vol. 109 no. 179 sheriff’s deputies make drug...

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Vol. 109 No. 179 SATURDAY , SEPTEMBER 8, 2012 $1 dollar weekend edition LIFESTYLES Ike Adams: Roost- ers can be an effective wake-up call...... 5 TODAY’S WEATHER Cooler with showers and thunderstorms. High will be in the mid 70s. The low in the mid 50s ...... 2 SPORTS Yellow Jackets sting Harlan ...... 6 HAVE YOU BEEN INJURED IN AN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT? LET THE FRIENDLY STAFF AT ASHER LAW OFFICE ASSIST YOU WITH YOUR LEGAL NEEDS! DOUGLAS E. ASHER II, PSC • ATTORNEY AT LAW 305 EAST CENTRAL STREET • HARLAN, KENTUCKY AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS • SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY • PERSONAL INJURY •CRIMINAL LAW •DUI DEFENSE • DIVORCE AND CUSTODY • DEEDS AND WILLS CALL FOR A FREE CONSULTATION: 606-573-3033 • OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 A.M. – 4:30 P.M. THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT Joe Asher Staff Writer The Harlan County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at a Wallins Creek resi- dence on Friday. James Gooden, 49, was arrested at his residence in Billy G. Hollow, by deputy Mitch Alford on charges of traf- ficking marijuana, second-degree traf- ficking a controlled substance, posses- sion of drug para- phernalia, prescription con- trolled substance not in prop- er container and third-degree trafficking a controlled sub- stance. According to a press release, information was received that lead to the execution of a search war- rant. Upon searching the residence with the aid of K-9 unit Ice, 38 pills, marijuana, drug parapher- nalia and $142 in cash were located. Also arrested was Wiley Belcher, 67, of Wallins Creek, who was charged with second-degree possession, third- degree posses- sion, controlled substance not in proper container, operating motor vehicle under the influence and obstructed vision and or windshield. Assisting at the scene were Sheriff Marvin Lipfird, Sgt. Miron Southerland, deputies Travis Freeman, Dee Dee Ulbrich, Matt Cope, Justin Lutrell and chaplains Bill Ball and Joey Robertson. In other police activity: * Kelly Blevins, 41, of Kenvir, was arrested on a charge of first-degree traffick- ing a controlled substance by the Lynch Police Department on Friday. Blevins was lodged in the Harlan County Detention Center on a $10,000 bond; * Virgil Blevins, 47, of Evarts, was arrested on Friday by the Loyall Police Department on a charge of first-degree trafficking a con- trolled substance. Blevins Photo submitted Several items were confiscated by the Harlan County Sheriff’s Office during a drug raid Thursday. Sheriff’s deputies make drug arrest at Wallins See BUST | 3 Mark Bell Contributing Writer Following a fire at the Daniel Boone Clinic last month, local officials of Appalachian Regional Healthcare anticipate reopening the second floor for patients very soon. According to Nick Jenks, facility manager at Harlan ARH Hospital, the cleanup work has been completed, minor repairs and renovations done, and the contents have been returned to offices, exam rooms, nursing stations, and waiting areas. The results of envi- ronmental tests required by insurance standards were expected Friday but had not been received by the end of the day. Once cleared by the report to return, the clinic staff will be able to make final prepara- tions for the return of patients to the upstairs departments of surgery, obstetrics and gynecol- ogy. Jenks said he antici- pates having the floor reopened for patients as early as Monday, but the finishing work cannot be completed until the test results are reported. The parking area out- side the hospital’s sur- gery department has been blocked off this week while construction crews prepare to build structures for the new heart cath lab. Cardiac catheteriza- tion, commonly referred to as heart cath, is a diagnostic and inter- ventional procedure for detailed imaging of the arteries feeding the heart. It is a common Daniel Boone Clinic expected to reopen floor next week New heart cath service also under construction Photos submitted Joe Sadler, site director for Belfor, coordinates final preparations for the Daniel Boone Clinic’s second floor with Sharon O’Rourke, clinic administrator. Belfor has been providing site restoration and cleanup work at the clinic following a fire last month. Hospital officials anticipate reopening the clinic’s upper floor next week. Cath Lab site work is under way in preparation for a new heart cath service at the hospital. It is expected to open by the end of the year. James Gooden See CLINIC | 2 Jeff Phillips Harlan County Schools Public Relations To say Roger Jordan loves band is an under- statement. “It is my life,” says Jordan, a senior at Harlan County High School and tuba player for the band. Over the past two years, his love for the program has blossomed through his involvement in the jazz band, concert band and marching band, as well as through per- sonal lessons. His hard work and dedi- cation in recent years to the music program are pay- ing off with various acco- lades for his talent coming his way. He recently was named the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Award recipient during the Stephen Foster HCHS band student wins Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia award Photo by Jeff Phillips | Harlan County Schools Tuba player finds the right path to college-career readi- ness in the field of music. See BAND | 2 Staff Report The Kentucky State Police are investigat- ing the death of a South Carolina man who was fatally injured in an off road crash Thursday evening at the Black Mountain ATV Park in Evarts. According to Trooper Jason Joseph, Gabriel Nelson Gardner, 31, of Seneca, was operating an off road vehicle on one of the trails at the park. A mechanical fail- ure caused the vehicle to leave the trail and go over an embankment, ejecting Gardner. Gardner was pro- nounced dead at the scene by Harlan County Deputy Coroner Jim Rich. Gardner’s wife, Heather Gardner, was a passenger in the vehicle and suffered minor injuries. She was transported and admitted to Harlan ARH Hospital where she was later released. The incident is still under investigation by Joseph. The Harlan County Rescue Squad and LifeCare Ambulance Service responded to the scene. Fatality occurs at Black Mountain ATV Park HHS Royalty Vicki Blakley|Daily Enterprise Lauren Hogue was crowned Harlan County High School Homecoming Queen during a ceremony at Friday night’s game.

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Vol. 109 • No. 179 Saturday , September 8, 2012 $1 dollar weekend edition

LifestyLesIke Adams: Roost-ers can be an effective wake-up call...... 5

today’s WeatherCooler with showers and thunderstorms. High will be in the mid 70s. The low in the mid 50s ...... 2

sportsYellow Jackets sting Harlan ...... 6

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HAVE YOU BEEN INJURED IN AN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT? LET THE FRIENDLY STAFF AT ASHER LAW OFFICE ASSIST YOU WITH YOUR LEGAL NEEDS!DOUGLAS E. ASHER II, PSC • ATTORNEY AT LAW 305 EAST CENTRAL STREET • HARLAN, KENTUCKY

AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS • SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY • PERSONAL INJURY •CRIMINAL LAW •DUI DEFENSE • DIVORCE AND CUSTODY • DEEDS AND WILLSCALL FOR A FREE CONSULTATION: 606-573-3033 • OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 A.M. – 4:30 P.M.

THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT

Joe asherStaff Writer

The Harlan County Sheriff ’s Office executed a search warrant at a Wallins Creek resi-dence on Friday.

James Gooden, 49, was arrested at his residence in Billy G. Hollow, by deputy Mitch Alford on charges of traf-ficking marijuana, second-degree traf-ficking a controlled substance, posses-sion of drug para-phernalia, prescription con-trolled substance not in prop-er container and third-degree trafficking a controlled sub-stance.

According to a press release, information was received that lead to the execution of a search war-rant. Upon searching the

residence with the aid of K-9 unit Ice, 38 pills, marijuana, drug parapher-nalia and $142 in cash were located. Also arrested was Wiley Belcher, 67, of Wallins Creek, who was charged with second-degree possession, third-degree posses-sion, controlled

substance not in proper container, operating motor vehicle under the influence and obstructed vision and or windshield.

Assisting at the scene were Sheriff Marvin Lipfird, Sgt. Miron Southerland, deputies Travis Freeman, Dee Dee Ulbrich, Matt Cope, Justin Lutrell and chaplains Bill Ball and Joey Robertson.

In other police activity:* Kelly Blevins, 41, of

Kenvir, was arrested on a charge of first-degree traffick-ing a controlled substance by the Lynch Police Department on Friday. Blevins was lodged in the Harlan County Detention Center on a $10,000 bond;

* Virgil Blevins, 47, of Evarts, was arrested on Friday by the Loyall Police Department on a charge of first-degree trafficking a con-trolled substance. Blevins

Photo submittedSeveral items were confiscated by the Harlan County Sheriff’s Office during a drug raid thursday.

Sheriff’s deputies make drug arrest at Wallins

See BUST | 3

mark bellContributing Writer

Following a fire at the Daniel Boone Clinic last month, local officials of Appalachian Regional Healthcare anticipate reopening the second floor for patients very soon.

According to Nick Jenks, facility manager at Harlan ARH Hospital, the cleanup work has been completed, minor repairs and renovations done, and the contents have been returned to offices, exam rooms, nursing stations, and waiting areas.

The results of envi-ronmental tests required by insurance standards were expected Friday but had not been received by

the end of the day.Once cleared by the

report to return, the clinic staff will be able

to make final prepara-tions for the return of patients to the upstairs departments of surgery,

obstetrics and gynecol-ogy.

Jenks said he antici-pates having the floor reopened for patients as early as Monday, but the finishing work cannot be completed until the test results are reported.

The parking area out-side the hospital’s sur-gery department has been blocked off this week while construction crews prepare to build structures for the new heart cath lab.

Cardiac catheteriza-tion, commonly referred to as heart cath, is a diagnostic and inter-ventional procedure for detailed imaging of the arteries feeding the heart. It is a common

Daniel Boone Clinic expected to reopen floor next week

New heart cath service also under construction

Photos submittedJoe Sadler, site director for belfor, coordinates final preparations for the daniel boone Clinic’s second floor with Sharon O’rourke, clinic administrator. belfor has been providing site restoration and cleanup work at the clinic following a fire last month. Hospital officials anticipate reopening the clinic’s upper floor next week. Cath Lab site work is under way in preparation for a new heart cath service at the hospital. It is expected to open by the end of the year.

James Gooden

See CLINIC | 2

Jeff phillipsHarlan County Schools Public Relations

To say Roger Jordan loves band is an under-statement.

“It is my life,” says Jordan, a senior at Harlan County High School and tuba player for the band.

Over the past two years, his love for the program has blossomed through his involvement in the jazz band, concert band and marching band, as well as through per-sonal lessons.

His hard work and dedi-cation in recent years to the music program are pay-ing off with various acco-lades for his talent coming

his way. He recently was named the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Award recipient during the Stephen Foster

HCHS band student wins Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia award

Photo by Jeff Phillips | Harlan County Schools

tuba player finds the right path to college-career readi-ness in the field of music.

See BAND | 2

Staff Report

The Kentucky State Police are investigat-ing the death of a South Carolina man who was fatally injured in an off road crash Thursday evening at the Black Mountain ATV Park in Evarts.

According to Trooper Jason Joseph, Gabriel Nelson Gardner, 31, of Seneca, was operating an off road vehicle on one of the trails at the park. A mechanical fail-ure caused the vehicle to leave the trail and go over

an embankment, ejecting Gardner.

Gardner was pro-nounced dead at the scene by Harlan County Deputy Coroner Jim Rich.

Gardner’s wife, Heather Gardner, was a passenger in the vehicle and suffered minor injuries. She was transported and admitted to Harlan ARH Hospital where she was later released. The incident is still under investigation by Joseph.

The Harlan County Rescue Squad and LifeCare Ambulance Service responded to the scene.

Fatality occurs at Black Mountain ATV Park

HHS Royalty

Vicki Blakley|Daily EnterpriseLauren Hogue was crowned Harlan County High School Homecoming Queen during a ceremony at Friday night’s game.

BandFrom page 1

ClinicFrom page 1

Page 2 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday , September 8 , 2012

Obituaries

Weather Forecast

State/Region

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TODAYCooler with showers and thun-

derstorms in the morning. Then partly cloudy with a chance of showers in the afternoon. The high will be in the mid 70s. The low will be in the mid 50s

SUNDAYPartly cloudy with the high

around 70. The low will be in the lower 50s.

EXTENDED OUTLOOKMostly sunny Monday through

Wednesday. The high will be 74 to 79. The lows will be in the lower 50s. Mostly sunny Thursday with the high in the lower 80s. The low will be in the upper 50s.

Summer enforcement project nets arrests

FRANKFORT (AP) — After three months of stepped-up enforcement on Kentucky’s highways, police say the project resulted in apprehension of 41 fugitives as well as thousands of drunken-driving and drug arrests.

The effort, called Operation B.L.U.E. Lights, began June 1 and ended Labor Day. Kentucky State Police held 1,640 safety checkpoints across the state during that time to draw attention to unsafe driving and reduce traffic deaths.

A total of 2,072 DUI arrests and 1,462 drug arrests were made. There were 8,932 seat belt cita-tions written and 933 child seat violations during the campaign.

Maj. Mike Crawford says the agency will continue such enforcement projects to reduce highway deaths.

To report an erratic driver, call state police at (800) 222-5555.

Former trooper gets 74 months on charges

LONDON (AP) — A former Kentucky State Police Trooper who tried to trade a woman drugs in exchange for sex has been sentenced to 74 months in prison for drug trafficking and carrying a firearm while trafficking prescription narcotics.

A judge handed down the sentence for 35-year-old Michael Fred Pennington in federal court in London on Thursday. A jury convicted Pennington in May of the firearms charge. Before the trial, Pennington pleaded guilty to drug trafficking. He previously worked out of the state police post in London.

Prosecutors say in September 2011, Pennington offered not to arrest a woman on a drug charge after finding pills in her home if she had sex with him. The next day, prosecutors say, Pennington offered the woman a Lortab pill in exchange for sex.

Former coach pleads guilty in teen sex case

PADUCAH (AP) — A former coach in Paducah has entered a plea agreement that could send him to prison for 3 1/2 years.

According to The Paducah Sun, 27-year-old Sammy Montgomery pleaded guilty on Thursday to third-degree rape and first-degree sexual abuse involving a teen.

The Commonwealth’s Attorney wants the court to declare Montgomery a violent offender, which would make him ineligible for parole or shock probation. The defense will argue at a November sentencing hearing against the designation and ask that Montgomery be allowed to stop registering as a sex offender after 20 years.

The McCracken County Schools hired Montgomery at the beginning of the last school year and fired him after his arrest in May.

The charge reflects the victim was younger than 16 and was under Montgomery’s authority.

Beshear announces airport FAA grants

FRANKFORT (AP) — Louisville International Airport has been awarded $10 million in Federal Aviation Administration grants for improvements, and Lake Cumberland Regional Airport in Somerset will receive $75,000.

Gov. Steve Beshear announced the grants Thursday.The Louisville airport will receive $8.1 million for

snow removal equipment, including a snow plow and two dump trucks; extend a taxiway by 2,000 feet; and reconstruct some existing pavement. The airport will receive another $1.9 million to buy firefighting suits, update the pavement management program, recon-struct runway and taxiway pavement and conduct a study to recommend infrastructure and operational improvements to accommodate aircraft.

Paul MullinsPaul Harry Mullins, 79,

of Rosspoint, passed away Thursday, September 6, 2012 at Harlan ARH Hospital of an apparent heart attack. He was born at Putney and had lived in the area all of his life. Paul was no stranger to hard work and started at an early age in the saw mill. He was retired from Gaines Lumber Mill at Baxter.

Paul was preceded in death by his wife, Helen Lewis Mullins; his par-ents, Hatler Mullins and Hattie Kelly Mullins; a son, Tony Mullins; one sister, Patsy Pope; three brothers, Kenneth, Warren G. and Billie Mullins; and a grandson-in-law, Moss Hensley.

Survivors include a son, Richard Mullins and wife Cindy, of London; a daughter, Melissa Thomas and husband Kenneth, of Cawood; a brother, Fred Mullins and wife Ruth, of Florence, KY; two sisters, Peggy Lewis, of Wallins; and Mary Hunt, of Loyall; his grandchildren:

April Thomas, Amanda Hensley, Calvin Hensley, Hailee Saylor, Derrick, Natasha, Steven, Becky, Ricky and Michael; his great-grandchil-dren: Braxton, Joshua, Jeremiah, Brayden, Brandon, Matthew, Monika, Christina, Alexis, Dalton, Scottie and Ayden; a host of nieces and nephews; and his friends and caregivers at the Harlan Health and Rehabilitation Center.

Visitation for Paul will be from 5 – 8 pm Saturday at Harlan Funeral Home.

Funeral services will be held at 2 pm Sunday at the funeral home with Rev. Joe Howard officiat-ing.

Paul will be laid to rest in the family cemetery with family and friends serving as pallbearers.

Online condolences may be left at www.harla-nobits.net.

Harlan Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-ments.

Joanna DelphJoanna Lynn Delph, 47

of Harlan, passed away Thursday, September 6, 2012 at Rockcastle Regional Healthcare after a long battle with cancer.

Joanna was born October 4, 1964 in Harlan, KY to the late Ralph “Buck” Frith and Arbutis Frith. She was a homemaker and believed in the Holiness faith.

Besides her parents

she is preceded in death by her husband, James Delph; and brother, Ralph Frith, Jr..

She is survived by 2 sons: Christopher (Robin) Delph and Shane (Kayla) Delph all of Harlan; 2 sisters: Lisa Moore (Zeke Helton) of Verda, KY and Trina (Mack) Napier of Evarts, KY; 3 nieces: Miranda (Brandon) Payne of Harlan and Tessa and Lily Napier, both of Evarts, KY; 1 nephew: Mack Napier of Evarts, KY; and 1 great niece: Tatum Ophelia Payne of Harlan; she also leaves a host of relatives and friends to mourn her passing.

Funeral services will be conducted 2:00 pm Sunday Sept. 9, 2012 in the chapel of Anderson-Laws & Jones Funeral Home with Rev. officiat-ing.

Visitation will be after 12:00 pm Sunday, Sept. 9, 2012 until the funeral hour at Anderson-Laws & Jones Funeral Home.

Burial will follow in the Tway Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be fam-ily and friends.

Condolences may be sent to www.harlanobits.net

Anderson-Laws & Jones Funeral Home is honored to be serving the Delph family.

Joshua MiracleJoshua Miracle, age 74,

of Smith, KY passed away

Friday, September 7, 2012 at his residence. He was born June 5, 1938 in Pathfork, KY. Mr. Miracle was a retired welder and night watchman. He was also a member of the Faith Holiness Church.

He is preceded in death by his parents; James Walt and Flora Miracle; two sisters, Dorothy Scott and Shirley Senters.

Survivors include his wife, Brenda Daniels Miracle of Smith, KY; three children, Amanda Miracle of Smith, KY, Renee Tomlin and hus-band Chris of Harlan, KY, Stephanie Mitchell and husband Thomas of Wallins, KY; one grand-child, Bradley Tomlin. Many other relatives and friends also survive.

Visitation will be held Sunday, September 9, 2012 from 5-9 p.m. at Mount Pleasant Funeral Home.

Funeral Services will be conducted on Monday, September 10, 2012 at 11 a.m. at the Faith Holiness Church in Smith, KY with the Rev. Spencer Burkhart and Rev. Everett Eads officiating. Burial will follow at the Daniels Cemetery in Smith, KY. Family and friends will serve as pallbearers.

Online Condolences may be left for the family at www.harlanobits.net.

Mount Pleasant Funeral Home has been entrusted with the arrangements.

Advisory issuedThe city of Evarts has issued a boil-water

advisory for the following customers: North Evarts, Baileys Creek, Dartmont, River Ridge and Short Town.

For more information, call 837-3232.

Music Camp at Eastern Kentucky University. This award is presented to the most outstanding student during the camp. He received this honor in front of 556 participating students.

Band Director James Adams said he is pleased with Jordan’s growth in the music program.

“He has progressed fast-er than any student I have had in my lesson studio. Not only has Roger grown technically, but he has blossomed into a strong musician.”

Adams noted that dur-ing Jordan’s sophomore year, “he was frequently last chair at honors events. During his junior year, he was first chair at honor events.

He earned first chair in the EKU Honor Band, second chair in the All-Festival band, third chair in the all-region band, and distinguished ratings in the district and state solo and ensemble competi-

tions.Jordan readily admits

his love for band wasn’t always there, that he actu-ally joined beginners and for what was perceived by students as an “easy class.”

“Then I came to HC and it really took hold,” he said.

Jordan credits Adams for helping foster his com-mitment to music.

“He (Mr. Adams) is what really got me into it. He is the reason I went to everything and got where I am. He helped me in band, in private les-sons and has talked with his teacher at Eastern. Everything seems to be coming together.”

Jordan plans to audition for a music scholarship at EKU in February. His goal is to pursue a music degree and someday be a band director.

Receiving the Phi Mu Alpha Award is a great honor, said Jeanne Ann Lee, the Harlan County

School District’s music director. “The kids who go are the kids who are inter-ested in music. They are very involved in groups at their high school. To be named best among stu-dents who already excel is a tremendous honor. We are extremely proud of Roger. He is such a great kid. He truly is. I am extremely pleased for him and our music program.”

Adams said some of the band’s success this year is a direct result of Jordan’s dedication to the program.

“Roger’s leadership within the band pro-gram has been invaluable this year,” said Adams. “Musically, Roger sets a great example for the pro-gram and has taken on an instructional role working with some of our younger students.”

The marching band’s featured program this year is a tribute to coal min-ers. The half-time show is designed to take a trip into a day in the life of

the coal miner. The band will perform this during half-time at home football games and during various competitions scheduled this fall.

“Roger is a very deserv-ing young man,” said Bob Howard, HCHS principal. “I always see him working hard with the band. He truly is dedicated to the band program. He has a great attitude. He is an all-around good natured boy.”

In addition to band, he is active with the piano program at HCHS and the Teetersville Baptist Church Youth Group. He presently has plans to “step out” in the music program at his church and share his talent. He is the son of the Rev. Roger and Berniece Jordan, of Teetersville. His brother, Josh is an eighth-grader at Rosspoint Elementary School. He is not inter-ested in band at this time, concentrating on base-ball. Hopefully that will change, said Jordan.

and reliable method for determin-ing heart disease and the risk for potential heart attacks.

Heart cath has been performed in Harlan before, but has not been available for about five years. This new mobile service will travel between Harlan and Middlesboro using a customized and expandable vehicle that converts down to the size of a semi trailer for transport purposes. Local cardiologists will perform the service.

The construction at Harlan con-sists of two phases: an outdoor ramp and canopy that connects the hospital directly with the mobile lab, and an indoor vestibule con-necting outpatient surgery with the covered ramp.

Total construction time is about three months, Jenks said. The placement of the new lab will result in the loss of six to eight parking spaces on the north side of the building.

As a result of a major storm in the area in March, the buildings on the hospital campus sustained serious roof damage due to hail. Temporary repairs have been in place since early spring, and now work on completely new roofs for all structures is underway, a project in the $4 million range.

Jenks said the roofing work was “30 to 40 percent” complete and estimated another 30 days to finish the project.

BustFrom page 1

Courthouse NewsSaturday , September 8, 2012 Page 3 — Harlan Daily Enterprise

Civil lawsuitsThe following civil

lawsuits were filed recently in the office of Harlan Circuit Court Clerk Paul F. Williams.

Kali L. Gordy vs. Allen J. Ross — child support.

Commonwealth Credit Union Incorporation vs. Tammy G. Roark, et al. — contract dispute.

Harlan Appalachian Regional Hospital vs. John H. Maggard — con-tract dispute.

Autovest vs. Charles Brock, et al. — contract dispute.

Asset Acceptance vs. Tammie Perkins — con-tract dispute.

Kristal Ann Brown vs. Boyd Robert Brown — dissolution of marriage.

Phillip B. Chitwood vs. Summer (Bailey) Chitwood — dissolution of marriage.

Ginger Gail Marsh vs. Anthony Edwin Marsh Jr. — dissolution of mar-riage.

Angelina Grubbs vs. Lee Robert Grubbs — dissolution of marriage.

Branch Banking & Trust Company vs. Richard Gale Ison, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Joyce Hoskins, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Jim Ed Gibson, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Carolyn Engle, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Betty Sue Cornett, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Tracey Michelle Williams, et al. — foreclosure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Mary Jacqulene Farmer, et al. — foreclo-sure.

Tax Ease Lien Servicing vs. Betty Anderson, et al. — foreclosure.

Larry W. Grubbs vs. Phillip L. Cox, et al. — personal injury.

District court cases

The following cases have been heard in Harlan District Court, Judge Jeff Brock pre-siding.

David L. Sargent, 26, failure of owner to main-tain required insurance/security, expired or no registration plate, inad-equate silencer (muffler), failure to wear seat belt, failure to register trans-fer of a motor vehicle, resident registered/titled vehicle in other state — continued for arraign-ment.

Bruce Z. Maddon, 17, speeding (seven miles per hour over the limit), no operator’s/moped license, operating vehicle with one headlight, improper equipment — first two charges, pleaded guilty, fined $64 (court costs waived); other charges dismissed.

Billy A. McBee, 20, no operator’s/moped license, failure to notify address change to the transporta-tion department, expired or no Kentucky registra-tion receipt, failure of non-owner operator to maintain required insur-ance, license plate not illuminated, resident reg-istered/titled vehicle in other state — pleaded guilty, fined $227 (court costs waived).

Billy A. McBee, 20, improper registration plate, failure to regis-ter transfer of a motor vehicle — dismissed on proof.

Shawn Vick, 22, — second-degree disorder-ly conduct — pleaded guilty, fined $50 (court costs waived).

Candace Seals-Smith, 27, failure to wear seat belt, failure to produce insurance card — pleaded guilty, fined $75 (court costs waived).

Michael Cooper, 51, illegal sale/give alcohol beverages in a dry terri-tory — pleaded guilty,

fined $100 (court costs waived) and sentenced to 90 days in jail (probated 24 months).

Gary Boggs, 59, driv-ing under the influence of alcohol/drugs, expired or no Kentucky registra-tion receipt, failure to produce insurance card, failure of owner to main-tain required insurance/security, careless driv-ing, failure to wear seat belt, display of illegal/ altered registration plate, expired or no registration plate, improper registra-tion plate — pleaded not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 8.

Terry O. Ingram, 28, operating vehicle on sus-pended/revoked opera-tor’s license, disregarding stop sign, failure to wear seat belt, failure of owner to maintain required insurance/security, care-less driving, failure to produce insurance card — pleaded guilty, sen-tenced to 22 days in jail (court costs waived).

Clarence W. Cox, driv-ing under the influence of alcohol/drugs, leaving the scene of an accident/failure to render aid or assistance, failure to produce insurance card, failure of owner to main-tain required insurance/security, failure to wear seat belt, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt, failure to regis-ter transfer of a motor vehicle — first charge, pleaded guilty, fined $708 and operator’s license suspended 30 days; other charges sentenced to 30 days in jail.

Cody Ryan McQueen, 20, no tail lights, no brake lights (passenger vehicles), license plate not illuminated, failure to wear seat belt — dis-missed.

Christopher J. Sergent, 38, failure to produce insurance card, operat-ing vehicle on suspend-ed/revoked operator’s license, failure to register transfer of a motor vehi-

cle, failure to wear seat belt — failed to appear for hearing.

David M. Estes, 29, failure of owner to main-tain required insurance/security, failure to reg-ister transfer of a motor vehicle — failed to appear for hearing.

Daniel Cornett, 26, expired or no registra-tion plate, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt, failure to use child restraint device in vehicle, failure to wear seat belt, operating vehi-cle on suspended/revoked operator’s license, failure of owner to maintain required insurance/secu-rity — failed to appear for hearing.

Green B. Detherage Jr., 53, failure to wear seat belt, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt — failed to appear for hearing.

Steven D. Lewis, 45, expired or no registra-tion plate, expired or no Kentucky registra-tion receipt — failed to appear for hearing.

Michael Witt, 23, improper equipment, license to be in posses-sion — failed to appear for hearing.

Maurice A. Napier, 47, expired or no reg-istration plate, expired or no Kentucky registra-tion receipt — failed to appear for hearing.

Anthony Adams, 45, expired or no registra-tion plate, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt, failure of non-owner operator to main-tain required insurance, expired temporary plate, failure to register transfer of a motor vehicle — con-tinued for arraignment.

Tamathas Cornett, 34, failure of non-own-er operator to maintain required insurance, fail-ure to produce insurance card — continued for arraignment.

Lisa L. Hensley, 50, failure to produce insur-ance card — dismissed

on proof.Charity S. Sheeks,

38, failure of owner to maintain required insur-ance/security — pleaded guilty, fined $633.

Jeremiah Bustle, 28, driving under the influ-ence of alcohol/drugs — pleaded not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 22.

Travis L. Lawson, 31, driving under the influ-ence of alcohol/drugs — pleaded not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 22.

Shawnta Rae Raleigh, 40, driving under the influence of alcohol/drugs — pleaded not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 22.

Diana J. Swanner, 54, driving under the influ-ence of alcohol/drugs, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt, fail-ure to wear seat belt, fail-ure to register transfer of a motor vehicle — plead-ed not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 29.

Stephanie Crow, 33, license to be in posses-sion, speeding (15 miles per hour over the limit) — dismissed on proof and warning.

Jerry W. Elliott Jr., 37, improper passing, care-less driving, expired or no Kentucky registration receipt, expired or no registration plate, failure to wear seat belt, driv-ing under the influence of alcohol/drugs — pleaded not guilty, jury trial set Jan. 29.

Deryan Caldwell, 32, expired or no registration plate, failure of owner to maintain required insur-ance/security, operat-ing all-terrain vehicle on roadway, operating all-terrain vehicle with-out headgear (on public property), operating all-terrain vehicle (oversized engine), driving under the influence of alcohol/drugs, operating vehicle on suspended/revoked operator’s license — con-tinued for arraignment.

Edward D. Maggard, 36, disregarding stop sign, no operator’s/

moped license, license to be in possession, failure to wear seat belt — con-tinued for arraignment.

Adam Blake Cornett, 27, theft by deception (under $500) — pretrial conference set Nov. 26.

Deborah N. Bray, 54, failure to wear seat belt, failure of owner to main-tain required insurance/security — continued for arraignment Sept. 24.

Paul W. Curry, 32, fail-ure to give or improper signal, operating vehicle on suspended/revoked operator’s license — pleaded guilty, fined $75 (court costs waived).

Christopher A. Cornett, 30, failure of owner to maintain required insur-ance/ security, failure to register transfer of a motor vehicle, expired or no Kentucky registra-tion receipt, expired or no registration plate — first two charges, pleaded guilty, fined $658; other charges dismissed.

James S. Reynolds, 35, driving under the influence of alcohol/drugs, driving on a DUI-suspended license, failure of non-owner operator to maintain required insur-ance, failure to produce insurance card, improper turning, operating vehi-cle with one headlight — failed to appear for hearing.

Denver M. Ray, 46, reckless driving, failure to produce insurance card, failure of owner to maintain required insur-ance/security, failure to notify address change to the transportation department — continued for arraignment Sept. 24.

Jonathan Matthew Sharp, 21, speeding (20 miles per hour over the limit), reckless driving, failure to wear seat belt — continued for arraign-ment.

Timothy Hall, 39, two counts of theft by unlaw-ful taking — failed to appear for hearing (bond set at $1,000 cash).

Texting and driving: An epidemicOf the many dangers on

the road, text messaging while driving is one that is entirely preventable. Putting down your phone when driving can prevent thousands of injuries and even death.

According to Students Against Destructive Decisions and Liberty Mutual Insurance Group, instant and text messag-ing while driving tops the list of driver distrac-tions. Evidence gathered by these organizations has suggested that more than 3,000 vehicle fatalities and about 300,000 collisions a year can be attributed to texting conversations while the vehicle is in motion.

The Web site Distraction.gov notes that, in 2010, 3,092 people were killed in crashes involving a distracted driver and an additional 416,000 were injured in motor vehicle crashes involving a dis-tracted driver. Some peo-ple are now saying that texting while driving is equally as dangerous as driving while impaired by alcohol or drugs in terms of interfering with indi-viduals’ driving abilities.

Texting creates a crash risk 23 times greater than driving while not distract-ed, according to the United States. Department of Transportation. Although it may seem like a driver’s eyes are off the road for only a nominal amount of time, texting generally requires about 4 seconds, which is 4 seconds driv-ers are not looking at the

road. At average driving

speeds, that can mean driving about 360 feet, or the length of a football field, without looking.

But messaging while driving is not the only danger associated with phones and operating a motor vehicle. A study from Carnegie Mellon University found that using a cell phone while driv-ing reduces the amount of brain activity associated with driving by almost 40 percent. Therefore, tex-ting or simply speaking on a phone while driving involves a manual distrac-tion, a visual distraction and a cognitive distrac-tion. All of those distrac-

tions add up to trouble.Many areas have banned

the use of cell phones while driving. But such laws are difficult to enforce. A 2009 Pew Research study on teens and distracted driving found that nearly half of all people between the ages 12 to 17 have at one time ridden in a vehi-cle where the driver was engaged in texting. Fifty-two percent of phone-own-ing teens ages 16 to 17 said they have talked on a cell phone while driving.

In response to the rise of texting-while-driving accidents, some organiza-tions have taken an eye-opening approach to edu-cating drivers about the dangers of texting.

was lodged in the Harlan County Detention Center on a $10,000 bond;

* Henry Brock, 51, of Bledsoe, was arrested on a charge of torture of a dog or cat by the sheriff ’s office on Wednesday. Brock was lodged in the Harlan County Detention Center on a $2,000 bond;

* Christopher Weedman, 24, of

Evarts, was arrested by the Evarts Police Department for probation viola-tion on Wednesday;

* Carla Burgess, 53, of Evarts, was arrested on a charge of possession of a controlled substance by the Evarts Police Department on Wednesday.

Reach Joe P. Asher at 606-573-4510 or [email protected]

OpinionPage 4 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday , September 8, 2012

Today in hisTory

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“They are just agitated. They are screaming. Their faces — you have the grimace. They’re in pain … Sometimes the babies have seizures.”

This is a nurse describing what infants look and act like when they are born addicted to drugs.

They are the newest and youngest victims of Kentucky’s prescription pill epidemic and the number of such infants is growing at an alarming rate, accord-ing to a report by Laura Ungar in the Courier-Journal.

Prescription pill abuse is a scourge that kills nearly 1,000 people a year in this state. Now we learn 730 Kentucky infants were hospitalized last year addicted to drugs, compared to 29 such cases in 2000, and offi-cials blame prescription pill abuse for the skyrocketing numbers.

Audrey Tayse Haynes, secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, describing it as a “silent epidemic,” is sounding the alarm.

“Stop the madness,” she said. “This is too much.”Haynes is absolutely correct. But it will take much

more than rhetoric to address the deep roots of a prob-lem that has been growing for more than a decade as the state has continued to starve its mental health and substance abuse services and slashed funding for other important social services that help steer people out of drug and alcohol abuse. …

Clearly the way to stop infants from being born addicted to drugs is stop pregnant women from drug abuse and addiction. But Kentucky offers only lim-ited services (both public and private) and is poorly equipped to deal with the demand …

Yet services remain scarce in Kentucky.The state currently has 36 licensed or certified cen-

ters that serve pregnant or postpartum women, but advocates say that’s not nearly enough. …

Kentucky must devise a comprehensive plan to reach much further into the state’s addiction problem, before young people become dependent on drugs and alcohol.

Mental health and drug and alcohol abuse are inter-twined. Yet the state’s system of community mental health centers — the front line in treating mental illness and addiction — has scraped by for more than a decade with no increase in state funds and soaring demand for services. …

Haynes said she is trying to pull together public health and other officials to address this problem in a major way. We hope she and others involved appreciate the urgency and come up with a comprehensive plan to attack the problem that is now threatening the lives of the state’s youngest citizens.

— The Courier-Journal, Louisville

Plan of attack needed for drug-addicted newborns

Other Viewpoints

By the Associated PressToday is Saturday, Sept. 8, the 252nd day of 2012.

There are 114 days left in the year.Today’s Highlight in History:On Sept. 8, 1892, an early version of “The Pledge of

Allegiance,” written by Francis Bellamy, appeared in “The Youth’s Companion.”

On this date:In 1504, Michelangelo’s towering marble statue of

David was unveiled to the public in Florence, Italy.In 1565, a Spanish expedition established the first

permanent European settlement in North America at present-day St. Augustine, Florida.

In 1761, Britain’s King George III married Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, just a few hours after meeting her for the first time.

In 1900, Galveston, Texas, was struck by a hurricane that killed an estimated 8,000 people.

In 1921, Margaret Gorman, 16, of Washington, D.C., was crowned the first “Miss America” in Atlantic City, N.J.

In 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, D-La., was shot and mortally wounded inside the Louisiana State Capitol; he died two days later. (The assailant was identified as Dr. Carl Weiss, who was gunned down by Long’s bodyguards.)

To the uninitiated and ill informed, shutting down the coal industry seems simple. They might say any of the following: Save the environment; Stop mountaintop remov-al; Use alternative renew-able energy sources.

As an Honorary Harlan County Coal Miner (award given in 1982) and coal miner’s daugh-ter whose paternal and maternal grandfathers were coal miners and as a person who watched her beloved father in law, Roy Blevins, die of Black Lung, maybe I have earned the right to have an opinion.

Additional credentials: I took a course in mining and taught writing to min-ing students at Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College. In the writing class we toured mines at Lynch, Benham, and one of Clyde Bennett’s smaller mines with low coal. I, therefore, know on a very superficial level what it’s like to be in a coal mine.

I also know profession-als who live and work in coal mining regions as well as some of the thousands of skilled and semi-skilled workers who keep mining communities

viable.When I receive Facebook

postings on a daily basis about the pain that coal miners and their fami-lies are suffering or the marches on Washington and Frankfort, I think the EPA and those lawmak-ers at the national level have a moral obligation to rethink their positions.

I teach my college stu-dents that if they are argu-ing in favor of or against a position, it’s a d#@% sight better if they have first-hand knowledge of their subjects. I encourage them to admit in their pre-sentations that their expe-rience is only theirs and scientific analysis might prove that large numbers

in a class of people have a vastly different point of view; however, for them to declaim with passion on subjects that they know little or nothing about from an experiential level disturbs me.

Congress now has a 10 percent approval rat-ing which is very telling. Whom do those men and women in D.C. think they are representing? What have they experienced? What do they know about us and our lives?

And who are the 10 percent who approve of the job Congress is doing? Obviously they are some-how benefiting from the decisions Congress is making. Or perhaps

they are benefiting from Congress’ refusal to make important decisions.

For today, right now, it’s time for EPA officials, coal men and women who live at a distance from the mines they own, President Obama and a few members of his cabi-net to live among — even for a week or two — the persons whose lives they are drastically altering in negative ways.

The insightful among them might walk away with a new perspective and make better decisions about the families whose lives are being shattered by thoughtless legislation and regulations. We can’t wait.

“For today, right now, it’s time for EPa offi-cials, coal men and women who live at a distance from the mines they own, President obama and a few members of his cabinet to live among — even for a week or two — the persons whose lives they are drastically altering in negative ways.The insightful among them might walk away with a new perspective and make better decisions about the families whose lives are being shattered by thoughtless legislation and regulations. We can’t wait.”

-Vivian BlevinsAnd Then

Our coal industry is under attack

Letters to the Editor:Editor,The Medicare issue

being discussed now will make it more difficult for Obama’s campaign to muddy the waters over the intentions of the Romney/Ryan ticket.

First of all the $716 bil-lion taken from Medicare to pay for Obamacare needs to be restored into the Medicare trust funds. Secondly, people need to understand that Romney/Ryan do not have an agenda to destroy or weaken Medicare. Paul Ryan’s mother depends daily on Medicare. To be sure there will have to be a change in the setup of Medicare for future recipients. Otherwise the Medicare system will soon become bankrupt.

What I have found out is that under president Obama’s system, called Obamacare, wheelchairs and pacemakers will be subject to a tax. How absurd to propose taxing persons who genuinely

need these devices to live out their lives. Speaking of possible new taxes, be warned of moves in our state government of add-ing the state sales tax to services for new revenue for state government to spend. This would be on things like getting a hair-cut or having your car repaired. Everyday things that we all depend on.

A die in the wool liberal, Lt. Gov. Jerry Abrahamson, has been leading a group on this bonehead idea. You can be sure that when pre-sented by his group it will be wrapped in nice wrapping paper: such as providing more money for schools and public roads.

Folks, maybe we need to start a tea party chap-ter in Harlan County. I am beyond angry at the government never know-ing when to stop asking you and I for more of our dollars. We don’t need more revenue for pro-

grams we have. We need for government, at all levels, to wisely use the money they are presently taking in. i have to live on a budget. Government should have to live within its budget too.

Mathias WilliamsEvarts

Editor,Dearest family and

Harlan friends, During my visit to Harlan in July, being a published poet nationally and interna-tionally, my interest was drawn to a book signing event at the mall.

I met some very inter-esting people. One in par-ticular, Rosezelle Boggs-Qualls. I purchased the book “Walking Free” The Life of Nellie Zimmerman. Rosezelle was gracious enough to sign the book I purchased. It was money well spent. I was amazed as I began to read the book of this sad but cou-rageous woman and the

life’s obstacles she faced and overcame. As I read, I cried, laughed, praised God and cried more. I must say the authors were gifted in bring-ing this story to life. I received a blessing each time I picked up the book to read.

I live in Florida but was born in Harlan County. I highly recommend this book to everyone of all ages. It is truly a wealth of knowledge and will make one very thankful for their well-being. God’s blessings to Rosezelle Boggs-Qualls and Dr. Daryl C. Greene for their guidance in publishing of this heartfelt book. And God Bless people as Emily Street-Hensel and Jim Schneck for their love and working efforts to bring public aware-ness of the handicapped people in our world.

SueEllen (Cain) Mullins-Tardy

Florida

You and YoursSaturday , September 8, 2012 Page 5 — Harlan Daily Enterprise

Last Saturday morning, right at the crack of dawn, I first thought that I was dreaming because I would have sworn that roosters were crowing and that they were under the window on my front porch. And then I thought that I was dreaming when I heard Loretta yelling, “Shoooo, shoooo, shooooo! Get out of here!” And she was using a broom handle to beat on the side of a five gallon bucket to make racket as she screamed at the chickens and tried to scare them away.

As dreams go, this one was not particularly alarming. To the contrary, I found it rather amusing and I commenced laugh-ing until I felt a violent shaking of my shoulders and gouging in my ribs so I opened my eyes to find my wife, in her night gown, red-faced and liv-idly screaming at me to wake up and get my behind out of bed and do something!

Actually, Loretta used

the three letter version of behind but I understand that my column is now required reading by sixth graders somewhere in Harlan County. I just wish that I could see the teach-er’s face when he or she is asked by a student to name a three letter word for “behind.” In the mean-time, I have stopped cuss-ing in the column because heaven knows that I would never encourage innocent children to say a bad word that might get them sent

to the principal’s office. But I’d still love to see a teacher squirm out of this dilemma.

Anyway, back to the wake-up call wherein my wife was demanding to know where I kept my firecrackers hidden. I sud-denly envisioned her light-ing a firecracker, tossing it on the lawn and watching a rooster run up to grab it, whereupon its beak would be blown off. I guarantee that would be one chicken that shut up in a hurry.

Of course I resumed laughing as the roost-ers continued to crow as fast as they could catch their breath. And, to give Loretta credit, it did sound like a sizable flock of roosters and they were, in fact, crowing loud enough to wake the dead. Our cat was sitting at the foot of the bed hissing with her tailed raised and every hair on her back stuck straight up and every dog in the neigh-borhood, including ours, was barking and growl-

ing like they were ready for a major fight. I doubt that anybody on Lowell Branch was sleeping through the uproar and I suspect that most of them were as highly peeved as Loretta. (You kids might want to ask your teacher to come up with a six let-ter word, beginning with “p” for “peeved.”)

I grumbled, crawled out of bed and stumbled to the foyer to find Loretta going through cabinet drawers in the stairwell searching for firecrackers. I grabbed a pack and walked out on the porch to find two lit-tle feather legged/feather footed roosters, too big to called bantams but too small to be considered serious chickens, crowing at the top of their lungs as though they were trying to outdo each other. Only two of them were mak-ing all that clamor and I immediately began think-ing blue ribbon at the 2013 State Fair Crowing Contest.

I lit the fuse and tossed

the pack of crackers within two feet or less of the birds. It sounded like machine gun fire for a few seconds. Big sparks flew and smoke billowed. The dogs hushed although they’d been turned off with the flip of a switch. The roosters skittered about five feet away from the smoke, cocked their heads sideways and appeared to be curious for a few moments before resuming their ritual. Our cat is still missing she’ll probably figure out a way to untangle herself from the box springs when she gets hungry enough.

Loretta’s mouth dropped open and I could see whites completely cir-cling her eyes. That may have been the first time in my life that I have ever seen her rendered com-pletely speechless. By 9 a.m. she had called all our neighbors up and down the road only to find that nobody was missing any chickens. So they wan-dered about the yard and

garden all day and that evening she pointed out to me that they had “gone to roost” under the big for-sythia jungle in our front yard.

I told her that would fix them. I honestly figured a possum, fox or a pack of coyotes would dine on them before the night was over. But that was four days ago and Loretta has been highly peeved-off before 6 a.m. every morn-ing.

Last night I glanced over to check out her bed-time reading and she had one of those tree-hugger, homesteading, how-to books open to the chapter that deals with slaughter-ing fowl. Tonight I fully expect her to be looking up recipes for chicken and dumplings.

If you are missing two roosters with “grand champion ribbon” written all over them, you’d better get to Charlie Brown Road in a hurry while there’s still time to save them.

Roosters can be an effective wake-up call

Ike AdamsColumnist

Dear Readers: Do you open your bathroom and kitchen cabinets only to find a lot of cleaners, scrubs and cleaning chem-icals there? For a better, green solution that is cheap and friendly to the environ-ment, use VINEGAR!

Pour vinegar full strength, or mix it up! Here’s a good recipe to try: Combine 1/2 cup white vin-egar, 1 pint rubbing alco-hol and 1 teaspoon liquid dishwashing liquid. Add enough water to make a gallon. Pour into a spray bottle and CLEARLY label.

This will clean the show-er door, break down soap scum and clean mirrors! Too many soap suds in the sink when hand-washing your delicates? Add a squirt of friendly vinegar to the rinse water, and rinse again with clear water.

— HeloiseDear Heloise: Buy a pair

of men’s suspenders and separate them into two single pieces. Place them under the mattress (Heloise here: depending on size of mattress) and, using the clips on each end, attach them to the fitted sheet from one side to the other — one near the top and one near the bottom.

It takes more time and trouble to change your lin-ens, but you have a nice, smooth fitted sheet that stays on.

— Pam in Yantis, TexasPRETTY PAINTED

POTDear Heloise: Last sum-

mer, I purchased a large outdoor plant in a pot with writing on it. Instead of tossing the pot, I spray-painted it green. This year, I planted impatiens in it. It

looks really nice.So, gardeners, don’t toss

pots that have writing on them. They can be painted. It is a wonderful way to recycle and save money.

— Carolyn in North Berwick, Maine

EASY STOREDear Heloise: To store

necklaces, use a men’s tie hanger. I use a hanger that’s shaped like a regular clothes hanger but has 14 hooks along the length of the hanger, and I hang it up in my clothes closet.

It not only makes it easy to see all of your necklaces at once, but it also keeps them from becoming easily tangled.

— Kim in CaliforniaBANANA CARRIERDear Heloise: I take a

banana to work every day, and it often became bruised in my tote bag. I now use a cylinder-shaped potato-chip canister made of plastic to transport my banana. Works perfectly!

— Susan in Huntsville, Ala.

TRAVEL HINTDear Heloise: I have to

travel a lot for work, and I miss my kids terribly when I am gone. I wanted to do

something to show them I was thinking of them. I started mailing them post-cards from each city I was in. It makes me feel better about being gone, and gives them a souvenir from all the places I visit.

—Tom in UtahTom, this is a wonderful

“heart” hint that my daddy used to do. I still have all of his postcards!

— HeloiseLEFTOVER NUTSDear Heloise: Here is my

hint: When you have just a few nuts left in a can or cans, mix them all together, along with sunflower seeds or any other kind of ker-nels. Put all of it in a food chopper, and use one of the empty cans for storage. You have the perfect topping for a salad.

— Joan in MarylandWhat a neat idea, Joan!

You also can use this idea to create your own trail mix.

— HeloiseNIFTY NOTESDear Heloise: I was out

and about the other day and wanted to write myself a note but didn’t have a pen and paper. I realized that there is a “notes” section on my phone and quickly typed in a little note. When I got home, I pulled up my note from earlier and remembered what I had wanted.

— John, via emailSTUCK ON YOUDear Readers: Recently,

we had a pizza delivered, and the driver had the address written on a sticky note. What’s different? He had attached it to his shirt sleeve by his bicep so that he could safely look at it while driving.

— Heloise

Vinegar is the ultimate cleaning solution for almost everything

HeloiseHints From Heloise

(StatePoint) — It’s never too soon to get your child interested in current events — and doing so can have many positive benefits, from building vocabu-lary and improving writing, to encourag-ing active and engaged citizenship.

While the news might seem “boring” at first to kids, there are steps you can take to show them just how interesting and exciting current events can be:

READ TOGETHEREnsure that your home subscribes to

a daily paper. Let your children pick which articles they want to read and help them with words and concepts they don’t understand. Read at least a few front page news articles together and then allow them to skip to whichever sections of the paper they find the most interesting.

Many magazines run kids’ editions in print or online, such as Time, Sports Illustrated and National Geographic. Subscribe your child to an age-appropri-ate magazine or newspaper.

Most children are already well-versed in using the Internet for acquiring infor-mation. Guide your children to trusted

online news sources that they can access on their own.

HANDS-ON LEARNINGOften the most effective way to spark

your child’s interest is to offer him or her hands-on learning opportunities. Encourage your child to join the school newspaper or the school’s television news program.

Even as budget cuts loom in schools, private companies are helping schools offer their students unique education-al opportunities. The Panasonic Kid Witness News program for example, a hands-on program designed to help children develop creative, cognitive and communication skills, has provided more than 150,000 children around the world access to top-notch video produc-tion equipment and an opportunity to learn a new skill they can use to make fun newscasts that are relevant to their daily lives.

Each year, schools are encouraged to submit student videos on set themes and topics in formats such as newscasts, documentaries, dramas and commer-cials to a national and potentially global

contest. Winning schools receive a pack-age of Panasonic products that will enhance classroom learning. The videos show “the world through their eyes.” For more information, visit www.panasonic.net/kwn.

“It’s important to get kids to share how they see the world. This is a per-ception we don’t usually see in the news,” says Joseph Taylor, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Panasonic Corporation of North America. “It’s a valuable perspective that mainstream media usually misses.”

WATCH TOGETHERMake watching the news together a

part of your evening routine. Remember, kids have limited attention spans — so avoid the never ending 24-hour news programming and opt for a half-hour program that highlights all the day’s top stories succinctly. Use commercial breaks and dinnertime to discuss what you watched.

Get kids interested in current eventsDICKSON CITY,

Pa. (AP) — A bag of stolen cold cuts has landed a northeastern Pennsylvania man in the cooler.

Police say Leonard Taylor broke into a Dickson City deli, made himself a sandwich then took off with a bag of cold cuts and cash on Thursday.

Officers say they saw an intoxicated Taylor

sitting on the steps of a demolished home and counting money. He told police he’d been asked to hold the bag of deli meat by a couple who bummed a ciga-rette from him.

The Times-Tribune of Scranton reports Taylor was arrested after police say they checked a nearby deli and found signs of a break-in.

Man broke into deli, stole cash and meat

BIBLE THOUGHTGod looks at the heart, not the hand; the

giver, not the gift.She out of her poverty put in all that

she had, her whole livelihood.— Mark 12:44

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SportsPage 6 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday , September 8, 2012

JOHN MIDDLETON | Daily EnterpriseBlack Mountain’s Glenn Ford has won five championships during his 33 years as a middle school basketball coach.

John MiddletonSports Editor

When Jim Carpenter resigned from the bas-ketball team he started after just one season in 1979, Black Mountain Elementary School offi-cials selected 28-year-old assistant coach Glenn Ford to lead the girls bas-ketball program. Thirty-three seasons later, it’s safe to say they made the right choice.

What Black Mountain and countless basketball players got in Ford is a coach that is passionate about winning and the game of basketball, but is just as passionate about helping to create success-ful people off the court.

“I don’t want them to be just good players, but good people. I have tried to stress sportsmanship and team basketball,” Ford said. “If you are going to have a chance to win anything it has to be about the team and not the individuals.”

Ford has captured four county championships and several runner-up fin-ishes during his lengthy career, but the 61-year-old coach is quick to credit others for his accomplish-ments.

“God has given me a long life of coaching, and every bit of that is attrib-uted to him. Everything that I have accomplished I give credit to God,” he said. “Over the years I

have also had some really good assistant coaches. I have always said to be a good head coach you have to have good assistants to help you do a lot of things.”

Along with his four county titles, Ford has remarkably suffered just one losing season in his 33 years on the sidelines as a girls coach. Despite that success, he insists the relationships built along the way are most important.

“Even more than coach-ing and being success-ful, the friendships that I have made mean every-thing in the world to me,” he said. “I have made so many friendships during those years, and I still

am. I have made a lot of lifetime friends through coaching. The joy of mak-ing friends with players, coaches and parents has been a big thing for me.”

Ford is best known for his success in girls bas-ketball, but he has built a successful boys team at Black Mountain since taking over a struggling program six seasons ago. His rebuilding effort cul-minated in a county sev-enth- and eighth-grade championship last sea-son.

“I didn’t coach boys for a long time, and I didn’t know how I would handle it. But, it has been a lot of fun,” he said. “You just have to coach them differently.”

Ford a legend in middle school hoops

See FORD | 7

Gary GravesAP Sports Writer

LEXINGTON (AP) — Kentucky just wants to move forward after a rough opener.

Kent State also wants to continue its winning ways, just without another foot-ball folly with players run-ning in the wrong direction.

So something has to give Saturday night at Commonwealth Stadium when Kentucky tries to get on track after losing its opener 32-14 to Louisville. The short week hasn’t allowed the Wildcats much reflecting time, which is just as well considering there wasn’t much to look

back on.But they can look ahead

to the home opener, which the Wildcats have won six consecutive times.

Kent State counters with its own self-confidence after a blowout of Towson State featuring plenty of highlights, including one the Golden Flashes won’t ever forget.

Linebacker Andre Parker returned a muffed punt 58 yards but in the wrong direction, a sequence made more comical by Towson tacklers chasing him down.

“The first thing I was thinking was, ‘why aren’t the officials blowing the

Kentucky seeks to rebound at home vs Kent State

CHRIS JONES/Daily EnterpriseKentucky's Max Smith delivered a pass during last week's loss to Louisville. Smith and the Cats will look to get back on track today against Kent State.

Brett MartelAP Sports Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The suspensions of Jonathan Vilma and three other players in the NFL’s bounty investiga-tion were lifted Friday by a three-member appeals panel and the league reinstated those players a few minutes later.

The panel said Commissioner Roger Goodell did not have jurisdiction to hear the players’ appeals of their punishment for their roles in the New Orleans Saints bounty program that paid cash bonuses for hits that injured opponents.

While the ruling allows Saints linebacker Vilma, banned for the 2012 sea-son, Saints defensive end Will Smith, Cleveland linebacker Scott Fujita and free agent defen-sive lineman Anthony Hargrove to play imme-diately, it does not per-manently void their sus-pensions.

Still, the ruling comes just two days before the first full slate of NFL games this season and is a setback for Goodell and the league.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Goodell would “make an expe-dited determination of the discipline imposed” for violating the league’s bounty rule.

“Until that determina-tion is made, the four players are reinstated and eligible to play start-ing this weekend,” Aiello said.

Vilma tweeted: “Victory is mine!!!! -stew-ie griffin”

The panel’s decision states that Goodell can-not suspend the players for receiving money from a pool that paid for big plays, but he can still sus-pend the players if he can prove they intended to injure opponents. Players and coaches implicated in the bounty pool have testified under oath in a related federal court case they never intended to injure opposing players.

“Whether the com-missioner tries to read-dress the situation or not is his call,” said Peter Ginsberg, Vilma’s attorney. “We are cer-tainly hoping the appeals board has made it clear the commissioner tried to grab jurisdiction and impose penalties over an area he does not have oversight. … The factual record in the court makes it clear he has acted in a biased and inappropriate manner.”

The Saints open their season at home against Washington on Sunday, while the Browns host Philadelphia.

Panel vacates Saints bounty suspensions

See KENTUCKY | 8

Gary GravesAP Sports Writer

LOUISVILLE (AP) — Rewarding as Sunday’s season-opening victory was for No. 23 Louisville, the Cardinals didn’t cel-ebrate for long.

A short work week lead-ing up to Saturday’s game against Missouri State helped the Cardinals focus on the task at hand — a strong follow-up. Especially after last sea-son, when wins against Murray State, Kentucky and West Virginia were followed by letdowns against FIU, Marshall and Pittsburgh.

The Cardinals cer-tainly aren’t looking past the Bears, who trailed No. 21 Kansas State 16-9 after three quar-ters last week before the Wildcats scored 35 points in the fourth. With North Carolina visiting Louisville next week and several areas of concern, Louisville is

mindful of how a team such as Missouri State can quickly expose some blemishes.

“We’re not going to be complacent,” running back Senorise Perry said. “We’re just going to stay humble and keep work-ing one game at a time.”

Offensively, Louisville believes the 466-yard output in its’ 32-14 vic-tory against Kentucky is just a baseline. While the Cardinals don’t expect quarterback Teddy Bridgewater to duplicate his near-perfect season debut of 19-for-21 pass-ing for 232 yards in three quarters of action — one of his two incompletions was an out-of-bounds throwaway — he’s clear-ly more comfortable with the West Coast offense.

He completed passes to 11 different receivers on Sunday, finding them in traffic and sometimes while throwing off-bal-ance. Bridgewater’s first

No. 23 Louisville aims to avoid another letdown

See LOUISVILLE | 7

Chris Jones | Daily EnterpriseSenior Dakota Morris broke for a big gain during a 27-20 loss to visiting Middlesboro on Friday. The Green Dragons led 20-12 late in the fourth quarter before the Jackets rallied with two scores in the final minute.

Receiver David Allen fought for yardage during Friday's contest. Harlan returns to action next week at Lynn Camp.

Due to the late conclusion of Friday's game, the complete report was not available at press time. Visit harlandaily.com or see Tuesday's edi-tion for the entire article.

Chris Jones | Daily Enterprise

Yellow Jackets sting Harlan

FordFrom page 6

LouisvilleFrom page 6

SportsSaturday , September 8, 2012 Page 7 — Harlan Daily Enterprise

SUNDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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That '70s Show

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As Time Goes By

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Sports-Nation

ITF Tennis U.S. Open Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center

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FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins

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The Great Food Truck Race

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FX <++ Step Brothers (2008, Comedy) John C. Reilly, Will Ferrell.

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HGTV House Hunters

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ION (5:30) � Leverage

Leverage <++ Couples Retreat Leverage Leverage

LIFE (5:00) � <++ Bride Wars Kate Hudson.

<++ The Ugly Truth (2009, Comedy) Gerard Butler, Katherine Heigl.

Drop Dead Diva (N) Army Wives <++ The Ugly Truth �

MTV Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki Snooki MTV Video Music Awards 2012

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Jim Shockey's

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SPEED FIM Superbike Speed Center NASCAR Victory

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Long Island

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Medium(SP) (N)

Long Island (N)

Breaking Amish (P) (N)

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Long Island

TNT (2:50) � < Saving ...

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Leverage (N) Leverage <+++ Gran Torino �

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Squidbillies RobotChicken

Family Guy

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(:05) M*A*S*H Reunion Show Loves Ray

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USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

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VH1 40 Funniest Fails 40 Funniest Fails <+++ Old School ('03) Luke Wilson. TI Tiny TI Tiny Love and Hip-Hop

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SHOW (4:30) � < How to...

Jay Mohr Weeds Dexter Homeland Weeds (N)

Therapy (N)

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TMC <++++ The King's Speech (2010, Drama) Geoffrey Rush, Colin Firth.

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SATURDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 8, 2012 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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The Lawrence Welk Show

Appear-ances

As Time Goes By

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Song of the Mountains

Austin City Limits

WLEX (3:30) � NCAA Football (L)

Access Hollywood Weekend

Grimm Saving Hope (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

LEX 18 News

Sat. Night �

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Post-game (L)

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NASCAR Auto Racing Federated Auto Parts 400 Sprint Cup Series Site: Richmond International Raceway -- Richmond, Va. (L)

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(:45) Judy �

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Post-game (L)

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NASCAR Auto Racing Federated Auto Parts 400 Sprint Cup Series Site: Richmond International Raceway -- Richmond, Va. (L)

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WKYT 27 News Evening

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ITF Tennis U.S. Open Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L)

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WBIR (3:30) � NCAA Football (L)

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Grimm Saving Hope (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

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Sat. Night �

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Football Pre (L)

NCAA Football Nebraska vs. UCLA (L) FOX Tri-Cities 10 O'Clock News

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Crook and Chase ITF Tennis U.S. Open Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L)

48 Hours Mystery 27 News (:35) E. Media �

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<+++ The Contender (2000, Drama)Joan Allen, Gary Oldman.

CW 20 News

King of Queens

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Friends

WAPK Cheaters Crook and Chase House House Two and

Half MenTwo and Half Men

The Office

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WDKY (3:30) � MLB Baseball (L)

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NASCAR Auto Racing Federated Auto Parts 400 Sprint Cup Series Site: Richmond International Raceway -- Richmond, Va. (L)

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Ricki's Back

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ITF Tennis U.S. Open Site: USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (L)

48 Hours Mystery WJHL News

Connec-tions

WKHA The Lawrence Welk Show

Louisville Life

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<++++ I Want to Live! (1958, Drama)Simon Oakland, Susan Hayward.

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AMC Into the West <+++ Apollo 13 ('95) Tom Hanks. The true story of how the

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To Be Announced �

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CMT (4:30) � Idiots

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My Big Redneck Vacation (SF) (N)

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Debt do Us Part

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CNN The Situation Room CNN Newsroom Footnotes of 9/ 11 Piers Morgan CNN Newsroom Footnotes of 9/ 11

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DISC Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival American Chopper:

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ESPN (3:30) � Football

Football Score. (L)

NCAA Football Washington vs. Louisiana State University (L) Football Score. (L)

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(:45) NCAA Football Georgia vs. Missouri (L) (:45) SportsCenter

FOOD Restaurant: Impossible

Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Iron Chef America

FX (4:00) � NCAA Football Wisconsin vs. Oregon State (L)

Two and Half Men

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FNC America's News HQ Fox Report Weekent Huckabee Judge Jeanine Fox Report Weekent Journal Fox News

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Halls of Fame

NCAA Football University of Texas at El Paso vs. Mississippi (Ole Miss) (L)

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GOLF Golf Central

LPGA Golf Kingsmill Championship Round 3 Site: Kingsmill Resort -- Williamsburg, Va.

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HGTV House Hunters

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ION Psych Psych Psych Psych Psych Psych

LIFE < Fatal Honeymoon (2012, Horror) Billy Miller, Harvey Keitel.

< Killer Among Us (2012, Thriller) Boris Kodjoe, Tess Atkins.

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Ultimate Outdoors

Trophy Hunters

Jimmy Big Time

R. Raglin Outdoors

Ultimate Hunting

Trophy Quest

Scentbl-ocker's

Buck C. Outfitter Camp

SCI (5:00) � < Shark Zone Dean Cochran.

< Sand Sharks (2012, Horror) Brooke Hogan, Corin Nemec. (P)

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< Super Shark ('11)John Schneider. �

SPEED (5:00) � NASCAR RaceDay (L)

Monster Jam Monster Jam AMA Motorcycle Racing

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Victory Lane (L)

Lucas Oil Edge

SPIKE (:15) <+++ Super Troopers <++ MacGruber A former special op agent is called

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King of Queens

Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

<+ Madea Goes to Jail (2009, Comedy)Derek Luke, Tyler Perry.

(:15) <++ How Stella Got Her G... �

TCM <+++ A Big Hand for the Little Lady ('66) Henry Fonda, Joanne Woodward.

<++++ The Goodbye Girl (1977, Romance) Marsha Mason, Richard Dreyfuss.

<+++ The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer ('47) Cary Grant.

(:45) <Andy ... �

TLC Lottery Changed My Life 3

Flight 175: As the World Watched

9/11 Emergency Room (N)

9/11: Heroes of the 88th Floor 9/11 Emergency Room

TNT (4:20) � <+++ Braveheart (1995, Action) Sophie Marceau, Mel Gibson.

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(:40) <Flags ... �

TOON Regular Show

Regular Show

< Big Top Scooby Doo! Mindy Cohn, Frank Welker.

God, Devil

King of the Hill

King of the Hill

Family Guy

AquaTeen/(:15) AquaT.

Metalo-calypse

TVL A. Griffith

A. Griffith

(:05) A. Griffith

(:45) A. Griffith

(:20) The Andy Griffith Show

Loves Ray

Loves Ray

Loves Ray

Loves Ray

Loves Ray

King of Queens

USA NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS Pt. 1 of 2

cont'd next NCIS Pt. 2 of 2 CSI: Crime Scene

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VH1 Greatest Songs '00s Greatest Songs '00s Greatest Songs '00s Greatest Songs '00s <+++ Old School ('03) Luke Wilson.

WGN Law & Order: Criminal Intent

America's Funniest Home Videos

America's Funniest Home Videos

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PREMIUM CHANNELS

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Shake It Up

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Shake It Up

Jessie

ENC (:20) <++ Are We There Yet? (2005, Comedy) Nia Long, Ice Cube.

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HBO (5:30) � Klitschko (P) < Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

('11, Adventure) Tom Hanks, Thomas Horn. (:45) Boxing WCB Ward vs. Dawson and Demarco vs. Molina �

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Jay Mohr Boxing Showtime Championship Bailey vs. Alexander ALL ACCESS

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< Southern Gothic (2007) (:35) <++ Believers ('07, Thril)Jon Huertas, Johnny Messner. �

Ford has experienced brief stints at the high school level, serving as an assistant at Evarts under girls coach Freddie McCreary for four years and another four years assisting cousin Jerry Ford with the boys pro-gram. Though he would likely have been successful as a high school coach, it is clear Ford belongs on the middle school sideline working with children.

“I have learned that young kids are more ener-getic. It means everything in the world to them, and they would run through a brick wall for you. I really enjoy coaching kids that age,” he said.

While Ford admits he is probably closer to the end of his career than the beginning at this point, his love for the sport and for teaching others is as strong as ever.

“I just love coaching. When I got into it the girls job came open, so I got into girls coaching and loved it,” he said. “I have

just always been crazy about the game of basket-ball since I was 10-years-old and I still am. I love it as much today as I did 30 years ago. It has been a good ride, and hopefully it is not going to end any time soon.”

During his time on the sidelines, Ford has had the opportunity to coach daughters Holly and Brook, but the Black Mountain coach said there are three players he hopes to have the opportunity to coach.

“I really want to coach my grandbabies,” he said referring to fifth-graders Kaleigh and Kassady Mulkey and third-grader Emma Mulkey. “If I can get Emma through to high school, I might hang it up.”

Recently Ford was instrumental in naming Black Mountain’s court after the originator of the Tigerettes, but when he finally does decide to “hang it up,” I’m sure there will be room for Glenn Ford’s name in Jim Carpenter Gymnasium.

completion, a third-down pass to a diving Damian Copeland for 23 yards from the 2, also showed his poise.

The trick might be getting the sophomore to slow down his execution of the fast-paced offense. While Bridgewater often kept Kentucky guessing, his quick cadence threw off his offensive line as well.

“We need to be more efficient, more poised in our no-huddle,” offensive coordinator Shawn Watson said. “There are times we miss things. We only had one missed assignment, which was good.

“But I thought Teddy played too fast, he ran through his progressions a little too fast and that’s the pace of the game, he’s thinking about the next play. That’s one big thing, not only for him but for the team.”

One priority against Football Championship Series-level Missouri State will be develop-ing depth, particularly behind Bridgewater. That might sound strange considering the pres-ence of senior and former starter

Will Stein, but the coaching staff wants him to be sharper than he was after relieving Bridgewater for the fourth quarter.

The most encouraging area was a ground game that saw juniors Perry and Jeremy Wright thrive. Perry finished with a game-high 108 yards includ-ing a 47-yard touchdown run while Wright rushed 22 times for 105 and three scores, and the Cardinals still have Dominique Brown waiting in the wings.

Louisville’s biggest concern will be shoring up a defense that gave up 373 yards to Kentucky. To be fair, the Cardinals’ reac-tion to the no-huddle offense improved as the game pro-gressed and they were able to contain Wildcats quarterback Maxwell Smith.

Smith still passed for 280 yards and two touchdowns, and now the Cardinals will face Bears quarterback Ashton Glaser after he threw for 257 on 22 of 44 attempts. An offensive line that returned four starters didn’t allow the Missouri transfer to be sacked and he went on to

find seven targets, led by junior Dorian Buford (seven catches, 114 yards).

“It is a team that has a spread offense,” Strong said, “so, they do a good job of throwing the ball around.”

Though Louisville sacked Smith twice, recovered two fumbles and held Kentucky to 93 rushing yards, Coach Charlie Strong wants more aggression from a defense used to creating opportunities for the offense. Since that unit is showing signs of holding up its end, he said the defense must step up as well.

For this week, the Cardinals’ overall plan is keeping up what they started on Sunday.

“You like to think that we’re more mature now that we’ve played a lot of games,” Strong said. “You can always go back to last season, and we beat Kentucky and we followed it up and got beat. We cannot allow that to happen and we’re at home. … (You’d) like to think that you don’t have to go through it again.”

KentuckyFrom page 6

Page 8 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday , September 8, 2012

MONDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 10, 2012 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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AMC (5:00) � <+++ The Reaping

<+++ The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, Tom Hanks. Death row guards form a relationship with an inmate who possesses extraordinary powers.

<+++ The Green Mile Tom Hanks. �

A&E Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Intervention Intervention �

ANPL Swamp Wars American Stuffers American Stuffers Call of

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HSN Electronic Connect. Korres Bath & Body Completely Me Hi Tech Home Electronic Connect. Football Fan Shop

ION Cold Case Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds

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Prep Football Scores

Friday’s GamesAshland Blazer 47, Russell 7Bath Co. 28, East Carter 7Bowling Green 21, Henderson Co.

7Breathitt Co. 36, Jackson Co. 14Butler Co. 42, McLean Co. 6Cin. Hills Christian Academy, Ohio

21, Lex. Christian 7Danville 28, Corbin 21Dayton 38, Bishop Brossart 14Dixie Heights 33, Conner 31Fort Campbell 65, Fort Knox 0Gallatin Co. 48, Lou. Atherton 36Grayson Co. 47, Muhlenberg ounty

7Green Co. 27, LaRue Co. 21John Hardin 34, Boyle Co. 14Lex. Henry Clay 43, Lex. Tates

Creek 25Lou. DeSales 42, Lou. Holy Cross

16Lou. Eastern 41, Collins 29Lou. Iroquois 16, Lou. Southern 8Lou. Trinity 45, Cin. Elder, Ohio 21Magoffin Co. 28, West Carter 26Marshall Co. 39, Webster Co. 6Middlesboro 27, Harlan 20North Oldham 54, Elizabethtown 0Ohio Co. 37, Hopkins Co. Central 0Perry Co. Central 50, Lawrence

Co. 49Rockcastle Co. 46, Estill Co. 18Scott Co. 35, Newport 0Shelby Co. 41, Lou. Jeffersontown

29Simon Kenton 31, Holmes 7Somerset 17, Hazard 9South Warren 20, Russellville 0Spencer Co. 27, Bullitt East 0Warren Central 21, Meade Co. 7Warren East 42, Daviess Co. 7Wayne Co. 22, Madison Southern

21, OT

College Football Schedule

Saturday’s GamesEAST

Maryland (1-0) at Temple (1-0),Noon

NC State (0-1) at UConn (1-0),Noon

Southern Cal (1-0) vs. Syracuse (0-1) at East Rutherford, N.J., 3:30 p.m.

Indiana (1-0) at UMass (0-1), 3:30p.m.SOUTH

Auburn (0-1) at Mississippi St. (1-0), Noon

Penn St. (0-1) at Virginia (1-0),Noon

East Carolina (1-0) at SouthCarolina (1-0), 12:21 p.m.

Ball St. (1-0) at Clemson (1-0),12:30 p.m.

North Carolina (1-0) at WakeForest (1-0), 3 p.m.

Missouri St. (0-1) at Louisville (1-0), 3:30 p.m.

W. Kentucky (1-0) at Alabama (1-0), 3:39 p.m.

Georgia St. (0-1) at Tennessee (1-0), 4 p.m.

Morehead St. (1-0) at E.Kentucky (0-1), 6 p.m.

Washington (1-0) at LSU (1-0), 7p.m.

UTEP (0-1) at Mississippi (1-0), 7p.m.

Cent. Arkansas (0-1) at MurraySt. (0-1), 7 p.m.

Kent St. (1-0) at Kentucky (0-1),7:30 p.m.MIDWEST

Miami (1-0) at Kansas St. (1-0),Noon

New Hampshire (1-0) at Minnesota(1-0), Noon

UCF (1-0) at Ohio St. (1-0), NoonMichigan St. (1-0) at Cent.

Michigan (1-0), 3:30 p.m.Air Force (1-0) at Michigan (0-1),

3:30 p.m.Purdue (1-0) at Notre Dame (1-0),

3:30 p.m.

Iowa St. (1-0) at Iowa (1-0), 3:42p.m.

New Mexico St. (1-0) at Ohio (1-0),7 p.m.

Georgia (1-0) at Missouri (1-0),7:45 p.m.

Vanderbilt (0-1) at Northwestern (1-0), 8 p.m.SOUTHWEST

Florida (1-0) at Texas A&M (0-0),3:30 p.m.

Louisiana-Monroe (0-0) vs.Arkansas (1-0) at Little Rock, Ark., 7p.m.

Memphis (0-1) at Arkansas St. (0-1), 7 p.m.

Florida A&M (0-1) at Oklahoma (1-0), 7 p.m.

New Mexico (1-0) at Texas (1-0), 8p.m.FAR WEST

Weber St. (0-1) at BYU (1-0), 3p.m.

Wisconsin (1-0) at Oregon St. (0-0), 4 p.m.

Toledo (0-1) at Wyoming (0-1), 4p.m.

Fresno St. (1-0) at Oregon (1-0),6:30 p.m.

Nebraska (1-0) at UCLA (1-0), 7:30p.m.

Oklahoma St. (1-0) at Arizona (1-0), 10:30 p.m.

Illinois (1-0) at Arizona St. (1-0),10:30 p.m.

Duke (1-0) at Stanford (1-0), 10:30p.m.

Transactions

BASEBALLAmerican League

BALTIMORE ORIOLES —Recalled RHP Jake Arrieta fromNorfolk (IL).

TAMPA BAY RAYS — RecalledRHP Chris Archer from Montgomery(SL).National League

CHICAGO CUBS — Claimed RHPJason Berken off waivers fromBaltimore. Placed RHP Blake Parkeron the 60-day DL.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS —Recalled INF-OF Alex Castellanosfrom Albuquerque (PCL).

MILWAUKEE BREWERS —Recalled INF Taylor Green fromNashville (PCL).

ScorecardLOCAL SCHEDULE TELEVISION

TODAY� AUTO RACING

7:30 p.m.ABC — NASCAR, Sprint Cup,

Federated Auto Parts 400, atRichmond, Va.

� COLLEGE FOOTBALLNoon

ABC — National coverage,Penn St. at Virginia

ESPN — Auburn at MississippiSt.

ESPN2 — UCF at Ohio St.FX — Miami at Kansas St.

3:30 p.m.ABC — Teams TBAESPN — Florida at Texas A&MESPN2 — Teams TBANBC — Purdue at Notre Dame

4 p.m.FX — Wisconsin at Oregon St.

7 p.m.ESPN — Washington at LSU

7:30 p.m.FOX — Nebraska at UCLA

7:45 p.m.ESPN2 — Georgia at Missouri

10:30 p.m.ESPN — Illinois at Arizona St.

� GOLFNoon

NBC — PGA Tour, BMWChampionship, third round, atCarmel, Ind.

� MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

4 p.m.FOX — Regional coverage,

Atlanta at N.Y. Mets

� TENNISNoon

CBS — U.S. Open, men's semi-finals, at New York

8 p.m.CBS — U.S. Open, women's

championship match, at New York———————————————

SUNDAY� GOLF2 p.m.

NBC — PGA Tour, BMWChampionship, final round, atCarmel, Ind.

� MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL1:30 p.m.

TBS — N.Y. Yankees atBaltimore

WGN — Chicago Cubs atPittsburgh

8 p.m.ESPN — L.A. Dodgers at San

Francisco

NFL FOOTBALL1 p.m.

CBS — Regional coverageFOX — Regional coverage,

doubleheader4:25 p.m.

FOX — Regional coverage,doubleheader game

8:15 p.m.NBC — Pittsburgh at Denver

� TENNIS12:30 p.m.

ESPN2 — U.S. Open, women'sdoubles championship match, atNew York

4 p.m.CBS — U.S. Open, men's

championship match, at New York———————————————

MONDAY� NFL FOOTBALL

7 p.m.ESPN — Cincinnati at

Baltimore10:15 p.m.

ESPN — San Diego atOakland

TODAY� MIDDLE SCHOOL

BASKETBALLLady Bears 7/8 Invitational atHarlan County High School

10 a.m.James A. Cawood vs Rosspoint

11 a.m.Cawood vs Cumberland

NoonWallins vs Evarts

1 p.m.Black Mountain vs Green Hills

2 and 3 p.m.Semifinals4:30 p.m.

Championship

MONDAY� HIGH SCHOOL

FOOTBALLJunior Varsity

6 p.m.Whitley County at Harlan County

� VOLLEYBALL6 p.m.

Lee, Va. at Harlan CountyHarlan at Middlesboro

� MIDDLE SCHOOLBASKETBALL

5:30 p.m.Cawood at Cumberland

Evarts at Black MountainWhitley County at Harlan (7/8)

whistle?’ ” Phillips said. “It’s dead. They probably were but everyone was so excited about trying to make blocks and make a tackle. The funny thing was watching the coaches’ reac-tions. You couldn’t really see the Kent coaches but you could see the Towson coaches like, ‘Don’t tackle him, don’t tackle him, don’t tackle him.’

“Sometimes, 18- to 22-year olds react in strange ways, but he reacted quick and stuck with it.”

But now the Golden Flashes’ focus is on Kentucky.

What Kent State saw of the Wildcats on film might differ from what it’ll face this weekend. Kentucky is expected to unveil a bunch of new faces as they seek identities on both sides of the ball along with depth.

Necessity forced the issue on offense, with muscle spasms knocking out run-ning back CoShik Williams. Junior Raymond Sanders will start, but Kentucky Coach Joker Phillips said he’ll also use junior Jonathan George and fresh-man Dyshawn Mobley.

As much as the Wildcats

need continuity at skill posi-tions, Phillips said the long term is more important. Of course, the Wildcats can afford to tweak things in the ground game since the passing game’s looking up thanks to Maxwell Smith, who threw for 280 yards and two touchdowns against the Cardinals.

Williams “is a tough guy, there is no doubt about that,” Phillips said of his tailback, who rushed for 62 yards on 10 carries against Louisville. “We have to have him for the long haul. We’re not taking (Kent State) for granted by any means but we need him full speed. The guy busts his gut on every play, whether it’s practice or pregame so we have to make sure we have to take care of him.”

Most of the attention will be on the defense, which allowed 466 yards to Louisville and forced the coaching staff into a person-nel shake up this week that could see freshmen Khalid Henderson and Pancho Thomas rotate at linebacker. Freshmen J.D. Harmon and Fred Tiller could be intro-duced in the secondary.

Kentucky’s prospects

still begin with pressure up front, an area where Phillips stressed improvement from tackles Dante Rumph and Mister Cobble and end Collins Ukwu.

“I want to see us get lined up and attack the guys in front of us,” Phillips said. “Get lined up, play physical, get off blocks and go make plays.”

Kent State is emphasizing doing the little things right, which worked out big dur-ing a 41-21 rout of Towson State on Aug. 30. That phi-losophy paid off in particu-lar on special teams, which sprung Dri Archer for 155 return yards on two kick-offs, including a 98-yarder for a touchdown.

The junior also rushed eight times for 54 yards and two more scores, pretty good for someone playing for the first time since the 2010 season. Kent State also forced six turnovers, which might be why Phillips wants to involve everyone on defense.

“They’re physical,” he said. “They won four out of their last five (games) last year and just beat a team handily, and they have a lot of confidence.”

Steve MagargeeAP Sports Writer

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Georgia State coach Bill Curry still remembers his reaction when he learned Derek Dooley was entering the coaching business.

“I asked that very question, ‘Derek, have you lost your mind? You’re brilliant. You’ve got a great legal career,’ “’ Curry recalled. “He smiled, laughed and said, ‘I guess so, but I’ve got to do this coaching stuff.’ “

Sixteen years after Dooley began his coaching career, their paths are crossing again. Dooley will lead Tennessee into its home opener Saturday against Georgia State, as Curry continues his final season before retirement.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Curry has squared off with a Dooley.

Curry coached Georgia Tech from 1980-86 when Dooley’s father, Vince, was in the midst of his illustrious career at Georgia. Curry will become the first coach ever to face both Vince and Derek Dooley.

Georgia Tech lost to Georgia by an average margin of 19.5 points in each of Curry’s first four seasons there, but quar-terback John Dewberry led the Yellow Jackets to back-to-back victories over their in-state rival in 1984 and 1985 after transferring from Georgia to Georgia Tech.

“I remember a couple of years where Tech beat Georgia and Dewberry was ripping off the hedges,” said Dooley, who was in high school at the time. “(Those are) not fond memories of my child-hood.”

The connection actually runs deeper than that.

Curry was a Georgia Tech team captain in 1964, which marked Vince Dooley’s first season as Georgia’s coach. Derek Dooley and Curry’s son, Bill Curry Jr., were teammates at Virginia in 1989 and 1990. Dooley was a senior receiver and Curry Jr. a redshirt freshman long snapper on the 1990 Virginia team was ranked first in the nation at one point.

Both enrolled as walk-ons and eventually earned scholarships.

Although Curry Jr. said he had never met Dooley before entering college, he cited Dooley’s success as one of his rea-sons for picking Virginia.

“The fact he’d gone there as a walk-on and had earned a scholarship was very attractive to me,” Curry Jr. said. “He was a role model, for lack of a better term. I wanted to be like Derek in a very real sense.”

Curry said this week that his fam-ily is “eternally indebted” to Dooley for mentoring his son during their time as Virginia teammates. After serving as a graduate assistant on his father’s staff at Kentucky in the mid-1990s, Curry Jr. now works as a medical device sales man-ager and lives in Waxhaw, N.C., about 20 miles south of Charlotte.

“Derek, with his sense of humor and his attitude, was a tremendous leader,” Curry Jr. said. “He just was the kind of upperclassman who was very respectful and was a guy I felt comfortable reaching out to, if for nothing else than just to feel better about how the day was going.”

Vince Dooley and Curry always had mutual respect even as they tried to beat each other during the 1980s. Having their sons play together added a new dynamic to their relationship.

“It gave us something in common to pull for,” Vince Dooley said.

Curry-Dooley rivalry heads into new generation

Classified Harlan Daily Enterprise Page — 9Saturday, September 8, 2012

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email resume to [email protected].

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CARRIER NEEDED

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• 5-1/2 hrs. per day• 5 days per week

Must have dependable vehicleContact Patrick Brooks

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Ph. 606-573-1219

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FOR SALE: Large Curio Cab-inet including all the angels.Call 664-5043.

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FOR SALE: Old time cast ironskillet and antique Home In-terior. Stop by 107 EastbrookStation II.

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Houses For Sale

2-STORY BRICK, 302 NorthMain, Harlan. 3 BR, 1-1/2baths. Shown by appointment.573-2962,3 BR, 1 bath, home with +/- 1acre of FLAT land in Cotes,$39,500. Call Harlan CountyRealty Agent Phylllis Napier formore information. 606-5055084.3 BR, 1 bath, home with a fullbasement in great location atBaxter, $79,900. Call HarlanCounty Realty Agent PhylllisNapier at 606-505-5084 to seeit today!320 CREECH AVENUE, Cum-berland. 2 bedroom, new kit-chen appliances, floor cover,A/C, paint, attic insulation, gut-tering, remodeled bath, heatpump, large back yard, andutility basement. Call 606-5735418 or 273-1515.AGES, 2 BR, 1 bath, large liv-ing room, kitchen, dining room,laundry room, heat pump, vinylsiding, carport, plus smallapartment. $40,000. 276-5466225.

Houses For Sale

FOR SALE: 2 STORY, 4bedrooms, 3/4 acre, new roof,gas fireplace, garage. 5735457.

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3 BR APARTMENT for rentColdi ron. HUD approved.$430/month. $200 deposit.Phone 664-2368.

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FOR RENT: 2 BR mobilehome in Cumberland, NewYork Section. Fenced yard,$350 month, $300 deposit. 606-894-0086.

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Sales

Attention!Have you been looking for aposition in sales that really re-wards you for your efforts?Could any or several of thefollowing words be used todescribe you or your per-sonality? Fast paced, com-petitive, decisive, persistent,eager, bold, forceful, and in-quisitive. How about assertive?Do you like to meet newpeople? Are you good at multi-tasking? Do you work well withothers and with the public? Ifyou've answered yes to manyof these questions, you may bethe person we are seeking.Heartland Publications islooking for experienced andentry level salespeople to sellonline and print advertising fornewspapers located in Ken-tucky and Tennessee. Theseare full time salaried positionswith a generous commissionprogram working Mondaythrough Friday. No evening orweekend work. Benefits in-clude Health insurance, 401 K,vacation.

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Tracie ConeAssociated Press

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Federal investigators probing a slaughterhouse after an undercover video showed inhumane treat-ment of cows said Friday that there is no evidence that sick animals entered the food supply.

A spokesman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that a team of investiga-tors at Central Valley Meat Co. in Hanford found that no food safety violations occurred, though an inves-tigation into inhumane handling of animals con-tinues.

“The USDA team con-ducting the Central Valley Meat investigation has concluded there is no evidence to support the allegation that a downer cow was slaughtered and entered the food supply, and that no food safety violation occurred as a result,” said Al Almanza, administrator of the Food Safety and Inspection Service.

The USDA closed the plant for a week this month after an under-cover video shot by Compassion Over Killing showed downed animals being repeatedly kicked, shocked, shot and pulled by the tails by workers trying to get them to stand. Executive Director Erica Meier said she is unsure what to make of the USDA’s decision.

“The video is clear and experts agree: Cows who were too sick or weak to stand up were egregiously abused,” said Meier. “These animals were excessively shocked and grabbed by their tails in a desperate attempt to get them to walk to the slaughter line. Such treat-ment is not only cruel but a violation of federal ani-mal handling regulations put in place for welfare concerns as well as food safety concerns.”

Outrage over cruelty shown in the video was swift as McDonalds Corp. and In-N-Out Burger can-celled purchasing agree-ments along with the fed-

eral government, which bought 21 million pounds of meat from the company last year for the national school lunch program and other nutrition programs.

The USDA’s findings mean the potential for a nationwide recall no lon-ger is a factor. Company officials have been work-ing to implement correc-tive actions, including quarterly training for workers and more fre-quent audits. Video sur-veillance cameras were installed in the plant this week.

“We have been informed that the USDA food safety investigation is now over and there are no food safety issues whatsoever with our product or opera-tions. As a result, we are resuming full operations and production immedi-ately,” said the company in a statement.

The investigation con-tinues into allegations of inhumane treatment of animals and how it was allowed to exist. USDA inspectors on site at slaughterhouses are

trained in humane han-dling and “are expect-ed to take immediate enforcement action” if they observe violations, according to the USDA.

The video showed workers shocking cows on the face. One worker apparently attempted to suffocate a cow by stand-ing on its muzzle.

Some dairy cows were unable to walk or stand, and some had udders so swollen they were unable to keep their legs under them.

Sick cows not slaughtered for food

Associated PressA security guard opens the gate at the Central Valley Meat Co., the California slaughterhouse shut down by federal regulators after they received video showing dairy cows being repeatedly shocked and shot before being slaughtered in Hanford, Calif. Federal regulators are investigating whether beef from sick cows reached the human food supply.

TORONTO (AP) — “Twilight’s” newest vam-pire re-emerged in pub-lic at the Toronto Film Festival.

Kristen Stewart made her first public appear-ance in nearly two months Thursday night to pro-mote her latest movie. The 22-year star went into lockdown mode after she publicly apologized for having a tryst with the married director of her last film, “Snow White and the Huntsman.”

For her return, hun-dreds of fans eagerly gath-ered early in the morning Thursday, awaiting her

walk on the red carpet for “On the Road.” It’s based on the classic Jack Kerouac novel, and one of Stewart’s favorite books.

“I’m somebody that has loved the book their whole life,” Stewart said, first reading it at age 14.

Stewart posed for pho-tographers, spoke to a few television crews — while paired with co-star Garret Hedlund — and signed lots of autographs for fans.

Dressed in a slinky, flo-ral Zuhair Murad dress, the young actress held her head high but, at times, showed signs of

nervousness. On sever-al occasions, she broke away from the press line to greet fans behind the barricade. It seemed her fans were providing the support she needed to carry on through the mobbed press event.

In July, Stewart acknowledged having an affair with 41-year old director Rupert Sanders. That announcement had a rippling effect, putting an end to her romantic rela-tionship with “Twilight” star Robert Pattinson.

Asked how she was doing, Stewart respond-ed: “I’m doing fine.”

Twilight’s’ Stewart back in the spotlight

Kristen Stewart (right) is shown on the red carpet with co-stars Kirsten Dunst (left) and Garrett Hedlund at the gala premiere for the movie "On the Road" during the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto on Thursday.

Associated Press | The Canadian Press, Chris

Young

(AP) — A man angry about a compromis-ing Facebook photo of his girlfriend took revenge against the ex-boyfriend who posted it, mak-ing a hoax call to police that set off a terror-ism scare and got the former beau taken off an airliner at gunpoint, authorities say.

The new boy-friend, Kenneth W. Smith Jr., was arrested Friday on charges of making a false threat to Philadelphia police, who recalled a Dallas-bound flight and marched the ex-beau, Christopher Shell, off the plane Thursday.

The episode led to Shell’s own arrest on drug warrants after he finally reached Texas to

celebrate his 29th birth-day.

On Friday, both Shell and Smith post-ed bond.

Shell declined to comment. Smith’s lawyer, Bill Brennan, described his client as “embar-rassed” by the consequences of the alleged threat.

“My client is very, very sobered by the

amount of attention this has received,” Brennan said after Smith’s initial appearance in federal court in Philadelphia. “He’s not very happy about it.”

Passengers weren’t very happy about the scare that rerouted US Airways Flight 1267 on Thursday morning. They were about 90 miles into

their trip when the air-craft turned around.

After landing at Philadelphia International Airport, heavily armed law enforcement officers boarded the plane and removed Shell. During questioning, he told authorities of the roman-tic feud, which involved hostile text messages with his ex and encoun-ters with Smith, accord-ing to a federal affidavit.

Shell also gave offi-cers the name of Smith’s workplace. Upon arrival, authorities said Smith acknowledged calling air-port police from a pay-phone to say that Shell was carrying liquid explo-sives.

Smith said he did it to “avenge” his new girl-friend, because Shell had posted a compro-mising picture of her on Facebook, the affidavit said.

Pa. man charged in hoax that led to plane’s recall

Kenneth Smith Jr.

Page 10 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday, September 8, 2012

Advertise with The Harlan Daily Enterprise — Call Wylene Miniard, Advertising Manager 606-573-4510

BLONDIE Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY Mort Walker

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE Chris Browne

HI & LOIS Brian and Greg Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN Tom Batiuk

MUTTS Patrick McDonnell

THE FAMILY CIRCUS Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum

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CONCEPTIS SUDOKUby Dave Green

Saturday, September 8, 2012 ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

Today’s Answers

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012:

This year you often act on one idea while espousing a different one. You also tend to say one thing but do another. Others could view this type of behavior as erratic. A boss, parent or older friend is a source of luck. You also will gain through your work, which could result in a pay raise or promo-tion. When brainstorming with others, you could be taken aback by all the ideas that pop up. If you are single, you could meet someone through one of your commitments. This com-mon ground allows you to relate more easily. If you are attached, working together on a project or for a common cause strengthens the bond between you. GEMINI can demand a lot.

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Could you be overly opti-

mistic? Positive thinking helps mani-fest your ideas, but it all depends on how you take disappointment. You might feel pressured by a friend’s version of an incident. There is such a thing as too much information. Tonight: Go to your favorite haunt.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You might expect more from

an emotional investment than is logi-cal. A touch of realism might make you uncomfortable, but on some level, it will serve to protect you. A brain-storming situation could add to the confusion. Tonight: Your treat.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You have a way about

you right now that makes you difficult to resist. Your spontaneity opens up new paths and possibilities. You might say one thing but actually want some-thing else. Try to be clear in your com-munication. Tonight: All smiles.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) HH You could need some time

away from others. You might want to think through a decision with-out hearing everyone’s opinions. Communication seems to come in from many different directions. Plans easily could change under the circum-stances. Tonight: Shhh ... you do not need to reveal everything.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You don’t need to be rigid,

but it would be wise to keep your eye on the big picture. You might feel as if there are too many decisions or pos-sibilities. Resist overthinking. You will

be more fortunate and happier if you are spontaneous. Tonight: Zero in on what you want.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You could be more in sync

with someone you’ve put on a pedes-tal than you might realize. You never looked at the similarities between you before now. Be willing to go out of your way to see this person. Tonight: Leader of the gang.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Share some of your drifting

thoughts with the person they involve. Good feelings will emerge as a result. On some level, one of you is logical and the other has a devil-may-care attitude. Tonight: Let the good times rock and roll.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Everyone needs to get

away with a favorite person every so often. Why would you be any differ-ent? You might be surprised by what this person shares. Try not to let your ideas and thoughts race out of control. Remain receptive to a positive idea. Tonight: Out late.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH A close loved one sim-

ply does not make sense to you. Eventually, you’ll understand where this person is coming from. You easily could feel overwhelmed by the constant flux of his or her ideas and sometimes off-the-wall actions. Tonight: Follow someone’s lead.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Stay nice and calm when

dealing with someone’s requests and desires. You might opt to get a project done or curl up with a favorite book. Not everyone needs to have his or her weekend action-packed. Tonight: Put your feet up and relax.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH It makes no difference

what you do — you have fun nearly anywhere, with anyone. You’re simply in the mood to live it up. Only you can interfere with your set of plans. A child or a potential loved one intrigues you. Tonight: Leader of the gang.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Visit with relatives rather

than run out the door to meet some-one. You often do not make enough time for certain members of your immediate family. Pressure builds as a result of the judgments you might be making. Tonight: Go for spontaneous.

Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internetat www.jacquelinebigar.com

zITS Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

THE LOCKHORNS William Hoest

ReligionSaturday, September 8, 2012 Page 11 — Harlan Daily Enterprise

When I was a young col-lege student I had the oppor-tunity to go with a friend to a “revival” in the town of Hollywood, Ga. That’s right, there is such a place: Hollywood, Ga. “On a clear night you can see all the stars,” the locals say (go ahead and groan). In reality, Hollywood is more of a coun-ty crossroads than a mecca for the rich and famous. It has a diner, a church, and not much else.

In the south a “revival” has at least two very different things. First, it is a spiritual awakening, a holy renewal where those who have wan-dered from the straight and narrow return to the fold. Second, it is a church event, a scheduled series of meet-ings. So a “revival” can be something deeply spiritual that people pray for, and it

is a traditional ceremony placed on the congregational calendar. Whether or not the two different meanings of this word cross paths is always up for debate.

This revival was the typi-cal affair. It was a week-long

gathering when people of the community crammed their families into the pews to sing rousing gospel songs, to hear the pleadings, exhortations, and condemnations of the best visiting evangelist the church could afford, and for everyone to have an annual time of repentance whether they needed it or not.

As I made my way to the front door I passed by a long line of Harley Davidson motorcycles. These were not the Baby Boomer playthings so many graying men and women ride today as a hobby or youthful escape. No, these were hardcore, gang-style cycles.

And just inside the church, occupying the back pew, lo and behold, there sat the gang. Leather, studs, rippling arms, ponytails, tattoos: It was the complete Hell’s

Angels package, sitting in a Baptist church in Hollywood, Ga. Being a young, eager revivalist myself, I said to my friend, “Good. Maybe these heathen will get saved tonight.” And I meant it.

I sat several pews away from them and found myself piously praying for their sal-vation because I just knew they were seconds from split-ting hell wide open. After the service got started, the pastor called on one of the deacons of the church to come forward and offer a prayer and word of introduc-tion. One of those wicked bikers rose from his seat and started down the aisle.

At first I thought the call of his bladder had merely coincided with the pastor’s invitation. And being a biker and all, I was certain he was short on manners and he

did not know that prayer time was an inappropriate moment to visit the latrine. When the big mountain of a man turned for the pul-pit, my pulse quickened as I thought he was going for-ward to cause a disturbance.

He caused a distur-bance alright, but not like I thought. This chaps-wearing biker with a beard to his waist was the aforemen-tioned deacon. I found out later that this biker-deacon was a self-financed mission-ary to the road houses, biker bars, strip clubs, and truck stops of America.

Up and down the high-ways with his fellow labor-ers – his motorcycle gang – he rode his horse of steel and entered places that good Christian people would never be caught, not even to share the gospel. He went to

places where people drank too much, showed too much skin, engaged in too much sensuality, and waged too much violence. But there he shared Jesus, led Bible stud-ies, prayed for those who thought they didn’t have a prayer left, and even bap-tized a few souls in the truck stop showers when neces-sary.

I left that Hollywood church thinking that it would have been better to give the revival budget to this biker’s ministry rather than spend-ing it on some flamboyant evangelist with a bouffant hair-do and expensive cuff links. And certainly I left with a lesson scorched deep in my conscience: Never point a finger or a prayer at those you consider sinners. They may be more holy than you can imagine.

A lesson scorched deep in your conscience

Ronnie McBrayerKeeping the Faith

The Ladies Aid of New Beginning Church of God in Coxton held their month-ly meeting Sept. 1. Joyce Kinney opened the meeting with prayer and a warm wel-come to all those in attendance. Prayer requests were received.

Susie Hall read the Bible Devotion from Psalms 121:1-8. Rita Stewart discussed the Bible lesson from the book of Ruth.

Refreshments of sandwiches, chips and dip, cake and sodas were. The door prize was given to Gladys Wallace.

The meeting was dismissed by those in attendees singing a verse of “What a friend we have in Jesus” and a closing prayer.

Those attending were Joyce Kinney, Susie Hall, Polly Couch, Gladys Wallace, Geraldine Bryant and Rita Stewart.

Ladies Aid meeting held

Have you ever said, “I just don’t know how much more of this I can take.” or “I don’t know how much longer I can keep doing this.” Sometimes when we make those statements it may be in reference to a job, our marriage, a fam-ily struggle, poor health, or even concerning some-thing at our church.

The apostle Paul knew a lot about being tested to his limits. He records in II Corinthians 11:23-29 much of what he endured for his faith. He writes about imprisonment, lash-ings, beatings with the rod, a stoning, shipwrecked, and going without food or shelter. He wrote from experience these words in II Corinthians 4:8-9, “We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; per-plexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not aban-doned; struck down, but not destroyed.”

All the studies conclude the same thing, people of faith are better equipped to handle life’s struggles, tragedies, and pain bet-ter and heal more quickly than people that rely on their own resources. I have heard Christians say, “God never gives us more than we can handle,” as wisdom to help them get through hard times. But the truth is there are times God does give us more than we can handle. At those

times we are to learn God never gives us more than we can handle with God’s help. Paul rose above the struggles and persecution in his life, not on his own strength, but on God’s. We can do the same through a strong and growing faith.

The story of Helen Keller’s great victories over loss of sight and hearing has inspired many. Despite her handicaps, Helen Keller was not only grate-ful; she devoted her life to assisting the deaf and the blind. She toured the world to promote the education of the persons similarly dis-abled. “For three things I thank God every day of my life,” Helen said. “Thanks that He has [given me] knowledge of His works; deep thanks that He has set in my darkness the lamp of faith; deep deepest thanks that I have another life to look forward to - a life joy-

ous with light and flowers and heavenly song.”

Great, that doesn’t help me feel more victorious. It makes me feel weak. That is because we are week. It is through our creator God that we find true strength. We as believers must keep our eyes upon the author and finisher of our faith! He hasn’t saved us so that we can quit! He didn’t die on the cross for us to give up! We can keep going when we feel we can’t go on if we stay focused upon the Lord Jesus Christ.

Horatio Gates Spafford wrote the inspiring lyr-ics to “It Is Well With My Soul” in the 1870’s. It was written in response to the loss of his four daughters in a ship wreck. He lost his son two years earlier to ill-ness. He wrote, “When sor-rows like sea billows roll;

Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say, It is well, it is well, with my soul.” He was a man of deep faith, who trusted in God even when the tragedies of life could have crushed his soul. Through the strength of God he and his wife, Anna, rebuilt their lives, serving the Lord faithfully. These and thousands of other examples have been written about the new lives people have found through the strength of their faith after it seemed the trag-edies of life had crushed them.

A grief so overwhelming

Al EarleyA Religious View

LOUISVILLE — The 55th Annual National Quartet Convention offi-cially kicks off on Sunday evening in Louisville at the Kentucky Fair & Expo Center. The event is expected to bring more than 40,000 people to the city for Southern Gospel Music’s largest event. A Sunday evening con-cert serves as the official kick-off for the week, as The Hoppers, The Booth Brothers and Greater Vision will be featured in a 6 p.m. concert in East Hall.

This year’s Convention, which runs from Sunday through Sept. 15, features the best recording artists in the world of traditional, harmony-oriented Southern Gospel Music. This year over 500 exhibitors will be on display in an exposition spanning 175,000 square feet on the grounds of the KFEC.

Throughout the week-long event, attendees will enjoy great music from early morning through late night. One of the many highlights of this year’s Convention will include the return of the Male Quartet Night on Wednesday evening. Over the years the National Quartet Convention has grown to encompass duets, trios, quartets and even choirs; however, the convention returns to its roots on Wednesday evening when the eve-ning line-up in Freedom Hall will fea-ture the four-part harmony of many

of Gospel music’s most prominent quartets.

On Wednesday, multi-award win-ning recording artist Marty Raybon and Full Circle will headline the bluegrass Gospel music that will be featured during the Bluegrass Pickin Jamboree. Legendary singer/song-writer and multi-Grammy winning recording artist, Bill Gaither will appear on the stage in Freedom Hall multiple times throughout the week, as he will again host the Gaither Vocal Band Reunion, reuniting mem-bers of his multi-award winning vocal group, honoring the group’s 30-year history. Present Gaither Vocal Band

members will also take to the stage in Freedom Hall on Friday during the evening program. Gaither will also host the Friday afternoon Sing-Along, featuring a 100-voice plus choir of Gospel music legends and popular newcomers. On Saturday afternoon, multiple grand pianos will fill the stage in Freedom Hall dur-ing the Parade of Pianos Showcase featuring Gospel Music’s favorite pianists, performing individually and together. Also on Saturday, several of the most popular Christian artists will pay tribute to one of the indus-try’s greatest producers, Lari Goss, as they celebrate the Man Behind The Music.

In addition to the great music featured during daily and evening concerts, the event will also feature prominent keynote speakers, includ-ing Dr David Jeremiah, who will be featured on Friday morning in the East Hall of the KFEC.

Seats for all showcases and eve-ning concerts are available by calling 800-846-8499 and will also be avail-able beginning Sunday in the North Wing Lobby of the Kenturcky Fair & Expo Center. A complete schedule of events set to take place during the 2012 National Quartet Convention, including performers and speakers scheduled to appear, may be obtained online at www.nqconline.com.

National Quartet Convention kicks off Sunday in Louisville

The Hoppers will kick off the convention at 6 p.m. on Sunday at Freedom Hall.

So the preacher can preach — Acts 6:1-7It hasn’t always been this way. There

have been many eras in the life of the church that the building was open only on Sunday and sometimes not every Sunday. In the opening decades of the early church there were not even buildings. What’s the point of these thoughts? The way “church is done” today may need to be tweaked a bit, probably more than a bit, to get us back to the New Testament model of a Kingdom building church.

In Acts 6:1-7, we are intro-duced to a problem in the Jerusalem Church. A church with a need is not novel; church-es are made up of people and people have needs. But with all the stories the Holy Spirit could have led Luke to write, why chose this one? The answer is a simple one. God wants the Church to see what to do when conflicts arise, and to know who is responsible for resolving issue.

Take a moment and read Acts 6:1-7, as you do look for conflict, need and resolution. Keep in mind that this story is more than a history lesson. As a matter of fact, learning about the event may be the least of the lessons to be gleaned. Finally, as you read see what comparisons can be made between the first century Church and the congregation which, whether occasionally or regularly, you gather with.

The conflict of Acts 6:1-7 is not hard to find is it. Luke puts it right out there for people of all times to see: “In those days when the number of disciples was increas-ing, the Grecian Jews among them com-plained against the Hebraic Jews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food.” (v.1) Clear, concise, simply laid out. One group of members felt that their widows were being neglected. Even more, there seems to be a charge of favoritism, even racism being leveled at others within the church. The Grecian Jews were those who were not native to Judea. They were generally older people who came to Jerusalem to die in order to be buried there. Whoever they were there was tension and it was growing.

Again, squabbles in churches are not out of the norm. Churches are gatherings of imperfect believers who, through the power or the Holy Spirit and being made new creations in Christ, desire to live and love as Jesus did. But every now and again the broken part can get the best of a person so here we are with Acts 6:1.

However, this passage is not given to show us the obvious. Rather, we have the story to show the Church what to do when the obvious takes on flesh and bone. The what to do comes in the verses immedi-ately following the obvious: “So the Twelve gathered all the disciples together and said, ‘It would not be right for us to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to wait on tables. Brothers, choose seven men

from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom. We will turn this responsibility over to them and will give our attention to prayer and the ministry of the word.’” (vv.2-4)

Let’s look at three what-to-dos delineated here. First, as soon as the issue became apparent, as soon as someone spoke up, the leaders of the Jerusalem Church acted. Curiously, the Twelve, i.e. the Apostles, didn’t jump up and immediately take on the

expressed need. Instead, they went after the critical need. The problem was real and impor-tant but the answer was not to scold the neglectors and get the neglected cared for. No, what the Twelve did was lay out a plan that would take care of this need and others that were beyond sight just over the horizon. How were they able to do this in the midst of conflict? The answer to that is found in verse four. They were men of prayer and study. The Holy Spirit helped them see beyond the present to that

which was most needed. Also, they didn’t wait and hope the problem would go away. They dealt with it before it could take on a life of its own.

Secondly, the Twelve did not jump up and do the work that would be required to help meet the needs of the neglected wid-ows. Here they understood that the work of the Church was a team thing. They knew they could not be jacks-of-all-trades and still effectively do what God had called them to do. The Twelve were the spiritual teachers of the church. They knew they needed time to pray and study if they were to continue accurately teaching the truths of Christ. So what did they do? They called the church together and gave them a plan. They explained that the work of waiting tables was important but others were going to have to do it so the Twelve could continue to serve efficiently as leaders.

Lastly, the Twelve set guidelines for the others who would lead in the physical working of the church. Like the Twelve, these men were to be sold out to Christ and connected into the wisdom of God. Though not all work in the church is praying and preaching, all church workers ought to be godly and wisdom-seeking believers.

Now let’s put these three altogether. Today, the expectation in many churches is that the preacher (pastor) must lead out in meeting every need and have their hands in every decision within the congregation. Consequently, these men become stretched beyond their limits resulting in a dimin-ished praying and preaching ministry.

Church members step up, step out, and take responsibilities that will help your pas-tor do what Christ has called him to do. If you will do this here is what you can expect: “So the word of God spread. The number of disciples in Jerusalem increased rapidly, and a large number of priests became obedi-ent to the faith.” (v.6)

Sunday School Lesson: Acts

John Ditty

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$99.00 Customer Installation Charge. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $35.99 per month ($1,295.64). Form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or savings account. Offer applies to homeowners only. Local permit fees may be required. Satisfactory credit history required. Certain restrictions may apply. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Dealer customers only and not on purchases from ADT Security Services, Inc. Other rate plans available. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Licenses: AL-10-1104, AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401, GA-LVA205395, IA-AC-0036, ID-39131, IL-127.001042, IN-City of Indianapolis: 93294, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1082, MA-1355C, MD-107-1375, Baltimore County: 1375, Calvert County: ABL00625, Caroline County: 1157, Cecil County: 541-L, Charles County: 804, Dorchester County: 764, Frederick County: F0424, Harford County: 3541, Montgomery County: 1276, Prince George’s County: 685, Queen Anne’s County: L156, St. Mary’s County: LV2039R, Talbot County: L674, Wicomico County: 2017, Worcester County: L1013, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC354, St. Louis County: 47738, MS-15007958, MT-247, NC-25310-SP-LV, 1622-CSA, NE-14451, NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-68518, City of Las Vegas: B14-00075-6-121756, C11-11262-L-121756, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State UID#12000286451, OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA22999, RI-3428, SC-BAC5630, TN-C1164, C1520, TX-B13734, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382, WA-602588694/PROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: 0001697, WV-042433, WY-LV-G-21499. For full list of licenses visit our website www.protectyourhome.com. Protect Your Home – 3750 Priority Way South Dr., Ste 200, Indianapolis, IN 46240. **Crime data taken from http://ovc.ncjrs.gov/gallery/posters/pdfs/Crime_Clock.pdf

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Page 12 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday, September 8, 2012

A.M.E. ZIONGOODE TEMPLE A.M.E. ZION

280 Liberty Street, Lynch, KYRev. Sandra Jones • 848-5627ASSEMBLIES OF GOD

FIRST ASSEMBLYBaxter, KY

Pastor, Charles Asher • 558-3535Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PM

NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GODLay Hill, Tremont , KY

Pastors, Eddie & Linda Estep848-3570

Sunday Services: 11 AMTHE KING’S CHAPELASSEMBLY OF GOD

Lejunior, KYPastor, Janice Fulkerson • 837-2811Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PM

BAPTISTBLAIR CHAPEL CHURCH

Blair, KYPastor, Rev. Rod Raleigh • 848-2046

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 11 AMBLEDSOE BAPTIST CHURCH

Bledsoe, KYPastor, John Baughman • 558-5132

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PMELCOMB BAPTIST CHURCH

Elcomb, KYPastor, Joshua Hensley • 573-3524

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHNorth Main Street, Harlan, KY

Pastor, C.A. Hall573-4870 or 615-522-1727

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 11 PMGILLIAM CHAPEL BAPTIST CHURCH

Clutt s Section, Cumberland, KYJohn Monhollen, Pastor • 848-2932

Johnathan Monhollen, Asst. Pastor • 848-0045Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PM

GRACE BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 221, Bledsoe, KY

Pastor, Larry Toner • 558-3333GREATER MT. SINAI

BAPTIST CHURCH409 First Street, Lynch, KY • 848-5580

Pastor, Rev. Ronnie HamptonSunday Services: 9:30 AM & 11 AM

IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCHTeetersville, KY

Pastor, Arnold Martin • 573-6839LIGHTHOUSE

BAPTIST MINISTRYEvarts, KY

Pastor, Alfred Lamb Jr. • 837-2249LYNCH FIRST BAPTIST

CHURCHMain Street, Lynch, KY

Pastor, J.H. WestMACEDONIA

BAPTIST CHURCHPride Terrace, Cumberland, KY

Pastor, Robert L. Henry • 589-5118MOUNT OLIVE

BAPTIST CHURCHClovertown, KY

Pastor, W. M. Garlington • 573-1897Sunday Services: 11 AM

POOR FORK OLD REGULARBAPTIST CHURCH

Spring Avenue, Cumberland, KYModerator, Elder Jim Fields

RISING STARBAPTIST CHURCH

Church Street, Benham, KYPastor, Th omas Simmons • 848-2114

Sunday Services: 11 AM(Meets 2nd & 4th Sunday of each month)

RIVERSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH811 Dayhoit Drive- Dayhoit, KY

Pastor, Dennis JohnsonSAND HILL

BAPTIST CHURCHSand Hill, Cumberland, KY

Pastor, Herbert Lewis • 589-6103Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

TUGGLESVILLEBAPTIST CHURCH

Hulen, KYPastor, Jeff Craig

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PMUNION BAPTIST CHURCH

Verda, KYPastor, Darryl Washington

Sunday Services: 11:30 AM & 7 PMVICTORY BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 38, Evarts, KY

Pastor, Rodney FreemanAssistant Pastor, Bill (Chic) Kelly

837-8441Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PM

SOUTHERN BAPTISTAGES BAPTIST CHURCH

Ages, KYPastor, James Burkhart • 664-2162

BLACK MOUNTAINBAPTIST CHURCH

Kenvir, KYPastor, Jim Clem

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6:30 PMBRITTAIN’S CREEKBAPTIST CHURCH

Kenvir, KYPastor, Don Johnson • 837-2801

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PMCALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH

Loyall, KYIntern Pastor, Billy Howell

573-1965Sunday Services 11 AM & 6 PM

CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH118 Central Street, Cumberland, KYPastor, Roger Colinger • 589-2346

CHEVROLET BAPTIST CHURCHChevrolet, KY

Pastor, Randy Hoskins • 837-3907Assistant Pastor, Edward Huckleby

Sunday Services: 10 AM • 11 AM & 6 PMCLOSPLINT MISSIONARY

BAPTIST CHURCHClosplint, KY

Pastor, Ira Clark • 837-2829CLOVER FORK

BAPTIST CHURCHHolmes Mill, KY

Pastor, Mike Blair • 837-3131Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PM

COXTON BAPTIST CHURCHCoxton, KY • Pastor, Donnie Adkisson

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PMCUMBERLAND MISSIONARY

BAPTIST CHURCHPastor, Dennis Williams

408 Spring Street, Cumberland, KYSunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

DIONE MISSIONARYBAPTIST CHURCH

Cumberland, KYPastor, Luke Day • 589-2336

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PMEVARTS BAPTIST CHURCH

Evarts, KYPastor, Rev. Larry White

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHBaxter, KY

Pastor, Dallas MesserSunday Services: 11 AM & 6:30 PM

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHLoyall, KY

Pastors, Dr. Roy Lucas • 573-2710Sunday Services: 10:55 AM & 6 PM

FOUR MILE MISSIONARYCHURCH

Keith, KYPastor, Edmond E. Gross Sr.

FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCHCawood, KY

Pastor, Gary Craig Sr. • 573-1758Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

HARLAN BAPTIST CHURCHMain and Mound Streets, Harlan, KY

Pastor, Brandon Pugh • 573-4904 • 573-4909Sunday School 9:30 AM Worhsip 10:35 AM

Sunday Services: 6 PMwww.harlanbaptist.comHUFF SETTLEMENT CHURCH

Hwy. 38, Holmes Mill, KYPastor, Ralph Whitaker

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PMJONES CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH

Jones Creek, KYSunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PM

KELLY STREET BAPTIST CHURCHHarlan, KY - parkerspreaching.com

Pastor, Paul White • 573-4704Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

LENARUE MISSIONARYBAPTIST CHURCHLenarue, KY

Pastor: Joe HowardSunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

LIGGETT BAPTIST CHURCHLiggett , KY

Pastor: Sean Daniels • 574-1203Sunday Services 11 AM & 7 PM

Wednesday Bible Study 7 PMLOCUST GROVE MISSIONARY

BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 215, Dizney, KYPastor: Dax Taulbee

Home 837-0000Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6:30 PM

NEW RIVERSIDE BAPTISTCHURCH

Smith, KYPastor, Josh HensleyNORTH EVARTS BAPTIST

CHURCHEvarts, KY

Pastor, David Napier • 837-8353PANSY BAPTIST CHURCH

Gulston, KYPastor, Bobby Joe Rouse

PINE FLAT BAPTIST CHURCHHwy. 119, Tremont, KY Pastor, Gary Craig, Jr.

Transportation: 573-9408PUTNEY MISSIONARY

BAPTIST CHURCHPutney, KY

Sunday School: 10:00 AMSunday Morning Service 11:00 AM

Sunday Night Service 6:00 PMWednesday Service: 6:00 PM

RED BUD MISSIONARY CHURCHRed Bud, KY • 837-4510

RIVER RIDGEBAPTIST CHURCH

Evarts, KYRIVERSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH

Dayhoit, KYSUNSHINE BAPTIST CHURCH

623 Perkins Hill Rd.Pastor, Jonathan Grills

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6:30 PMTEETERSVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH

Hwy. 72, Catrons Creek RoadPastor, Roger Jordan • 574-0449

TOTZ MISSIONARY BAPTISTCHURCH

Hwy. 522, Totz, KYPastor, John Lutt rell

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PMTURNER BAPTIST CHURCH

Verda, KY • Pastor, Jerry KirbyVERDA FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

Verda, KYPastor, Danny McCreary • 837-3887

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PMWALLINS BAPTIST CHURCH

877 Hwy. 219, Wallins, KYPastor, Freeman Clark • 664-9053Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

www.wallinsbaptist.orgW. CUMBERLANDBAPTIST CHURCH

Sand Hill Section, Cumberland, KYPastor, Adie Dossett WILLOW GROVE BAPTIST

CHURCHHwy. 38, Lejunior, KY

Pastor, Jack Edd Ford • 837-9213Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6:30 PM

YOCUM CREEK MISSIONARYBAPTIST CHURCH

Middleton Addition, Evarts, KYPastor, Rev. Larry Parker

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PMAwana: Wednesdays 6:30 PM

CATHOLICHOLY TRINITY CHURCH

2536 S. U.S. Hwy. 421, Harlan, KYMarjorie Grieshop • 573-6311

Fr. M. George, CM• 859-5616Sunday Service: 9:45 AM

SAINT STEPHEN’S CHURCH304 Central Street Cumberland, KY

Fr. M. George, CM• 589-5616Services: June-October Sat. 5:30pm

CHURCH OF THE RESURRECTIONChurch Street Lynch, KY

Fr. M. George, CM• 589-5616Sunday Service: 12:00 noon

CHRISTIANCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

CHURCHVerda, KY

Pastor, Ernest Cox • 837-8632Sunday Services: 11:15 AM & 6 PM

COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN CENTER186 West Main Street

Lynch, KY 40855 • Pastor, Joe JenkinsSunday Service: 11 a.m.

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH110 Freeman Street, Cumberland, KY

Pastor, Nathan Crowe • 589-2713Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

HARLAN CHRISTIANDISCIPLES OF CHRIST CHURCH

First and Clover Streets, Harlan, KYPastor, Charles B. Morris • 573-1314Sunday Services: 10:30 AM & 6 PM

PANSY CHRISTIAN CHURCHMary Alice, KY •

Sunday Service: 10 A.M. & 6 P.M.Wednesday Service: 6 P.M.

Phone: (606)262-4308WALLINS CHRISTIAN CHURCH

1000 Hwy. 219, Wallins, KY664-0544 • Pastor, Obie Clark

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

CHURCHOF CHRISTCHURCH OF CHRIST

Creech Avenue, Cumberland, KYCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

Baxter, KYPastor, Pete Rowe

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRISTShields, KY

Pastor, Bruce Helton • 837-2689CLOVER STREET

CHURCH OF CHRISTHarlan, KY

Harlan 573-1887Sunday Service: 11 AMHARLAN CHURCH OF CHRIST

Harlan, KYPastor, Lee Sergent

573-4450 • 573-7289Sunday Services: 10:30 & 6 PM

LOYALL CHURCH OF CHRIST501 Wilkerson Street, Loyall, KY

Pastor, Josh Fennell573-5315 • 573-6865

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PMMOUNTAIN VIEW

CHURCH OF CHRISTPutney, KY • 573-9633

Stephen Foster, MinisterChris Hall, Minister

Sunday Bible Study: 9:30 AMSunday Worship: 10:30 AM

Wednesday Bible Study: 6:30 PMPOOR FORK

CHURCH OF CHRISTNext To Rosspoint School

On Hwy. 522, Rosspoint, KYPastor, James Forrester • 573-4687

Sunday Services:11 AM & 5:30 PM

ROSSPOINTCHURCH OF CHRIST

Rosspoint, KY • Pastor, Harry Coultas574-0094

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PMTEETERSVILLE

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRISTTeetersville, KY • Pastor, Mike Brock

Sunday Service: 6:30 PMCHURCH OF GODAGES MOUNTAIN ASSEMBLY

CHURCH OF GODAges, KY • Pastor, Donnie W. Harrison

Sunday Services: 10:15 AM & 7 PMCAWOOD CHURCH OF GOD

U.S. 421 S., Cawood, KYBishop Eric Richardson • 573-3943

CHURCH OF GODGrays Knob, KY

Pastor, Don Smith • 573-7507CHURCH OF GOD GOSPEL

ASSEMBLY302 Popular Street

Pastor, Robby HerringtonCHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

Bailey Creek Rd., Evarts, KYPastor, Ricky Allen • 837-8109Sunday Services: 4 PM & 5 PM

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECYBig Laurel, KY • 837-8470

Pastor, Rick AllenSunday Service: 6 PM

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY113 Union St., Lynch, KY

Pastor, Charles R. Scoville • 848-2615CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

113 Union St., Cumberland, KYPastor, Mae Bailey • 848-2620

CHURCH OF GODOF THE FREE PEOPLE

Fairview, Harlan, KYPastor, Vonny Jones • 573-1053

Sunday Services: 10:30 AM & 7:30 PMCOLDIRON CHURCH OF GOD

Coldiron, KYPastor, Jack Carmical • 664-2680

COLDIRON PENTECOSTALCHURCH OF GOD

Pastor, Charles Blanton • 664-3621Sunday Service: 6 PMCLOSPLINT CHURCH OF GOD

Closplint, KYPastor, Frank Howard • 837-3049Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

COXTON FAITH TABERNACLEStan Nicely, Pastor • 837-8014

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PMCUMBERLAND CHURCH OF GOD

503 Jackson St., Cumberland, KYPastor, Ronnie Doyle

573-3461DRESSIN CHURCH OF GOD

Pastor, Mark Speakman • 573-5621Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

EVARTS CHURCH OF GOD154 South Main Street, Evarts, KYPastor, Buddy Simpson • 664-7359

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PMFIRST CHURCH OF GOD

Sunny Acres, Harlan, KYPastor, James Blair

GULSTON CHURCH OF GODPastor, John Lundy

Gulston, KYHARLAN SUNSHINE

CHURCH OF GOD505 Hwy. 3459, Harlan, KY

Pastor, Nick W. Noe • 573-7131Sunday Services: 10 AM & 11 AM

KENVIR MOUNTAIN ASSEMBLYCHURCH OF GOD

Kenvir, KY • Pastor, Ancil VanoverLITTLE SHEPHERD TRAIL

CHURCH OF GODU.S. Hwy. 421 • Mac’s Rescue Mission573-2216 • Pastor, Mary R. McMurray

Chaplin: Joel McMurrayLOYALL CHURCH OF GOD

Rev. Billy Owens, Pastor573-0558

Sunday School: 10 AMSunday Night: 6 PM

Wednesday: 7:00 PMLYNCH CHURCH OF GOD

547 E. Main St., Lynch, KYPastor Marshal Rainey • 848-2600

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PMNEW BEGINNING PENTECOSTAL

CHURCH OF GODCoxton, KY • Pastor, Jerry Kinney

Sunday Service: 10 AM & 6 PMNEW HOPE CHURCH OF GODS. Main St., Harlan, KYPastor, Steve Kirkland

RIVERRIDGE CHURCH OF GODPastor, Martin Bledsoe • 837-2551

120 Tyree, Evarts, KYSaturday Services: 6:30 PM

TEETERSVILLE CHURCH OF GODPastor, Mitchell Brock • 573-4197

Sunday Services: 6:00 PMTHE CHURCH OF GOD

OF THE UNION ASSEMBLY1820 S. U.S. Hwy. 119, Baxter, KY

Pastor: Charlon Braff ord • 574-9237Asst. Pastor: Sonny Jones • 269-6836Sunday Services: 10:45 AM & 6 PM

TOTZ CHURCH OF GODTotz, KY • Pastor, Mark Turner

606-573-5983Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

EPISCOPALCHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH

Williams and Central StreetsHarlan, KY • Rev. Robert Coke McClure

573-4210 • Sunday Service: 11 AMEVANGELICAL

WESLEY EVANGELICAL CHURCHBaxter, KY

Pastor Harold Miller • 621-0269Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

FULL GOSPELBUNCH STREET FULL GOSPEL

CHURCHPathfork, KY • Pastor, Rev. Green Saylor

664-7912 • Sunday Service: 7 PMKILDAV COMMUNITY CHURCH

Kildav, KY • Pastor, Richard Ledford837-9482 • Sunday Service: 7 PM

KENTENIA FULL GOSPEL CHURCH2911 Hwy. 219, Wallins, KY

Pastor, Ed Houston • 664-0430E-mail: churchoffi ce@

kenteniafullgospelchurch.orgWeb site: www.kenteniafullgospelchurch.org

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PMHOLINESS

FAITH HOLINESS CHURCHPastor, Spencer Burkhart Smith

573-2642Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6:30 PM

INSULL HOLINESS CHURCHLocated Between Blackmont & Pathfork

Insull, KYRev. Ronnie Brock, Pastor

Tuesday Service: 7 p.m606-664-5158.

PATHFORK HOLINESS CHURCHPathfork, KY

Pastor, Everett e Eads • 664-3838Sunday Services: 10:15 AM & 7 PM

MENNONITEHARLAN MENNONITEFELLOWSHIP CHURCH

Contact Person, Richard StoltzfusSunday Services: 9:30 AM

METHODISTBAXTER UNITED

METHODIST CHURCHHwy. 119 Sookie Ridge, Harlan, KY

Pastor, Kyle Burnett • 573-9347Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

Wednesday: 6:00 PMBENHAM UNITED

METHODIST CHURCHCentral St., Benham, KY

Pastor, Jody VanSickle• 848-2052CRANKS CREEK UNITED

METHODIST CHURCHPastor, C. Robert Landis

Sunday Services: 9:45 AMCUMBERLAND UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

102 Frazier Street, Cumberland, KYPastor, Jody VanSickle • 589-4609Sunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PM

EVARTS CONGREGATIONALUNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Main St., Evarts, KYPastor, Rev. David W. Gross • 837-3228

Sunday Services:9:30 AM & 6 PM, Wed: 6:30 PM

HARLAN UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

201 East Mound Street, Harlan, KYPastor, Kyle Burnett e • (606) 573-1464

Sunday School 10:00 AMWorship 11:00 AM & 6:00 PM

LOYALL UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

Wilkerson St., Loyall, KYPastor, Arnold Hammons • 573-2007Sunday Services: 10:45 AM & 6 PM

LYNCH UNITED METHODIST CHURCHLynch, KY • Pastor, Hugh Webb

848-2907Sunday Service: 11:15 AM

MARY HELEN UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

Ky. 990, Coalgood, KYPastor, C. Robert Landis • 573-5221

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PMWALLINS UNITED

METHODIST CHURCHWallins, KY

Pastor, David Gross664-7705

Sunday Services:11 AM & 5 PMNAZARENE

CUMBERLAND CHURCHOF THE NAZARENE

3rd Avenue, Cumberland, KYPastor, Dillard Stanley •589-2742

HARLAN NAZARENE CHURCH

Airport Road, Baxter, KYRev., Wayne Curry • 573-3840

OTHERBLOOD BOUGHT CHURCH

117 N. Main Street, Harlan, KYPastor, William BakerSunday Service: 6 PM

CHRIST OF THE CUMBERLANDLUTHERAN CHURCH

190 Forge Ridge Rd., Harrogate, TNPastor, Arthur F.C. Avery

1-423-869-4359 • 1-423-869-5934Sunday Service: 9:30 AM & 10:30 PM

CHURCH OF THE LIVING GODBaxter, KY • Pastor, Homer Browning

Co-Pastor, Terry TaylorSaturday Service: 6 PM

COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN CENTER186 West Main Street

Lynch, KY 40855 • Pastor, Joe JenkinsSunday Service: 11 a.m.CORNERSTONE COMMUNITY

CHURCH277 South Hwy. 413, Baxter, KY

Pastor, Jeff Mills • 573-5181Sunday Services: 10:30 AM & 6:30 PM

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCHStanfi ll, KY

Pastor, Ronnie Brock • 664-5158Wed & Sun 7:00 PM

Sunday School 10:30 AMGRAYS KNOB BIBLE CHURCH

Hwy 421, Grays Knob, Harlan, KYPastor, James Pope • 573-3089

HARVEST WORSHIP CENTER113 North Main Street, Harlan, KY

Down from Area Bank (now BB&T)Pastor, Roland “Bo” Lee • 573-8874

Sunday Services: 11:15 AMHOUSE OF PRAYER

Hwy. 219 S., Twila, Wallins, KYSunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

Pastor: Terry L. TaylorHOUSE OF PRAYER

344 Bigelow Road, Bledsoe, KYPastor,McClellan Tolliver • 558-3274

Friday 7 PMHOUSE OF YAHWEH

Tazewell, TN • Pastor, Eugene Johnson423-626-6591 • Saturday Service: 1 PM

JONES CREEK CHURCHOF THE LIVING GODJones Creek, KY

837-8440Sunday Services: 10 AM & 7 PM

LITTLE LAUREL BIBLE CHURCHPastor, Rev. Titus BoggsSunday Services: 11 AM

NEW ERA MINISTRIES216 Hwy. 1084, Baxter, KY

Pastor, Ronnie Williams • 573-1915OUR HOUSE OF PRAYER

Cumberland Avenue, Harlan, KYSunday Service: 7 PM

PUTNEY BIBLE CHURCHHwy. 522, Putney, KY

Pastor, Clay Goves • 573-7641SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST

CHURCHSookey Ridge, Harlan, KY

Pastor, Mykal Ringstaff • 573-6506Saturday Service: 9:30 AM

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRISTOF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

169 Mosley Lane, Baxter, KY 40806Branch President, Sam Gilbert

Sunday Service: 10 a.m.TRIUMPH THE CHURCH ANDKINGDOM OF GOD IN CHRIST

Clutt s Section, Cumberland, KYPastor, K.L. Newman • 848-2678

PENTECOSTALBLACK STAR PENTECOSTAL

CHURCH8 miles on Hwy. 72, east at Black Star

Pastor, Rev. J.C. Craig • 664-3141Sunday Services: 11 AM & 6 PM

CUMBERLAND PENTECOSTAL CHURCHVictory Rd., Cumberland, KY

Pastors, Michael & Barbara Blair 589-4011

www.cumberlandpentecostalchurch.orgSunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PM

FIRST PENTECOSTALCHURCH

Loyall, KY • Pastor, Clark StantonSunday Services:10 AM & 6 PMFIRST PENTECOSTAL

CHURCH OF GODSunday Service: 6 PM

Rev. Wade Johnson • 664-7037FIRST PENTECOSTAL

CHURCH OF WALLINSP.O. Box 72, Wallins, KY

For Information 664-2154Wed 7 PM • Sun 10 AM & 6 PM

GREEN HILLS PENTECOSTAL CHURCHPastor Hubert Saylor

Sunday 10 AM • Th ursday 6:30 PM573-7470

HIRAM FREE PENTECOSTALCHURCH

Hiram, KYPastor, Bill Combs

589-4987HOLMES MILL PENTECOSTAL

HOLINESS CHURCHClosplint, KY

Sat & Sun Services: 7:00Sunday Services: 10 AM

Pastor, Greg Eldridge • 837-2744HOUSE OF MERCY CHURCH

Wallins, KYPastor, Darlene Roberts • 664-2920

Wednesday Services: 5:30, 6:00 & 7:00Sunday Services: 10 AM & 11:15

JESSE’S CREEK COMMUNITYCHURCH

Coldiron, KY • Pastor, Jeremy BlevinsSunday Services: 10:30 AM & 6 PM

LEWIS CREEKPENTECOSTAL CHURCH

Partridge, KYPastor, Ron Oplinger • 589-6125

LIBERTYPENTECOSTAL CHURCH

Molus, KY • 664-2547Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PM

Th ursday: 7 PMLIGHTHOUSE PENTECOSTAL

CHURCH421 North at 15 Mile Marker

Before Rosspoint • Pastor, Wade Smith573-9165 • Sunday Service: 1 PM

LIVING WATERS MINISTRIESMISSION

213 Moore Street, Clutt s, KYPastor, Pete Ashby • 633-9229

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PMLOUELLEN PENTECOSTAL

CHURCHHwy. 38 • Pastor, Clyde Addington

MOLUS PENTECOSTAL CHURCHHwy. 119, Molus, KY

Pastor, Ray Stepp • 664-3174NEW COVENANCE

COMMUNITY CHURCH49 Johnson Drive, Cawood, KY

Pastor, John C. Carter III • 573-4209Sunday Services: 10 AM, 11 AM & 6 PM

SHIELDS PENTECOSTAL CHURCHShields, KY • Pastor, James Sanders

837-2437SMITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH

U.S. Hwy. 987 (6 mile marker)(606) 573-9202

www.smithfullgospelchurch.comPastor, Rev. Ernest Hensley

Sunday Services: 10 AM & 6 PMTRI-CITY PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

Cumberland, KYPastor, Billy Lewis • 848-3524

Sunday Services: 11 AM & 7 PMTRINITY HOLINESS TABERNACLE

Hiram, KY • Pastor, Rex Lloyd589-4774

VICTORY PENTECOSTAL CHURCHPastor, Carmon Lewis • 589-9216

Sunday Services: 10:30 AM & 7 PMPRESBYTERIAN

CAWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH573-5916

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH306 East Clover Street, Harlan, KY

Sunday Service: 10:45 AMPANSY CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Pastor, Caleb BakerSunday 10am • 5pm

Wednesday 6pm

CLOVER FORK

CLINICP.O. Box 39, Evarts, Kentucky

(606) 837-2108 or 573-1499

Doss-Fuelco, Inc.

Rayburn Doss, MarketerChevron Products

Hwy. 119 RosspointHarlan, KY 40831

(606) 573-3223

KENTUCKY MINE SUPPLY

River Street,Harlan

573-3850“Headquarters for all your

mining needs!”

INTERNET SERVICE... VIA CABLE MODEM15x faster than dial up

harlanonline.net

HARLAN COMMUNITY TV

“The Able Cable”124 South First St., Harlan • 573-2945

CINEMAX

Immanuel Baptist Church

“Where Everybody Is Somebody And Jesus Is Lord”Upper Elcomb

Sunday School 10 AMSunday Morning Service 11 AMSunday Evening Service 6 PM

Wednesday Service 7 PM

573-6839

Harlan Nursing

Home200 Medical Center Drive

P.O. Box 895, Harlan, KY 40831(606) 573-7250

Fax (606) 573-6734

Evarts- Loyall Tri-City Harlan

Funeral Homes

Southeastern Eye Care Clinic, P.S.C.

Dr. Donald Holbrook, Optometrist

117 N. Cumberland Avenue Let us keep you seeing your best

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What’s Going OnSaturday, September 8, 2012 Page 13 — Harlan Daily Enterprise

C H U R C H ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Loyall Church of God’s Block Party will be from 3-6 p.m. today. An out-door movie will begin at 8:30 p.m. There will be inflatables, games and food. Everything is free to the public.

• • • • • • •Homecoming services

will begin at 6:30 p.m. today at Faith Holiness with evangelist Charles Long. Homecoming day service will begin at 11 a.m. on Sunday with din-ner following. Tommy Helton will be the evan-gelist.

Pastor Spencer Burkhart invites everyone to attend.

• • • • • • •Evarts Holiness Church’s

homecoming revival will continue through Sunday.

Speakers include: Today — Kenny Clem; Sunday (Homecoming) — Jamie Edwards.

Pastor Mike Guthrie and Assistant Pastor Jamie Edwards invites everyone to attend.

• • • • • • •Ages Church of God

Mtn. Assembly’s home-coming revival will begin at 7 p.m. nightly today through Sept. 15. Homecoming day service will begin at noon on Sept. 16.

Speakers include: Today and Sunday — Bro. Perry Long; Monday — Bro. George Sowels; Tuesday — Bro. Jack Carmical; Wednesday, Thursday and Friday — Bro. Jay Walden; Sept. 15 and 16 — Ronnie Boggs.

• • • • • • •Chevrolet Baptist

Church’s homecoming ser-vice will begin at 11 a.m. on Sunday.

Former pastor Marty Bramble will bring the message. There will be special singing. Dinner will follow. Pastor Eddie Huckleby and the congre-gation invites everyone to attend.

• • • • • • •A homecoming service

will begin at 11 a.m. on Sunday at Teetersville Baptist Church. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Thomas Heck. A fellow-ship dinner will follow. Everyone is invited to attend.

• • • • • • •Kelly Street Baptist

Church’s annual homecom-ing service will begin at 11 a.m. on Sunday.

Donnie Adkisson will be the guest speaker. There will be special singing and dinner to follow. Everyone is invited to attend.

• • • • • • •Yocum Creek Baptist

Church (located in Middleton Addition of Evarts) Awana Club meet-ings will be from 6:30-8 p.m. and continue through-out the school year begin-ning Wednesday.

Ages K-4 through eighth grade are welcome. Kids earn shirts, patches and Awana dollars which can be spent at the Awana store for great prizes. There will be food, fun and games as well as learning the Word of God. No club fees or dues.

For more information or bus pickup, call 837-3170.

• • • • • • •Homecoming at Lenarue

Missionary Baptist Church will begin at 11 a.m. on Sept. 16. Sunday School will not be held.

There will be special singing and dinner to fol-low. Pastor Joe Howard will bring the message. Everyone is welcome.

C O M M U N I T Y ANNOUNCEMENTS:

The Harlan County Extension Service and Scrapmakers Club will sponsor a “Scrap Fest” from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Harlan County Extension Depot today.

The fee is $10 and is payable at the door. Lunch is included in the fee and will be provided by Harlan County Christian School. Free T-shirts will be given to the first 50 people. There will be an All Day Crop (bring your own proj-ects) favor bags, vendors and door prizes (must be present to win).

To register, call 573-4464.

• • • • • • •The Bledsoe Volunteer

Fire Department auction will begin at 6 p.m. today.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County 4-H

Teen Club will meet at 3:30 p.m. on Monday at the Extension Depot.

This will be the first scheduled meeting for this school year. Students in grades 7-12 from any school in Harlan County, Independent or private schools are invited to attend.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County 4-H

Horse Club will meet at 5 p.m. on Monday at the Extension Depot.

This will be the first scheduled meeting for this school year. Students ages 9-18 from any school in Harlan County, Independent or Private Schools are invited to attend this meeting.

• • • • • • •The bookmobile sched-

ule for the week of Sept. 10 includes:

Monday — Sunshine School, Harlan Child Care Center, Rita’s Day Care, Nursery Time Day Care, Challenge Academy, Cawood and Little Creek.

Tuesday — Green Hills Elementary School, Bledsoe and Straight Creek.

Wednesday — Loyall, Good Neighbor Road, Terry’s Fork and Wallins.

Thursday — Cumberland Elementary School, Victory Road Christian Academy and Tri-Cities Nursing and Rehabilitations Center.

Friday — No run.• • • • • • •

The Harlan County 4-H Council will meet at 6 p.m. on Sept. 10 at the Extension Depot. All council members are urged to attend. Please contact the Extension Office if you are unable to attend.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County 4-H

Environmental Camp will be held at Martin’s Fork Lake Sept. 11, 12 and 13. State and local agencies will present Environmental Education programs to all fourth graders. Schools have been contacted con-cerning dates and times.

• • • • • • •Harlan County Shriners

second annual “Fun Day in the Park” will be from 1-6 p.m. on Sept. 15 at the Harlan County Shriners Fair Ground at Putney.

Everything is free. Activities include: Free kids T-shirts to the first 300 kids through the gate; inflatables, cotton candy, popcorn, drinks, hot dogs, face painting, pony rides, horse walk, corn toss, water balloon toss, basket-ball shoot, train rides and music.

Kids can also tour the Rescue Squad Crash Truck, police cruiser, Air Evac helicopter and much more.

• • • • • • •The second annual Sue

Ford Memorial Bike Ride is scheduled Sept. 15 at Harlan County Christian School in Putney. Registration will be from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Ride begins at 1 p.m. The rain date is Sept. 29.

The registration fee is $15. All proceeds will go to benefit Harlan County Christian School.

Route: Leave from Putney, turn north on U.S. 119; Turn right on KY 160 cross Black Mountain to Appalachia, Va.; Turn right on KY 38 to Harlan.

For more information, call 574-1900.

• • • • • • •The 10th annual Totz

School and Community Reunion will begin around 10 a.m. on Sept. 15 at the lower shelter house at Kingdom Come State Park. Dinner will begin at noon.

Hot dogs, chips, soft drinks, paper plates and napkins will be provided. Bring a covered dish or your favorite dessert. Bring a lawn/lounge chair for a comfortable seat.

Prize tickets will be available at the sign in table. If you do craftwork or bake, bring a sample for door prizes. Clearly mark each item as a door prize with your name on it.

For more information, contact Nancy Farmer Garland at 589-2251.

• • • • • • •Harlan County Bureau

will hold their annual meeting for regular mem-bers on Sept. 15 at the Harlan office. Lunch will begin at noon followed by the meeting.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County

Cooperative Extension Service along with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture will host a “Pesticide Container Rinse and Return Program” on Sept. 17.

If you have empty pes-ticide containers you may drop them off at the Harlan County Extension Office from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sept. 19. The containers must be empty of pesti-cides and clean, preferably triple rinsed.

For more information, contact the Harlan County Cooperative Extension Service at 573-4464.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County

Extension Service is plan-ning the sixth annual Harlan County Railroad History Evening on Sept. 18 at the Harlan County Extension Depot. The event will begin at 6 p.m.

An HO Scale Model Railroad depicting the L&N and other railroads will be featured. The high-light of the evening will be Ron Flanary’s L&N Railroad presentation of “Forever Reliable.” Cake and ice cream will also be served.

To celebrate the history of the railroad in Harlan County, we are giving local individuals the opportuni-ty to display railroad arti-

facts or memorabilia that they might have, during the event that evening.

If you have any railroad memorabilia that you would like to display or would like more informa-tion, contact the Harlan County Extension Service office at 573-4464.

• • • • • • •Harlan County

Homemakers 79th Annual Meeting, “Hats off to Homemakers,” will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 27 at the Harlan County Extension Depot. R.S.V.P. by Sept. 21 by calling 573-4464.

Members are encour-aged to wear hats; men may wear a ball cap or any other hat. Tables will be decorated by homemakers council members with the hat theme. There will be no contest for best deco-rated table.

Club responsibilities are to bring two door prizes and each members attend-ing should bring a large potluck dish.

• • • • • • •A DAV Representative

will be at the Hazard VA Outpatient Clinic (located in the ARH Medical Mall) from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Tuesday to assist veter-ans filing benefit claims. Interested veterans should bring military discharge documentation with them. No appointments are nec-

essary.Clinic staff is also avail-

able from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday to assist veterans in fill-ing out paperwork for VA health care. Interested vet-erans should bring a copy of their DD-214 to expe-dite their request.

For more information about VA health care, call 606-436-2350.

• • • • • • •The Cumberland Tourist

Commission is sponsoring a fall decorating contest. This contest is open to all residences and businesses in the Cumberland City Limits. There are no strict guidelines to follow, just decorate your yard or busi-ness for the upcoming fall season and register with the tourism office.

For each category (busi-ness and residential) the prize will be: First place — $150; second place — $100; third place — $50. The decision of the judg-ing committee is final. All eligible properties must be located within the city limits of the city of Cumberland.

You can register at the Cumberland Tourism office located at 506 W. Main St., Cumberland, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. All registrations must be sub-mitted by 5 p.m. on Sept. 25. Judging will be held on

Sept. 26, 27.The winners will be announced in the Enterprise.

• • • • • • •Friendly Village

Greenhouse (located behind Cumberland River Comprehensive Care Center) now has locally grown fall mums for sale at $6 each.

A variety of colors are available: yellow gold, fla-mingo pink, plum, pine-apple, bedazzled bronze and cranberry. Business hours are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

• • • • • • •Businesses who are cel-

ebrating their 25th, 50th, 75th or 100th anniversary are asked to contact the Harlan County Chamber of Commerce to be recog-nized in the awards pro-gram on Nov. 11. Send a letter to: P.O. Box 268, Harlan, Ky. 40831.

S C H O O L ANNOUCNCEMENTS:

Holy Trinity Learning Center’s after school tutor-ing program is now open.

For more information, call 573-3570.

• • • • • • •The Harlan County

4-H Home School Club will meet at 2 p.m. on Monday at the Extension Depot (located behind the Huddle House on River Street in Harlan).

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Page 14 — Harlan Daily Enterprise Saturday, September 8, 2012