12
THURSDAY • January 24, 2013 • Issue 7 • 1 Section • 12 Pages • In Howard County, Arkansas since 1878 • USPS 371-540 • 75 cents Nashville News The IN BRIEF t T he Safariland Group hon- ored three officers at SHOT Show who survived harrow- ing gunfights because they were wearing the company’s body armor. The officers told the stories of their encounters with determined, armed sus- pects during a presentation today at the Safariland booth during the Las Vegas trade show. The company inducts officers into the Safariland Saves Club, which now includes 1,830 members who survived because they were wearing Safariland body armor. Corporal Pete Penney of the Arkansas State Police gave the first presentation. In March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun- tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent altercation ensued. During the struggle, the assailant pulled a .357 Magnum revolver and shot Cpl. Penney in the lower abdomen. The round was stopped by his ABA XT2-9 armor. Two deputies from the Greenville County (S.C.) Sheriff’s Department then gave a joint presentation about a gunfight with a suspect under the influence of metham- phetamine who took a former girlfriend and her family hostage. Master Deputy Jeff Maxwell and Deputy Brad Grice responded to a single-wide trailer in October. The deputies, members of the tactical team, made entry to the trailer. The suspect opened fire on the victims and the officers with a 30-30 lever- action rifle. Maxwell was shot in the left leg; a second round glanced off his patrol rifle and hit his Protech FAV MK II armor with SM01 IIIA ballistics. The round stopped within an inch of his neck. Deputy Grice was hit in the left arm; the round was ultimately stopped by his Protech FAV MK II with SM01 IIIA ballistics bicep protector. Copyright Police Magazine/PoliceMag.com. All rights reserved. Used with permis- sion. Mark Clark | Police Magazine ABOVE: Corporal Pete Penney, Deputy Brad Grice, and Master Deputy Jeff Maxwell are honored by Safariland. PENNEY HONORED Body armor group recognizes oicer’s survival TERRICA HENDRIX Editor MINERAL SPRINGS – A longtime elementary principal will now serve as a programs coordi- nator for the Mineral Springs Saratoga School District. The school board unanimously approved Interim Superintendent Bill Blackwood’s recom- mendation that Jeanie Gorham become the dis- trict’s Federal Programs Coordinator Tuesday evening at the January board meeting. As coordinator, Gor- ham is responsible for overseeing and imple- menting Title I: Im- proving the academic achievement of the disadvantaged; Title II: Preparing, training and recruiting high quality Gorham appointed as Federal Programs Coordinator DEWAYNE HOLLOWAY Sports Editor UMPIRE – Former Umpire school admin- istrator Donald J. Man- ning passed away Tues., Jan. 22 in Nashville. Manning served as a principal in the Umpire School District from 1969 – 1975 and made the transition to su- perintendent where he served from 1976-1985. Howard County JP and Umpire resident Cary Strasner remem- bered Manning best as a part of the school system. “Nothing happened that he didn’t know about,” Strasner said in regards to Manning’s in- volvement in the school system. “He was a strict dis- ciplinarian and we need Former Umpire administrator passes See UMPIRE / Page 4 See GORHAM / Page 4 Former Nashville News contributor dies NASHVILLE - Growing up in Howard County, Wendy Haddan recorded some of her fondest childhood memories shopping on Main Street in Nashville. Today, the newly-appointed Chamber of Commerce president hopes to use her position to instill the same excitement she once felt in a new generation of youth. “When I was small, I was so excited a couple weeks before Easter when I got to go buy Easter SUBMITTED PHOTO | Nashville News Newly-appointed Nashville chamber of commerce president Wendy Haddan is pictured with furniture and other items purchased on Main Street in Nashville. New chamber president hopes to inspire youth to shop locally See SHOP / Page 4 School preparing for new teacher evaluation system TErrICa HENDrIX I NaSHVIllE NEWS Sammy F. Jackson received a plaque for his service as district bookkeeper Tuesday evening at the Mineral Springs Saratoga School District board meeting. He retired after 46 years with the district. Pictured (from left to right): Board Vice President William Dixon, Jackson, Dale Gathright Jr., secretary, Dornell Trotter, Mike Erwin, board president, Joann Walker and Linda Ross. HONORING HIS SERVICE CHARLES GOODIN Managing Editor NASHVILLE - Campus princi- pals at Nashville School District will begin attending training ses- sions this week to prepare them for a new form of teacher evalua- tion set to go into effect next year. Superintendent Doug Gra- ham told school board members Tuesday that the more rigorous, state-mandated standards will be adopted locally this summer and will be in effect at the beginning of the 2013-14 school year. “This teacher evaluation is a very, very elaborate process with a very rigorous rubric,” Graham said. According to the State Depart- ment of Education’s website, the new evaluation system is designed to: •Provideschooldistricts a transparent and consistent teacher evaluation system that ensures effective teaching and promotes professional learning; •Providefeedbackandasup- port system that will encourage teachers to improve their knowl- edge and instructional skills in or- der to improve student learning; • Provide a basis for making See SCHOOL / Page 4 TERRICA HENDRIX Editor CENTER POINT – A well-known pastor, counselor and spiritual advisor passed away Wednesday. Norman Adamson, 75, of Center Point, died at his home with his family by his side. He was the pastor of Dodson Street Church of Christ for 12 years and founded the Family Life Center – an after- school tutoring pro- gram. Adamson began preaching in 1957 af- ter he graduated from Southwest Christian College in Terrell, Texas, Geneva Walton said. He was a Nashville News contributor for several years. His col- umn titled, “ Coming Home,” was a source of See FORMER / Page 4 Tickets are now on sale at the Nashville Chamber of Commerce for this year’s ban- quet The banquet will be held on Tues., Feb. 5 at 6:30 p.m. in the First Baptist Church Activity Building located on Second Street. In addition to the award presentation, the Chamber will give away two trips; One for two people with lodging, activities, and some meals to Hot Springs, and the other to Eu- reka Springs. In Eureka Springs, one can choose from one of four packages: either a mystery week- end, an invited friend get a way weekend, a golf weekend, or a romantic get a way weekend. Simply list your name and phone number on the back of your chamber ticket at the door, and we will enter it into the drawing box. At the end of the banquet, we will draw two tickets for the two trips. Tickets are $15 each, and tables of eight can be reserved. Call 870-845- 1262 or e-mail chamber@ nashvillear.com today to reserve your table. Tickets to chamber banquet on sale now Ebenezer U.M.C. in Nash- ville will host a Heritage History Program Sun., Jan. 27 at 2:30 p.m. The Rev. Margie Johnson- Williams, of Visi- tor’s Chapel in Hot Springs, will be the speaker. Church to host heritage program Central Ar- kansas Develop- ment Council is accepting applications for the regular Low Income Home Energy Assis- tance Program (LIHEAP) in Pike County. Ap- plications will be accepted at the CADC Murfreesboro Senior Activity Center, 120 E. Court, Ste. A on Mondays only, 8 a.m. until noon. Call 870-285- 2312. Applica- tions will also be accepted at the CADC Glenwood Senior Activ- ity Center, 229 Betty St. on Tuesdays only, 8 a.m. until noon. Call 870-356- 4212. For more information, call your local CADC office. CADC accepting LIHEAP applicants

ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    4

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

THURSDAY • January 24, 2013 • Issue 7 • 1 Section • 12 Pages • In Howard County, Arkansas since 1878 • USPS 371-540 • 75 centsNashville NewsThe

IN BRIEF

t

The Safariland Group hon-ored three officers at SHOT Show who survived harrow-

ing gunfights because they were wearing the company’s body armor.

The officers told the stories of their encounters with determined, armed sus-pects during a presentation today at the Safariland booth during the Las Vegas trade show. The company inducts officers into the Safariland Saves Club, which now includes 1,830 members who survived because they were wearing Safariland body armor.

Corporal Pete Penney of the Arkansas State Police gave the first presentation. In March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent altercation ensued. During the struggle, the assailant pulled a .357 Magnum revolver and shot Cpl. Penney in the lower abdomen. The round was stopped by his ABA XT2-9 armor.

Two deputies from the Greenville County (S.C.) Sheriff’s Department then gave a joint presentation about a gunfight with a suspect under the influence of metham-phetamine who took a former girlfriend and her family hostage.

Master Deputy Jeff Maxwell and Deputy Brad Grice responded to a single-wide trailer in October. The deputies, members of the tactical team, made entry to the trailer. The suspect opened fire on the victims and the officers with a 30-30 lever-action rifle.

Maxwell was shot in the left leg; a second round glanced off his patrol rifle and hit his Protech FAV MK II armor with SM01 IIIA ballistics. The round stopped within an inch of his neck. Deputy Grice was hit in the left arm; the round was ultimately stopped by his Protech FAV MK II with SM01 IIIA ballistics bicep protector.

Copyright Police Magazine/PoliceMag.com. All rights reserved. Used with permis-sion.

Mark Clark | Police Magazine

ABOVE: Corporal Pete Penney, Deputy Brad Grice, and Master Deputy Jeff Maxwell are honored by Safariland.

PENNEYHONORED

Body armor grouprecognizes oicer’s survival

TERRICA HENDRIX

Editor

MINERAL SPRINGS – A longtime elementary principal will now serve as a programs coordi-nator for the Mineral Springs Saratoga School District.

The school board unanimously approved Interim Superintendent Bill Blackwood’s recom-mendation that Jeanie

Gorham become the dis-trict’s Federal Programs Coordinator Tuesday evening at the January board meeting.

As coordinator, Gor-ham is responsible for overseeing and imple-menting Title I : Im-proving the academic achievement of the disadvantaged; Title II: Preparing, training and recruiting high quality

Gorham appointed as Federal Programs Coordinator

DEWAYNE HOLLOWAY

Sports Editor

UMPIRE – Former Umpire school admin-istrator Donald J. Man-ning passed away Tues., Jan. 22 in Nashville.

Manning served as a principal in the Umpire School District from 1969 – 1975 and made the transition to su-perintendent where he served from 1976-1985.

Howard County JP and Umpire resident Cary Strasner remem-bered Manning best as a part of the school system.

“Nothing happened that he didn’t know about,” Strasner said in regards to Manning’s in-volvement in the school system.

“He was a strict dis-ciplinarian and we need

Former Umpire administrator passes

See UMPIRE / Page 4

See GORHAM / Page 4

Former Nashville News contributor dies

NASHVILLE - Growing up in Howard County, Wendy Haddan recorded some of her fondest childhood memories shopping on Main Street in Nashville. Today, the newly-appointed Chamber of Commerce president hopes to use her position to instill the same excitement she once felt in a new generation of youth.

“When I was small, I was so excited a couple weeks before Easter when I got to go buy Easter

SUBMITTED PHOTO | Nashville News

Ne wly - a p po i n t e d N ash v i l l e chamber of commerce president Wendy Haddan is pictured with furniture and other items purchased on Main Street in Nashville.

New chamber president hopes to inspire youth to shop locally

See SHOP / Page 4

School preparing for new teacher evaluation system

TErrICa HENDrIX I NaSHVIllE NEWS

Sammy F. Jackson received a plaque for his service as district bookkeeper Tuesday evening at the Mineral Springs Saratoga School District board meeting. He retired after 46 years with the district. Pictured (from left to right): Board Vice President William Dixon, Jackson, Dale Gathright Jr., secretary, Dornell Trotter, Mike Erwin, board president, Joann Walker and Linda Ross.

HONORING HIS SERVICE

CHARLES GOODIN

Managing Editor

NASHVILLE - Campus princi-pals at Nashville School District will begin attending training ses-sions this week to prepare them for a new form of teacher evalua-tion set to go into effect next year.

Superintendent Doug Gra-ham told school board members Tuesday that the more rigorous,

state-mandated standards will be adopted locally this summer and will be in effect at the beginning of the 2013-14 school year.

“This teacher evaluation is a very, very elaborate process with a very rigorous rubric,” Graham said.

According to the State Depart-ment of Education’s website, the new evaluation system is designed to:

• Provide school districts

a transparent and consistent teacher evaluation system that ensures effective teaching and promotes professional learning;

•Providefeedbackandasup-port system that will encourage teachers to improve their knowl-edge and instructional skills in or-der to improve student learning;

• Provide a basis for makingSee SCHOOL / Page 4

TERRICA HENDRIX

Editor

CENTER POINT – A well-known pastor, counselor and spiritual advisor passed away Wednesday.

Norman Adamson, 75, of Center Point, died at his home with his family by his side.

He was the pastor of Dodson Street Church of Christ for 12 years

and founded the Family Life Center – an after-school tutoring pro-gram. Adamson began preaching in 1957 af-ter he graduated from Southwest Christian College in Terrell, Texas, Geneva Walton said.

He was a Nashville News contributor for several years. His col-umn titled, “Coming Home,” was a source of See FORMER / Page 4

Tickets are now on sale at the Nashville Chamber of Commerce for this year’s ban-quet

The banquet will be held on Tues., Feb. 5 at 6:30 p.m. in the First Baptist Church Activity Building located on Second Street.

In addition to the award presentation, the Chamber will give away two trips; One for two people with lodging, activities, and some meals to Hot Springs, and the other to Eu-reka Springs. In Eureka Springs, one can choose from one of four packages: either a mystery week-end, an invited friend get a way weekend, a golf weekend, or a romantic get a way weekend. Simply list your name and phone number on the back of your chamber ticket at the door, and we will enter it into the drawing box. At the end of the banquet, we will draw two tickets for the two trips.

Tickets are $15 each, and tables of eight can be reserved. Call 870-845-1262 or e-mail [email protected] today to reserve your table.

Tickets to

chamber

banquet on

sale now

Ebenezer U.M.C. in Nash-ville will host a Heritage History Program Sun., Jan. 27 at 2:30 p.m.

The Rev. Margie Johnson-Williams, of Visi-tor’s Chapel in Hot Springs, will be the speaker.

Church

to host

heritage

program

Central Ar-kansas Develop-ment Council is accepting applications for the regular Low Income Home Energy Assis-tance Program (LIHEAP) in Pike County. Ap-plications will be accepted at the CADC Murfreesboro Senior Activity Center, 120 E. Court, Ste. A on Mondays only, 8 a.m. until noon. Call 870-285-2312. Applica-tions will also be accepted at the CADC Glenwood Senior Activ-ity Center, 229 Betty St. on Tuesdays only, 8 a.m. until noon. Call 870-356-4212.

For more information, call your local CADC office.

CADC

accepting

LIHEAP

applicants

Page 2: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

Postmaster, send Change of address to:

P.o. Box 297Nashville, ar 71852

Louis ‘Swampy’ Graves, Editor and Editor Emeritus, 1950-2001

Mike Graves, CEO/PublisherDonna Harwell, Comptroller/Office Mgr.Terrica Hendrix, EditorCharles Goodin, Managing EditorDewayne Holloway, Sports EditorTamzen Jarrett Cox, Advertising Manager Cindy Harding, Circulation Manager

The News is the oldest active business in Howard County -- Founded in 1878.

Find us on the Internet at: www.nashvillenews.org

NatioNal

Newspaper

associatioN

The Nashville News

USPS 371-540 P.O. Box 297 418 N. Main St. Nashville, AR 71852

Telephone (870) 845-2010Fax (870) 845-5091

Toll Free 1-888-845-NEWSEstablished 1878. Published since Sept. 1, 1979

by Graves Publishing Company, Inc.Lawrence Graves, President

Subscription rates:$30.00 per year in Howard, Pike, Sevier, Little River

and Hempstead counties;$50.00 elsewhere in continental United States

Periodicals Postage Paid at Nashville, Arkansas

any erroneous statement published in the newspaper will be

gladly and promptly corrected after management is notified.

The News is a twice weekly publication.

2 editorial Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Minutes after we were sworn into office, Arkansas House Speaker Davy Carter told us that from this day forward

history will be made by what we do, not who we are.

A short time later we were also warned this session will not be a “cakewalk”.

The issues facing us this year are challenging and will, in some way, impact your day to day lives. We will be asked to find a way to cover a shortfall in the existing Medicaid program and con-sider a possible expansion. Testi-mony on that topic is expected to begin in the next week or two.

The first measure we passed was a resolu-tion to change to House Rules. The Rules of the Arkansas House are reviewed and voted into law by the members at the beginning of every regular session. House Rules are used to govern parliamentary procedure in committees and on the House floor.

Changes include extending the waiting period from the time a bill is passed in committee to when it can be introduced on the floor. The waiting period was extended from one day to two days. Another change allows members to use electronic devices when presenting bills before a committee. The last change allows the Speaker to develop a policy to allow guests on the House floor when the House is not in ses-sion. The adopted House Rules are posted on our website.

The second measure passed was a $39 mil-lion appropriation to fund the executive, legisla-tive, and judicial branches of government. The state constitution requires that the General Appropriation Bill must be passed before any other appropriation. This $39 million appropria-tion keeps all salaries flat. Cost of living adjust-ments could be re-visited at a later date.

The clerk’s office has reported that 22 bills were pre-filed, meaning they were filed before the session began. By the end of the first week, at least 20 more had been filed.

Our committee meetings this week were more organizational in nature. We met with key agencies and were briefed on issues.

In the second week, you are going to start seeing more bills presented in committees.

We encourage all of you to stay engaged in the process. All of our House floor proceedings and many of our House committee meetings are streamed live on our website. We have also posted an article on how to find our proceed-ings on your local public access channels.

Visit www.arkansashouse.org for more.

Nate

Steel

District 21State Rep.

Legislative session will be no cake walk

Check out...

...on Facebook!

The gun control contro-versy is only the latest of many issues to be debated almost solely in terms of fixed preconceptions, with little or no examination of hard facts.

Media discussions of gun control are dominated by two factors: the National Rifle Association and the Second Amendment. But the over-riding factual question is whether gun control laws actually reduce gun crimes in general or murder rates in particular.

If, as gun control advo-cates claim, gun control laws really do control guns and save lives, there is noth-ing to prevent repealing the Second Amendment, any more than there was any-thing to prevent repealing the Eighteenth Amendment that created Prohibition.

But, if the hard facts show that gun control laws do not actually control guns, but instead lead to more armed robberies and higher mur-der rates after law-abiding citizens are disarmed, then gun control laws would be a bad idea, even if there were no Second Amendment and no National Rifle Associa-tion.

The central issue boils down to the question: What are the facts? Yet there are many zealots who seem utterly unconcerned about

facts or about their own lack of knowledge of facts.

There are people who have never fired a shot in their life who do not hesi-tate to declare how many bullets should be the limit to put into a firearm's clip or magazine. Some say ten bullets but New York state's recent gun control law speci-fies seven.

Virtually all gun control advocates say that 30 bul-lets in a magazine is far too many for self-defense or hunting — even if they have never gone hunting and nev-er had to defend themselves with a gun. This uninformed and self-righteous dogma-tism is what makes the gun control debate so futile and so polarizing.

Anyone who faces three home invaders, jeopardizing himself or his family, might find 30 bullets barely ad-equate. After all, not every bullet hits, even at close range, and not every hit incapacitates. You can get killed by a wounded man.

These plain life-and-death realities have been ignored for years by people who go ballistic when they hear about how many shots were fired by the police in some encounter with a criminal.

As someone who once taught pistol shooting in the Marine Corps, I am not the least bit surprised by the

number of shots fired. I have seen people miss a station-ary target at close range, even in the safety and calm of a pistol range.

We cannot expect every-body to know that. But we can expect them to know that they don't know — and to stop spouting off about life-and-death issues when they don't have the facts.

The central question as to whether gun control laws save lives or cost lives has generated many factual studies over the years. But these studies have been like the proverbial tree that falls in an empty forest, and has been heard by no one — certainly not by zealots who have made up their minds and don't want to be confused by the facts.

Most factual studies show no reduction in gun crimes, including murder, under gun control laws. A significant number of studies show higher rates of murder and other gun crimes under gun control laws.

How can this be? It seems obvious to some gun control

zealots that, if no one had guns, there would be fewer armed robberies and fewer people shot to death.

But nothing is easier than to disarm peaceful, law-abiding people. And nothing is harder than to disarm people who are neither — especially in a country with hundreds of millions of guns already out there, that are not going to rust away for centuries.

When it was legal to buy a shotgun in London in the middle of the 20th century, there were very few armed robberies there. But, after British gun control zealots managed over the years to disarm virtually the en-tire law-abiding population, armed robberies became literally a hundred times more common. And murder rates rose.

One can cherry-pick the factual studies, or cite some studies that have subse-quently been discredited, but the great bulk of the studies show that gun con-trol laws do not in fact con-trol guns. On net balance, they do not save lives but cost lives.

Gun control laws allow some people to vent their emotions, politicians to grandstand and self-righ-teous people to "make a statement" — but all at the cost of other people's lives.

Rarely have second terms lived up to the hopes and expectations of presidents or their electorates.

FDR's began with an at-tempt to pack the Supreme Court by adding new jus-tices and a second Depres-sion of 1937. He was rescued only by the war in Europe in 1939 and the GOP's nomina-tion of "the barefoot boy from Wall Street," Wendell Willkie.

What can be called Harry Truman's second term was a disaster.

In 1949, the Soviets ex-ploded an atom bomb and China fell to Mao. In 1950, the Rosenbergs were con-victed as atomic spies for Stalin and North Korea in-vaded the South, igniting a three-year war Truman could not win or end.

He lost the New Hamp-shire primary in 1952 to Sen. Estes Kefauver, dropped out and saw would-be suc-cessor Adlai Stevenson crushed by Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, as Republicans captured Congress. Truman left with the lowest ap-proval rating of a president before or since.

In his second term, Ike did better, but suffered a GOP defeat in 1958, saw Fidel Castro seize Cuba in January of 1959, and had the U-2 shot down by Russia in May 1960 and his Paris summit blown up by Nikita Khrushchev, who berated Ike to his face. His vice presi-dent, Richard Nixon, then lost the White House.

The Kennedy-Johnson second term began spec-

tacularly, with passage of all the Great Society legislation. But, in 1966, LBJ's party suf-fered huge losses. In 1968, that year of assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy, of race riots in a hundred cities, and of campus anarchy, antiwar protests and an endless war in Vietnam, LBJ was challenged in the primaries, quit the race, and saw Nixon succeed him.

After his own 49-state re-election victory, Nixon did not survive his second term. Jimmy Carter did not get a second term.

Ronald Reagan comes close to being the exception.

While he lost 10 Senate seats in 1986, he cut income tax rates from 50 to 28 per-cent, and his summiteering with Mikhail Gorbachev is seen as a historic success, leading to America's victory in the Cold War.

The Iran-Contra scandal — trading of arms to Iran for hostages in Lebanon — almost broke his presidency. But by the time Reagan left in 1989, his popularity had been restored, the Cold War was ending, and his vice president was taking the oath of office to succeed him.

George H.W. Bush was de-nied a second term. And the main event of Bill Clinton's was his impeachment and Senate trial for the Monica Lewinsky affair.

In his second term, George W. Bush lost his battle for Social Security reform and lost both houses of Congress in 2006, ending

his presidency with America mired in two unwinnable wars and plunging into a near-depression.

By January 2009, Bush's approval rating was ap-proaching the Truman low, and his party had lost the White House.

About Obama's second term it is hard to be san-guine.

The hopeful news is that, after four years, the U.S. economy appears to be re-covering. Progress is slow, but we seem to be out of intensive care and walking the hospital halls.

The perils, however, are visibly present. With its mas-sive creation of money, the Federal Reserve is taking an immense risk that as recov-ery takes root, inflation may explode. And the hostility between President Obama and House Republicans likely means no big deal to constrain future deficits. Obama added $5 trillion to America's debt bomb in his first term, and his second promises the same.

This cannot go on for-ever. Foreign and domestic creditors will one day de-mand a risk premium for lending money to Uncle Sam.

But it is abroad where the problems and perils seem imminent.

Iraq is drifting toward

sectarian-civil-ethnic war. Few are optimistic about the fate of Syria when Bashar Assad falls. Even fewer are optimistic about Afghani-stan after U.S. troops depart. The Taliban of Afghanistan's past may be her future.

N o t w i t h s t a n d i n g Obama's campaign claim about al-Qaida being "on the run," Islamism and Islamist terrorism seem to be growth stocks in the Sahel region of Africa, the Maghreb, and the Middle and Near East, all the way to nuclear-armed Pakistan.

In East Asia, escalating tensions between Japan and China are spawning a new nationalism in both nations, and now warships and jet fighters of both have begun circling the Senkaku Islands.

The most immediate cri-sis may come this year, when a re-elected Bibi Netanyahu and his neocon and War Party allies demand of the president an ultimatum to Tehran, followed by U.S. air strikes on its nuclear facili-ties at Natanz and Fordow if Iran does not capitulate.

Obama may be dreaming of amnesty for illegal aliens and a Federal Gun Registry, but most of us would settle for no more wars and no double-dip recession.

Remarkable how the ex-pectations of Americans seem so modest compared to what they were when we were young.

Today, the minimalist slogan, "General Motors is alive, and Osama bin Laden is dead!" is enough to get you re-elected president.

PatBuchananCreators

Syndicate

Obama’s second term

ThomasSowell

Creators

Syndicate

Does gun control, control guns?

Page 3: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

obituaries 3 Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Puzzle AnswersGun It!

N

A

B

S

A

D

D

S

G

O

A

P

E

O

R

E

O

P

R

A

Y

A

C

T

A

S

T

R

E

F

P

E

N

N

Y

S

T

O

C

K

C

A

R

T

H

A

G

E

A

M

A

Z

E

S

H

U

B

E

L

S

G

M

A

N

A

B

E

L

R

E

M

I

T

T

A

L

M

O

R

A

L

L

A

T

E

N

A

N

A

O

K

R

A

C

I

G

A

R

S

C

T

V

O

L

E

S

A

G

E

T

N

O

K

I

A

S

A

L

T

I

N

E

S

P

I

T

H

E

D

E

R

S

A

C

A

M

P

U

N

I

T

E

R

H

E

R

K

I

M

E

R

M

I

C

R

O

S

C

O

P

E

O

M

A

N

P

L

A

I

N

O

L

I

N

N

E

R

D

S

E

N

S

E

P

E

A

T

A

R

A

L

© 200 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2787-D

7 8 5 1 6 2 3 9 4

4 9 2 8 3 5 1 6 7

3 1 6 4 7 9 5 8 2

5 6 3 7 2 4 9 1 8

8 2 4 5 9 1 7 3 6

9 7 1 3 8 6 4 2 5

2 4 9 6 1 7 8 5 3

1 3 7 2 5 8 6 4 9

6 5 8 9 4 3 2 7 1

Lois King, 91, loving mother, Jan. 21Lois King, age 91, of Nashville, died on

Monday, January 21, 2013 in Nashville. She was born on October 22, 1921 in Salt Springs, Arkansas, the daughter of the late James Adi-son Hartness and Rena (Rhodes) Hartness.

She was a homemaker and member of the New Mt.Zion Baptist Church.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus-band, Beedie King; two grandsons, Michael Hall and Lance Bowden; three brothers, Otis Hartness, Elbert Hartness and Elmer Hartness; two sisters, Lottie Tinkes and Velma Lee Hartness and one step-son, Jim King.

She is survived by one son, Alton Par-

son and wife, LaVeda of Ashdown; two daughters, Wilma Bowden and husband,

Jerry of Nashville and Ima Sem-mler of Mineral Springs; one step daughter, Doris Sillivan of Nixa, Missouri; one sister, Vel Bevill and husband, Hershel of Nash-ville; 17 grandchildren; 36 great grandchildren; nine great great

grandchildren and a host of other relatives and friends mourn her

passing.Graveside services were held on

January 24, 2013 at 10:00 a.m. at Mineral Springs Cemetery with Brother Ben Jones oficiating, under the direction of Latimer Funeral Home, Nashville.

You may send an online sympathy mes-sage at www.latimerfuneralhome.com.

Ronnie “Hacksaw” Mounts, 56, loving father, Jan. 20Ronnie “Hacksaw” Mounts, age 56,

of Newhope, died Sunday, January 20, 2013. He was born on March 23, 1956, at DeQueen, the son of Wil-burn Mounts and Elberteen Pate Mounts. On November 4, 1978, he was married to Becky Jester.

He was preceded in death by his parents and his father-in-law, Deloy Jester.

He was a logger, a Christian and a member of the Pleasant Grove Free Will Baptist Church.

He is survived by his wife, Becky Mounts of Newhope; two sons and daugh-ters-in-law, Nic and Michelle Mounts of Glenwood and Todd and Shanna Mounts of Dierks; one daughter and son-in-law, Brandi and Barry Tolleson of Kirby; eight grandchildren, Hannah, Tripp, Kason, Karter, Adi, Gus, Bo and Sadie; three

brothers, Terry Mounts, Jerry Mounts and his twin, Donnie Mounts, all of Dierks;

and his mother-in-law, Ceola Jester of Newhope.

Services were held at 10:00 a.m., Wednesday, January 23, 2013, in the Pleasant Grove Free Will Baptist Church with Bro. Kenny Fant and Bro. Raymond Dees oficiating.

Visitation was held Tuesday, 6:00 PM until 8:00 PM, at the funeral home.

Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove Cemetery under the direction of Davis-Smith Funeral Home, Glenwood.

Pallbearers will be Jeffrey Hill, Joe Hill, Jackie Jones, James Sebren, Rhodie Romine and Mark Story.

Guest registry is at www.davis-smith.com.

Charlie Bennet, 69, loving father, Jan. 20Charlie Bennett, age 69, of Mineral

Springs, died on Sunday, January 20, 2013 in Shreveport, Louisiana. He was born on July 27, 1943 in Bluff Springs, to the late Noah Bennett and Oma (Shoals) Bennett.

He was a member of the As-sembly of God Church and was a plater for the Shear Plant.

In addition to his parents, Mr. Bennett was preceded in death by two brothers, Opal Bennett and Walter Bennett and two sisters, Ruthie Carmichael and Lorraine Carmichael.

He is survived by one son, Charlie Ben-nett and Youlonda of Mineral Springs; three daughters, Carolyn Wynn and hus-band, Don of Nashville, Rachell Hamil-ton and husband, Alex of Nashville, and Joey McGill and husband, Bill of North

Carolina; close friend, Dorothy Stone of Mineral Springs; seven grandchildren,

Zackery Bennett, Stormi Bennett, Cheyenne Parker, Cieria Wynn, K C Kirtley, BreAnna Shelly and Mincey McGill and a host of nieces, nephews, and other rela-tives and friends mourn his pass-ing.

Services were held on Thursday, Janu-ary 24, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. at Latimer Fu-neral Home Chapel with Johnny Stuart oficiating.

Burial to follow in Antioch Cemetery under the direction of Latimer Funeral Home, Nashville.

Visitation was Wednesday from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. at the funeral home.

You may send an online sympathy mes-sage at www.latimerfuneralhome.com.

Donald Manning, 79, retired Superintendent Umpire, Jan. 22

Donald J. Manning, age 79, of Umpire, passed away on Tuesday, January 22, 2013 in

Nashville. He was born on August 26, 1933 in Belton, Arkansas, the son of the late, “Doc” Harvey Manning and Sarah Lane Manning.

He was a retired Superintendent of Um-pire Schools, past member of the Howard Memorial Hospital Board of Directors, on the Board of Directors for Rich Mountain Electric Coop for 38 years, First National Bank Board of Directors for 28 years, pio-neer of the Umpire Volunteer Fire Dept., and he raised cattle and horses all of his life. He served in the Army during the Ko-rean War.

In addition to his parents, he was pre-ceded in death by irst wife, Jane Manas-co; two brothers and four sisters.

He is survived by his wife, Peggy Man-ning of Umpire; two sons, Charles Man-

ning and wife, Tina, of Alexander, and Cheyne Manning of Umpire; one daugh-ter, Carla Golden and husband, Kyle, of Kirby; ive grandchildren, Vanessa Samp-son and husband, Brian, Alden Manning, Kyla Golden, Sarah Jane Manning and Caleigh Manning; one sister, Faye Pate of Glendale, Oregon; one sister-in-law, Pat Parson of Hot Springs Village; and two special nieces, Wanda Gaye Cooley and Jane Brown and a host of other relatives and friends mourn his passing.

Services will be at 10:00 a.m., Saturday, January 26, 2013 at the Umpire Gym with Don Vaughn and Scott Kitchens oficiat-ing. Burial to follow in Athens Cemetery in Athens under the direction of Latimer Funeral Home, Nashville.

Visitation will be on Friday from 6:00 to 8:00 at Wilkerson in Dierks, Arkansas.

You may send an online sympathy mes-sage at www.latimerfuneralhome.com.

Maude TurnerMaude Turner, age 96

of McCaskill, Arkansas, died on Tuesday, January, 15, 2013. She was born on August 16, 1916 at Tula, Mississippi.

She is survived by one sister, Atha Buggs of Grand Rapids, Michigan; one daughter-in-law, Precious Kirkwood of Chicago, Illinois; six grandchildren; ifteen great grandchildren; thirty-six great great grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends.

Visitation will be held 11am-5pm Friday at the funeral home.

Funeral services will be held 11:00 a.m. Saturday, January 26 at Goff Chapel CME Church in McCaskill, Arkansas. Interment will be at St. Peter Cemetery in Ozan.

Arrangments entrusted to Hicks Funeral Home, Inc.

Lue Ethel JeffersonLue Ethel Jefferson,

age 80 of Washington, Arkansas died on Saturday, January 19, 2013. She was born on July 20, 1932 in Hempstead County, Arkansas.

She is survived by eight children, David L. Jefferson, Jr. (Sharlett) of Nashville, Edward Jefferson of Phoenix, Arizona, Linda Jefferson of Macedonia, Diann Williamson of Columbus, Shara Ann Brown of Macedonia, Wayne Jefferson (Katrina) of Forest City, Thomas Jefferson of Mesa, Arizona and Gregory Jefferson (Dolly) of Prescott; twenty-six grandchildren, twenty-eight great grandchildren; three great-great grandchildren; one brother, Dorothy Adams of Texarkana and a host of relatives and friends.

Visitation will be held 11am-5pm, family hour 5-6pm Friday at the funeral home.

Funeral services will be 2:30 p.m. Saturday, January 26 at Macedonia Baptist Church

Interment will be at Macedonia Cemetery in Columbus.

Arrangements are entrusted to Hicks Funeral Home, Inc.

Norman AdamsonNorman R. Adamson,

age 75 of Center Point, Arkansas, passed away, Wednesday, January 23, 2013 at his home with his family by his side. Services are pending at this time with Nashville Funeral Home.

Public input is a crucial component of the Arkan-sas Game and Fish Com-mission’s process for set-ting hunting and fishing regulations. Meetings are part of the AGFC’s annual hunting-regulations pro-cess, providing hunters with the opportunity to make comments and pro-posals on the 2013-14 hunt-ing seasons. The meetings will be held 7 p.m.-9 p.m., Jan. 29, at the following locations:

* Calico Rock AGFC Re-gional Office, 1125 Highway 56, Calico Rock, 877-297-4331

* Fayetteville Ozark Electric Cooperative Cor-poration, 3641 Wedington Drive, Fayetteville, 866-253-2506

* Hope AGFC Regional Office, 7004 Highway 67 East, Perrytown, 877-777-5580

* Jonesboro Forrest L. Wood Crowley’s Ridge Na-ture Center, 600 East Law-

son Road, Jonesboro, 877-972-5438

* Litt le Rock AGFC Central Office 2 Natural Resources Drive, Little Rock, 800-364-4263

* Monticello AGFC Re-gional Office 771 Jordan Drive, Monticello, 877-367-3559

* Mount Ida Montgom-ery County Courthouse 105 Highway 270 East, Mt. Ida, 877-478-1043

* Russellville AGFC Re-gional Office 1266 Lock and

Dam Road, Russellville, 877-967-7577

Written comments may be submitted at any of the meetings or mailed by Feb. 28 to the AGFC, attn: Hunting Regulations Proposals, 2 Natural Re-sources Drive, Little Rock, AR 72205. There will be a brief presentation starting at 7 p.m. followed by oral comments from the public. After the meeting, AGFC personnel will be available to answer questions.

AG&FC to hold public meetings

LITTLE ROCK - Gover-nor Mike Beebe has sent a letter to President Obama requesting a major disas-ter declaration for seven Arkansas counties effected by the Christmas winter storm that brought ice and heavy snow into Arkansas.

Those counties include Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Lonoke, Perry, Pulaski and Saline Counties.

The seven counties sus-tained an estimated $9 mil-lion in storm damage, with three-quarters of that total coming from debris-re-

moval costs. Assessment teams from the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management and the Fed-eral Emergency Manage-ment Agency have spent the past few weeks touring damaged areas.

Federal aid resulting

f rom the declarat ion would help state and lo-cal agencies recover their costs from the storm re-sponse. This Arkansas storm did not meet the eli-gibility criteria to obtain assistance for individual victims.

Beebe seeks winter storm disaster declaration

WASHINGTON Jan. 15, 2013 – Agriculture Secre-tary Tom Vilsack today an-nounced that over $323 mil-lion will be paid to 41 states and Puerto Rico in two distributions to support local schools and roads as part of the Congressional one-year reauthorization of the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Deter-mination Act.

“These payments are part of the Department of Agriculture’s long-stand-ing commitment to rural communities, schools and American youth,” said Vil-sack. “Our century-long support of America’s public schools and roads is one of many ways in which the Forest Service, as a good neighbor and partner, con-tributes to rural communi-ties becoming self-sustain-ing and prosperous.”

Below are the fiscal year 2012 amounts being distrib-uted this month.

Arkansas $6,653,117Kentucky $1,586,483Louisiana $1,734,539

Mississippi $5,552,034Missouri $3,352,723Oklahoma $916,663Tennessee $1,149,582Texas $2,331,150Total $291,402,691The actual amount of

each state’s payment is determined by a number of factors written into the law, including how many counties ultimately decide to share in that payment. Each county’s share of their state’s payment amounts can be found on the Forest Service Web site at http://www.fs.usda.gov/main/pts/securepayments/projected-payments.

Earlier this year the U.S. Forest Service sent letters to each state advising them of the opportunity for coun-ties where national forests are situated to receive a share of the state’s pay-ment based on the July 6 reauthorization of the act.

New language in the reauthorization required states to inform the agency how counties plan to al-locate their share of the

state’s payment. The pay-ments may be used for sup-porting public schools and public roads, for projects to help maintain and improve the health of forests, and for county projects includ-ing “Firewise Communities” programs, reimbursements for emergency services on national forests, and de-velopment of community wildfire protection plans.

“These forest projects were reviewed and recom-mended by resource advi-sory committees made up of local residents working together to improve the en-vironment and help provide jobs in rural communities,” Vilsack said.

Nearly $32 million in support for Title II projects will be sent out in April. The payments listed above also include $6 million to Min-nesota under 16 U.S.C. 577g, seven thousand dollars to Arkansas under Section 323 of P.L. 100-446, and six thou-sand dollars to Washington state under Section 4 of P.L. 100-638.

Since 1908, the Forest Service has shared with states 25 percent of gross receipts from timber sales, grazing, minerals, recre-ation, and other land use fees on national forests to benefit public schools and public roads in the counties in which the forests are situated.

In the late 1980s, due largely to declines in timber sale receipts, payments began to drop significantly and fluctuate widely. In 1994, Congress responded by providing “safety net payments” to counties in northern California, west-ern Oregon and western Washington.

In 2000, Congress passed the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-De-termination Act that pro-vided enhanced, stabilized payments to more states through 2006. The act was extended for one year and then reauthorized in 2008 for four more years. Last year’s reauthorization pro-vides benefits for an addi-

Forestry Service announces rural school funding details

tional year.The mission of the U.S.

Forest Service is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations. The agency manages 193 million acres of public land, pro-vides assistance to state and private landowners, and maintains the largest for-estry research organization in the world. Forest Service lands contribute more than $13 billion to the economy each year through visitor spending alone. Those same lands provide 20 percent of the nation’s clean water sup-ply, a value estimated at $27 billion per year.

Page 4: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

4 Jumps Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Housing Authority of the County of Howard,

Arkansas will receive bids to supply labor to install one thousand eight hundred seventy-seven (1,877) linear feet of ornamental iron fence and two (2) seven-foot gates at its S. Pope Street site located in Nashville, Arkansas. Prior to the submission of bids, the contractor shall visit the proposed construction site and become familiar with all existing conditions that will affect the installation of this fence.

Bids must be submitted in duplicate to the Housing Authority ofice located at 1010 S. Pope Street, Nashville, Arkansas, no later than 2:00 P.M. on Thursday, February 7, 2013.

The contact person for this job is Dave Smith and he can be contacted by coming to the Housing Authority ofice or by telephone at (870) 845-1080 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., or by cell phone at (870) 557-6648 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Minority- and/or women-owned businesses are encouraged to respond. The Housing Authority reserves the right to reject any and all bids.

Bobby Keaster, Executive Director(HCHA:5-7; w180)

www.edwardjones.com

Roll your old 401(k)without taxes or penalties.

Josh Tice, AAMS®Financial Advisor.

106 South Main StNashville, AR 71852870-451-9232

Member SIPC

Timbers

• Hwy 27 N • Murfreesboro •

•• PRESENTS ••

January 26th

Raising Grey •Feb 2Live Wire • Feb 9

Download • Feb 16

he Best Entertainment In SW Arkansas

• Private Club Members & Guest Only• With Memberships Available

• Must Be 21 to enter

Revelry Live

Happy Birthday To My Beautiful

JIMI (like the boy but spelled different)

“Friends to the end no matter

whose team DON’T

win!”

“ You and Me, We is Like Saints & Stars”

Love You, Tamzen

more like him in our schools today,” Strasner stated.

Manning, who was 79, also served on the Howard Memorial Hospital Board of Directors, The Rich Mountain Electric Coop Board of Directors and First Na-

tional Bank Board of Directors.Manning, also was an instrumental

part of the Umpire Volunteer Fire Depart-ment in its infancy.

Services will be held Sat., Jan. 26 at 10 a.m. at the Umpire Gymnasium.

teachers and principals; Title IV: Safe and drug free schools; NSLA: Na-tional School Lunch Act; professional development as it pertains to federal

programs; and any other federal/state programs as assigned.

Saratoga Elementary Principal Charles Hanson will assume Gorham’s du-ties as Mineral Springs Elementary principal.

Gorham has 35 years in the educational profession with the last 27 years as

elementary principal.After a 54-minute execu-

tive session for personnel issues, the board voted unanimously to accept the resignations of Business Manager Sammy F. Jack-son and LeMerle Crosslin, technology department employee.

Jackson retired after 46

years with the district and was in attendance Tuesday evening before the board meeting. Board President Mike Erwin presented Jack-son with a plaque for his dedicated service to the district. During his 55-year career, Jackson taught business education and was the district treasurer

and bookkeeper at various schools including Mur-freesboro, Prescott and Mineral Springs.

The board unanimous-ly hired: Frankie Darr as business manager, Marla Williams as district book-keeper and Liz Ann Bell as a full-time technology department employee.

The board also ap-proved a Fixed Assets-Purged items list for the 2011-2012 year.

Blackwood told the board that a fiscal distress workshop (for board mem-bers) will be held soon and that Vista Health is now of-fering counseling services for the district.

shoes at Quality Shoes,” she explained during a re-cent interview. “I’d love to get back to that feeling on Main Street where the kids are excited - the younger generation is excited about getting to go to Quality Shoes, or wherever, and

get something new here in town.”

The effort to encourage local shopping represents half of what Haddan, a 25-year employee of Bell’s Vi-sion Center and lifelong Min-eral Springs resident, calls the ‘theme’ of her year in the chamber’s top position.

The other half of the plan is to encourage strong relationships and coopera-tion with other chambers

of commerce across the state.

“If I call a chamber some-where and work something out with their chamber, they’re more likely to say, ‘Yaknow, if you’re going to southwest Arkansas, Nashville has a real neat park.’ I think that’s kind of my theme for my year,” she said.

Members and guests who attend the annual

chamber banquet Feb. 5 will have a chance to experience the earliest fruits of Haddan’s efforts to reach out to other cities as the chamber offers two getaway packages as door prizes.

Haddan said the idea was born when the board considered giving away a cruise at the event, but de-cided against the measure in the interest of keeping

money in the state.“It doesn’t make any

sense sending our money to Mexico when we want people to spend money in Nashville,” she said. “If we want to promote our area, we need to promote other areas in the state.”

With that in mind, Had-dan said she contacted chambers of commerce in Hot Springs and Eu-reka Springs, arranging

two vacation packages to the popular recreational destinations that will be up for grabs at the banquet where she will be officially introduced as president.

Haddan has two chil-dren, Tyler and Peyton, and has been married to her husband, Earl, for 25 years. They are members of the Mineral Springs Church of Christ.

-Charles Goodin

teacher employment deci-sions;

•Provideanintegrated

system that links evalua-tion procedures with cur-

ricular standards, profes-sional development activi-ties, targeted support and human capital decisions;

• Encourage highly ef-fective teachers to under-take challenging assign-ments;

• Support teachers’

roles in improving stu-

dents’ educational achieve-ments;

• Inform policymakers

regarding the benefits of a consistent evaluation and support system in re-gard to improving student achievement across the state;

• Increase the aware-

ness of parents and guard-ians of students concern-ing the effectiveness of teachers.

According to Graham, campus principals will be required to pass a sev-en hour test on the new standards before moving forward with evaluations

under the guidelines.G r a h a m s a i d t h e

school’s teachers will also receive four days of train-ing on the subject in June.

In other business, the school board:

• voted unanimously

to renew its legal liability insurance with no changes

made to the policy;•heldanhour-longex-

ecutive session which was followed by the extension of Graham’s contract into 2016;

•wasinformedthatthe

district will begin seeking applicants for a second boys’ basketball coach.

SHOPFrom Page 1

GORHAMFrom Page 1

SCHOOLFrom Page 1

information on his life, views and advice. “I was honored to serve with Dr. Adamson,”

Graves Publishing Company CEO Mike Graves said. “He was courageous. He was not afraid to be controversial, but was not controversial to be at odds with people. He was a man of God Almighty.” Graves served as chairman on the FLC board.

“He [Adamson] was a minister in Chicago [be-fore moving back to Center Point] and retired as a post master,” Walton added. He worked at Post Offices in Texas, Macon, Ga., Waco, Texas, Tyler, Texas, Memphis, Tenn., Chicago, Maryland and D.C., according to Walton. “His last assignment was at Tyson as a chaplain,” she confirmed.

He is survived by his wife, Helen, and four children. The two were married for 53 years.

Services are pending at this time with Nash-ville Funeral Home.

FORMERFrom Page 1

UMPIREFrom Page 1

WASHINGTON - Today Congressman Tom Cotton (AR-04) was named to the Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit Subcom-mittee and the Domestic & International Monetary Policy Subcommittee of the House Committee on Financial Services.

“I am pleased and ex-cited to be named to these two subcommittees. More than four years after the financial crisis, much work remains to be done in ensuring our financial markets remain free, fair, and competitive in order to best serve individuals and small businesses in

Arkansas.“Unfortunately, the reg-

ulatory overreach of the Dodd-Frank law constrains small community banks while the Federal Reserve continues its adventures in the largest monetary stimulus in our history.

“As with most instances of government excess in Washington, hardworking families and small business owners bear the ultimate burden. I promised during my campaign to fight these excesses, and that’s what I intend to do on the Finan-cial Services Committee,” said Cotton.

The Financial Institu-

tions and Consumer Credit Subcommittee is chaired by Congressman Scott Garrett (R-NJ) and has jurisdiction over all finan-cial regulators, such as the Federal Deposit Insur-ance Corporation and the Federal Reserve, all mat-ters concerning consumer credit, to include the Con-sumer Credit Protection Act and access to financial services, along with the security and soundness of the banking system.

The Domestic & Inter-national Monetary Policy Subcommittee is chaired by Congressman John Campbell (R-CA) and over-

sees domestic monetary policy, multidimensional development loan institu-tions, coins and currency including operations of the Bureau of the Mint and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and international trade and finance includ-ing all matters concerning the International Monetary Fund and the Export-Im-port Bank.

The first Financial Ser-vices Committee hearing of the 113th Congress will be on January 23, 2013, when the committee will adopt rules governing the committee’s operations and structure.

Cotton appointed to committees

Check out

on Facebook!

NORMAN ADAMSON

Page 5: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

Authority ofice located at 1010 S. Pope Street, Nashville, Arkansas, no later than 2:00 P.M. on Thursday, February 7, 2013.

ofice or by telephone at (870) 845-1080 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., or by cell phone at (870) 557-6648 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Minority- and/or women-owned businesses

(HCHA:5-7; w180) • Hwy 27 N • Murfreesboro •

•• PRESENTS ••

Raising Grey •Feb 2Live Wire • Feb 9

Download • Feb 16

he Best Entertainment In SW Arkansas

• Private Club Members & Guest Only• With Memberships Available

• Must Be 21 to enter

(like the boy but spelled different)

“Friends to the end no matter

whose team DON’T

win!”

“ You and Me, We is Like Saints & Stars”

•Provideanintegrated

• Encourage highly ef

• Support teachers’

• Inform policymakers

• Increase the aware

• voted unanimously

•heldanhour-longex

•wasinformedthatthe

SHOPFrom Page 1

GORHAMFrom Page 1

SCHOOLFrom Page 1

FORMERFrom Page 1

UMPIREFrom Page 1

Opening the front door on a cold winter evening and being greeted by the inviting smells of beef stew or pot roast wafting from a crockpot can be a busy woman’s dream come true. And according to the Uni-versity of Arkansas, Coop-erative Extension Service, the crockpot can be used safely to prepare delicious meals that will also save time in food preparation.

The crockpot is a coun-tertop appliance that cooks food slowly at a low temperature - gener-ally between 170 and 280 degrees. One major ad-vantage of the crockpot is that the low heat helps less expensive lean cuts of meat become tender and shrink less.

The direct heat from the crockpot, lengthy cooking, and steam created within the tightly-covered con-tainer combine to destroy bacteria and make the crockpot a safe process for cooking foods. But as with any other type of food preparation, you will still need to keep some basic food safety rules in mind when using the crockpot.

Begin with a clean cook-er, clean utensils and a clean work area. Wash your hands before and during food preparation. A good rule to follow is to wash your hands with warm soapy water each time you change tasks. An example would be pre-paring the meat for the cooker, stopping to wash

hands and utensils, and then preparing the veg-etables for a salad.

Keep perishable foods refrigerated until prepa-ration time. If you cut up meat and vegetables in advance, store them sepa-rately in the refrigerator.

The crockpot may take several hours to reach a safe, bacteria-killing tem-perature. Constant re-frigeration assures that bacteria, which multiply rapidly at room tempera-ture, won’t get a “head start” during the first few hours of cooking. Always defrost meat or poultry before putting it into a crockpot.

Cut food into chunks or small pieces to ensure thorough cooking. Do not use the crockpot for large pieces like a large roast or whole chicken because the food will cook so slow-ly it could remain in the bacterial “danger zone” too long. Fill the crockpot no less than half full and no more than two-thirds full.

This may seem strange, but vegetables cook slow-er than meat and poultry in a crockpot; so if using them, put vegetables in first, at the bottom and around the sides of the utensil. Then add meat and cover the food with liquid such as broth, water or barbecue sauce. Keep the lid in place, removing it only to stir the food or check for doneness.

Most crockpots have two or more settings.

Foods take different times to cook depending upon the setting used. Certainly, foods will cook faster on high than on low. However, for all day cooking or for less tender cuts, you may want to use the low setting.

If possible, turn the crockpot on the highest setting for the first hour of cooking time and then to low or the setting called for in your recipe. How-ever, it’s safe to cook foods on low the entire time - if you’re leaving for work, for example, and prepara-tion time is limited.

Don’t worry about over-cooking food. It is almost

impossible in a crockpot. While food is cooking and once it’s done, food will stay safe as long as the crockpot is operating.

If you are not a home during the entire slow-cooking process and the power goes out, throw away the food even if it looks done. If you are at home, finish cooking the ingredients immediately by some other means - on a gas stove, on the out-door grill or at a friend’s house where the power is on. When you are at home, and if the food was com-pletely cooked before the power went out, the food

should remain safe up to two hours in the cooker with the power off.

Store leftovers in shal-low covered containers and refrigerate within two hours after cooking is fin-ished. Reheating leftovers in a crockpot is not recom-mended. However, cooked food can be brought to steaming on the stove top or in a microwave oven and then put into a pre-heated crockpot to keep hot for serving.

For more information about using your crockpot to prepare meals, contact the Howard County Coop-erative Extension Service.

Recipe of the WeekHere’s a great recipe for

the crockpot. Be sure to cut the meat into smaller pieces. You can omit the step for browning in a

skillet if you are short on time. The meat will brown as it cooks; you just miss out on some of the flavor.

Basic Pot Roast1 (3 - 4 lb.) rump or

chuck roast1 tsp. salt¼ tsp. pepper2 Tbsp. oil3 medium potatoes,

pared and quartered3 medium carrots, cut

into 2-in. pieces2 m e d i u m o n i o n s ,

halved½ cup water or beef

brothSeason meat with salt

and pepper. Heat oil in skillet and brown meat on all sides. Place half of vegetables in bottom of crockpot, add meat, then add other vegetables and liquid. Cook on low 10-12 hours, or high 5 hours. Yield: 4-6 servings.

commuNity 5Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Call Us for All Your Electrical Needs!

• COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL• LICENSED • INSURED • BONDED

870-200-4658M-7767

KJEP‐TV Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednes. Thurs. Friday Satur.: am Always Good News Wretched TV Gaither Homecoming : am MXTV Completing Kaden Peculiar Greater Than Gold th St. Theatre Christiano Films : am Movie Walk On Water Newsboys Way of the Master Genesis Week TV One Life Movie : am W. Coast PraZe The Drive Revolution Ybb TV Youth Bytes : am Worship RidgewayBaptist FirstBaptist Nashville ImmanuelBaptist Worship : am : am Worship Network Worship Network : am : am Worship Club Worship: am TBA TBA: am Continuum Start Your Day Visibly Fit HarvestTime Rise Up Christian Fitness Pure Passion : am Awakening Hour Bethlehem Glory Bethlehem Glory Poor Boys : am Faith For Living Quick Study Ultimate Outdoors : am Time For Hope Oasis Ministries Garner Ted Armstrong : am North Florida Baptist Church Ridgeway Baptist HarvestTime Today With God Extreme Christian Outdoors : am Through the Bible Backwoods Angler : am Sherwood Baptist Church Club ImmanuelBaptist Club Woods & Water : am The Road Less Traveled : am Dare To Love Know the Cause Outdoors : am Back To Jerusalem Wingshooting USA : am Brian Rogers Your Health End of the Age : am Day of Discovery American Outdoorsman : am TBA Products For Healthy Living Natural Healing Fishing Edge : am Through the Bible Crosstalk Outdoors : pm Cross the Bridge Ridgeway Baptist FirstBaptist Nashville Precepts New Life NLJC Precepts Dynamic Outdoors : pm Living On the Edge God’s View Babbie’s Home Fishing Edge : pm TBA New Life Live New Life Live With Steve Arterburn TBA: pm Manna Fest Bob Vila: pm Inspirational Camp Meeting For Your Home HarvestTime Home & Style Dr. Anna Marie Eat Free Eye On Gardening : pm Marriage Today Marriage Today Golfing Country : pm Donkey Ollie Ms. Charity’s Diner ImmanuelBaptist Dooley Adven. Odyssey American Spirit : pm Think Big Swap TV Passport/Explore Dragon Fly Steel Dreams : pm News CBN Newswatch BonanZa : pm Mani Erfan Animal Rescue Aqua Kids Ishine Real Winning Edge Real Life : pm Truth Than Transforms Travel w/Spirit Tn. Wild Side Heart In Carolina Traveler Eye On Travel Harmony Road : pm TBA Distant Roads Life Head‐On Always Good News Expedition:Texas Just Down the Road Digger Mountain : pm TBA News Brody Files Law & Justice Stakebeck on Terror Jerusalem Dateline Live At Oak Tree : pm Winning Walk Restoring America Insight USA Am. Heritage Faith In History TBA : pm Leading the Way Liberty Town Hall FirstBaptist Nashville

Liberty Town Hall New Life NLJC Liberty Town Hall Larry’s Country Diner : pm Truth For Today Randall Terry Randall Terry Randall Terry : pm In Touch with Charles Stanley Ridgeway Baptist Wretched TV Saturday Night at the Movies : pm Greater Than Gold th Street Theatre Christiano Films : pm From His Heart Walk On Water HarvestTime ImmanuelBaptist Genesis Week TV One Life : pm White Horse Media W. Coast Praise YBB TV Youth Bytes : pm Love Worth Finding Gaither Homecoming Change TV Great American Gospel : pm TBA MXTV Sing Out America : pm Gaither Homecoming Liberty Town Hall Country’s Family Reunion : pm Randall Terry

KJEP-TVwww.kjep.tvFOR LOCAL EVENT

SHOWING TIMES, VISIT:

PROUDLY

SPONSORED

BY ...

WOODS & WOODS, PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

118 N. Main St. • Nashville • (870) 845-4422

DoNNy WooDS • Bill Moorer

TELEVISION SCHEDULE

209 N. Main, Nashville, AR 71852

Credit Cards shown above accepted at participating stores

by Jean A. InceStaff chairman

UofA Cooperative Extension

Service • Howard CountyExt

ensionTips

How to use a crock pot safely

Howard County Farm-ers’ Market is forming a trial partnership with a new farmers’ market in Hope and with Old Wash-ington Farmers’ Market.

Rather than each of the three area markets open-ing multiple days each week and competing for local vendors, the markets plan to coordinate their days. The arrangement is intended to minimize the need for growers to “choose” between markets and result in more growers

being at each market. Also, each of the markets

plan to focus their efforts on making one day each special and unique from each of the other markets, providing a more exciting market for customers.

Anyone with locally-grown produce, honey, eggs, home-baked goods, homemade soaps and oth-er farm products will be able to participate at all three markets for one low registration fee.

Growers must grow the

produce themselves to sell at market and there is even an opportunity to sell hand-crafted goods, especially at Old Washington Farmers Market. The markets plan to expand days and hours if the coordinated effort between markets works well this season.

A public meeting is planned for Tues., Jan. 29 at the newly completed Hempstead Hall - Universi-ty of Arkansas Community College in Hope. Anyone interested in finding out

what is planned for area farmers’ markets or who might want to participate at the market should plan to attend this meeting.

There will be a one hour public informational meet-ing followed by a special two hour workshop for those planning to sell at any of the markets. Re-freshments will be served. For more information, contact Debra Bolding at 870-557-2352, Jodi Coffee at 870-703-8788 or Jaimie Williams at 870-703-7892.

SUBMITTED PHOTO | Nashville News

Market customers Janice Huffman (foreground), Patsy Harper and Molly Sirigiri (left and right in background) sample stone-ground cornmeal at a cooking demo during last year’s Howard County Farmers’ Market.

Area farmers markets begin planning for 2013 season, look to collaborate on schedules

PowerPharmacy 1310 S. 4th • Nashville (870) 845-1413

LET’S GIVE

HOPE!

Embrace The Mission With

THE MISSION

BRACELETSonly $7.99

Help break the generational cycles of poverty, illiteracy& human trafficking of

women and children in Nepal..

Page 6: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

6 sports Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

2 cols. x 4” N. News

Family Restaurant

Family Restaurant

Family Restaurant

411 South Main, Nashville • Ph. 845-4997

Presenting Starz all-new...

This one’s a winner! It’s delicious and nutritious! If you’re a Grilled Chicken fan, this could be your new champion! Our delicious,

all-new Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich is a bit

more on the healthy and nutritious side, but it is quite

tasty...and you’ll love it!

Enjoy this all-new

Sandwich seven days

a week!

New Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich:

•Grilled Chicken Breast Fillet •Swiss Cheese •Parmesan Peppercorn Dressing •Lettuce & Tomato •Served on Wheatberry Bread

Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich!

Lisa ChandLer insuranCe

~ Group & Individual ~ G Health G Life G Dental GG Medicare Supplement GFor more information, call

(870) 845-5930 Ofice845-7728 Cell

Umpire Junior Invitational Tournament

First Round

Junior Girls

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Dierks 7 6 8 9 30

Caddo Hills 8 6 2 7 23

leading Dierks scorers: katelynd Fennell-17, Blair

Garner-5, Stacey Carter-3, Isabel Fox-3, kenzie Stokes-2

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Wickes 9 3 4 13 29

Nashville 2 10 13 19 44

leading Nashville scorers: keekee richardson-9,

asia Munn-22, Tiyonna Garland-7, kendall

kirchhoff-7, Maddi Horton-7, kaylea Carver-4,

Hannah Vines-2

Junior Boys

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Dierks 7 13 16 6 42

Cove 11 13 2 7 33

leading Dierks scorers: Jake Green-13, Brady

Strasner-9, lane Woodruff-6, Tyler kesterson-6, Tanner

Owens-6, alex Faulkner-2

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Nashville 4 13 14 8 39

Umpire 3 5 4 7 19

leading Nashville scorers: Darius Hopkins-8,

Dea’jeon armstrong-6, Winland Ogden-6, Jordan

Williams-4, Trey Hughes-3, lee Scroggins-3, C.J.

Spencer-3, Shaundell Scott-2, austin Bowman-2,

Zach Jamison-2

Junior Boys

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Murfreesboro 11 5 2 0 18

Mineral Springs 12 13 16 9 50

leading Mineral Springs scorers: Cameron lacy-10,

Darius Turner-9, keshaun Davis-8, Camron Perkins-6,

levin Thornton-5, kenshun Witherspoon-3, Fred

robinson-2, kevonte Esters-2, Dennis Scott-2, lamar

Conway-1

Senior Girls

1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT F

Pulaski robinson 10 9 11 7 6 43

Nashville 9 12 8 8 9 46

leading Nashville scorers: kassidy Snowden-20,

Maddie McJunkins-15, Shayla Wright-3, kirby kell-2,

kerstein kane-2, Breona Jefferson-2, la’Trice Wiley-2

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Murfreesboro 7 17 6 9 39

Mineral Springs 5 6 3 8 22

leading Mineral Springs scorers: kiki Cannon-8, Jordan

Miller-5, allie Coulter-4, Sonora Gillespie-2, Briara

Sanders-2, ketonya Clayton-1

Senior Boys

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Pulaski robinson 10 5 13 22 50

Nashville 15 13 16 22 66

leading Nashville scorers: Jose Camacho-25, Cameron

alexander-16, Brandon Shamrock-10, Matthew

McCammack-8, laMichael Pettway-4, Jacobi lampkin-2,

Jamie Newton-1

1st 2nd 3rd 4th F

Murfreesboro 13 13 4 16 46

Mineral Springs 18 16 15 9 58

leading Mineral Springs scorers: kendrick langston-15,

anfernee Johnson-11, J’von atkins-8, Jerry Hollins-7,

rashad Williams-5, E.J. Stuart-3, avante Evans-2,

Jaylon Britt-2, kier McClinton-2

The Dierks Outlaw base-ball team will hold a soup and chili fundraiser Fri., Jan. 25 from 4-8 p.m.

The fundraiser will be held in the Dierks High School

cafeteria during the Dierks vs. Murfreesboro basketball games.

The meal will include soup, chili, a desert and drink and will cost $6 per meal.

Outlaw baseball team fundraiser Friday

Umpire Junior Tournament highlights

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Maddi Horton (24) and Kaylea Carver (12) battle Kara Richardson (50) of Wickes for the ball Wednesday night as the Jr. Scrapperettes fight their way into the semifinals with a 44-29 victory over the Jr. Lady Warriors.

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Junior Outlaw Jake Green (34) goes up for a basket.

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Desmond Pinson (12) tries to block a shot as Darius Hopkins (22) of Nashville scores two.

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Isabel Fox (24) brings the ball down the floor for the Jr. Lady Outlaws Monday night.

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Jaylon Britt (22) of Mineral Springs wrestles the ball away from a Rattler Tuesday night as the Hornets earn a 58-46 conference win over Murfreesboro. The Jr. Hornets earned a 50-18 win over the Jr. Rattlers.

Hornets wrestle win away from Rattlers

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

At Right: Jordan Miller (2) turns up court after a defensive rebound Tuesday night as the Mineral Springs Lady Hornets battle the Murfreesboro Lady Rattlers. Murfreesboro came away with a 39-22 victory over the Lady Hornets.

870-845-0505 or 870-557-0446

Page 7: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

2 cols. x 4” N. News

Family Restaurant

Family Restaurant

Family Restaurant

411 South Main, Nashville • Ph. 845-4997

Presenting Starz all-new...

This one’s a winner! It’s delicious and nutritious! If you’re a Grilled Chicken fan, this could be your new champion! Our delicious,

all-new Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich is a bit

more on the healthy and nutritious side, but it is quite

tasty...and you’ll love it!

Enjoy this all-new

Sandwich seven days

a week!

New Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich:

•Grilled Chicken Breast Fillet •Swiss Cheese •Parmesan Peppercorn Dressing •Lettuce & Tomato •Served on Wheatberry Bread

Wheatberry Grilled Chicken Sandwich!

(870) 845-5930 Ofice

7 Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Golden is a 2005 graduate of Redwater High School who earned a BBA in accounting at Texas Wom-an’s University in 2011. She is cur-rently employed as an auditor at DMP Investments.

Lawrence, the son of the Chris-ty Lawrence, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Stan Lawrence, of Nashville, is a 2003 graduate of

Nashville High School. He gradu-ated from the University of Central Arkanas in 2006 with a BA in Span-ish and is the owner of Lawrence Greenlawn.

The couple will be united in mat-rimony May 3 during a ceremony in Cancun, Mexico. A reception will be held for the newlyweds May 18 in Texarkana.

Donnie and Laura Golden and Kimberly and Kendall Ward, all of Texarkana, announce the engagement and ap-proaching marriage of their daughter, Amanda Golden,

to Heath Lawrence.

The groom is the son of Carlton and Juanita Hubbard, of Prescott, and the grandson of Tommy and Venita Sweeden, of Murfreesboro, and Mary and the late Ed Hubbard, of Prescott.

A 2007 graduate of Murfrees-boro High School and 2010 gradu-ate of University Of Arkansas, Jeremy is a patrolman with the Prescott Police Department.

The bride is the daughter of Craig and Julia-Lovewell Dwyer, of Kirby, and Donald and Melissa Dixon, of Texarkana. She is the

granddaughter of the late Jesse D. Lovewell, of Nashville, the late Leona and Roy Mitchell, of Mur-treesboro, Bill and Vickie Walters, of Hot Springs, Truman and Ber-nece Dixon, of Dierks, and Greg Kudela, of Wisconsin.

A 2009 graduate of Kirby High School, Brittany will graduate in May 2013 from the University Of Arkansas with a Degree in Child-hood Education.

The wedding ceremony will take place Feb. 9 at 2 p.m. at Central Baptist Church in Prescott.

The parents of Jeremy Grant Hubbard and Brittany Danyell Dixon are proud to announce the engagement and up coming wedding of their children.

James Ernest and Virginia Callaway Chandler celebrated their 50th wedding anniversa-ry Wednesday. They were mar-ried in Arkadelphia on Jan. 23, 1963 by Bro. Harvey Arnold.

The couple has two daugh-ters: Judy and husband Eric Whittington, of Ringgold, GA, and Joan Chandler, of Dal-las, Texas. They also have two grandchildren: Chandler Whittington, a sophomore at Harding University, and Alex-andra Whittington, a senior at Ringgold.

James retired from Farm Bureau as Howard County Agency Manager in 2004 after 38 years of service. Jenny retired after teaching school in Mineral Springs, Blevins and Nashville.

Chandlers celebrate 50th anniversary

We the Family of Curtis Ware are standing at the grave site were we laid him to rest years, days, and

months, has passed on January 22, 1972. 42 years ago our hearts were sad when Nickey and his

Grandpapa left. They left our House but they are still living with us in our home. Dear Children, God has Blessed us to still be together, only the Lord can do that. Remember Jesus had to suffer. We have to arm our self like wise with the same mind. It will be Joy in the morning. Dear Children, don’t forget Mr. Cecil Harris, he was always so nice to take our Family pictures and that was a Blessing. Just remember Dear one’s to Love everybody. Love doesn’t have color. God is love. Treat people like you want to be treated. Don’t forget the Family prayer. Jesus will meet you there. The Lord is the only one that can answer pray. MaMa and Papa Day was a wonderful time. It was my birthday, March 28, 2012. Thank you, Dear Children, for all you have done for me. Grandchildren, Great

grandchildren, everybody enjoyed themselves. Family, Love one another. Love will keep you together.

God is Love.

Mother, Mrs. Curtis Ware, Edward W. Ware, Glorious D. Ware Burns,

Diann Ware Ferguson, Shelba N. Ware Thurman,Melodie S. Ware Hill, Ronnie L. Ware,

April J. Ware Hopson

9 th Joint Memory of Curtis Ware & Larry “Nickey” Hill, Jr.

His Grandson

Page 8: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

CECIL ANDERSON

NHS Correspondent

Mineral Springs teachers Bev-erly Tallman and Judy Cassady talked with students and parents last Thursday over many academic issues facing MS students seeking graduation.

The subjects of ACT scores and credits to graduate were all ad-dressed at the meeting.

Arkansas state law requires many classes to be taken for any student to graduate from an Arkansas high school. If these classes are not taken and met, then the student will not be allowed to graduate. Tallman stressed this to the parents in at-tendance.

“This is what your kids are bound by,” Tallman said.

The running total is kept by the students to prevent a senior from winding up in class with freshmen because of unmanaged credits.

“We had one senior this year find out that he did not have civics, and he is taking civics with ninth grade students,” Tallman said. “We weren’t aware that a lot of the ninth grade parents weren’t aware of how the credits worked, especially if this was their first child.”

Tallman said the rules can also af-fect a student’s college career.

“Some of the things, when they become juniors and seniors, if they start planning they can take Cossat-tot classes,” she explained. “There are several things they can use some of these to get extra credits for.”

8 miNeral spriNgs Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

COMPLETE TREE SERVICETRIMMING/REMOVAL

BUCKET TRUCKINSURED

(870) 845-2307198 MURRAY LANE

Off Hwy 278 W, toward Center Point

STUMP GRINDING

Countryside

nursery

The Nashville News418 N. Main • Nashville, AR

(870) 845-2010Toll Free 1-888-845-NEWS

...for all your Printing Needs - See Us First!

Envelopes - Business Cards -

Invoices - Church Bulletins -

fliers - Self-inking Stamps -

Photos -Copies - fax Service

Courteous, Prompt, Reasonable Rates!The Nashville News

Call Bobby Chambers • 870-845-2010

Ex

am

pl

e

4x6 for - $3.00

8½x11 - $7.00

11x17 - $10-12

We have a NEW PRINTER!

Get AMAZING Color Copies ofPhotos from The Newspaper!

Come by today or call at 870-845-2010!

CECIl aNDErSON | Nashville News

Beverly Tallman discusses the credit system with Mineral Springs students and parents Thursday.

CECIl aNDErSON | Nashville News

Judy Cassady discusses the credit system with Mineral Springs students and parents Thursday.

SCHOOL HOLDS INfORmATION mEETING

* denotes all A’s 3rd grade

Cameron Fields-Williams*Tiana GibsonHaylee MondenDarrah StrongHaeden WalkerEmagiyea Thomas

4th gradeTiawan Alexander*Alan Hernandez*Brenda SalinasJazmin HernandezN’Kyia RandleHaven ReedAhlayshia BurtonMaria BorjaJeffery WitherspoonDestiny Bearden*Tadashi Dennis*Halie BlountSilvia BravoAxel CardenasMadison WilliamsZakya HillHunter DavisTerrell Fricks

5th gradeChiree NewtonJadyn Schooley-WilliamsTydaija WaltonDanielle ThomasPrincess ThomasSydaija Walton

6th gradeNyisha CheathamTaylor LewisGustavo PerezDiana MorrisBraden Schooley-WilliamsStephanie TaylorRay Hawkins

Mineral Springs elementary honor rollJAMES A. SINGLETON

Hempstead Co. Sheriff

As Sheriff, one of my top priorities has been the edu-cation of our young people on the dangers of drugs, alcohol, and choices they make. Along with that my continued commitment to aggressively pursue those people that sell, Transport, Distribute, and Manufac-ture drugs that fall into the hands of our citizens and children. The following is what the Sheriff’s Office and South Central Drug Task Force Agents have ac-complished in Hempstead County for the year of 2012.Education

During 2012 The Sher-iff’s Office Drug Abuse Re-sistance Education (DARE) program a 10 week course taught by a certified dep-uty was presented to four county schools to students in the fifth and sixth grade. The course designed to target that age group to advise and show how not only illegal drugs such as Marijuana, Cocaine, and Methamphetamine can affect the body, but legal drugs such as prescription medication when abused will also impact their bod-ies and affect the lives of their love ones, along with alcohol and Tobacco abuse. The response from students and teachers has been great.

Two community out-reach programs present-ed by the Sheriff’s Office, Hope Police, ASP, Firemen, Local Jr. ROTC students from Hope High School, and EMS Personnel was the National Night Out and the Sheriff’s Halloween Cook Out get together where Law Enforcement and the youth in the county got to-gether in a social setting to discuss various problems facing the young people to include peer pressure,

bullying, alcohol and drug abuse.

With assistance from the Arkansas Sheriff’s As-sociation the Sheriff’s Of-fice presented an anti-drug / Alcohol program for K-6th grades at Spring Hill, Blevins, and Garrett Memo-rial Christian Schools. Drug TraffickingTraining for Deputies

Three Hempstead Coun-ty investigators completed a 40 hour Drug / Crimi-nal apprehension course which has enhanced their ability to detect drug traf-fickers, locate hidden compartments in vehicles traveling I and through Hempstead County. Activity forHempstead County 2012

South Central Agents & Deputies opened 80 Felony Cases which resulted in over 30 Arrest.

Listed below is the amount of drugs seized and the street value.

46 Grams of Crack val-ued at $4,600.00

179,900 Grams of Pro-cessed Marijuana valued at $642,500.00

25 Marijuana Plants val-ued at $25,000.00

9,852 Grams of Powder Cocaine valued at $985, 200.00

188 Grams of Ice (Meth-amphetamine) valued at $18,795.00

Total street value of Drugs seized by Agents of South Central Drug Task Force and Hemp-stead County Deputies: $1,676,095.

The dedicated Agents of SCDTF and Hempstead County investigators will continue to work together with all neighboring agen-cies as well as the DEA, FBI, and Home Land Security to pursue the people who continue to sell, manufac-ture, and transport drugs in and through Hempstead County.

Sheriff’s report on the sale, distribution and manufacturing of drugs in Hempstead County for 2012

The Howard County 4-H Foundation will hold a BBQ cookout Sat., Feb. 2 from 10:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. at Just Poultry, located next to Southwest Arkansas Radio.

The group will offer a full slab of ribs for $22, half slabs for $15, Cornish hens for $4 each or two for $7.

Call the Howard County Extension Office at 845-7517 to place an order.

Money raised will support 4-H educational activities.

4-H foundation to hold cookout

Retirement reception to be held for school book keeper

A retirement reception will be held today at 3 p.m. in the Mineral Springs caf-eteria for Sammy Jackson.

Page 9: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

dierks 9 Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

DIERKSDIERKSWE HAVE WHAT

YOU NEED IN

WE HAVE WHAT

YOU NEED IN

SHOP DIERKS ARKANSAS FIRST!

110 East 4th St. • Dierks(870) 286-3088

www.wilkersonfuneralhomes.com

Serving

Howard County

since 1878

Robert E. Gunter, DDS

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Braces • Dentures • Partials • Crowns • Bleaching • Root Canals • Extractions AR KIDS & AR KIDS BRACES

By appt., Mon.-Thur. 8:00-5:00 Adult Medicaid accepted

202 East 3rd St. • Dierks(870) 286-2112

P.O. Box 268, Dierks

• 870-286-2777 • 286-3220 (home)

Complete line of property, casualty & life insurance

• Highest Standards •• Professional Service •

ARCHIE COTHREN

Insurance agency, Inc.

Equal Housing

Lender

People helping people(870) 845-3323

Member FDIC

Nashville • DeQueen • Dierks

286-2121

Place Your

Ad Here!ONLY $10/Week(870) 845-2010888-845-NEWS

PLACE YOUR AD HERE!$10/WEEK

CALL TAMZEN (870) 845-2010

(888) 845-NEWS

Place Your

Ad Here!ONLY $10/Week(870) 845-2010888-845-NEWS

DROP OFF SERVICE

Now Available at

TRENDZin Dierks

Place Your

Ad Here!ONLY $10/Week(870) 845-2010888-845-NEWS

Now is the time to switch to Direct TV or Dish. Don’t wait until you lose your cable tv.

Matt StaggsRepresentative903-826-3810

BUTCH MOrrIS I Nashville News

On Wednesday, Howard County Sheriff Butch Morris received a report from Gary Bearden of Umpire that someone had stolen 14 tons of cubes and calf mix feed from his feed bin located on Faulkner Road in Umpire.The feed is valued at around $5,000. The theft has occurred during the past week. If anyone has any information concerning the theft please call the Howard County Sheriff's Office at 870-845-2626.

DIERKS - Cable television service in rural parts of How-ard County and the cities of Dierks and Mineral Springs will be discontinued next month.

Allegiance Communications has informed customers that they will no longer be providing cable TV service after Feb. 12. Allegiance says the decision was due to the economic downturn and a reduced subscriber base, mak-ing it no longer financially viable to continue operations.

Dierks Mayor Terry Mounts says the only other option for any existing Allegiance customer will be to switch to a satellite TV service.

He says the city would be willing to hear any propos-als from any other cable company that would like to provide service.

Allegiance Communications also provides TV service to Murfreesboro, Daisy and Kirby in Pike County and to DeQueen and Mena. Southwest Arkansas Radio has confirmed that the cable TV service in those areas will continue.

– Southwest Arkansas Radio

fEED THEfTAllegiance Communications to discontinue Dierks,

Mineral Springs service

TERRICA HENDRIX

Editor

DIERKS – A police offi-cer, who received a broken leg while responding to a December disturbance call, will be out for five more weeks.

Dierks Police Chief Brian White confirmed Wednesday that officer John Mckee “will be out for about five more weeks” after he received a broken leg.

Mckee responded to a disturbance call on Dec. 14, 2012 from a male stat-ing that Rickey Alexander was at his house causing problems and refused to leave, according to the af-fidavit. Alexander allegedly told Mckee that he was not going to leave and was placed under arrest for criminal trespass.

According to the affi-davit, “Mckee placed one

handcuff on Alexander when he became combat-ive and pushed the officer away. Alexander pushed and kicked the officer to the chest. Officer Mckee then tackled Alexander and he continued to strug-gle with the officer. Officer Mckee then pulled his Taz-er out and tazed Alexander in the back. Alexander still refused and continued kicking at the officer,”

“John [Mckee] got his foot hung under a couch and they fell,” the chief continued, “he broke his leg in three places…right below the knee joint.”

Alexander, 22, of New Hope, was placed under arrest for second degree battery, possession of drug paraphernalia and criminal trespass. On Jan. 9, Circuit Judge Charles A. Yeargan ordered him to return on March 13 for pretrial and on March 26 for trial.

Dierks Police officer recuperating from

broken leg

CHarlES GOODIN I NaSHVIllE NEWS

Dierks Police officer John Mckee is recuperating from a broken leg he received while responding to a disturbance call. He is pictured at a recent training for law enforcement.

DEWaYNE HOllOWaY | Nashville News

Aaron Kesterson (21) of Dierks passes the ball as the Jr. Outlaws face Van Cove in first round action in the Umpire Junior Invitational Tournament. Both Dierks teams earned victories in the first round with the boys defeating Van Cove and the girls defeating Caddo Hills.

Page 10: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

10 televisioN Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Gun It!1

14

17

20

27

31

36

39

45

48

54

58

61

2

28

46

3

29

42

4

24

43

5

25

40

18

21

37

55

59

62

6

15

32

56

7

30

49

8

26

47

9

22

44

23

41

57

60

63

10

16

19

38

50

11

33

51

12

34

52

13

35

53

ACROSS 1. Gunslinger's tally,

perhaps6. Calls from Bossy

10. Ballpark arbiters14. Pianist Claudio

from Chile15. Sooner State:

Abbr.16. Aswan Dam site17. Brewery container19. Sammy Davis Jr.'s

"Yes __"20. Easily molded21. Ovine utterance22. Falling-shapes

game24. Command to

Rover26. Half an LP27. Horrify30. Some chair makers31. Wine sediment32. Feline crossbreed33. Radar gun wielder36. Hamlet, for one37. Fits of wrath38. Bagel center39. Dict. offering40. Insinuate41. Brown pigment42. Be a whiner44. PTA member45. Fuel pipeline47. Shaving mishap48. 1/8 of a circle49. d.t.'s sufferer50. Island of Scotland54. The whole

spectrum55. Upholsterer's tool58. Dueler's distance59. Nay sayer60. Stiller's mate61. Igloo dwellers:

Abbr.62. Fuji outflow

63. Common gearshiftsequence

DOWN1. Slaps the cuffs on2. Creme-filled cookie3. Not kosher4. Punic Wars side5. Center of activity6. Fable finale7. Gumbo need8. Corrida call9. Freebies with soup

10. "I'm a __, not adivider": G.W.Bush

11. Bio lab instrument12. Yogurt choice13. Have a hunch18. Genesis victim

23. River of centralGermany

25. Windy Citytransports

26. Bob of "FullHouse"

27. Uses an abacus28. Recite the rosary29. Cheap Wall Street

buy30. Claro or cheroot32. Grow dark34. Lena of "Chocolat"35. Bog fuel37. Payment by mail38. General mortally

wounded in theBattle of Oriskany

40. FBI agent41. Cul-de-__

43. Bowls over44. __ helmet (safari

wear)45. Lose one's cool46. Play the role of47. Big name in mobile

phones49. John Candy's old

show51. Mideast sultanate52. Computer geek,

e.g.53. Inland Asian sea56. Santa __ winds57. Roadie's haul

American Proile Hometown Content 1/20/2013

STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDSCall Eva or Linda at 1-800-569-8762 to place your ad here!

Week of 1-21-13

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED - TRUCK DRIVERS

DRIVERS- CRST offers the Best Lease Purchase Program! SIGN ON BONUS. No Down Payment or Credit Check. Great Pay. Class-A CDL required. Owner Operators Welcome! Call: 866-261-6532.

DRIVERS- CDL-A, $5,000 SIGN-ON BONUS for exp'd solo OTR drivers & O/O's. Tuition reimbursement also available. New Student Pay & Lease Pro-gram. 877-521-5775.

www.USATRUCK.jobs

DRIVERS- START THE NEW YEAR with a Great CDL Driv-ing Career! Experienced Drivers and Recent Grads - Excellent Benefi ts, Weekly Hometime, Paid Training. 888-362-8608.AVERITTcareers.com Equal Op-portunity Employer.

DRIVERS- OTR positions. Up to 45 CPM. $1,000 - $1,200 Sign On Bonus. Assigned Equip-ment. Pet Policy. O/O's Wel-come! deBoer Transportation 800-825-8511

www.deboertrans.com

MISCELLANEOUSLIVE LINKS- Meet Singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greet-ings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-877-939-9299.

DIVORCE WITH OR WITH-OUT children $125.00. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and Easy. Call 1-888-733-7165, 24/7.

FOR SALETORNADO SHELTERS- FEMA Approved – Factory Direct Concrete Storm Shelters. 870-867-3613 Toll Free 877-233-3033. Visit us online

www.RiverValleyConcrete.com

TRAINING/EDUCATIONAIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Become an Aviation Maintenace Tech. FFA approved training. Financial aid if qualifi ed - Housing available. Job place-ment assistance. Call AIM 877-424-4177.

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE 100% Medical, Business, Crimi-nal Justice, Hospitality, Web, Job Placement Assistance, Computer Available, Financial Aid if Qualifi ed, Schev Autho-rized, Call 877-596-6796.

www.centuraonline.com

"Can You Dig It?" Heavy Equipment School. 3 wk Train-ing Program. Backhoes, Bull-dozers, Excavators. Local Job Placement Asst. VA Benefi ts Approved. 2 National Certifi ca-tions. 866-362-6497.

RV's/MOBILE/MANUFACTURED

HOMESUSED MOBILE - will fi nance and move to your lot. Call 870-862-4305.

ADOPTIONAdopt- Your baby will be raised with love and security. Expenses paid. Sue & Frank 1-888-449-0803.

ADOPTION- A childless, single successful woman seeks to adopt. Will be HANDS-ON mom. Financial security. Expenses paid. Let's help each other. Michelle 1-888-242-7968.

DISH Network Starting at $19.99/month. PLUS

30 Premium Movie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask

About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 1-877-575-8281

ATTENTION DIABETICS with Medicare. Get a FREE talking meter and diabetic

testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery!

Best of all, this meter eliminates painful fi nger

pricking! Call 888-574-3087.

ADOPT: A teacher & devoted husband wish to adopt a baby

into their loving home & extended family. Expenses Paid.

Awaitingtoadopt.com 1-866-408-1543

[email protected]

Drivers Wanted.Hiring Percentage Owner Operators

and Lease to Own Program.Sign on Bonus, 6 months experience. Contact us at 800-509-2021

or www.oandstrucking.com

Become a TRUCK DRIVER IN LESS THAN

30 DAYS!!Tuition Reimbursement Available if Qualified!

Classes Start Every Monday!

• Financing Avail. • Lodging Provided!

PINE BLUFF TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL, INC.

CALL TODAY!1-800-954-4981

www.pbtds.netThe RIGHT TRAINING for today’s trucking industry lic. by ASBPCE

Unemployed? Low Income?

Have you lost your job due to a company closing? Have you worked on a farm

in the last two years?

If so, you may qualify for government funding to get

your Class A CDL license to drive!

COME TO THE: BRINKLEY WORKFORCE CENTER on January 17th, January 24th, January 29th, and January 31st

to see if you qualify,

or call Blake @1-877-945-0400.

You will be eligible for LIFETIME JOB PLACEMENT

ASSISTANCE

upon graduation from the program.

ATTN: Experienced DRIVERS/Owner Ops!

TIME for a CHANGE?

888-202-3569, x 114, or Nights/Weekends call REITA, 501-240-7348 or 501-247-7511

email:[email protected]

Home most weeks (if you live in Ar.) Mostly drop/hook! Late Model Equip.!

Maj. Med Ins. Avail. Local:Dispatch/Orientation/Shop (NLR),

No-touch

freight!

If you got 5 minutes I can make you a homeowner.

For Prequalification call 870-862-4300.

NOW HIRING

PAINT SUPERVISOR

Supervising and painting experience comparable to automotive painting

required. Position includes benefi ts and possible

signing bonus.

For information call: 870-367-5317

Apply at: 728 W. Patton St. Monticello, AR

The unforgettable gift is waiting.

Visit www.berries.com/beyondor call 888.716.0854

Our favorite gifts to give… and receive

Delight all of your valentines with our

freshly dipped strawberries, decadent

*20 off minimum product purchase of $29.00. Discounts do not apply to gift cards or certiicates, same-day delivery, shipping and handling, taxes or third-party hosted products (e.g. wine). Discounts will appear upon checkout and cannot be combined with other offers or discounts. Discounts not valid on bulk or corporate purchases of 10 units or more. Prices valid while supplies last. Offer expires 2/28/2013.

SAVE20 %

off

*

Friday-SundayJan. 25 - Jan. 27, 2013

Friday Evening January 25, 20137:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

KATV/ABC Last Man Malibu Shark Tank 20/20 Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

KTHV/CBS Undercover Boss CSI: NY Blue Bloods Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson

KARK/NBC Betty Betty Dateline NBC Local Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon

KLRT/FOX Kitchen Nightmares The Following Local

KYPX/PAX Cold Case Cold Case Cold Case Flashpoint Flashpoint

Cable ChannelsA & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Storage Storage Storage Storage Duck D. Duck D.

AMC Mrs. Doubtfire Mrs. Doubtfire

ANIM Infested! Infested! Fatal Attractions Infested! Fatal Attractions

BET One Mic One Mic Husbands Second Soul Plane Wendy Williams Show

BRAVO Ocean's Thirteen Ocean's Thirteen

CMT Reba Reba The Princess Bride

CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight

COMEDY Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Kroll Work. The Burn Tosh.0 Harold & Kumar

DISC Gold Rush Gold Rush Bering Sea Gold Gold Rush Bering Sea Gold

DISN Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Dog Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Good Luck Good Luck

E! Sex-City Sex-City Kourtney-Kim Fashion Police Chelsea E! News Chelsea

ESPN NBA Basketball Winter X Games SportCtr

ESPN2 Nation First Boxing SportsCenter SportCtr NBA

FAM Nanny Sorcerer's Ap The 700 Club Prince Prince

FOOD Diners Diners Diners Diners Mystery D Mystery D Diners Diners Diners Diners

FX Transformers The A-Team

HGTV Outrageous Bathrooms Outrageous Rooms Hunters Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Hunt Intl Outrageous Rooms

HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers

LIFE To Be Announced To Be Announced Teen Trouble America's Supernanny To Be Announced

MTV Buckwild BUCKWILD Jackass: The Movie Jackass Jackass

NICK Turtles Turtles See Dad Full H'se The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends

SCI WWE SmackDown! Merlin Being Human Merlin

SPIKE The Green Mile Payback

TBS Worse Worse Worse Worse Monster-in-Law Are We Th Are We Th

TCM The Tender Trap Robin-7 Hoods Oceans11

TLC Four Weddings Say Yes Say Yes Randy Randy Say Yes Say Yes Randy Randy

TNT Twister Twister Seabiscuit

TOON Cartoon Planet King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen

TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures

TV LAND Cosby Cosby Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King The King of Queens

USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Suits CSI: Crime Scene

VH1 Beverly Hills Cop II Best Week Mob Wives Best Week Love & Hip Hop

WGN How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules Rules

Premium ChannelsHBO Hanna Real Time/Bill Maher Real Time/Bill Maher Girls Paul

MAX Fast Five Banshee Girls Bed Banshee Sexual

SHOW Twilight-Dawn Boxing Inside the NFL

©2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

Saturday Evening January 26, 20137:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

KATV/ABC The Taste 20/20 Local

KTHV/CBS NCIS: Los Angeles 48 Hours 48 Hours Local

KARK/NBC Figure Skating Figure Skating Local Saturday Night Live

KLRT/FOX UFC: Johnson vs. Dod Local The Ultimate Fighter Local

KYPX/PAX House House Psych Psych Psych

Cable ChannelsA & E Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping

AMC Identity Signs Identity

ANIM Too Cute! Pit Boss Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Boss Pit Bulls-Parole

BET Coach Carter Madea's Family

BRAVO The Family Man The Family Man

CMT Joe Dirt Redneck Vacation Swamp Pawn Redneck Vacation Swamp Pawn

CNN CNN Presents Piers Morgan Tonight Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Presents Piers Morgan Tonight

COMEDY Without a Paddle Grandma's Boy Tosh.0 Tosh.0

DISC Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush Gold Rush

DISN Good Luck Charlie Dog Austin Jessie Austin Austin Good Luck Good Luck Good Luck

E! The Women You've Got Mail The Women

ESPN College Basketball Winter X Games SportsCenter SportsCenter

ESPN2 College Basketball '13 Australian Open College B NBA

FAM Pirates-Worlds The Goonies

FOOD Unwrapped Unwrapped Diners Diners Diners Iron Chef America Unwrapped Diners

FX The A-Team Anger Biased Archer Legit

HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It

HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn

LIFE Family That Preys Double Double Double Family That Preys

MTV Jackass: The Movie Jackass 3.5 Jackass Jackass

NICK Victoriou Marvin Ninjas Ninjas The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends

SCI Snow Beast Abominable Snowman Rock Monster

SPIKE Shawshank R. The Wolfman

TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Cougar King of the Nerds Sullivan

TCM Captains Courageous Lord of the Flies

TLC 48 Hours: Hard Evid. 48 Hours: Hard Evid. 48 Hours: Left 48 Hours: Hard Evid. 48 Hours: Hard Evid.

TNT Gran Torino Gran Torino Dallas

TOON Hoodwinked! Venture Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Cleveland Dynamite Boondocks Bleach Naruto

TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures

TV LAND The Princess Bride Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King

USA The MummyG.I. Joe: Cobra Fast & Furious

VH1 Mob Wives Best Week Black Ink Crew Black Ink Crew Love & Hip Hop Left Eye

WGN NBA Basketball Videos WGN News at Nine Bones Bones

Premium ChannelsHBO Wrath of the Titans Safe House

MAX The Hangover Part II Banshee Troy

SHOW Iron Lady Maz Jobrani: I Come in Peace Boxing

©2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

Sunday Evening January 27, 20137:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

KATV/ABC Once Upon a Time The Makeover Local

KTHV/CBS NCIS The Good Wife The Mentalist Local

KARK/NBC 2013 Pro Bowl Local Dateline NBC

KLRT/FOX Simpsons Burgers Fam. Guy Amer. Dad Local

KYPX/PAX Monk Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI

Cable ChannelsA & E Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage

AMC A Knight's Tale A Knight's Tale

ANIM Wild West Alaska Gator Boys Finding Bigfoot Gator Boys Finding Bigfoot

BET Madea's Family UNCF- Stars Popoff Inspir.

BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Shahs of Sunset Housewives/Atl. Happens Housewives/Atl. Shahs

CMT Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Redneck Vacation Swamp Pawn Smokey-Bndt. 2

CNN CNN Presents Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom CNN Presents Piers Morgan Tonight

COMEDY Grandma's Boy Kroll Work. South Pk South Pk Tosh.0 The Burn

DISC Monster Squid Dual Survival Monster Squid

DISN Dog Austin Shake It Jessie Shake It Shake It ANT Farm ANT Farm Wizards Wizards

E! Chasing T Chasing T Kourtney-Kim Chasing T Kourtney-Kim Chasing T Chelsea The Soup

ESPN NBA Basketball Winter X Games SportsCenter SportCtr

ESPN2 '13 Australian Open Poker

FAM 700 Club-Programming J. Osteen Shook

FOOD Chopped Rachael v. Guy Bobby's Dinner Battl Iron Chef America Rachael v. Guy

FX Twil: Eclipse Twil: Eclipse

HGTV Cool Pools Hawaii Hawaii House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Hawaii Hawaii

HIST Ax Men Ax Men Bamazon Pawn Pawn Ax Men

LIFE Abducted Story Steel Magnolias Abducted Story

MTV Snooki & JWOWW Buckwild BUCKWILD Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show

NICK See Dad Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends

SCI Underworld Dragon Wasps Continuum

SPIKE The Green Mile Rounders

TBS SAG Awards Sex and the City 2

TCM The 39 Steps The Lady Vanishes Sabotage

TLC Here Comes Honey Here Comes Honey Plastic Wives Here Comes Honey Plastic Wives

TNT SAG Awards SAG Awards Dallas

TOON Incredibl Looney Oblongs King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Metal

TRAV Trip of a Lifetime Extreme Yachts Extreme Yachts Extreme Houseboats Extreme Yachts

TV LAND Roseanne Roseanne Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King

USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU He's Just Not

VH1 Mob Wives Love & Hip Hop Mob Wives Best Week Mob Wives Black Ink

WGN How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met News/Nine Replay 30 Rock 30 Rock Rules Rules

Premium ChannelsHBO Bridesmaids Girls Enlighten Girls Enlighten Girls Enlighten Wrath of the Titans

MAX Patch Adams I, Robot Girls Bed Dirty

SHOW Lies Californ. Shameless Lies Californ. Shameless Lies Californ.

©2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2787-D

Difficult

1 2 3 4

2 5 6

1 7

6 3 4 1 8

9 7 3 4 2

1 5

3 2 6

6 8 9 3

Answers

on Pg. 3

Your Local WeatherWed

1/23

64/51Mix of sunand clouds.Highs in themid 60s andlows in thelow 50s.

Thu

1/24

68/41MostlyCloudy.Highs in theupper 60sand lows inthe low 40s.

Fri

1/25

53/29Morningclouds fol-lowed by af-ternoon sun.

Sat

1/26

52/32Partlycloudy.Highs in thelow 50s andlows in thelow 30s.

Sun

1/27

56/45Mix of sunand clouds.Highs in themid 50s andlows in themid 40s.

©2009 American Profile Hometown Content Service

Page 11: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

4/2 on land. 5.75%, 30 yrs., $550/mo. Please call for info (903) 831-4540 rbi#35153. (SH:48-tf, w15) ___________________________Bad or good credit. You own land, you’re approved. Call for details (903) 831-4540 rbi#35153. (SH:48-tf; w14) ___________________________$0 down delivers. Bring your deed & proof of income. No application refused on your dream home. Call anytime (903) 831-5332 rbi#35153. (SH:48-tf; w21) ___________________________1st time home buyers, low down, No Credit, all applications ac-cepted. (903) 838-7324 rbi#35153. (SH:49-tf; w13) ___________________________

We buy/sell Brahman heifers. (870) 451-4189. (mg:tf) ___________________________HAY FOR SALE, Mixed Grass Hay, Barn kept, 4’x5’ Rolls. $40.00 Each. Square bales $4.00 per bale. 870-845-4894 or 870-200-0436. (PD:5-8) ___________________________

Looking for scrap metal, small amounts OK. Call (870) 557-0838. (dj:tf) ___________________________Now buying good usable pallets 40 inches wide X 48 inches long $2.00 each delivered to Ward Shavings LLC 870-285-3377. (WS:82-tf, w20) ___________________________Concealed Handgun Class, Jan. 26, 2013. Contact Butch Godwin (08-516). 870-845-7066. (PD:3-7) ___________________________

classifieds 11 Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

For ALL your printing and oice supply needs...

Call us:

(870) 845-2010

Send yours to: [email protected]

870-845-2010

FOR ReNT1 BR, 1 BA, brick house, CH/CA,

washer/dryer, carport, walk-in closet, partially furnished, utilities paid, in Nashville. Deposit required.

(870) 845-8637

Brazil’s Full Service Center & Detail.

For all your car care needs! Why shine when you can sparkle. 805 S. Main, right beside Hickory House. Call us at 870-557-7739.

If you need any kind of yard work or hauling scrap, Give me a call. 870-557-4726. (tfn) ___________________________

Septic tank pumping and drain cleaning service, sewer lines/drains unstopped. Johnson Services, (870) 642-2787. (LJ:27-tf, 13w) ___________________________Jimmy Don Sullivan Welding & Construction Service, 845-4752, licensed septic tank installation. (JDS:tf; w12) ___________________________he Terminator Pest Control (870) 557-1780. (tf) ___________________________Hostetler Mowing - dependable lawn care. (870) 557-4510. (RH:20-tf; w6) ___________________________Tennis lessons, private or group. (870) 845-8505. (dh:tf) ___________________________Ward Shavings LLC - dry shavings $1,350/van load. (870) 285-3377. (WS:89-tf; w9) ___________________________Brazil’s Full Service Center & Detail. For all your car care needs! Why shine when you can sparkle. 805 S. Main, right beside Hickory House. Call us at 870-557-7739. (mg:tfn) ___________________________

ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, por-table, lightweight, like new. Low $ or perhaps free to senior. (888) 442-3390. (WG:10-tf, w14) ___________________________Oak Firewood. 870-451-1378 or 870-451-1400. (PD:102-9) ___________________________A N E W P I L L O W T O P M A T T R E S S S E T . w / W a r r a n t y . T w i n S e t $ 8 8 , F u l l S e t $ 1 0 8 , Q u e e n S e t $ 1 3 8 & K i n g S e t $ 1 6 8 . C a l l S a n d y 903-276-9354. (Pd:1-9) ___________________________Split Red Oak Firewood. $75 rick delivered Nashville area. 557-8820. (PD:7) ___________________________

Liberty Tax Service is Hiring. Marketing Manager & Personnel. No experience required. Must be energetic & Friendly. Good Cus-tomer Service. Must have Vehicle. Salary & Bonus. Apply in person at Liberty Kiosk in Walmart. (LTS:4-7, w32)___________________________

For all your Printing needs:

Self-inking Stamps, Business

Cards, Ofice Supplies, Ofice Furniture, Paper

& Commercial Printing!418 N. Main St., Nashville,

email

[email protected]

or call

(870) 845-2010

“Victim Advocate/Volunteer Co-ordinator: Provide advocacy ser-vices to victims of crime; limited travel; good computer, commu-nication and grammar skills. Call 870-784-6788 for further informa-tion.” (SWDV:5-8, w24) ___________________________

Furnished apartments for rent, util-ities paid, 1403 S. Main, two blocks from Tyson, call Hal Scroggins, 845-1691. (tf) ___________________________Peach Tree Trailer Park, 2 and 3 bedrooms, furnished, conveniently located laundry. 845-1355 or 845-2943. (PT:18-tf, w15) ___________________________Murfreesboro Mini Storage and Maxi Storage. 845-1870 or 845-3168. (GS:tf, w9) ___________________________Portable toilets for construction jobs and special events. Lonnie Johnson, (870) 642-2787. (LJ:tf, w11) ___________________________2 & 3 BR trailers for rent. (870) 845-2940. (SBMH:62-tf; w8) ___________________________Apartments for rent. (870) 451-3940. (PV:tf, w4) ___________________________Modern brick apartments for rent, contact he Agency, 845-1011. (TA:tf, w11) ___________________________2 Bedroom trailer, furnished, in Murfreesboro. 870-285-2010 or 870-451-3712. (VF:7-tfn, w9) ___________________________One Bedroom Apartment, Car-port, Inside Storage Room. $350, Deposit, References. 845-4214. (JS:2-tf, w11) ___________________________2 BR duplex at Henderson & hird St. 504-715-7442. (PD:4-11) ___________________________2 BR Trailer, No pets. Call 870-784-0001. (PD:5-11) ___________________________

3 or 6 ac. lots, city water, Hwy 26W, owner inancing. (501) 758-2303. (CL:74-tf; w13) ___________________________Great Family Home on 12 acres, just 2 1/2 miles from high school at 2011 Mt. Pleasant Dr., Nashville, 3 BR, 2 BA, 1736 H/C, 2480 sqt under roof, Brick with 2 car ga-rage, 30x40 metal bldg. with water and electric. Lots of extras, WAS $127,700 - NOW $124,000. (501) 384-5427 or (501) 467-1222. (RW:7-tfn, w38) ___________________________

FOR ♦ENT

** Call The Nashville News (870) 845-2010 or The Murfreesboro Diamond (870) 285-2723 for rates, dates or questions **

We strive for accuracy, though occasionally er-rors do occur. Please notify us immediately if your ad has a mistake in it, so that we may cor-rect it and give you a free rerun for the irst day that it ran incorrect-ly. Mistakes not brought to our attention before the second printing of the ad are eligible for one free corrected ad only!For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of i-nancing or business op-portunities, he Nash-

ville News urges our readers to contact the Better Business Bureau of Arkansas, 12521 Can-nis Rd., Little Rock, AR 72211 or phone (501) 665-7274 or 1-800-482-8448.

MILLWOOD CORPORATION

Ofice:800-647-6455

Buyer of TimBer & TimBerland

P.O. Box 1316Hope, AR 71802

Matt Tollett (870) 845-5582

Johnny Porter - (870) 777-3774

J.K. Porter Jason Porter RF#987

Smith’s Mini Storage Units available in

Nashville & Mineral Springs (870) 845-5075

CarltonMini Storage

(870) 845-3560

SANDY BRANCH

MOBILE HOMES

We have your mobile home needs.SALES, SERVICE, RENTAL & MOVING

Financing Available! 8:00-5:00

(870) 845-2940

Hostetler

MowingDependable Lawn Care

Commercial & Residential Leaf Cleanup

(870) 557-

4510 Nashville

❍ELP❲ANTED

▼ERCHANDISE

�ANUFACTURED✁OMES

FARM

BUSINESS❙ERVICES

REALESTATE

MurfreesboroDiamond

COMBINATIONCLASSIFIEDS

NashvilleNEWS

N

reach over 4,500 readers! Call 1-888-845-6397 to place your ad today!

OTICE

219 N. 2nd St.

PO Box 903

Nashville, AR 71852

Ofice 870-845-5303Fax 870-845-1764

www.teagueandteague.com

[email protected]

LARRY R. TEAGUE, CIC

PARTNER

HOME • LIFE • AUTO

❨OU TH ✂OBS

YOUNG eLeCTRIC

Steve Young, Owner

870-845-2643

870-845-70921917 CR 342 • Nashville, AR 71852

• Residential• Commercial • Industrial Licensed, Bonded

& Insured

Be American

Buy American!!!

www.rayandassociates.net Call for your personal tour today!

Ray & Associates Real Estate724 S. Main St., Nashville • (870) 845-2900 Randy Ray (870) 904-0293 • Terry Ray 845-7757

Dale Bennett 557-6597 Laurie Westfall 584-7926 • Carolyn Reed 200-0201

Home in Bingen Estates on 1.28 Acres.

3 bedroom/2 bath, approx. 1752 sq. ft., No

wasted space in this home, large rooms,

great for growing family, plenty of yard

with covered patio, stove/oven, dishwash-

er, microwave stay, located at 111 S. Bin-

gen Circle.....................Listed for 159,900.

Call our ofice for your personal tour.

Charles’ Tree Service

870-557-1003Tree trimming •Tree Removal

• Professional Tree Service• Bucket Trucks

Fully insured for all your tree trimming needs Free Estimates

and years experience.

Help WantedLooking for Cook with 2 years

experience in understanding recipes & following nutrional guide lines.

Non-Emergency Van Driver, must be 21 years old. Valid drivers license, Vlean MVR (does not require a CDL). Must pass criminal backgroung & drug test.

Select Staff of Texarkana903-794-1411

Page 12: ashville News · March, Cpl. Penney was serving a traffic stop along Highway 278 when he encoun-tered a convicted felon. The suspect became combative during the exchange and a violent

12 Thursday, January 24, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397

Drug free Workplace Equal Opportunity Employer m/f/V/D

Providi g Co fort a d Care Fro Our Fa ily

In your Ho e, Hospital or Nursi g Ho e Facility

www.dierksenmemorialhospice.com

870-773-4353

4425 Jefferson Ave. Ste. 104

Texarkana, AR 71854

OuTREACH COORDINATORThis position will handle marketing and public

relations for Sevier, Howard, and Hempstead

counties educating medical and non medical communi-

ties on end of life care and The Hospice Philosophy.

The ideal candidate is a compassionate person with a

sincere desire to help others

Send Resumes toDarren Crabbe, Asst. Administrator

[email protected] fax 870-773-4418

Providing Comfort Care From Our Family to Yours

- Wherever You May Call Home

On January 19, 2013, our parents, celebrated 50 years together surrounded by family. Even those who were unable to physically attend were able to be there through modern technology (thank you Skype!).Through trials and triumphs, good times and rough patches, they have shown to us all that love and commitment are the guiding forces to a lasting relationship. Who would have thought

that this wonderful union started with a blind date? God bless you both.

We love you both so much!We love you both so much!

Bud and Carol Spaulding Bud and Carol Spaulding

mLK rememberedNew Light CME hosts community memorial for Martin Luther King Jr. and his legacy

Photos by C e c i l Anderson

•Friends •Food•FootballPrivate Club Members & Guest Only

Memberships Available

join he Timbers Crew

Sunday, February 3rd and watch the BIG GAME on

5 (60”) TV’s Football in every corner • Never Miss A Play

Doors Open @ 4:00 pmKick of at 6:30 pm

Timbers

“We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools,” - Martin Luther King Jr.

Rev. Don White Sr. and Rev. Johnny Stuart sing, “Lift Every

Voice and Sing.”

Pastor Kevin Brazil

Bonnie Haislip presents Nashville Police Chief Dale Pierce with the Alston Award for his community service work “with Seniors of Howard County.”

Bonnie Haislip presents Philip Walton (above) and Nashville Police officer Casey Parker (below) with the Alston Award for their community service work.

The crowd at New Light CME Church listens to Wendy Stewart sing during the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration held Jan. 21.