2016 Media Guide -...
Transcript of 2016 Media Guide -...
Media Guide2016
Every morning 365 Days A Year… Your Local News Source
124 S. Second St. | PO Box 4430 | Aberdeen, SD 57402-4430 | 800.925.4100 | AberdeenNews.com | FarmForum.net
PUBLISHER
Cory [email protected]
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Christy [email protected]
RETAIL SALES MANAGER
FARM FORUM SALES MANAGER
Lynde [email protected]
CUSTOMER SERVICE MANAGER
Brenda [email protected]
Personnel
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
SATURDAY
THURSDAY
TUESDAY
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
Media Guide
TOTAL MARKET ADULTSLess than 3 years in area 7%20 years or longer 66%White collar employee 29%Blue collar/service/other 28%Retired 28%Multi-income households 38%Married 68%College graduate 32%Children (<16 y.o.) at home 32%Own home 85%Family income -$25,000 12%25,000-49,999 35%50,000-74,999 29%75,000-99,999 12%$100,000+ 11%Median family income $52,000
Market Characteristics55,100 MARKET ADULTS: 54% ARE LOYAL, DAILY READERS
Total market AdultsMen 49%Women 51%18-34 years old 22%35-54 37%55+ 41%Median age 48 yrs.
Circulation:11,281 Daily
12,768 Sunday9,999 AN Plus (TMC)
902 Digital Only**All subscribers have Digital access
Reaches 30,000 Readers!
Covering Over 50 Towns In 11 Counties
Hazelton
Linton
McLaughlin
Mahto
Trail City
Wakpala
Bowdle
Glenham
Akaska
Onida
Java
Hoven
Gettysburg
Miller
Crandon
Hitchcock
Carpenter
Vienna
Hazel
Bryant
Badger
De Smet Hetland
Brookings
WhiteBruce
Brandt
Astoria
Altamont
HendricksBroadland Yale
Wolsey Cavour
SenecaFaulkton
Onaka
Mans�eld
Stratford
Verdon
Turton
Stockholm
Strandburg
NassauWallace
Brentford
Ashton
Chelsea
Eureka
Long Lake
Leola
Frederick
Barnard
Westport
PutneyLangford
Pierpont
Claremont
HoughtonAmherst
Britton
Lake CitySisseton
Eden
Foster
SummitMarvin
OrtonvillerCorona
Roslyn
Hecla
Hillsview
Hosmer
Roscoe Ipswich MinaBath
GrotonAndover
Bristol Waubay
Pollock
Herreid
Mound City
Wishek
Venturia
Fredonia
Merricourt
Verona
Lehr
AshleyForbes
Ellendale
Keystone
Berlin
Oakes
Gwinner
Port Emma Brampton
Lisbon
Barrie
Wyndmere
McLeod
Milnor
Campbell
La Mars
RosholtWheaton
Barry
NashuaRansom City
Fort Ransom
Havana
Grand Rapids
NapoleonJud
Braddock
Solen
Mobridge
LittleEagle
Cannon Ball
Fort YatesStrasburg
Selby
Ordway
Northville
Webster
Grenville Wilmot
Chokio
Artichoke
RockhamRed�eld
Burdette
Huron
Willow LakeLake Norden
Lowry
Athol
Florence
Odessa
Madison
Tolstoy
Kulm
Edgeley
Monango
Hudson Forman
Doran
Kent
Pelicon Rapids
Elizabeth
ErhardColfax
Walcott
Clement
Selfridge
Glencross
Artas
Zeeland
Devoe
Mellette
Tulare
Doland Clark
Merton
Bancroft Erwin
Henru
CastlewoodClear Lake
Kampeska
Bonilla
Manchester LakePreston
Iroquois
Ivanhoe
Arco
Butler
Waverly
Blunt Harrold Highmore
Hague
Adrian Marion
Dickey
Lamoure
Harlem
Claire City
Dumont
Beardsley
Elliott
Cayuga Lidgerwood
Sheldon Christine
Wahpeton
Tintah
Abercrombie
DwightDwight
Great Bend
Tenney
Western
Agar
Pierre
MissionRidge
Wetonka
Newark
Aberdeen
Wessington
Naples
Hayti
Gary
TorontoEstelline
VeblenVictor
Clinton
Norcross
Goodwill
SpringGrove
BrownsValley
Warner
Cresbard
Garden City
Bradley
RaymondElrod
Rauville
Twin BrooksMilbank Louisburg
Troy
SouthShore
WatertownGoodwin
AAN Distribution
0 mi 20 40 60 80
Friday, January 1, 2016
www.aberdeennews.com 5A
Ever After Baby Boutique on Main Street closes
Two residents namedto 40 Under 40 list
Ever After Baby Boutique closed its doors one last time Thursday.The children’s clothing store opened Dec. 19, 2013, at 424 S. Main St.This past September, Ever After moved to the basement loor under Karisma Boutique at 305 S. Main St.Sisters Jessica Dinger and Ali Pasteur did not specify a cause for the closing.“We’re ready to go in a different direction with our lives,” Pasteur said in a phone interview.— Reporter Kelda J.L. Pharris
Two Aberdeen residents were on Prairie Business magazine’s “good” list this year: Ryan Rivett, 32, and Tanya Shafer, 34. Both were named as two of the most inspiring and dedicated professionals under the age of 40, according to the magazine.• Rivett is the president/chief operating oficer of My Place Hotels, the co-owner/vice president of Legacy Builders Inc. and the president of Legacy Management LLC.
ABERDEEN
ABERDEEN
Community Business
Business in Aberdeen saw ups and downs in 2015, as there were sev-eral closings, openings, layoffs, new construction projects and more. And Santa wasn’t the only one making a list and checking it twice. In no speciic order, here are the businesses changes we can recall during the last year.
Openings• Hobby Lobby• Wheat Growers Innovation Center• Stutsman Harley-Davidson• New Angus, now dba DemKo-ta Ranch Beef• Famous Footwear• Pulse Nightclub• Colorful Creations• Dakota Outdoor Living• CrossFit Rails• Jimmy Johns (new location in Shoppes on 7th)• Dairy Queen• CJ’s Patisserie• Schwab Audiology• Kessler’s Holiday• My Place Hotel• Midwest Decorative Stump and Design• Aspen Dental• Next Generation Performance• The Brass Kettle• Hair Addictions• Dazzling Detail• Amanda’s Massage• iDeal Furniture• TK’s Sewer, Kitchen and Bath Repair• Hair and Company
• Artisan Custom Homes• Harr Motors Bargain Center
Closings (or planned closings)• JC Penney• Wyndham (oficially closing January 2016)• Ramada/Bully’s/Tapz• Klein’s• Webb Shoe Co.• Hallmark• Subway in Aberdeen Mall
• NSU’s Children’s Center• Mugs Coffee House (12th Ave-nue location)• Junk in the Trunk Antiques• Hush Boutique (to Karisma/Stitch Row)• Aberdeen Originals• EZ Pawn Shop (inventory transferred to Sixth Avenue Pawn)• Sauerwein Construction• Bonn’s Eats and Treats• The Daily Grind• Radio Shack• The Frame Gallery
Opened/closed• Max and Dazy’s retail space closed, but the owners manage the business out of their home.• Ever After Baby Boutique moved into the basement loor of Karisma Boutique’s new lo-cation. The boutique closed for business on Thursday.
Layofs/employee changes• Midstates (-55)
• Xerox (-20)• Molded Fiber Glass this week announced an expansion, adding 15,000 square feet to its Aber-deen facility along with 75 to 100 new jobs within the next year.
Under construction• Mike Miller Elementary School• Buffalo Wings and Rings (ac-cording to spokeswoman Rachel Stolba, construction is going as planned and the business is hop-ing to open early April 2016)• Magnum
• Avera Cancer Institute (which should open soon)• Ag Processing Inc. announced a soybean processing plant for Aberdeen. The company is in the beginning stages of planning and permitting, with an eye toward a 2018 opening.
Now hiring to expand or open• Great Clips (Michelle Curtis, area manager based in Minne-sota, said that hiring is going well enough now that the busi-ness could open by the end of January.)
• New Angus, now dba DemKota Ranch Beef• Subway on Eighth Avenue Northeast in Paramount Village
Other notable changes• Under new ownership, Dad-dy’s is in the process of be-ing changed back to local icon Scotty’s.• Curves has changed to Balance Fitness Studio.
• Kathleen’s closed and its owner now operates Kate’s, downstairs.• JL Photography, Paisley Tree Photography and Jenna Hollinger Photography moved into the basement loor of Karis-ma Boutique’s new Main Street location.
• The owner of MainStream Boutique opened a second loca-tion in Sioux Falls.• Pips Squeaky Clean Soaps opened a new production area in the Citizen’s Building.• A movie theater inside of the Capitol Theatre started playing movies in December.• Body By Design, Hitch ‘N’ Post, Gallery Go Gaming, Sub-way (the 205 Sixth Ave. S.E. lo-cation) and Schriver’s Memori-al all had their buildings hit by vehicles.
• Lakewood Mall was renamed Aberdeen Mall.• Aberdeen plastic surgeon San-jay Mukerji reopened his private practice. • Ray Malsch of Ray’s Barber Shop retired in March after 60 years of cutting hair.• O’Reilly Auto Parts built and moved into a new store on Sixth Avenue.• Several new apartment build-ings opened and more units are currently under construction.• Upper Plains Contracting changed its name to Reede Construction.
• What Women Love and Urban consignment stores combined space.• Firestone changes its name to
GCR Tires and Service.
Changes outside of Aberdeen• The MStation convenience store opened at Mina Lake.• The Wakeside Bar and Grill, also at Mina Lake, closed for the winter season, while still open-ing to host special events.• ALCO stores close in Redield, Webster and Mobridge; Shopko Hometown opened in its place.• The Farmer’s Wife Boutique opened in Groton.
• CompQuest Technology, based in Aberdeen, opened a new ofice in Mobridge.• Sinner Auto Body in Webster closed.• Marcy Lucy Boutique opened in Webster.• Titan’s Bar and Grill opened in Frederick.• Tom and Gabrielle Pioske took over ownership of Frohling Meats in Hecla.• The County Seat: Furniture and Home Décor opened in Redield. • Langford’s Main Street Center opened.
Are there others?Having only been in this posi-tion for just under two months, I relied heavily on memory and the archives of our Friday Com-munity Business page. Thus, I realize not all business chang-es may be included on this list. Let me know what I missed by emailing [email protected].
Follow @vlusk_AAN on Twitter.
The year in local business comings, goings
COLUMN
Victoria LuskBusiness and enterprise editor
The Corner Book Shoppe:
Elizabeth Svensen, owner of The Corner Book Shoppe, left, and employee Linda Nelson stand among the
hundreds of books in the store at 504 S. State St. American News Photo by John Davis
BUSINESS Q&A: THE CORNER BOOK SHOPPE
8B www.aberdeennews.com
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Taste
Cookies, cakes and pies.
The holy trinity of bak-
ing, if you will.
Sweets are a
time-honored tradition in many
households, but for some the
thought of having to make a
pie crust or work through an-
other batch of cookies can be
overwhelming.
We’re of the irm belief that
baking should be fun, not frantic,
and we’ve quizzed some bakers
for their tips and tricks to mak-
ing delicious cookies, cakes and
pies.
Cookies
Pastry chef Daniel Benjamin
of Lucettegrace in Raleigh, N.C.,
is no stranger to a good cookie.
His downtown patisserie churns
out dozens of perfect macarons
every day in addition to delicious
cakes, tartlets, croissants and
more.His advice to home bakers
is simple. “Plan ahead,” Benja-
min said. “If I’m making cookies
on a Saturday, I’ll make my list
on Thursday. Do I have enough
lour? Do I have all the tools I
need?”He strongly recommends hav-
ing a proper “mise en place,”
a French culinary phrase that
means “putting in place.” A prop-
er mise means you’ve measured
out all the ingredients, your but-
ter is soft, eggs are room tem-
perature and you’ve read through
every step of the recipe.
“So many things can be done
in stages,” Benjamin said. “Ice-
box cookies can be made ahead
and baked the day you need
them. Even with our macarons,
we make the illings ahead of
time, so that when the cookies
cool, we can ill them right away.
You can do a little bit every day
and inish it up the last day.”
When it comes to technique,
Benjamin pointed out the steps
he never skips.
“Creaming is important,” he
said, noting the process of whip-
ping together sugar and butter.
He creams the butter on low to
medium-low speed in a mixer,
making sure to stop and scrape
the bowl every once in a while
until the mixture is what the
French call “en pomade,” or the
consistency of hair pomade.
How you add your dry ingre-
dients is also important. “I al-
ways add my lour in three’s,” he
said. “Add a little bit, mix it, stop
scrape down the sides of the thing,” Tornquist said. “So I
don’t bake anything that isn’t lat
e
BY MATT LARDIE
The (Raleigh, N.C.) News and Obser
ver
Calendar once meant a grid,
on paper. I scrawled tasks into
der cookie is short and sweet.
Each offers an espresso rush of
punctuality. And, it makes an
excellent snack. Just don’t tell
my computer.
bowl of a stand mixer itted
with the paddle attachment.
(Alternatively, use a hand mix-
er.) Cascade in sugar. Mix until
luffy, about 2 minutes.
2. Mix: Whisk together yolks,
espresso, vanilla and
Espresso shortbreads ofer sweet pick-me-up
BY LEAH ESKIN
Chicago Tribune
Pastry chef Daniel Benjamin of Lucettegrace in Raleigh, N.C., gives simple advice to home bakers: “Plan ahead.” Benjamin’s
patisserie churns out dozens of perfect macarons every day, in addition to delicious cakes, tartlets, croissants and more. TNS
Photo
Instant espresso powder gives a bit of a kick to buttery shortbread cookies. TNS Photo
Watch how to make a healthy
and illing breakfast in our
latest AN Test Kitchen video
at AberdeenNews.com.
Online
3professional bakers s
hare
tips for home cooks
“So many things can
be done in stages.
Icebox cookies can
be made ahead and
baked the day you
need them. Even
with our macarons,
we make the illings
ahead of time,
so that when the
cookies cool, we can
ill them right away.
You can do a little bit
every day and inish
it up the last day.”
Daniel Benjamin
Pastry chef at Lucettegrace
in Raleigh, N.C.
Monday, January 4, 2016
www.aberdeennews.com 5A
SEND YOUR PHOTOS
Email your photos and
captions to
scrapbook@aberdeenn
ews.com. Everyone in
the photo must be ide
ntified left to right,
or the
photo will not be printed. Only emailed phot
os
and captions will be acce
pted.
Scrapbook
The Wells Fargo Auto Finance top performers for September were, back row from left: Dar Patterson,
Zach Anderson, Mary Davidson, Beth Kolb, Judy Schweigert and Corey Barbato. Seated, from left: Joe
Black and Mike Orr.
South Dakota Sen. Jason Frerichs of Wilmot received the "Friend of Local Government" award on Dec.
2 in Huron at the 36th annual South Dakota Association of Towns and Townships Conference. It is the
group's highest award, and is given to a recipient that shows exceptional support for local government.
From left are SDATAT Director Dan Thyen, SDATAT President Jim Pufer, Frerichs and SDATAT lobbyist and
transportation consultant Richard Howard.
Aberdeen Family YMCA recently received a $3,000
grant from the Great Plains Outdoorsmen to help
fund its youth archery program. Back row, from
left: Rod Eisenbeisz, Ray Ireland and Jerry Brick.
Front row, from left: Fallon Eichler, Dan Grewe and
Bill Bowen.
During the Sept. 23 meeting of the Aberdeen Lions
Club, Safe Harbor Executive Director Gina Karst,
right, provided the club with information on Safe
Harbor's goals and activities. With Karst is Bob
Karst, a member of the club.
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
www.aberdeennews.com 5AEducation
Central High School students of the month for December were, irst row, from left, Hailey Bieber, Katie Ol-
son, Zoey Gab, Rachel Hohenstein and Megan Kingsriter. Back row, from left, Nico Swalley, MiKayla Wieker,
Makaela Gross and Brandon Heim.Central High School Academic Achievement win-ner in December was senior Thomas Krueger. Courtesy photos
Groton Area School students of the month for October are, front row, from left, Ashley Fliehs, Erin Unzen
and Seth Johnson. Back row, from left, Tylan Glover, Jenifer Fjelstad, Erin Smith and Lily Cutler. Courtesy
photos
Hannahs
Sieler
CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS OF THE MONTH — DECEMBER CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT — DECEMBER
Aberdeen Central High School is hosting a inan-cial aid information night at 7 p.m. Jan.11 for seniors and their parents at the Thomas F. Kelly Theatre.
Topics to be covered include the application pro-cess, college/postsecondary costs and a host of other inancial aid matters. Information on scholarships available through the CHS counseling department will also be highlighted.Sharon Kienow, director of inancial aid at North-ern State University, is presenting.For more information, contact counselor Barry Hehn at 605-725-8118.— Staff reports
CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOLFinancial aid nightset for Monday
GROTON AREA SCHOOL STUDENTS OF THE MONTH — OCTOBER
The Northern Plains Christian Academy students of the month for November are Tafyra Sieler in the elementary and Brant Hannahs in the secondary.— Staff reports
NORTHERN PLAINS CHRISTIAN ACADEMY STUDENTS OF THE MONTH — NOVEMBER
MondayScrapbook (local photos)
American Proile (every other Monday)Athlon (every third Monday)
TuesdayEducation Page
WednesdayTaste Page
hursdayOut & About [email protected]
FridayCommunity Business
Special FeaturesMedia Guide
SportsNorthern State
women’s team
receiving poll votes
World of Outlaws Sprint Cars
coming to Aberdeen
Former Minnesota Twins ace
coming to Webster Jan. 23
For the irst time this season, the
Northern State women’s basketball team
is receiving votes in the WBCA Divi-
sion II poll. The Wolves, winners of ive
straight games, received 14 votes this
week.Northern is currently 10-3 on the sea-
son and will be at home for four straight
games starting Friday against Minot
State.Other Northern Sun Intercollegiate
Conference teams in this week’s poll
include 12th-rated Winona State and
Sioux Falls, which received 50 votes.
Northern handed Winona its only loss of
the season last weekend and hosts Sioux
Falls on the inal game of its upcoming
home stand.
The World of Outlaws Sprint Car
Series is coming back to Brown County
Speedway.
The sprint cars will be competing at
the local track on June 19, which is Fa-
ther’s Day this year. It marks the irst
time the sprints will be in Aberdeen
since 1985, when Sammy Swindell de-
feated Steve Kinser.
Donny Schatz of Minot, N.D., won his
seventh championship this past season
and became just the second driver to win
more than 30 A feature events in a World
of Outlaws Sprint Car Series season.
Schatz joined Kinser, who accomplished
the feat three times in his career. Schatz
also won his 200th career race this past
year, joining Kinser and Swindell as the
only three drivers in series history to
reach that mark.
Information on tickets for the sprint
car show will be available soon at www.
slspromotions.com.
The World of Outlaws Late Model
Series made a stop at the local track in
2008.
Webster Legion Post 40 Baseball is
presenting “A Night with Twins Legend
Jack Morris” on Jan. 23 at the Webster
Armory. All proceeds from the event,
which starts at 6 p.m., will beneit the
Legion baseball program.
Cost is $25 for adults (ages 19 and
older) and $10 for students and includes
a meal and the program.
To purchase tickets, email
[email protected] or contact
Chad Hesla at 605-881-0007.
Morris was selected as the 1991 World
Series Most Valuable Player after he
helped lead the Minnesota Twins to the
championship, capped off by his 10-in-
ning shutout pitching victory in Game 7.
BASEBALL
AUTO RACING
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
www.aberdeennews.com 1C
HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
Inside today’s edition:
• PC men knock down Johnson and Wales 2C
• Huron blocks Aberdeen Central upset bid 3C
• Two-time Olympic gold medal-winning skeet shooter
reacts to newly announced gun restrictions 4C
News? Scores? Thoughts?
Aberdeen Central took the
sting out of the Huron’s bite
early.The second-ranked Golden
Eagles pressured the Tigers
into a big irst-quarter differ-
ential and pulled away from
there, cruising to a 76-42
Eastern South Dakota Confer-
ence girls’ basketball victory
Tuesday night at Golden Ea-
gles Arena.
Central turned up the pres-
sure early, creating scoring
opportunities in transition
and dominating the paint in
the half-court setting. Paiton
Burckhard scored 10 of her
13 total points in the open-
ing quarter, one of a series of
single-player scoring stretch-
es by the Golden Eagles
throughout the night.
The result was a 24-8 lead
by the end of the irst and Hu-
ron could not stem the tide.
“They like the ball to go to
the paint,” said Huron head
coach Wade Stobbs. “We talk-
ed about that. They like to
transition. The things we talk-
ed about before the game was
the things we let them do in
the irst half.”
In addition to Burckhard’s
run in the opening quarter,
the Golden Eagles got other
scoring runs by Karli Gard-
ner, Brianna Kusler and Ally
Steckler, all of whom ended
up in double igures.
Gardner used the transi-
tion game and the three-point
line to her advantage, while
Kusler was active on the
drive into the lane. Steckler’s
spree in the fourth came on
a three-pointer and a trio of
free throws.
“That’s the nice thing
about this team. If a team
tries to take something
away, you have some other
options,” said Central head
coach Dawn Seiler.
“We just needed to ind
Golden Eagles tame Tigers
BY JACQUE SCOBY
Aberdeen Central’s Renee Bragg, center, tries to duck under Huron’s Karissa Schroder, right, as Bragg
makes a move to the basket during the irst half of Tuesday night’s game at the Golden Eagles Arena. Behind
Bragg for Huron is Madeline Willemssen. For more photos from the game, check out the photo galleries at Ab-
erdeenNews.com. American News Photos by John Davis
Aberdeen Central’s Cortez Standing Bear, right, scoops
up a loose ball ahead of Huron’s Madeline Willemssen,
center, and Lexy Glanzer, far left, during the irst half of
Tuesday night’s game at the Golden Eagles Arena.
See Central, 3C
Aberdeen Roncalli held
Leola-Frederick to just two
baskets from the loor and
a total of eight points in
the second half as it pulled
away for a 44-23 victory in
nonconference girls’ bas-
ketball action Tuesday at
Roncalli Gym.
The Cavaliers (4-4)
took an 8-6 lead during the
inal seconds of the irst
quarter and even trailed
13-12 after a 3-point play
by the Titan’s Cassandra
Hinz with 3:19 left in the
second. However, Megan
Streier gave Roncalli the
spark it needed. The fresh-
man scored on consecutive
trips down the court to put
the Cavaliers up 17-13 with
2:25 left in the half.
Jami Ewart kept the run
going and scored Roncalli’s
inal four points of the half
for a 21-15 lead.
In the second half, a de-
fensive switch by the Cav-
aliers was a game-changer.
Changing from a man de-
fense to a zone, Roncalli
shut the backdoor on the
Titans. Roncalli coach Derek
Larson credited assistant
Jamie Neuendorf with sug-
gesting the change.
“I thought when we
went zone in the second
half, it really helped us pre-
vent them from getting to
the rim,” Larson said. “We
only gave up a few points
in the second half. If we
can hold teams on the de-
fensive end, it’s a lot easier
on both ends of the loor.”
Leola-Frederick man-
aged just three points in
the third quarter — all on
free throws — while the
Cavaliers turned the de-
fensive stops into points at
the other end of the court
and carried a 31-18 lead
into the fourth.
Kennedy Lorenz opened
the inal quarter with a
pair of free throws for Ron-
calli. Taylor Morgan fol-
lowed with a layup as the
Cavaliers doubled the Ti-
tan’s point total 36-18 with
7:04 to play. Streier add-
ed her second 3-pointer of
the game before the Ron-
calli bench took over and
closed out the game.
Ewart led Roncalli
with 13 points, while
Morgan added 10 points
and a team-leading seven
rebounds.
Roncalli will be back in
action Tuesday at Tiospa
Zina, while Leola-Fred-
erick will travel to Red-
ield-Doland on Saturday.
Follow @ejhoros_AAN on Twit-
ter, email ehoros@aberdeenews.
com or call 605-622-2323.
LEOLA-FREDERICK (2-4): April
Hoffman 0-3 2-2 2, Abby Berreth 1-1 0-0
2, Chandler Ellwein 1-6 0-0 2, Mackenzie
Heilman 4-14 1-2 9, Savana Hinz 1-5 0-0
2, Cassandra Hinz 2-9 1-1 5, Mikayla
Forsting 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 9-47 5-7 23.
RONCALLI (4-4): Jami Ewart 6-12 0-0
13, Megan Streier 3-9 0-0 8, Taylor Mor-
gan 5-8 0-0 10, Grace Imbery 1-4 1-1 3,
Kennedy Lorenz 3-7 1-1 7, Abby Hanson
0-1 1-2 1, Madelyn Martin 1-2 0-0 2.
Totals 19-44 3-4 44.Leola-Frederick6 15
18 23
Roncalli 8 21 31 44
3-point ield goals — Leola-Frederick
0-5; Roncalli 3-10 (Ewart 1, Streier 2).
Total fouls — Leola-Frederick 12; Roncalli
12. Fouled out — None. Rebounds —
Leola-Frederick 16 (Heilman 6); Roncalli
24 (Morgan 7, Ewart 6). Assists —
Leola-Frederick 4; Roncalli 11 (Imbery
4). Turnovers — Leola-Frederick 24;
Roncalli 17. Steals — Leola-Frederick 10
(Michaela Podoll 7); Roncalli 14 (Imbery
5, Streier 4).
Defense leads Roncalli girls to v
ictory
BY EMILY HOROS
Aberdeen Roncalli’s Taylor Morgan, center, puts up a shot between
Leola-Frederick’s Michaela Podoll, left, April Hofman (3), MacKenzie
Heilman (21) and Abby Berreth, far right, during the irst half of Tuesday
night’s game at the Roncalli High School gym. For more photos from
the game, check out the photo galleries at AberdeenNews.com. American News
Photos by John Davis
Aberdeen Roncalli’s Me-
gan Streier, right, puts
up a shot as Leola-Fred-
erick’s Abby Berreth,
left reaches in on de-
fense during the irst
half of Tuesday night’s
game at the Roncalli
High School gym.
4A www.aberdeennews.com
Wednesday, January 6, 2016OBITUARIESSteve RauschHoven: Steve Rausch, 53, of Hoven died Saturday, Jan. 2, 2016, at his home, west of Hoven.
Mass of Christian buri-al will be at 10 a.m. T h u r s -day, Jan. 7, 2016, at St. Antho-ny’s Catho-lic Church, H o v e n , with Fa-ther Kevin Doyle as cele-brant. Organist will be Al-ice Simon at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church and the choir will sing. Lector will be Rebecca Arbach. Eu-charistic ministers will be George and Shirley Raus-ch. Mass servers will be Dana Hageman and Col-in Arbach. Offertory will be Steve’s sisters. Placing the pall will be his chil-dren: Zachary, Shawna and Luke.Wake services have been scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday at the church.Steven Albert Rausch, son of Patricia (Mack) and Edward Rausch, was born June 4, 1962, at Holy In-fant Hospital in Hoven. He was brought up on a farm 7½ miles west of Hoven. Steve attended St. Antho-ny’s Catholic School and Hoven High School, class of 1980. Steve participated in Greyhound sports while he was in high school, as well as playing Teener and Legion baseball in the summer. He then farmed for a while and attended a taxidermy school in James-ville, Wis. He returned to the farm.
Steve was engaged in a variety of vocations in addition to farming. He practiced taxidermy from his basement in the win-ter. Through the ‘80s and early ‘90s, he operated a crop spraying business. He worked many years as a truck driver. In 1996, he bought a new truck and trailer and he established Rausch Land and Live-stock. Steve married Jill Manolovitz in Gettysburg on Dec. 28, 1998. They re-sided in Hoven until July 2003, when they relocated to Whitewood. Steve re-turned to Hoven in March 2012, where he lived for the rest of his life.He was an avid Mi-ami Dolphins fan. He also spent many hours hunting and ishing. Steven espe-cially enjoyed planning and taking his kids on va-cations. His three children fondly remember riding with their dad in his truck.
Surviving Steve are two sons: Zachary Rausch of Hoven and Luke Raus-ch of Casper, Wyo.; one daughter, Shawna Rausch of Casper, Wyo.; ive sis-ters: Jeanne (Ron) Arbach, Amy (Jim) Arbach, Col-leen (Tom) Hageman and Lori (Chad) Sautner, all of Hoven, and Debbie (Neil) Jensen of Henry.He was preceded in death by his father, Ed-ward, on March 6, 2012; his mother, Patricia, on July 5, 1998; his brother,
James, on Jan. 17, 2002; and one niece, Madalyn Sautner, on July 1, 2003.Casketbearers will be Darrell Griese and Allen Frost of Hoven, Wes Hem-mah of Whitewood, Alvin Phillips of Gettysburg, Mike Arbach of Sioux Falls and Larry Arbach of Pierre.
Please visit millerlienfh.com to view the tribute video.Lien Funeral Home, Bowdle, is in charge of arrangements.
Phyllis A. MarvelAberdeen: Memorial ser-vices for Phyllis A. Marvel, 85, of Aberdeen will be held at a later date.
Phyl l i s died Fri-day, Jan. 1, 2016, at Avera St. Luke’s Hosp i ta l , Aberdeen.
At Phyllis’ request, she was cremated and per-sonally wrote this obitu-ary. Spitzer-Miller Funeral Home, 1111 S. Main St., is in charge of arrangements.Phyllis Ann Smith was born Dec. 19, 1930, in Broadland to Milton and Leta (Urban) Smith. She grew up and attended ru-ral schools near Hitchcock. The family moved to Hu-ron, where she graduat-ed from the Huron High School with the class of 1948. Upon graduation, she worked for the Benson Optical Company in Hu-ron. She married Robert Marvel on Sept. 3, 1949, in Marshall, Minn. They made their home in Huron and, in 1957, they moved to Minneapolis, Minn., and in 1965, they moved to Ab-erdeen. Phyllis belonged to First United Methodist Church in Aberdeen, the church choir, organ guild and former Clio Study Club.
Grateful for having shared Phyllis’ life are her husband, Robert Marvel; twin sons: Gregory Marvel, Benson, Ariz., and Bradley Marvel, Hampshire, Ill.; and grandsons: Casey and Cody Colemer.She was preceded in death by her daughter, Monica Colemer; parents, Milton and Leta Smith; and siblings: Lois Thomp-son, Robert Smith and Ce-cil Smith.
spitzerfuneralhome.com
Richard NehlsPierpont: Richard Nehls, 90, of Pierpont passed away Jan. 5, 2016, at San-ford Medical Center in Webster.
Services are pending with Paetznick-Garness Funeral Chapel, Groton.
Janice L. BartlettGettysburg: Janice L. Bartlett, 58, of Gettysburg passed away Jan. 4, 2016, at Avera Gettysburg Hos-pital.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 7, 2016, at United Methodist Church, Blunt, with Pastor Kori Lehrkamp presiding.Burial will follow at Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Blunt.Visitation will be one hour prior to the service at the church.Luce Funeral Home of Gettysburg has been entrusted with Janice’s arrangements.
familyfuneralhome.net
Mildred DummerAberdeen: Mildred Dum-mer, 91, of Aberdeen died Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2016, at Avera St. Luke’s Hospital, Aberdeen.
Arrangements are pend-ing with Spitzer-Miller Fu-neral Home, 1111 S. Main St., Aberdeen.spitzerfuneralhome.com
James ‘Jim’ DuncanLemmon: Rosary service for James “Jim” Duncan, 82, of Lemmon will be 10 a.m., followed by the Mass at 10:30 a.m., on Jan. 8 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Lemmon.
Burial, with mili-tary honors, at Greenhill Cemetery.Visitation is from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Evan-son Jensen Funeral Home, Lemmon.Survivors include wife, Ilene; daughters: Tammy (Don) Rieger, Milbank and Kimberly (Jon) Lutz, New England, N.D.; son, Steven (Jackie) Duncan, Water-town; six grandchildren; and sister, Phyllis Merkel.evanson jensen funera lhome.com
Marie GutenbergAberdeen: Marie Guten-berg, 85, of Aberdeen passed away Jan. 4, 2016, at her home.
Mass of Christian burial is 10:30 a.m. Friday, Jan. 8, 2016, at St. Mary’s Catho-lic Church, Aberdeen.Burial follows at St. Mary’s Cemetery. Schriv-er’s Memorial Mortuary and Crematory, Aberdeen, is handling arrangements.
Visitation is from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the church, with a liturgical wake held at 7 p.m. Visi-tation continues one hour before Mass. No visita-tion will take place at the mortuary.schriversmemorial.com
Gregory ‘Greg’ StrutzOakes, N.D.: Gregory “Greg” Strutz, 67, of Oakes passed away Jan. 4, 2016, at Oakes Community Hos-pital.
His memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Fri-day, Jan. 8, 2016, at Grace Lutheran Church, Oakes, with Pastor Tina Mills oficiating.An online guestbook may be signed at dahlstr
Robert ‘Bob’ WehdeAberdeen: Memorial ser-vices for Robert “Bob” We-hde, 85, of Aberdeen will be 10:30 a.m. Friday, Jan. 15, at United Methodist Church, Groton. Pastor Tom Carlson will oficiate.
Inurnment, with mil-itary honors, will follow in Union Cemetery, Gro-ton, under the direction of Paetznick-Garness Funeral Chapel, Groton.Bob passed away Dec. 21, 2015, at Banner Heart Hospital in Mesa, Ariz.
paetznick-garness.com
POLICE/FIRE CALLSAlcohol/drugs: Police were called to the 1400 block of 15th Avenue Southeast at 2:24 p.m. Tuesday for a report of drugs.Theft: Police were called to the 100 block of Third Curve at 11:18 a.m. Tues-day for a reported theft.Theft: Police were called to the 2100 block of Sixth Avenue Southeast at 10:16 p.m. Monday for a reported theft.Harassment: Police were called to the 2400 block of Sixth Avenue Southeast at 9:29 p.m. Monday for a
report of harassment.Alcohol/drugs: Police were called to the 500 block of Second Avenue Northeast at 5:17 p.m. Monday for a report of drugs.Theft: Police were called to the 700 block of Sixth Avenue Southeast at 4:35 p.m. Monday for a report-ed theft.
Note: Reports at the 100 block of Second Avenue Southeast are generally reports made at the police department. For recent crime reports in Aberdeen, go to crimereports.com/map?search=aberdeen+sd.
DAILY CALENDARTODAYNewcomers Club Lunch and Cards: 11:30 a.m., Ramkota Hotel, 1400 Eighth Ave. N.W.Weight Watchers: 11:45 a.m. weigh-in, 12:15 p.m. meeting, Super City Mall, 2201 Sixth Ave. S.E.Alcoholics Anonymous: 1 and 8:30 p.m. (both closed; 8:30 nonsmok-ing), Yellow House, 519 S. Arch St. 605-225-1292.
Narcotics Anonymous: 1 p.m., St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 1410 N. Kline St. Use southeast door, down-stairs. 605-262-1159.Weight Watchers: 5 p.m. weigh-in, 5:30 p.m. meet-ing, Super City Mall, 2201 Sixth Ave. S.E.Family history research: 5-9 p.m., free instruction on genealogical research. Aberdeen Family History Center, 1103 24th Ave. N.E. Call 605-225-0407.
LIVING — Life In Violence in the New Generation: A support group for teenage girls, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Safe Harbor, 310 S. Kline St. Women Survivors of Abuse (physical, emo-
tional, sexual): 5:30 p.m., Safe Harbor, 310 S. Kline St. Cost: free. 605-226-1212.TOPS No. 125: 5:45-7 p.m., Presentation Sister House, North Conference Room in basement, 1500 N. Second St., 605-225-7178.
Alcoholics Anonymous Sixth Sense: Topic meet-ing: 7 p.m. (closed/non-smoking), 422 Fifth Ave. S.E. (west door); Rich, 605-380-4784.
Alcoholics Anonymous: Nonsmoking, 8:30 p.m., Zion Lutheran Church, 1732 S. Main St.
THURSDAYWeight Watchers: 9:30 a.m. weigh-in, 10 a.m. meeting, Super City Mall, 2201 Sixth Ave. S.E.Weekly lunch: 12:10 p.m., dining room, Masonic Temple, 503 S. Main St.Alcoholics Anonymous: 1, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. (all closed meetings), Yellow House, 519 S. Arch St., 605-225-1292.
GriefShare: 4 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 502 S. Lincoln St., com-munity room.Alcoholics Anonymous Sixth Sense: Beginners Big Book: 5:30 p.m. (closed/nonsmoking), 422 Fifth Ave. S.E. (west door); Rich, 605-380-4784.
Yelduz Shrine Women’s Auxiliary: Meal at 6 p.m., meeting at 7 p.m., Yel-duz Shrine Center, 802 S. Main St.DivorceCare: 6:30 p.m., First United Method-ist Church Community Room, 502 S. Lincoln St.Steps 2 Recovery, Al-
Anon family group: 6:30-
7:30 p.m., Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 1429 N. Dakota St. Use north entrance. Sherry, 605-229-4531.Narcotics Anonymous: 7-8:30 p.m., Faith United Methodist Church, 503 S. Jay St., use back door. 605-262-1159.
Aerie and Auxiliary meetings: 7:30 p.m., Ea-gles Club, 316 S. Second St.
FRIDAYChristian Businessmen’s Committee meeting: 6:30 a.m., Millstone Family Restaurant, 2210 Sixth Ave. S.E.Alcoholics Anonymous: 1 and 8:30 p.m. (all closed meetings), Yellow House, 519 S. Arch St. 605-225-1292.
Alcoholics Anonymous Sixth Sense: Pamphlet: 6 p.m. (closed/nonsmok-ing), 422 Fifth Ave. S.E. (west door); Rich, 605-380-4784.
Narcotics Anonymous: Open speaker meeting, 6-7:30 p.m., upstairs, Yel-low House, 519 S. Arch St., 605-262-1159.Email your regular support group or club meetings for the Daily Calendar to [email protected]. Include town, event, time, place and a number to contact if there are questions. Publication in this calendar is not guaranteed.
SETTING IT STRAIGHTBud and Owen’s: Schyler Kumpf’s name was mis-spelled in a Tuesday sto-ry about Bud and Owen’s closing.Walworth County acci-dent: Eric Martinmaas’s name was misspelled in
a Tuesday story about a trafic accident in the Sel-by area.Wrong date: Harry S. Truman delivered his Fair Deal address in 1949. The year was wrong in Tues-day’s Today in History.
We regret the errors. The American News tries to be fair and accurate. Errors discovered by our staff or our readers will be corrected in this space. If you ind an error, email [email protected].
COURTJennifer Rose McBride, 16, of 1601 Milwaukee Ave., tobacco violation, ined $95.Kathryn Marie Lindquist, 55, of 1915 10th Ave. S.E., No. 5, stop sign viola-tion, ined $120.Joshua Henry Bumann, 24, Bismarck, N.D., speeding, ined $105.Hayden Evan Williams, 24, Casa Grande, Ariz., speeding, ined $85.James King Reed, 46, Baytown, Texas, speeding, ined $125.William Remy Whiteside, 31, of 12963 Richmond Heights Drive, speeding, ined $105.
Ky., seat belt violation, ined $25.Steven Arthur Woodring, 48, Redield, seat belt violation, ined $25.Katelyn Marie Caulield, 22, Frazee, Minn., speeding, ined $85.Andrew John Weyer, 16, of 1619 S. Melgaard Road, use or possession of drug paraphernalia, ined $270.Gary Raymond Rowley, 61, Pierpont,
seat belt violation, ined $25.Erik Russell Nolte, 28, of 2318 13th Ave. S.E., warning ticket violation, ined $120.Melyssa Mette Stein, 18, of 301 S. Washington St., No. 9, unauthorized use of vehicle by restricted licensee, ined $120.Eric Allen Jones, 27, of 414 N. State St., unauthorized use of vehicle by restricted licensee, ined $120.Michaela Lee Smith, 20, Watertown, seat belt violation, ined $25.Hamdi Ahmed Mohamud, 22, of 11 Ninth Ave. N.E., No. 5, parking/standing violation, ined $91.50.Ronald James Geffre, 67, Leola, seat belt violation, ined $25.Whitney Ann Rosebrock, 18, of 1803 N. Jay St., failure to yield after stop, ined $120.
Stephanie Joe Ramsdell, 34, of 1524 S. Lawson St., No. 202, theft by insuficient funds check, ined $240 and
the jail sentence suspended.Alisha Marie Rombs, 31, of 213 Sev-enth Curve, failure to maintain inancial responsibility, ined $125 and sentenced to 30 days in jail with all of the jail sentence suspended.Beverly Parsons, age unavailable, of 809 S. McCoy St., No. 8, theft by insuficient funds check, ined $116 and sentenced to 30 days in jail with all of the jail sentence suspended.Rayce William Harder, 18, Groton, reckless driving, ined $520 and sen-tenced to 60 days in jail with all of thejail sentence suspended.Syndi Raye Ernzen, 56, Ipswich, speeding, ined $125.Jay Matthew Menning, 39, of 2410 S. Dakota St., speeding, ined $105.Patricia Ann Bruce, 55, of 1315 S. Lawson St., No. 52, speeding, ined $125.Kelsey Jo Etl, 22, of 710 S. 11th St., speeding, ined $125; seat belt violation, ined $25.
(Ac
ing Aid
31Years
SD-2059208R
SD-2050258R28358F N1-15
Thrivent Financial representatives and employees cannot provide legal, accounting, or tax advice or services.Work with your Thrivent Financial representative and, as appropriate, your attorney and tax professional foradditional information. Insurance products issued or offered by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, Appleton, WI.Not all products are available in all states. Securities and investment advisory services are offered throughThrivent Investment Management Inc., 625 Fourth Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55415, a FINRA and SIPC memberand a wholly owned subsidiary of Thrivent. For additional information, visit Thrivent.com/disclosures.
Thrivent Financial offers solutions that can help youprotect retirement assets, defer taxes or enjoy astream of income for life. Plus, you may be able totake advantage of recent tax law changes that offermore choices for your retirement income strategy.Find out how a rollover can help! Contact me today.
WHEN IT COMES TO RETIREMENT,ARE YOU READY TO ROLL?
Appleton, Wisconsin • Minneapolis, Minnesota • Thrivent.com • 800-847-4836
Don R. MillerCLTC®, FIC
Financial AssociateNorthern Prairie Group614 S. Main St., Ste. 2Aberdeen, SD 57401Office: 605-725-2025Toll-free: 866-202-3091Georggia Smith
Sunset Memorial Gardens offers affordableoptions that are both practical and beautiful tobest suit your needs. Discover for yourself thebuilt-in features at budget-pleasing prices.Call Georgia or visit to learn full details.g
605-225-5361gg
5851 Hwy 12 East • Aberdeen www.SunsetAberdeen.com
SD-22205
2932
R
REMEMBERING THREE DAYS OF TERROR
POOL PHOTO BY BENOIT TESSIER AFP/GETTY IMAGES
French car-toonist Sté-phane Char-bonnier orCharb, killed inthe attack onthe satiricalnewspaperCharlie Hebdo,is captured in apainting.
In a ceremony in Paris on Tuesday, French President François Hol-lande greets the mother of Ahmed Merabet, a police officer whowas killed in last January’s terror attacks. Seventeen people died inthe Jan. 7-9 assault on ‘Charlie Hebdo’ and a Jewish supermarket.
POOL PHOTO BY BENOIT TESSIERWreath from President FrançoisHollande and Paris Mayor AnneHidalgo honors the victims.
CHRISTOPHER FURLONG, GETTY IMAGESDemonstrators took to the streets inParis last year after the Januaryattacks.
01.06.16
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Fighting terror
In 465 days battling the In 465 days battling the
Islamic State, the U.S. Islamic State, the U.S.
spent an averagespent an average� ����������������� ��������a daya daya daya day
Note As of Nov. 15Source U.S. Department of DefenseTERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
PATRICK T. FALLON, BLOOMBERG
U.S. auto sales endstrong, set record
IN MONEY
‘Idol’ judges ready for finalseason with special guestsKEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES
IN LIFE
LAS VEGAS If you want to see theautomobile’s past, visit a vastdealership lot. If you want toglimpse its future, hit the Con-sumer Electronics Show. The annual tech gathering isfast becoming the place to show-case new automotive tech. Withnine automakers and 115 auto-re-lated companies demonstratingtheir wares this year, it’s stealing
some of the thunder from the De-troit Auto Show, which takesplace next week.CES is also turning out to be aplace to sketch out the roadmapto a connected, shared and ulti-mately driverless transportationexperience.
Ford announced Tuesday thatit would be tripling the number ofautonomous vehicles it will beroad testing in various states,while also pursuing projects withtech giants such as Amazon thatwould allow Ford vehicle ownersto leverage the cloud to accesstheir Internet of Things homeproducts.Chevy o�ered test rides in its
forthcoming 200-mile range, bat-tery-powered Bolt, which engi-neers said was deliberatelydesigned as a ride-sharing vehi-cle, intriguing considering GM’sMonday announcement that it
was investing $500 million inride-sharing company Lyft.Toyota executives said Tuesdaythat they would be pushing intothe artificial intelligence space tocreate a self-driving car.
And in perhaps one of themore curious auto events herethis week, mysterious Chinese-backed Faraday Future unveiled arakish, tech-stu�ed supercar onMonday that didn’t seem to di-rectly address the growing call tomake fewer and more practicalcars. The hallmark of all this CEScar talk is synergy. There is an un-precedented amount of collabo-ration on display as automakersseek to agree upon shared plat-forms in order to avoid the Beta-max vs. VHS tech debacle of the1980s. It’s clear that the consum-er is in the driver’s seat, and autocompanies are taking direction.
At CES this year, they are really reinventing the wheelAuto’s future ondisplay at tech fest
Marco della Cava@marcodellacavaUSA TODAY
ROB LEVER, AFP/GETTY IMAGESNew concept electric car FFZERO is unveiled by Faraday Future.
WASHINGTON The centerpiece ofthe new White House proposal tocurb gun violence aims to directmore applicants to a gun dealerlicensing system that already isweighted in favor of aspiring fire-arm dealers, manufacturers andimporters over insuring the near-
ly 140,000 licensees follow feder-al regulations, according togovernment records.Up to 10,000 new business ap-plications received each year bythe Bureau of Alcohol TobaccoFirearms and Explosives are giv-en heightened priority by a groupof a little more than 600 industryinvestigators who must issue de-cisions within 60 days of a fullycompleted application’s receipt.The same group of investigatorsis tasked with conducting period-ic compliance inspections of tensof thousands of licensed gun
GUN LICENSE APPLICANTS GET PRIORITY ATF spends moretime puttingdealers in businessKevin JohnsonUSA TODAY
Gunmakers’stocks rally Investors anticipate a rise infirearm sales. IN MONEY
President tears upat unveiling “Every time I think about thosekids, it gets me mad.” IN NEWS
GOP says Obamastretching powerShows “utter disregard” for Second Amendment. IN NEWS
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
Weapons are displayed at a gun store in Delray Beach, Fla.
WASHINGTON U.S. employerswill soon begin bringing in thou-sands more low-skilled foreignworkers to fill seasonal jobs rang-ing from ski lift operators to crabpickers.Critics said a newly expandedvisa program — approved by Con-gress last month as part of a mas-sive spending bill — will exploitforeign workers, take jobs fromAmericans and hold down wages.“What business owners aretrying to get here is captive work-
ers — people who are desperateand won’t complain no matterhow they are treated,” said MarkKrikorian, executive director ofthe Center for Immigration Stud-ies, which wants to reduce immi-gration to the USA. “They’reimporting a servile class. There’sno excuse for this.”Supporters of the bigger H-2Bvisa program said it will help U.S.businesses hire enough people todo the temporary work that is vi-tal for companies to meet con-sumer demand during peakseasons, whether it’s summer at abeach resort or spring at a gar-dening company. The “seasonal”work can last as long as 10months at a time.
“Our members’ businesses arenow spared the devastating hit
they would have faced this springwithout the availability of H-2Bworkers,” said Sabeena Hickman,CEO of the National Associationof Landscape Professionals.“Landscape professionals will beable to hire needed seasonalworkers, support their Americanworkforce and provide their cus-
tomers with the continued ser-vice that they rely on.”The seasonal worker provision,sought by a coalition of industrygroups that includes hotels, res-taurants, resorts, constructioncompanies and seafood proces-sors, allows U.S. companies tobring in far more than the 66,000workers a year that have beenpermitted to obtain visas in thepast. The H-2B visa program doesnot include farmworkers.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said opponents are exagger-ating the impact of the legisla-tion. He points to an estimate bythe Congressional Budget O�cethat the bill will bring in an addi-tional 8,000 seasonal workers in2016, at a cost of about $1 millionin extra health care costs.
U.S. to bring more foreign workersCritics say visa ruleallows ‘captive’ labor
Erin KellyUSA TODAY
JOHN MOORE, GETTY IMAGESMexican migrant workers pickspinach Oct. 11, 2011, in Colorado.
IN NEWSCAPITAL DOWNLOAD
Christie: Voters’2nd look at Trumpmay be skepticalNew Jersey governorcloses in on leading theestablishment GOPpresidential field in N.H.
Kuwait recallsenvoy to IranLatest ally of Saudi Arabia to cut ties withTehran after fires set atSaudi Embassy.
NEWSLINE
ANDREW HARRER, BLOOMBERG
USA TODAY —
SECTION B
This is an edition of USA TODAYprovided for your local newspaper. Anexpanded version of USA TODAY isavailable at newsstands or bysubscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage,go to sports.usatoday.com
USA TODAY — AMERICAN NEWS
Quentin Tarantino pre-
fers his characters to
be more hateful than
heroic.
So when you strand a blizzard-
bound bunch of his ne’er-do-well
creations into one cabin, as in the
filmmaker’s new The Hateful
Eight, things get very combusti-
ble very quickly. Just the way he
likes it.“I don’t know if you would call
everybody in the piece a villain,
but they’re all fairly hateful. That
was a good word to use, better
than Eight Bad Guys,” Tarantino
says with a laugh. “Some might be
more likable than others.”
But the filmmaker has a histo-
ry of those kinds of personas
in all his movies, says Walton
Goggins, who was in Tarantino’s
Django Unchained and is also in
Hateful Eight — “people on the
fringes of society or who live
these alternative lifestyles or who
find themselves in situations
based on their karmic actions.”
It’s an especially touchy crew
Tarantino has in his new film:
a couple of post-Civil War bounty
hunters in Major Marquis
Warren (Samuel L. Jackson)
and John “The Hangman” Ruth
(Kurt Russell); vicious fugitive
Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason
Leigh); soon-to-be sheri� Chris
Mannix ( Goggins); the seemingly
helpful Mexican Bob (Demián
Bichir); chatty executioner Os-
waldo Mobray (Tim Roth); elder-
ly Southern general Sanford
Smithers (Bruce Dern); and a guy
known for punching cows, Joe
Gage (Michael Madsen).
There is no moral center, and
all of them have at the very least
done some questionable things —
which means you can’t really
trust any of them.
“People tell you what they did
and who they are, but you don’t
know if that’s true or not,” Taran-
tino says. “I didn’t want you to
have any sure-footed knowledge
about any of the charac-
ters and let them hash it
out and just deal with it
that way.”
The Hateful Eight re-
sembles the group setting
of the filmmaker’s first
movie, 1992’s Reservoir Dogs,
which is pretty much packed to
the limit with criminals. In Pulp
Fiction (1994), Jackson’s Jules
Winnfield is a hitman who spouts
Bible verses and wrestles with his
place in the universe. And the
American World War II soldiers
of 2009’s Inglourious Basterds
scalp and kill captured Nazis and
plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler in
the coldest blood possible.
“They’re human beings.
There’s 360 degrees to them.
There’s bad sides, good sides,”
Russell says. “The flow of the sto-
rytelling comes from his charac-
ter behavior and getting to know
these people and getting to care
about them.”
What makes The Hateful Eight
cool for Jackson is how the
movie’s large cast of characters
engage in an enclosed, increasing-
ly volatile environment, which
emphasizes Tarantino’s ability “to
write for all kinds of people, create
all these diverse characters and
make all those things work for us.”
In fact, the paranoia and dis-
trust among these characters is
so strong that “it just bounced o�
the walls of the shelter until it
had nowhere else to go but
through the fourth wall into the
audience,” Tarantino says. “And
that’s what I was going for.”
MOVIES
Tarantino, left,
assembled a mot-
ley crew for his
latest movie,
among them Kurt
Russell, Jennifer
Jason Leigh and
Tim Roth.
Brian Truitt
@briantruitt
USA TODAY
LINDA R. CHEN, MIRAMAX FILMS
Mr. Pink (Steve Buscemi) and Mr. White (Harvey Keitel)
face o� in Tarantino’s 1992 cult hit Reservoir Dogs.
ANDREW COOPER, THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY
FRANCOIS DUHAMEL, THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY
Donny (Eli Roth) and Aldo
(Brad Pitt) mete out some
pointed punishment in 2009’s
Inglourious Basterds.
QUENTIN TARANTINO’S
‘HATEFUL’ HISTORY
OF PERSONAS
LIFELINE AUTOS
SPORT
LIFE
��� �������©
�� ��������best sellers
Top five best sellers, shown in
proportion of sales. Example:
For every 10 copies of The 5th
Wave sold, The Life-Changing
Magic of Tidying Up sold
9.9 copies:
Tomorrow: Top 50 books list
(top150.usatoday.com)
Source USA TODAY Best-Selling Books
MARY CADDEN AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
��� ����� �Rick Yancey
10.0
!"#$� %�&'�(John Grisham
7.4
���)�(�*�+Andy Weir
7.8
��� ,*(- "+��� �(�*+Paula Hawkins
8.5
��� %*.�/0��+#*+#)�#*� ". �*1'*+# 23Marie Kondo
9.9
LOS ANGELES American Idol
hopes to go out on a high note.
Fox’s one-time ratings jugger-
naut and pop-culture force that
launched superstars heads into
its final season Wednesday
(8 p.m. ET/PT) as sharply declin-
ing ratings claim a show that once
seemed as if it might go on
forever.Judges Harry Connick Jr., Jen-
nifer Lopez and Keith Urban, and
host Ryan Seacrest, are searching
for the 15th American Idol, but
they know the end is coming.
“All of us (realize) this is the
last time we’ll do each one of
these episodes,” Seacrest says.
“This year, I want to make sure I
am present and enjoying every
single aspect of what makes this
show great.”
With a shorter schedule ending
in April, the 15th season will mix
Idol’s past and present, starting
with winners and stars from ear-
lier seasons — Ruben Studdard,
Clay Aiken, Taylor Hicks, Kris
Allen, Lee DeWyze and Nick
Fradiani — advising singers at
early auditions. The original
three judges — Paula Abdul, Si-
mon Cowell and Randy Jackson
— are expected back, too.
Executive producer Trish Ki-
nane won’t confirm who among
Idol’s stars will return — inaugu-
ral winner Kelly Clarkson, Carrie
Underwood, Jennifer Hudson,
Fantasia, Jordin Sparks, Chris
Daughtry, Adam Lambert? — but
says, “Everybody we’ve spoken to
(is) really positive about being
part of this farewell season.”
That list is Idol’s legacy,
Connick says.
“The people who have come
through the ranks of American
Idol are so numerous and diverse,
from Grammy winners to Oscar
winners to people on Broadway,”
he says. “I don’t think there’s any
show that comes this close in
terms of success rate.”
Although the series hasn’t pro-
duced a superstar in some years,
the judges say the new crop could
have what it takes.
“I think we have a couple of
stars, (but) they have to prove over
time that they’re a star with their
performances, their consistency,
how they handle pressure,” Lopez
says. “The girls really stand out. If
we could have, we probably would
have had 20 girls in the top 24.”
Although Idol is now less popu-
lar than NBC’s knocko� The
Voice, its core appeal remains.
“It’s a Cinderella story. For
someone like me, it’s the Ameri-
can Dream,” Australian Urban
says. “You can come from a little
nowhere town with no connec-
tions, no money, no nothing —
just raw talent and drive and am-
bition. And you can make it.
That’s what Idol o�ers and people
still want to believe in that.”
TELEVISION
‘American Idol’ gears up for its final run
New singers and
some special guests
on tap for last verse
Bill Keveney
USA TODAY
MICHAEL BECKER, FOX
Judges Keith Urban, left, Jennifer Lopez and Harry Connick Jr.
are back on deck for the final season of Fox’s American Idol.
Vanessa Redgrave appealed
for international assistance in
Europe’s migrant crisis during
her visit to a shelter in Athens.
She told the Associated Press
that Greece, a common entry
into Europe for asylum-seekers,
offers a “lesson in humanity”
for other nations.
MAKING WAVES
LOUISA GOULIAMAKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Two of Coachella’s headlining
sets also will be high-profile
reunions. Heavy-metal legends
Guns ’N Roses will join forces
after two decades to headline
the Saturday sets of the two-
weekend fest in California. LCD
Soundsystem, which broke up
in 2011, will close the Friday sets.
Rounding out Sundays’
headlining sets is
DJ (and Taylor
Swift beau)
Calvin
Harris.
FESTIVAL TRACKER
BIG GUNS AT COACHELLA
GOOD DAY
ADAM DRIVER
The ‘Star
Wars’ actor
continues his hot
streak into 2016,
hosting the first
‘Saturday Night
Live’ of the new
year Jan. 16.
Another star
who had a
big 2015 is country singer
Chris Stapleton, who joins
as musical guest.
HOW WAS YOUR DAY?
GOOD DAY
RONDA ROUSEY
In what’s likely
to be her first
major TV
appearance
since her
crushing UFC
title fight loss
in November,
Rousey will host
‘SNL’ Jan. 23,
with Selena
Gomez performing.
GETTY IMAGES
WIREIMAGE
“To me the
movie was so
educational.
Honestly, I
learned so
much ... Over the
last nine months
that I’ve been
out I’ve learned
so much about
this community.” — Caitlyn Jenner,
speaking at a Los Angeles
screening of the trans drama
‘Tangerine’
Compiled by Maeve McDermott
THEY SAID WHAT?
THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES
GETTY IMAGES
AXL ROSE
BY ETHAN
MILLER, GETTY
IMAGES
USA TODAY
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2016
7B
From smart shoes to hair restoration, thenext big gadget could be at your fingertips
LAS VEGAS The size of asmall ball, the 360flycamera takes spherical
videos that don’t requirecomplicated editing —
one of the coolest thingswe saw at the start of the
Consumer Electronics Showhere.
Many folks are looking tojump in on the immersive expe-
rience popularized by Facebookand YouTube, which have thriv-ing 360-degree channels for theultimate in virtual reality: A com-plete view of the world that canbe viewed online or via VReyewear.
The 360fly one-lens camera,which includes a 4K image sensorinside, can attach to a bike orstand alone and is available for$399.99 at Best Buy.
Here’s what else is cool at CES:uYou’ve heard of the
smart shirt, smart sockand even the smartbra — now get readyfor the smart shoe.
Zhor-Tech, aFrench tech firm,brought big brightred sneakers, whiteself-lacing shoes andeven women’s pumps toCES. What makes theshoes smart? You can ad-just the temperature ofyour shoe with an app andmeasure your steps more accu-rately than you could with a fit-ness tracker, the company says.The shoes will sell later this yearfor $450.
uEverywhere you look here,we’re seeing drones, lots of them,bigger and more elaborate thanever — some 100 new drones areexpected to be introduced at thisweek’s CES. Tuesday, we attended
the Drone Rodeo, acollection of 25 di�er-
ent drone manufactur-ers in the desert. Weloved the Parrot Bebop 2,an a�ordable $550 dronethat can be operated by asmartphone.
Even with new Federal Avia-tion Administration rules thatcall for registration, that’s notscaring folks away. Plus, droneshave gotten easier to use. “In theearly days, you had to be a DIYperson to run a drone, but nowthey’re available to a wider audi-ence,” Shan Phillips, CEO ofdrone manufacturer Yuneec, toldUSA TODAY.
456 576859:;5©
Optimistic 2016
Source Fidelity Investments New Year Financial Resolutions Study of 2,013 adultsJAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
72%think they will be better
off financially in 2016.
INDEX CLOSE CHGNasdaq composite 4891.43 y 58.44S&P 500 2016.71 x 4.05T- note, 10-year yield 2.24% y 0.01Oil, light sweet crude $36.13 y 0.63Euro (dollars per euro) $1.0744 y 0.0083Yen per dollar 118.97 y 0.33SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
D<= ><?@A B?DCAEFBGH GIJKLKMN
17,050
17,100
17,150
17,200
17,250
17,300
9:30 a.m.OPQORS 4:00 p.m.OPQOTS
TUESDAY MARKETS
NEWSMUVWX
RTS
Automakers posted a solid 9%sales gain in December, an excla-mation point that sealed 2015 asthe biggest sales year ever for theindustry, they reported Tuesday.
All told, automakers sold 17.47million vehicles for the year, Au-todata reported, besting whatKelley Blue Book reported as theprevious record, 17.35 million in2000. Low gas prices, cheap cred-it, low unemployment, soaringconsumer confidence and warmweather fueled a rush into show-rooms in December.
“The U.S. economy continuesto expand, and the most impor-tant factors that drive demand fornew vehicles are in place, so weexpect to see a second consecu-tive year of record industry salesin 2016,” said Mustafa Mohata-rem, GM’s chief economist, in astatement.
Still, sales success for individ-ual automakers presented amixed bag. Detroit’s Big 3 faredwell for December and the year.
General Motors had a 5.7% salesincrease in December, Ford Mo-tor saw an 8.3% boost and FiatChrysler sales rose 12.6%, accord-ing to Autodata. Tesla Motorsdoubled sales during the monthand sold 23,650 of its luxury elec-tric cars in the U.S. for the year.
Among Asian makers, Toyotasaw a 10.3% increase for themonth, Honda was at 9.9% andNissan at 8.7%. But for the fullyear, they came in lower, withToyota posting a 5.3% increase.
One laggard was German auto-maker Volkswagen Group, which
still cannot sell diesel vehiclesamid an emissions scandal, down3.4% overall. The automaker’sVolkswagen brand sales fell 9.1%in December and 4.8% for theyear. The company’s Audi luxurybrand, which has felt a smallerimpact from the scandal,achieved a 6% gain in Decemberand 11.1% for the year. Anotherloser for the month was Hyundai,saddled with a car-heavy lineupduring the SUV surge, down 1.5%.
Consumers continued their ex-odus from less-lucrative cars intocrossovers, sport-utility vehiclesand pickups amid low gasolineprices. At 13.9% market share, thesmall SUV segment is now thelargest category of vehicles in theU.S., trailed by small cars andmidsize cars at 13.7% apiece, ac-cording to Kelley Blue Book.
“There’s no end in sight tothose trends,” AutoTrader.comanalyst Michelle Krebs said.
Crossovers such as the ToyotaRAV4, the Nissan Rogue and theJeep Renegade delivered a robustshowing in December. The FordF-Series pickup, the most popularvehicle in the U.S., rose 14.6% inDecember.
SUVs turn 2015 into best sales year ever Nathan Bomeyand Chris WoodyardUSA TODAY
PATRICK T. FALLON, BLOOMBERG
President Obama’s proposalsto tighten gun rules announcedTuesday can’t take at least onething away: the rally in gunstocks.
Shares of the key three gun-maker stocks — Smith & Wesson,
Vista Outdoor and Sturm, Ruger— jumped an average of 7% Tues-day as investors anticipated aboost in firearm sales by consum-ers looking to lock in their pur-chases before tougher rules arepassed.
Strong performance by gunstocks is in stark contrast to therest of the market. The broadmarket had a ho-hum 2015 and iso� to a shaky 2016 so far. But gunstocks have been a beacon ofstrength. So far this year, thethree gunmakers’ stocks are up10.8% on average as the Standard
& Poor’s 500 has sunk 1.3%.Those big gains come o� a re-markable year for gun stocks in2015. The three gun stocks
jumped an average of 78.1% in2015 — a huge gain when the S&P500 dropped 0.7%.
Several large mutual fundcompanies including Fidelity andVanguard have been huge win-ners from the gun-stock rally.
Consumers have been rushingto load up on guns and ammo forfear the government would makeit tougher to get new weapons.Recent violence around the worldhas stoked interest by regulatorsto tighten rules, especially withbackground checks.
Smith & Wesson has been the
best-performing gun stock, jump-ing 132.1% in 2015 and 17.7% thisyear so far.
Late Monday, Smith & Wessonindicated its financial perfor-mance would be better than ex-pected. “The sell-through rate ofits products at distribution hasbeen stronger than originally an-ticipated,” the company said in arelease.
Smith & Wesson’s revenue isexpected to surge 18% to $650million in the current fiscal yearended in April, says S&P CapitalIQ.
Gunmakers see boost from Obama plan Gun stocks’ performance is stellar:
Company2015 % change
YTD % change
Sturm, Ruger 72.1% 9.9%Smith & Wesson
132.1% 17.7%
Vista Outdoor 29.9% 4.9%SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY
GUN STOCKS SOAR
Stocks jump Tuesdayas investors anticipaterise in firearm sales
Matt KrantzUSA TODAY
CONSUMER ELECTRONICS SHOW
THE 5 COOLESTTHINGS WE’VE
SEEN SO FAR
COMPANY ORDERED TO PAYFOR BATHROOM BREAKSA company near Philadelphiahas been ordered to pay up to$1.75 million in back wages tomore than 6,000 employeesafter it neglected to pay forbathroom breaks, according tothe Department of Labor. Amer-ican Future Systems, also knownas Progressive Business Publica-tions, docked its telemarketers’wages “for virtually all time notspent making sales calls, some-times bringing their wages be-low the federal minimum wage,”the DOL said. “Our company hasa liberal break policy of allowingour telemarketers to chooseunpaid breaks anytime, for anyreason, for as long as they want,”company President EdwardSatell said Tuesday.
EUROZONE INFLATION HOLDS STEADY AT 0.2%Lower energy costs kept a lid oninflation across the 19-countryeurozone in December. TheEuropean Union’s statistics agen-cy found annual consumer priceinflation held steady at 0.2%.Energy prices, down 5.9% on theyear, were the cause for lowinflation, which remains wellbelow the European CentralBank’s target of just under 2%.
SPIRIT SHARES UP AFTER NEW CEO ANNOUNCEDSpirit Airlines said Tuesday it hasnamed Robert Fornaro, a long-time airline executive who oncehelmed AirTran, as its new presi-dent and CEO. Fornaro will re-place Ben Baldanza, a flashyand impassioned champion ofSpirit’s no-frills style who steeredthe carrier to profits, then over-saw a rapid expansion into ri-vals’ territory that may havehelped undermine its financialperformance. Investors seemedpleased with the move. Spirit’sshares closed up 5.9% at $41.50.
MONEYLINE
KOEN VAN WEEL, EPA
The top auto sellers in December,with U.S. sales, percentagechange from December 2014 andU.S. market share last month:
Sales Chg. ShareGM 290,230 5.7% 17.7%Toyota 238,350 10.8% 14.5%Ford 237,606 8.3% 14.5%Fiat/Chrysler 217,527 12.6% 13.2%
Honda 150,893 9.9% 9.2%Nissan 139,300 18.7% 8.5%Hyundai 63,508 -1.5% 3.9%Subaru 56,274 12.7% 3.4%Kia 54,241 19% 3.3%Volks-wagen 52,015 -3.4% 3.2%
SOURCE: AUTODATA
DECEMBER SALES
Jefferson Graham l USA TODAY
360FLY
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY
Hairmax says for 90 sec-onds a night, you can re-store your lost hair.
STICKWITHUSA
TODAY FORTHE LATESTFROM CESAnd follow ourtech team:@je�ersongraham, @edbaig, @marcodellacava and@mikesnider
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY
TristanEvarts,above, in-vented theSmartWheel forsafety.
HAIRMAXuMen and women havetried everything to deal withthinning hair — now there’s a$799 digital device to helpbring it back.
Hairmax is a laser treat-ment you put over your scalpfor 90 seconds every night. Itlooks like a high-tech hair-
band that lights up. Thefirm swears it works,
and we’re skeptical.But if it does, really,that would bereally cool, right?
SMART WHEEL COMPANYuTristan Evarts graduatedhigh school two years ago andskipped college, with the goal todo something about distracteddriving. He started the SmartWheel company to sell just that— a device that goes over yourdriving wheel and alerts youwhen you do something stupid,such as text or grapple with ahamburger wrapper whiledriving.
“Technology can be part ofthe problem and part of thesolution,” says Evarts, 20. “Mydream is to have this technol-ogy in every car in America.”
JEFFERSON GRAHAM,USA TODAY
Zhor-Tech’sSmart shoes.
The 360flysphericalcameracomes with a4K imagesensor.
USA TODAYWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2016
5B
USA TODAY is committedto accuracy. To reach us,contact Standards EditorBrent Jones at 800-872-7073 or e-mail [email protected] indicate whetheryou’re responding to
content online or in thenewspaper.
Corrections & Clarifications
dealers.Though the goal is to reviewthe operations of federal licens-ees every three to five years,“there are numbers of licenseesthat have not been seen in morethan five years,” said Ed Court-ney, chief of the ATF’s FirearmsIndustry Branch.
“We are spending more timeputting more people in businessthan inspecting (licensees),”Courtney said.In 2014, according to records,the ATF conducted 12,404 fire-arm license application reviews,while compliance inspectionsnumbered 10,429. There were atotal of 140,446 licensees in 2014,including 55,512 individual fire-arm dealers.
The Obama administration, aspart of a series of executive ac-tions announced Tuesday tocombat gun violence, is attempt-ing to push more private firearmdealers to obtain federal licenses,so buyers would be required tosubmit to criminal backgroundchecks. Such checks are requiredon all purchases from licenseddealers, while many privatetransfers on the Internet and atgun shows have not been subjectto that level of scrutiny.President Obama called for theaddition of 200 ATF investigatorsand 230 examiners for the FBI’sNational Instant Criminal Back-ground Check System (NICS) tohelp process background reviewsof gun buyers more e�ciently. Former ATF o�cials wel-comed the proposal for an infu-sion of additional investigators,but they said compliance inspec-tions of licensees have laggedover the years as the agency’sbudget for personnel and re-sources has remained largely flatfor almost a decade.When Michael Sullivan tookover as the ATF’s acting directorin 2006, he said some dealers hadnot been inspected in more than10 years. The lapse prompted areinvigorated inspection systemas the agency sought to stop theflow of guns from the USA to drugtra�cking operations in Mexico.“The (uneven inspection sys-tem) was tremendously unfair tothe ATF and to firearm dealersbecause many want to do theright thing,” Sullivan said.He described the plan to add200 investigators to the ATF — aproposal that must be approvedby Congress — as a potentially“huge benefit.” Others said manymore investigators were neededto put the agency on firmerfooting.“It is fact that thousands offirearms licensees are never in-spected, never,” said Ben Hayes, aformer ATF o�cial who oversawparts of the ATF’s National Trac-ing Center for more than a dec-ade. “The president’s new
initiatives are long overdue, butATF needs more than 200 newemployees to allow for enforce-ment. There will still be thou-sands who are never inspected.”In detailing parts of the ad-ministration’s new strategy, At-
torney General Loretta Lynchsaid it is “impossible to predict”how many additional gun dealerswill be required to register or facepossible criminal prosecution. The push to license more deal-ers represents a reversal of sorts
for the government, which in theearly 1990s sought to discouragethose who wanted to obtain li-censes for legal cover to engage ininterstate gun purchases. To cutdown on such commerce, thegovernment raised license feesfrom as little as $10 and $25 to afee that stands at $200.The fee changes, former ATFo�cials said, contributed to adramatic decline in the numberof individual dealer licenseesfrom 213,734 in 1994 to about50,000 in 2007.“There was always this tensionover whether someone should belicensed or not,” former ATF di-rector Bradley Buckles said, add-ing that federal authoritiessought to better ensure that theuniverse of licensees did notovertax the agency’s capacity toconduct compliance inspections.“The resources available toconduct compliance inspectionsalways has been an issue,” Buck-les said.
Though the number of federallicensees (dealers, manufacturers
and importers) in the USA de-clined slightly in 2015, from140,446 in 2014 to 138,659, Court-ney said the agency has beenprocessing a steady stream ofnew applications — up to 10,000— each year throughout the USA.About 99% of those applica-tions are approved within 60 daysof receipt. The number of new li-censees is o�set each year bythousands of other dealers wholeave the business or allow theirlicenses to expire. Last year,about 6,000 dealers went out ofbusiness, Courtney said. Theoverall number of dealers has re-mained fairly flat since 2013, aftersurging from 124,946 in 2011.The period of acceleratedgrowth included the aftermath ofthe Newtown, Conn., elementaryschool massacre in 2012 and sub-sequent federal gun control pro-posals that prompted record gunsales in the USA. The administra-tion’s major proposals, includinguniversal background checks, lan-guished in Congress.
Many firearms licensees go uninspectedv CONTINUED FROM 1B
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHERJohn ZidichEDITOR IN CHIEFDavid Callaway
CHIEF REVENUE OFFICERKevin Gentzel
7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108,703-854-3400Published by GannettThe local edition of USA TODAY ispublished daily
in partnership with Gannett NewspapersAdvertising: All advertising published inUSA TODAY is subject to the current ratecard; copies available from theadvertising department. USA TODAY mayin its sole discretion edit, classify, reject orcancel at any time any advertisingsubmitted.National, Regional: 703-854-3400Reprint permission, copies of articles,glossy reprints:
www.GannettReprints.com or call212-221-9595
USA TODAY is a member of TheAssociated Press and subscribes to othernews services. USA TODAY, its logo andassociated graphics are registeredtrademarks. All rights reserved.
A map Tuesday showing Mus-lim countries that are majoritySunni or Shiite mislabeled Bah-rain. It is majority Shiite, with aSunni-led government.
WASHINGTON President Obamaannounced a series of executiveactions on guns Tuesday, focus-ing on the victims of gun vio-lence in a White House eventintended to prod Congress totake further action. Speaking to an East Room au-dience packed with the familiesof gun violence victims, gunowners and gun control advo-cates, an often emotional Oba-ma broke into tears whentalking about the 20 first-grad-ers gunned down at Sandy HookElementary School in Connecti-cut three years ago. “First-graders,” he said, paus-ing to wipe away tears and com-pose himself. “Every time Ithink about those kids, it getsme mad.”The executive actions — firstpreviewed by the White Houseon Monday — would attempt toclamp down on unlicensed gunsellers who exploit an exceptionfor hobbyists and collectors in
order to avoid having to runcriminal background checks ongun purchasers. Many of thosesellers, Obama said, are runninga business by selling guns at gunshows and online.“The problem is that somegun sellers have been operatingby a di�erent set of rules,” hesaid. Obama said the admini-stration is also beefing up en-forcement, streamlining thebackground check system, in-vesting $500 million in mentalhealth care and researching“smart gun” technology.“If a child can’t open a bottleof aspirin, we should make surethey can’t pull a trigger on agun,” he said.
Obama said the actions he’staking are consistent with gunrights. “I believe in the Second
Amendment. ... No matter howmuch people try to twist mywords around, I taught constitu-tional law. I know a little bitabout this. I get it,” he said.“This is not a plot to take awayeverybody’s guns.”But Obama argued that justlike the First Amendmentdoesn’t allow someone to yell“fire” in a crowded theater,there are common-sense mea-sures that could keep guns outout of the hands of people whoshouldn’t have them. And he ar-gued that Second Amendmentrights shouldn’t infringe on therights of people to safely wor-ship in Christian churches, Jew-ish synagogues, Sikh templesand Muslim mosques — all ofwhich have been targets of gunviolence in recent years. “Theyhad rights, too,” he said.
STIRRINGWORDS FORSMALLESTVICTIMS
JIM WATSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
“Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad,” Presi-dent Obama said about the Sandy Hook victims.
Emotional Obamaunveils actions
Gregory Korte@gregorykorteUSA TODAY
MANCHESTER, N.H. New JerseyGov. Chris Christie, his fortunesrising in New Hampshire, saysangry voters are ready to take asecond and more skeptical look atRepublican rivals such as DonaldTrump and Ted Cruz as the open-ing presidential primariesapproach.“Things that might seem un-presidential in January are enter-taining (last) July, right?”Christie said in an interview withCapital Download as he preparedto hold his 46th town hall in theGranite State. “What happens ispeople really start to focus onpicking a president and I thinkthat will lead to some potentialchanges in the way things areoperating.”
That could be wishful thinking.National polls show no erosion inTrump’s double-digit lead overTexas Sen. Cruz, who is in secondplace. But the combative NewJersey governor now is in strikingdistance of leading the establish-ment field in New Hampshire —where he said he hopes a second-place finish to Trump could setan outsider-vs.-insider show-down down the road.Christie warns that nominat-ing an “entertainer-in-chief”(that would be Trump, among
others) or a contender who choseto be “sidelined” during the bigdebates of the past few years (for-mer Florida governor Jeb Bush,for instance) or one who haschanged positions to suit the mo-ment (that’s a reference to Cruz,he says) would risk blowing Re-publican chances of winning back
the White House in November.So would a third-party bid di-vide the GOP?“A third-party candidacy, if it’sone of the people who’s currentlyon the stage, yeah, I think thatwould probably lead to a loss bythe Republican Party” in the gen-eral election, he told USA TO-
DAY’s weekly video newsmakerseries Monday. “There are no silver medals inthis business — you lose, you gohome — so we need to be focusedon that,” Christie went on. Hecalled for the party to unite on“common themes, all geared to-wards defeating Hillary Clintonin the fall, which is what I thinkwe have to be focused on.”Christie argues that senatorslack the executive experience thatpresidents need. So does Trump.“Listen, I think it’s much,much harder — as Barack Obamahas shown — when you have noexperience in the executivebranch of government to come inand run the most complex, di�-cult executive branch the world’sever seen,” he says.Trump may not fully under-stand that, he adds. “I would justtell you that I think governmentalways looks easier from theoutside.”
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
Gov. Chris Christie says a third-party bid equals a GOP loss.
Chris Christie, on the rise in N.H., aims at Trump and Cruz
NOW PLAYINGAT USATODAY.COMSee the entire interview with Gov.Chris Christie.
Republican presidential candi-dates quickly denounced Presi-dent Obama’s gun announcementTuesday, saying his plans under-cut the Second Amendment andstretch the limits of executivepower.“It’s part of a broader narra-tive,” Florida Sen. Marco Rubiotold Fox News. “And that is thatthis president is obsessed withundermining the Constitution in
general, but the Second Amend-ment in particular.”Former Florida governor JebBush said Obama’s call for en-hanced background checks andother new restrictions “shows anutter disregard for the SecondAmendment as well as the properconstitutional process for makinglaws in our nation.”In his remarks at the WhiteHouse, Obama said he supportsthe constitutional right to beararms. The president said the Re-publican candidates, in concertwith the National Rifle Associa-
tion and other members of the“gun lobby,” have distorted hisplans, and that his proposals donot represent a “slippery slope”toward mass confiscation offirearms.“This is not a plot to take awayeverybody’s guns,” Obama said.Gun rights always are a big is-sue in Republican primary con-tests, including the current one.Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, cam-paigning in Iowa, repeated hispledged to rescind Obama execu-tive orders on gun control, sayingthat “when you live by the pen,
you die by the pen.”Former Arkansas governorMike Huckabee called Obama’sannouncement a “blatant, bellig-erent abuse of power,” and saidthat “I will never bow down andsurrender to Obama’s unconstitu-tional, radical, anti-gun agenda.”Retired neurosurgeon BenCarson tweeted that Obama’s “ac-tions have everything to do withadvancing his political agenda &little to do with actually protect-ing American citizens.”Democratic presidential candi-dates, meanwhile, voiced support
for the president’s actions.The party’s front-runner, Hil-lary Clinton, tweeted that Obamahad taken “a crucial step forwardon gun violence,” and his succes-sor “has to build on that progress— not rip it away.”Vermont Sen. Bernie Sandersalso endorsed the Obama plan,saying in a statement that “a vastmajority of the American people,including responsible gun ownerswho are sickened by the deaths ofso many innocent people, agreewith the common sense reformsannounced today.”
Republican hopefuls attack Obama’s gun planDavid JacksonUSA TODAY
BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR FIREARMSAnnual number of background checks conducted for gun purchases
(in millions):
Source: National Instant Criminal Background Check System Operations, FBI.
GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY ’15
’05’10
’00
20
15
10
5
0
8.4 million
23 million
2B
USA TODAYWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2016
Insiders’ Guide to the Dakotas & Upper Midwest
American News Co. Products
Every DayUSA Today • Money • National & World News • Life
Sports – [email protected] • Obits – [email protected] – [email protected]
Sunday, January 3, 2016
www.aberdeennews.comA M E R I C A N N E W S
PICKLES
Sunday, January 10, 2016 www.aberdeennews.com 1D
605 LifeMOBILEWALLA
APPLE APPS
ANDROID APPS
If you are determined that swimsuit season will not sneak up on you this year, jump on the New Year’s itness bandwagon and get moving with the following apps.
Nom Nom Paleo ($5.99) — This app focuses on recipes free of gluten, soy and reined sugar — everything a Paleo dieter needs to eat like a neo-caveperson.Yoga Studio ($3.99) — Yoga Stu-dio includes 65 HD video class-es featuring yoga and meditation routines. Classes range from be-ginner to advanced levels.FitStar Personal Trainer (Free)* — FitStar offers video workouts that match your itness level and adjust dificulty levels as you progress.Runkeeper — GPS Running, Walk, Cycling, Workout, Pace and Weight Tracker (Free)* — Runkeeper tracks your run using your phone or Apple Watch.Hello Heart — Blood Pressure Monitor and Hypertension In-sights App ($39.99 — iPhone and Apple Watch only)* — This seri-ous tool aims to help you track
your heart health.
Calorie Counter — MyFitnessPal (Free)* — This calorie counter is easier to use over time, as it learns what you eat. It also saves recipes and plans itness rou-
tines for you.Runtastic Running and Fitness (Free)* — Runtastic uses your device’s GPS capabilities to track your movements, and can share your progress live with
chosen friends.Google Fit — Fitness Tracking (Free) — The Google Fit app au-tomatically tracks activities and does a wide variety of things to support your itness goals when
you work with it.Fitness Trainer FitProSport (Free) — This app features 100 exercises you can select from to customize workouts that are right for you. Focus on a total
workout, or one area.7 Minute Workout (Free) — The 7 Minute Workout is designed to get you moving, even if you hate working out. Users love the results they get with just seven
minutes of effort.
Fitness apps 2016
The plains of northeast South Dakota are the proving ground for a handful of authors.
From adventure to children’s histor-ical iction to an eye-opening memoir on the whys of cancer, local writers are offering different stories and genres. Here’s a rundown of what a few have been working on recently.
Derek KeelingDerek Keeling is
an Oregon transplant who’s found the calm of Redield conducive to writing his second book.
In Portland, Keel-ing was able to join writer’s circles, visit a variety of bookstores and get lots of feed-back from peers that often inluenced his writing.
“In Oregon, I could go and be in-spired at a bookstore or having writ-ers circles and support like that. Here, there are readers, not writ-ers. There isn’t as much support,” he said. “My wife is the support I have here. It’s made it a book of my writing, my ideas and a sprinkling of her inluence. It’s less chaotic in Redield. Things close down at 5:30 p.m. Because you don’t have much to do, you create things to do. You’re either going to write or you’re going to be bored.”
Keeling followed his wife Kyrié to Redield.
“I call it the reverse Oregon Trail. Kyrié moved here to be here with her friend who was preg-nant,” Derek Keeling said. “The she told me there are good peo-ple here, it’s a nice place, there are jobs here, and everything was true.”
Keeling has one book listed on amazon.com, “The Umbras.” It’s a detective mystery he put out in 2011. Now he’s working on a new book, “Nomad’s Island,” that he’s hoping to have published one way or another
Local authors come in variety of genresBY KELDA J.L. PHARRIS
“The Dandelion Conspiracy,” written by Marie Cleveland, is a historical iction chil-
Keeling
Saturday, January 2, 2016
www.aberdeennews.com 5A
DIRECTORYPlaces of worship around the Aberdeen area. Call or email for service times and events. Report changes to [email protected] Alliance Church: 1106 S. Roosevelt St., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-9724; aberdeenalliance.orgAberdeen Christian Fellowship: 214 First Ave. S.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-226-2331; aberdeenchristianfellowship.com
Aberdeen Church of Christ: 1801 S. Lincoln St., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-3621; aberdeenchurchofchri.wix.com/churchAberdeen First Assembly of God Church: 1424 24th Ave. N.W., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-5322, aberdeenirstassembly.comAberdeen Seventh-Day Adventist Church: 825 12th Ave. S.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-2185Aberdeen Wesleyan Church: 1701 Eighth Ave. N.E.,
Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-2873; aberdeenwesleyan.org
Bath United Methodist: Second Avenue, BathBethlehem Lutheran: 1620 Milwaukee Ave. N.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-9740; bethlehemaberdeen.org
Calvary Baptist: 515 Eighth Ave. N.W., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-1866; [email protected]; experiencecalvary.orgChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints: 1103 24th Ave. N.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-290-1053; mormon.org
Evangelical Free Church of Aberdeen: 1801 Eisenhower Circle, Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-229-5080Fairview Baptist: 901 24th Ave. N.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-226-4956Faith United Methodist Church: 503 S. Jay St., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-290-5506; aberdeenfaithchurch.blogspot.comFamily Worship Center: 435 U.S. Highway 281 North,
Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-5444; aberdeencog.orgFirst Baptist: 1500 E. Melgaard Road, Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-225-9581; fbcaberdeen.comFirst Presbyterian Church: 318 S. Kline St., Aberdeen,
SD 57401; 605-225-6753; presbyterian-aberdeen.comFirst Presbyterian Church: 300 N. Main St., Groton, SD 57445
First Reformed: 818 Ninth Ave. S.E., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-229-5953; aberdeenrcus.orgFirst United Methodist: 502 S. Lincoln St., Aberdeen,
SD 57401; 605-225-5680; aberdeenirst.orgFreedom Worship Center: 202 S. Main St., Suite 330, Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-725-0777; time4freedom.orgGood Shepherd Lutheran: 1429 N. Dakota St., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-229-0846; goodshepherdaberdeen.org
Grace Covenant Lutheran Church (AFLC): Ramkota Theatre Room, 1400 Eighth Ave. N.W., Aberdeen, SD 57401; 605-252-2552 or 605-216-0078Holy Cross Lutheran (LCMC
Faith
Rap and hip-hop aren’t the irst music genres that come to mind when one thinks about faith-based concerts. But Dave Scher-er, who performs under the moniker Agape, thinks the styles are very conducive to getting God’s message to the masses.“I think the thing about hip-hop, when it’s at its best it’s about storytelling and we have the greatest story to tell,” Scherer said. “It invites in people who have been shut out by the church: young people, peo-ple of color. We don’t have the market cornered on any worship preferences. In the end, it all belongs to God.”
Scherer will team his rap and hip-hop lyrics with Rachel Kurtz who croons blues and folk music at the Make A Difference Day concert at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 1620 Milwaukee Ave. N.E. The cost is $5 per person or $20 for a family.“People will get differ-ent styles of music,” Scher-er said in a phone inter-view last week. “It’s the same faith and same mes-sage, but in much different packages.”Scherer is a touring musician, author of a book of meditations called “Agap-ology” and does many outreach and minis-terial projects across the globe. He got serious about his faith in college.
“I grew up not feeling the need for faith and Je-sus. I’d been disappointed by inite causes I’d placed my faith in and gotten let down,” Scherer said. “I ended up being invited into a Christian group on campus, seeing people that love each other and I’d nev-er seen
Artist uses hip-hop to facilitate God’s messageBY KELDA J.L. [email protected]
Rap, blues featured at Make A Diference Day concert Tuesday
Dave Scherer performs under the moniker Agape. The hip-hop artist, a cham-
pion of faith-based outreach programs, will bring his unique sound and God’s
message to Bethlehem Lutheran Church on Tuesday for a Make A Diference
Day concert. Courtesy photo
SundayComics • 605 Life • Parade
SaturdayFaith Page
Special FeaturesMedia Guide
Unique Opportunities
USA TodayPublication: Every Day!Front & back page advertisingFirst come, irst serve basis
• 6x3.5 front strip ad (10.333 x 3.5”)• 6x21.25 back page ad (10.333 x 21.25”)• Full color• $215 strip ad - $799 back page ad
Tuesday Business Builder & RepeatsPublication: Every Tuesday
• Any size ad• 50% off• Repeat during same week-30% off second
time, 50% off remaining times
TOMAPublication: Every dayTop Of Mind Awareness
Efective billboards in the newspaper & online to create name awareness.
• Direct correlation between who people think of irst & who they buy from.
• Size 4 inches to 8 inches• 1 to 7 times per week • Farm Forum pickups available
FRONT STRIPPublication: Everyday!Be on the front page!
• First come, irst serve basis• 6x2 ad (10.333” x 2”)• Full color• Includes 10,000 online impressions• $359 Sunday - $299 Daily
Grand SlamPublication: Your Choice
• Your choice of 4 ads in the American News (including Sunday), or 2 ads in the American News & 1 ad in the Farm Forum, or 2 ads in the Farm Forum
• Your choice of days within 7 days (Sun.-Sat.) (2 consecutive Farm Forums if this option chosen)
• 10,000 online impressions on aberdeennews.com for 7 days
• Minimum ad size 8 inches• Same ad for all issues• $37 per column inch• Add full color to irst ad for $200 and get
FREE color on the remaining ads
SlamPublication: Your Choice
• Your choice of 4 ads in the American News (including Sunday), or 2 ads in the American News & 1 ad in the Farm Forum, or 2 ads in the Farm Forum
• Your choice of days within 14 days (Sun.-Sat.) (2 consecutive Farm Forums if this option chosen)
• 10,000 online impressions on aberdeennews.com for 7 days
• Minimum ad size 8 inches• Same ad for all issues• $48 per column inch• Add full color to irst ad for $200 and get
FREE color on the remaining ads
Media Guide
JANUARYJan. 1 Primetime Monthly (Friday)Jan. 2 Redield PageJan. 3 Childcare DirectoryJan. 14 Mall Crazy DaysJan. 15 Snow Queen Festival Jan. 15 Monthly Downtown PageJan. 17 HomeTown WelcomeJan. 24 Bridal ShowcaseJan. 24 Homebuilders MonthlyJan. 27 AHBA Membership DirectoryJan. 29 Wings MonthlyJan. 29 ODF Winter Sports & Rec
Preview
FEBRUARYFeb. 1 Primetime Monthly (Monday)Feb. 5 FF New Equipment FeatureFeb. 6 Redield PageFeb. 7 Tax TipsFeb. 12 FF Tax TipsFeb. 14 Tax TipsFeb. 14 Dream HomesFeb. 17 HomeTown WelcomeFeb. 19 Monthly Downtown PageFeb. 21 Spring Coupon ManiaFeb. 21 Tax TipsFeb. 25 Wings MonthlyFeb. 26 FF Tax TipsFeb. 28 Homebuilders MonthlyFeb. 28 Tax Tips
MARCHMarch 1 Primetime Monthly (Tuesday)March 6 Tax TipsMarch 7 Redield PageMarch 7 Customer AppreciationMarch 13 Tax TipsMarch 13 Silver Pages FOCUS &
DirectoryMarch 14 March Madness March 15 FF Spring Extra EditionMarch 17 HomeTown Welcome
March 17 State B Boys Basketball March 18 Monthly Downtown PageMarch 20 Tax TipsMarch 20 Bid4ItMarch 21 March Madness March 22 Easter Church Services March 24 Wings MonthlyMarch 27 S/S Car CareMarch 27 Tax TipsMarch 27 Homebuilders MonthlyMarch 28 March Madness
APRILApril 1 Primetime Monthly (Friday)April 1 FF S/S Car CareApril 2 Redield PageApril 7 Spring Hub City HappeningsApril 8 ODF Fishing Season Super
IssueApril 9 Spring Sports Guide April 10 Volunteer Page April 15 Monthly Downtown PageApril 17 Childcare DirectoryApril 17 HomeTown WelcomeApril 17 All Family Health Fair April 22 FF Hay FeatureApril 24 Mother’s Day 1 of 2April 24 Spring Home & GardenApril 24 Homebuilders MonthlyApril 27 Design An Ad #1April 30 Design An Ad #2
MAYMay 1 Primetime Monthly (Sunday)May 1 Mother’s Day 2 of 2May 6 FF Life On The FarmMay 7 Redield PageMay 8 Nursing Home Week May 8 Graduation May 13 Friday the 13thMay 17 HomeTown WelcomeMay 20 Monthly Downtown PageMay 20 FF Life On The Farm
May 22 Homebuilders MonthlyMay 26 Road Trip
JUNEJune 1 Primetime Monthly
(Wednesday)June 3 FF Life On The FarmJune 4 Redield PageJune 6 Customer AppreciationJune 10 ODF Summer Fish, Camp, GolfJune 12 Tying the KnotJune 17 HomeTown WelcomeJune 17 FF Life On The FarmJune 17 Monthly Downtown PageJune 19 Summer Coupon ManiaJune 26 Homebuilders MonthlyJune 29 Access Aberdeen
JULYJuly 1 Primetime Monthly (Friday)July 2 Redield PageJuly 8 FF Harvest Time on the Farm July 14 Crazy DaysJuly 15 Monthly Downtown PageJuly 15 FF Harvest Time on the Farm July 16 Crazy DaysJuly 17 HomeTown WelcomeJuly 22 FF Harvest Time on the Farm July 24 It’s Your HealthJuly 24 Homebuilders MonthlyJuly 27 ODF Pheasant Fever E-editionJuly 29 FF Harvest Time on the Farm July 29 FF Health FeatureJuly 31 Childcare Directory
AUGUSTAug. 1 Primetime Monthly (Monday)Aug. 2 FF Pre-Harvest EditionAug. 5 FF Harvest Time on the Farm Aug. 6 Redield PageAug. 12 FF Fair Feature -
DakotaFest/BCFAug. 14 Fair Days with 4-H Page
Insiders’ Guide to the Dakotas & Upper Midwest
2016 Special Promotions Planner
Media Guide
Aug. 17 HomeTown WelcomeAug. 19 Monthly Downtown PageAug. 19 FF Harvest Time on the FarmAug. 21 Bid4ItAug. 26 ODF Archery & WaterfowlAug. 27 Fall Sports Guide Aug. 28 Homebuilders Monthly
SEPTEMBERTBD SchmeckfestSept. 1 Primetime Monthly (Thursday)Sept. 1 F/W Hub City HappeningsSept. 3 Redield PageSept. 4 Fall Home ImprovementSept. 4 Applefest Sept. 11 Fall Coupon ManiaSept. 11 Customer AppreciationSept. 17 HomeTown WelcomeSept. 16 Monthly Downtown PageSept. 23 Ag DirectorySept. 25 Homebuilders MonthlyTBD Wings: Welcome Back
OCTOBERTBD Restaurant Week/DashOct. 1 Primetime Monthly (Saturday)Oct. 1 Clergy Oct. 1 Redield PageOct. 2 CosmetologyOct. 7 FF Livestock Equipment
FeatureOct. 7 Make Your House A HomeOct. 7 ODF Pheasant Super IssueOct. 8 Think PinkOct. 9 F/W Car CareOct. 14 Make Your House A HomeOct. 14 FF F/W Car CareOct. 16 Silver Pages FOCUS DirectoryOct. 17 HomeTown WelcomeOct. 21 Make Your House A HomeOct. 21 Monthly Downtown PageOct. 21 FF Seed & Planting Feature
Oct. 23 Homebuilders MonthlyOct. 28 FF Seed & Planting FeatureOct. 28 Make Your House A Home
NOVEMBERTBD Six Weeks of ChristmasNov. 1 Primetime Monthly (Tuesday)Nov. 4 Make Your House A HomeNov. 4 FF Seed & Planting FeatureNov. 4 Shop Local TBD Nov. 5 Redield PageNov. 11 FF Seed & Planting FeatureNov. 11 ODF Deer Hunting issueNov. 11 Veterans Nov. 11 FF 55th - Innovations Nov. 11 Shop Local TBD Nov. 17 HomeTown WelcomeNov. 18 Shop Local TBD Nov. 18 Monthly Downtown PageNov. 20 Winter Coupon ManiaNov. 20 Thanksgiving Wrap (AN Plus)Nov. 24 Holiday Gift Guide 1
Nov. 24 Thanksgiving Wrap (AN)Nov. 25 Shop Local TBD Nov. 27 Homebuilders MonthlyNov. 27 Christmas Church Service
DECEMBERDec. 1 Primetime Monthly (Thursday)Dec. 2 Shop Local TBD Dec. 3 Redield PageDec. 4 Holiday Gift Guide 2Dec. 5 Customer AppreciationDec. 9 Shop Local TBD Dec. 9 FF Cattlemen’s RoundupDec. 10 Winter Sports Guide Dec. 15 Holiday GreetingsDec. 16 Shop Local TBD Dec. 16 Monthly Downtown PageDec. 17 HomeTown WelcomeDec. 18 Letters to Santa Dec. 25 Homebuilders Monthly
**All dates subject to change.
We give you full retail value of your items in ad space once your item/items sell for the reserve bid of 50% (75% for real estate or vehicles.)
No cash outlay, a trade for your merchandise or services for advertising space ($1300 minimum required to participate in packages not less than $50 each)
Credit may be used in the American News, Farm Forum, Outdoor Forum, print or digital.
March & August 2016Your business gives us merchandise
or services to put up for auction
T h e A r e a ’s B e s t O n l i n e A u c t i o n
Insiders’ Guide to the Dakotas & Upper Midwest
2016 Special Promotions Planner
Media Guide
Media Guide