October 20,2009

Page 1

The Mountain Press ■ Sevier County’s Daily Newspaper ■ Vol. 25, No. 293 ■ October 20, 2009 ■ www.themountainpress.com ■ 50 Cents

Tuesday

Surprise vote for flood insurance

INSIDE

County leaders vote 20-3 to enter into federal program By DEREK HODGES Staff Writer

5Ascending to new heights Smoky Bears movin’ on up in AP’s statewide 6A football poll Sports, Page A8

Flood insurance program vote

SEVIERVILLE — The county’s Voting for: Ronnie Allen, Fred Atchley, Ben Clabo, Jimbo Conner, Bryan participation in the National Delius, Judy Godfrey, Mike Hillard, Jim Keener, Phil King, Tommy McGaha, Flood Insurance Program has Buster Norton, Bill Oakes, Ray Ogle, Frank Parton, Harold Pitner, Tony twice before been shot down by Proffitt, Carroll Rauhuff, Jimmy Temple and Ronnie Whaley. the County Commission, but a Voting against: Gene Byrd, Warren Hurst and Kenneth Whaley. proposal to enter the initiative sailed through with surprising ease Monday evening. ing toward approval, but when only three opposed it. The debate on the matter gave the roll was called, 20 commisThat vote caps months of work no hints that the move was cruis- sioners gave it a thumbs-up and and debate among planning lead-

ers, and officially launches the county into the program, which each of the cities already participate in. It could mean savings for some local property owners, but also more regulations for those looking to build in flood-prone areas. Those new rules have prompted plenty of concerns locally, with the common argument about

Dumplin Creek asks for $8.5M

Snow on the mountain 5More chances for life 32 new planets are discovered outside of our solar system WORLD, Page A14

BOMA to consider request at workshop

Celebrities

By JEFF FARRELL Staff Writer

They still love ‘The King’ Lock of Elvis’ hair fetches $15,000 at auction Saturday Page A6 Submitted photos

Weather Today Sunny High: 70°

Tonight Mostly clear Low: 40° DETAILS, Page A6

Obituaries Lola Riggs, 84 James Tant, 77 Teresa Koontz, 47 Henrietta Ogle, 52 Joseph Irwin, 82

DETAILS, Page A4

Hundreds of tourists and locals who traveled Newfound Gap Road on Sunday to see the annual foliage display got an added bonus. In the lower portions of the National Park, the foliage is becoming more brilliant by the day. As travelers moved slowly up the mountain, they came to areas where bright foliage was mixed with the white of the season’s first snow. In the higher elevations almost all of the leaves were hidden by snow and there were icicles forming on rock formations. Park rangers closed the highway at approximately 4:30 p.m. because of ice road conditions in the higher elevations.

Corrections The Mountain Press is committed to accuracy. Please report factual errors by calling 428-0748 Ext. 214.

Looking for a miracle

H1N1 flu vaccine arrives

Seymour resident hopes to find one at cancer center in Chicago By ELLEN BROWN Staff Writer

my brother sent me a birthday card with more money in it than usual.” The Seymour resident SEYMOUR — Cancer patient Mary Wooten had is probably more apprebeen having a great week. ciative than most of the little blessings in life “Ever since I’ve been — she has been battling wearing this bracecancer and other health let, good things have problems for eight years. been happening,” said Wooten has stage four Wooten, pointing to a purple wristband printed Parotid Pleomorphic with the word “Miracle.” Adenoma, a rare cancer diagnosed in 2005. In “My stepdad, who has 2001, she had been diagbeen in the hospital, is nosed with cervical and doing much better. And

SEVIERVILLE — The Dumplin Creek project needs $8.5 million from the city to build the main road into the retail and entertainment complex, John Turley said Monday. The long-awaited development along Interstate 40 near Exit 407 is one of the most visible projects in Sevierville, because of the location and the large amount of earth moved before work stopped due to the downturn in the economy. Its prospects appeared to move forward with the recent announcement that Wal-Mart signed a contract to build a supercenter at the site; in fact the site plan for that store has already been presented to the planning commission. But in a letter to Mayor Bryan Atchley he presented at the meeting, Turley noted Wal-Mart could still move on to another site. “Until Kodak and the city work together to get Wal-Mart to close on their site, we are subject to a better deal coming their way and killing our project!! (sic),” Turley said in the letter. See DUMPLIN, Page A5

Index Local & State . A1-A4,A6 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . A2 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . A7 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . A8,A9 Money . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Advice . . . . . . . . . . . A13 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . A13 Classifieds . . . . . A10-A12 Nation . . . . . . . . . A5,A14 World . . . . . . . . . . . . A14

See FLOOD, Page A5

Submitted reports

mation online about the Cancer Centers of America, the nearest location in Chicago. They treat the whole body instead of just the cancer,” Wooten said. Wooten is unsure how much her insurance

SEVIERVILLE — The Sevier County Health Department will offer H1N1 flu vaccine shots on Thursday from 3 to 7 p.m. To make an appointment, call 453-1032. The vaccine will be provided at no charge. The health department is located on Cedar Street downtown. The H1N1 flu vaccine shot will be given to the following people only: n Children ages 6 months and older

See MIRACLE, Page A4

See VACCINE, Page A5

Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press

Mary Wooten of Seymour is a cancer patient and currently takes 15 medications each day. She hopes to receive breakthrough treatment at the Cancer Center of America in Chicago. adrenal cancer. Karen Melbardis, a friend Wooten met at the food pantry (and who presented her with the “Miracle” wristband), had been keeping up with her health struggles and told her she may have found a solution. “She had found infor-


A2 â—† Local

The Mountain Press â—† Tuesday, October 20, 2009

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 4280748, ext. 214, or e-mail to editor@themountainpress. com. Items may be faxed to 453-4913.

Tuesday, Oct. 20 Women’s Bible Study

can be picked up at Mountain Hope Clinic between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. today. 774-7684.

Pig Roast/Pow-Wow

Native American powwow part of pig roast at St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church on Hardin Lane, Sevierville. 10-5 today and Saturday. Pow-wow $5. Meal Saturday 11-5 for $8. Tickets at door or from church members. 4530943.

Gists Creek Baptist

Gists Creek Baptist singing 6 p.m. with Marcia Huskey-Nelson and Jarrod Wilson from First Baptist Sevierville, members of praise/worship band.

Fall Festival

Pigeon Forge First Baptist Church Fall Festival 4-7 p.m., 209 Wears Valley Road across from Kroger. Trunk or treat, bounce rides, food. 453-4647.

Garlands of Grace women’s Bible study: n 1 p.m. Fox Trot B&B, Garrett Road, Gatlinburg n 6:30 p.m. Pigeon Forge UMC

Kid’s Night Out

New Salem Baptist

Gatekeepers

Woodmen Meeting

Second Baptist

Gatekeepers men’s community Bible study, 6:30 p.m., 1328 Old Newport Highway, Sevierville. 9050591.

Hospital Benefit

Kid’s Night Out 6 to 10 p.m. at the Pigeon Forge Community Center. $10 for PFCC members and $15 for nonmembers. 429-7373. Woodmen of the World meets 3:30 p.m. in Big Lots parking lot for Halloween party/corn maze at Kyker Farms. 765-0233.

Saturday, Oct. 24

Volunteers at Fort Sanders Sevier Medical Center hosting $5 jewelry sale 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. in classrooms. Proceeds benefit LeConte Medical Center.

5k Run for ACS

Civitan

Pig Roast/Pow-Wow

Sevier County Civitan meets at noon at the Golden Corral in Sevierville. 429-8400

Gospel Concert

J.P. Miller in concert, free at Riverbend Campground.

Thursday, Oct. 22 Hot Meals

Smoky Mountain Area Rescue Ministries provides hot meals 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at First United Methodist Church in Sevierville.

TOPS

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

Women’s Bible Study

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

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.

Midway FCE

Midway Family, Community and Education meet 1 p.m at Mountain National Bank. Program: Stress and how to deal with it.

‘Suthern Livin’ Nite’

“Suthern Livin’ Nite,� Wears Valley United Methodist, 3110 Wears Valley Road. Relay for Life team serving meal of beans, greens, and cornbread for $5. Entertainment to follow.

Genealogy Class

Theresa Williams to hold free beginning genealogy class 4:30-5:30 p.m., Main Library, 321 Court Ave. 908-7988 day prior to class so materials can be reserved.

Book Sale

Tanger Outlet’s first 5K run/walk at 8 a.m. at Tanger Five Oaks. $25 day of race. 453-1053 or wwwtangeroutlet.com. Native American powwow part of pig roast at St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church on Hardin Lane, Sevierville, 10-5. Pow-wow admission $5. Pork meal $8 from 11-5. Tickets at door. 453-0943.

Festival Trunk/Treat

French Broad Valley Baptist Church Fall Festival/trunk or treat 4-6 p.m. Hot dogs, candy and games.

SCVFD Benefit

Sevier County Volunteer Fire Department 30th annual benefit auction and hot dog supper, 5 p.m. at fairgrounds, rain or shine. Includes games for children.

Health Fair

Roaring Fork Baptist Church health fair 10 a.m. to noon in Family Life Center. Flu shots $25; free blood pressure checks, breast cancer info and more. 436-9403.

Optimist Club

Kodak Northview Optimist Club yard sale 8 a.m. at the Optimist Cub Building. For donations/ into, 933-0078.

Sunday, Oct. 25 Toy Run

East Tennessee Toy Run from Smokies Park to Maryville. Gates open 9 a.m.; ride leaves at 1. Bring a toy or $10 per person. E-mail to fxdwglide@ hotmail.com or santa@ shilohriders.com.

Maples Branch

Maples Branch Baptist Church singing 6:30 p.m. with guest singer, Greg Bullock.

Soccer Shoot

Gatlinburg Elks Lodge soccer shoot, 2 p.m. at Walters State in Sevierville, for ages 14 and under. Trophies in each age group. 436-7550.

Boyds Creek Baptist

Boyds Creek Baptist Church monthly service in song, 7 p.m. with Cody Shuler and Pine Mountain Railroad.

Local Rotarians fighting polio

Adoptable pets

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Singing at New Salem Baptist Church on Jones Cove Road, 6:30 p.m. with Russell Family and Gospel Tradition. The Parton Family singing 6 p.m. at Second Baptist Church.

Old Timers Day

Walden Creek Missionary Baptist Church Old Timers Day following 9:30 a.m. service. Special singing by the Heirmen. 453-5805.

Pastor Appreciation

Pastor Appreciation Day, First Smoky Mountain Church of the Nazarene, 2652 Upper Middle Creek Road, Sevierville. An Old Fashion Worship Service is planned in honor of Pastor Owen Wetzel and his wife, Pat. Special music by out of town guests and local members of the church. Brother Barrett Smith will be preaching. A love offering will be taken at the end of the service for the Wetzels. Also following will be a pot luck dinner in Suite No. 3.

Monday, Oct. 26

From Submitted Reports

On a sunny afternoon in September 1979, Jim Bomar of the Rotary Club of Shelbyville put the first drops of polio vaccine in the mouth of a small child in the Philippines. This started a journey that is celebrated worldwide on Oct. 24 as World Polio Day. Rotary International has pledged to eradicate this disease. In November, Rotary clubs throughout east Tennessee, including those in Sevier County, will be joining in the “You Can Change the World� campaign. They will be placing labeled cans at local businesses asking for customers’ change. All of this money will be matched by the Gates Foundation. District Gov. Carol Foster said, “We are currently Submitted trying to vaccinate about Ariel is a 5-month-old domestic long hair torti. 150 million Americans Three-year-old Little Bit is a Chihuahua mix. against the swine flu over Adoption fee for cats and dogs is $100 and the next few months and includes their first set of vaccinations, spay/ this is a historic event. neuter and microchip. The Gnatty Branch When Rotarians conduct Animal Shelter is open Tuesday through a National Immunization Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. Adoptions Day in India we will vacOptions booth at Great Smokies Flea Market cinate about 170 million is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and children under the age of 5 Sunday. in three days.� ALLWEATHER AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING

Women’s Bible Study

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Garlands of Grace women’s Bible study: n 10 a.m. Seymour Heights Christian Church n 1 p.m. Gatlinburg Inn, Gatlinburg

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Holiday of Hope

Mountain Press Relay For Life team meeting 3:306:30 p.m. at newspaper office, 119 Riverbend Drive, regarding Nov. 21 Holiday of Hope Pageant. Pick up or drop off registration forms and donations, and get info. 4280478, ext. 215.

Gatekeepers

Gatekeepers men’s Bible study 6:30 p.m., 2445 Scenic Mountain Road, Sevierville. 310-7831.

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Smart Bank Stock For Sale

Approximately 30,000 shares can be purchased in big blocks or small blocks. $15 per share.

Call (865) 388-2795

Book Sale 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Fort Sanders Sevier Medical Center classrooms. Proceeds benefit the LeConte Medical Center.

Pi Beta Phi Drama

Pi Beta Phi Elementary School presents “Legend of Sleepy Hollow,� 7 p.m. at the school. Tickets $3.

Friday, Oct. 23 Church Concert

Faith Trio and the Camerons perform 7 p.m. at Gum Stand Baptist Church, 3031 Veterans Blvd., Pigeon Forge. Offering to help Missionaries For Christ.

Rummage Sale

Rummage sale 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Saturday at The Crossing Church, 215 Kyker Ferry Road, Kodak, near post office.

Church Lunches

St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church taking orders for boxed pork sandwich lunches to benefit local nonprofits. $7. Lunches

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Local ◆ A3

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 ◆ The Mountain Press

Submitted reports KNOXVILLE — To raise awareness about child abuse and neglect and to commemorate CASA’s 20th anniversary in East Tennessee, Court Appointed Special Advocates established the Light of Hope Child Abuse Victims Memorial Fund in 2007 and commissioned the Light of Hope sculpture. The sculpture, “Innocence Remembered,” will be unveiled at Knox County Juvenile Court on Division Street at 2 p.m. Nov. 6. The sculpture will serve as a reminder of the effect child abuse has on the community. The piece consists of a 48-inch triangular granite stone with two lifesized bronze children on top. The stone base will bear the following inscription: “In remembrance of lives lost to child abuse. In celebration of lives saved through caring.”

Submitted

This CASA statue raising awareness of child abuse and neglect will be unveiled in Knoxville. “Its strategic placement near the entrance to the court and juvenile detention facility is

Arrowmont to host ‘Souper Bowl VI’ Fundraiser slated for Nov. 12, 5-6:30 p.m. From Submitted Reports GATLINBURG — Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts will again host its fundraising event combining handmade bowls and food for the United Way of Sevier County.

“Souper Bowl VI” will be held on Nov. 12 from 5-6:30 p.m. in Arrowmont’s staff house dining room. Tickets are $20 each, with all proceeds benefiting the United Way. The ticket earns a place in line to select a free handmade ceramic bowl created by Arrowmont staff, resident artists and students. Then persons can fill the

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stop by Arrowmont at 556 Parkway in Gatlinburg. All proceeds from ticket sales will be given to the United Way. For more information about Arrowmont’s programs, visit www.arrowmont.org or call 4365860.

KNOXVILLE (AP) — A University of Tennessee technology employee has been charged with attempting to solicit a child for sex in Georgia. A statement from the FBI in Atlanta says 41-year-old Todd McAdoo of Knoxville was arrested Sunday in Catoosa County, Ga. He is charged with computer sexual exploitation; attempted aggravated child molestation; and possession of a controlled substance, Viagra, without a prescription. McAdoo was being held Monday on $22,500 bond at the county jail in Ringgold, Ga.

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bowl with soups prepared by Arrowmont’s kitchen. Tickets may be purchased in advance at the school or from an Arrowmont staff member. Limited tickets will be available at the door. Call 436-5860 to reserve tickets with a credit card or

University of Tennessee employee charged with solicitation of child

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designed to remind all who walk past it of the importance of protecting the most vulnerable

members of the community,” said Carolyn Doty, CASA of East Tennessee executive director. The community may participate in the Light of Hope sculpture project by purchasing a sponsorship or an engraved brick paver. Two sizes are available for $100 and $200 each. Those contributing $1,000 or more will have their name engraved on the back of the granite base. CASA has a goal of raising an additional $20,000. Send contributions to CASA of East Tennessee Cherokee Mills, 2250 Sutherland Ave., Suite 101, Knoxville 37919. Call 329-3399 or visit www.casaofeasttn.org. Since 2004, child abuse rates have increased approximately 106 percent in Knox and the surrounding counties served by CASA of East Tennessee. That includes Sevier. For more information or to obtain a donation form, call or visit the Web site.

865-546-7282

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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 Thomas Wayne Bradford, 54, of 414 Swaying Pines Drive in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 17 with phone call: harassment. He was released on $1,500 bond. u Melanie Ann Burkett, 31, of 2114 Hazelwood Lane in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 19 with violation of probation. She was being held. u Will Carol Carter, 37, of Jefferson City, Tenn., was charged Oct. 19 with violation of probation. He was being held. u Jacob Andrew Cole, 31, of 646 Delaney Drive in Kodak, was charged Oct. 19 with simple possession and possession of drug paraphernalia. He was being held. u Jonathan Deion Daniel, 19, of Strawberry Plains, was charged Oct. 17 with leaving the scene of an accident, following too close and financial responsibility law. He was released on $500 bond. u Juan Carlos Estrada, 19, of Louisville, Tenn., was charged Oct. 18 with speeding and driving without a license. He was being held in lieu of $1,500 bond. u Joseph Brenham Habenicht, 24, of Newport, was charged Oct. 19 with DUI and violation of implied consent law. He was released on $2,500 bond. u Tracy Ray Hammock, 29, of Cookeville, was charged Oct. 18 with DUI and violation of implied consent law. HE was released on $2,500 bond. u Timothy Gene Hatmaker, 44, of 307 Kate Byrd #21 in Kodak, was charged Oct. 19 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court and criminal impersonation. He was being held. u Kami Nicole Hays, 18, of 304 Club Drive Apt. 304 in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 18 with aggravated burglary. She was being held in lieu of $15,000 bond. u Kristina Ann Hicks, 24, of Dandridge, was charged Oct. 19 with DUI, violation of open container laws and traffic violations. She was being held in lieu of $2,500 bond. u Crystal Joan Hill, 25, of Hartford, Tenn., was charged Oct. 18 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. She was being held. u Robert Lewis Jeffries, 56, of Spring City, Tenn., was charged Oct. 17 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held. u Audrey Jeneen Jinks, 34, of Newport, was charged Oct. 16 with, a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. She was being held. u Elmer Chester Lane, 57, of Oak Ridge, was charged Oct. 18 with DUI, speeding and financial responsibility law. He was released on $3,500 bond. u Seth E. Newman, 18, of 3105 Clintwood Way Lot 97 in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 18 with aggravated burglary. HE was released on $4,000 bond. u Jason Lee Ownby, 30, of 1350 Newsome Road in Cosby, was charged Oct. 18 with unlawful possession of a weapon, driving while revoked and traffic violations. He was released on $2,000 bond. u Kelly Ray Quarles, 37, of 111 Eight Point Way in Sevierville ,was charged Oct. 19 with criminal impersonation. He was being held in lieu of $1,500 bond. u Jerry Justin Reagan, 21, of 304 Club Drive Apt. 10 in Sevierville, was charged Oct. 17 with 121 Silver Bell Lane in Gatlinburg, was charged Oct. 17 with aggravated burglary. He was being held in lieu of $15,000 bond. u Lisa McGill Reagan, 51, of 121 Silver Bell Lane in Gatlinburg, was charged Oct. 17 with violation of open container laws, unlawful possession of a weapon, DUI, violation of implied consent law and traffic violations. She was released on $500 bond. u Ronald Joe Tarbett, 42, of 2980 Six Pointe Lane in Seymour, was charged Oct. 18 with violation of parole. He was being held. u Joe Charles Tillett, 51, of 4333 Trentham Way in Pigeon Forge, was charged Oct. 17 with violation of probation. He was released. u Jason Allan Tipton, 26, of 872 Bates Lane in Kodak, was charged Oct. 17 with domestic violence assault. He was being held in lieu of $2,500 bond.

CASA sculpture to be unveiled Nov. 6

ARRESTS


A4 â—† xxxxxxxxx

The Mountain Press â—† Tuesday, October 20, 2009

MIRACLE

OBITUARIES

In Memoriam

Lola B. Riggs

Lola B. Riggs, age 84 years, went home to be with the lord on Monday, October 19 2009. She was a long time active member of Sims Chapel Baptist Church where she had taught Sunday School and sang in the choir. She was preceded in death by her husband, William O. Riggs, and her mother and father Zobie and Jessie Whaley. She is survived by her son and his wife, Christopher and Kay Riggs; sister, Nora Fisher; brother and sister-in-law, Billy and Sandra Whaley; several nieces, nephews and friends. Receiving of family and friends will be Wednesday, October 21 from 5-7 p.m. at Rawlings Funeral Home. Funeral service at 7 p.m. Interment will be Thursday, Oct. 22, at Sims Chapel cemetery. The Revs. Ron Ball and Kim McKroskey officiating. Meet at Rawlings at 10 a.m. n www.rawlingsfuneralhome.com

In Memoriam

Henrietta King Ogle

Henrietta King Ogle, age 52 of Sevierville, passed away Sunday, October 18, 2009. She was preceded in death by her granddaughter Emily Parton and mother-in-law and fatherin-law Ralph and Pearl Ogle. She is survived by her husband, Billy R. Ogle; daughters and sons-in-law, Amy Jill and Steven Spicer, Donna Leigh Parton and companion Joshua Walters, Travis Parton; son, Billy Travis Ogle; same as a son, Josh Cotter; grandchildren, Brandon Parton, Trey Trentham, Hope Trentham, Sean Parton; parents, Loy and Treves King; brother, Michael King; brothers-in-law and sister-in-law, Carl Ogle, Donald and Angie Ogle; nieces and nephews, Hannah King, Dillon King, Jake Ogle, Rebecca Ogle, David Ogle; special friend, Ellen Bryant. Funeral service 1 p.m. Thursday in the East Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Pastor Randy Shook officiating. Interment will follow in Valley View Cemetery. The family will receive friends 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville.

3From Page A1

In Memoriam

would cover the costs. She is hopeful she will be able to get the money to travel and receive treatment. “I was at work, and I couldn’t stop bleeding,� she said, looking back at her most recent cancer. “At first, I thought it was James “Jim� Darryl Tant, age 77 of Gatlinburg, just a heavy period. I had passed away Monday, October 19, 2009. Jim was been getting Pap smears born and raised in Nashville. After completing all along; one test would his military service, come back positive, but he attended Auburn then the next would be University studying negative.� Architecture. He worked Around the same time, in architectural offices Wooten felt a lump inside in Nashville, Knoxville, her cheek. and Chattanooga assist“I kept telling my priing in the design of many mary care physician about landmark buildings. it, but he kept insisting it He was proud of his was nothing.� design of the Gatlinburg When she and her Church of Christ where husband moved from St. the family attended. Jim Louis to Seymour, she was an avid golfer and finally got a second opinTennessee fan, holding ion. Her new doctor sent season tickets through UT’s football, Wooten to a specialist, basketball, and baseball programs for where it was confirmed many years. He was well known for she had parotid cancer. yelling, “Knock it in the river!� while “I was told one in watching baseball. He was owner of 100,000 people get it. Duffy’s Restaurant in Gatlinburg for 30 I was one of the lucky years and was well known by many patrons as ones,� she said wry laugh. “Old Duffy.� Jim never met a stranger. He was preWooten’s husband, ceded in death by his parents James O. and Doris Mike, is head custodian Tant, brothers Gerald and David Tant, and sister at a Knoxville elemenNancy Lunday. tary school. She also has Survivors: wife, JoAnn King Tant; sons, James two brothers who live in Dewan Tant, Darryl King Tant; daughters, Mary the Knoxville area and Lisa Campbell, Christy Moyers, Lara Carr; granda daughter who lives in children, Skyler, Sunny Jo, and Roslynn Moyers, Pigeon Forge. Her son Lindsey and Carson Campbell, Jared Carr, Austin lives in Houston. Tant; and several nieces and nephews. Cancer has been wideFuneral service 11 a.m. Thursday in the Chapel spread in her family; she’s of Atchley Funeral Home with Pastor Rod had relatives with pancreRutherford officiating. Interment will follow in atic cancer and Hodgkin’s Smoky Mountain Memory Gardens. The family disease, and a sister died will receive friends 5-7 p.m. Wednesday at Atchley of lung cancer at age 36. Funeral Home, Sevierville. “I’ve never smoked or chewed tobacco,� Wooten n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com said. “I am the only person in my family who has had cancer and lived.� Wooten takes 15 differJoseph Lewis Irwin ent medications daily. Joseph Lewis Irwin, 82, of Seymour, died Friday, Oct. 16,

James “Jim� Darryl Tant

2009. Survivors: special friends Missy and Greg Hunt, Brittany Hunt, Emma Booth, Dustin Booth, Robin Brewer, Dale “Tiny� Reagan, Lisa Boyer, and Gordon Galyon. Funeral service was held Monday at Atchley’s Seymour Chapel with the Rev. Lee Gibson officiating. Interment 11 a.m. Tuesday in Magnolia Cemetery.

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LA FOLLETTE (AP) — Tennessee’s first elk hunt in 150 years began Monday with three elk harvested in 30 minutes in East Tennessee. Charles “Chuck� Flynn shot his elk shortly after 7:30 a.m. Craig Gardner and Ronald Woodard each shot an elk shortly after that. Two other people hold permits for the hunt that runs though Friday in the North Cumberland Wildlife Management Area. Almost 13,000 people entered a contest to win one of four permits. The fifth went to the highest bidder at a charity auction, with the money going toward restoring the state’s elk population.

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Teresa Dianne Davenport Koontz, age 47 of Strawberry Plains, went to be with the Lord on Saturday, October 17, 2009. She was a member of and the organist at The Crossing in Kodak. She was preceded in death by her father Rev. Billy Louis Davenport and father-in-law Owens Wayne Koontz. Survivors: husband, Timothy Earl Koontz; sons, Aaron Louis Owens, Aric Scott Koontz; grandson, Noah Lee Moore; mother, Viola Davenport; brothers, James and Philip Davenport; mother-in-law, Joyce Koontz; several nieces, nephews, and cousins. The family will receive friends 5-7 p.m. Tuesday with a funeral service beginning at 7 p.m. at The Crossing. Pastors Kermit McPeek and Kim McCroskey will officiate. Graveside service and interment 11 a.m. Wednesday in Oak Grove Cemetery with Pastor Brandon Cate officiating. Arrangements by Atchley Funeral Home.

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First state elk hunt in 150 years begins

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In Memoriam

“I just got disability insurance, but I have been considered disabled only since 2005,� she said. “I have neuropathy in my feet, and I had kidney failure about two years ago. Cancer is an immune disorder; once I caught a cold, and within a week I had pneumonia. I’ve also had shingles, and my kidney still isn’t functioning well. I have to go every three months to get my stints changed because they crystallize.� The tumors in her face keep growing back; she has them removed every two to three months. The 11 weeks of radiation Wooten has had on her face have “done absolutely nothing� for her cancer. In the meantime, she volunteers every day at Smoky Mountain Area Rescue Ministries’ thrift store in Seymour. If there’s anything Wooten hopes people learn from her story, it’s to “keep pushing� when they suspect something is wrong. “People ask me, ‘Aren’t you afraid of dying?’ I say no. Everyone has their time — no one knows the last day of their life. There’s a reason that God is still keeping me around. I’m praying and I have so much hope.�


Money/Local â—† A5

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 â—† The Mountain Press

FLOOD

3From Page A1

property rights – the same one that stalled county zoning for years after voters approved it – used to defeat the initiative in the past. Those concerns were raised again Monday evening, as at least a few commissioners worried the program might bring federal oversight on local development. “I feel sorry for the people without insurance, but I don’t want to get us into something that takes away more rights,� Commissioner Kenneth Whaley said. “I

think the government is trying to force us into all this stuff. I don’t want to take away 30 acres from this man or 50 acres from this man with this.� Whaley’s issue, which prompted him to make a motion the matter be delayed a month to allow commissioners more time to consider it, is with new regulations that come along with participation in the program. Whaley’s effort failed, with only three votes in favor of it, the same three that voted against the final motion to join the initiative. Commissioner Ben Clabo took issue with Whaley’s

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

1

DOW JONES

1

NASDAQ

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Name

AFLAC INC ALCOA INC ALCATEL LUCENT ALLSTATE CORP ALTRIA GROUP INC APPLE INC AT&T INC BANK OF AMERICA BB&T CORP BOEING CO BRISTOL-MYERS CRACKER BARREL CHEVRON CORP CISCO SYSTEMS INC COCA-COLA CO CONSOLIDATED ED DUKE ENERGY CORP EASTMAN CHEMICAL EXXON MOBIL CORP FIRST HORIZON FORD MOTOR CO FORWARD AIR CORP GAYLORD ENT GENERAL ELECTRIC HOME DEPOT INC IBM INTEL CORP

Last

Chg

%Chg

Name

Last

Chg

%Chg

46.20 14.07 4.74 32.02 18.35 189.86 26.00 17.16 27.03 53.45 22.97 36.52 77.66 24.25 54.79 41.88 15.98 56.38 73.62 13.52 7.57 25.49 18.82 15.84 27.63 123.06 20.41

1.00 0.03 0.07 0.35 0.08 1.81 0.30 -0.10 -1.22 0.26 0.09 0.14 0.85 0.23 -0.22 0.55 0.19 0.73 0.50 0.02 0.15 0.19 0.11 -0.24 0.37 1.42 0.23

2.21% 0.21% 1.50% 1.11% 0.44% 0.96% 1.17% -0.58% -4.32% 0.49% 0.39% 0.38% 1.11% 0.96% -0.40% 1.33% 1.20% 1.31% 0.68% 0.15% 2.02% 0.75% 0.59% -1.49% 1.36% 1.17% 1.14%

JC PENNEY CO INC 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 CO TRW AUTOMOTIVE WAL-MART STORES YAHOO! INC

36.57 45.98 51.01 27.21 24.29 59.28 8.05 26.36 8.47 22.42 51.45 17.98 57.79 5.70 72.24 0.62 20.42 15.06 3.44 32.72 21.08 38.27 31.44 52.85 17.38 51.89 17.22

0.75 -0.08 0.53 0.18 -0.38 0.50 0.10 -0.14 0.62 0.61 0.50 0.21 0.35 -0.13 2.16 0.03 0.09 0.06 -0.03 0.11 -0.63 -0.04 1.03 0.48 0.53 0.67 0.41

2.09% -0.17% 1.05% 0.67% -1.54% 0.85% 1.26% -0.53% 7.90% 2.80% 0.98% 1.18% 0.61% -2.23% 3.08% 4.32% 0.44% 0.40% -0.86% 0.34% -2.90% -0.10% 3.39% 0.92% 3.15% 1.31% 2.44%

10,000 9,000 8,000

+96.28 10,092.19

J

J

A

Pct. change from previous: +0.96%

S

High 10,117.96

O

2,400

0CUFCS EQORQUKVG

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

+19.52 2,176.32

J

J

A

S

High 2,180.11

Pct. change from previous: +0.91%

O

Oct. 19, 2009

+10.23 J

J

A

S

High 1,100.17

Pct. change from previous: +0.94%

1,400

Low 2,150.42

5VCPFCTF 2QQTÂśU 1,097.91

7,000

Low 9,995.15

Oct. 19, 2009

SOURCE: SunGard

O

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

Low 1,086.48 AP

MARKET ROUNDUP 101909: Market charts show Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq; stand-alone; 2c x 4 1/2 inches; 96 mm 114 mm; staff a xneedle. The flu shot

is VACCINE Editors: All figures as of: 5:30:03 PM EST approved for use among 3From Page A1 NOTE: Figures reflect market fluctuations after close; may not match other AP content

n Adults of all ages Others will not be able to receive the H1N1 vaccine on Thursday. No shortage of is expected, officials said. However, only limited quantities and types of vaccine will be available at first. The Tennessee Department of Health expects to receive enough H1N1 vaccine in coming weeks so anyone can receive it. The Sevier County Health Department will announce future H1N1 clinics. Information is also available at http://health. state.tn.us/H1N1.htm. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has named the following priority groups to receive the vaccine first: n Pregnant women, because they are at higher risk of complications and can provide protection to infants who cannot be vaccinated n Household contacts and caregivers for children younger than 6 months of age; younger infants are at higher risk of flu-related complications and cannot be vaccinated. n Healthcare and emergency medical services personnel n All people from 6 months through 24 years of age; n Persons aged 25 through 64 years who have health conditions associated with higher risk of medical complications from flu There are two types of vaccines that protect against H1N1 flu. Flu MistÂŽ contains a weakened version of virus that is administered in the nose and can be provided to healthy, non-pregnant persons age 2-49. The flu shot contains killed virus that is given with

some local folks have been given. It may well have been calls from those people and increased attention given to the matter that assured its easy approval. Several commissioners have reported receiving calls from constituents upset about the high insurance rates, an issue they’ve stumbled onto thanks to new federal regulations that make mortgage companies check properties for flood potential, desires to refinance their debts and recently revised flood maps. Additionally, some folks have been forced to pay the hefty fees even if only a small part of their property is likely to be inundated. That includes properties where the homes are a considerable distance above the streambed, Ownby said. In addition to homes, the rules will apply to all structures built on property identified as being in a flood hazard area, including recreational vehicles, sheds

and barns, Commissioner Jim Keener said. “I support this thing, I just want us all to be aware of what we’re voting for so when we people come to us, we know,� Keener said. “I’m not saying that’s bad, I just want us all to understand.� Keener also pointed out most of the waterways in the county don’t yet have the requisite flood zone mapping. Securing those will be a costly endeavor either for the property owner or the county, while the other layers of regulation imposed by the new rules will also add to the final tab for local builders. Since the new regulations represent a change to the zoning ordinance, county rules require at least two-thirds of the commissioners to vote in favor of the move. That threshold was met easily by the 20-3 vote.

DUMPLIN

signed the contract earlier this year. To do that, he needs $8.5 million from the city. He told the board he believed the city could recoup the cost through sales tax revenues from the new WalMart within a few years. Turley also made a case for his project filling in for the Universe projects at Bridgemont. The city’s plans called for it to repay about $200 million in bond funds in part with sales tax funds from a retail development in Bridgemont, planned for Gists Creek Road across from the Events Center. That project has also stalled due to the recession. “Dumplin Creek is your best alternative for paying the CBID debt,� he said. Completing the road could also help the city in convicning state and federal officilas to build a new interstate exit in Sevier County, between mile markers 408 and 409, he said. Board members said they would have to review Turley’s proposal more thoroughly at a workshop; they already have workshops scheduled before both regular meetings in November and said they

would take it up next month. Also Monday, the board: n Voted on final reading to approve revisions to the municipal flood damage prevention ordinance n Authorized the city to keep participating in the

Tennessee Municipal League Risk Management pool’s driver safety program n Rejoined the Great Smoky Mountain Regional Greenway Council

Officials with Turley’s Kodak Land Co. and the city had previously talked about making the area a special assessment district — meaning the developer could access special bonds to pay for the road and other infrastructure, and repay them using a fee that would be assessed on property inside the district so that it could be recouped from tenants or buyers. That isn’t feasible now because of the recession, Turley said. The figures worked when first proposed in 2006, he said, but in the current market. Now, he said, potential buyers or tenants balk at the additional cost. “We’re in a different world,� he said. “The special assessment won’t work.� When the economy recovers, it could still be viable — but Turley is now calling for the bonds to be issued in 2014. In the meantime, he said he need to build the road so he can market the project and sustain the momentum created when Wal-Mart

11,000

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it does is just enforce some simple rules on development.� That means doing common sense things like building structures in flood-prone areas at least three feet above the surrounding grade to help keep living spaces out of rising waters, Ownby continued. In exchange, people who own land in floodprone areas will likely see a considerable reduction in their monthly mortgage payments, Ownby said. At current, those folks must secure costly flood insurance from companies like Lloyd’s of London. As a result of participation in the FEMA program, all local insurers will be required to offer the coverage, which will be backed by the federal agency. FEMA officials have told Ownby that may mean a savings of 40 to 70 percent off the cost of the insurance, a drastic reduction in the up to $5,000 rates

3From Page A1

A DAY ON WALL STREET Oct. 19, 2009

argument, insisting the rules will only force people to do what they should do when they’re building in danger zones and won’t take away anyone’s land. “You’re not restricting anybody,� Clabo said. “What you’re saying is you build them above the flood. I don’t see that you’re restricting anybody from building. I think we ought to go ahead and approve it.� As County Planner Jeff Ownby explained it, the rules are boilerplate from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which operates the program, and are required for every municipality and county that opts into the initiative. Ownby was quick to insist – in fact, he did so in his first sentence to the County Commission – that the rules will only regulate building, not stop it. “This does not prohibit you from building in a flood zone,� Ownby said. “What

people 6 months of age or older. The Sevier County Health Department also urges residents to receive the seasonal flu shot. The seasonal flu vaccine is particularly

recommended for the elderly, young children and people with certain health conditions. For more information, call the Sevier County Health Department at 453-1032 or the Tennessee Flu Information Line at 877-

252-3432. Information is also available on the Web at www.tn.gov/health or www.flu.gov.

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C 0

Children of Aaron & Joi Whaley

F K D I H P , <O> , @ C

A Page Featuring Your Little Pumpkin Will Be Published Saturday, October 31, 2009 in The Mountain press $10 for 1 child in photo, $15 for 2 children in photo. All photos must be in our offices by 5 p.m. Tuesday, October 27, 2009.

I give my permission to publish the enclosed picture and information in The Mountain Press “Pumpkin Patch�.

Signature _____________________________________________________ Relationship to Child __________________________________________ Child’s Name _________________________________________________ Parent’s Name ________________________________________________ Address ______________________________________________________ Day Phone____________________________________________________ Method of payment â?? Check $ ____________________________________________________ â?? Credit Card # _______________________________________________ Mail to: The Mountain Press, Pumpkin Patch, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN 37864


A6 ◆

The Mountain Press ◆ Tuesday, October 20, 2009

sunrise in the smokies

TODAY’S Briefing Local n

SEVIERVILLE

Coffee Talk to give flu shots

Flu shots will be offered for $20 each at the Sevierville Chamber of Commerce Coffee Talk today at the Civic Center. Flu shots will be given from 7 a.m. until the program begins at 8:30, and again after the meeting ends at 9:30 if there is still vaccine available. Proceeds go to Mountain Hope Good Shepherd Clinic.

n

SEVIERVILLE

Christmas Child gifts are sought

Karen Hall is Sevier County coordinator for Operation Christmas Child, a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse that brings the holiday to children throughout the world with a gift-filled shoe box. Bring gifts to the conference center at River Plantation RV Park, 1004 Parkway, during collection week Nov. 16-23. Collection hours: 1-5 p.m. Nov. 15; 8-6 Nov. 16-20; 10-4 Nov. 21; and 1-5 p.m. Nov. 22. Contact Hall at 982-9968 or 851-2922, or e-mail to occseviercounty@yahoo. com.

n

SEVIERVILLE

Senior flu shot clinic set today

Fort Sanders Sevier Medical Center and Covenant are holding a senior flu shot clinic from 9 a.m. to noon today at the Senior Center, 1220 West Main St. Only the seasonal flu shot will be offered — no H1N1 vaccinations. Those with insurance can file claims at the time of the shot. If insurance cannot be filed, shots are $30 cash. For information, call 453-9355.

n

GATLINBURG

‘Beat Bama’ lunch helps United Way

The city of Gatlinburg “Beat Bama” tailgate luncheon wil nbe from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Mills Park. The $7 meal includes a barbecue sandwich, potato salad, baked beans, an apple turnover and a drink. Tickets are available at the police and fire departments and the city’s special events office or by calling 436-0505. Proceeds benefit to city’s United Way campaign.

n

PIGEON FORGE

Relay for Life kickoff tonight

The Relay For Life kickoff rally will be held today at 6 p.m. at Tennessee State Bank, 2210 Parkway. The public may attend to hear about the new ideas and innovations planned for this year. Refreshments and prizes will also be offered. For more information about the kickoff rally, to register a team or to serve as a volunteer, contact Robin Kurtz at 908-5789.

n

SEVIERVILLE

Emergency panel to meet Thursday

The Sevier County Local Emergency Planning Committee will meet at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Sevier County E911 Building on Bruce Street. The LEPC is comprised of representatives from area emergency service agencies and associated groups, who meet on a monthly basis to discuss disaster preparedness and responses to large scale emergencies.

top state news

Lottery Numbers

Less West Nile virus found in state By RANDALL DICKERSON Associated Press Writer

NASHVILLE — There was less West Nile Virus this year in Tennessee compared to 2008, and unusually cool weather in July and August is probably the reason, a state health expert said Monday. “We’ve not had a very hot summer, compared to previous years,” said Dr. Abelardo Moncayo, an epidemiologist with the Tennessee Department of Health. “That’s important

to mosquito development and also to development of the virus.” Moncayo explained that mosquitos, which spread the virus that causes the disease, spawn more vigorously in hot weather. Higher temperatures also aid replication of the virus itself, he said. August is usually the peak month for West Nile. Moncayo said the best indicator is tracking tests done on pools of mosquitoes, explaining that there could be late reporting of human cases of the disease. The mosquito test-

TODAY’S FORECAST

LOCAL:

ing ended last week and Moncayo reports a significant drop. In 2008, 14.6 percent of the samples tested came back positive for West Nile, compared with 11.7 percent this summer. The difference was even more pronounced in Shelby County, the usual hot spot in the state: 60 percent positive results last year versus 40 percent in 2009. There have been six confirmed human cases this year and one death, but health officials caution more human cases are

Today's Forecast

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Tuesday, Oct. 20

Sunny

Chicago 63° | 49°

Washington 68° | 40°

High: 70° Low: 40° Memphis 72° | 47°

Wind 5 mph

Chance of rain

likely to be confirmed and reported. Nineteen cases were confirmed in 2008, with one death reported. The lower incidence of the virus this year probably also resulted from spraying for mosquitoes in cities and educating people to use insect repellant and eliminate shallow pools of water where mosquitoes could breed around their homes. The trend in Tennessee follows a national decrease in detection of West Nile virus this year, with 18 deaths reported nationwide by late September.

Raleigh 74° | 34°

0%

Atlanta 68° | 34° ■ Wednesday Sunny

High: 74° Low: 47° ■ Thursday

Miami 83° | 68°

■ Lake Stages: Douglas 982.5 U0.1

Primary Pollutant: Particles

Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow

Ice

Cautionary Health Message: None

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Weather Underground • AP

quote roundup “There will be compromise. There will be legislation, and it will achieve our goals: helping people who have insurance get more security, more accountability for the insurance industry, helping people who don’t have insurance get insurance they can afford, and lowering the overall cost of the system.” — White House aide David Axelrod in a television interview after advisers said the White House will not commit to health care legislation that would cap insurance premiums or tax benefits.

“Everything is on the table. You’ve got this huge national deficit and we’ve got to do what we can to bring that down. At the same time, it’s important to stimulate the economy. Let’s wait and see. Let’s let the recovery bill do its job.” — Senior White House adviser Valerie Jarrett in a statement after White House advisers said that President Barack Obama is considering all options to create jobs, including another stimulus package, while trying to pull the economy out of a deep recession and deal with a record deficit.

How to Subscribe Just mail this coupon in with your payment to: The Mountain Press P.O. Box 4810 Sevierville, TN 37864-4810 0r Phone 428-0746 ext. 231 Ask about Easy Pay. . 55 or older? Call for your special rates In County Home Delivery Rates 4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 11.60

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Name: _________________________ Address: _______________________ City: _______________St: ____ Zip: ____ Phone: ________________________

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.

Monday, Oct. 19, 2009 Midday: 4-9-2-7 22 Evening: 8-8-4-8 28

This day in history Today is Tuesday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 2009. There are 72 days left in the year. n

Subscriptions

A year ago locally:

Recently released sales tax figures reveal more than a 5 percent sales tax drop from 2007. The nation’s economic struggles have hit Sevier County fairly hard. October, which regularly draws some of the largest crowds of the year, may bring some redemption. “Hopefully, now that gas prices are going down, we will see some increases to help make up the difference,” said County Trustee Jettie Clabo. n

Today’s highlight:

On Oct. 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur stepped ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 years after he’d said, “I shall return.”

n

© 2009 Wunderground.com

■ Air Quality Forecast:

18 16

On this date:

In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase. In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.

New Orleans 76° | 52°

High: 74° Low: 54°

Staff

Midday: 7-8-3 Evening: 8-6-2

n

Mostly sunny

Mountains: Good Valley: Good

Monday, Oct. 19, 2009

“A UT-TPA Prize Winning Newspaper”

How to Reach Us:

Carrier Delivery (Where Available): $11.60 Phone: (865) 428-0746 per 4 weeks Fax: (865) 453-4913 In-County Mail: $13.08 per 4 weeks P.O. Box 4810, Out-of-County Mail: $19.60 per 4 weeks Sevierville, TN 37864 Postmaster: Send address changes to The Mountain Press, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN Departments: 37864 News: Ext. 214; e-mail: editor@themountainpress. com Office Hours: Sports: Ext. 210; e-mail: mpsports@themountain8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Weekdays press.com Located at 119 Riverbend Dr., Sevierville, TN Classifieds: Ext. 201 & 221 37876 Commercial Printing: Ext. 229

Ten years ago:

The government laid out new rules to protect children’s privacy on the Internet and to shield them from commercial e-mail. Elizabeth Dole abandoned her Republican bid to become America’s first woman president. n

Five years ago:

A U.S. Army staff sergeant, Ivan “Chip” Frederick, pleaded guilty to abusing Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib prison. (Frederick was sentenced to eight years in prison; he was paroled in 2007.) n

Thought for today:

“Everybody’s private motto: It’s better to be popular than right.” — Mark Twain (18351910).

Celebrities in the news n Elvis Presley

CHICAGO (AP) — A clump of hair believed to have been trimmed from Elvis Presley’s head when he joined the Army in 1958 h a s sold for $15,000 at a Chicago auction house. Elvis hair Also among the d items up for grabs at the Leslie Hindman Auctioneers in Chicago on Sunday was a shirt that once belonged to the King which sold for $52,000. The buyer of the hair paid $15,000 plus an additional $3,300 in auction house fees. Other items on offer included scarves, photos from the reception of Presley’s 1967 wedding to Priscilla, Christmas cards he sent and lots of records.


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 ■ Tuesday, October 20, 2009

commentary

Insurance needs pool of people The insurance companies have decided to let you and me in on a little secret: When the government says the health care bill is “revenue neutral,” that doesn’t necessarily refer to your personal cash flow. Democratic politicians are denouncing health care insurance executives as traitors for spilling the beans in a new industry-funded study that predicts large increases in premiums if the health care reform plan passes: “The misleading and harmful claims made by the profit-driven insurance companies are politicking for corporate gain at its worst,” said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va. Just hours before a vote, it is still not entirely clear what the Democrats’ health care plan is. The industry study examines the plan put forth by Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., who has at least had the courage to propose specifics. The bad news is that Baucus’ plan will raise the cost of private health insurance. Why? In response to criticism of health care insurance mandates as new taxes, Sen. Baucus watered down his mandates on buying insurance, while maintaining requirements that insurers cover preexisting conditions. Therein lies the problem. Ask yourself: Why would you or I pay thousands of dollars for “insurance” if we can just buy insurance coverage to pay for bills when we get sick, and all for the same price as a healthy person? Insurance cannot work like that. Insurance requires a pool of healthy people to cover those of us who get unexpectedly sick. That’s why the requirement to insurance companies to cover all comers has to be accompanied by an enforceable requirement to individuals to buy insurance. Otherwise the whole plan collapses. Let it collapse. Neither mandate is in the best American tradition. There is a commonsense solution to the problem: The federal government should override state laws and permit every American to buy catastrophic insurance coverage — say, over $5,000 — to cover the kind of unexpected large medical expenses that can bankrupt families. This is what insurance, properly speaking, is for. What about ordinary medical expenses? Let us set up savings accounts using tax-advantaged dollars to pay for ordinary medical care directly. What about people who cannot afford to pay for their own medical care? Use our tax dollars to subsidize the accounts of the poor and the working class and families with children; $900 billion could pay for a lot of medical coverage and medical expenses. In an instant we could dramatically expand insurance coverage while reversing the perverse incentives that drive Americans to overpay for inconvenient medical care. So you say the market is in bad repute these days among the cognoscenti? Meanwhile, I can’t help but notice that each year the market brings me both things I need and things I want, delivered in ways that are convenient to me, for a price that gets cheaper every few years. We can unleash the discipline of the market — the same market that gives us healthier food, cheaper books and lessexpensive computers every year, more conveniently delivered — on a sclerotic, heavily regulated health care system. If it costs more money to expand health care to more people, give that money to people to buy insurance for large expenses and to pay directly for routine medical care themselves. Doctors, hospitals and communities will respond by delivering better medical care — faster and cheaper and more conveniently organized. Unlike health insurance companies, they will have no incentive to ration care by imposing institutional obstacles designed to cut costs by increasing wait times. At the same time, you would eliminate the interference of insurance or government bureaucrats in the ordinary health care decision-making processes of patients and their own doctors. — Maggie Gallagher, president of the National Organization for Marriage, is known for her conservative social policy analysis of social trends and conditions. (C)2009 Maggie Gallagher. Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate.

Editorial

Get the shot

For many, the H1N1 flu vaccine can be a lifesaver There are a number of skeptics out there who doubt the emergence of a swine flu pandemic. They don’t think this HIN1 virus is anything to be worried about, and they vow not to get the vaccine that has been developed to ward off the potentially dangerous flu. Getting an H1N1 flu shot is up to you. If you doubt its safety and don’t think the swine flu is anything to worry about, then you probably won’t be getting a shot. That’s a roulette wheel of chance you’re taking. Federal officials say the new H1N1 flu vaccine, hitting health departments this week, is safe and has been tested thoroughly. It is believed to be helpful in preventing what some fear could become a worldwide outbreak of a

flu virus that can be deadly to some people. Specifically, health officials say the people most vulnerable and the ones who should be getting the shot are pregnant women, children ages 6 months to 18 years old, young adults ages 19-24, and persons ages 25-64 who have health conditions associated with a higher risk of complications from getting the flu. The vaccine will be in short supply at first, but no shortage is expected. Those in the high risk categories are asked to be first in getting the vaccine while it is in limited supply. Announcements will be made and published in this newspaper as the shots become available. So should you get one? For sure

you should if you’re in the high-risk categories, and when it becomes more widely available it should be taken by almost everyone else. The H1N1 flu is nothing to joke around about or brush off as much ado about nothing. The more people who receive the vaccine, the better we all will be in keeping the swine flu in check. For most people a case of the H1N1 flu will be relatively mild. For others, especially those in the high-risk category, it can be deadly. Many children have died already who contracted this more serious strain of the virus. If you have children, get them vaccinated as soon as possible. We need to do all we can to ensure this virus is contained.

Political view

Public forum Real statesmen deserve prize, not our first-term president

Editor: When I think of Nobel Peace prizes, I think of real statesmen who accomplished something of significance. 1) Theodore Roosevelt: In 1906, he helped negotiate the Portsmouth Treaty ending the war between Japan and Russia. 2) Cordell Hull: In 1945, he helped form the United Nations.

3) George Marshall: In 1953, he won for the Marshall Plan for the relief of Europe after World War II. 4) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: In 1964, he won for leading the struggles for civil rights for black Americans. I don’t think of Al Gore, who dreamed up the global warming hoax, or Barack Obama, who was nominated for the prize just 12 days after he took office as president. I have concluded that the Swedish people who decided on the prize winner gave in to President Obama in the hopes

of what he will do in the future. Perhaps he will surrender in Afghanistan, let Iran have their nuclear bomb, let the Russians do as they please without as much as a disagreement. Perhaps they liked his apology tour shortly after he took office. I would like to see some worthwhile accomplishments from our rookie president before he gets some joke award or gets re-elected. George L. Fowler 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 ■ Tuesday, October 20, 2009

PREP FOOTBALL

Bears vault to 5th, G-P falls to ninth in AP football poll By JASON DAVIS Sports Editor SEVIERVILLE — The Smoky Bears got more attention from media members over the weekend, jumping from 7th in the AP prep football poll to 5th in Class 6A. The Bears (8-0, 5-0 in 2-AAA) won 36-19 over Cherokee on Friday night, and Farragut and Blackman, two previously higher-ranked teams, lost their games to Maryville and Oakland ­— two of the polls’ other top-ranked programs. Gatlinburg-Pittman, Sevier County’s other ranked prep team, lost a 14-7 matchup with Austin-East on Friday night. The loss dropped the Highlanders (7-1, 3-1 in 3-AA) to No.9 in Class 3A from the No.7 slot last week. Austin-East (5-3, 4-0 in 3-AA) moved up to 7th with the win over G-P. The Smoky Bears will be at home this Friday against district doormat South-Doyle (0-8, 0-5). It’s the Bears’ first game at home since their emotional double-overtime victory over county-rival Seymour on Oct. 1. Should the Bears win over the Cherokees, Morristown East will be the Smoky Bears’ only obstacle for a perfect 10-0 regular season. That game will also be played at Burchfield Stadium on Oct. 30. The Highlanders will travel to face district foe Carter (4-5, 2-3) Friday, before facing county-rival Pigeon Forge on Oct. 30. mpsports@themountainpress.com

Class 6A W-L Pts Prv 1. Ooltewah (17) 8-0 195 1 2. Maryville (2) 7-1 176 3 3. Riverdale (1) 7-1 130 4 4. Oakland 6-2 115 6 5. Sevier County 8-0 99 7 6. Blackman 7-1 78 2 7. Brentwood 7-1 68 8 8. Mt. Juliet 8-0 65 9 9. Farragut 6-2 53 5 10. Franklin 8-1 43 10 Class 5A W-L Pts Prv 1. Tennessee (18) 8-0 198 1 2. Clinton (2) 8-0 160 2 3. Henry County 7-1 143 4 4. Sullivan South 7-1 135 5 5. Columbia 7-1 100 7 6. Daniel Boone 7-1 96 8 7. Knox Catholic 5-3 67 9 8. Hardin County 7-1 63 3 9. Mitchell 6-2 42 6 10. Morristown West 6-2 39 10 Class 4A W-L Pts Prv 1. Red Bank (20) 8-0 200 1 2. Crockett County 8-0 169 2 3. Giles County 7-1 150 3 4. Liberty Magnet 7-1 132 4 5. Claiborne County 7-1 101 5 6. Creek Wood 7-1 79 7 7. David Lipscomb 5-3 68 8 8. Knoxville Fulton 6-3 51 9 9. Brainerd 6-2 43 6 10. Greeneville 5-3 32 Class 3A W-L Pts Prv 1. Alcoa (18) 8-0 198 1 2. Milan (1) 8-0 158 2 3. Polk County 8-0 155 3 4. Camden 9-0 136 4 5. CAK 8-0 115 5 6. Elizabethton (1) 7-1 103 6 7. Austin-East 5-3 82 8 8. McMinn Central 6-2 49 9 9. G’Burg-Pittman 7-1 38 7 10. Goodpasture 6-2 30 10 Class 2A W-L Pts Prv 1. Trousdale Co (16) 7-1 184 1 2. BBuchanan (2) 6-1 179 2 3. McKenzie 8-1 145 3 4. Frsp. Christian 7-1 128 4 5. Signal Mountain 8-1 120 5 6. Hampton (1) 7-1 98 6 7. Adamsville (1) 8-1 94 7 8. Forrest 7-1 55 8 9. Oneida 6-2 47 9 10. Cascade 5-3 14 10 Class 1A W-L Pts Prv 1. SPittsburg (10) 7-1 181 3 2. Jo Byrns (8) 8-0 173 1 3. Wayne County (2) 8-0 158 2 4. Grace Christian 7-1 139 4 5. Huntingdon 7-2 114 5 6. Union City 6-2 94 7 7. Lookout Valley 6-2 72 6 8. Perry County 6-2 42 9. Collinwood 5-3 28 8 10. Harriman 5-3 26 10

Jason Davis/The Mountain Press

Seymour junior midfielder Jodie Wood fires a pass forward to teammate Lauren Johnson, who converted it into the Lady Eagles’ seventh goal of the first half in the team’s 9-0 rout of Cocke County in the first round of the 2-AAA soccer tournament Monday in Sevierville. PREP SOCCER

Seymour gets 1st round shutout Lady Eagles soar past overmatched Cocke County By JASON DAVIS Sports Editor SEVIERVILLE — A Friday evening win over the Sevier County Bearettes gave the Seymour Lady Eagles the third seed in the District 2-AAA soccer tournament. Any thoughts of a letdown by the team after an emotional win over former heach coach Bobby Norwood’s Sevier County squad was unfounded. The Lady Eagles cruised

to a 9-0 victory over the Cocke County Lady Red in Monday night’s opening round game. “That was our talk going in,” first-year head coach Drew Payne said. “We’re playing with a lot of momentum right now, and we can’t afford to play down to our competition.” While Payne said he thought the team did come out flat, they rebounded quickly, scoring seven unanswered goals in the first half and netted two more in the second. Senior Courtney Suttles had four of the Lady Jason Davis/The Mountain Press Eagles’ goals to lead the Seymour coach Drew Payne talks to his players during the halftime of their 9-0 win over Cocke See LADY EAGLES, Page A9 County in Sevierville on Monday.

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

MIDDLE SCHOOL CROSS COUNTRY

Doors closed in bye week, Titans seek answers SMS Cub runners By TERESA M. WALKER AP Sports Writer NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Whatever Jeff Fisher plans to do to fix Tennessee’s losing ways will be done behind closed doors. At 0-6, the reeling Titans, coming off a 59-0 rout at New England that is the NFL’s most lopsided loss since 1976, are as far away from their 10-0 start a season ago as possible. Fans want Fisher fired, though owner Bud Adams isn’t ready yet for a midseason change. So Fisher is closing practices this week as the Titans try repairing all that’s gone wrong. It’s a flexible bye week schedule that could feature two sessions a day or walkthroughs before and after practice. The coach is looking at everything, will split work between veteran Kerry Collins and backup quarterback Vince Young, and some roster changes may result. And the future for the NFL’s longest-tenured coach with his current team? Fisher insisted Monday he isn’t worried, not with everything he has to fix. “I’m not in any kind of survival mode or worried about my job or worried about job security. I have a good coaching staff. I’ve got tremendous confidence in my coaching staff and tremendous confidence in my players we’re

qualify for state

Steven Senne/AP

Tennessee Titans head coach Jeff Fisher walks along the sidelines in the third quarter of an NFL football game against the New England Patriots in Foxborough, Mass., Sunday. The Patriots defeated the Titans 59-0. going to get this turned around,” Fisher said. Adams’ last head coaching change came in 1994 after a 1-9 start when he promoted Fisher from defensive coordinator. Fisher has lasted longer and won more games for this franchise than any other coach. Adams told The

Tennessean newspaper he is worried, but will make his decision on the future after this season. The 0-for start is stunning because this is the franchise that returned 20 starters from the team that went an NFLbest 13-3 last season. Two local TV stations streamed

Fisher’s news conference on their Web sites Monday, and one radio station aired it live as well. The schedule hasn’t helped with four of the first six on the road against teams now a combined 22-13 and none See TITANS, Page A9

KNOXVILLE — As has been the case for most the season, the rainy weather continued as the SMS Cubs finished out the middle school cross country season at Victor Ashe Park with two runners qualifying for the State Middle School Cross Country Championships. On the girls side, Kasey Funderburg qualified 17th for the state meet while Connor Rytz qualified 25th on the boys’ side. Kasey Funderburg Funderburg bettered her previous mark at Victor Ashe Park by 56 seconds, while Rytz improved by nine seconds from the earlier contest. “Kasey and Connor have worked hard all year to improve their times and move up the rankings,” Coach Jamiee Collier said. “Overall, I am quite pleased with the finish to our season. Every runner bettered their time, some by three or four minutes. Connor Rytz Everyone pushed themselves, gave 100 percent and got better. I could not have asked for anymore. I am very proud of my team.” The Tennessee State Cross Country Championships will be held at Victor Ashe Park on October 24. Over 600 athletes are expected to participate in this years event. mpsports@themountainpress.com


Sports â—† A9

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 â—† The Mountain Press

PF routs A-E soccer 16-0

SCOREBOARD BASEBALL American League SEATTLE MARINERS— Announced C Kenji Johjima has opted out of the final two years of his contract. American Association EL PASO DIABLOS— Released OF Bobby Andrews and INF Edwin Maldonado. ST. PAUL SAINTS— Exercised the 2010 contract options on LHP Ryan Ariail, RHP Mike Bille, RHP Tom Buske, RHP Todd Mathison and RHP Kyle Foster. CanAm League WORCESTER TORNADOES—Released RHP Santiago Ramirez. FOOTBALL National Football League NEW YORK JETS—Placed NT Kris Jenkins on injured reserve. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS— Placed LB Jeff Ulbrich on injured reserve. Signed LB Matt Wilhelm. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS—Added P Troy Westwood to the practice roster. HOCKEY National Hockey League NEW JERSEY DEVILS— Placed D Cory Murphy on waivers. NEW YORK RANGERS— Reassigned F Ryan Hillier to Hartford (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING— Recalled D Matt Smaby from Norfolk (AHL). American Hockey League TORONTO MARLIES— Signed F Mike Zigomanis. ECHL CHARLOTTE CHECKERS— Announced F Ryan Hillier has been assigned to Hartford (AHL). IDAHO STEELHEADS— Agreed to terms with D Aaron MacKenzie. SOCCER Women’s Professional Soccer SKY BLUE FC—Agreed to terms M Carli Lloyd. COLLEGE ECAC—Voted Geneva, Lyndon State, MarylandEastern Shore, Penn StateAbington, Salem International and Virginia Commonwealth into membership for the 200910 academic year. CHEYNEY—Named Marc Harrison women’s cross country and track and field coach, and James Williams men’s cross country and track and field coach. FELICIAN—Named Ivan Lewis and Brandon Smith men’s assistant basketball coaches. SOUTHERN ILLINOIS— Dismissed G Ryan Hare from the men’s basketball team for violating team rules and policies.

NASCAR NASCAR Sprint Cup Money Leaders Through Oct. 17 1. Jimmie Johnson, $6,403,604 2. Matt Kenseth, $6,338,257 3. Tony Stewart, $6,285,056 4. Jeff Gordon, $5,800,730 5. Kyle Busch, $5,489,737 6. Kevin Harvick, $5,300,905 7. Kasey Kahne, $5,063,196 8. Carl Edwards, $4,928,949 9. Mark Martin, $4,686,053 10. Joey Logano, $4,684,979 11. Juan Pablo Montoya, $4,660,480 12. Jeff Burton, $4,533,304 13. Ryan Newman, $4,433,337 14. David Reutimann, $4,340,580 15. Denny Hamlin, $4,327,764 16. Greg Biffle, $4,242,284 17. Brian Vickers, $4,179,030 18. Martin Truex Jr., $4,106,732 19. Kurt Busch, $4,092,634 20. Reed Sorenson, $4,065,598 21. David Stremme, $3,926,447 22. Clint Bowyer, $3,886,134 23. Paul Menard, $3,824,603 24. Bobby Labonte, $3,762,718 25. Marcos Ambrose, $3,707,375 26. Sam Hornish Jr., $3,657,003 27. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $3,609,814 28. Casey Mears, $3,478,463 29. AJ Allmendinger, $3,452,283 30. Robby Gordon, $3,381,307 31. Jamie McMurray, $3,376,004 32. Elliott Sadler, $3,375,388 33. David Ragan, $3,240,913 34. Scott Speed, $3,084,179 35. Michael Waltrip,

NASCAR Nationwide Money Leaders Through Oct. 16 1. Kyle Busch, $1,287,730 2. Brad Keselowski, $1,224,023 3. Carl Edwards, $1,142,750 4. Jason Leffler, $1,011,563 5. Mike Bliss, $1,002,451 6. Brendan Gaughan, $903,933 7. Justin Allgaier, $891,598 8. Jason Keller, $865,443 9. Steve Wallace, $857,838 10. Joey Logano, $857,582 11. Michael Annett, $857,308 12. Tony Raines, $850,358 13. Kenny Wallace, $839,008 14. Michael McDowell, $822,983 15. Eric McClure, $807,038 16. Danny O’Quinn Jr., $680,283 17. Kevin Harvick, $630,500 18. Scott Wimmer, $613,523 19. Scott Lagasse Jr., $579,516 20. John Wes Townley, $548,956 21. Mark Green, $541,458 22. Brian Vickers, $515,040 23. David Ragan, $485,580 24. Joe Nemechek, $474,232 25. Morgan Shepherd, $473,430 26. Greg Biffle, $463,725 27. Johnny Chapman, $441,741 28. Brian Keselowski, $413,784 29. Casey Atwood, $410,850 30. Clint Bowyer, $408,665 31. Brandon Whitt, $391,437 32. Erik Darnell, $380,317 33. Matthew Carter, $378,320 34. Trevor Bayne, $350,329 35. Ken Butler, $345,791 36. Robert Richardson Jr., $345,728 37. Mike Wallace, $345,432 38. Terry Cook, $316,394 39. Matt Kenseth, $302,240 40. Paul Menard, $297,125 41. Kelly Bires, $290,904 42. Shelby Howard, $285,285 43. Scott Speed, $268,227 44. Jeff Burton, $263,415 45. David Green, $262,552 46. Kertus Davis, $260,710 47. Kevin Lepage, $258,580 48. David Reutimann, $255,140 49. Kenny Hendrick, $246,386 50. Dennis Setzer, $235,800

NFL National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct \New England 4 2 0 .667 N.Y. Jets 3 3 0 .500 Miami 2 3 0 .400 Buffalo 2 4 0 .333 South W L T Pct Indianapolis 5 0 0 1.000 Jacksonville 3 3 0 .500 Houston 3 3 0 .500 Tennessee 0 6 0 .000 North W L T Pct Cincinnati 4 2 0 .667 Pittsburgh 4 2 0 .667 Baltimore 3 3 0 .500 Cleveland 1 5 0 .167 West W L T Pct Denver 5 0 0 1.000 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 Oakland 2 4 0 .333 Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct N.Y. Giants 5 1 0 .833 Dallas 3 2 0 .600 Philadelphia 3 2 0 .600 Washington 2 4 0 .333 South W L T Pct New Orleans 5 0 0 1.000 Atlanta 4 1 0 .800 Carolina 2 3 0 .400 Tampa Bay 0 6 0 .000 North W L T Pct Minnesota 6 0 0 1.000 Green Bay 3 2 0 .600 Chicago 3 2 0 .600 Detroit 1 5 0 .167 West W L T Pct San Francisco 3 2 0 .600 Arizona 3 2 0 .600 Seattle 2 4 0 .333 St. Louis 0 6 0 .000

Postseason Baseball At A Glance (Subject to change) (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 LOS ANGELES 3, BOSTON 0 Thursday, Oct. 8 Los Angeles 5, Boston 0 Friday, Oct. 9 Los Angeles 4, Boston 1 Sunday, Oct. 11 Los Angeles 7, Boston 6 National League LOS ANGELES 3, ST. LOUIS 0 Wednesday, Oct. 7 Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 3 Thursday, Oct. 8 Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2 Saturday, Oct. 10 Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 1 PHILADELPHIA 3, COLORADO 1 Wednesday, Oct. 7 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 1 Thursday, Oct. 8 Colorado 5, Philadelphia 4 Saturday, Oct. 10 Philadelphia at Colorado, ppd., weather Sunday, Oct. 11 Philadelphia 6, Colorado 5 Monday, Oct. 12 Philadelphia 5, Colorado 4 ——— LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES American League NEW YORK 2, LOS ANGELES 1 Friday, Oct. 16 New York 4, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, Oct. 17 New York 4, Los Angeles 3, 13 innings Monday, Oct. 19 Los Angeles 5, New York 4 11 innings Tuesday, Oct. 20 New York (Sabathia 19-8) at Los Angeles (Kazmir 10-9), 7:57 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 22 x-New York at Los Angeles, 7:57 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 24 x-Los Angeles at New York, 4:13 or 8:07 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25 x-Los Angeles at New York, 8:20 p.m.

Wednesday, Oct. 21 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 8:07 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23 x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 8:07 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 24 x-Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 8:07 p.m. ——— WORLD SERIES Wednesday, Oct. 28 National League at American League, 7:57 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29 NL at AL, 7:57 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31 AL at NL, 7:57 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1 AL at NL, 8:20 p.m. Monday, Nov. 2 x-AL at NL, 7:57 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4 x-NL at AL, 7:57 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5 x-NL at AL, 7:57 p.m.

COLLEGE F ootball FCS Coaches Poll SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — The top 25 teams in the Coaches Football Championship Subdivision poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 18 and previous ranking: W-L Pts Pvs 1. Richmond (28) 6-0 700 1 2. Montana 6-0 667 2 3. Southern Illinois 5-1 643 5 4. Villanova 6-1 610 6 5. William & Mary 5-1 556 7 6. Northern Iowa 5-2 551 3 7. Elon 5-1 516 9 8. New Hampshire 5-1 478 4 9. Appalachian State 4-2 468 10 10. SCarolina State 5-1 420 12 11. McNeese State 4-2 409 11 12. Jacksonville State 4-2 384 13 13. SDakota State 5-1 353 14 14. Central Arkansas 4-2 318 8 15. Weber State 4-3 311 15 16. Massachusetts 4-2 280 20 17. Colgate 7-0 255 18 18. Stephen F. Austin 5-1 248 21 19. Cal Poly 3-3 175 19 20. EKentucky 4-2 139 23 21. EWashington 4-3 110 17 22. Holy Cross 4-1 103 24 23. Delaware 5-2 84 NR 24. Eastern Illinois 5-2 82 25 25. Northern Arizona 4-2 38 NR Others receiving votes: Prairie View A&M (37), Florida A&M (36), James Madison (31), Liberty (29), Montana State (15), Youngstown State (14), Butler (12), Morgan State (10), Chattanooga (9), Lafayette (5), Albany (1), Missouri State (1), Southeastern Louisiana (1), UC Davis (1). AFCA Division II Coaches Poll Through Oct. 18 W-L 1. North Alabama (25) 8-0 2. Central Washington 8-0 3. Bloomsburg (Pa.) 8-0 4. Northwest Missouri St. 7-1 5. Minnesota St.-Mankato 8-0 6. Grand Valley St. (Mich.) 7-1 7. Minnesota-Duluth 7-1 8. Albany St. (Ga.) 7-0 9. Abilene Christian (Texas) 7-1 10. Charleston (W.Va.) 8-0 11. Tarleton St. (Texas) 7-1 12. Missouri Western St. 7-1 13. Nebraska-Kearney 7-1 14. Texas A&M-Kingsville 7-1 15. North Carolina-Pembroke 6-1 16. Washburn (Kan.) 6-2 17. Midwestern St. (Texas) 6-2 18. West Liberty (W.Va.) 7-1 19. Tuskegee (Ala.) 5-2 20. Carson-Newman (Tenn.) 6-2 21. Central Missouri 6-2 22. Wayne St. (Neb.) 6-2 23. Edinboro (Pa.) 6-2 24. California (Pa.) 6-2 25. Hillsdale (Pa.) 6-2 NAIA Football Poll Through Oct. 18 W-L 1. Sioux Falls (18) 7-0 2. Carroll (Mont.) (1) 8-0 3. Lindenwood 7-0 4. Saint Francis (Ind.) 6-0 5. Morningside (Iowa) 6-0 6. Lambuth 7-0 7. Saint Xavier 8-0 8. Ottawa (Kan.) 6-0 9. Missouri Valley 6-1 10. MidAm Nazarene 6-1 11. McKendree 6-1 12. Northwestern (Iowa) 6-1 13. U.Cumberlands (Ky.) 6-1 14. Friends 5-1 15. Langston 5-2 16. Minot State 6-1 17. McPherson 5-1 18. Eastern Oregon 6-2 19. Georgetown (Ky.) 5-2 20. Walsh 5-2 21. Hastings 6-2 22. Dickinson State 5-2 23. Ohio Dominican 4-2 24. Central Methodist 5-2 25. Grand View 6-2

PIGEON FORGE — Monday night’s first-round District 3-AA soccer tournament matchup wasn’t much of a match at all for the Pigeon Forge Lady Tigers. The Orange and Black stormed the Austin-East Lady Roadrunners 16-0 for one of the most lopsided wins in recent memory. Kelsey Brooks had three goals for the Lady Tigers,

while Autumn Wilkinson, Cheyenne Montgomery and Dani Montgomery each had two goals each. Teammates Amber Fair, Haley Doan, Aricia Kreahmer, Catelyn Ogle, Kesha Hooker, Claire Johnson and Olivia Frost also got into the scoring act. PF will host the winner of G-P/Carter today at 5:30.

TITANS

to fullback Ahmard Hall for 15 yards. Collins now has eight interceptions, one more than all of 2008. Adams wants to see more of Young, the No. 3 pick overall in 2006, but such decisions are up to Fisher. Young hasn’t been any better in two relief appearances, going 0 for 5 with one interception. Who starts Nov. 1 against Jacksonville (3-3)? Fisher isn’t saying. The bye will heal up defensive backs Cortland Finnegan (right hamstring) and Vincent Fuller (broken right arm). But running back LenDale White hurt his left knee in the second quarter Sunday. He walked to the sideline, then rode a cart to the locker room and was seen walking gingerly after the game. He led the AFC with 15 touchdowns rushing last season, but has just one in 2009. Fisher is trying to sell this bye week, with Monday a day off for players, as a fresh start. “This is the coaches’ and players’ week to get things fixed, and there will be things that we won’t be privy to discuss for competitive reasons,� Fisher said. “There may be changes in the lineups. Hopefully, we can get some people healed up and ready to play for us. “I’m expecting to put a different team on the field next week as we practice for Jacksonville.�

3From Page A8

with a losing record. The next four offer little hope either, with only Buffalo (2-4) on Nov. 15 currently below .500. This week’s focus will be on the basics of throwing, catching, blocking and tackling. The only thing they’re doing OK? Chris Johnson is second in the NFL with 596 yards rushing. Fisher said he isn’t making any coaching changes or taking over the defensive play calling, even though these Titans now have given up nearly as many points through six games (198) as they did in all of 2008 (234). They rank last in the NFL in that category in the first season under new coordinator Chuck Cecil. “He’s not the one missing the tackles. He’s not the one getting to the quarterback. He’s not the one giving up the plays down the field or making the mental mistakes,� Fisher said of Cecil. The offense shares as much blame. The Titans dropped six passes in the first half alone Sunday against New England and turned over the ball a season-high five times. Collins botched a couple snaps and a would-be reverse to Nate Washington wound up as a 22-yard loss on a pass. The only other completed pass was a screen

LADY EAGLES 3From Page A8

way. Junior Jodie Wood had four assists and a goal, and Lauren Johnson knocked in a couple more for SHS. The Lady Eagles got another positive out of the match as well. “We got to play a lot of younger girls in a district tournament game, and that’s good, too,� Payne said.

Win over SCHS “I’ll remember that one for a while,� Payne said of Friday’s 4-2 win over the Bearettes on SCHS’s turf. “We played by far our best game of the season. I guess the girls were highly motivated, and we just came out on all cylinders.� Lauren Johnson got the

From submitted reports

Blue and Gold started with an early goal on an assist from Deborah Huddleston to give the team a 1-0 lead. But Sevier County answered, and then some, scoring two straight goals to go up 2-1. Before halftime, though, Seymour got an equalizer as Jodie Wood scored on an assist from Courtney Suttles. In the second half, it was all Seymour. Sarah Dean netted the go-ahead goal for Seymour as Wood got an assist and Huddleston scored unassisted to give the team breathing room at 4-2. “I was just glad to part of something like that it was amazing,� Payne said of his seniors’ first-ever win over the Bearettes. The win gave Seymour the third seed for the tournament over Sevier County, who got the fourth seed.

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$2,991,028 36. John Andretti, $2,806,818 37. David Gilliland, $2,227,879 38. Dave Blaney, $2,135,381 39. Joe Nemechek, $2,106,005 40. Regan Smith, $1,510,651 41. Brad Keselowski, $1,305,359 42. Bill Elliott, $1,139,790 43. Max Papis, $1,078,800 44. Mike Bliss, $1,004,638 45. Tony Raines, $968,508 46. Aric Almirola, $902,563 47. Scott Riggs, $830,523 48. Terry Labonte, $657,488 49. Jeremy Mayfield, $568,888 50. Travis Kvapil, $520,708


The Mountain Press Tuesday, October 20, 2009

10 Classifieds

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

IN THE JUVENILE COURT FOR SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE

service or service by further publication shall be dispensed with and service of any future notices, motions, orders or other legal documents on this matter may be made upon the Respondent David Johnson, by filing same with the Juvenile Court Clerk for Sevier County, Tennessee.

a.m., to personally answer the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights. Failing to appear for the hearing on this date and time, without good cause, pursuant to rule 39(c) of the Tenn. R. Juv. P., will result in the loss of your right to contest the petition to terminate your parental rights to the child listed above. You may view and obtain a copy of the Petition and any other subsequently filed legal documents at the Juvenile Court Clerk's Office, 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee 37862 Entered this 19 day of October

NO. 09-000026 Rolfe Straussfogel, Guardian Ad Litem, and STATE OF TENNESSEE, DEPT OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES, Petitioner, v. Kimberly H. Johnson, Mother And David C. Johnson, Father Respondents In re: Kaylee Johnson d.o.b. 10-02-07 ORDER FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION

It appearing to the Court from allegations of the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights, and the Affidavits of Diligent Search that the whereabouts of the Respondent David Johnson are unknown and cannot be ascertained by diligent search, therefore, the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon David Johnson. It is therefore, ORDERED that said Respondent be served by publication of the following Notice for four (4) consecutive weeks in the Mountain Press, a newspaper published in Sevier County, Tennessee. It is further ORDERED that if the Respondent David Johnson does not enter an appearance or otherwise Answer the Petition, further personal

NOTICE TO THE RESPONDENT: DAVID JOHNSON The State of Tennessee, Department of Children's Service, has filed a Petition against you seeking forever your parental rights to KAYLEE RANDI JOHNSON. It appearing that ordinary process of law cannot be served upon you because your whereabouts are unknown. You are hereby ORDERED to serve upon Daniel K. Smithwick, Attorney for the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services, 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105, Sevierville, TN 37876, Phone NO: (865) 429-7012, an Answer to the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights filed by the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services, within thirty (30) days of the last date of publication of this notice, which will be October 28, 2009 or appear personally in the Juvenile Court of Sevier County, Tennessee, at 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee, 37862, on the 11th Day of December, 2009 at 9:00

Hon. Jeff Rader Sevier County Juvenile Judge 10-20-09, 10-27-09, 11-03-09, 11-10-09

IN THE JUVENILE COURT FOR SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE NO. 09-000026 Rolfe Straussfogel, Guardian Ad Litem, and STATE OF TENNESSEE, DEPT OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES, Petitioner, v. Kimberly H. Johnson, Mother And David C. Johnson, Father Respondents In re: Kaylee Johnson d.o.b. 10-02-07

LEGALS ORDER FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION It appearing to the Court from allegations of the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights, and the Affidavits of Diligent Search that the whereabouts of the Respondent Kimberly Hoyles-Johnson are unknown and cannot be ascertained by diligent search, therefore, the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon Kimberly Hoyles Johnson. It is therefore, ORDERED that said Respondent be served by publication of the following Notice for four (4) consecutive weeks in the Mountain Press, a newspaper published in Sevier County, Tennessee. It is further ORDERED that if the Respondent Kimberly Hoyles-Johnson does not enter an appearance or otherwise Answer the Petition, further personal service or service by further publication shall be dispensed with and service of any future notices, motions, orders or other legal documents on this matter may be made upon the Respondent Kimberly Hoyles-Johnson, by filing same with the Juvenile Court Clerk for Sevier County, Tennessee. NOTICE TO THE RESPONDENT: K I M B E R L Y HOYLES JOHNSON The State of Tennes-

LEGALS

LEGALS

see, Department of Children's Service, has filed a Petition against you seeking forever your parental rights to KAYLEE RANDI JOHNSON. It appearing that ordinary process of law cannot be served upon you because your whereabouts are unknown. You are hereby ORDERED to serve upon Daniel K. Smithwick, Attorney for the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services, 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105, Sevierville, TN 37876, Phone NO: (865) 429-7012, an Answer to the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights filed by the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services, within thirty (30) days of the last date of publication of this notice, which will be October 28, 2009 or appear personally in the Juvenile Court of Sevier County, Tennessee, at 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee, 37862, on the 11th Day of December, 2009 at 9:00 a.m., to personally answer the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights. Failing to appear for the hearing on this date and time, without good cause, pursuant to rule 39(c) of the Tenn. R. Juv. P., will result in the loss of your right to contest the petition to terminate your parental rights to the child listed above. You may view and obtain a copy of the Petition and any other subsequently filed legal documents at the Juvenile Court Clerk's Office, 125

Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee 37862 Entered this 19 day of October Hon. Jeff Rader Sevier County Juvenile Judge 10-20-09, 10-27-09, INVITATION TO BIDDERS Sevier County is soliciting sealed bids on audio and video equipment for the conference room, located on the third floor of the Sevier County courthouse. Bids will be received at the Sevier County Mayors Office, 125 Court Ave., Suite 102E, Sevierville, TN, 37862 until 9 a.m., October 30, 2009, at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Specifications and questions may be obtained from Perrin Anderson, 125 Court Ave., Suite 102E, Sevierville, TN, 37862, Telephone number (865) 774-3643 or panderson@seviercountytn.org. The Bidder’s name, address, bid opening time and the quotation "Conference Room Audio/Video Bid" must be printed on the sealed, opaque envelope containing the bid. Sevier County reserves the right to accept or reject any/or all bids and to accept the bid deemed most favorable to the interest of Sevier County. 10-18-09, 10-19-09, 10-20-09

LEGALS

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

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 3, 2005, by Rick L Clayton and Judith L Clayton to PRLAP Inc., Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book No. 2265, Page 584, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Aurora Loan Services LLC, acting on behalf of Wells Fargo, National Bank and the SARM 2005-18 Trust Fund; and WHEREAS, Aurora Loan Services LLC, acting on behalf of Wells Fargo, National Bank and the SARM 2005-18 Trust Fund, 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, November 5, 2009 (having been postponed from the previous sale dates of September 10, 2009 and September 24, 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 Fifth (5th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee and being all of unit 25 of the Sherwood Forest Resort, Phase 1 a Planned unit development as shown in the plat of record in LM BOOK 4 PAGE 65 in the register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat specific reference is here made for a more particular description. Subject to all of the covenants, restrictions, conditions, easements and other provisions of record in book 1322, page 750, in said register s office. Subject to any and all applicable restrictions, easements, boundary lines agreements and building setback lines of record in Map Book 32, page 360 and LM Book 4 page 65 in said Register s Office. Being all of the property conveyed to Rick L. Clayton and wife, Judith L. Clayton from Pleasant Cove, Inc., a Kentucky Corporation dated June 3, 2005, of record in Book 2265 Page 582 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

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 April 18, 2006, by Winford Aurthur Reed to Larry A. Weissman, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 2515, Page 400, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Bank; and WHEREAS, SunTrust Bank, 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, November 12, 2009 (having been postponed from the previous sale date of October 15, 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: Map 134B, Group D, Parcel 025 SITUATE IN DISTRICT NUMBER SIX OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE and more particularly bounded and described as follows: BEING all of Lot 25, of SMOKER HOLLER SUBDIVISION as seen of record at Large Map Book 6, Page 160 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat specific reference is herby made for a more particular description. Subject to restrictions, easements and right-of-ways as seed of record in Deed Book 2054, Page 134, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Subject to Declaration of Restrictions as see of record in Deed book 2381, Page 539, Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Subject to Transmission Line Easement as seen of record at Misc. Book 21, Page 157, and Misc. Book 21, Page 138, in said Register s Office. Subject to all Easements, Restrictions and Right-of-ways of Record and Not of Record BEING the same property conveyed to Winford Aurthur Reed by Warranty deed of Jeannie Countiss, dated April 18, 2006 and of record in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee in Deed Book 2515, Page 398.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 4435 Forest Vista Way Pigeon Forge, TN 37863

CURRENT OWNER(S): Clayton Financial Group, LLC 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: Bank of America, 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, 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.

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.: 158.0930437TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3235 Samuel Wear Drive Sevierville, TN 37862 CURRENT OWNER(S): Winford Aurthur Reed 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 (2) 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.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o LDWatts Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329 (770) 234-9181 (ext. ) File No.: 221.0932371TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com October 20, 27 and November 3, 2009

October 13, 20 and 27, 2009

Legals

500 Merchandise

100 Announcements

600 Rentals

200 Employment

700 Real Estate

300 Services

800 Mobile Homes

400 Financial

900 Transportation LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

Public Notice The Board of Commissioners of Sevier County Utility District will meet Tuesday, October 27, 2009 at 9:00 a.m. at the Utility District’s office located at 420 Robert Henderson Road, Sevierville.

RHS

Home of the Week

10-20-09

1526 Park Lane Sevierville TN 37876 Minimum Bid: $ 21,500.00 (or best offer above minimum bid)

107 LOST & FOUND LARGE REWARD Heirloom Diamond Ring lost in Sev. Kroger or in parking lot. Call 8034542.

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Reward!! Solid brown hound dog, striped collar (FeeFee). 430-5609

DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: 5 Room, 3 Bedroom, 2 Baths, Forced Heat, Central Air, Porch and Deck DATE & TIME OF SALE: October 27, 2009 at 10:00 A.M. PLACE OF SALE: North Door Sevier County Courthouse FOR INFO CONTACT: Area Specialist @ 865-523-3338 ext 4 For future foreclosure sales and inventory property access our website:www.resales.usda.gov

LEGALS

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 March 19, 2008, by Consuelo Arango to PRLAP, Inc., Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book No. 3043, Page 150, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Bank of America, N.A.; 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, November 12, 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: Situate in the Eleventh (11th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and within the corporate limits of the City of Gatlinburg and being all of Site 26, of Gatlinburg Falls, a planned unit development, as the same appears on a plat of record in large Map Book 5, Page 179, and Map Book 36, Page 78, as amended in large Map Book 7, Page 60, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description. Subject to the restrictions, notes, easements, and setbacks as shown on the maps of record in large Map Book 4, Page 154; large Map Book 5, Page 7; large Map Book 5, Page 59; large Map Book 5, Page 65; large Map Book 5, Page 171; large Map Book 5, Page 179, and large Map Book 7, Page 60, all in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. The above described property is conveyed together with and subject to the declaration of covenants, conditions, restrictions, and easements for Gatlinburg Falls, a planned unit development, of record in Volume Book 1643, Page 467, in the Register s office for Sevier County, Tennessee, as to the lots appearing on large Map Book 5, Page 65, and as revised in large Map Book 5, Page 179, both in the Gatlinburg Falls Resort-a planned unit development, annexing the additional area shown on the above described map and recorded in Book 1736, Page 16, and Book 1835, Page 236, both in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. The above described property is conveyed together and subject to the rights-of-way for House Road and Gatlinburg Falls Way of record in Volume Book 1875, Page 297; Volume Book 1875, Page 300, and Volume Book 1875, Page 302, all in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Being all of the same property conveyed to Consuelo Arango, single, from Leonard Fiume and wife Diane L. Fiume by general warranty deed dated January 17, 2007, and recorded January 23, 2007, in Volume Book 2718, Page 42, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 862 Great Smokey Way Gatlinbug, TN 37738 CURRENT OWNER(S): Consuelo Arango 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: Bank of America, NA 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. 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.: 158.0934466TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com October 20, 27 and November 3, 2009


The Mountain Press ‹ Tuesday, October 20, 2009 110 SPECIAL NOTICES

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. 110 SPECIAL NOTICES

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!

110 SPECIAL NOTICES

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.

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.

Classifieds ‹11 236 GENERAL

242 RESTAURANT

Earthbound Trading Company is looking for a 1st Assistant to join our Gatlinburg team. If interested please apply in person at 625 Parkway.

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

Local cabin company taking applications for Reservationist, Assistant Manager, and Cleaners. Apply in person at: 333 Ski Mtn. Rd. Gatlinburg.

245 SALES

238 HOTEL/MOTEL 2nd Shift Desk Clerk needed. Royal Inn Call 908-6949.

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.

Online

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.

236 GENERAL Cabin rental company seeking part time Guest Services Staff for 2nd shift. Weekends required. Please apply at 170 Showplace Blvd, Pigeon Forge. 774-5545.

Call. Collect.

Classifieds: 428-0746 LEGALS

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 September 9, 2005, by Edward E. Healy and Dani L. Healy to Crossroad Title, Inc., Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 2343, Page 279, (“Deed of Trust�); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Mortgage Inc.; and WHEREAS, SunTrust Mortgage, Inc., 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, November 12, 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: SITUATE in the Eleventh (11th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee and being all of LOTS 12 AND 13 OF THE PARTIAL REVISION OF ADDITION NO. TWO OF MONTGOMERY WOODS, according to the plat thereof of record in Map Book 11, Page 61 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. SUBJECT to restrictions of record in Warranty Deed Book 167, Page 349 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. SUBJECT to a five (5) foot easement for construction and maintenance of utilities along all property lines. Being the same property conveyed to Edward E. Healy, a single person, by deed from Steven V. Lear, a single person, dated May 17, 2005 of record in Book 2245, Page 649 in the Sevier County, Register s Office. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 504 Bruce Road Gatlinburg, TN 37738 CURRENT OWNER(S): Edward E. Healy 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: Suntrust Bank, Oak Ridge Urology Assoc., Brown Squirrel Furniture, Sevier County Electric Systems 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.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o SBS Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329 (770) 234-9181 (ext. ) File No.: 221.0902373TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com

Riverside Motor Lodge Gatlinburg now hiring experienced 311 Desk Clerk. Please apply in person.

Riverstone Resort is seeking an Executive Housekeeper. Full Time Position. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 212 Dollywood Ln. Pigeon Forge, Left at Traffic Light #8.

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

Property Clean Up Cutting of trees, underbrush & misc. Yard Work. FIREWOOD Free Delivery Call Joe 428-1584 or 850-7891

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

Stanley’s Lawncare & Landscaping Aeration, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding, Bush Hogging, Fall Clean-Up, Fencing, Hydro-seeding & Planting ˆV°ĂŠEĂŠ Â˜Ăƒ°ĂŠUĂŠ Ă€iiĂŠ ĂƒĂŒÂˆÂ“>ĂŒiĂƒ

865-254-3844

Trees Cut & Removal & Trimmed

COZY CABIN CHILD CARE

Townhouse

356 STORAGE BUILDINGS

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

Jay Ell Road 429-0948

CURRENT OWNERS: Kenneth Martin 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 setback 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. All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed(s) of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. he 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.

Jerry Amonett Substitute Trustee 4730 New Harvest Lane, Suite 300 Knoxville TN 37918 http//www.resales.usda.gov October 6, 13 and 20, 2009

Affordable Lawn care & Landscaping

Hauling

601 TOWNHOUSES FOR RENT

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1526 Park Lane Sevierville TN 37876

Yard Clean up Trash & Brush

307 CHILDCARE

For Sale Complete Wood Shop Planer Table Saw 24� Sander Etc. Hand tools Well Drilling Equip Roto Tiller Jet Pump Bladder Tank Eureka Steam Carpet Cleaner Rainbow Vacuum 9am-5pm for app 429-5961

Fall Clean-up Trees, brush & leaf removal.

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

C B Builders Experienced local carpenter Does all types remodeling Additions & Repairs Licensed & Insured

865-654-0892

Call 865-382-5527 Or 865-453-8224

Call Conley Whaley 428-2791 or 919-7340(cell)

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

KELLY’S HOME IMPROVEMENT

Quality Work - Reasonable Prices

• Carpentry • Electrical • • Plumbing • Kitchens • • Bathrooms • Painting • Licensed & Insured

Call Ty 368-2361

=VcYnbVc Bdk^c\ HZgk^XZ

-+*"'&+"',.+

610 DUPLEX FOR RENT

3BR/1BA Garage. All Kit. Appl Sevierville behind High School $800 plus Damage Call 7123946

500 MERCHANDISE

Michele Price 851-5028

1000 sq ft OfďŹ ce Space First month free $850/mo 1 yr lease Available Immediately Near Hospital

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

Art Gallery in Arts & Crafts Community for sale. $45,000. 719-0156

555 GARAGE & YARD SALES

Spacious, Furn or Unfurn 2 story & Garage W/D, D/W, Balcony Weekly or Monthly

865-789-1427

Traditional townhouse 2BR 1.5BA Smoke free & pet free. $550 mth + $550 dep. Call 4285781.

605 BUSINESS RENTALS

DOWNTOWN GATLINBURG 958 Parkway Retail Building 3680 Sq. Ft. Call 428-5161

Duplex for rent: Big River Overlook, Sevierville 2BR 1BA W/D hkup. $500 mth $500 dep 1 yr lease. 428-0731 leave msg.

Duplex-Spacious 2BR 1.5BA, located in quiet Sevierville neighborhood, large level lotAvailable immediately. Appliances furnished. Desire tenant with yr round employment. $695 mth. 1st last & security. 6075111 or 429-5111

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

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

2BR 1.5BA Townhouse

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/2BA

Apartments for Lease in Wears Valley Quiet and Easy Access. We also have some houses for rent. East Tennessee Realty Group

DOWNTOWN SEVIERVILLE

2BR/1BA

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

800-359-8913

Like New ALL Appliances Special Fall Rates

453-6823

LEGALS

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE Sale at public auction will be on November 5, 2009 at 12:00 pm Eastern Standard Time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Fred Mannix and Nancy Mannix Husband and Wife, Joint Tenancy with Full Rights of Survivorship to Guaranty Land Title Co., Trustee, on August 1, 2005 at Book Volume 2306, Page 75and conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register s Office. Owner of Debt: Central Mortgage Company 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 Sixth (6th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit:Lot 6, of The Preserve, Phase I as the same is shown by plat of record in Large Map Book 6, Page 17 in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee to which plat reference is hereby made for a more particular description.Subject to restrictions, reservations and easements as set forth in Book 2248, Page 135, Large Map Book 3, Page 72, and Large Map Book 6, Page 17 in the said Register s Office.Subject to a Well Agreement of record in Book 2253, Page 680 in the said Register s Office. Street Address: 2820 White Oak Ridge Lane Sevierville, TN 37862

Current Owner(s) of Property: Fred Mannix and wife, Nancy Mannix The street address of the above described property is believed to be 2820 White Oak Ridge Lane, Sevierville, TN 37862, 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. 09-020806 October 13, 20 and 27, 2009

111 HOME & OFFICE CLEANING

All Phases

Tri-County Glass and Door

+ARLA S #LEANING 3ERVICES

Kitchens, bath, decks, Windows, door, trim Sheetrock, painting Plumbing & electrical Vinyl & laminate ooring

Comm, and Residential Glass repair, Showers, Doors, Insulated Glass

ALL REPAIRS 24 HOUR 865-740-7102

24 Hour Emergency Service

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Don Ryan

$169.77+ Family Inns West

(865) 329-7807

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

865-908-9560 or 865-621-6559

Includes Phone, Color TV, Wkly Housekeeping Micr./Frig. Available

693 ROOMS FOR RENT

106 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Pressure Washing, Gutter Cleaning Fall Yard Clean-up Home Maintenance/ Cleaning

693 ROOMS FOR RENT

Weekly Rentals

453-0727

Open 24 Hours. Mon.-Fri. Sat. Hrs. available Low weekly rates CPR/First Aid CertiďŹ ed 13 yrs. exp.

605 BUSINESS RENTALS

428-4244

589 FURNITURE

For Sale

WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured by that certain Real Estate Deed of Trust for Tennessee executed on March 12, 2003 by Kenneth Martin and wife, Nancy Ann Martin to Mary Ruth Tackett, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee in Book 1647, Page 237-243, recorded March 14, 2003,, (ĂŹDeed of TrustĂŽ); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed(s) of Trust is the United States of America, acting by and through the United States Department of Agriculture (ĂŹUSDAĂŽ); and WHEREAS, USDA, the current owner and holder of said Deed(s) of Trust appointed Jerry Amonett 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(s) of Trust; and NOW THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed(s) of Trust by USDA, and Jerry Amonett as Substitute Trustee, or duly appointed agent, pursuant to the power, duty, and authorization in and conferred by said Deed(s) of Trust, will on Tuesday, October 27, 2009, commencing at 10:00 A.M., at the north door at the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest bidder either for cash or 10 percent of the high bid price as a non-refundable deposit with balance due within ten (10) days of sale, (and if such balance goes unpaid, USDA will retain the deposit and reforeclose) the following described property lying and being in the 7th Civil District in Sevier County, Tennessee to wit: Being Lot 61 of GALLOWAY S LAKESIDE DEVELOPMENT (Map Book 2, Page 163), containing 0.53 acres, more or less, being bounded on the Northeast by T.V.A., on the Southeast by Lot 60, on the Southwest by Park Lane and on the Northwest by Lot 62. Being the same property conveyed by Acie Newsom and wife, Ola Newsom to Kenneth Martin and wife Nancy Ann Martin, by deed of record in Deed Book 1647, Page 234, in the said Register s Office.

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

Store fixtures for sale. Smoky Mtn Forge Gift Shop. Light #7 Pigeon Forge 4281875.

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

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

Leaves & weedeating

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

LEGALS

October 20, 27 and November 3, 2009

105 YARD & TREE SERVICES

SELF STORAGE

557 MISC. SALES

435 BUSINESS FOR SALE

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

10X10 or 10x20

Part time sales help wanted. Evenings & weekends. Competitive wages, high school graduate, nonsmoker. Employee parking at store. Apply in person at Myrick’s Jewelry 962 Parkway, Gatlinburg.

Deadlines

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

356 STORAGE BUILDINGS

865-286-9611

115 ROOFING SERVICES

Nicks Roofing

2ENTAL 0ROPERTY (OUSES YRS EXP &REE %STIMATES ,ICENSED 3ATISFACTION 'UARANTEED

All types of roofing All New roofs Re-roofs Work Repairs Guaranteed Free Estimates

Call: 865-430-2599

113 MISC. SERVICES

117 ELECTRICAL

Need Someone Reliable, Professional for Handy work you can use regularly? 865-692-7597 or visit www.tomloliopropertymanagement.com


The Mountain Press ‹ Tuesday, October 20, 2009

12‹ Classifieds 696 APARTMENTS FOR RENT

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

CURRENT OWNER(S): Garlon D. Sherrell and Teri M. Sherrell 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: Adam Kowal and Sylvia Kruk; General Motors Acceptance Corp; Granite State Insurance Company; Blount Memorial Hospital 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.

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.: 560.0810227TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com

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 13, 2003, by Jace Ribblett and Debra Ribblett to Armold M. Weiss, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 1721, Page 226, (“Deed of Trust�); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP FKA COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING LP; and WHEREAS, BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP FKA COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING LP, 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, 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: Situate in the Tenth Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being all of Lots No. 34, 35, and 36 in Davis Hills Subdivision No. One as the same appear on a plat of said subdivision of record in Map Book 13, Page 13, Page 73, Register s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat reference is here made for description of the premises herein conveyed. This conveyance is made subject to the restrictions as set out in Misc. Book 28, Page 173, in said Register s Office. Being the same property conveyed to Richard Dwayne Knight and wife, Janet K. Knight, by deed dated November 11, 1999, of record in Deed Book 680, Page 752, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Being the same property conveyed to Jace Ribblett and wife, Debra Ribblett, by deed dated June 13, 2003, of record in Book 1721, Page 224, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

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

865-453-8947 865-776-2614

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

Kellum Creek Townhomes

2BR 1.5BA Sev. 1BR 1BA New Center. Stove & refrigerator furn. 453-5079. 2BR/1BA apt. $675 mth. 2BR/2BA cabin $775 mth., 3BR/2BA house $1000 mth., 3BR/ 1.5BA apt. $800 mth. 924-4761. APTS. AVAILABLE 1BR/1BA to 2BR/2BA $415.00 &UP. Many styles to choose from. 865-429-2962

1 BR - $450.00 2 BR - $645.00 incl. water & sewer.

865-908-6789

2BR/2BA

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

329-7807

CROSSCREEK 2BR/1.5BA $545 2BR/2BA Large Garden apartment $570.00 to $580.00 865-429-4470 Furnished 1BR apt. Pond,creek. Wears Valley. 228-8414.

NEWLY RENOVATED

2BR, 1.5 BA Townhouse $ 580 Mo.

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.

Small Pets

Call 384-1054 Or 384-4054

Light 6, PF, Duplex, 2BR/1BA, $575 mo. 1st/last/dep. 865-898-7925 Kodak 2BR/2BA, Washer/Dryer Hook-up 1 level, covered porch No Pets, 1 yr lease $500/$500 dep. 932-2613

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

Kodak area. 2BR 1.5BA. All appliances furnished. No pets. 865-5480032. 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 Nice, clean 1 BR. 10 miles East of Gat. (865) 228-7533 or (865) 430-9671.

BIG BROKER BOB’s REALTY 865-774-5919 SILO APARTMENTS

Spacious 2BR/2BA Apt 1100 sq ft. Close to town & school. $700 mon. 9ft ceiling. Call 742-6176 697 CONDO RENTALS

2BR/2BA $465 C H/A & decks No Pets

865-368-6602

OPEN HOUSE 15 Homes to view

RENT NO MORE! RENTERS, LET YOUR RENT BE YOUR DOWN PAYMENT!

865-453-0086 2BR 1BA mobile home on Indian Gap Cir. 933-5509 or 7552402 2BR 1BA on private lot in Seymour. $450 mth includes city water. 1 block from Chapman Hwy. 654-1391 Kodak 3 homes 3+2 $500 2+2 $450 2+1 $425 + dep No pets. 933-6544. 699 HOME RENTALS $700 to $1000+. Wanda Galli Realty Exec. 680-5119 or 774-4307.

Offers 1/2 BR Units

2BD/2BA APARTMENT

HOMES Pigeon Forge 4BD/3BA 1 block off parkway

New Center 3BR/2BA Garage, Pet Friendly

$495/MO

CALL PINE KNOB

865-933-0504

Wimbledon PROPERTIES

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)

3BR/2BA For Rent/Sale in Country in Dandridge. 20 mins from Pigeon Forge. 561866-1291 3BR/2BA Hot tub, Furnished. Traffic Light #6 in Pigeon Forge. Credit References and Deposit Required. $1050 mth. 770983-0698 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

Furnished House for Rent 1 blk from Pky Gatlinburg. Great location 865-274-2637

Lease To Purchase Option!

NOW $174,900

OPEN HOUSE FRI-SAT-SUN 12-5 For virtual tours and oor plans visit: www.eaglecreeklandingTN.com

CENTURY 21 (865) 816-3551

For a private tour contact: WILL ROBERTS (865) 806-6257

Beautiful above average 16x80. $27,750. For info: 591-7177

I will ďŹ nance!

Only 3 left! Call Mickey (865) 453-0086

CLAYTON HOMES 1751 WinďŹ eld Dunn Pkwy Sevierville, TN 37862

Bring in cold cash with an ad in the Classifieds!

Call

428-0746

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

AAIM Real Estate Co.

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

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

Working for peanuts?

-+1 -,

1

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. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

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

Live Your Dream at EAGLE CREEK LANDING was $189,900

3BD/2BA With Land

Find your perfect job in

New Rental Energy Eff. Geo-

3BR 2BA Log home in Wears Valley. Hot tub, gas fireplace, mtn views. $1000 mth. 239-560-1129

BEAUTIFUL 2-3 BEDROOM HOMES STARTING AT

829 MANUFACTURED HOME SALES

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.

New Townhomes 2 BD/2 BA Excellent View FHA, USDA Approved $105,000 Call Kim Sheets (865) 387-7717

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

698 MOBILE HOME RENTALS

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.

3 BD / 2 BA 4 MILES FROM EXIT 407 $700/MONTH & DEPOSIT. NO PETS. 865-712-5238, 865-705-9096

$99 move in

Studio condo on Pkwy, furn, util inc, wifi, cbl, indr pool $200/ wk 540-397- 4977

Perfect small log home for small family. F.P.-3BR-Kit. Appl. $850 Plus DepositCall 803-3198.

NICE, CLEAN IN KODAK

3BR 1BA house in Kodak. $700 mth $500 dep. 4281318.

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

House for rent 2BR 2BA Flat Creek Rd in Sevierville. No pets. 453-5337

829 MANUFACTURED HOME SALES

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

Pet Friendly

PIGEON FORGE

3BR/2BA + Bonus Room in Kodak $975/Mo + dep. 865-748-2684

1BR Fully furnished Log Home Down Town Pigeon Forge. $650 mth. No Pets, No Smoking 865-7123026.

New Homes for Rent. 3BR/2BA starting at $700 - $850 & $1000 per month. No pets. 865-850-3874

in Sevierville

CURRENT OWNER(S): Jace Ribblett and Debra Ribblett 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: 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, 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.

October 6, 13 and 20, 2009

Hard wood oors, plus many extras, 1 year lease, no pets, TVA energy efďŹ cient.

429-2475

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 919 Davis Boulevard Seymour, TN 37865

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee c/o PLG Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc. 1587 Northeast Expressway Atlanta, GA 30329 (770) 234-9181 (ext. ) File No.: 432.0932732TN Web Site: www.msplaw.com

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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 October 23, 2003, by Garlon D. Sherrell and Teri M. Sherrell to Douglas S. Yates, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book No. 1824, Page 372, as rerecorded in Book No. 1853, Page 27, aforesaid records, and (“Deed of Trust�); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to U.S. Bank National Association as trustee under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of January 1, 2004 Asset Backed Securities Corporation Home Equity Loan Trust 2004-HE1 Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-HE1; and WHEREAS, U.S. Bank National Association as trustee under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of January 1, 2004 Asset Backed Securities Corporation Home Equity Loan Trust 2004-HE1 Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-HE1, 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, November 5, 2009 (having been postponed from the previous sale date of August 20, 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 Sixteenth (16th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being all of Tract 2 as shown on the plat entitled “4 Lot Subdivision for Adam Kowal�, as the same appears on the plat of record in Map Book 34, Page 179, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which specific map reference is hereby made for a more particular description. Subject to easements, notations, setbacks, restrictions, and right of ways as shown on the mpa of record in Map Book 34, Page 179, in the said register s office. Subject to a Shared Well Agreement of record in Book 1824, Page 368, in the said register s office. Being the same property conveyed to Garlon D. Sherrell and wife, Teri M. Sherrell by warranty deed from Adam Kowal and wife, Sylvia Kruk dated October 23, 2003, of record in Book 1824, Page 370, in the Register s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

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

MEPIR Š2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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Comics ◆ A13

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 ◆ The Mountain Press Family Circus

Close to Home

Advice

Recovering alcoholic timid about socializing at bars with co-workers

Zits

Blondie

Baby Blues

Beetle Bailey

Dear Annie: I am a recovering alcoholic with six months’ sobriety. Recently, I was hired at a new company. The job is everything I dreamed of, and my bosses and co-workers are great. The problem is, every Friday after work, they go to a bar to socialize. I am always invited to join them, but since bars were where I did most of my drinking, it is essential to my recovery that I stay out of them. So far, I have politely excused myself from attending these gatherings, saying I have a previous commitment or an errand to run, but it is beginning to get awkward. I am aware that socializing outside of work can be an important part of an employee’s success. I don’t want to come across as standoffish or not a team player. But I also don’t want to jeopardize my sobriety. Some people have suggested I sit in the bar and sip a soft drink. I tried it once and was so uncomfortable (and tempted to drink) that I had to leave. My AA sponsor thinks I should tell my co-workers the truth, but I’m afraid if I do, they might think poorly of me. Or worse, I might get fired. Any suggestions? -- Between a Rock and a Hard Place Dear Between: It is no one’s business that you are a recovering alcoholic. If you think your lack of socialization is a problem, consider telling your co-workers that you are a non-drinker and would love it if they could mix it up and go to a cafe or restaurant instead of the bar once in a while. You might also bring up this topic at your next AA

meeting. Many of your fellow non-drinkers have lived through similar situations and may have some good suggestions. Dear Annie: My 58-year-old sister, “Doreen,” gets into debt over and over. She will hammer at my mother until Mom gives her the money to bail her out. My father passed away years ago, and I am sure he would be horrified at how Doreen is taking advantage of Mom. My parents worked hard for every penny they made. We always had what we needed, but were never what you’d call “well off.” Doreen has taken at least $50,000 from Mom within the last two years, and now I find she has convinced Mom to give her thousands more. She preys on Mom’s fears and sympathies until Mom feels she has no choice but to help her out. Doreen has a lowpaying job, and even though she owns a home, she is so much in debt that I don’t see any way she could ever repay the money. At this rate, she will leave Mom penniless. How can she believe this is right? What can my brother and I do? -Worried Daughter in Canada Dear Canada: If your mother is mentally capable and chooses to give Doreen this money, there isn’t much you can do to stop her. However,

t o d ay ’ s p u z z l e

Garfield

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

For Better Or Worse

Tina’s Groove

you might discuss with Mom the possibility of putting control of her money with someone else -- perhaps an attorney or trusted friend who won’t be manipulated by Doreen. (We don’t recommend you or your brother, since it could cause an estrangement.) A nonpartisan third party can put the money in a trust, pay Mom’s bills and give her a monthly allowance, but anything else will require approval. Suggest it. Dear Annie: I have an easy solution to “Senior Delinquent’s” dilemma about carrying her prescription pills in a plastic bag. I, too, must carry several medications with me when I go out. I save the description insert that comes with each prescription and put it in my purse. The insert lists all the information on the bottle label. -- Portable Pharmacist in San Pedro, Calif. Dear San Pedro: We suspect that works much better for women with large purses than men with small wallets, but thanks for a useful idea. 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.


A14 ◆ Nation/World

The Mountain Press ◆ Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Nation/World briefs

Pump prices rise quickly

Despite persistently low demand, prices for gasoline have spiked over the past week along with crude oil, threatening one of the very few points of relief for the recession-striken U.S. consumer: Cheap gas. Prices have risen for six straight days and they are now comfortably above $2.50 per gallon for the first time in weeks. On Monday, they rose again for the sixth straight day to $2.564 per gallon according to auto club AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service.

11 Park Service searches per day

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Whether it’s saving a stranded hiker with a broken leg or fishing out a capsized boater, a new study says national parks launch 11 search-and-rescue operations on an average day. Travis Heggie, an assistant professor at the University of North Dakota who headed up the study, analyzed search-and-rescue reports from 1992 to 2007, when there were more than 65,000 operations in national parks with costs exceeding $58 million. Those most commonly in need of help? Day hikers, young men and boaters. Weekends were the busiest.

KIHEI, Hawaii (AP) — A 54-year-old man has been attacked by a shark while surfing off Maui. Maui County spokeswoman Mahina Martin says the unidentified man was bitten Monday morning in the upper right thigh and lower right ankle off Kalama Beach Park. He man was transported to Maui Memorial Medical Center. His condition wasn’t immediately available. Martin says a 6- to 8-foot sand shark is believed to have carried out the attack.

Toddler OK after 30-foot fall

ANTIOCH, Calif. (AP) — Talk about a tough kid: A California toddler is alive after falling 30 feet from an apartment window and landing on concrete and rocks. Contra Costa County Fire Capt. Charles Thomas says the 22-month-old boy was alert and crying after the three-story plunge Sunday in Antioch that left him with just a cut on his abdomen, a bruised lung and a bump on his head. The boy appeared to have climbed onto furniture near an open window and fell after pushing against the screen. He landed on concrete and a bed of rocks.

Former nurse’s aide Ugandan king

KASESE, Uganda (AP) — For years, Charles Wesley Mumbere worked as a nurse’s aide in Maryland and Pennsylvania, caring for the elderly and sick. No one there suspected that he had inherited a royal title in his African homeland when he was just 13. On Monday, after years of political upheaval and financial struggle, Mumbere, 56, was finally crowned king of his people to the sound of drum beats and thousands of cheering supporters wearing cloth printed with his portraits.

Pacific Hurricane Rick weakens

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Hurricane Rick was still more than a day away from the resorts of Baja California on Monday but the 13-foot waves it kicked up already have killed one person in Los Cabos, which lies almost directly in the hurricane’s forecast path. Francisco Cota, the Los Cabos civil defense director, said a 38-year-old man was standing on a rocky point fishing when he was swept away by one of the big waves Sunday. Bystanders went to help the man, but by the time they got him out of the water he was dead.

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32 planets found outside solar system By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer

Shark attacks Maui surfer

PIONEER WOODS

Associated Press

This artist rendering provided by the European South Observatory shows some of the 32 new planets astronomers found outside our solar system, adding evidence to the theory that the universe has many places where life could develop.

WASHINGTON — European astronomers have found 32 new planets outside our solar system, adding evidence to the theory that the universe has many places where life could develop. Scientists using the European Southern Observatory telescope didn’t find any planets quite the size of Earth or

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covered planets were as small as five times the size of Earth and one was up to five times larger than Jupiter. Astronomer Stephane Udry of the University of Geneva said the results support the theory that planet formation is common, especially around the most common types of stars. “I’m pretty confident that there are Earth-like planets everywhere,” Udry

said in a Web-based news briefing from a conference in Portugal. “Nature doesn’t like a vacuum. If there is space to put a planet there, there will be a planet there.” What astronomers said is especially exciting is that about 40 percent of sun-like stars have planets that are closer to being Earth-sized than the size of Jupiter. Jupiter’s mass is more than 300 times that of Earth’s.

Balloon boy charges may not come until next week FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Authorities investigating the family accused of perpetrating the balloon boy hoax to promote a reality show said Monday they don’t expect to bring possible charges until at least next week. Larimer County sheriff’s spokeswoman Eloise Campanella said that investigators don’t anticipate finishing their reports and presenting them to the district attorney’s office until next week. It will then be up to prosecutors to decide whether to file charges against Richard Heene or his wife, Mayumi. The couple’s lawyer, David Lane, said earlier in the day that he expected charges to be filed by Wednesday. With television cameras and reporters set up outside the Heene home, Lane has stressed that the Heenes are willing to turn themselves in to avoid the spectacle of a public arrest. Lane declined to say directly whether he believes the incident was a hoax but said the Heenes are innocent

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any that seemed habitable or even unusual. But their announcement increased the number of planets discovered outside the solar system to more than 400. Six of the newly found planets are several times bigger than Earth, increasing the population of socalled super-Earths by more than 30 percent. Most planets discovered so far are far bigger, Jupitersized or even larger. Two of the newly dis-

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unless convicted. The family remained in seclusion Monday at their home. “If they (prosecutors) can prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt, that’s one thing. If they can’t prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt, that’s another,” he told The Associated Press. Investigators also say they want to question an associate of his after e-mails surfaced showing the two had discussed a balloon hoax months ago as part of a public relations campaign for the reality show. Robert Thomas of Denver claimed Heene had told him

he was planning a media stunt to promote a proposed reality show. Thomas, a selfdescribed researcher, sold his story to Gawker.com and provided the Web site with

e-mail exchanges between him and Heene. Thomas said the show would feature Heene as a mad scientist who carries out various scientific experiments. Present this coupon for

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