all rights in easements and permissive use agreements of record. THE ABOVE description is the same as the prior deed of record, no boundary survey having been made at the time of this conveyance. Said property is located in Summit View Condominiums, and being all of Unit CC and Unit GG, Sevierville, Tennessee, in Sevier County, Tennessee, said project is located along Upper Middle Creek Road, Sevierville, TN 37876 and being identified as CLT No: 085-056.00-029 and 085-056.00033. The above-described parcels of property will be sold subject to any and all unpaid taxes, restrictions, easements and building setback lines, matters shown on the maps referenced above, and to any prior or superior liens, judgments or Deeds of Trust. The proceeds of the sale will be applied in accordance with the terms and provisions of the above-named Deed of Trust. Said sale is being made upon the request of Farm Credit Services of Mid-America, FLCA, owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, due to the failure of the maker to comply with all provisions of said Deed of Trust. Other parties interested as defined by Tennessee statutes and to whom the Substitute Trustee has given notice of the sale includes the following: ALLEN L. HOOD Should the highest bidder fail to comply with the terms of the bid at the public sale, then the Substitute Trustee shall have the option of accepting the second highest bid, or the next highest bid with which the buyer is able to comply. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time set forth above.

THOMAS H. DICKENSON Substitute Trustee Hodges, Doughty & Carson P. O. Box 869 Knoxville, Tennessee 37901 (865) 292-2307

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The Mountain Press Wednesday, October 14, 2009 SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE Sale at public auction will be on October 28, 2009 at 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by James D. Burns and Jennifer B. Burns, husband and wife to Gregg S. Murphy, Trustee, on February 26, 2001 at Book 1185, Page 315 and conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register s Office. Owner of Debt: EverHome Mortgage Corporation The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record: Described property located in the Ninth (9th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit :Lot 72, of Eagle Den Subdivision, Unit III, as the same appears on a plat of record in Map Book 26, Page 25, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which reference is hereby made for a more particular description of said property. Street Address: 930 Eagle Den Drive Seymour, TN 37865 Current Owner(s) of Property: James Burns The street address of the above described property is believed to be 930 Eagle Den Drive, Seymour, TN 37865, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. IIf the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee Law Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP 6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410 Memphis, TN 38119 Phone 901-767-5566 Fax 901-767-8890 File No. 08-008077

October 7, 14 and 21, 2009

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE Sale at public auction will be on October 21, 2009 at 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Mildred Whaley and husband, Jerry Whaley to American Pioneer Title, Trustee, on May 2, 2003 at Book Volume 1696, Page 682 and conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register s Office. Owner of Debt: OneWest Bank FSB The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record: Described property located in the Seventh (7th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit Lot Number 3 of the Vern and Joyce Catlett Subdivision as shown by map or record in Plat Book 7 at Page 55 in the Register s Office in Sevier County, Tennessee, more particularly described as follows: Beginning on a stake on the South edge of the Dandridge-Sevierville Highway Number 66, corner Lot Number 2 South 84 degrees East 150 feet to a stake corner to Lots Number 2, 18, and 17; thence South 6 degrees West 100 feet to a stake corner to Lots Number 17, 16 and 4; thence North 84 degrees West 150 feet to a stake at the South edge of Highway Number 66 and corner to Lot Number 4; thence North 6 degrees 100 feet to the point of beginning. Street Address: 2411 Douglas Dam Road Sevierville, TN 37876 Current Owner(s) of Property: Mildred Whaley, and husband, Jerry Whaley Other interested parties: Eastman Credit Union The street address of the above described property is believed to be 2411 Douglas Dam Road, Sevierville, TN 37876, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee Law Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP 6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410 Memphis, TN 38119 Phone 901-767-5566 Fax 901-767-8890 File No. 08-007831

September 30, October 7 and 14, 2009 TENNESSEE, SEVIER COUNTY DEFAULT having been made in the terms, conditions and payments provided in certain Deed of Trust executed by Timothy Zeller to Dwight B. Grizzell, Trustee dated December 20, 2005 in the amount of $132,000.00, and recorded in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee in Deed Book 2427, Page 626, Re-recorded on 02/13/2007 in Deed Book 2427 Page 626, (“Deed of Trust”); and, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust having been last transferred to JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association by assignment; and, JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, as the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust (the “Owner and Holder”), has appointed as Substitute Trustee the undersigned, Patrick A. Taggart, Laura A. Grifka, Sidney A. Gelernter, or J. Michael Dugan, any of whom may act, by instrument filed for record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; therefore, NOTICE is hereby given that the entire amount of said indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Owner and Holder, and the undersigned as Substitute Trustee, or a duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested by the Appointment of Substitute Trustee, will on Thursday, October 22, 2009 commencing at 12:00 PM at the front steps of the Sevier County Courthouse in Sevierville, Tennessee; sell to the highest bidder for cash, immediately at the close of sale, the following property to-wit: Situated in the Fourth (4th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and without the corporate limits of any municipality in the State of Tennessee, and being known and designated as all of Lot 23, Shields Mountain Estates, an unrecorded Subdivision and being more particularly described as follows: Beginning on a new iron pin in the North right of way line of Mountain Boulevard (25.80 feet from centerline), said iron pin located in the curve that is the Southwestern intersection of Mountain Boulevard and Spring Drive, said iron pin also being located S 58 deg. 09 min. 27 sec. W 134.90 feet from the centerline intersection of Mountain Boulevard and Spring Drive; thence from said beginning point around a curve to the right; R= 21.73; A=50.57 feet; CH= S 20 deg. 42 min. 57 sec. E 39.91 feet to a new iron pin in the Northwest right of way line of Spring Drive (25.43 feet from centerline); thence along the Northwest right of way line of Spring Drive, S 45 deg. 58 min. 49 sec. W 118.62 feet to a new iron pin; thence around a curve to the right; R=65.99 feet; A=42.44 feet; CH=S 64 deg. 21 min. 11 sec. W 41.71 feet to a new iron pin; thence continuing around a curve to the right; R=139.12 feet A=50.96 feet; CH=N 86 deg. 43 min. 48 sec. W 50.68 feet to an iron pin; thence continuing with the North right of way line of Spring Drive, N 76 deg. 14 min. 09 sec. W 73.01 feet to found iron pin, corner to Jones; thence along the line of Jones, N 34 deg. 49 min. 48 sec. W 134.01 feet to a found iron pin, corner to Jones (Lot 24); thence along the line of Lot 24, N 54 deg. 18 min. 28 sec. E 130.05 feet to a found pin in the Southwestern right of way of Mountain Boulevard; thence along the Southwestern right of way of Mountain Boulevard, S 48 deg. 13 min. 30 sec. E 38.22 feet to a new iron pin; thence around a curve to the left: R=155.35 feet; A=106.18 feet; CH=S 67 deg. 48 min. 22 sec. E 104.13 feet to a new iron pin; thence continuing along the South right of way line of Mountain Boulevard, S 87 deg. 23 min. 00 sec. E 76.33 feet to the point of beginning as shown by survey of Eddy R. Garrett, RLS 1544, dated February 8, 2005, Drawing No. 05-021. Subject to restrictions of record in Misc. Book 45, Page 67, in the said Registers Office. Being the same property conveyed to Timothy M. Zeller, a single person by Warranty Deed from Alan A. Thompson, a single person, dated April 15, 2005, of record in Book 2224, Page 110, in the Registers Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Map & Parcel No.: 085 011.00

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2125 Spring Drive Sevierville, Tennessee 37876

CURRENT OWNER(S): Timothy M. Zeller SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: N/A OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: Shields Mountain Owners Association All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, however, the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The sale will be held subject to any unpaid taxes, assessments, rightsof-way, easements, protective covenants or restrictions, liens, and other superior matters of record which may affect said property; as well as any prior liens or encumbrances as well as priority created by a fixture filing; and/or any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. If the U.S. Department of Treasury/IRS, the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue, or the State of Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development are listed as Interested Parties in the advertisement, then the Notice of this foreclosure is being given to them and the sale will be subject to the applicable governmental entities` right to redeem the property, as required by 26 U.S.C ß 7425 and T.C.A. ß 67-1-1433. The sale will be conducted subject (1) to confirmation that the sale is not prohibited under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and (2) to final confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the holder of the Deed of Trust. Substitute Trustee reserves the right to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. THIS LAW FIRM IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on June 16, 2005, by Randall E Ussery to PRLAP Inc., Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book No. 2270, Page 755, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, Bank of America, N.A., the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, (the “Owner and Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Owner and Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or his duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested in him, will on Thursday, October 29, 2009 (having been postponed from the previous sale dates of October 1, 2009 and September 3, 2009), commencing at 2:00 PM at the steps of the Main entrance of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: Situated in the Thirteenth (13th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee and being all of Lots 99, 100, 101, 102 and 103 of Starr Crest Resort two phase 2 as shown on plat of record in Large Map Book 5 page 45 Registers Office of Sevier County, Tennessee to which plat specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description. Subject to easements, rights of way, setback lines, reservations, notations and all other matters as shown on plat of record in Large in Map Book 4 page 45 in said Register s Office. Subject to the rights of others in and to those portions to the subject property that may lie within the bounds of Starr View Drive, Starr Street, Angela Starr Drive and/or Sandstone Way. Subject to the right of way of record in Large Map Book 4 page 54 in said Register s Office. To the extent applicable, subject to easements, rights of way, reservations, notations and all other matters shown on maps of record in Large Map Book 3 page 126 and Map Book 25 page 8 in said Register s Office. Subject to restrictions of record in Volume Book 1750 page 767 specifically including the following: A. All building constructed on the subject property are limited in height to two (2) stories above the foundation. B. The exterior of all buildings constructed shall be finished and trimmed in neutral color. Please see Starr Crest Subdivision Adoption of Restrictive Covenants and record in Volume Book 1819 page 300 which specifically adopts the following: Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions for Starr Crest Subdivision, a planned Unit Development, of record in volume Book 1254 page 88 in said Register s Office. These Restrictions were modified by Amendment to Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions for Starr Crest Subdivision, a planned unit development of record in Volume Book 1414 page 134 Registers office Sevier County, Tennessee. These restrictions were revised again by Amendment to Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions for Starr Crest Subdivision a planned unit development of record in Volume Book 1984 page 772 in said Register s Office. This Amendment specifically replaces Article 4 section 3 of the original restrictions with the following: The amount of the initial assessment is set at $1,000.00 to be paid upon completion on an improvement (house/cabin, etc) The monthly Assessment shall be $75.00 payable quarterly in advance, but is subject to change by vote of three-fourths of the members at any properly called meetings of themembers. Being the same property Randall E. Ussery acquired from Ussery Construction Company Inc. by Warranty deed dated June 16, 2005 of record in volume book 2270 page 752 Register s Office Sevier County, Tennessee. PROPERTY ADDRESS: Lots 99-103 Star Crest RE Sevierville, TN 37876

CURRENT OWNER(S): Randall E Ussery The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan; any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; and any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: Mountain National Bank (3) OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Patrick A. Taggart, Laura A. Grifka, Sidney A. Gelernter, or J. Michael Dugan McCurdy & Candler, L.L.C. (404) 373-1612 www.mccurdycandler.com File No. 09-22383 /FHLMC

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o NDS1 Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329 (770) 234-9181 (ext. ) File No.: 158.0930419TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com

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Furnished House for Rent 1 blk from Pky Gatlinburg. Great location 865-274-2637 House for rent 2BR 2BA Flat Creek Rd in Sevierville. No pets. 453-5337 Large home on lake for lease in Kodak area. Minutes from Exit 407. 4BR 4+ BA, large deck, 2 fireplaces. $2000 per mth. 850-2487 Two cabins for residential rental between Gatlinburg & Pigeon Forge in Sky Harbor Development. Very nice & completely furnished. 1BR $600 mth, 2BR $700 mth 1 yr lease required. No subleasing. 423-2461500. HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD Toll-free at 1-800-6699777, The Toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

908 ATV SALES

829 MANUFACTURED HOME SALES

3BD/2BA With Land I will finance!

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42,900

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Manufactured home on fall lake view lot is a beauty. Home is immaculate and is nicely fully furnished. Subd is off hwy 139 in Kodak. Call Diane @ Rimmer Realty 865-397-2432 or cell 423-327-0956.

2007 Red 450 Yamaha Rhino. Excellent shape with approx 60 hrs on engine. $5500. 865-9083785. 941 SUV SALES

For Sale: 2007 Denali Envoy. Excellent condition. Loaded. $23,900. 865-3884846. 943 AUTOMOBILE SALES

1997 HONDA Accord, 4 cyl., 5 sp. AC, 4 dr., looks & runs good. $3195. Call 865-607-6542.

2004 SATURN ION2, AT, 4cyl, AC, PW, PDL, cruise, keyless entry, new tires. 68,000 miles, nice car, $5995. Call 865-607-6542.

945 TRUCK SALES 1999 Chevy S-10 94K miles. Excellent shape. $5000. 865-908-3785

710 HOMES FOR SALE Cobbly Knobb 3 BR 2 BTH BSMT Rancher "Renovated" all thru. Pristine location on stream $199,900 Call Brackfield & Associates 865-691-8195

Fish & Swim at home on Douglas Lake with your dock. 2BR 2BA A-Frame on approx 2 acres with 400 ft lake front. Large 2 car garage w/ workshop & office space.Appraised in 2007 for $450,000Sell $300,000. 865-219-8502

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

GITUL ©2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

GOUCH

DIMFOY

Pigeon Forge. Nice. Newly remodeled. 3 B R 2 B A $159,900 obo. 385-9530

NEW Jumble iPhone App go to: http://tr.im/jumbleapp

714 LOTS FOR SALE

Answer:

LOT in Ridgewood Estate Subd. Underground utilities. $39,000. 209-4113

Yesterday’s

BLAURT Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

” (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: QUAKE KNOWN CANNED ACTUAL Answer: When the noisy pet duck woke up the farmboy, it was the — “QUACK” OF DAWN


A16 ◆ Comics Family Circus

The Mountain Press ◆ Wednesday, October 14, 2009 Close to Home

Advice

Woman must distance herself from co-worker for sake of her marriage

Zits

Blondie

Baby Blues

Beetle Bailey

Dear Annie: I have been married to “Kristina” for 14 years, and we have a beautiful 7-year-old daughter. My wife has numerous health problems, including arthritis and diabetes. I have been a husband, father and doctor to her. Over time, I started becoming detached emotionally, and then our physical contact diminished. All our disagreements are about Kristina taking care of herself and the lack of sex. I always thought that because she is so dependent, I would never have to worry about her straying. I was wrong. I caught her cheating with one of her married coworkers. She admitted it, but is still lying to me about him. I have to take Kristina’s word that it is strictly business between them, but I don’t trust her. I am afraid the two of them are just being more careful about getting caught. I want us to work things out. The problem is, the co-worker said he would leave the company, but four months later, he is still there. His wife has no clue. The stress is taking a toll on my health. Kristina says she is committed to the marriage, but also says this coworker filled an emotional void and she misses his friendship. I think she’s in love with him. I have accepted my part of the blame for not trying harder years ago. We went to counseling then and are in counseling now, both individual and joint. What should I do about the co-worker? -- Brokenhearted Dear Brokenhearted: You cannot force the co-worker to quit. You can, however, tell Kristina that her constant contact with this

man undermines your efforts to heal your marriage. If she truly wants to be with you, she will take the necessary steps to cut him out of her life. If you haven’t specifically brought up this issue with your counselor, please do so immediately. Dear Annie: Ten years ago, my daughter got married during a Halloween party. Everyone wore a costume, even the minister. Her father and I were horrified. Now she wants to renew their vows on their Halloween anniversary when her husband comes home on leave from Afghanistan. They want everyone to wear costumes again. We want her to have the white wedding we missed before. She won’t budge. Can you help us? -Bereft in Bethesda. Dear Bereft: Sorry, no. This is her anniversary and her choice, as it was the first time. You would be less upset if you adjusted your attitude and decided to participate and have fun. Maybe she will surprise you and come dressed as a conventional bride (instead of the Bride of Frankenstein). If you want a white wedding, consider renewing your own vows. Then you can plan the event you’ve always wanted. Dear Annie: Your reply to “Professional Woman,” who complained about your use of the term to refer to a stripper, was way off base. Sure, most people probably knew that you

t o d ay ’ s p u z z l e

Garfield

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

For Better Or Worse

Tina’s Groove

were referring to some sort of sex worker, but how sexist is that? In the 19th and even 20th centuries, the phrase “public woman” was used to refer to prostitutes on the assumption that any woman who would occupy public space without a proper male escort must be a prostitute. It provided a handy way to exclude middle- and upper-class women from public spaces, stigmatize working-class women (who appeared regularly in public spaces), and render as sexual prey all women who went out in public. The double entendre implicit in the phrase “professional woman” undoubtedly serves a similar purpose, insinuating that sex work can be a profession for women and also that “professional women” are sexually available. It’s sexist and discriminatory. -- Leigh Ann Wheeler, Associate Professor of History, Binghamton University (SUNY) Dear Professor Wheeler: We did not intend to be sexist or insulting. However, you’ve made a well-articulated argument for us not to use the term again, and we won’t. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.


Nation ◆ A17

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 ◆ The Mountain Press

Robotic prostate surgery comes with major risks By CARLA K. JOHNSON AP Medical Writer CHICAGO — A new study suggests less-invasive keyhole surgery for prostate cancer may mean a higher risk for lasting incontinence and impotence when compared with traditional surgery. The results add to confusion around prostate cancer treatments, which sometimes lead to urinary and sexual problems. It’s not clear that either kind of surgery is superior to radiation alone or watchful waiting, which means simply monitoring the prostate for changes. Laparoscopic, or keyhole, surgery is increasingly chosen by men having a cancerous prostate removed. And often it involves the highly marketed da Vinci robotics system. Da Vinci’s popularity has been rising even though there’s never been a rigorous head-tohead comparison between it and standard surgery. “There’s been a rapid adoption of this relatively new technique,” said the study’s lead author Dr. Jim Hu of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. For the study, appearing in today’s Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers analyzed Medicare data for nearly 9,000 prostate cancer patients who had surgical treatment from 2003-07. Of those, 1,938 patients had minimally invasive surgery and 6,899 patients had standard surgery. The data did not indicate how many of the less invasive cases involved robotics. PIONEER WOODS Covering the Gatlinburg, Cosby, Hartford & Newport Areas • Truck and Trailer Rentals • Moving Supplies

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The patients who had keyhole surgery left the hospital in two days, rather than three, on average. They also had lower rates of blood transfusions, breathing problems and internal scarring. There was no difference in the rate of additional cancer therapy down the road, suggesting the two techniques were about the same for cancer control. But the men who had keyhole surgery were more likely to report complications in the first 30 days after surgery involving genital and urinary function. About 5 percent of the minimally invasive surgery patients vs. about 2 percent of the standard surgery patients had these complications. And after 18 months, they had more incontinence and erectile dysfunction. “The take-home message for men is they need to dig deeper than simply the message they might be getting from planted stories from device manufacturers or radio ads or billboards,” Hu said. In laparoscopic surgery, small incisions are made and the doctor uses a tiny camera and instruments for the operation. When robotics is used for this, the doctor sits at a console and manipulates similar instruments attached to robotic arms that work on the patient. From 2001-06, use of the da Vinci system — the

only robot available for this operation — rose from 1 percent to 40 percent of all radical prostatectomies. During that time, the stock price of da Vinci’s maker, Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Intuitive Surgical Inc., increased 11-fold. To compete for patients, more hospitals are buying robotic systems and advertising faster recovery times. More doctors are taking the two-day training to learn Intuitive’s da Vinci Surgical System. But many doctors perform too few robot-assisted surgeries to get good at it, Hu said, and that could explain the lasting problems that showed up in the study. Previous research has shown doctors who perform the most surgeries get the best results. Hu had his own learning curve. He’s now done more than 700 robotic prostate surgeries, but “it took several hundred cases before I thought I was doing really well in preserving erectile function and continence,” he said. Dr. Steve Freedland of Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, N.C., said he doubts the findings will dampen the enthusiasm for robotic surgery — he termed it “mass hysteria over new technology” — because surgeons will claim better-than-average results when they talk to men considering their options. Freedland, who does

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Associated Press

A billboard advertising robotic assisted surgery hangs outside Fenway Park in Boston earlier this week. prostate surgery, said the results just reinforce his decision to stick with traditional, open surgery. “One of the reasons why health care in this country is extremely expensive is because it’s assumed that what’s newest must be best,” Freedland said. The researchers found that the less-invasive surgery was more popular among more affluent, highly educated men. So it might be that those

patients are more likely to seek help for urinary and sexual problems compared to men who had traditional surgery, said Dr. Ashutosh Tewari, director of the Prostate Cancer Institute at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Tewari, who receives research funding from Intuitive Surgical and had no role in the study, faulted the research for lumping all minimally invasive

surgeries together, both robotic and those using older laparoscopic techniques. Ryan Rhodes, a spokesman for Intuitive Surgical, said there have been more than 800 previous studies on robot-assisted prostate surgery. “The overwhelming majority of these show superior results,” both for cancer treatment and urinary continence and sexual function, Rhodes said in an e-mail.

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To look over the choices, visit: www.themountainpress.com And click on the Photos box to the right.


A18 ◆ World

The Mountain Press ◆ Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Contraception use up, abortions down, deaths rampant DAVID CRARY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK — While contraceptive use is increasing worldwide, helping fuel a drop in the number of abortions, unintended pregnancies and deaths from unsafe abortion remain rampant in many developing nations, a research institute reported Tuesday in a major global survey. Sub-Saharan Africa was singled out as the region with by far the lowest rates of contraceptive use and the highest rates of unsafe abortions and unintended pregnancies. The report, three years in the making, was compiled by the New York-based Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights and is a leading source of data on abortionrelated trends. Researchers examined data from individual countries and multinational organizations, The institute’s president, Sharon Camp, said she was heartened by the overall trends since Guttmacher conducted a similar survey in 1999, yet expressed dismay at the gap revealed in the new report. “In almost all developed countries, abortion is safe and legal,” she said. “But in much of the developing world, abortion remains highly restricted, and unsafe abortion is common and continues to damage

Associated Press

People sit under a sign pointing toward an abortion clinic Tuesday in a government-run hospital in Katmandu, Nepal, where abortion is a legal practice and is performed in government and private clinics through out the country. The sign reads “Safe Abortion Service available. From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday to Friday. Charge 1,000 Indian rupees.” women’s health and threaten their survival.” In one example, the report told of a Nigerian woman named Victoria who first tried to induce an abortion by drinking an herbal concoction, then consulted a traditional healer who inserted leaves

in her vagina that caused internal injuries. The report’s call for further easing of developing nations’ abortion laws was criticized by Deirdre McQuade, a policy director with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities.

“We need to be much more creative in assisting women with supportive services so they don’t need to resort to the unnatural act of abortion,” she said. Guttmacher estimated previously that the number of abortions worldwide fell from 45.5 million in 1995 to 41.6 million in 2003 — the latest year for which global figures were available. A key reason for that drop, the new report said, was that the portion of married women using contraception increased from 54 percent in 1990 to 63 percent in 2003 as availability increased and social mores changed. Guttmacher’s researchers said contraceptive use had increased in every major region, but still lagged badly in Africa — used by only 28 percent of married women there compared to at least 68 percent in other major regions. The report notes that abortions worldwide are declining even as more countries liberalize their abortion laws. Since 1997, it said, only three countries — Poland, Nicaragua and El Salvador — substantially increased restrictions on abortion, while laws were eased significantly in 19 countries and regions, including Cambodia, Nepal

and Mexico City. Despite this trend, the report said 40 percent of the world’s women live in countries with highly restrictive abortion laws, virtually all of them in the developing world. This category includes 92 percent of the women in Africa and 97 percent in Latin America, it said. “Legal restrictions do not stop abortion from happening, they just make the procedure dangerous,” Camp said. “Too many women are maimed or killed each year because they lack legal abortion access.” The report estimated that 19.7 million of the 41.6 million abortions in 2003 were unsafe — either selfinduced, performed by unskilled practitioners, or carried out in unhygienic surroundings.

“Almost all of them occurred in less developed countries with restrictive abortion laws,” said the report, which estimated that 70,000 women are killed annually from unsafe abortions and 8 million women suffer complications because of them. The report makes three major recommendations: n Expand access to modern contraceptives and improve family planning services. n Expand access to legal abortion and ensure that safe, legal abortion services are available to women in need. n Improve the coverage and quality of post-abortion care, which would reduce maternal death and complications from unsafe abortion. Present this coupon for

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