Reason for Theseason
Sunday Edition
December 23, 2018 $1.50 $9M-plus RV park proposed Cartersville “We’re hoping to permit it by spring and start in council Potential 270-lot June, July,” he said. “The first phase would be around development targets summer 160 [lots]. The total is 270, around that number.” Baldree is partnering with Maury Stead, founder of approves construction in Emerson Roswell-based Stead Realty Group, for the project. “If you look at a million-and-a-half people that gas main BY JAMES SWIFT are going to visit LakePoint and the hundreds of [email protected] thousands that travel down to Florida and the people who want to come and watch the Braves play or relocation The City of Emerson Planning and Zoning Commis- want to watch the Falcons, it’s an awesome oppor- sion heard from a real estate investor Thursday evening tunity for them to bring their RV,” Stead said. who aspires to construct an approximately 57-acre The two are seeking a special use permit to get the agreement recreational vehicle (RV) “resort” along the Etowah. development off the ground. As Emerson Assistant BY JAMES SWIFT “It’s right at Joe Frank Harris and the river,” said City Manager Todd Heath noted, a total of four hear- LTB Holdings LLC President Todd Baldree. “Right [email protected] JAMES SWIFT/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS ings are required before the project gets the green there where the old train trestles are in the water.” light from city officials. A second reading before the Emerson Assistant City Manager Todd Heath, left, presents at The final Cartersville City Baldree estimated the potential development to planning and zoning commission is scheduled for Thursday’s planning and zoning commission meeting. Todd Council meeting of the year had a Baldree, president of LTB Holdings LLC, was on hand to discuss cost about $9-$10 million, with construction taking a proposal for 57-acre recreational vehicle park. about 12 months. SEE RV PARK, PAGE 7A little bit of everything — board ap- pointments, intergovernmental agreements, financial reports and even a resolution to deny a claim Bartow County made by an individual seeking $100,000-plus in damages after he School System REASON FOR THE SEASON was stopped for going 61 mph in a 45 mph zone. launches first At the top of the list, however, was a gas main relocation agree- distance learning ment between the city, Bartow County and the owner/developer cybersecurity of a planned Courtyard by Mar- riott hotel near the Clarence pathway Brown Conference Center. Michael Hill, the city’s gas de- BY DONNA HARRIS partment superintendent, said the [email protected] agreement is necessary for the city’s existing natural gas facilities A new pathway being launched to avoid “conflicts” with the pro- by the Bartow County School Sys- posed development. He tabbed the tem could completely turn around total cost of relocation to be about the lives of some of its students. $52,000, plus any and all custom- A cohort of 25 second-semester ary overruns. juniors at Cass High School and their parents signed commitment “Additionally, the agreement agreements Tuesday night for a provides for the county to provide new cybersecurity pathway that easements associated with this re- will be the system’s first-ever dis- location where proposed city util- tance learning class. ities will be constructed on Beginning Jan. 8, the students will property owned by the county,” meet with their classroom instructor, wrote gas system engineer Brian career, technical and agricultural ed- Friery in an email sent to Hill, ucation teacher Matt Thompson, dated Dec. 13. “The agreement every day at 8:30 a.m. to learn about also provides for the city to aban- cybersecurity virtually from a trained don all rights and interests in any teacher in Nevada. existing easements not to be incor- CyberTec Academy, a Nevada- porated in the completed overall based company owned by retired project site.” U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. R. “Mon- Council voted unanimously to RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS tana” Williams, will simultane- approve the agreement. Under the ously train and certify Thompson Two-year-old Elise Womack speaks with Emma Adams, who portayed Mary, mother of Jesus, in the Sam Jones Memorial UMC Living Nativity. Will Murphy, center, portrayed Joseph. arrangement, the owner/developer and the first cohort through virtual of the hotel will reimburse the city learning. for relocation-associated ex- “This rigorous program is a big penses. deal,” Superintendent Dr. Phillip “We’ll have to pay it up front, Page said. “We wanted our students and families to know this is not a First Presbyterian Church completes but the developer’s going to be typical high school class. This is a paying for all these costs,” Mayor unique opportunity where our Matt Santini said. Colonels will participate in our first- Reading the Bible in 90 Days program Council members also heard the ever distance learning course. They first reading of a proposed amend- will learn from those who have prior BY MARIE NESMITH quickly found that afternoon reading was ing letters from an encouraging friend.” ment to the city’s “wine corkage” national experience working for the [email protected] better for me. Some days it was difficult to Founded in 2002, the Bible in 90 Days ordinance. White House and Department of stop at just the 12 pages when the stories ministry and its curriculum was created by “It would allow restaurants Homeland Security. We are ‘virtu- Answering the challenge to read the Bible were kin to a novel. Ted Cooper, a former agnostic whose life which serve alcohol and serve ally’ bringing the best to Bartow in 90 days, Suzanne Collins was thrilled to “Reading through the Old Testament was was transformed after reading the Bible in food to allow patrons to leave with County in order to provide second- immerse herself in God’s Word in the challenging at times with repetition of laws, three months. a bottle of wine, an unfinished bot- to-none enrichment opportunities to months leading up to the holiday season. She temple descriptions and vengefulness. God “Each Sunday during Sunday school hour tle of wine if it’s properly sealed this special cohort and cohorts mov- was one of about 86 people taking part in did make his presence known and expected we would meet to discuss what we had read, and it was purchased along with ing forward. It’s an exciting time for First Presbyterian Church of Cartersville’s man to follow the given laws. Many of the then view a DVD discussion of the material the dinner,” said Randy Mannino, Bartow County students.” Reading the Bible in 90 Days program Aug. stories were familiar from my youth in Sun- we had read during the week,” Collins said. the city’s planning and develop- For this cohort, the program is 12 to Nov. 11. day school and/or vacation Bible school. The “Dr. [Michael] Anderson, [First Presbyter- ment director. designed to be a three-semester “Having never read the Bible from cover book of Ruth and the Song of Solomon were ian’s designated pastor], would preach a ser- He said city attorney Keith course in which students take three to cover, the challenge was one I readily ac- two of my favorite books along with Psalms. mon based on a passage from the week’s Lovell wrote the ordinance certification exams over the first cepted,” said Collins, a deacon at First Pres- The New Testament was more familiar with material. Even though this was not a Bible amendment to mimic state law. two semesters before participating byterian Church. “I set aside an hour in the the four Gospels retelling the story of Jesus’ SEE , PAGE 5A in work-based learning opportuni- evening to read the prescribed 12 pages but life and death. Paul’s epistles were like read- BIBLE SEE CARTERSVILLE, PAGE 4A ties during the third semester. “This new distance learning op- portunity will allow our students to earn three technology certifications – CompTIA A+, Network + and Local restaurant manager wins Security + – by the time they grad- uate,” Page said. “No other high school program in Georgia offers back-to-back national awards all three credentials.” The superintendent said state BY JAMES SWIFT partners from a pool of more than 500 LongHorn Sen. Bruce Thompson presented [email protected] Steakhouse operators to receive their coveted “Di- him with the idea for a cybersecu- amond Club” award, which celebrates manage- rity program in August. Winning back-to-back awards isn’t easy. Over ment personnel who demonstrate “outstanding “I knew it was a perfect partner- 90 years, barely a dozen people have ever earned results and show strong and inspiring leadership ship, given Sen. Thompson’s pas- Academy Awards in consecutive years. Since while also achieving top financial performance sion and the global shortage of 1917, just one person has ever won back-to-back from the previous year.” cybersecurity professionals,” he Pulitzer Prizes. And in the 117-year history of the Patricia France, managing partner of the local said. “Employers are struggling to Nobel prize, no one has ever claimed the honor LongHorn restaurant at 463 East Main St. in fill hundreds of thousands of cyber- two years in a row. Cartersville, took home her second consecutive security-related roles in the U.S. And if you think achieving such a distinction is Diamond Club distinction earlier this year. every year. We want our children any easier in the world of restaurant management, “They send all of the winning managing part- think again. This year, Darden Restaurants, Inc. — ners of all the brands on a trip to an awards cere- prepared and at the forefront of this JAMES SWIFT/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS booming industry.” an Orlando-based company whose brands include mony, where you get a celebration dinner and they Patricia France, managing partner of the LongHorn Steakhouse Olive Garden, Bahama Breeze and Cheddar’s, restaurant in Cartersville, received her second consecutive SEE , PAGE 5A SEE CYBERSECURITY, PAGE 5A among many others — chose just 24 managing FRANCE “Diamond Club” distinction earlier this year.
INSIDE TODAY Mostly Obituaries ...... 2A Sports ...... 1B cloudy VOLUME 72, NO. 198 U.S.& World ...... 4A Classified ...... 4B High 54 Business ...... 6A Around Town ...... 1C www.daily-tribune.com Blotter ...... 7A Entertainment ...... 7C Low 33 2A Sunday, December 23, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com Local The Daily Tribune News
ContactUs OBITUARIES The Daily Tribune News Grover Greene and Vister Lorene neral Home, Adairsville. include Johnny Ray, Blake Ray, Steve (Tasha) and Trina; special Address: 251 S. Tennessee St. Harris Greene. Mrs. Green was of Sign the guestbook and leave Brent Ray, Mike Wilkey, Shane grandchild, Jeremy; niece, Cartersville, GA 30120 the Baptist faith. She was a tal- online condolences at www.Bar- Copeland, and Dowis Satterfield. Aleasha; siblings, Flonnie (Frank) ented decorator and enjoyed mak- tonFuneralHome.net Honorary pallbearers will be Wiley, Daniel (Fannie) Linley, Mailing Address: ing flower arrangements. She was R. Dudley Barton & Son Fu- Jimmy Stewart, Sammy Aker (Latonia) Linley, Tyrone 251 S. Tennessee St. a loving mother, grandmother, and neral Home, Inc., Adairsville, is in McMillen, Donny Hale, and Terry (Nora) Linley; sister-in-laws, Cartersville, GA 30120 sister. Mrs. Green was preceded in charge of arrangements for Mrs. Martin. Charlotte, Dianne, Evelena and Phone: 770-382-4545 death by her parents; husband, Janice Ann Green. The family will receive friends Lurece; and a host of grandchil- After 5 p.m.: 770-382-4548 Jerry Green; sisters, Mae Bates Sunday from 6:00 PM until 8:00 dren, great grandchildren, nieces, Fax: 770-382-2711 and Alma Lou Greene; brother, PM at Barton Funeral Home. nephews, other relatives and Charles Barry Tommy Green. William Darrell R. Dudley Barton & Son Fu- friends. Alan Davis, Spradley Survivors include her son, Hyde neral Home, Adairsville, is in Condolences may be expressed Publisher Mr. Charles Barry Spradley, 67, Shane Bell; daughter, Melanie Mr. William Darrell Hyde, age charge of funeral arrangements for at: www.mackeppingerfuneral- Jason Greenberg, of Cartersville, died on Saturday, (Scotty) Bell; step-daughters, 71, of Joe Frank Harris Parkway, Mr. William Darrell Hyde. home.com Managing Editor December 22, 2018, at his resi- Sharon Baker and Sherl Wilerson; Adairsville, passed away Thurs- Mack Eppinger and Sons Fu- Jennifer Moates, dence. Born May 2, 1951, in grandchildren, Tony (Amy) day, December 20, 2018. Kenneth Ray neral Service, Inc. are in charge of Advertising Director Cartersville, Georgia, he is the son Erwin, Jeremy (Mandy) Erwin, He was born in Cartersville, the arrangements. Mindy Salamon, of the late Charles Ellis Spradley, Emily Baker, Tyler Wright, and GA, August 17, 1947, son of the Linley Office Manager/Classified Jr. and Mildred Lewis Spradley. Haley Wilerson; great grandchil- late Gordon Hyde and Velma Ray Mr. Kenneth Ray Linley, 68 of Advertising Director Mr. Spradley was retired from dren, Jase Erwin, Lexie Erwin, Hyde. Mr. Hyde was a member of Cartersville, Georgia, passed away Jay Ascension Anna Hall, and Conner Spriggs; Lee McCrory, Lockheed Martin, where he Oak Hill Baptist Church. He re- on Tuesday, December 18, 2018. brothers, Frankie, James, Johnny, Funeral service will be held on Salinas Circulation/Distribution worked for 10 tired from Union Carbide after 37 Jay Ascension Salinas, age 24, Manager and Wayne Greene; sisters, Mattie years and then worked for H & R Sunday, December 23, 2018, at years, and was passed away on December 7, Byron Pezzarossi, the owner of Meeks, Linda White, Darlene Fire Safety. Everyone who knew 3:00pm at Damascus Baptist 2018. Survived by his father J. As- Press Room Director Spradley Profes- Brooks, Bobbie Harrison, Betty Darrel knew his favorite place to Church, 174 Gaston Westbrook cencion Salinas, 57, of San Luis sional Services Craig, and Linnie Greene; several be was fishing. Mr. Hyde was pre- Avenue, Emerson, Georgia 30137. Potosí, Mexico; mother Darlene Email: for over 28 years nieces and nephews. ceded in death by his parents; The body will lie in state in the A. Salinas of Columbus, Ga., 58 ; and Rhino Lin- Funeral services will be held brother, Gordon “Cotton” Hyde; church from 2:00pm until the hour MANAGING EDITOR brother Josh B. Salinas; sister-in- ings of Wednesday, December 26, 2018, sister, Lucille Hyde Ray; and niece of service. The family received [email protected] law Gwen Salinas; nephews Cartersville for at 2:00 PM from the Chapel of Peggy Ann Ray. friends December 22, 2018, at the NEWSROOM 6 years. He was Barton Funeral Home, Adairsville, Survivors include his nephews, Mack Eppinger and Sons Funeral Aston Salinas and Braydon Sali- [email protected] nas, all of Cartersville; sister Rox- a Deacon at Spradley with Rev. Chad White and Rev. Johnny Ray and Jimmy Ray both Home, 210 North Bartow Street, FEATURES EDITOR Gilmer Street Frankie Greene officiating. Inter- of Adairsville; great-nephews, Cartersville, Georgia. anne Birmingham; nephew Austin [email protected] Baptist Church & Sunday school ment will follow in Towe Chapel Billy Ray, Blake Ray, and Brent Kenneth Ray Linley, affection- Booth and niece Hannah Birming- PHOTOGRAPHER teacher, and a member of Atco Cemetery. Pallbearers include Je- Ray; great great nieces and ately known as "Kent" or "K- ham of Phenix City, Alabama; [email protected] Baptist Church. Mr. Spradley was remy Erwin, Tony Erwin, Anthony nephew, Ryder, Sophia, and Macie Funk," was born on July 4, 1950, grandmother Elsie F McQuirt, 80, White, Sean Stemper, Rusty Stem- Ray. in Emerson, Georgia, to the late of Commerce, Georgia; and sev- STAFF REPORTERS a current member of The Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons per, and Brent Gilmore. Honorary Funeral services will be held Raymond Clyde Linley, Sr. and eral aunts, uncles and cousins; [email protected] [email protected] (Cartersville Chapter), the Grand pallbearers include Michael Stem- Monday, December 24, 2018, at Eula Graves. He lived life to the friends and work family with Eu- Lodge of Georgia (John W. Alan), per, Phillip Weatherford, and Chris 2:00 PM from Oak Hill Baptist fullest and cherished each day. harlee Creek Outfitters, Jeffer- SPORTS REPORTER Grand Chapter of Royal & Select Meeks. Church, Rydal with Reverends Kent leaves to cherish his mem- son’s, Coffees Brazilian, Jiu-Jitsu [email protected] Masters of Georgia (Minor C. The family will receive friends Jim Pinkard and Ronny Cline of- ories: his loving wife, Laura Ann Martial Arts, and Toyo. He loved ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Shadburn), Cartersville Shrine Wednesday evening from 12:00 ficiating. Interment will follow in Callahan; his beautiful children, everyone of you and his life will [email protected] Club, Elks USA, and previously PM until 2:00 PM at Barton Fu- the church cemetery. Pallbearers Nicole, Kenneth, Kirk (Benita), be missed and treasured. OFFICE MANAGER/CLASSIFIED active member of the Cartersville ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kiwanis club. In addition to his [email protected] parents, he is preceded in death by The Family of LEGAL ADVERTISING his brother, James Lewis Spradley. [email protected] Survivors include his wife of 49 years, Brenda Edmondson Henry Lee Smith PRODUCTION Spradley; his children, Kelley [email protected] Hendrix (Stacy) of Adairsville, extends our heartfelt thanks Letter Guidelines: Camille Spradley (Mike) of to all who gave comforting sympathy Letters to the editor on issues Cartersville; his grandchildren, of broad public interest are Spencer Hendrix and Kameron and help during our recent sorrow. welcomed. Letters must bear a Hendrix of Adairsville, and Reily We deeply appreciate the visits, food, complete signature, street ad- Spradley-Mount and Charlotte dress and phone number (ad- Spradley-Mount of Cartersville; cards, flowers and prayers during dresses and phone numbers his sisters, Susan Spradley will not be published). Letters of this difficult time. A special thank 500 words or less will be ac- Stephens (Ron) of Cartersville, cepted. Libelous charges and and Vivian Alexander of McDo- you to the Rev. Lagoone and church abusive language will not be nough; his brother, Steven considered. Information given Spradley (Debi) of Cartersville; members as well as Mt. Zion Baptist must be factual. All letters will and many loving nieces, nephews Church. Jonathan E Brown be printed as submitted. No and cousins. Financial Advisor corrections will be made to Funeral services will be held on grammar, spelling or style. Your thoughtfulness 101 S Erwin St Monday, December 24, 2018, at Writers may have letters pub- Cartersville, GA 30120 lished once every two weeks. 10:00 a.m. in the chapel of Parnick will never be forgotten. 770-607-0114 Consumer complaints and Jennings Funeral Home and Cre- thank-you letters cannot be mation Services with Pastor Mike used. All are subject to editing. Boatfield, Pastor Doug Harris and Send letters to 251 S. Ten- Reverend Crawford Greeson offi- CONSTRUCTION TO nessee St., Cartersville, GA ciating. Interment will follow in 30120, or e-mail to Sunset Memory Gardens ceme- [email protected]. PERMANENT FINANCING Editor’s Note: tery. The family will receive Opinions expressed by colum- friends on Sunday from 5:00 – AVAILABLE AT REGIONS nists for The Daily Tribune 8:00 p.m. at the funeral home. Join Us For Daily Specials News are those of the colum- Serving as pallbearers will be nist alone and do not reflect the Spencer Hendrix, Reily Spradley- Monday: Large Mexican Salad $550 opinion of the newspaper or Mount, Randy Gray, Dalton John- (Shell $100 More) any of its advertisers. son, Hunter Aspenwall, Brett Renee Killian Tuesday: Taco $100 (Soft or Hard) Spradley and William Reed. NMLS #546413 Ordering Photographs: $ 00 Every photograph taken by a Parnick Jennings Funeral Home Wednesday: Whole Potato Pancho 5 Mortgage Loan Originator and Cremation Services is hon- Vice President Daily Tribune News photogra- Thursday: Reg. Mexicali $500 pher and published in the paper ored to serve the family of Charles [email protected] $ 00 is available for purchase. Go to Barry Spradley; please visit Friday: Med. Meat Nachos 5 770.655.4148 www.daily-tribune.com and www.parnickjenningsfuneral.com 5pm to 9pm 75¢ Wings 620 East Main Street click on “Order Photos.” to share memories or to leave a condolence message. Saturday: ¢ Wings or Cartersville, GA 30120 Subscriber Info: 75 To subscribe, call 770-382- 10 Wings, FF & Med. Drink $1099 4545. Visa, Mastercard, Ameri- * Sour cream and black olives 50¢ extra can Express and Discover Monday - Saturday 10:30am - 9:00pm accepted. Six days by local carrier motor route subscription rates: 4 N. Tennessee St. • 770-382-7321 3 Months $32.95 6 Months $59.95 1 Year $112.50 Home delivery $11.25 per month. Whenever You Need A Miss Your Paper? If your paper has not arrived by Shoulder To Lean On 6:30 a.m., call our customer care line by 11 a.m. at 770-382-4580 &'.,-. !0'! &5/'! ) #& ')'0 0',+ 0 // %# . -5 When a funeral home is not owned and and a paper will be delivered to Janice Ann Green operated by local people, important your home. All subscribers call- Mrs. Janice Ann Green, age 69, decisions that need to be made quickly ing after 11 a.m. will have their are sometimes delayed. We are a paper delivered with their next of Adairsville, passed away De- locally owned and operated funeral regular delivery. cember 20, 2018. Mrs. Green was born in home staffed with sincere and caring “Bartow County’s only Adairsville, GA, February 15, people with familiar faces from our daily newspaper” 1949, daughter of the late James own community, and we’re always OFFICIAL ORGAN OF ready to serve at a moment’s notice. BARTOW COUNTY Our concern doesn’t end with the USPS 146-740 funeral or memorial service, we’re here Published daily Tuesday The Daily Tribune before, during, and after the service... through Sunday by Cartersville Whenever you need a shoulder Newspapers, a division of News office will be +0.,"1!0,.5 $$#. J.T. Willoughby Funeral Assistant to lean on. Cleveland Newspapers, 251 S. ,+/1)0 0',+ 6 4 * 6 . 5/ Tennessee St., Cartersville, closed Christmas GA 30120. Periodical Postage Paid at Cartersville, GA 30120. Eve and Christmas E (&3 ( 7C $&3 $16 E 95 ( 07B4'(9 $16 POSTMASTER, send all ad- E 18 ( () $16 E &1$A1&$ E 879A@ 62B91(@ dress changes to Cartersville Day and New E (961$A(' %1@3@ E #0184$@0 62B91(@ E ($'$&0(@ Newspapers, 251 S. Tennessee St., Cartersville, GA 30120. Year’s Eve and New E 1%975D$4)1$ E BA7 &&1'(6A@ PARNICK JENNINGS FUNERAL HOME Year’s Day. There 76#('91 E !B(@ !0B9@ E $A D 88716A5(6A 430 Cassville Road • Cartersville Copyright © 2010 The Daily Tribune will be no paper on (35 1'0# .0#./2'))# 770-382-0034 News. All rights reserved as to the en- ! "" ""!% www.parnickjenningsfuneral.com tire content. Christmas Day. The Daily Tribune News Local www.daily-tribune.com • Sunday, December 23, 2018 3A
BARTOW BIO Former probate judge Scoggins gears up for the Gold Dome
BY JAMES SWIFT work on that with the [Department missioner, the sheriff, the tax com- [email protected] of Transportation] and try to get that missioner and the clerk and that started and spearheaded up.” gave me a little advantage. I had On Jan. 14, 63-year-old Mitchell experience in knowing how to get Scoggins becomes a freshman Name: Mitchell Scoggins things done in Atlanta, down at the again. Age: 63 General Assembly, and I think peo- “That is the first day the session Current City: Rydal ple have seen that and I believe convenes, and they usually have a Hometown: Rydal people think I had done a good job mass swearing in for everybody in High School: Cass High (Class when I was probate judge. the gallery,” the winner of Tues- of 1973) day’s District 14 special Republi- Family: Wife Donna; sons Kurt DTN: What do you consider the can primary election said. “I’m just and Blake; daughters-in law Lind- single most important legislative humbled by the people who got out say and Ashley; granddaughters issue affecting Bartow County res- and worked for me and voted for Sophie and Sela idents? me, and the confidence that I think MS: One would be the senior they have in me to get down there Daily Tribune News: What in- school tax relief that everybody’s and do the right thing.” spired you to run for a state-level interested in, and the other thing I The journey to the General As- office? want to address is the opioid prob- sembly in Atlanta was prefaced by Mitchell Scoggins: Well, I’ve lem with the prescription drugs. a roughly 35-year career in Bartow always been interested in trying to That is a big problem, not only in County government. The Cass get things done down in Atlanta Bartow County, but in the whole High grad spent a year working as from the different duties that I did state of Georgia and the United a fireman before transferring to the in probate court, like trying to get States and we need to get a grip on county tax commissioner’s office. different laws passed — it was hard that and try to slow down the illegal And from there, he began a 28-year to do sometimes, so I thought if I use of prescription drugs — there’s tenure as probate judge. “I was ever had an opportunity and the at least three people dying every- lucky enough to never have oppo- timing was right, I might try to be day in the state of Georgia from sition in seven terms,” he recol- a representative, and it worked out. drug-related deaths, and most of lected. Christian Coomer, who did a fine the time people start off with Garnering about two-thirds of job as representative, he got ap- painkillers, oxycodone, hy- the votes in Tuesday’s election to pointed to an appellate court judge drocodone and then they graduate determine who will sit in the state seat, so the seat opened and it on up to heroin, and that’s when the house seat, even Scoggins said he worked out good for me to take a overdoses happen. was surprised by how lopsided his chance on it. electoral victory was. “I was a little DTN: Are you currently mulling bit shocked to see that I won by that DTN: Was there a specific mo- any pieces of legislation for the big of a margin,” he said. “I was ment you knew you wanted to enter next session? worried about getting the people state-level politics? MS: No, not really, I’m just get- out to vote. I felt pretty good if we MS: No, [but] there’s a local ting my feet wet. Right after Christ- were able to get the people out to topic going around about the senior mas I’m meeting with some of the vote, and they did come to vote — school tax relief that’s a pretty hot chiefs of staff for the speaker of the not as many as we’d like, the per- topic for the school systems and the house and other people to kind of centage was about 10 percent.” taxpayers in Bartow County. That do orientation and those types of About three quarters of District was one thing I really wanted to things. Matthew Gambill and I are 14 includes portions of Bartow — work on is trying to help our sen- both going in as freshman legisla- including virtually all of iors without crippling our school tors, so hopefully we can work to- Adairsville, Kingston and White. system. gether and get some things done. The remainder is made up of a wide swath of eastern Floyd DTN: Can you tell us about your RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS DTN: County. campaign strategy heading into the Are there any committees After winning Tuesday’s special Republican primary election, former probate judge Mitchell And there’s one particular issue Dec. 18 primary? you’d like to join? Scoggins is set to be sworn in as Georgia's new District 14 state representative next month. impacting both counties he said MS: We did some mail-outs, we MS: I would love to be on any- and also to get them stabilized if have anything right off. freshman representatives on three he’s champing at the bit to start did three or four different mail- thing judiciary, since I was a judge they have a mental illness. committees. The older and more working on — the proposed Rome- outs. We had a phone bank that we for 28 years. I’d also like to be on DTN: Do you have any particu- senior representatives get on more Cartersville Development Corridor, called — it was a live person talk- the [Health and Human Services DTN: Do you see yourself rally- lar goals or aspirations you want to committees, but they usually jus a long-planned transportation proj- ing, not a robocall … we were ac- Committee] where I can address t ing behind any particular reform is- achieve in your first year as a leg- ect that would directly tie Rome to tually calling, ourselves, the people some of our mental health issues, let us kind of wade into it a little bit sues in the General Assembly? islator? Interstate 75 through an extension who vote in District 14. and that also ties back into the drug … I want to try to do the best I can MS: Not at the moment. I’m sure MS: The only goals I have is to of U.S. 411 that would start along issue with opioids, being able to get on these committees. Let’s work to- I will as I get in there and get started try to learn as much as I can my the State Route 20 intersection and DTN: Are there any aspects of these people who need help detox- gether on the state budget and try working. But at the moment, I don’t freshman year. Usually, they put terminate at a new interchange near being a former probate judge that ing from either alcohol or drugs, to get things done. Cass-White Road. you believe may make you more “I know how to be a public ser- effective as a state representative? vant, and part of that job is being a MS: A probate judge wears public servant and bringing things many, many hats. They do traffic home and trying to get things that court, they do probate wills, they Join us to affect Bartow County and Floyd do guardianships … we have broad County, because it is a split district,” duties there in the probate court, Scoggins said. “So I want to be able and I think working with the other celebrate to help people out, and I want to be elected officials in Bartow County able to try to jump on the 411 ex- gave me a little edge on any other Christmas tension from Floyd County over to candidates that were seeking to get
I-75 — that is a big issue with this same office. I already have a December 16 - Worship at 10:30 AM Floyd County, so I want to try to working relationship with the com- including Children’s Christmas Program December 23 - Worship at 8 AM & 10:30 AM CHRISTMAS EVE CANDLELIGHT SERVICES 5 PM and 7 PM " %" "( $ ( CHRISTMAS DAY SERVICE - 10:30 AM December 30 - Worship at 8 AM & 10:30 AM "# '!" SAVIOR OF ALL LUTHERAN CHURCH 35 Indian Trail SE • Cartersville 770-387-0379 • www.saviorofall.org U.S. & WORLD
4A Sunday, December 23, 2018 www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News Partial shutdown likely to extend past Christmas
BY LISA MASCARO, DARLENE SU- president’s signature. PERVILLE AND Senators approved a bipartisan KEVIN FREKING deal earlier in the week to keep the Associated Press government open into February and provide $1.3 billion for border The federal government was ex- security projects, but not the wall. pected to remain partially shut But as Trump faced criticism from down past Christmas as the stand- conservatives for “caving” on a off deepened Saturday over Presi- campaign promise, he pushed to dent Donald Trump’s demand for House to approve a package tem- funds to build a border wall with porarily financing the government Mexico. but also setting aside $5.7 billion With Trump’s insistence on $5 for the border wall. billion for the wall and negotiations A test vote in the Senate on Fri- with Democrats in Congress far day showed that Republicans from a breakthrough, even a tem- lacked the 60 votes needed to ad- porary measure to keep the govern- vance the House plan. ment running while talks continued Pelosi, poised to become seemed out of reach until the Sen- speaker, said in a letter to col- ate returned for a full session leagues Saturday that “until Presi- Thursday. dent Trump can publicly commit to From coast to coast, the first day a bipartisan resolution, there will be of the shutdown played out in un- no agreement before January when even ways. The Statue of Liberty the new House Democratic Major- was still open for tours, thanks to ity will swiftly pass legislation to funding from New York state, and re-open government.” the U.S. Post Office was still deliv- The impasse blocked money for ering mail, as an independent nine of 15 Cabinet-level depart- agency. ments and dozens of agencies, in- Yet the disruption affected many cluding the departments of government operations and the rou- Homeland Security, Transporta- tines of 800,000 federal employees. tion, Interior, Agriculture, State and Roughly 420,000 workers were J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Justice. deemed essential and were ex- Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is met by reporters as he arrives at the Capitol on the first morning of a partial Those being furloughed included government shutdown Saturday. pected to work unpaid. An addi- nearly everyone at NASA and tional 380,000 were to be closed the Senate’s rare Saturday getaway to his club Mar-a-Lago ment. He had campaigned on the the president simply dropped his 52,000 workers at the Internal Rev- furloughed, meaning they will stay session hours after it opened. due to the shutdown. First lady promise of building the wall, and demand for money. “If you want to enue Service. About 8 in 10 em- home without pay. The Senate had But after ushering Vice President Melania Trump was flying back to he also promised Mexico would open the government, you must ployees of the National Park already passed legislation ensuring Mike Pence through the Capitol for Washington to be with her hus- pay for it. Mexico has refused to do abandon the wall,” Schumer said. Service were to stay home; many that workers will receive back pay, another round of negotiations, the band. so. Democrats said they were open parks were expected to close. and the House was likely to follow Republican chairman of the Appro- Trump’s re-election campaign In recent days, though, Trump to other proposals that didn’t in- Some agencies, including the suit. priations Committee, Sen. Richard sent out a fundraising email late shifted blame to Democrats for not clude the wall, which Schumer said Pentagon and the departments of No one knew how long the clo- Shelby of Alabama, said a quick Saturday launching what he called acceding to his demand. was too costly and ineffective. Veterans Affairs and Health and sures would last. Unlike other shut- end to the shutdown was “not prob- “the most important membership After the luncheon at the White They have offered to keep spend- Human Services, were already downs, this one seemed to lack able.” program ever - the OFFICIAL House, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R- ing at existing levels of $1.3 billion funded and will operate as usual. urgency, coming during the long At the White House, Trump BUILD THE WALL MEMBER- S.C., said, “It’s clear to me he be- for border fencing and other secu- Also still functioning were the FBI, holiday weekend after Trump had hosted a lunch Saturday with con- SHIP.” The president urged donors lieves the additional funding is rity. the Border Patrol and the Coast already declared Monday, Christ- servative lawmakers, including to sign up. necessary.” But Trump, digging in, tweeted Guard. Transportation Security Ad- mas Eve, a federal holiday. Rather House Freedom Caucus chiefs With Democrats set to take con- Senate Democratic leader Chuck about “the crisis of illegal activity” ministration officers continued to than work around the clock to try Mark Meadows of North Carolina trol of the House on Jan. 3, and Schumer of New York met with at American’s southern border is staff airport checkpoints and air to end the shutdown, as they had and Jim Jordan of Ohio, and sev- Speaker Paul Ryan on his way out, Pence on Saturday at the request of “real and will not stop until we traffic controllers were on the job. done in the past, the leaders of the eral senators. Absent from the guest the shutdown was providing a last the White House, according to build a great Steel Barrier or Wall.” Many of Congress’ most conser- House and the Senate effectively list were GOP leaders or any De- gasp of the conservative majority Schumer’s office. But the senator’s Republican leaders largely vative Republicans welcomed such closed up shop. But they didn’t rule mocrats, who would be needed for before the new Congress. spokesman said they remained stayed in the background of the ne- a confrontation, but most GOP law- out action if a deal were struck. a deal. Trump savored the prospect of a “very far apart” on a spending gotiations. McConnell acknowl- makers wanted to avoid one be- “Listen, anything can happen,” “I am in the White House, work- shutdown over the wall for months. agreement. edged that any deal to reopen cause polling showed the public Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mc- ing hard,” tweeted the president, Last week he said he would be Schumer said the “Trump shut- government would require Demo- opposed the wall and a shutdown Connell told reporters after he who canceled his Florida holiday “proud” to close down the govern- down” could end immediately if cratic support for passage and the over it. Cancer the latest health woe for Ginsburg At least 20 killed, 165 hurt after
BY MARK SHERMAN court even more to the right. “Wish- pital for a few days, the court said. growth was benign, while the tsunami hits Indonesian Strait Associated Press ing Supreme Court Justice Ruth She has never missed arguments in smaller one was malignant. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bader Ginsburg a full and speedy more than 25 years as a justice. The Doctors who are not involved in JAKARTA, Indonesia — A tsunami apparently caused by undersea Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is recovery!” Trump tweeted after the court next meets on Jan. 7. Ginsburg’s care said she may have landslides from a volcanic island killed at least 20 people after the resting in a New York hospital fol- court’s announcement Friday. While it’s hard to refer to good gotten lucky again, although they waves hit the coast around Indonesia’s Sunda Strait, the government lowing surgery to remove two ma- But Ginsburg has always luck and cancer diagnoses in the caution it is too soon to know. reported. Another 165 people were hurt and dozens of buildings dam- lignant growths in her left lung, the bounced back before, flaunting her same breath, this is the second time “This is just luck” that the aged Saturday night, the National Disaster Management Agency said. third time the Supreme Court’s old- physical and mental fitness. for Ginsburg that cancerous growths were found through those The Meteorology and Geophysics agency in a separate statement est justice has been treated for can- After past health scares, she has growths have been detected at an rib X-rays because accidentally dis- said it could have been caused by undersea landslides from Anak cer and her second stay in a resumed the exercise routine popu- apparently early stage through un- covered lung tumors tend to be Krakatau, a volcanic island formed over years from the Krakatau hospital in two months. larized in a book written by her per- related medical tests. early-stage when surgery works volcano, which last erupted in October. Worries over Ginsburg’s health sonal trainer and captured in a The nodules on her lung were best, said Dr. Giuseppe Giaccone, “I had to run, as the wave passed the beach and landed 15-20m have been a constant of sorts for Stephen Colbert video. Weeks after found during X-rays and other tests an oncologist at Georgetown Uni- (meters) inland,” Øystein Lund Andersen wrote on Facebook. He nearly 10 years, and for liberals, cracking three ribs in a fall at the Ginsburg had after she fractured versity’s Lombardi Comprehensive said he was taking pictures of the volcano when he suddenly saw a particularly in the last two. Gins- Supreme Court in November, the ribs in a fall in her Supreme Court Cancer Center. big wave come toward him. burg, the leader of the court’s lib- 85-year-old Ginsburg was asking office on Nov. 7, the court said. In Dr. John Lazar, director of tho- “Next wave entered the hotel area where I was staying and eral wing and known to her fans as questions at high court arguments, 2009, routine follow-up screening racic robotic surgery at MedStar downed cars on the road behind it. Managed to evacuate with my the Notorious RBG, has achieved speaking at a naturalization cere- after Ginsburg’s colorectal cancer Washington Hospital Center, said family to higher ground trough forest paths and villages, where we an iconic status rare for Supreme mony for new citizens and being 10 years earlier detected a lesion on it’s not uncommon to see slow- are taken care of (by) the locals. Were unharmed, thankfully.” Court justices. interviewed at screenings of the her pancreas. Doctors operated and growing lung cancers in women in The Sunda Strait between the islands of Java and Sumatra con- If she did step down, President new movie about her, “On the removed the growth they’d previ- their 80s, and they tend to respond nects the Java Sea to the Indian Ocean. Donald Trump would have another Basis of Sex.” ously spotted, plus a smaller one well to surgery and go on to die of Footage posted by the head of the disaster management agency opportunity to move a conservative Ginsburg will remain in the hos- they hadn’t seen before. The larger something unrelated, he said. showed the aftermath of flooded streets and an overturned car.
“It’s been a good experience Cartersville working at the city,” he said. “I ap- preciate all the confidence and the FROM PAGE 1A support you guys give our depart- The measure was approved by ment, and I’m looking forward to the city’s alcohol control board — continuing it in the future.” a second reading before council is Other items unanimously ap- required before members will have proved at Thursday night’s meeting an opportunity to approve or deny include: the proposal. — A request from the city fire City finance director Tom Rhine- department to purchase and up- hart also gave a monthly financial grade two vehicles for an amount statement at the public meeting. to not exceed $89,900. Comparing data from October — A request from the public 2017 and 2018, he noted that gen- works department to pay a eral fund net profit increased from RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS Matthews Garage invoice in the $1,105,922 to $2,026,639, while The Cartersville City Council on Thursday unanimously approved amount of $15,012.65 for garbage the city’s gas fund net loss swelled an agreement with Bartow County and the owner/developer of a truck repairs. from $515,903 to $1,250,583. planned hotel to relocate gas mains near the Clarence Brown — A request from the finance de- “This is due to increased person- Conference Center. partment to pay a Mauldin and nel expenses, increased operating ton, who was appointed the city’s team to bring that here,” Santini Jenkins, LLC invoice in the amount expenses, decreased costs of gas, electric department director in the praised Hampton. “I have every of $33,000 for auditing services. increased debt service and in- wake of Don Hassebrock’s retire- confidence he will do a wonderful — A request from city adminis- creased capital expenditures,” he ment earlier this month. job, and I’m very happy about tration to pay a Georgia Municipal said. “Some of the larger industrial that.” Association invoice in the amount The meeting also saw the swear- customers we’ve got are a result of Hampton briefly took to the of $6,759.26 for annual member- ing-in ceremony for Derek Hamp- his efforts and being part of the podium to mark the occasion. ship dues.
CONTACTING FEDERAL STATE Sen. Johnny Isakson • 131 Russell Senate Office Building • Washington, D.C. 20510 Gov. Nathan Deal • 206 Washington St., 111 State Capitol • Atlanta, GA, 30334 OUR 202-224-3643 • Fax: 202-228-0724 • http://isakson.senate.gov/ Sen Chuck Hufstetler • 3 Orchard Spring Dr. • Rome, GA, 30165 • 404-656-0034 • [email protected] Sen. Bruce Thompson • 25 Hawks Branch Ln. • White, GA, 30184 • 404-656-0065 • [email protected] ELECTED Sen. David Perdue • 455 Russell Office Building • Washington, D.C. 20510 • 202-224-3521 Rep. Paul Battles • 208 Rd. #2 South S.W. • Cartersville, GA, 30120 • 404-657-8441 • [email protected] OFFICIALS Rep. Barry Loudermilk • 329 Cannon House Office Buliding • Washington, D.C. 20515 Rep. Christian Coomer • 127-A West Main St. Cartersville, GA, 30120 • 770-383-9171 • [email protected] 202-225-2931 • https://loudermilk.house.gov Rep. Trey Kelley • 836 N. College Dr. • Cedartown, GA, 30125 • 404-657-1803 • [email protected] The Daily Tribune News Local www.daily-tribune.com • Sunday, December 23, 2018 5A
the rest of their life.” work in cybersecurity – one of the Top 10 ca- France Cybersecurity Thompson secured funding for the first co- reer fields in the country – for almost any or- hort at Cass through a state grant from the ganization, including the military, government FROM PAGE 1A FROM PAGE 1A Governor’s Office of Student Achievement, agencies, health care facilities, financial insti- announce all the winners and present you with the diamond trophy,” Thompson, chairman of the Senate Science and he said he’s looking at federal funding tutions and global manufacturing firms. the 37-year-old Kingston resident said. “This year, we went to Marco and Technology Committee, said the idea for and private partnerships to fund future co- “These students will immediately enter into Island in Florida and it was amazing — I’ve never been there before.” the program started a couple of years ago horts. the workforce as ‘high-demand’ candidates The native of Chestnut Ridge, New York, has been in the restaurant when he worked on the Georgia Cyber Inno- Page said Cass Principal Stephen Revard, with salaries ranging from $32[,000] to trade virtually her entire adult life. She started off in Flagstaff, Arizona, vation and Training Center in Augusta. his administration team and school counselors $35,000 a year,” Thompson said. where she rose to the rank of regular manager of a Red Lobster location “This journey started nearly three years ago “took ownership of the vetting process” and Laziya said this is a “beyond-amazing op- (which, at the time, was operated under the Darden Restaurants banner.) with a study committee I led focused on mak- carefully searched for 50 top-performing stu- portunity, not just for me but for everyone that She then transitioned to various restaurants on the West Coast, including ing Georgia the leading cybersecurity state in dents in the junior class who met the criteria gets the chance to participate in this pro- a few locations in and around the Los Angeles area. the country,” he said. “Our recommendations as potential candidates. gram.” Then she and her fiancé moved to Georgia. It didn’t take long for included the new GBI center, the Innovation From that pool, 25 students were inter- “I believe this because of how many people France to switch over to the LongHorn Steakhouse brand — she was Center in Augusta and cyber insurance for the viewed and selected to begin the pathway. can find jobs right out of high school, [but] promoted to the Cartersville location in 2012. state agencies. With over 300,000 cyber posi- “This is a segment of the population that most jobs require more schooling beyond “The managing partner oversees the functioning of the restaurant as tions currently unfilled in the U.S., it was im- many times … they haven’t ever been cho- high school so that they can receive a degree a whole, so with the help of my management team, we help provide a perative to have the technical colleges and sen,” Thompson said. “They are now. We to come back and do the job,” she said. “This superior guest experience, a great employee experience and quality food universities develop curriculum as post-sec- have some kids that literally were signed up sometimes can be really challenging because and drinks,” she described her day-to-day duties. “The most rewarding ondary opportunities for the students.” to drop out of school that said, ‘You know everyone cannot attend college right away but thing about this job is the people. I get to interact with people everyday, While the committee was exploring the what? I have hope. I want to stay in school.’ still wants the job. This program helps you get that’s the primary function of my job, whether it’s my team members issue, “I realized that there were kids who And some of the testimonies were from the job right out of high school so that you can or the guests that come in and delight us.” would never make it to college or trade cen- guardians or parents saying one particular kid, better your life.” She considers the dual Diamond Club distinctions to be the highlight ters that we are leaving out,” Thompson said. they haven’t been excited about anything in Moving forward, the school system hopes of her professional life — so far, anyway. “As the product of a challenging home life, three years and now they’re just jamming. to start each new cohort the first semester of “Two years ago, we achieved No. 1 status in the company, which to I felt compelled to develop a program that of- They’re excited.” their junior year to allow more time for stu- me, is a pinnacle achievement of my career and my team’s career,” she fered true hope to those high school students Laziya Johnson, 16, is one of the students dents to participate in work-based learning said. “It was amazing being the recipient of this award … and it was that ‘longed to be chosen,’” he said. who was chosen for the program. opportunities, Page said. great to be able to get it back-to-back, two years in a row.” The senator said he was able to get “The reason I wanted to participate in the At the end of the current school year, the She’s garnering high praise from Darden Restaurants’ upper brass, Williams, a longtime friend, to develop the cybersecurity program is because I knew that system plans to certify other instructors and too. curriculum for the high school program, then I loved computers but didn’t have the tools to model a similar, non-virtual, state-funded pro- “Tricia embodies LongHorn’s commitment to quality, said LongHorn he approached Page about providing a school learn how to best work them,” she said. “Then gram at Adairsville and Woodland high Steakhouse President Todd Burrowes. “She champions our unique cul- partner. the school showed me a way I can take part schools. ture to her team members and creates unmatched guest experiences.” “He quickly said, ‘I want to be this in something I always wanted to do.” “Due to funding and technology, we hope Regarding her own management philosophy, France said her ap- school,’” Thompson said. “I want to make The junior said her interest in cybersecurity by 2021, this program will be offered in all proach is to simply let her team members and managers do what they sure — he did as well — that we are targeting began developing when she was in middle Bartow County high schools,” Page said. do best — deliver superior customer experiences. the free and reduced lunch or at least that school. Thompson said the program is “not a one- “My part is really just to guide them in the right direction, but you’ve crowd of students. I wanted to be sure that the “I became interested in this field when I got and-done.” got to have those great people under you to do the jobs that they do,” students that didn’t get chosen in life for any- into eighth grade and realized I need to start “This is something that I am looking at,” he she said. thing else, that they were the ones who were planning what I want to do with my life and said. “I already have schools contacting me, France said the No. 1 attribute of a restaurant operator is humbleness chosen to be able to make a difference. noticing that technology takes a big place in asking to do it. We need to make sure we get — followed closely by the ability to take feedback from one’s staff. “When you look at the benefits of this, not our world, and the best way to help people is this right. We’re playing with kids’ lives. We Flexibility, she added, is also a necessity. “I mean, in the restaurant only from a human standpoint of giving peo- by protecting them in new ways,” she said. want to get this right. We want to make sure industry, you never know what’s going to happen on any given shift,” ple hope, but [we are] taking individuals and “That is what cybersecurity is for me.” they have mentors. I’ve already talked to sev- she said, “so being able to go with those tides is important.” putting them into a position where they will When the students complete the program in eral businesses about the work-based learning It doesn’t matter how great a restaurant’s menu may be — without be potential taxpayers vs. being recipients for about 17 months, they will be qualified to part once we get down that road.” excellent service, France said the whole operation is destined for failure. “Guest experience is paramount to anything else,” she said. “If you don’t have happy guests leaving when they exit your restaurant, you’re not going to have a business to do it.” As for her activities and interests outside of the restaurant business, the mother of two young children and the owner of several pets said she cherishes any opportunity to explore the great outdoors. The life lessons she’s learned at LongHorn have been valuable, she said, both on the job and out in the world at large. “I’ve worked in so many states, so many locations. Everyone I’ve worked with, really, in the Darden brands is wonderful and presents unique opportunities,” she said. “It’s just knowing that the next day, you’re always going to have opportunities to make a difference in some- body’s life, whether you’re at the restaurant or the grocery store, to be kind to each other and try to find those moments to make somebody else happy.” And if you’re looking for a recommendation the next time you’re in the mood for steak? “My favorite thing has to be our prime rib,” France said. “It’s slow roasted for six hours overnight, it’s perfectly seasoned and it just melts in your mouth.”
the Bible during this project. Bible “A number of people said, ‘This is the first time I’ve ever read the FROM PAGE 1A Bible all the way through’ and what study program, the discussion and that meant to them,” Anderson sermon added to the week’s read- said, noting participants included ing. members of the adult and older “I can now say I have read the Bible straight through, which I’ve youth Sunday school classes. “It learned not many people have was both a spiritual exercise as well done. It was well worth the effort as an accomplishment. of those 90 days. Reading the “I remember one lady who said, Bible, learning to apply the mes- ‘This was the first time my hus- sage and thinking of God/Jesus band and I have ever talked about have become a habit. The challenge the Bible.’ … We had a lot of posi- is there to read through the Bible tive feedback in that regard. So it again.” was a positive experience for the In talking with the program’s church for everybody to galvanize participants, Anderson shared they around that one project of Reading enjoyed immersing themselves in the Bible in 90 Days.”
```````````````````````````````````Merry Christmas To All and To All A Great Year! We appreciate your friendship and support during the holiday season and year round! Business
6A Sunday, December 23, 2018 www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News
sette, of course. Maybe I’d be able to expand it to This whole thing is hardly The next stop is just gonna’ be other parts of the county. I’m anything more than a 90- me pointing near the Target sure people would pay good minute action figure commer- shopping center for an hour, say- money to hear about the history cial, made even worse by that Swift at the ing “Nope, we didn’t have none of bygone retailers in Folsom — smarmy tongue-in-cheek refer- of that stuff until 1996, but we I’m sure it’d be the most thrilling ential humor that panders to did have one of them old school two-to-three-minute tour any- 30-year-old nerds but com- Pizza Huts, though.” I’ve done a where in Georgia. pletely goes over the heads of few trial runs with friends and Anyhoo, speaking of nostalgia elementary schoolers. The plot Movies family, and lemme tell you — by for yesteryear, our flick of the itself is nothing more than a the time I start telling people week is “Spider-Man: Into the mild reworking of the second about the $1.29 pepperoni per- Spider-Verse,” and is it just me Spider-Man movie, and the an- sonal pan pizza and the “After or are all these Spider-Man imation itself looks spectacu- Burner” arcade machine with the movies getting exponentially larly subpar — the whole thing ‘Into the Spider-Verse’ is broken “turbo missile” button, worse? Indeed, this latest, com- looks more like a Playstation 4 there isn’t a dry eye to be found puter-animated entry might be game than a legit cinematic of- all style, no substance Swift within a one-mile radius. the biggest disappointment in the fering. Naturally, the whole shebang series to date. I suppose it has a few funny BY JAMES SWIFT long tour will be me explaining playground was like (complete concludes where KMart (now an This is one of those movies lines here and there, but it’s such [email protected] in vivid detail what the old Wal- with an anecdote about the time Academy Sports) used to be. that thinks it can overcome a dull a dreadfully predictable and mart used to be like, right down I got my arm trapped inside a You’ll marvel as I recount jour- plot by simply throwing as many uninspired experience that even I’ve decided that next year, to how the nacho cheese sauce in statue of Grimace) while gold- neys to Record and Tape World, characters on-screen as possible. third-graders will probably finds I’m gonna’ start doing some- the in-store cafeteria smelled. tier members get to hear me talk where all the CDs were seven or In fact, there’s no less than seven themselves tuning out from the thing I call “The Used-To-Be Then I’ll go in-depth about how about which pinball machines eight dollars more expensive different Spider-Men in this same-old, same-old. But that’s Cartersville Tour.” For a reason- before there was an Ingles here, the laundromat next to the Dollar than they were everywhere else movie, including one that’s a modern day Hollywood for you able fee, I plan on driving peo- there was another Ingles in the General had circa 1992. Trust in town, for some reason. You’ll Japanese grade-schooler in a — re-releasing the EXACT same ple around town, pointing out all same shopping center where me, the annual $500 season pass be astounded as I talk about the robot and another that’s Porky movie over and over again, but the stuff that used to be in Bar- Planet Fitness is now, except it is gonna’ be worth it. old BI-LO grocery store, and Pig in spandex. demanding you celebrate them tow. I reckon we’ll start around was way smaller and their shop- You definitely don’t want to how it only took me 14 years to It’s also one of those, sigh, anyway because now the main the 41-411 cloverleaf and make ping carts didn’t have burglar miss my lecture on the Plaza, ei- figure out the “B” in the logo “socially conscious” kids character is a boring, one-dimen- our way southward to the old alarms on ‘em. And for an extra ther. It’ll start with a step-by- was supposed to be the silhou- movies, where the producers sional black protagonist instead KMart shopping center. It’ll be $5, I’ll even tell all you Johnny- step retracing of the old ette of a cow. And you’ll be on try to get you to stop thinking of a boring, one-dimensional like one of those Hollywood Come-Latelies about the Eckerd Woolworths building, loop down the edge of your seats as I show about the paint-by-numbers white one. tours, only instead of some goof pharmacy and Payless Shoe- to the remnants of the Radio you just how much the local “doomsday must be averted for Anyhoo, the best I can give in a fanny pack pointing out Source that used to be in be- Shack and conclude with an au- Taco Bell has changed over the the 17,345th time” story and this rehash of a rehash of a re- where the kid who played “Web- tween the two. thentic historical reenactment of last 30-some odd years … and as pat them on the back for turn- hash is a subpar ONE- AND-A- ster” has a P.O. box, it’ll be me Stop two’s going to be Market what life was like in the Wendy’s soon as I can think of one exam- ing some of the characters into HALF PIECES OF POPCORN with a megaphone screaming Square, a.k.a., “the one with Big parking lot back in 1998. By the ple, I’ll be sure to include it in women and Hispanics — as if OUT OF FOUR. “yeah, that used to be a video Lots in it.” Those who sign up way, if anybody wants to volun- the program. any seven-year-old girls in the Do yourself a favor and just store, TOO.” for the “Used-To-Be teer as an actor, be sure to bring This tour’s going to be big, audience will see a female pick up the Spidey-branded Stop one is going to be the In- Cartersville” silver plan get to a lot of hair gel and at least one folks. Heck, I might even find a Doctor Octopus and suddenly Happy Meal instead — not only gles parking lot off Joe Frank hear me describe in flowery lan- copy of the “Soul Food” motion way to get a state grant for it. want to pursue a STEM is it cheaper, the box has better Harris. The first hour of the day- guage what the old McDonald’s picture soundtrack … on cas- And from there, who knows? career. writing than the movie, too. Do your tenants meet all of your core values?
We recently welcomed a busi- matter of fact, you should be able could poison our company well. — Joe and Ashley English buy formation or to ask a question, go ness consultant by the name of to combine the 21 attributes into Now, as a landlord, you have houses and mobile homes in to www.cashflowwithjoe.com or Gary Harper into our office. Gary three to seven values. employees you may not view as Northwest Georgia. For more in- call Joe at 678-986-6813. is with Sharper Business Solu- The last question you ask is, such. They are the tenants you’ve tions, and he and his wonderful “Which of these values can you hired to live in your houses and wife Susan helped us with a num- budge on?” In other words, if one take care of them. ber of things ranging from writ- of our employees violated any of We always tell our tenants ing out a vision for our company these values, would they still be we’re hiring them for four things. to properly defining all of our de- allowed to work for you? No. 1. is to take care of the prop- partments.They also helped us set Strike from the list any value erty. No. 2. is to pay on time. No. up an accountability chart for English that isn’t an absolute must for em- 3. is to be easy to work with by those departments, and they ployment. In other words, get rid maintaining good communica- helped us map out the processes Susan did an exercise with us that of anything you’re not willing to tion and being respectful. And for the major procedural things I’d like to share with you. It goes fire someone for. No. 4. is be a good neighbor. we do. The purpose of mapping a like this: The resulting qualities are Having Gary and Susan help us process is to give you a birds-eye I want you to choose three peo- called your core values. define our company core values view of all the things you do to ple who have had an impact on Defining these core values is made me realize that the above get from, say, a seller phone call you and who you feel would huge because it sets the tone and list represents our tenant core to putting the property under con- allow you to dominate your in- standard for your company and values. And every time we’ve tract. dustry if you added them to your gives you a way to evaluate who had tenant troubles, it was be- Having this birds-eye view of company. Also, make sure these you bring into your team. Once cause they violated one of those how your company works is three individuals are people everyone shares the same core values. huge. It allows you to see incon- you’ve had personal contact with. values, it will make for a more Oftentimes, that meant it was sistencies and eliminate waste, Next, write their names across harmonious work environment. time fire them and hire someone thus streamlining how you do a piece of paper. Under each And you will notice that if some- who shared our values. And just business. The added bonus to name, write three to seven traits one is lacking one of those core like with the employees in our process mapping is that it shows that makes you admire that per- values, it will cause discord and company, when all the tenants you where you need to write stan- son. You should have no more unease. share our core values, it makes dard operating procedures. Once than 21 attributes when you fin- We recently had to let someone for a more enjoyable environ- you accomplish this task, you ish. go because they didn’t possess ment. have an efficient way to train new You’ll notice something inter- one of our values. Once they were If we allow someone to stay employees and scale your busi- esting when you do this. These terminated, morale improved and that does not possess our tenant ness. three people will likely share productivity increased. I didn’t core values, we are poisoning our On the first day, Gary and many of the same qualities. As a realize just how much one person rental well.
THE WEEK IN REVIEW
STOCK MARKET INDEXES STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST MUTUAL FUNDS Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init Wk Wk YTD Wk Wk YTD Name Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt Dow Jones industrials -507.53 82.66 -351.98 -464.06 -414.23 Name Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg Name Ex Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg American Funds AmrcnBalA m MA 65,640 24.34 -4.5 -4.8/A +6.0/A 5.75 250 Close: 22,445.37 AT&T Inc NY 2.04 28.31 -1.91 -6.3 -27.2 Inv QQQ NA 1.31 147.57 -13.51 -8.4 -5.3 American Funds CptlIncBldrA x IH 64,098 55.34 -3.9 -8.5/C +3.2/A 5.75 250 AbbottLab NY 1.28 67.27 -3.49 -4.9 +17.9 iShCorEM NY .95 46.39 -1.76 -3.7 -18.5 1-week change: -1,655.14 (-6.9%) American Funds GrfAmrcA x LG 85,537 40.95 -7.8 -7.2/C +8.3/B 5.75 250 MON TUES WED THUR FRI AMD NA ... 16.93 -2.97 -14.9 +64.7 JD.com NA ... 21.08 -1.09 -4.9 -49.1 American Funds IncAmrcA m AL 72,246 20.28 -4.5 -6.4/A +4.8/A 5.75 250 27,000 Allstate NY 1.84 79.85 +.55 +0.7 -23.7 JPMorgCh NY 2.24 94.17 -6.12 -6.1 -11.9 American Funds InvCAmrcA m LB 60,441 32.76 -7.7 -9.8/C +6.9/B 5.75 250 AlpAlerMLP NY 1.35 8.72 -.78 -8.2 -19.2 JohnJn NY 3.60 128.09 -4.91 -3.7 -8.3 American Funds WAMtInvsA x LB 57,349 39.82 -7.4 -6.1/A +7.6/A 5.75 250 Altria NY 3.44 49.09 -3.64 -6.9 -31.3 26,000 Kinross g NY ... 3.12 +.24 +8.3 -27.8 Dodge & Cox Stk LV 71,815 167.09 -10.8 -10.6/B +6.8/A NL 2,500 Apache NY 1.00 26.55 -3.69 -12.2 -37.1 Kroger s NY .56 27.40 -2.15 -7.3 -.2 Federated EqInc,IncA f LV 785 21.41 -10.0 -14.3/D +2.5/E 5.50 1,500 Apple Inc NA 2.92 150.73 -14.75 -8.9 -10.9 LockhdM NY 8.80 256.55 -31.15 -10.8 -20.1 Fidelity 500IdxInsPrm LB 164,099 84.03 -8.6 -8.2/B +8.0/A NL 0 25,000 BP PLC NY 2.38 37.67 -.99 -2.6 -10.4 Lowes NY 1.92 87.64 -5.72 -6.1 -5.7 Fidelity Contrafund LG 91,616 10.46 -7.6 -7.5/C +8.5/B NL 0 BankOZK NA .84 21.67 -.28 -1.3 -55.3 McDnlds NY 4.64 174.15 -9.14 -5.0 +1.2 George Putnam BalA m MA 959 17.41 -4.5 -5.4/B +5.3/A 5.75 0 BkofAm NY .60 23.37 -1.11 -4.5 -20.8 Merck NY 2.20 72.90 -3.58 -4.7 +29.6 INVESCO QualIncA m CI 302 11.44 +1.3 -0.3/B +2.3/C 4.25 1,000 24,000 B iPVxST rs NY ... 47.16 +6.61 +16.3 +68.9 MicronT NA ... 30.32 -3.88 -11.3 -26.3 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m LV 5,597 12.90 -9.2 -9.9/B +6.0/B 5.75 1,000 BlockHR NY 1.00 23.94 -3.04 -11.3 -8.7 Microsoft NA 1.84 98.23 -7.80 -7.4 +14.8 Lord Abbett BdDebA m MU 4,438 7.43 -2.1 -4.2/E +3.8/A 2.25 1,000 BrMySq NY 1.64 49.82 -2.30 -4.4 -18.7 Lord Abbett DevelopingGrA m SG 616 17.05 -12.1 -2.7/A +3.2/D 5.75 1,000 23,000 CSX NA .88 60.70 -5.13 -7.8 +10.3 Mohawk NY ... 113.21 -3.77 -3.2 -59.0 MorgStan NY 1.20 37.68 -1.96 -4.9 -28.1 Lord Abbett MltAsstGlbOppA m IH 118 9.83 -6.2 -13.5/E +0.3/E 2.25 1,000 CampSp NY 1.40 35.75 -3.41 -8.7 -25.7 Lord Abbett SmCpValA m SB 329 14.49 -12.8 -15.6/B +2.2/D 5.75 1,000 Caterpillar NY 3.44 120.07 -6.70 -5.3 -23.8 NCR Corp NY ... 21.79 -1.74 -7.4 -35.9 22,000 NewellRub NA .92 18.86 -3.22 -14.6 -39.0 Putnam DiversIncA m NT 1,189 6.63 -1.8 -1.2/C +1.7/C 4.00 0 JDJASON ChesEng NY ... 1.90 -.43 -18.5 -52.0 Putnam EqIncA m LV 8,057 21.62 -9.1 -11.3/C +5.8/B 5.75 0 Chevron NY 4.48 104.21 -9.62 -8.5 -16.8 NikeB s NY .88 72.37 -.16 -0.2 +15.7 Oracle NY .76 44.00 -2.60 -5.6 -6.9 Putnam GlbEqA m WS 677 13.20 -9.3 -15.7/D +2.0/D 5.75 0 Cisco NA 1.32 41.85 -3.97 -8.7 +9.3 Putnam GlbHCA x SH 1,212 43.81 -7.8 -4.9/C +6.2/D 5.75 0 Citigroup NY 1.80 50.24 -4.78 -8.7 -32.5 PepsiCo NA 3.71 109.42 -4.53 -4.0 -8.8 Pfizer NY 1.44 41.93 -1.87 -4.3 +15.8 Putnam IntlGrA m FG 215 18.17 -7.7 -19.7/E -0.5/E 5.75 0 52-Week Net YTD 12-mo CocaCola NY 1.56 47.57 -1.77 -3.6 +3.7 Putnam SustLeadersA m LG 3,936 70.82 -8.1 -6.1/B +8.5/B 5.75 0 High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg ColgPalm NY 1.68 59.91 -5.26 -8.1 -20.6 PhilipMor NY 4.56 66.21 -15.15 -18.6 -37.3 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl LB 253,238 223.00 -8.6 -8.3/B +8.0/A NL 3,000 Comcast s NA .76 33.75 -2.59 -7.1 -15.4 PrUltPQ s NA ... 32.82 -10.08 -23.5 -29.0 Vanguard InsIdxIns LB 116,738 219.26 -8.6 -8.3/B +8.0/A NL 5,000,000 26,951.81 22,396.34 Dow Jones Industrials 22,445.37 -1655.14 -6.87 -9.20 -9.33 ConAgra NY .85 22.15 -7.74 -25.9 -41.2 ProctGam NY 2.87 90.97 -5.67 -5.9 -1.0 11,623.58 8,859.11 Dow Jones Transportation 8,874.79 -639.32 -6.72 -16.37 -16.86 Vanguard InsIdxInsPlus LB 104,731 219.27 -8.6 -8.2/B +8.0/A NL 100,000,000 Darden NY 3.00 99.18 -4.02 -3.9 +3.3 PShtQQQ rs NA .07 19.90 +4.45 +28.8 -7.5 Vanguard PrmCpAdmrl LG 59,006 115.86 -9.3 -6.7/C +10.8/A NL 50,000 762.26 647.81 Dow Jones Utilities 722.38 -35.47 -4.68 -.14 +.18 Deere NY 3.04 142.99 -6.02 -4.0 -8.6 Qualcom NA 2.48 54.85 -2.77 -4.8 -14.3 13,637.02 11,013.42 NYSE Composite 11,036.84 -718.54 -6.11 -13.83 -13.76 Vanguard TtBMIdxAdmrl CI 86,606 10.41 +1.5 0.0/B +2.3/C NL 3,000 Disney NY 1.76 104.22 -7.98 -7.1 -3.1 S&P500ETF NY 4.13 240.70 -19.77 -7.6 -9.8 8,133.30 6,304.63 Nasdaq Composite 6,332.99 -577.67 -8.36 -8.26 -9.01 Vanguard TtInSIdxAdmrl x FB 66,521 24.78 -5.7 -15.5/B +1.0/A NL 3,000 DowDuPnt NY 1.52 50.59 -2.19 -4.1 -29.0 SibanyeG NY .14 2.35 -.45 -16.1 -51.6 2,940.91 2,408.55 S&P 500 2,416.58 -183.37 -7.05 -9.61 -9.94 Vanguard TtInSIdxInsPlus x FB 95,758 99.10 -5.8 -15.5/B +1.0/A NL 100,000,000 EliLilly NY 2.58 109.42 -2.51 -2.2 +29.6 SouthnCo NY 2.40 45.09 -2.24 -4.7 -6.2 2,053.00 1,607.63 S&P MidCap 1,611.35 -121.46 -7.01 -15.22 -15.40 Vanguard TtInSIdxInv x FB 128,269 14.81 -5.8 -15.6/B +0.9/B NL 0 Equifax NY 1.56 91.00 -6.18 -6.4 -22.8 SP CnSt NY 1.28 50.18 -4.32 -7.9 -11.8 30,560.54 24,715.44 Wilshire 5000 24,792.95 -1956.39 -7.31 -10.80 -11.02 Vanguard TtlSMIdxAdmrl x LB 203,888 59.77 -9.1 -9.0/C +7.5/B NL 3,000 EsteeLdr NY 1.72 125.82 -9.36 -6.9 -1.1 SP Engy NY 2.04 56.11 -5.98 -9.6 -22.3 Vanguard TtlSMIdxIns x LB 123,279 59.78 -9.1 -9.0/C +7.5/A NL 5,000,000 1,742.09 1,289.49 Russell 2000 1,292.09 -118.73 -8.42 -15.85 -16.26 ExxonMbl NY 3.28 68.12 -7.46 -9.9 -18.6 9,847.94 7,816.90 Lipper Growth Index 7,816.90 -675.00 -7.95 -7.97 -8.26 SPDR Fncl NY .46 22.79 -1.45 -6.0 -18.3 Vanguard TtlSMIdxInv x LB 129,896 59.75 -9.1 -9.1/C +7.3/B NL 3,000 Facebook NA ... 124.95 -19.11 -13.3 -29.2 SP Tech NY .78 59.20 -5.37 -8.3 -7.4 Vanguard WlngtnAdmrl MA 86,207 62.72 -5.0 -5.4/B +6.1/A NL 50,000 FordM NY .60 8.05 -.47 -5.5 -35.5 SunTrst NY 2.00 48.50 -3.68 -7.1 -24.9 GenElec NY .04 7.15 +.06 +0.8 -59.1 CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, GI -Intermediate Government, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large 3M Co NY 5.44 183.75 -12.35 -6.3 -21.9 Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MU -Multisector Bond, MV - Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, Goodyear NA .64 19.87 -.91 -4.4 -38.5 MARKET SUMMARY: NYSE AND NASDAQ Twitter NY ... 27.31 -8.56 -23.9 +13.7 WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in HP Inc NY .64 19.65 -2.36 -10.7 -6.5 top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. HomeDp NY 4.12 160.48 -11.81 -6.9 -15.3 USG NY ... 42.84 -.19 -0.4 +11.1 GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE) Hormel s NY .84 42.54 -2.03 -4.6 +16.9 US OilFd NY ... 9.57 -1.25 -11.6 -20.3 VanEGold NY .06 20.44 +.32 +1.6 -12.0 Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Vol (0 Last Chg HuntBncsh NA .56 11.59 -.44 -3.7 -20.4 MONEY RATES CURRENCIES iShEMkts NY .59 38.52 -1.31 -3.3 -18.3 VangFTSE NY 1.10 36.62 -1.57 -4.1 -18.4 MarinSft rs 9.75 +6.71 +220.7 Reebonz 2.90 -3.80 -56.7 GenElec 8725956 7.15 +.06 iS Eafe NY 1.66 57.56 -2.90 -4.8 -18.1 VerizonCm NY 2.41 54.92 -2.16 -3.8 +3.8 Last Pvs Week Last Pvs Day ObalonT n 2.65 +.95 +55.9 DBV Tech 6.70 -8.56 -56.1 AMD 5901730 16.93 -2.97 iShiBxHYB NY 5.09 80.23 -2.93 -3.5 -8.1 WalMart NY 2.08 87.13 -4.72 -5.1 -11.8 Prime Rate 5.50 5.25 Australia 1.4192 1.4047 Greenpro n 4.59 +1.58 +52.4 SurfaceOn n 3.70 -4.55 -55.2 BkofAm 5871162 23.37 -1.11 iShR2K NY 1.77 128.37 -12.24 -8.7 -15.8 WeathfIntl NY ... .27 -.16 -37.8 -93.5 Discount Rate 3.00 2.75 Britain 1.2635 1.2671 Astrotch rs 5.00 +1.48 +42.0 Wheelr pfB 6.80 -8.32 -55.0 Microsoft 3849315 98.23 -7.80 iShCorEafe NY 1.56 53.68 -2.98 -5.3 -18.8 WellsFargo NY 1.72 45.12 -1.42 -3.1 -25.6 Federal Funds Rate 2.25-2.50 2.00-2.25 Canada 1.3590 1.3504 Intel NA 1.20 44.84 -3.02 -6.3 -2.9 Wendys Co NA .34 15.69 -1.02 -6.1 -4.4 XBiotech n 6.27 +1.83 +41.2 DovaPh n 6.80 -8.01 -54.1 Apple Inc 3054627 150.73 -14.75 Treasuries Euro .8795 .8719 IntPap NY 1.90 39.12 -4.32 -9.9 -32.5 WDigital NA 2.00 35.90 -2.88 -7.4 -54.9 electCore n 5.88 +1.67 +39.7 Wheelr pfD 9.00 -7.94 -46.9 MicronT 3017321 30.32 -3.88 3-month 2.34 2.34 Japan 111.31 111.11 Materialise 21.28 +5.61 +35.8 AdmaBio 2.41 -2.12 -46.8 AT&T Inc 2970174 28.31 -1.91 6-month 2.46 2.46 Mexico 19.9547 19.9130 Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with Neonode rs 2.20 +.48 +27.9 G1Thera n 17.01 -13.50 -44.2 ChesEng 2872059 1.90 -.43 SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. 5-year 2.66 2.72 Switzerlnd .9949 .9870 rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankrupt- 10-year 2.79 2.85 HyreCar n 2.69 +.57 +26.9 GrdsmHld n 2.30 -1.66 -41.9 FordM 2784522 8.05 -.47 British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others show dollar in AutoWeb 2.87 +.54 +23.2 AxoGen 17.09 -11.51 -40.2 Kinross g 2669583 3.12 +.24 cy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. 30-year 3.02 3.14 foreign currency. The Daily Tribune News Local www.daily-tribune.com • Sunday, December 23, 2018 7A
BARTOW Cartersville, was arrested and ing false information to law en- Baldree said he envisions the park not only as a charged with simple battery on a forcement and probation viola- RV Park destination for “glampers” — i.e., individuals into person who is 65 years of age or tion. a more luxurious form of camping — but also BLOTTER older. FROM PAGE 1A evacuees and individuals with loved ones experi- • Jared Ken- January, with two subsequent readings before the encing months-long hospital stays. city council slated afterwards. “Even if we have a little correction or something The following information — • Andra Lynne shaud Talmadge, Lohr, of 51 of 366 Old Mill “We wouldn’t want an RV park to just pop up in the market, people have still got their RVs and names, photos, addresses, are going to need a place to go,” he said. “And it’s Ridge Row Drive Road SE 401, anywhere,” Heath said. “Our ordinance says that charges and other details — was an affordable little vacation — it’s close enough SE, Cartersville, Cartersville, was if you want to do an RV park, you have to come taken directly from Bartow before the planning commission and the council, to Atlanta that you can take advantage of Atlanta was arrested and held on a Drug County Sheriff’s Office jail which will allow you to lay out any conditions on but it’s also on a major artery … you have a lot of charged with pos- Court sanction. records. Not every arrest leads to the property.” people coming from the Midwest down to Florida, a conviction, and a conviction or session of Plans for the project include cabins, which Bal- and we think there’s going to be a lot of traffic acquittal is determined by the methamphetamine and failure to • Quinn Desmine dree described as miniature hotels. there.” court system. Arrests were made appear. Thomas, of 905 “The cabins are actually Recreational Vehicle At this point, Baldree said he’s going “through by BCSO deputies except where Hemmings Way, Industry Association-certified, so they’re going to the bank process” and determining which ameni- otherwise indicated. • Dewayne Lee Stone Mountain, have wheels,” he said. “They’re basically tiny ties will be included in the final project. He also Lovingood, of 75 was held on a Su- homes. They’re on 399-foot chassis … you can said he’s working on the occupancy and stormwa- December 21 Hawkins Road perior Court sen- move them like that.” ter aspects of the development. SW 34, Tay- tence. Baldree said the maximum amount of time a “Most of the RV stuff will be in the back or kind • Alliyah Zhane lorsville, was ar- visitor can stay at the park is six months. He ex- of behind, so when you’re driving down the main Brown, of 3 Clif- rested and • Develle Laron pects the average user to remain at the park for road you’re not really going to see a lot of the fview Drive 2, charged with bur- Turner, of 10 about one to four months. parking spaces,” he said. “Obviously our sellers Rome, was ar- glary. Winchester Ave. “You have a lot of tradesmen that come into want us to buy it. But we’re trying to be careful through the process to make sure we get every- rested and NW, Adairsville, town with F-250s and their big, $100,000 fifth thing done correctly and try not to rush anything.” charged with • Devin Deshane was arrested and wheel,” he said. “Some of our ideas are very early, but it’s going to be nice. We’re going to cater to Ultimately, Baldree said he’s optimistic that he driving with a McConnell, of 25 charged with giv- the motor coaches, all the way down to your week- can bring the first “Class A” RV park to metro At- suspended license and speeding. E. Main St. ing false informa- end campers, millennials to baby boomers.” lanta — and that he plans on working alongside Rome, was ar- tion to a law enforcement officer, The northern arc of Atlanta, Baldree said, is a stakeholders within Emerson and other portions of • Tiffany Terrell rested and two counts of identity theft fraud market in dire need of upscale recreational vehicle Bartow County to make it a reality. Brown-Rideaux, charged with pro- and two counts of deposit ac- parks. “We think there’s a lot of baby boomers “We love the I-75 corridor, we love LakePoint of 5 Town and bation violation. count fraud-bad checks greater who have kids that live in Marietta or Cartersville and the opportunity that brings,” he said. “We Country Drive than or equal to $500. or Emerson or wherever that want a nice camp- think there’s a lot of opportunity to plan things SE, Cartersville, • Marquis ground,” Baldree said. “There’s a parking lot with the City of Emerson, the City of Cartersville, was arrested and Alexander Mon- • Alaina Marie across from Dobbins in Marietta, off of Wylie local businesses — we’re looking to figure out dif- charged with pos- roe, of 4755 Tree Voges, of 312 Road … it is old and it’s not good looking, but it ferent ways to partner with local restaurants, things session of less than 1 ounce of Top Lane, Co- Stewart Drive, is full 100 percent of the time.” like that, to make it very successful.” marijuana and simple assault- hutta, was ar- Calhoun, was ar- family violence. rested and rested and charged with charged with not • Aaron David speeding and aggressive driving. using headlights Caldwell, of 7 when driving when dark, driving Grassdale Road • Caylie Michelle under the influence of drugs and #D8)&F 98)&F $D0B)&F %0)80B)&F $3DAB)&F SE B, Mooney, of 1771 reckless driving. Cartersville, was Joe Frank Harris arrested and Parkway SE, • Kristina charged with bi- Cartersville, was Danielle cycle must be on the right side of arrested and Wheelis, of 134 the roadway and willful obstruc- charged with W. Leake St. SE tion of law enforcement officers. driving without a license on per- Apt. 18, (3&8(0 91 !&C(3F 1A9BC '0# #D88F E4C3 & 9BC6F BD88F "&48 64506F son, two counts of driving under Cartersville, was B39E0AB 9BC6F 19A0 &7 #D88F 3423 80&A E4C3 & 3423 69D)F 3423 • Dontavious the influence-endangering a child held on a Drug (69D)F 3423 3423 % E48) 80&A 3&8(0 91 @A0(4@4# &A9D8) 7@3 !&AC6F (69D)F C&C498 4B Dewvan Daniel, under the age of 14, driving with Court sanction. (3&8(0 91 E4C3 & 69E (3&8(0 91 of 750 Franklin an expired license plate, driving B39E0AB !&C(3F 60&A 69E &A9D8) A&48 69D)F E4C3 #39E0AB @9BB4'6F Gateway SE 20 with an obscured or a missing li- • Debbie Louise 1A9BC 9BC6F E48) &A9D8) & 69E &A9D8) & $#BC9A7 H, Marietta, was cense plate and driving under the Wigley, of 40 (69D)F 69E 7@3 9E arrested and influence of drugs. Barbara Lane, charged with Adairsville, was driving with a suspended license, • Dario Ruben arrested and not using headlights when driv- Gray Palachios, charged with im- Today’s weather National weather ing when dark and window tint of Black Oak proper lane Forecast for Sunday, December 23, 2018 Forecast for Sunday, December 23, 2018 violation. Road SW, change, driving with a suspended Bands separate high temperature zones for the day. TENN. StSeattle Cartersville, was license and driving under the in- N.C. 50/4200//4/42 • Emiliano Gar- held on a Drug fluence of alcohol. Rome Billingsg 55/31 4/2442/26 L MinneapolisM po NNeww YrYYorkok cia, of 280 Scott Court sanction. 29/177 L 444/354/4/3/ Athens DDetroittrott Mill Road, Can- 56/36 H CChChicagocgo SSan FrFranciscocco 4044/940/29/29/ 29 Atlanta DenverDe v r 40/2440/250/0/ S.C. 59/529/9/ 2 ton, was held on a 57/37 46/26/2/ WWashingtonh gto • Mitchell Lee KKtKansas CyCCityy 50/3700//37/ 7 447/297/797/2/29 Probate Court LosLLsog AngelesA Stringfield, of 69/51669/9/9 1 Augusta AAtlantat H 57/377//37 sentence. 6803 Skyview 64/39 El PoPaso ALA. Macon 64/3664/64/39/3/ 9 HHoustono to 63/40 68/466 Drive SE, Ac- H • Bennie Andrew worth, was ar- Columbus MMiami 62/40 73/59 Hardman, of rested and Savannah Fronts 62/44 1100 Adairsville charged with five Cold Warm Stationary Albany Pressure Pleasant Valley counts of willful obstruction of 65/43 H L High Low Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice Road NW, law enforcement officers and Valdosta Adairsville, was failure to appear. 64/45 <-10 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110+ FLA. NATIONAL SUMMARY: An Alberta clipper storm will spread snow from held on a Supe- the Upper Midwest to part of the interior Northeast today. Rain showers are forecast from the Ohio Valley to the Gulf coast. A significant storm will rior Court sen- • Trevor Martin spread drenching coastal rain and inland snow over the Northwest and parts tence. Summey, of 125 of the northern Rockies. Most other areas can expect a dry day. Miller Farm Road ©2018 AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018 AccuWeather, Inc. • Charles Wesley SW, Taylorsville, Hembree, of 193 was arrested and Walker Road NW, charged with giv- 8A Sunday, December 23, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com The Daily Tribune News
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The Daily Tribune News www.daily-tribune.com Sunday, December 23, 2018 Colonels crush host Jackets for 3rd Adairsville boys Ford knocked down two triples; Cass will take an extended men held a slim 8-7 edge after one and Andrew Glaze connected break through the holidays, re- quarter before Adairsville (5-8) close out Rockmart from deep in the first quarter. turning to action Friday, Jan. 4, at got going. It boded well for Cass to score home against Hiram. Mason Boswell was once again tourney with win 23 points and for none to come the spark the Tigers needed. He from leading scorer Jacquez Adairsville boys 53, Bremen 44 had nine points in the quarter. STAFF REPORT Fountain. The senior got going in Following a 76-50 loss to Overall, the senior had 20 points, Facing the Georgia Vinyl and the second period, matching Jus- Thompson in the consolation including a 3-pointer in each quar- Thread tournament hosts could tice Hayes with four points in the semifinals of the Georgia Vinyl ter. have proved a daunting task for stanza. and Thread tournament late Fri- Thanks to Boswell, Adairsville the Cass boys on Saturday, but the Armed with a 38-21 halftime day night, the Adairsville boys held a 26-16 lead at the halftime Colonels got off to a great start advantage, the Colonels continued had a quick turnaround to play for break. The Tigers extended the ad- and never let up in an 81-53 rout to find easy looks, thanks in part seventh place on Saturday morn- vantage to 37-24 after three quar- of Rockmart. to 17 total assists. Rockmart nar- ing. ters before holding off a slight Just days after letting a 13-point rowed the deficit ever so slightly The Tigers could have been un- rally in the final stanza. lead after one quarter slip away in to 56-41 entering the fourth quar- motivated to play a former Region Danarous Johnson added 14 a victory over Adairsville, Cass ter but never posed a serious chal- 6-AAA rival in Bremen with the points for Adairsville, scoring ex- (7-8) showed a killer instinct in lenge in overturning the deficit. holiday break set to start when the actly four points in three of the dispatching of Rockmart in its Overall, five Colonels finished final buzzer sounded. Adairsville four quarters. Savaun Henderson own gym. in double-figures. Fountain led the found motivation, though, snap- added eight points for Adairsville, The Colonels got off to a blis- way with 19 points — 15 of which ping a five-game losing streak which will play next in its own tering start, nailing four 3-pointers came in the second half. Hayes with a 53-44 victory over the Blue Christmas Clash. The Tigers will in the opening period to take a 23- contributed 14 points; Zaylan Devils. host Excel Christian Academy in 8 lead after one. Ethan Carter had Chaney added 12; and Ford and The first quarter didn’t indicate the first round at 8:30 p.m. Thurs- RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS seven points, including a 3; Jordan Carter finished with 11 apiece. a thrilling game was afoot. Bre- day in the eight-team tournament. Cass junior Jordan Ford dribbles past a Rockmart defender. Claxton too much for Jackets RIVALRY RALLY as Georgia beats Canes dominate 4th quarter, take down Tigers Georgia Tech BY GEORGE HENRY Associated Press BY NICHOLAS SULLIVAN nicholas.sullivan@daily- ATLANTA — Nicolas Claxton loved how Georgia tribune.com started out denying entry points and disrupting Geor- gia Tech’s passing lanes. Cartersville girls head coach The Bulldogs dominated the game with their Cindy Moore believes a young length. basketball team is like a box of “It was a huge win,” the 6-foot-11 Claxton said. chocolates. Saturday afternoon’s “We came out strong. In the second half they had a home game against Adairsville little surge but we just kept fighting.” started off like a bite into a cherry- Claxton had 13 points and 13 rebounds, Teshaun filled morsel. Hightower added 12 points, and Georgia beat Georgia After falling behind 9-2 one Tech 70-59 on Saturday. quarter into the game and trailing The Bulldogs (7-4) never trailed as they won for 20-10 in the final minutes of the the fourth time in five games. Rayshaun Hammonds, second period, Cartersville could Georgia’s leading scorer, played just a few seconds have easily folded and looked to of final 15 minutes because of foul trouble and a knee regroup following the upcoming injury sustained in the game. winter break. Georgia Tech (6-5) couldn’t recover from a poor Instead, the Canes made sure shooting effort in the first half. Though the Yellow nobody was looking and stuck the Jackets pulled within three with 6:58 remaining, they half-eaten fruit-stuffed chocolate were essentially done when Tyree Crump hit a fade- back in the box. They then se- away 3 as he fell out of bounds to push the lead to lected a tasty treat from the pack- seven at the 1:28 mark. age and produced a delicious Claxton, one of three Georgia starters 6-9 or taller, second-half performance. finished with career highs of six assists and six Cartersville cut into a seven- blocked shots. He dunked a putback and hit a 3- point halftime deficit to pull pointer on consecutive possessions to push the lead within two entering the fourth to 56-47 with 2:32 remaining. quarter. The Canes completely Michael Devoe scored 14 points, and Jose Al- controlled the final period, varado and James Banks each added 11 for Georgia outscoring the visiting Tigers by a Tech, which has lost four of six. decisive 17-1 margin to run away “I thought we tried to shoot speed layups when with a 49-35 win. speed layups weren’t there,” Jackets coach Josh Past- “It was a good team win,” ner said. “We needed to use our pivot feet more. Moore said. “We did a lot of all- We’ve had no issues with our guys and their compet- around good things.” itive excellence. They have always played hard. We Things didn’t start out promis- have just struggled offensively, and you have to give ing for Cartersville (5-4). The Georgia credit, too.” Canes, who pulled out a 40-39 vic- Georgia continued its tendency to start slowly in tory when these teams met in the the second half. As it did in blowing an 18-point lead Armuchee tournament in Novem- last week to lose by two points at home to No. 20 Ari- ber, fell behind early due to an inept offense. zona State, the Bulldogs let the Jackets get back in the While turnovers weren’t the game with a four-point possession. killer they have been in the past, A flagrant foul on Hightower led to two free throws indecisiveness crept in for the by Devoe and a dunk by Banks as Georgia Tech cut home team. Adairsville switched some adjustments in the first half. ter, when they started chipping the lead to six. Moses Wright followed with a three- its defense up from the previous I thought we got decent looks, but away. ... They had all the momen- point play that made it 29-26. meeting and went with a zone that we were hesitant.” tum in the fourth quarter, and we But the Jackets had no answers for Claxton. seemed to give Cartersville fits in Five Canes scored at least three could never stop it and turn it “He’s got tremendous agility,” Bulldogs coach Tom the first half, as the Tigers built a points in the third quarter, includ- around.” Crean said. “We’re comfortable with him guarding 1- decent lead. ing 3-pointers by A’mya Davis and As she often is when the Canes 5 and playing 1-5. He hands the ball a lot for us. He’s “I think playing zone might Jamiya Moore, who hit three are playing well, Davis was the a shot-maker, and that 3 was just huge.” have caught them off guard, be- triples in the game. Seven points catalyst in the impressive fourth The 3 was his only attempt beyond the arc, and cause last time we played them we from Aaliyah Applin and five free quarter. She had eight of her 12 Claxton is 4 for 12 this season. played man the whole time,” throws by Washington helped hold points in the period, while making “Honestly I was hunting the 3 the whole game,” he Adairsville head coach Michael off a complete Cartersville come- good, smart passes and rebound- said. “When I shot it, I knew it was going in.” Roberson said. “It was a fast- back. ing the ball well. PLAYING HURT paced game [the first meeting], so But only for a little while. Speaking of rebounding well, Hammonds tweaked his knee on an awkward land- we slowed the game down by Trailing 34-32 with 6:57 to go, senior London Shaw’s work in the ing. He picked up his third foul with 14:47 remaining playing zone. I thought on the of- Davis hit a long 2-point shot while middle of the paint was a huge and played only seven seconds after that with a pro- fensive side we moved the ball getting fouled. The senior knocked boost, as she totaled 10 points. She tective sleeve. He was whistled for his fourth foul and around, and our girls hit some down the accompanying free had a few putbacks in the third left the game for good. ... Alvarado injured a knee late shots.” throw, and the Canes never trailed quarter and drew some fouls in the in the first half and finished 3 for 20 from the field. ... Thanks in part to nine first-half again en route to the two-touch- fourth, but some of her biggest Banks seemed to be favoring his right shoulder during points by Nakiyah Washington, down victory. contributions were just as a nui- the game. who returned to the starting lineup In fact, Cartersville began the sance for Adairsville to attempt to BRUTAL START after barely playing in a Tuesday fourth quarter on a 15-0 run. The shoot over. Georgia Tech looked like a young team playing its loss to Cass, Adairsville (3-10) only point Adairsville could “One of the things we needed third game in six days, missing 20 of its first 23 shots. managed to take a 22-15 lead into muster in the final stanza came on was confidence,” Moore said. “We The Jackets had seven turnovers with five shots the locker room. a free throw by Coriana McDaniel battled. ... We did a lot of the blocked to trail 25-9 at the 3:02 mark. Moses Wright At the break, Moore’s message with 50 seconds remaining. things we’ve talked about that has stopped a 13-0 run. to her team was simple: shoot the “When something doesn’t go escaped us.” RANDY PARKER/THE DAILY TRIBUNE NEWS TEACHING MOMENT ball. the way we want it to go on the The Tigers, meanwhile, fell into Above, Cartersville sophomore Jamiya Moore After Devoe scored an uncontested layup with 4.9 “I wasn’t totally surprised by floor, our body language the kind of offensive lull down the surveys the floor as Adairsville senior Havyn seconds left in the first, Crean was visibly upset and Isaac defends during Saturday's game the zone, but I honestly thought, changes,” Roberson said. “We stretch that has hurt them time and called a timeout. “We’re not nearly as active defen- between the Bartow County rivals. Moore sively as we need to be,” Crean said. “The communi- especially after the way we’ve kind of deflate, and nobody out again this season. Adairsville has finished with nine points on three 3-pointers performed against pressure, that there steps up and turns it around.” played well against almost every in a 49-35 win for the Canes. Top, Adairsville cation is a challenge to get to.” we would see more pressure,” He added, “I think [the game] senior Nakiyah Washington goes up for two of Moore said. “... We had to make started changing in the third quar- SEE CANES, PAGE 3B her game-high 14 points in Saturday’s game. SEE GEORGIA, PAGE 3B 2B Sunday, December 23, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com Sports The Daily Tribune News Hopkins has 5 TDs, No. 22 Army routs Houston, 70-14
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS late October. The Cougars suf- Bowl over San Diego State. AP Sports Writer fered their most-lopsided loss in Tune, the true freshman filling their 27 bowl games, and their in for injured playmaker D'Eriq FORT WORTH, Texas — biggest loss overall since a 66-10 King, was 21-of-32 passing for Army quarterback Kelvin Hop- loss at UCLA during the 1997 230 yards and was sacked 10 kins Jr. ran for 170 yards and an regular season. times. He was responsible for Armed Forces Bowl-record five Along with his 11 rushing at- both Houston TDs, a 3-yard pass touchdowns and the No. 22 tempts before coming out of the to Romello Brooker in the sec- Black Knights overwhelmed game midway through the third ond quarter and a 6-yard run with Houston 70-14 on Saturday to quarter when it was 49-7, Hop- 6 1/2 minutes left. reach 11 wins for the first time in kins completed the first 1,000- THE TAKEAWAY program history. yard passing season for Army Houston: The Cougars didn't The Black Knights (11-2) won since 2007. He was 3-of-3 pass- have King or NFL-bound defen- their ninth consecutive game ing for 70 yards, including a 54- sive tackle Ed Oliver. King, who since an overtime loss at playoff yarder that set up one of his three will be back next season, was re- team Oklahoma exactly three 1-yard TD plunges. He also had sponsible for 50 touchdowns in months earlier. a 2-yard TD run. 11 games before knee surgery. Hopkins had a nifty 77-yard On the first play of the second Oliver missed four games be- TD run on the last play of the quarter, Cameron Jones had a 23- cause of a bruised right knee, first quarter for a 14-0 lead. The yard fumble return for an Army then skipped the bowl game to junior quarterback initially ran touchdown after James Nachtigal focus on preparing for the NFL right before cutting back the forced the turnover when he draft. other way and alluding one tack- sacked Clayton Tune. Army: After a 10-loss season ler. He sent two other defenders Army got 507 of its 592 total as freshmen, the Black Knights sliding to the ground when he yards on the ground in its high- senior class won 29 games the switched directions again back est-scoring game this season — past three seasons. They finished toward the middle of the field. and the most points in the pro- with back-to-back seasons of at Houston (8-5) lost for the gram's nine bowl appearances. least 10 wins. Army is an AP Top fourth time in five games since The Black Knights won a bowl 25 team for the first time since JIM COWSERT/AP starting 7-1 and getting into the for the third consecutive year, in- 1996, the academy's only other Army defensive back Cameron Jones (20) picks up a fumble by Houston quarterback Clayton Tune AP Top 25 poll for one week in cluding last year's Armed Force 10-win season. during the Armed Forces Bowl Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas. Jones scored on the play. Olympian slams ref who told teen wrestler to cut dreadlocks
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS criticized parents and coaching have been “more powerful” to walk letter to the community that they BUENA, N.J. — An Olympic staff at the match for not interven- away. support and stand by all student champion wrestler has reached out ing, calling it “absolutely shame- Michael Cherenson, spokesman athletes. to a New Jersey high school ful.” for the New Jersey State Inter- Maloney came under fire in 2016 wrestler who had his dreadlocks cut High school wrestler Andrew scholastic Athletic Association, for using a racial slur against a off minutes before his match after Johnson, who is black, had a cover said Saturday the organization had black referee, according to the a referee told him to lose the hair- over his hair, but referee Alan Mal- reached out to leagues and confer- Courier Post newspaper. Maloney style or forfeit his bout. oney, who is white, said that would- ences that assign referees “and told the newspaper he did not re- Jordan Burroughs, a 2012 n’t do. Johnson went on to win they’ve all agreed” not to assign member making the comments. Olympic gold medalist and four- Wednesday’s match but appeared Maloney to any event until the mat- After the incident was reported, he time world champion, posted and visibly distraught. An SNJ Today ter has been reviewed. agreed to participate in sensitivity spoke on social media early Satur- reporter tweeted a video of Johnson Gov. Phil Murphy weighed in on training and an alcohol awareness day about the incident Wednesday getting his hair cut. the issue on Twitter, posting a photo program. A one-year suspension at the Buena Regional High School Burroughs drew attention to his of the haircut and saying he was was overturned. match, saying he had never seen demeanor, saying, “He was hurting, “deeply disturbed” by the story. A woman answering the phone at anything like it in a quarter-century and that wasn’t fair.” “No student should have to need- a listed number for Maloney said CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP of wrestling. Burroughs called Johnson lessly choose between his or her the ordeal is being blown out of In this Aug. 26, 2017, file photo, United States’ Jordan Ernest “This is nonsense,” a message on “courageous” for his performance identity and playing sports,” the proportion and the referee was sim- Burroughs celebrates after defeating Khetik Tsabolov of Russia Burroughs’ twitter account said. in the match despite “all of the ad- Democratic governor said. ply following rules. in the men’s free style 74 kg category during the final of the “My opinion is that this was a com- versity and racism that you were The state attorney general’s of- Burroughs also said he hoped to Wrestling World Cup at the Paris Bercy Arena, in Paris. Burroughs has reached out to a New Jersey high school wrestler bination of an abuse of power, facing in the moment” and said he fice has confirmed an investigation be in touch with Johnson soon and who had his dreadlocks cut off minutes before his match after a racism, and just plain negligence.” understood his reasons for agreeing by the Division on Civil Rights. promised to send him “a few cool referee told him to lose the hairstyle or forfeit his bout. In a video posted on Instagram, he to the haircut, although it might The school superintendent said in a things for Christmas.”
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BY TERESA M. WALKER way it ended for him tonight because he with 26 seconds left in the first quarter AP Pro Football Writer really just played (great), displayed great and then eating up 10:58 off the clock, courage, leadership all in three weeks,” going 98 yards over 17 plays. Johnson NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Tennessee Gruden said. “I hate for him to be judged capped the drive with a 7-yard TD pass to Titans finally have a victory in a game on that one pass (Byard’s interception), Michael Floyd for a 10-6 lead. where quarterback Marcus Mariota left but overall just very, very proud of the INJURIES injured, and Blaine Gabbert did much way he came in here and led this team.” With Washington already thin at guard, more than just win. Mariota had thrown for 110 yards when guard Zac Kerin hurt a knee on the Red- Gabbert kept the Titans’ playoff hopes sacked with 48 seconds left in the first skins’ second drive of the game but was alive. half by defensive end Jonathan Allen. His able to return. Redskins defensive end The veteran threw a 2-yard touchdown right, throwing shoulder and arm were ex- Matt Ioannidis hurt a hamstring. pass to MyCole Pruitt with 4:30 left and amined, then he walked to the locker Titans Pro Bowl defensive tackle Jur- the Titans rallied to beat the Washington room and was replaced by Gabbert. rell Casey aggravated a knee that kept him Redskins 25-16 on Saturday for their The stinger is the same injury that out of practice all week with 4:21 left. fourth straight victory. knocked him out of Tennessee’s loss Nov. PETERSON’S MARKS “I don’t know,” Gabbert said when 18 at Indianapolis. He also was knocked Adrian Peterson ran for 119 yards for asked if this was the biggest win of his out of the season opener with an elbow in- Washington. That put him over 1,000 eight-year career with four teams. “It was jury that cost him a start. Vrabel said Mar- yards for the season for the first time since a fun win. We got a big game next week.” iota was still being evaluated after the 2015 and made him the 12th player in The victory was Tennessee’s first in the game. NFL history with eight or more seasons seven career games that Mariota has left MARK ZALESKI/AP Byard said the Titans have full trust in with 1,000 yards rushing. None of that with an injury. Tennessee quarterback Blaine Gabbert (7) is pressured by Washington outside Gabbert. mattered with the loss. Coming off the bench for the third time linebacker Ryan Kerrigan (91) in Saturday’s game in Nashville, Tennessee. “It’s really no panic on the sideline,” “Hopefully, I’ll appreciate it after this season, Gabbert threw for 101 yards Byard said. Christmas, but for the time being, you after the Redskins knocked Mariota out of to earn the AFC’s second wild-card spot pass as time expired and ran 56 yards for Henry finished with 84 yards and a TD know, I play this game to win and to have the game late in the first half with a for a second consecutive playoff berth. an emphatic TD. on 21 carries. an opportunity to win a championship,” stinger. Gabbert hit Taywan Taylor for 35 “The only scenario that any of us are The Redskins (7-8) have lost five of Johnson threw for 153 yards and a TD. Peterson said. “Falling short of having yards to jump-start the winning drive, smart enough to worry about is us prepar- six, and coach Jay Gruden said they Dustin Hopkins kicked field goals of 50, that opportunity is weighing heavy on my Derrick Henry ran four times for 33 yards, ing to win and ultimately win, and that’s couldn’t ask for anything more from quar- 40 and 46 yards, and Washington finished heart right now. I’m just going to let this his last an 18-yarder to the 2. Gabbert then all we can do right now,” first-year Titans terback Josh Johnson, who came off his with three sacks. one sink in and bounce back and finish the hit Pruitt at the back of the end zone. coach Mike Vrabel said. couch only weeks ago. Washington needs The fourth quarterback to start this sea- season off on the right note.” The Titans (9-6) must beat Andrew Safety Kevin Byard intercepted Josh losses by Minnesota and Seattle to avoid son for Washington this season, Johnson UP NEXT Luck and the Indianapolis Colts and have Johnson’s pass on third-and-3 with 1:17 being eliminated. drove the Redskins on the NFL’s second- Redskins: Host Philadelphia. either Baltimore or Pittsburgh lose once left. Then Malcolm Butler picked off a “I’m just very proud and sick for the longest drive this season, taking the ball Titans: Host Indianapolis.
GEORGIA Smith’s 4 TDs lead Troy in Dollar General Bowl Kentucky
FROM PAGE 1B BY DAVID BRANDT Troy took a 21-17 lead on yard pass completion that turnovers proved to be tough to tops UNC AP Sports Writer Smith’s 2-yard touchdown run bounced off K.J. Osborn’s hands overcome. RIVALRY with 9:47 left in the third and then and pinballed between a few Troy Troy: The Trojans secured their Georgia won its fourth straight MOBILE, Ala. — Sawyer immediately recovered an onside defenders before being caught by third straight 10-win season, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS in the series and leads the annual Smith threw for 320 yards and kick. The Trojans were driving Buffalo’s Antonio Nunn. which is the longest such streak CHICAGO — John Calipari rivalry 14-10 since the schools four touchdowns, B.J. Smith and for another score before a B.J. Troy bounced back quickly in program history. Sawyer Smith sees No. 19 Kentucky rounding switched to campus-only venues Sidney Davis ran for touchdowns Smith fumble bounced into the with its own huge gain through was excellent and Troy finally into form. Beating North Carolina in 1995-96. This was Georgia’s and Troy beat Buffalo 42-32 in hands of Buffalo’s Tyrone Hill, the air — a 60-yard touchdown got its run game going in the sec- sure is a good way to drive home fourth victory in Atlanta during the Dollar General Bowl on Sat- who ran 93 yards for a touch- from Sawyer Smith to Tray Eaf- ond half. The Trojans were also that point. that stretch. The home team had urday night. down to give the Bulls a 24-21 ford. able to capitalize on Buffalo’s Keldon Johnson scored 21 won 18 of the last 23 games. “We Troy (10-3) secured the hard- lead. The game stayed tight through- turnovers. points and Reid Travis added 20 to sent the seniors out right — beat- fought win on Davis’ 20-yard Troy jumped ahead 35-24 after out the first half and Buffalo took UP NEXT lead the Wildcats to an 80-72 vic- ing Georgia Tech four times.” tory over the ninth-ranked Tar touchdown run with 3:09 remain- two quick touchdowns in the a 17-14 lead late in the second The Bulls should return most NEXT TIME AROUND Heels in a matchup between two ing, a play after Buffalo’s Tyree fourth quarter and held off Buf- quarter on Adam Mitcheson’s 41- of their offense next season, but McCamish Pavilion was the site of college basketball's winningest Jackson fumbled to give the Tro- falo’s final rally. yard field goal. The Bulls had the must replace eight defensive of Crean’s last loss at Indiana, an programs on Saturday. jans possession. It was the Bulls’ Buffalo’s Jackson threw for halftime lead despite three starters. Buffalo opens at home NIT setback that led to his firing. Johnson scored 16 in the second third lost fumble. 274 yards with a touchdown and turnovers, including two fumbles. against Robert Morris next sea- Crean sat out one season before half, helping Kentucky (9-2) hold The entertaining game that had an interception. THE TAKEAWAY son. signing a six-year, $16 million off North Carolina (8-3) in their several big swings in momentum, Buffalo (10-4) took the early 7- Buffalo: It’s a disappointing Troy has a few holes to fill, but contract with Georgia. ... The first meeting since the 2017 especially during a strange third 0 lead on Jaret Patterson’s 11- loss for the Bulls, who are still should return another very good game was sold out, marking the NCAA South Regional final. The quarter that featured Buffalo yard touchdown run less than two looking for their first bowl win in team next season. Troy opens at 16th capacity crowd at McCamish Tar Heels won that game on a last- scoring seven points despite not minutes into the game. The drive program history. Buffalo domi- home against Campbell next sea- Pavilion since the building re- second jumper by Luke Maye en running an offensive play. was helped by a spectacular 51- nated at times, but the four son. opened from a major renovation route to their sixth NCAA title. seven years ago. UP NEXT Georgia: Hosts Massachusetts on Dec. 30. SPORTSROUNDUP Georgia Tech: Hosts Kennesaw State on Friday. NBA Standings Home & Away NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION EASTERN CONFERENCE CANES Atlantic Division Thursday BASKETBALL W L Pct GB Toronto 25 10 .714 — BASKETBALL Cartersville boys at White County, 5 p.m. FROM PAGE 1B Philadelphia22 12 .647 2½ Boston 18 13 .581 5 Woodland at Cartersville, 6 p.m. Friday, January 4 Brooklyn 15 19 .441 9½ opponent it has faced, but an in- New York 9 25 .265 15½ Cass girls vs. Washington BASKETBALL ability to put four solid quarters to- Southeast Division at Christmas Clash at Adairsville, 10 a.m. Adairsville at Ringgold, 7 p.m. W L Pct GB gether has hampered the team. Charlotte 16 15 .516 — Excel boys at Adairsville at Christmas Clash, 8:30 p.m. Cartersville at Cedartown, 6 p.m. Roberson, though, did see some Miami 15 16 .484 1 Orlando 14 17 .452 2 Friday Hiram at Cass, 6 p.m. positives out of his players Satur- Washington 13 20 .394 4 BASKETBALL Excel boys at Christian Heritage, 6 p.m. ATLANTA 8 23 .258 8 day. Free-throw shooting was Central Division Cass girls at Christmas Clash at Adairsville Carrollton at Woodland, 6 p.m. much improved with the Tigers W L Pct GB Milwaukee 22 10 .688 — Excel boys at Christmas Clash at Adairsville WRESTLING hitting 11 of 16 from the line. Indiana 21 12 .636 1½ WRESTLING Cass at Clay County Fairgrounds (Florida), 2 p.m. Washington returned and had 14 Detroit 15 15 .500 6 Woodland at Knockout Classic at Osceola (Florida) Saturday, January 5 points, while Applin, a freshman, Cleveland 8 25 .242 14½ Chicago 8 25 .242 14½ Adairsville at Heart of Dixie Invitational, 9 a.m. BASKETBALL added nine before leaving with an WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division Saturday, December 29 Central-Carroll at Cartersville, 2:30 p.m. injury in the fourth quarter. W L Pct GB Adairsville will conclude its Houston 17 15 .531 — BASKETBALL Villa Rica at Woodland, 6 p.m. San Antonio 18 16 .529 — Chattooga at Cartersville, 4 p.m. SWIM 2018 portion of the schedule with Memphis 16 16 .500 1 Dallas 15 15 .500 1 Cass girls at Christmas Clash at Adairsville Adairsville at Greyhound Invitational, 2:45 p.m. three games in its eight-team New Orleans15 18 .455 2½ Christmas Clash. The Tigers open Northwest Division Excel boys at Christmas Clash at Adairsville WRESTLING W L Pct GB the tournament with a game Denver 21 10 .677 — WRESTLING Adairsville at Murray Invitational, 9 a.m. against North Cobb Christian at 7 OKC 20 10 .667 ½ Adairsville at Heart of Dixie Invitational, 9 a.m. Cartersville at Spartan Duals at South Paulding Portland 18 14 .563 3½ p.m. Thursday. Utah 16 17 .485 6 Cartersville at Yellow Jacket Invitational at Rockmart Cartersville girls at Women's Queen of the Mountain Minnesota 14 18 .438 7½ Roberson hopes the trio of con- Pacific Division Cartersville girls at ALX Invitational at Alexander at Harris County tests will provide a springboard W L Pct GB Woodland at Knockout Classic at Osceola (Florida) Cass at Clay County Fairgrounds (Florida), 9 a.m. Golden State21 11 .656 — into the second half of the Region L.A. Lakers 19 13 .594 2 Wednesday, January 2 6-AAA schedule. L.A. Clippers 19 13 .594 2 Sacramento 17 15 .531 4 “We did some good things Phoenix 8 25 .242 13½ today,” he said. “We’ve done some Friday’s Late Games good things lately, but we’re still Charlotte 98, Detroit 86 just searching for consistency — Toronto 126, Cleveland 110 On the Air Atlanta 114, New York 107 not just in the game but also in Indiana 114, Brooklyn 106 MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 4:25 p.m. — Pittsburgh at New Orleans (CBS) practice every day. ... I still think Chicago 90, Orlando 80 Milwaukee 120, Boston 107 4:30 p.m. — Diamond Head Classic: Semifinal (ESPN2) 8:20 p.m. — Kansas City at Seattle (NBC) we’re still in this region, as much San Antonio 124, Minnesota 98 7:30 p.m. — Las Vegas Classic: Championship (FS1) NHL HOCKEY as anybody else.” Sacramento 102, Memphis 99 Utah 120, Portland 90 10 p.m. — Diamond Head Classic: Semifinal (ESPN2) 5 p.m. — Boston at Carolina (FSSO) Cartersville hasn’t started its re- L.A. Lakers 112, New Orleans 104 Saturday’s Games NBA BASKETBALL BUNDESLIGA SOCCER gion schedule, yet, but the Canes L.A. Clippers 132, Denver 111 could have some positive momen- Washington 149, Phoenix 146, 3OT 4 p.m. — Atlanta at Detroit (FSSE) 9:30 a.m. — Augsburg vs. Wolfsburg (FS1) Philadelphia 126, Toronto 101 NFL FOOTBALL Noon — Hoffenheim vs. Mainz (FS1) tum heading into its Jan. 4 opener Houston 108, San Antonio 101 against Cedartown. After Satur- Miami 94, Milwaukee 87 1 p.m. — Atlanta at Carolina (FOX) PREMIER LEAGUE SOCCER Dallas at Golden State, late day’s triumph put a good taste in Oklahoma City at Utah, late 1 p.m. — Houston at Philadelphia (CBS) 10:55 a.m. — Everton vs. Tottenham (NBCSN) its mouth entering the holiday Today’s Games ATLANTA at Detroit, 4 p.m. break, Cartersville has home Washington at Indiana, 5 p.m. East Division Seattle 8 6 0 .571 363 292 Charlotte at Boston, 6 p.m. W L T Pct PF PA San Francisco 4 10 0 .286 301 373 games against Woodland, which Chicago at Cleveland, 6 p.m. New England 9 5 0 .643 374 310 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Arizona 3 11 0 .214 192 367 they’ve already beaten twice, and Miami at Orlando, 6 p.m. Miami 7 7 0 .500 295 374 East Division x-clinched playoff spot New Orleans at Sacramento, 6 p.m. Buffalo 5 9 0 .357 215 333 W L T Pct PF PA y-clinched division Chattooga to close out the calendar Phoenix at Brooklyn, 6 p.m. N.Y. Jets 4 10 0 .286 292 359 Dallas 8 6 0 .571 276 269 Saturday’s Games year. Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. South Division Philadelphia 7 7 0 .500 311 318 Tennessee 25, Washington 16 L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. W L T Pct PF PA Washington 7 8 0 .467 281 335 Baltimore at L.A. Chargers, late “If we can be consistent like we Dallas at Portland, 9 p.m. Houston 10 4 0 .714 352 281 N.Y. Giants 5 9 0 .357 307 348 Today’s Games were in the second half, especially Memphis at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m. Tennessee 9 6 0 .600 293 270 South Division ATLANTA at Carolina, 1 p.m. Monday’s Games Indianapolis 8 6 0 .571 372 300 W L T Pct PF PA Houston at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. the fourth quarter, with our deci- No games scheduled. Jacksonville 4 10 0 .286 225 289 y-New Orleans 12 2 0 .857 459 292 N.Y. Giants at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s Games North Division Carolina 6 8 0 .429 333 344 Green Bay at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m. sion-making and our shot selec- Milwaukee at New York, 12 p.m. W L T Pct PF PA ATLANTA 5 9 0 .357 356 381 Minnesota at Detroit, 1 p.m. tion,” Moore said, “... I liked the Oklahoma City at Houston, 3 p.m. Pittsburgh 8 5 1 .607 384 316 Tampa Bay 5 9 0 .357 344 403 Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Baltimore 8 6 0 .571 341 253 North Division Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1 p.m. different ways we scored — we hit L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 8 p.m. Cleveland 6 7 1 .464 309 348 W L T Pct PF PA Jacksonville at Miami, 1 p.m. some shots outside the lane, we Portland at Utah, 10:30 p.m. Cincinnati 6 8 0 .429 337 413 y-Chicago 10 4 0 .714 383 264 Tampa Bay at Dallas, 1 p.m. West Division Minnesota 7 6 1 .536 323 308 L.A. Rams at Arizona, 4:05 p.m. scored in the lane, we scored off NFL Standings W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 5 8 1 .393 332 331 Chicago at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. penetration. If we can keep it var- x-Kansas City 11 3 0 .786 499 380 Detroit 5 9 0 .357 284 333 Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 4:25 p.m. x-L.A. Chargers 11 3 0 .786 395 298 West Division Kansas City at Seattle, 8:20 p.m. ied like that, I feel good about the Denver 6 8 0 .429 306 299 W L T Pct PF PA Monday’s Game AMERICAN CONFERENCE second part of the season.” Oakland 3 11 0 .214 260 418 y-L.A. Rams 11 3 0 .786 448 343 Denver at Oakland, 8:15 p.m. 4B Sunday, December 23, 2018 • www.daily-tribune.com Classifieds The Daily Tribune News
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