A New Year, A New You

12
By Lauren Anderson Freeman Staff TOWN OF MERTON — A cheerful, 140-pound New- foundland dog named Zappa provided a welcome break from studying in Arrowhead High School’s library on Wednesday morning. “He loves all the atten- tion,” Zappa’s owner told the crowd of students as the dog offered one of them a kiss on the nose. Zappa was one of several therapy dogs invited to the school to help relieve anxi- ety during what can be a stressful week for students, Arrowhead Director of Stu- dent Services Mary Ann Beckman said. A new offering this year, the dogs were available for students to visit with dur- ing study hall over the three days of exams. The volunteer-led service was provided at no cost to the school, Beckman said. Groups streamed in and out of the library’s rooms to see the four dogs and their owners, with many students responding in smiles and collective “aws.” Whether consciously de- stressing or not, students enjoy the canine visitors, Beckman said. “Some students just say ‘I love dogs,’” she said. “Oth- ers say, ‘I just really needed a break.’” Seniors Kathryn Makowski and Annie Ben- son made the journey from Arrowhead’s North campus to its South one immediate- ly after an exam to see the dogs. “We just took a chemistry test — it was stressful,” Makowski. “We knew we would need this.” Benson and Makowski agreed the dogs helped them decompress. They suggested the school expand the program by hav- ing dogs at both campuses during the next finals week. Sophomore Sam Evert also supported the effort. “I just like dogs,” Evert said while petting PJ and Shaina, a pair of Bernese “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” 7:30 p.m. today and Friday, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday, Sunset Playhouse, 800 Elm Grove Road, Elm Grove. 262- 782-4430, www.sunsetplayhouse.com “White Rabbit Red Rabbit,” 7:30 p.m. today, Friday and Saturday and 4 p.m. Sunday, Oconomowoc Arts Cen- ter, 641 Forest St., Oconomowoc. OHS Fringe fundraiser. $15. 262- 560- 3172, www.oasd.k12.wi.us “The Dastardly Ficus,” 7:30 p.m. Fri- day and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday, Lake Country Playhouse, 221 E. Capi- tol Drive, Hartland. 262-367-4697, http://lakecountryplayhouse.net Clear Water Outdoor snowshoe social hike, 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Lapham Peak State Park, W329-N846 Highway C, Town of Delafield. Clear Water Outdoor Adventure Club mem- bers $7 (snowshoes included), non- members $10 (snowshoes included); $5 with own snowshoes. Park fees apply, registration required. 262-303- 4206. Winter Tales by the Fire, 6 p.m. Sat- urday, Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts, 19805 W. Capitol Drive, Brookfield. One-hour performance for children of all ages. Florentine Opera’s Goldie B. Locks & the Three Singing Bears. $7. 262-781-9520, www.wilson- center.com Fantastic Flicks, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday, Waukesha Public Library, 321 Wisconsin Ave. Feature is “The Boxtrolls.” For families with children of all ages. Art and Artisans Studio Creations Clearance Sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Waukesha County Expo Center, 1000 Northview Road, Waukesha. $5 adults, free admission for children 12 and younger. Attend for free with two canned goods for Food Pantry of Waukesha County. www.artworkswisconsin.com Oconomowoc Indoor Winter Farmers Market, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, Oconomowoc Landscape Supply and Garden Center, N68- W37850 Highway K, Town of Oconomowoc. Winter Music Series presented by SummerStage, 6 p.m. Sunday, Hawks Inn visitor center, 426 Wells St., Delafield. $10. Featuring Bill Camplin. Purchases tickets at Delafield Public Library, 500 Gene- see St., SummerStage office, 605 Milwaukee St., or online at www.summerstageofdelafield.org. WEATHER Tomorrow: Partly cloudy High 37 / Low 28 INDEX Fun Things To Do This Weekend Volume 156, Number 209 Business............................... 5A Classified............................. 5B Comics................................. 8B Crossword..........................8B Dr. Komaroff..................... 8B Lottery ................................. 2A Obituaries........................9A Opinion................................ 8A Sports................................... 1B Weather ............................ 10A See the complete forecast on back page 75¢ THURSDAY JANUARY 22, 2015 TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FREEMAN, CALL 542-2500 By Sarah Pryor Freeman Staff WAUKESHA — Darrin Malone has been charged with felony murder in the Jan. 13 slaying of a Wauke- sha Citgo clerk and his bail has been set at $500,000, but he remained at large as of press time. According to court docu- ments, a Waukesha County Circuit Court judge issued an arrest warrant for 28-year-old Malone on Wednesday. The official charge is being a party to felony murder, which is punishable upon convic- tion by up to 55 years behind bars. Malone’s alleged accom- plice, 19-year-old Kenneth Thomas of West Allis, who allegedly shot and killed 65- year-old Citgo clerk Saeed Sharwani, has been charged with seven felonies, includ- ing homicide, and could face life behind bars if convicted. According to the criminal complaint, police arrived at the Citgo, 1445 White Rock Ave., at 10:45 p.m. Jan. 13 to find Sharwani prone on the ground outside the station with a gunshot wound to the chest. He was unable to speak and was only able to answer a question about how many people had been there by holding up two fingers. Shar- wani died at Waukesha Memorial Hospital less than an hour later. According to the com- plaint, Thomas told investi- gators that Malone, a Mil- waukee resident, put him up to the robbery because “there was money out in Wauke- sha,” and Malone supplied Halloween masks. Thomas also told police that during the robbery, he jumped onto the counter and Sharwani started “freaking out,” came around the counter, grabbed Thomas and “the next thing he knew, the gun went off.” Thomas said he didn’t shoot on purpose and he thought the gun’s safety was on. He said Malone told him to put the gun in the “baby bag.” Police later found the gun in a diaper box in one of the bedrooms of Thomas’ apartment. Alleged getaway driver Jer- ica Cotton, 23, told police that on Jan. 13, she agreed to give Thomas and Malone a ride in exchange for $50 for gas money. She has been charged with being a party to the crime of felony murder and felony armed robbery, and a court commissioner set her bail at $250,000. Thomas’ bail was set at $1 million. Third suspect charged with murder in gas station clerk slaying $500K bail set; Malone still at large By Brian Huber Freeman Staff WAUKESHA — Jealousy was the motivation for two brothers and a woman who allegedly burglarized a Muskego home and stole a safe containing up to $400,000 in cash Nov. 7, according to a criminal complaint. Tiffany Kapitanski, 23, and Javier Rizo, 30, both of West Allis, and Rizo’s brother Dario Rizo, 29, of Milwaukee, all were charged Wednesday in Waukesha County Circuit Court with one count each of burglary and theft. Kapitans- ki and Javier Rizo both were ordered held on $20,000 cash bonds Wednesday. Dario Rizo has yet to appear in court. According to the criminal complaint, a resident of the Muskego house returned home Nov. 7 to find the back door ajar and a safe contain- ing about $400,000 missing from his mother’s closet. The resident had been summoned to meet a potential client regarding a landscaping job, but found it suspicious when the client did not show up and the phone number given could not be tracked down later. A person who wished to remain anonymous called police Jan. 7, saying he or she knew of the burglary before its occurrence and identified the suspects as the Rizo brothers, the complaint said. The informant said the homeowner’s husband had died in some type of accident, the complaint said. A call was placed to get a son of the resident out of the house Nov. 7, during which time the alleged burglary occurred. Shortly thereafter, the three bought cars from a Nissan dealership in Milwau- kee. A dealership representa- tive recognized Javier Rizo’s face when police showed his picture and recalled that the Rizo brothers and Kapitanski bought a 2014 Nissan Altima for $15,600, a 2013 Nissan Rogue sport utility vehicle worth $28,857, and a 2013 Nis- san Pathfinder worth $39,800, taking cash from Kapitans- ki’s purse to pay for them, the complaint said. Police determined the homeowner’s son had been giving an ex-girlfriend between $30,000 and $50,000; that woman had a child with Kapitanski’s brother and was friends with Kapitanski, the complaint said. The complaint added close to $120,000 in cash was deposited into accounts for the three suspects despite their reporting a combined $19,900 in earnings for 2014. The informant added Javier Rizo and Kapitanski bought a house in West Allis with some of the money; two of the vehicles bought with cash were parked outside that home when police checked last Friday, the com- plaint said. They were arrest- ed in the house. Both initially denied knowledge of the bur- glary but Javier Rizo later admitted some of the money used to buy the cars came from the Muskego residence, the complaint said. Kapitanski allegedly admitted she was upset with her friend, the son’s ex-girl- friend, who was frequently flaunting new clothes, cars and cash. She told Javier Rizo “about how frustrated she was with the situation that (the woman) was getting all this money and she didn’t have to work or do anything for it,” the complaint said. Kapitanski called the son away from the home that day, using a prepaid cellphone. When the son left, the broth- ers went to the house, using a garage door opener given to them by the son’s ex-girl- friend, the complaint said. After the burglary, they went to a hotel in Milwaukee and opened the safe, Kapitanski told police. A resident of the home could not be reached for com- ment Wednesday. When police contacted Dario Rizo to turn himself in, he hung up the phone, the complaint said. Email: [email protected] Three charged with stealing safe containing up to $400,000 Complaint: Suspects bought cars, house with cash Darrin Malone, suspect still at large Fighting stress with Canine visitors relieve exam pressure at Arrowhead Charles Auer/Freeman Staff Arrowhead High School freshman Travis Case pets Charlie,a beagle-dachshund mix therapy dog. Zappa, a Newfoundland thera- py dog, waits for students Wednesday at Arrowhead. Abby, a Labrador therapy dog owned by Arrowhead guidance counselor Mike Ward, holds a sign.Abby works with students on a regular basis, but was not part of the exam day program. What do you think? Phone: 513-2641 Email: [email protected] SOUND OFF See MALONE, PAGE 10A See DOGS, PAGE 10A furry friends Coming to grips with a health wake-up call. 7B What you need to know about financial aid. 7B A NEW YEAR, a new YOU Tips to help you keep your resolution to eat healthier. 2A Waukesha County’s Daily Newspaper T h e FREEMAN

Transcript of A New Year, A New You

By Lauren AndersonFreeman Staff

TOWN OF MERTON — Acheerful, 140-pound New-foundland dog namedZappa provided a welcomebreak from studying inArrowhead High School’slibrary on Wednesdaymorning.

“He loves all the atten-tion,” Zappa’s owner toldthe crowd of students as thedog offered one of them akiss on the nose.

Zappa was one of severaltherapy dogs invited to theschool to help relieve anxi-ety during what can be astressful week for students,Arrowhead Director of Stu-dent Services Mary AnnBeckman said.

A new offering this year,the dogs were available forstudents to visit with dur-ing study hall over thethree days of exams. Thevolunteer-led service wasprovided at no cost to the

school, Beckman said. Groups streamed in and

out of the library’s roomsto see the four dogs andtheir owners, with manystudents responding insmiles and collective “aws.”

Whether consciously de-stressing or not, studentsenjoy the canine visitors,Beckman said.

“Some students just say ‘Ilove dogs,’” she said. “Oth-ers say, ‘I just really neededa break.’”

Seniors KathrynMakowski and Annie Ben-son made the journey fromArrowhead’s North campusto its South one immediate-ly after an exam to see thedogs.

“We just took a chemistrytest — it was stressful,”Makowski. “We knew wewould need this.”

Benson and Makowskiagreed the dogs helpedthem decompress. Theysuggested the schoolexpand the program by hav-

ing dogs at both campusesduring the next finals week.

Sophomore Sam Evertalso supported the effort.

“I just like dogs,” Evertsaid while petting PJ andShaina, a pair of Bernese

“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’sNest,” 7:30 p.m. today and Friday, 2p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 2p.m. Sunday, Sunset Playhouse, 800Elm Grove Road, Elm Grove. 262-782-4430, www.sunsetplayhouse.com

“White Rabbit Red Rabbit,” 7:30p.m. today, Friday and Saturday and 4p.m. Sunday, Oconomowoc Arts Cen-ter, 641 Forest St., Oconomowoc.OHS Fringe fundraiser. $15. 262- 560-3172, www.oasd.k12.wi.us

“The Dastardly Ficus,” 7:30 p.m. Fri-day and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday,Lake Country Playhouse, 221 E. Capi-

tol Drive, Hartland. 262-367-4697,http://lakecountryplayhouse.net

Clear Water Outdoor snowshoesocial hike, 10 a.m. to noon Saturday,Lapham Peak State Park, W329-N846Highway C, Town of Delafield. ClearWater Outdoor Adventure Club mem-bers $7 (snowshoes included), non-members $10 (snowshoes included);$5 with own snowshoes. Park feesapply, registration required. 262-303-4206.

Winter Tales by the Fire, 6 p.m. Sat-urday, Sharon Lynne Wilson Center forthe Arts, 19805 W. Capitol Drive,

Brookfield. One-hour performance forchildren of all ages. Florentine Opera’sGoldie B. Locks & the Three SingingBears. $7. 262-781-9520, www.wilson-center.com

Fantastic Flicks, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.Saturday, Waukesha Public Library,321 Wisconsin Ave. Feature is “TheBoxtrolls.” For families with children ofall ages.

Art and Artisans Studio CreationsClearance Sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Saturday, Waukesha County ExpoCenter, 1000 Northview Road,Waukesha. $5 adults, free admissionfor children 12 and younger. Attendfor free with two canned goods for

Food Pantry of Waukesha County.www.artworkswisconsin.com

Oconomowoc Indoor WinterFarmers Market, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.Sunday, Oconomowoc LandscapeSupply and Garden Center, N68-W37850 Highway K, Town ofOconomowoc.

Winter Music Series presented bySummerStage, 6 p.m. Sunday,Hawks Inn visitor center, 426 WellsSt., Delafield. $10. Featuring BillCamplin. Purchases tickets atDelafield Public Library, 500 Gene-see St., SummerStage office, 605Milwaukee St., or online atwww.summerstageofdelafield.org.

WEATHERTomorrow:Partly cloudy

High 37 / Low 28

INDEX Fun Things To Do This Weekend

Volume 156,Number 209

Business...............................5A

Classified.............................5B

Comics.................................8B

Crossword..........................8B

Dr. Komaroff.....................8B

Lottery.................................2A

Obituaries........................9A

Opinion................................8A

Sports...................................1B

Weather............................10A

See the complete forecast on back page

75¢

THURSDAYJANUARY 22, 2015

TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FREEMAN, CALL 542-2500

By Sarah PryorFreeman Staff

WAUKESHA — DarrinMalone has been chargedwith felony murder in theJan. 13 slaying of a Wauke-sha Citgo clerk and his bailhas been set at $500,000, buthe remained at large as ofpress time.

According to court docu-ments, a Waukesha CountyCircuit Court judge issued anarrest warrant for 28-year-oldMalone on Wednesday. Theofficial charge is being aparty to felony murder, whichis punishable upon convic-tion by up to 55 years behindbars.

Malone’s alleged accom-plice, 19-year-old KennethThomas of West Allis, whoallegedly shot and killed 65-year-old Citgo clerk SaeedSharwani, has been chargedwith seven felonies, includ-ing homicide, and could facelife behind bars if convicted.

According to the criminalcomplaint, police arrived atthe Citgo, 1445 White RockAve., at 10:45 p.m. Jan. 13 tofind Sharwani prone on theground outside the stationwith a gunshot wound to thechest. He was unable to speakand was only able to answer aquestion about how manypeople had been there byholding up two fingers. Shar-wani died at WaukeshaMemorial Hospital less thanan hour later.

According to the com-plaint, Thomas told investi-gators that Malone, a Mil-waukee resident, put him upto the robbery because “therewas money out in Wauke-

sha,” and Malone suppliedHalloween masks. Thomasalso told police that duringthe robbery, he jumped ontothe counter and Sharwanistarted “freaking out,” camearound the counter, grabbedThomas and “the next thinghe knew, the gun went off.”

Thomas said he didn’tshoot on purpose and hethought the gun’s safety wason. He said Malone told himto put the gun in the “babybag.” Police later found thegun in a diaper box in one ofthe bedrooms of Thomas’apartment.

Alleged getaway driver Jer-ica Cotton, 23, told police thaton Jan. 13, she agreed to giveThomas and Malone a ride inexchange for $50 for gasmoney. She has been chargedwith being a party to thecrime of felony murder andfelony armed robbery, and acourt commissioner set herbail at $250,000. Thomas’ bailwas set at $1 million.

Third suspectcharged with

murder in gas station

clerk slaying$500K bail set;

Malone still at large

By Brian HuberFreeman Staff

WAUKESHA — Jealousywas the motivation for twobrothers and a woman whoallegedly burglarized aMuskego home and stole asafe containing up to $400,000in cash Nov. 7, according to acriminal complaint.

Tiffany Kapitanski, 23, andJavier Rizo, 30, both of WestAllis, and Rizo’s brotherDario Rizo, 29, of Milwaukee,all were charged Wednesdayin Waukesha County CircuitCourt with one count each ofburglary and theft. Kapitans-ki and Javier Rizo both wereordered held on $20,000 cash

bonds Wednesday. Dario Rizohas yet to appear in court.

According to the criminalcomplaint, a resident of theMuskego house returnedhome Nov. 7 to find the backdoor ajar and a safe contain-ing about $400,000 missingfrom his mother’s closet. Theresident had been summonedto meet a potential clientregarding a landscaping job,but found it suspicious whenthe client did not show upand the phone number givencould not be tracked downlater.

A person who wished toremain anonymous calledpolice Jan. 7, saying he or sheknew of the burglary before

its occurrence and identifiedthe suspects as the Rizobrothers, the complaint said.The informant said thehomeowner’s husband haddied in some type of accident,the complaint said.

A call was placed to get ason of the resident out of thehouse Nov. 7, during whichtime the alleged burglaryoccurred. Shortly thereafter,the three bought cars from aNissan dealership in Milwau-kee. A dealership representa-tive recognized Javier Rizo’sface when police showed hispicture and recalled that theRizo brothers and Kapitanskibought a 2014 Nissan Altimafor $15,600, a 2013 Nissan

Rogue sport utility vehicleworth $28,857, and a 2013 Nis-san Pathfinder worth $39,800,taking cash from Kapitans-ki’s purse to pay for them, thecomplaint said.

Police determined thehomeowner’s son had beengiving an ex-girlfriendbetween $30,000 and $50,000;that woman had a child withKapitanski’s brother and wasfriends with Kapitanski, thecomplaint said.

The complaint added closeto $120,000 in cash wasdeposited into accounts forthe three suspects despitetheir reporting a combined$19,900 in earnings for 2014.

The informant addedJavier Rizo and Kapitanskibought a house in West Allis

with some of the money; twoof the vehicles bought withcash were parked outsidethat home when policechecked last Friday, the com-plaint said. They were arrest-ed in the house. Both initiallydenied knowledge of the bur-glary but Javier Rizo lateradmitted some of the moneyused to buy the cars camefrom the Muskego residence,the complaint said.

Kapitanski allegedlyadmitted she was upset withher friend, the son’s ex-girl-friend, who was frequentlyflaunting new clothes, carsand cash. She told Javier Rizo“about how frustrated shewas with the situation that(the woman) was getting allthis money and she didn’t

have to work or do anythingfor it,” the complaint said.

Kapitanski called the sonaway from the home that day,using a prepaid cellphone.When the son left, the broth-ers went to the house, using agarage door opener given tothem by the son’s ex-girl-friend, the complaint said.After the burglary, they wentto a hotel in Milwaukee andopened the safe, Kapitanskitold police.

A resident of the homecould not be reached for com-ment Wednesday.

When police contactedDario Rizo to turn himself in,he hung up the phone, thecomplaint said.

Email: [email protected]

Three charged with stealing safe containing up to $400,000Complaint: Suspects bought cars, house with cash

Darrin Malone,suspect still at large

Fighting stress with

Canine visitors relieve exam pressure at Arrowhead

Charles Auer/Freeman Staff

Arrowhead High School freshman Travis Case pets Charlie, a beagle-dachshund mix therapy dog.

Zappa, a Newfoundland thera-py dog, waits for studentsWednesday at Arrowhead.

Abby, a Labrador therapy dogowned by Arrowhead guidancecounselor Mike Ward, holds asign.Abby works with studentson a regular basis, but was notpart of the exam day program.

What do you think?Phone: 513-2641Email: [email protected]

SOUND OFF

See MALONE, PAGE 10ASee DOGS, PAGE 10A

furry friends

Coming to gripswith a health wake-up call. 7B

What you need to know about financial aid. 7B

A NEW YEAR,a new YOU

Tips to help you keep your resolutionto eat healthier. 2A

Waukesha County’s Daily Newspaper The FREEMAN

By Karen PilarskiSpecial to The Freeman

SUMMIT — The cham-pagne glasses have stoppedclinking and the tossedconfetti has been vacu-umed up. Ah, another NewYear’s celebration hascome and gone. January isthe official start to the res-olutions that were made.Some may resolve to find anew job, get a degree orlose weight.

Why is weight loss a hugeresolution?

“People need a jump-start. They think a newyear means a new begin-ning where habits and tra-ditions can start,” saidAmanda Motl, registereddietitian and certified dia-betes educator at AuroraMedical Center in Summit.

Robyn Pearce, groupexercise director at YMCAof Greater WaukeshaCounty, said: “Throughoutthe year we lose focus dueto the busy-ness of every-day life and it acceleratestoward the end of the yearand we completely losefocus. The changing of thecalendar is always the per-fect time to change yourbehavior.”

The holiday season is fullof sugary cookies, hot hamand creamy dips. After theholiday eating, people areready to get over the excessby having healthier begin-nings.

Motl said people shouldstart small rather than set-ting unattainable aspira-tions and becoming dis-couraged quickly. “Thefirst step is to start basic. Isee patients that try to gofull steam and makechanges that are difficult tostick with and complywith,” she said.

“Set a realistic goal andthen create mini stepswithin that goal,” Pearcesaid. “The small stepsmake the goal that muchmore achievable and cre-ates opportunity forreward, motivation and tofeel successful.”

Tips for losing weightDiets are different from

food plans. Motl explainsthat dieting means eating acertain way for short timethen falling back on oldhabits. She says, “Whendieting, someone may con-sume cake or ice cream andfeel as though they failed.There is no black and whitewith food.”

Besides the notion ofcheating, many people areconfused about how to getstarted. Pearce said theylack a plan or education on

how to reach their goals. The key to successful

weight loss is moderation.Motl stresses that peopleshould think about howoften and how much cer-tain foods are consumed.

A goal she gives is toincorporate one piece offruit or vegetable withevery meal. This helpsform a healthy habit dur-ing meal times.

“The biggest thing wepreach is to increase fruitsand vegetables,” she said.“Fruits and vegetables arelow in calories and a goodsource of fiber. Skins andseeds from fruits and veg-etables have a higher fibercontent. Eating the skins ofapples, baked potatoes,pears, seeds, raspberries,blackberries leaves the per-son feeling fuller longer.”

Taming temptationA common roadblock for

the newly health-consciousis that they don’t want toknow what they are eating.Motl encourages herpatients to look at the nutri-tion label, fat content andcalories. Paying attention tolabels makes people moreaware of what they are eat-ing. She has observed whenpatients start paying atten-tion, they put food back onthe shelves. It is all aboutmaking healthy choices.

There may be hesitationto fully commit to a healthi-er lifestyle. Most peoplelead busy lives. Keeping upwith a strict diet lacks vari-ety and takes time. “Drink-ing water, deleting emptycalories, eating clean andgetting into a regular exer-cise schedule are very basiclifelong changes but theymust look at their scheduleand lifestyle and figure outa way to make it work with-in their own schedule,social, work and family cir-cles,” Pearce said.

Both Motl and Pearceagree that accountability isthe key to fitness success.What happens is peoplecave to convenience. Motlsuggested people look uprecipes to find foods thatare tasteful and healthy. Byadding recipes it preventsthe fall back of fast food.There are many user-friend-ly, free calorie-trackingwebsites available. If theInternet is not your cup oftea, use a pen and paper.

“By keeping a food jour-nal, people can look at theirmeals and see calories andwhere they come from,”Motl said.

Fitness is for everyoneFor older people and

those with a handicap or

illness, it may be frustrat-ing to find a good fitnessplan. Pearce said the Y isan inclusive organization,with a variety of programsfor just about everyone.“Our senior and activeolder adult programs arevery extensive, we haveprograms for specialtygroups and coaching andpersonal training is alwaysavailable,” she said.

New fitness programscan be intimidating.Health enthusiasts arewary over new equipment,new people, and new move-ments that may be uncom-fortable. Motl and Pearcesuggest finding a supportsystem such as life coach-es, partners, friends anddietitians willing to workwith them. Without a men-tor there is no one to beaccountable to. Pearce sug-gests finding an instructorthat plays awesome musicand likes to joke a little inclass. For the shy andtimid, remember othersare not gawking at you.They are more focused onthemselves then what isgoing on around them.

“Leave your inhibitionsat the door,” Pearce said.“Remember your goals.Play music that motivatesyou or go to a Zumba classif you like to dance.”

Unfortunately not every-one will share the samehealthy resolution.

Motl said it can be hardwhen a loved one bringshome a fatty treat. The per-son may take a step back intheir progress to pleaseothers. She cheers peopleon by saying, “We have tolook after ourselves. Hope-fully by seeing others’ suc-cessful changes, it willlead them to making betterchoices.”

Lifestyle changes mustbe sustainable. Beforeembarking on a fitnessplan, ask yourself if youare willing to make thesechanges for life and notjust for a month or two.

“Our bodies are unitsthat were designed to workphysically. We function ata higher level in all areaswhen we exercise and aremore physically active,”Pearce says. “From a cellu-lar level all the waythrough to entire systemswe will function more effi-ciently, we will live happi-er, healthier, longer livesand be better able to wardoff sickness and disease.”

PAGE 2Today and Friday

Bubba’s, 1276 Capitol Drive,PewaukeeToday: Andes MintChocolateFriday: StrawberryShortcake

Culver’s, 1650 E.Main St., WaukeshaToday: Butter PecanFriday: Turtle

Culver’s, 840 W. Sunset Drive,WaukeshaToday: Crazy for Cookie DoughFriday: Turtle

Culver’s, 2600 N. GrandviewBlvd., WaukeshaToday: Red Raspberry Friday: Caramel ChocolatePecan

Culver’s, 14855 W. NationalAve., New BerlinToday: Brownie ThunderFriday: Double MarshmallowOreo

Culver’s, 3705 N. 124th St.,BrookfieldToday: Chocolate CoveredBananaFriday: Cookies & Cream

Culver’s, 21300 W. CapitolDrive, Town of BrookfieldToday: Boston CreamFriday: Caramel Turtle

Culver’s, 15280 W. BluemoundRoad, Elm GroveToday: Caramel Peanut Butter-cupFriday: Chocolate Caramel Twist

Culver’s, 701 Industrial Ct., HartlandToday: Double Strawberry Friday: Caramel ChocolatePecan

Culver’s, 1090 N. Rochester St.,MukwonagoToday: Caramel PecanFriday: Really Reese’s

Culver’s, W187-S7959 RacineAve., MuskegoToday: Twix MixFriday: Butter Pecan

Culver’s, 1177 E. Summit Ave.,OconomowocToday: Double MarshmallowOreoFriday: Maple Pecan

Culver’s, W249-N6620 Highway164, Town of LisbonToday: Bonfire S’moresFriday: Cookies & Cream

Culver’s, 400 E. Summit Ave.,WalesToday: Chocolate Heath CrunchFriday: Turtle Dove

Sloppy Joe’s, 280 W. Broadway,WaukeshaToday: Black CherryFriday: Vanilla

Kopp’s Frozen Custard, 18880W. Bluemound Road, Town ofBrookfieldToday: Mint Chip, ChocolateTruffelFriday: Red Raspberry, RockyRoad

LeDuc’s Frozen Custard Drive-In, 240 W. Summit Ave., WalesToday: PistachioFriday: French Silk

Oscar’s Frozen Custard, 21165Highway 18, Town of BrookfieldToday: Black Forest TorteFriday: Death by Chocolate

Flavor of the day

Wednesday, Jan. 21WISCONSIN

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92 YEARS AGOJan. 22, 1923

Two boys, giving theirnames as Donald Willard andElmer Shinn, each 12 yearsof age, were arrested asvagrants by Officer OwenOwens, on Sunday, whenthey stepped from a Soo Linefreight train on which theyhad made their way fromChicago.

The boys told SheriffAlvin Redford that they“hooked” one freight for ashort ride but that they wereunable to get off until theyreached this city. Later theyadmitted that they had runaway from home to see whatlife outside the city of Chica-go was like. The parents ofthe boys have been notifiedand will probably makearrangements for theirreturn home.

They said that they hadbeen noticed by the brake-man of the train, whom theytold they were on their wayto Minneapolis, where theirparents resided. YoungWillard said, upon inquiryby Jailor Don McKay, that hewas not a relative of Jess, butthat he had been endowedwith the same fighting abili-ty. To prove good his state-ments he did some shadowboxing with one of the mat-tresses in the jail, andMcKay said that in view ofthe lad’s proficiency onemight believe that Jess hasbeen instructing him.

The boys were arraignedin Municipal Court thismorning together with fiveothers who appeared oncharges of being drunk anddisorderly.

34 YEARS GOJan. 22, 1981

Peddlers vs. TradersThe agreement leading to

the release of the Americanhostages that was workedout in such painstakingdetail by members of theCarter administration, theAlgerian government andthe Iranians “has the samemoral standing,” editorial-ized the Wall Street JournalWednesday, “as an agree-ment made with a kidnapper,that is to say, none at all.”

It was announced the sameday that the new Reaganadministration just mighttake that advice. It is report-edly studying the agreementcarefully, as well it might,but is making no commit-ments about honoring it.

It would be a mistake, inour view, for the new Presi-dent to renege on the dealstruck with the Iranians —despite the fact that the ordi-narily such a move wouldhave every justification.Agreements made underduress, which in this caseincluded the threat of death,have no legal and certaintyno moral validity whatsoev-er.

But there are other consid-erations. For one thing, abroken agreement now couldseal fates of any Americanswho find themselves in asimilar situation in thefuture. It makes no moresense to cut off diplomaticavenues than it does to ruleout military actions.

For another, a shatteredagreement would have seri-ous diplomatic consequencesfor the Algerian government,which bargained in goodfaith over the last fewmonths and to which we owea measure of gratitude.

— Local history compiledby Patrice Shanks;

[email protected]

ALSO ON THIS DATEJan. 22, 1498 — During

his third voyage to the West-ern Hemisphere, Christo-pher Columbus arrived atthe present-day Caribbeanisland of St. Vincent.

Jan. 22, 1917 — PresidentWoodrow Wilson pleaded foran end to war in Europe, call-ing for ‘‘peace without victo-ry.’’ (By April, however,America also was at war.)

Jan. 22, 1944 — DuringWorld War II, Allied forcesbegan landing at Anzio, Italy.

Jan. 22, 1957 — Suspected‘‘Mad Bomber’’ George P.Metesky was arrested inWaterbury, Conn. (He waslater found mentally ill andcommitted until 1973; he diedin 1994.)

Jan. 22, 1968 — ‘‘Rowan &Martin’s Laugh-In’’ pre-miered on NBC-TV.

Jan. 22, 1973 — The U.S.Supreme Court, in its Roe v.Wade decision, legalizedabortions using a trimesterapproach.

Former President LyndonB. Johnson died at his Texasranch at age 64.

On this dayin Waukesha County

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A NEW YEAR,a new YOU

WAUKESHA — A thirdperson has been charged in acase involving the shipmentof thousands of dollarsworth of high-grade mari-juana from California toWaukesha.

Shannon M. Collins, 30,was charged Wednesday inWaukesha County CircuitCourt with several drugcharges including posses-sion of between 2,500 and10,000 grams of marijuana,maintaining a drug traffick-ing place, possession of nar-cotics and drug parapherna-lia and resisting an officer.

While he has beencharged, Collins is not cur-rently in custody, accordingto online court records.

Shawn P. Collins, thebrother of Shannon, andAngelo M. Tagliavia, herboyfriend, were similarlycharged last year.

According to the criminalcomplaint against them,Waukesha police officershave been working on track-ing marijuana traffickingorganizations that have sentmultiple pounds of high-grade marijuana from Per-ris, Calif. to the city.

The complaint states fivepackages were delivered toTagliavia’s home, one ofwhich was recovered bypolice and found to contain12 identical vacuum-sealedbags of marijuana, weighingapproximately 7.3 poundsand worth up to $47,000 ifsold on the street.

Shawn Collins allegedly

tried to take responsibilityfor the shipments, but textmessages between the twoappear to show they hadbeen working together, the

complaint states. The complaint against

Shannon Collins indicatesthat while police weresearching her home, they

found pill bottles thatallegedly had over 100 pillsmissing two days after theprescriptions were filled.Police also allegedly found

“meticulous notes relating tothe distribution of the pills,”the complaint says.

— Freeman Staff

By Lauren AndersonFreeman Staff

DELAFIELD — A group ofhigh school students strug-gled as they navigatedthrough a wooden structureand tangled web of wireswhile wearing firefightergear at the Lake CountryFire Station early Wednes-day morning.

Once they emerged fromthe first in a series of obsta-cles simulating a house fire,the students looked up atCaptain Nick Heltemes forfurther instructions.

“Good job,” he said. “Nowfollow the hose line and gosave someone.”

That, ultimately, is whatthe group was there for.

As students in KettleMoraine’s High School ofHealth Sciences, this partic-ular group aspires to futuresin medicine — and, huffingthrough breathing maskswhile crawling on all fours,they were getting an up-closelook at one potential careerpath.

Exposing students to real-world health field experi-ences is a central vision ofthe charter school and theinspiration behind the part-nership with Lake CountryFire & Rescue, school direc-tor Steve Plum said.

The two-week course onfirefighting and emergency

medical services covers avariety of topics, includingIV therapy, airway maneu-vers, vehicle extrication,patient confidentiality proce-dures and donning and doff-ing turnout gear. Studentstook one of the days to dis-sect a pig lung, learning howlungs expand with the assis-tance of a breathing tube.

By offering hands-on expe-riences, Plum said, he hopesthe course addresses a cen-tral question high school stu-dents ask themselves.

“Will I fit in this career?”Plum said. “It’s that insecu-rity that can drive theirlives.”

Some students have takenmore of a liking to the EMSinstruction than others. But,Plum said, it’s still a valuableexperience for those whodecide not to pursue a fire orEMS career.

“Some people are reallyinto it, but some just want todo research — and that’sfine,” Plum said. “But evenfor the people that might befuture doctors and futurenurses, to have this experi-ence on this side of thetragedy, on this side of thecar accident, it’s going togive them a more well-round-ed idea of what they’redoing.”

As a graduate of KettleMoraine High School, Hel-temes reached out to Plum

when he heard about thehealth science charter andoffered to provide trainingfor the students.

“When I was in highschool, I wish I would havehad a program exactly likethis,” Heltemes said. “Itwould have been ideal formyself and a lot of other peo-ple that are in the firedepartment here.”

Upcoming internship program

Beginning next fall, Hel-temes and Plum plan to offeran internship program andEMT class for students toreceive their certification.Heltemes wants to providestudents a jump-start intotheir future careers.

“If you know you want togo into the field, why not getstarted as soon as you can?”he said.

While student Sadie Wil-son hopes to go into oncolo-gy, she has enjoyed the EMScourse.

“I like that it’s more hands-on than sitting in class andlearning materials —instead you actually get toexperience it, rather than

watching videos in class,”Wilson said.

Emma Erdman is lookingto pursue an EMS-relatedcareer.

“I want to be a hot-zoneparamedic,” she said. “Soeverything I’ve learned hereI’ve loved. There’s somethingnew we learn every day. Ilove the physical exertionand today we learned how

physical an actual fire wouldbe.”

Erdman was the last of herclassmates to attempt theobstacle course. Visiblyexhausted as she dragged a150-pound dummy to the fin-ish line, Plum offered hersome encouragement.

“Life saved,” he said.

Email: [email protected]

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • THE FREEMAN • 3AWWW.GMTODAY.COM LOCAL

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The Spoonclosed until

further notice

WAUKESHA — TheSpoon, a popular newWaukesha restaurant, isclosed until further notice,per a post on the restau-rant’s Facebook page.

“We are overwhelmedwith the great reception ourrestaurant had with every-one — and so appreciate allyour great support — butdue to personal circum-stances, need to step backand re-evaluate,” reads thepost, which was datedWednesday.

Specializing in soup,bread and pies, the restau-rant is located at 928 N.Hartwell Ave. It had beenopen since December andreceived rave reviews fromcustomers on its Facebookpage.

Owners John and LeslieBley live in Delafield, butthe former Hartwell Avenuegyro stand stole theirhearts and made themdecide to open a carry-outcomfort food restauranthere in Waukesha.

The building was in badshape after being vacant forabout seven years, but theBleys completely revampedit, redecorating the interiorand fitting it with state-of-the-art kitchen appliances.

The Bleys love cookinglocally sourced whole foods,and planned to focus oncomfort foods like pies,soups and freshly bakedbread, John Bley told TheFreeman last year.

In October, the Plan Com-mission approved TheSpoon’s conditional use per-mit, which was necessarysince it’s located in a manu-facturing district.

“We think we will be look-ing for younger versions ofus to manage this wonder-ful business — so if youknow anyone, (private mes-sage) us,” the Facebook postread.

— Sarah Pryor, Freeman Staff

Hands-on learning

BURNINGBRIGHT

Kettle Moraine health sciencecharter students explorelivesaving career path

Lake Country Fire & Rescue Captain Nick Heltemes guidesKettle Moraine High School of Health Sciences student EmmaErdman as she climbs through an obstacle course at the fire sta-tion Tuesday morning.

Lauren Anderson/Freeman Staff

Kettle Moraine High School of Health Sciences student Hannah Fenelon operates a fire hose withparamedic Kevin Young’s assistance at the Lake Country Fire & Rescue station Wednesday morning.

Additional charges issued in California re. Waukesha pot case

Waukeshaman charged

with possessionof child porn

WAUKESHA — Paul R.Ceretto, 43, was chargedWednesday with 10 countsof possession of childpornography. Each chargecarries the possibility of 25years in prison and up to$100,000 in fines upon con-viction.

According to the criminalcomplaint against him,police obtained a searchwarrant for Ceretto’s resi-dence after allegedly receiv-ing images of child pornog-raphy from his IP addressduring an investigation intothe sharing of child pornog-raphy. When they served thewarrant on Tuesday, policeallegedly found evidence ofother child pornographyitems.

Ceretto, of Waukesha,made an initial appearanceon Wednesday and a cashbond was set for $10,000. Apreliminary hearing isscheduled for Jan. 28.

By Matt MastersonFreeman Staff

TOWN OF VERNON —Two months after openinghis newly-branded restau-rant, The Lakeside SupperClub at Heaven City, ownerTroy Schoenrock said busi-ness has exceeded his ownexpectations.

“We just re-located TheLakeside and it is like wenever missed a beat,” he said.“It is really doing phenome-nal.”

Schoenrock, who ownedThe Lakeside in Mukwonagofor more than 16 years, movedhis operation to the site of theold Heaven City restaurantlast fall after purchasing theland at S91-W27850 NationalAve. in the Town of Vernon.

He said he has run intosome issues with the “HeavenCity” brand, so he is trying tomove away from that title forthe time being.

“What we basically did waswe moved The Lakeside tothe old Heaven City locationand we are in the Heaven Citycomplex,” he said. “I havehad some problems with peo-ple who brought Grouponsfrom the old Heaven City. Theold Heaven City had someobligations to some otherpeople that they took theirmoney and now they think Ibought their business andthey are coming after me.These are issues I am tryingto get away from.”

Schoenrock said he’s stick-ing with The Lakeside namefor now, but sometime downthe road he may decide to goback to Heaven City.

The Lakeside at HeavenCity held its opening on Nov.17 and offers many of thesame supper club favorites

that helped The Lakesidethrive for over a decade and ahalf.

“We are still specializing insteaks, ribs, chops, seafoodand Italian specialities,”Schoenrock said. “Then weare starting with our all-you-can-eat specials that we areknown for at The Lakeside.”

Those specials include all-you-can-eat baby back ribsand shrimp on Tuesdays,chicken and fish fry onWednesdays and spaghetti,lasagna and other Italiancourses on Thursdays.

The menu is largely thesame as it was at The Lake-side, according to Schoen-rock, sans a couple fanfavorites like pizzas and all-you-can-eat crab legs whichcould rejoin the main roster

sometime down the road. Hesaid his chef is also workingon a Valentine’s Day menuthat could feature some itemsnot currently on the menu.

The building was not ini-tially ready to handle the typeof volume The Lakeside atHeaven City is bringing in,but Schoenrock said his staffhas slowly been progressingtowards building the supperclub atmosphere he’s soughtto create.

“Every day we are alwayscoming up with somethingdifferent that the customersare looking at,” he said. “It isworking, it is just a slow pro-cess trying to get the buildingapplicable for what we aretrying to do.”

Email: [email protected]

4A • THE FREEMAN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 WWW.GMTODAY.COMLOCAL

IN BRIEFSwallow student to receive settlement

WAUKESHA — An 8-year-old who wasinjured while going down a slide with herteacher during a field trip could receive near-ly $33,000 when she turns 18 as part of a set-tlement with the Swallow School District.

The girl, who The Freeman is not namingbecause she is a juvenile, broke her leg whilegoing down a slide on her teacher’s lap whileat the Betty Brinn Children’s Museum inMilwaukee.

The settlement between the two partiescalls for a total amount of $50,000 with a por-tion going towards attorney fees.

A hearing for approval of the settlement isscheduled for Feb. 2.

Waukesha man charged with sexuallyassaulting 14-year-old girl

WAUKESHA — A Waukesha man wascharged in Waukesha County Circuit Courton Tuesday after he allegedly engaged in sex-ual intercourse with a then-14-year-old girlon multiple occasions last year.

Lance W. Russ, 21, is facing one count ofsexual assault of a child under 16 years ofage. If convicted on the Class C felony, hefaces up to 40 years in prison.

According to the criminal complaintagainst him, a Waukesha Police Departmentdetective met with the victim at her highschool last September where she indicatedshe’d had sex with Russ. She said the sex wasconsensual, but added that she did discloseher correct age to the defendant. He respond-ed by telling her to be careful because hecould get into trouble for having sex with her,the complaint states.

Russ told investigators he and the victimhad had sex on at least two or three occasionsin the basement of a home on Debbie Drive,and he was indeed aware of her age.

Russ will make his initial appearance incourt on Feb. 2.

Pair charged with passing off fake $100 bills

WAUKESHA — A Kenosha woman and aMilwaukee man were charged Tuesday afterthey allegedly passed off forged $100 bills at aTarget store in Menomonee Falls.

Twenty-three-year-old Aleece L. Gillespieand Antonio L. Williams, 30, were eachcharged in Waukesha County Circuit Courton Tuesday with one count each of utteringa forgery as a party to a crime. If convicted,each defendant faces up to six years inprison.

Menomonee Falls police learned of foursuspects cashing counterfeit $100 bills at theTarget on N95-W17707 Shady Lane, accordingto the criminal complaint. One officerarrived at the scene and began pursuit of asuspicious vehicle which fled the area.

The officer pursued the vehicle, but it wastraveling over 100 mph, weaving in and out oftraffic and using the emergency lane toevade the officer, the complaint states.

A week later, officers with the SaukvillePolice Department apprehended four sus-pects passing counterfeit bills in its jurisdic-tion. Gillespie and Williams, who were amongthe four arrested, were also identified bysurveillance footage as those who had passedthe fake bills at the Shady Lane Target

No court date was available for either

defendant through court records.

$500,000 in uncashed checks remainfrom LCD antitrust case settlement

MADISON — Approximately $500,000worth of checks remain uncashed by Wis-consin consumers involved with an LCDantitrust case, according to the claimsadministrator for the case.

The Wisconsin Attorney General’s office isencouraging consumers who filed validclaims in connection with the purchase ofLCD laptops, monitors and TVs to make sureto cash their checks.

Claimants are set to receive $43.49 foreach computer monitor or laptop claimedand $86.98 for each LCD TV. In total, Wis-consin consumers, businesses and publicentities will receive more than $27 millionfrom the settlement. The state of Wis-consin has also received $1.5 million incivil penalties.

Consumers who believe they should havereceived checks but have not should [email protected] or call the toll-free hotlineat 855-225-1886. Wisconsinites may also con-tact the Attorney General’s office at 608-266-1221.

More than 170,000 in Wisconsin usedHealth Insurance Marketplace forhealth coverage

MADISON — More than 170,000 people inWisconsin selected a plan or were automati-cally re-enrolled in the Federally FacilitatedMarketplace according to the U.S. Depart-ment of Health & Human Services.

Open enrollment runs until Feb. 15, andthe department urges people not to wasteany time in signing up.

Nearly 7.2 million consumers nationwidehave selected a plan as of Jan. 16, including177,157 in Wisconsin.

For more information about Health Insur-ance Marketplaces, visitwww.healthcare.gov/marketplace. To signup for individual and family coverage, go tohttps://www.healthcare.gov/apply-and-enroll/.

American Lung Association gives Wisconsin mixed grades

BROOKFIELD — The American LungAssociation gave Wisconsin mixed gradesregarding the state’s efforts to enact tobaccocontrol policies in 2014, according to the 13thannual State of Tobacco Control reportreleased Wednesday.

Tobacco use costs Wisconsin $4.6 billion inhealth care expenses and lost productivity,according to the American Lung Associa-tion.

State of Tobacco Control evaluates tobaccocontrol policies at the federal and state leveland assigns grades based on whether lawsprotect citizens from the toll tobacco usetakes on lives.

Grades given to Wisconsin by the Ameri-can Lung Association included an “F” intobacco prevention and control programfunding, a “B” grade in tobacco taxes, an “A”grade in smoke-free air and an “F” in accessto cessation services.

For the full report, visit www.stateoftobac-cocontrol.org.

Milwaukee streetcar plan moves forward, but ...By Dave Fidlin

Special to The Freeman

MILWAUKEE — MayorTom Barrett’s proposedstreetcar project moved onestep closer to reality Wednes-day, although a final, defini-tive vote will wait in thewings a few weeks.

After deliberating on themerits of Barrett’s contro-versial plan, the CommonCouncil voted 10-5 to back the$124 million project. Despitethe overwhelming approval,seven aldermen voted for aprovision in the city’s char-ter ordinance to delay a finaldecision.

Alderman Tony Zielinskivoted to reconsider the pro-posal until Feb. 10 so the pub-lic can formally weigh in onthe issue.

Aldermen gave variedviewpoints on the streetcar,echoing previous commentson the perceived pros andcons behind the project.

Proponents frequentlydeem the project forward-thinking and cite theprospect of economicgrowth. But opponents havecriticized the plan because ofthe cost and potential detri-ment to other city services.

Alderman Bob Donovan,who represents portions of

the city’s south side, hasbeen one of the most outspo-ken critics of the plan.Speaking to the issue thisweek, he likened the debateto “an almost religious fer-vor.”

“I meet people all the timewho ask why we are pursu-ing this,” Donovan said.

Donovan and fellow Alder-man Joe Davis Sr. have pub-licly backed a plan to take theproposal to a referendum.Explaining why he was vot-ing against the measure thisweek, Davis said he had greatconcerns about it.

“(The city of Milwaukee)has no experience in public

transportation, yet we’re stilltrying to take this projecton,” Davis said. “What we dohave experience in is costoverruns.”

Supporters speak outBut other council members

painted a far rosier pictureabout bringing the streetcarplan to fruition.

Alderman Nicholas Kovac,whose district would bedirectly impacted by thestreetcar, said he believed itwould enhance the city’seconomy and result in anestimated 1,000 constructionjobs.

“Public transit needs to be

a priority in this city,” Kovacsaid. “It needs to be in con-cert with other decisions.”

While many of the mostardent aldermanic support-ers of the streetcar are in ornear the downtown area,there are officials in outlyingareas who are also backingthe plan.

Alderman Terry Witkows-ki represents portions ofMilwaukee’s southwest side— a section that likely willnever have a streetcar linerunning through it becauseit lacks the density.

But Witkowski said theefforts aimed at spurringgrowth downtown inevitablybenefit all corners of Mil-waukee. About 18 percent ofthe city’s tax base is derived

from downtown residential,commercial and industrialdevelopments.

“This is a time for the cityto have vision and look atwhat can be,” Witkowskisaid.

In its first phase, the street-car, as proposed, would runin a four-mile loop and linkdowntown commuters to thelakefront and East Sideneighborhood. About $55million in federal fundingwould be directly applied tothe $124 million cost.

In recent months, Barrettdefended allocating city dol-lars toward the project. Hehas frequently asserted thefederal dollars cannot beapplied toward other initia-tives within the city.

Final decision slated for Feb. 10 to accommodate public input

Freeman file photo

The atrium with a large rubber tree is the center of the HeavenCity Restaurant.

Lakeside at Heaven

City making new namefor itself

Blair House headsto another hearingWAUKESHA — The historic Blair House’s

future is still uncertain as a Waukesha Coun-ty Circuit Court judge set another summaryjudgment hearing regarding the house afterhearing arguments on Wednesday.

Waukesha Masonic Lodge #37 has offeredto take $300,000 from the city to walk awayfrom the house, which the Masons claim isrightfully theirs under the terms of the willof former Mayor Henry Blair, who was mayorof Waukesha back in the 1920s.

Blair passed away in 1957 and left the 138-year-old Italianate-style Madison Street brickhome to the city, saying in his will that thecity couldn’t use it for commercial purposes,storage, a tool shed or warehouse. He alsosaid in the will that the city could sell theproperty, but it had to use the proceeds for a“civic purpose such as playgrounds, schools,parks or hospital work,” according to courtdocuments.

If the city violated the terms of the will, thehouse’s title was to be turned over to Mason-ic Lodge #37.

City Attorney Brian Running filed a

motion for summary judgment, asking thejudge to dispose of the lawsuit and treat itas a frivolous case. The Masons’ attorneyGene Johnson said he also discovered boththe parking lot and an addition to the city’sEngineering Department annex onDelafield Street are encroaching on theBlair property.

A couple offered to purchase the historicbuilding and turn it into Waukesha’s onlybed and breakfast, but the purchase is on holduntil the resolution of the suit.

The next hearing will be on Feb. 4.

— Freeman Staff

Freeman file photo

The Blair House, 434 Madison St.

WAUKESHA — State lawmakers with por-tions of their district in Waukesha Countyreceived an average of just over $5,500 in perdiem reimbursements in 2014, according toreports from the Senate and Assembly chiefclerks.

That number is slightly skewed by thecounty having districts that included thehighest and the lowest per diem amounts inthe state.

Former state Rep. Bill Kramer tied forthe fewest number of per diem daysclaimed in 2014 at 18, giving him a reim-bursement of $1,584. The Town of Wauke-sha Republican largely stopped legisla-tive activity after allegations surfacedthat he had groped someone on a trip toWashington D.C. early that year. He even-tually pleaded guilty to two counts offourth-degree sexual assault, which hecommitted in 2011. Kramer is currentlyserving five months in jail.

Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald,R-Juneau, meanwhile had the highest reim-bursement amount in the state at $14,168.His district covers the northwestern portionof the county. Fitzgerald claimed 161 daysspent in Madison.

State law allows lawmakers to claim a perdiem allowance for food and lodging expens-es for each day spent in Madison on legisla-tive business. For each day, members werereimbursed at $88.

Excluding Fitzgerald, who had 63 moredays than the next closest lawmaker, andKramer, the county’s lawmakers averaged62 days in Madison and were reimbursed anaverage of $5,230.

With the outliers still excluded, senatorsaveraged 58 days in Madison, while staterepresentatives averaged almost 64 days.

Rep. Joel Kleefisch, R-Town ofOconomowoc, had the most from the Assem-

bly at 98 days, while Sen. Paul Farrow, R-Pewaukee, was the top senator at 80 days.

The number of days decreased for mostlawmakers as 2014 was an election year com-pared to the budget year of 2013.

— Arthur Thomas, Freeman Staff

Area lawmakers on both endsof reimbursement spectrum

Lawmakers

REPS.Adam NeylonDavid CraigRob HuttonChris KapengaJoel KleefischDale KooyengaBill KramerMike KuglitschSteve NassDon PridemoreJoe SanfelippoDan Knodl

SENATORSAlberta DarlingPaul FarrowNeal KedzieMary LazichLeah VukmirScott Fitzgerald

Days

799337399858187396314653

4980664253161

Reimbursement ($)

6,9528,1843,2563,4328,6245,1041,5846,4247,2002,7282,0244,240

4,3127,0405,8083,6964,66414,168

Area lawmakers 2014 per diem reimbursementsState law allows lawmakers to receive $88 for eachday they spend in Madison on legislative business.

Source: Senate and Assembly Chief Clerks

Carroll demolition,construction to cause street, sidewalk closures

WAUKESHA — As Car-roll University continuesits demolition of MaxonHall, there will be period-ic lane and sidewalk clo-sures over the next twoweeks along CollegeAvenue, between BarstowStreet and the VoorheesHall parking lot entrance,the university announcedWednesday.

The closures will takeplace through Friday andagain from Monday toJan. 30 as crews connectwater and sewer pipes.Spokeswoman Tiffany Wynn said the closures are a necessary safety precaution duringthe demolition and the university appreciates the patience and understanding of resi-dents during the construction process.

— Freeman Staff

Charles Auer/Freeman Staff

Work continues Wednesday as crews demolish the former MaxonHall on the Carroll University campus to make room for a new sci-ence building.

MILWAUKEE — North-western Mutual announcednearly five dozen companieson Wednesday that had joinedthe design and constructionteam for the NorthwesternMutual Tower and Commons,a 32-story, 1.1 millions-square-foot development to be builtover the next three years nearMilwaukee’s lakefront.

Sandy Botcher, head ofNorthwestern Mutual’s down-town campus developmentproject, stressed the inclusionof various Milwaukee compa-nies on the list of new hires.

“From day one, we said weneeded the community andour fellow businesses, espe-cially local companies, to be apartner in this process,” saidBotcher.

Waukesha County firmsincluded in the released listwere:

From New Berlin: B&DContractors and UnitedStates Alliance Fire Protec-tion, Inc.;

From Waukesha: Boelter,LLC and JWC Building Spe-cialties, Inc.;

From Menomonee Falls:Choice Construction, Inc.,Con-Cor Company, DuewMetal Products, Inc., HurtElectric, Inc., LaForce, Inc.and Staff Electric Company,Inc.;

From Sussex: E.R. Aber-nathy Industrial, Inc. andTremmel Anderson Truck-ing, LLC.;

From Pewaukee: Hetzel-Sanfilippo, Inc. and KleinDickert Milwaukee, Inc.; fromBrookfield: Hiram Power

Electric, KMI Construction,LLC and PL Freeman Compa-ny, Inc.;

From Lannon: Rams Con-tracting Ltd.;

And from Oconomowoc:Valente Transport Inc. andVizcaino Trucking, Inc.

The new companies hiredto work on the NorthwesternMutual Tower and Commonswill perform jobs rangingfrom foundation, architectureand building automation, toplumbing, electrical andmechanical work.

Construction of the North-

western Mutual Tower andCommons is scheduled forcompletion by the end of 2017.The site is currently beingprepared for vertical con-struction that is expected tobegin in February, whencrews undertake a 24-hourconcrete pour, the largest con-tinuous pour conducted inthe state of Wisconsin.

Once completed, the projectis expected to preserve 1,100downtown jobs while adding1,900 new ones.www.NorthwesternMutual.com/

BuildingMKE

By Matt MastersonFreeman Staff

MADISON — Nearly three-quarters of constructionbusinesses statewideincreased their employeecount last year and compa-nies across the nation arepredicting 2015 to be one ofthe biggest years for growthin the field in nearly a decade.

The Associated GeneralContractors of Americareleased its 2015 Construc-tion Industry Hiring & Busi-ness Outlook on Wednesday,which shows most contrac-tors are optimistic about theyear ahead and are ready toexpand, but must find quali-fied workers to hire.

“Eighty percent of firmsreport plans to expand theirpayrolls in 2015 while only 7percent expect to reduce headcounts — a net positive of 73percent,” said Stephen Sand-herr, CEO of Associated Gen-eral Contractors of America,during a conference call withmedia Wednesday. “If thosepredictions come true, indus-try employment couldexpand in 2015 by the most ina decade.”

Total employment in con-struction businessesincreased by 290,000 workers,or nearly 5 percent, andinvestments in constructionrose by nearly 6 percent inthe first 11 months of 2014compared with the same peri-od in 2013, according to Sand-herr.

In Wisconsin, 91 percent of

the 22 companies in the statethat took part in the surveysaid they expect an increaseof between 1 and 25 percentin their head counts during2015.

Suzanne Kelley, presidentof the Waukesha CountyBusiness Alliance, said thosestats are consistent withwhat her organization hasbeen hearing locally.

“I sense a lot of optimismfor 2015,” she said. “Whenyou look at the survey andsome of the growth they areprojecting in manufacturingand health care and in thecommercial arena, I thinkpeople feel very good aboutthe upcoming year.”

Finding staff with the right stuff

While a predominantly pos-itive outlook is there, a size-able portion of companiesbelieve it will be a challengeto find the right workers.According to the survey, 86percent of businesses in Wis-consin reported having ahard time filling professionaland craft working positions.

And finding skilled andunskilled laborers is notexpected to get any easier anytime soon. A majority ofresponding companiesreported they do not foreseemuch of an improvement inhiring workers in 2015, as 90percent said they expect itwill continue to be hard, orbecome even harder, to findand hire skilled craft work-ers.

“Despite the overall opti-mism, some challengesremain for the industry,” saidKen Simonson, the AGC’schief economist. “In particu-lar, as construction firmscontinue to expand, they willcontinue to have a difficulttime finding enough skilledconstruction workers.”

Simonsen said 87 percent ofcontacted companies nation-wide are having a tough timefilling key professional andcraft worker positions. Threequarters of the firms that arehiring report having troublefinding qualified craft work-ers, while 62 percent say thesame about professional posi-tions such as project man-agers, supervisors and esti-mators.

Compensation levels, how-ever, appear to be rising andmost businesses expect todole out more health care in2015.

AGC members and officialsplan to continue pushing foraction on the measures out-lined in their WorkforceDevelopment Plan and lookto lobby President BarackObama’s administration torethink its current regulato-ry approach.

“With a little luck and a lotof effort, we will make surethe construction industryhas the support it needs tocontinue expanding in 2015and beyond,” Sandherr said.

The Outlook was based onsurvey results from over 900construction firms from 48states and the District ofColumbia.

www.agc.orgwww.waukesha.org

Email: [email protected]

Frontier to lay off 138 in Milwaukee

WAUKESHA — FrontierAirlines will lay off 138employees from its Milwau-kee operations starting inMarch. The company recent-ly notified the state Depart-ment of Workforce Develop-ment of the decision asrequired by law.

The positions are in thecompany’s reservationdepartment and the entireunit is expected to be elimi-nated eventually, accordingto a letter from Frontier VicePresident for HumanResources and Labor rela-tions Jacalyn Peter to theDWD.

The decision will impactreservation agents, work-force analysts, specialty trav-el and travel desk agents andsupervisors.

A Frontier Airlines busi-ness partner will take overreservations work May 31,Peter said.

www.flyfrontier.comwww.dwd.wisconsin.com

Midwest Healthcarecompanies raise $1.8 billion in 2014

WAUKESHA — MidwestHealthcare companiesattracted $1.8 billion in newinvestments across 243 com-panies in 2014, according tothe BioEnterprise MidwestHealthcare Growth CapitalReport.

The totals are the highestrecorded in both dollars andnumber of companies fund-

ed since BioEnterprisebegan filing the report in2005, surpassing the banner2007 by 46 percent and 2013by 135 percent.

The largest reported Mid-west deal occurred in Wis-consin, where Shine MedicalTechnologies, a biotech com-pany, raised $125 million.

To view additional dataabout Midwest Healthcarebusiness activity, visithttp://www.bioenterprise.com/reports.

New RE/MAX officeopens in Muskego

MUSKEGO — RE/MAXbroker and owners RenoBerg and John Jewell areopening a new office at South75 West 17237 JanesvilleRoad in Muskego, just threemonths after convertingtheir real estate business toRE/MAX Legacy.

The new franchise willserve clients in the south-western region of the Mil-waukee metropolitan area.Itwill specialize in residentialand commercial real estate,new construction, landdevelopment, investmentproperty and short sales.

The 1,400 square foot officewill employ a total of sevenagents and staff, with poten-tial for new recruitments in2015. Agents operating out ofthe new office includeCatherine Kierzek, DarrenHojnacki, Dan Warwick andCarrie Lemke.

Berg and Jewell togetherbring nearly 40 years of com-bined realty experience to

their new office. www.soldsignblog.com

R.A. Smith National welcomes ecologist,project manager

BROOKFIELD – TheranStautz is the newest ecologist

and projectmanager atR.A. SmithNational, aB ro o k f i e l d -based multi-d i s c i p l i n e dcivil engineer-ing and sur-veying firm.

Stautz is one of only nineAssured Wetland Delin-eators with the WisconsinDepartment of NaturalResources. He has morethan 10 years of wetlandand forest resource experi-ence in the Great Lakesand southeast regions ofthe United States as a wet-land ecologist.

Additionally, Stautz hasexperience in vegetation sur-veys and inventories, wet-land mitigation monitoring,native habitat restoration,invasive species manage-ment and prescribed burnactivities. He has workedwith local, state and federalclients, including the U.S.Forest Service and Depart-ment of Defense.

Stautz holds a bachelor’sdegree in natural resourcesin forest science and recre-ational resources manage-ment from the University ofWisconsin-Madison.

www.rasmithnational.com

Stautz

BUSINESSThe FREEMAN THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • 5A

Dilbert

COMMODITIES

METALS

LIVESTOCK/FOODS

GRAINS

THE MARKET IN REVIEW

NYSE10,720.40 +61.78

NASDAQ4,667.42 +12.57

S&P 5002,032.12 +9.57

Stock Footnotes: n = New in past 52 weeks. rs = Stock hasundergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within thepast year.s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the lastyear. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

DAILY DOW JONES

uu uu uu

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Ex Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg

AT&T Inc NY 1.88 5.5 10 34.00 +.05 +1.2

Actuant NY .04 .2 12 23.61 +.63 -13.3

BP PLC NY 2.40 6.2 6 38.82 +1.13 +1.8

Bemis NY 1.08 2.4 25 45.21 +.06 0.0

BrigStrat NY .50 2.7 23 18.77 +.48 -8.1

Chevron NY 4.28 4.0 10 108.16 +1.69 -3.6

Citigroup NY .04 .1 22 47.74 +.48 -11.8

CocaCola NY 1.22 2.8 23 43.36 +.20 +2.7

ColgPalm NY 1.44 2.1 30 68.35 -.25 -1.2

ConocoPhil NY 2.92 4.5 11 64.54 +1.35 -6.5

Disney NY 1.15 1.2 22 94.17 -.57 0.0

ExxonMbl NY 2.76 3.0 12 91.87 +.78 -.6

Fiserv Nasd ... ... 23 72.42 -.74 +2.0

FordM NY .60 4.0 10 14.97 -.04 -3.4

Generac NY ... ... 18 45.60 +.03 -2.5

GenElec NY .92 3.8 17 24.04 +.19 -4.9

HarleyD NY 1.10 1.7 17 64.01 +.65 -2.9

HomeDp NY 1.88 1.8 24 103.53 +.28 -1.4

IBM NY 4.40 2.9 13 152.09 -4.86 -5.2

JohnJn NY 2.80 2.7 18 101.90 +.61 -2.6

JohnsnCtl NY 1.04 2.3 25 45.85 +.61 -5.2

JoyGlbl NY .80 1.9 13 43.09 +.56 -7.4

KimbClk NY 3.36 2.9 21 117.59 +.06 +1.8

Kohls NY 1.56 2.7 15 58.66 +.30 -3.9

Koss h Nasd ... ... ... 1.95 -.18 +11.4

Magnetek Nasd ... ... 20 41.39 +.37 +1.8

ManpwrGp NY .98 1.5 13 67.42 +1.82 -1.1

Marcus NY .38 2.1 19 18.51 -.18 0.0

Microsoft Nasd 1.24 2.7 18 45.92 -.47 -1.1

Modine NY ... ... 5 12.71 -.04 -6.5

OshkoshCp NY .68 1.7 11 40.21 +.17 -17.3

RockwlAut NY 2.60 2.4 18 106.39 +.94 -4.3

RoyDShllA NY 3.76 5.7 13 65.62 +1.03 -2.0

SPX Cp NY 1.50 1.8 17 83.68 +1.95 -2.6

SmithAO NY .60 1.1 25 54.62 +.11 -3.2

SnapOn NY 2.12 1.6 20 133.80 +1.05 -2.2

Target NY 2.08 2.8 31 73.95 +.28 -2.6

3M Co NY 4.10 2.5 22 162.54 +.60 -1.1

Toyota NY ... ... ... 128.66 -.50 +2.5

WalMart NY 1.92 2.2 18 86.64 -.05 +.9

WiscEngy NY 1.69 3.0 21 56.45 +.69 +7.0

SILVER5,000 troy oz.- cents per troy oz.Jan 15 1826.0 1796.0 1817.9 +23.2

CATTLE40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Feb 15 154.15 152.27 153.70 +.65FEEDER CATTLE50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.Jan 15 216.00 213.30 215.70 +1.23

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl.Mar 15 48.20 46.55 47.78 +1.31NATURAL GAS10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btuFeb 15 3.925 2.867 2.974 +.143

GOLD100 troy oz.- dollars per troy oz.Jan 15 1303.50 1286.70 1293.70 -.50

SOYBEAN OIL60,000 lbs- cents per lbMar 15 33.15 32.33 32.41 -.43

CORN5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 15 392.50 386.25 388 -2.25

ROUGH RICE2,000 CWT- dollars per CWTMar 15 11.390 11.290 11.370 +.105

OATS5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 15 291.50 289.25 290.75 +.50

SOYBEANS5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 15 991 977.50 983.50 +1.50

SOYBEAN MEAL100 tons- dollars per tonMar 15 331.60 326.20 330.50 +4.00

WHEAT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelMar 15 544.50 535.50 536.75 -.25

High Low Close Chg.

High Low Close Chg.

FUELSHigh Low Close Chg.

High Low Close Chg.

16,000

16,500

17,000

17,500

18,000

18,500

J JA S O N D

17,240

17,600

17,960 Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,554.28Change: 39.05 (0.2%)

10 DAYS

4,200

4,400

4,600

4,800

5,000

J JA S O N D

4,560

4,660

4,760 Nasdaq compositeClose: 4,667.42Change: 12.57 (0.3%)

10 DAYS

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

IN BRIEF

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IRA ROLLOVER RULES EXPLAINEDThe Internal Revenue Service does not always offer the clearestexplanations. The first set of rules about IRA rollovers were so fuzzy thatthe changes were put off until this January 1.

Understand that in a true rollover, the money is transferred directly tothe owner, who then has 60 days to put it into another IRA or have topay taxes—and maybe a penalty—on the money. (And the IRS is sticky;being even one day late can cost taxes and penalties.) Originally, onecould roll over each IRA once a year, no matter how many IRAs onehad. No more. Now, an IRA owner can do just one rollover in a 12-month period, period.

What hasn’t changed, though, is the trustee-to-trustee transfer, in whichthe owner never actually touches the money. There are no limits on howmany such transfers can be made. Many financial experts consider suchtransfers much safer, feeling that it can be dangerous to treat IRAs as asource of short-term loans.

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Favre to star in Super Bowl ad

Wisconsin construction eyeing big year in 2015

Survey: 91 percent of businessesexpect to increase staff size

Northwestern Mutual adds contractorsfor downtown tower project

MILWAUKEE — Former Packers quar-terback Brett Favre will be one of fiveretired NFL players starring in Wix.com’sad during the upcoming Super Bowl onFeb. 1.

The ad, part of Wix’s #ItsThatEasy cam-paign, features each ex-player openingtheir own unique business that has anactual website and a comprehensive socialmedia presence.

Favre’s imagined small business is Favre

and Carve, a “charcuterie for Cheese-heads.”

Favre and Carve is hosting the “SayCharcuterie Challenge,” in which peoplecan video themselves pronouncing charcu-terie, upload it to social media, and winprizes such as an autographed Brett Favrejersey and football. This contest ends today.

www.Wix.com

— Special to The Freeman

Submitted photo

All SaintsCorporation, Knightsof Columbus,Council 4240

Drs. Mark & CynthiaBauer

Dan BiersackNancy BiersackJames DowlingJanice DowlingRosemary McCarthyBill HoppePeggy HoppeMichael SweetGail Grenier SweetPatricia PayleitnerArcario BlancoMichael PrebilicDan, Diane & Max

CarstensThomas Bruders, Sr.Mary BrudersJulie BrudersThomas Bruders, Jr.Elinor BrudersTimothy BrudersJane BrudersPatrice BrudersMary (Bruders) BaxaMichael BaxaElizabeth MezeraLarry A. LeschCarol G. LeschJeannine PragerJoan ReddinRalph E. BittersDorothy M. BittersIrene ScheyMary Bell MuellerMary Ellen HinkensHarold HinkensJohn & Pat CelekAllen NitzBonnie NitzJoe NitzRobert JaworskiJulianne JaworskiIn Memory of Helen

WalczakPatty McHughCarl & Karen MillardThomas MillardLaura MillardAdam J. HartungFrank JelenNancy JelenDave & Nancy

SchwanzCaitlin SchwanzRachel SchwanzMark W. StegerJohn & Mary PiresSt. James

Congregation,Menomonee Falls

Gordon BoucherBernice BoucherDr. William LuckeyJeanette LuckeyFlorence HahnRobert LuckeyJackie VitucciFrank Vitucci, Jr.Mary HansonJames HansonMarianne HartounianAldo BonfiglioAngela BonfiglioLucio BonfiglioNancy BonfiglioVictoria Boucher

Marissa BoucherKristen BoucherJill BoucherMark AntczakCarol AntczakJames VitucciDan AbezetianDeneen AbezetianMark BraatenKathy BraatenMaddy BraatenRose Marie BrierDon BrierDonna CariniDominic CariniDottie FiestDennis FiestMelody GenslerRobert GenslerKim HeyenJack HollensteinSue HollensteinJennie CaglePam BredenKean KemnitzSue KemnitzJeff LandisGreta LandisPat MyersJae MyersKelly MarinoChuck OlsenSophia PartipiloLouise PlattoJack RampollaPeter RoehlChuck StanelleGreg StehlingMichael SchinzerTony SerioTim TownsendTed TorciviaLarry WadeTom BeckerHayde BeckerKelly Becker-Van

HovelnChris BeckerErica BeckerLisa BeckerThomas CarpentierRose CarpentierRyan CarpentierMelanie MankeTom SchoenauerCarolyn SchoenauerArnold KesslerMarilyn KesslerRichard C. ZirbelJudith A. ZirbelJames RouillerMadonna RouillerEdward E. SchlumpfMary W. SchlumpfThomas

KutschenreuterLois KutschenreuterHelen N.Barbara N.Carol N.Mary K.Millie D.From St. Luke’s

Parish:Mary StengelElizabeth McMullenJan & JoeBoberschmidtGloria SmithOlivia ConradKen & Carole Guran

Joe McGavockEvelyn GoretskeThad GroszczykLaura GirgaMike & CarolKennedyJohn & Chris Kluth Sandy Wilde Josephine WinterRosemary SottillieBeatrice AlexanderRose Marie BochatRose & FredBrandenburg

Phil & Diane BeltranNancy A. PetersenJanet V. BeltonAnna Mae HurleyConnie HurleyPronleyEd HurleyMary Ellen EderDick & KellyBeckmannJulie BeckmannAnn WaddellSandra NickelSteven NickelKathleen ZarlingWilbur HaseWilbur Hase, Jr.Jolene HaseTess CrossmanShyann MarquardtCarol JohnsBill JohnsDon WildeGeorge & BetsyLubeleyAnn BlewettGloria TimmerBela & Mary PiacsekBea PronleyDoroty GoerkeSally R. ChristianMary Jo KirchoffMichael P. JohnsonAnita WeierGary & MaxineDrinanBernice BerthJoanne AndersonMary MeyerBarbara LucasArlene WilsonJames M. GarvensRob & ChrisSchneider Family

Washington SantosLaura & Robert BairdRoger JossartRobert JacobColleen HagenRobin LaRoseAmy & ClaudeKlemowits

Melania KlemowitsSusan SchmidtJim & Nancy RusnakFrom Christ Lutheran

Church:Bonnie FrederickRon FrederickCarole HahlThomas HahlHarold ArnesonPaulette ArnesonShirley HildenMarge HooverTed OertelDeb Oertel

Debbie KruegerBill KruegerRoger SeefeldtKen KuchitaKathy GatesLarry GatesRamona MorehouseRobert TiebergDonna L. YaegerKenneth L. YaegerKurt Philip YaegerTricia YaegerJulie YaegerJennifer BeranekTom BeranekJudith DoravaDiane M. PeasePat & Judy HoganWayne HawsKaila PhillipsRandy PhillipsJeff JohnsonNatalie JohnsonBev & Ed BuergerAlan J. RennerJames R. BurrieMary Ann BurrieDr. Walter LehrerCelia Lehrer LawrenceBob & Rita LorenzDarrell & Sally FoellKurt & Kim SchneiderDave & Sue CyraIn Memory of

Dr. Thomas SmithKaren & Gary PankaCaroline O’ReillyTheresa A. SingerJohn T. SingerMaria LechnerJoan HemauerCharles HemauerDick HemauerCindy HarlfingerDebby PetersonBarb MudrockMike HemauerPat HemauerLori HemauerMary Jo DampeckJudith Hyde KriegerDiane A. BillburgNorbert UeckerDorothy DaganhardtJoyce VolkmannGlenn VolkmannGary M. HoffBernice C. MaertzBill PanaroCarole PanaroSid EarsleyKathy EarsleyMeg EarsleyMargaret EarsleyKris LabottGrace WaiteJessi HoganLorraine T. JanzerCarl WolffCarla WolffStephanie WolffDan WolffDebra BalistreriToni MemmelCarol KennedyJohn KennedyLiz KennedyChristine Kennedy

KortesKathleen Hoffman

Brett HoffmanColleen Kennedy

PrivideraMark PrivideraIsabella Kennedy

KortesEmma Kennedy

KortesJustin PrivideraJoseph & Marilyn

HuberJean P. ZippererDaniel SydlewskiJudith SydlewskiJay & Kiara MackLinda HuebnerJanice F. GregoireDennis GreenwoodDiane GreenwoodDarla EnrightDon EnrightWilliam J. BuggyJacqueline BuggyMary K. CareyAsche CareyDori VanderkelenKaren KabacinskiRick CareyFrom St. Joseph’s

Parish, Waukesha:Elaine Roman Don Roman Steve Roman Sue Van Abel Jim & Beth Norgord Cathy Muehlbauer Dick MuehlbauerTony Tomaz Jane TomazNicole MillerTaylor MillerJan StubbsBruno JohnSandy LefebvrePhil LefebvreDavid IsnardDianne IsnardDon & Mary Alice

FlatenLorraine StorckMary SkougFrank AlbanoNimfa AlbanoJoan StaubJohn KosankeBill & Linda HausserKathy ArquetteDennis ArquetteCarol SchuellerThomas SchuellerVicky MedinaRoseann WestphalRoland & Waverly

SternsBarbara WalkVernon PillsburyMarianne LenhardtIrene BurrCharles J. WaldvogelLynne EngstromRick & Barb SimonsLen & Judy DacquistoAdeline MlodzikMerlin & Rosemary

NaderKaren LarsonRick & Chris Lufter

& FamilyDiane Lufter &

Jordan GomezRay & Rita Feldmeier

Jo CamachoJim DesseckerMichael & Jean

BanasiakMr/Mrs Eugene

CiechanowskiRichard J. StruckArlene Sesing Carla RiederMaria FrickerMichael SchmitzJanice BrooksTom Van HandelDon MarsicekMarybeth MarsicekKen BillburgTherese BillburgAlyssa KittlesonMyles KittlesonAlex BillburgCassandra BillburgChristy BillburgKeith BillburgCathy MarsicekSue PeckTodd PeckNatalie PeckCelia PeckSteven ScheuingCindy ScheuingMae ScheuingRuby Beth ScheuingJane Eve ScheuingRick MarsicekJulie MarsicekFaith MarsicekAmelia MarsicekLucy MarsicekDave MarsicekTeri MarsicekStephen MarsicekMary SchweitzerJackie KarthBob KarthRose ManeyDon KanterMary Ann KanterKyle SchweitzerJoan Kennedy Patty GorskiKathy StollenwerkPhil StollenwerkBernie CleppeKaren CleppePam KnackertMilissa LefebvreDan LefebvreMegan LefebvreEmily LefebvreAnn StrakulskiPhilip HesselbeinBarbara HesselbeinNina Mazza CorraoPat SchroeckenthalerBob & Nadeane

SemrowAlice ThomasRandy & Vicky AlfAnn KloppShawn LangSandra SummerfieldPatrick HollowayHarder FamilyFrom Hillside

Community Church:Chris & Carol GeddeTherese & Dean

CarterMichael & Judy

BonvilleNick SyversonDoug & Sheila

NielsonMike, Jill, Amanda,

Bekah, David, Kayla& Abbie Hassi

Chris & CindyWendlandt

Cherry & PatrickKaboskey

Kathleen WalshTavulares

John & NadineMovrich

Sherry Drinkwine-Letteny

Pat & Brenda RicklefsAaron & Rachel

RicklefsWilliam & Kim

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HoneyagerCarol A. HoneyagerSarayah K.

HoneyagerKaitlin A. HoneyagerNathan C. HoneyagerLauren LopezMary LopezAnne LopezKathryn A. GotthardtJohn & Mary PandlCharles D. WieberPatricia MillerThomas MillerFrom Holy Apostles

Parish:Barbara CameronGerald Hawley

Karen JurekMary ZacherBrian LawtonChristy MillerMegan MillerAmanda MillerKaren DeQuardoLorraine ClareyRandy NorthLynn NorthKyle PionekLaura PionekNed HovieMike & Mary ManeyMargaret GrandelisBrian JalasKathy StokesTim Jaeger & FamilyValerie ForretKathleen HarrisCollee HiderMary Lu WeigelJames WeigelLynn JohnsonRuth RaderSue UnruhJoe DorlachRobert, Sue, Michael

KernAttorney Christopher

CarsonTom BergenEd RivardDave & Linda

HolzingerJesse MelloDolores SlanePaul & Molly Mikna &

FamilyCheryl SobczakPaul SobczakMary Ann SarsfieldMary JekaRoger UhrmanGiricz FamilyNorm & Carlene

HeidemannChmielewski, Mike &

MaryCraig & Mary TobinBernice B.

PodlaszewskiRalph HeunGloria HeunMary KarrakerWallace KarrakerRebecca ToledoJose Oscar ToledoVictoria ToledoIsabella ToledoKathleen WalterLori MurphyJerry MurphyD.F. Balshunas*Dennis K. SageMary P. SageJoseph SageMiles & Kathy VilskiMr. & Mrs. James

HornakJason & Pam ScaffidiJoe ScaffidiTony ScaffidiWilliam RobbSherryl RobbJason RobbRay WestBarbara WestLuke BrayerAndrew BrayerAnnabel BrayerTimmy BrayerChristian BrayerJustin BrayerDiane BuchholzFred BuchholzBob NolanKelli OwenSue FirkusKathy & Rich

StopczynskiVickie ByrneColleen & Tom FoleyJim & Michelle GrossKeith R. BerndtChristine & John

ConsigleroDonna BarnesAndrew BrayerJohn DaltonTheresa DaltonTim DaltonJudy DaltonKim & Mary IrelandGene BalcerzakDianna LassaNorman LassaDonna TadychMatt TadychLaVerne & Roger

LaurDon & Marie MoranMarie BenzLeila RouseLeola StrauseLewis StrauseRenee GratzMichael GratzBill & Pat SommersTravis & Kelly BrabecDick & Kay MeyerringNancy & Richard

RankDoreen ReynoldsHenry ReynoldsVirginia TemplinJohn TemplinRobert & Rosie

SmockeKatie KlameckiAnn & Bernie

Klamecki

Rachel MuckJan Fredrickson Dominic SundararajanMark SchmalzSusan SchmalzTom & Vicki

GerstbreinBill & Beth KernTom & Pegg YttreEd & Carleen

EricksenJames MittelbrunMartin ToledoTed & Pat BannantineNancy MachnikDennis MachnikJim & Sue

AschenbrennerRobert GroschRon KroepflGerri KroepflJudy & Joe MulqueenJeffrey RobbNaomi HawthorneLucy WichtoskiAlan WichtoskiJohn ShebestaJerry & Libby MuellerMaryann & Bob

Hollenboch*Susan DellaBob & JoAnn NadeauLisa AbbottBarbara KronenwetterCharles KronenwetterDonna RivardDavid HerrmannSteve ErdmannAnne RieckhoffScott RieckhoffJanet ZeierFrom St. William’s

Parish:Virginia KulinskiGeralyn KulinskiTom DoughertyMari DoughertyThe StockfischesSharon WieserMary AntunesDawn MaddisonLiz RamboCraig RamboDebbie RamboPJ & Ruth Anne

WhiteAnn FincutterThe WorzallasPat WaltersAngela WaltersNoah WaltersCaleb WaltersEli WaltersSimon WaltersJonah WaltersLevi WaltersRon WaltersMarge WaltersTodd PlierAnn PlierTom ShekletonPaul DahmsMary Jo DahmsJohn SchraufnagelThe Gabe Szecsy

FamilyCarl PalzkillPeggy McCarthyMike McCarthyVertz FamilyDeacon John & Eva

LibeckiAudrey LiesenfelderMick McGuireJim & Mireya

Floryance & FamilyGene & Clarice

GerbasiJudy HankelLinda RemmWilliam J. RemmSharon OhlisCarol ReskeMark ReskeMary ReskeSteve ReskeAndrew ReskeVeronica ReskeCatherine ReskeJoellyn MarksJosh MarksJim HemmensHenry DussJoyce DussTom GallKathy GallReg & Jeanne

NettesheimFrom Blessed Terese

Parish:Don BethkeRick BethkeTerry & Marilyn

CollinsDorothy CullJo Anne CullEarl CullDawn CullSarah CullClint CullBridget CullDebra CullDon CullWilliam CullPatricia CullDebra CzaplewskiAudrey CzaplewskiMary DegenhardtJames DegenhardtGene & Judy FormoloLouis & June

Frankulin

WWW.GMTODAY.COM6A • THE FREEMAN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015

UNBORN BABIES FEEL PAIN.

We, the undersigned, believe there are positive solutions to abortion.Join us as we promote respect for all persons ... born and unborn!

When abortionwas legalized in1973, there wasno Internet, no flat

screen TVs, digitaldownloads or cell

phones.

Not much was knownabout the baby in the

mother’s womb.

But now, mounting scientificevidence shows us that unbornbabies feel pain at least five (5)

months after fertilization,if not earlier!

Todd & ReneeGehring

Diane GilbertsonDaniel J. HanrahanBarbara HaslerRalph HaslerSandi HoraKathy KaiserCarol KawleskiTom KingJoan KingRalph & Theresa

KloehnJim KrauseCheryl KrauseRich & Nancy

KreuserMark LeidelLynn LeidelRita LundKent L. MaltbyLinda Lou MaltbyCharlotte ObermayrMichael & Debbie

O’DriscollDon OrthSharon OrthCornel RosarioKathy RosarioRoberta SchaeferMatt SchaeferJean SchlidtFrank SchmitzMary SchultzMike SchultzJohn & Lynn SolwoldFr. William StanfieldBrian StippichLinnette SukupAndrew SukupSharon L. TobolskiJuiette Welch*Vivianne WhitcombSteve WhitcombBeverly J. KuntzschDorothy Kemp &

FamilyMaria NeddersenRobert NeddersenSusan M. MarksRichard & Kristine

HeinrichDavid & Ann HeinrichPeter & Chelsea

HeinrichTom HeinrichFrom Bethlehem

Lutheran Church:Jeff RoseRuth RoseBonnie CamplinDon CamplinTim HoltKim HoltDarlene StuempgesPastor Allen BehnkeBarb BehnkeChristy BehnkePat EngenDave EngenFrom Kettle Moraine

Knights ofColumbus:

Joe & Dorothy BeckerJoe HaizelDaniel ZachariasKaren & Dale SitekKirsten & Marshall

SenflebenSam VallonePat & Gene GrossLynn & Carl

LimbergerDon SchoenhaarJim SchoenhaarStan WiliszewskiPatrick JacunskiSue JacunskiAJ JacunskiPJ JacunskiKatherine JacunskiNicole JacometLucus JacometChris WilliamsLinda & Bob RohdeMark BeckerRonald J. WerowinskiBob BoehlerRuss HeinritzGina HeinritzJoelle HeinritzJosie TarantinoFrom St. Charles

Parish:Ed & Kelly McAleer /

Kelly BradfordKaren MaurerStephen MaurerJenna MaurerEd & Jeanine MalyAnn LorenzEmma ClawsonTravis GilleJennifer GilleMary Charles*Anthony BerndtKathie HenkelJack HenkelMark & Camilla CaneLen & Sue NowakNick & Terry

ManriquezKay StuerDorothy BrauerJim & Shirley KlauserGary FischerClaudia MillotJo MillotEd LumpKaren & Dale SitekKris & Shelley SchultzMary Judge

John & PeggyShanabarger

Paula PostBrian PostDevin PostAaron PostLauren ClawsonRobb ClawsonMegan GilleMatthew GilleDavid VogtGina VogtMargaret AndrewsDana AndrewsJudy KlinkMeg HenkeMark HenkeCindy DeCleenePatrick DeCleeneSusan & Gary

ZimmermanDan & Sue Van

SistineBob & Margaret

KurkiewiczMike & Ann KrollMary Pat MeierCurtis BlakewayLance KerwinMary H. BrunnerErin K. BrunnerBrian A. BrunnerMary HaukeDiane GaberinoCourtney GaberinoMary ShanabargerZach WaltzMary KlattMichelle HeinJim HeinAngela HeinDiane FlemingMike FlemingMark UbertJohn GroganAnne GroganDianne BayMaria BayWilliam BayMatthew BayJoseph BayJohn CourchaineAnn CourchaineArlene CondonMark CondonThomas Taugher &

FamilyJanine StolpaJoy HobertAnn UbertMichael SchulzeKimberly SchulzeDaniel MeindlMichelle BrummMichaeleen HincaTom HincaJohn JensenKathy JensenSusan SwitalskiLiliana HincaReggie JacoboskyMatthew GaberinoBecky StolpaColleen PedersenKaren WaltzStefanie HettRose FrohnaPatricia OlsonFred & Rosemary

JeskoSusan M. ThiedeRon ThiedeShirley LamerandRoseann CarollKathy NawrockiMary Beth TrentadueJoe JaskolskiJulie JaskolskiKathy GillstromJeff BellCarol BellChristine KlingseisenJean HilgerLisa ScherrerJoan KobbRachel ShanabargerFather Ken OmernickChristopher NovakJoe BraunSarah OlsonMargie CarmichaelE. Nancy EberhardyJackie EndterPeggy BurrusChristine McGilvraMaria TrentadueAnn KrollKevin & Bridget

GaughanSendi OotonAustin BoeslDiane SleaperDavid & Julie

Biesanski & FamilyTom & Peg Renz &

FamilyChristopher FarrisLori FarrisRyanne FarrisThomas P. ShannonKaren & Mike

BorchardtJulie KirbyGregory KirbyMary BrauerPaul A. AkreCecilia A. JohnsonPat BuzzellDenise FischerJennifer ReichTom Harter & FamilyLee Kempen

Merry KempenJulie HeyrmanBrian & Ann Kohr

FamilyTom HeyrmanChristopher

OstromeckiElzbieta OstromeckiHalina KraszewskaMaripat DalumTom DalumNick HirschLori StortzRon StortzNick StortzAlex StortzChayse FarrisMeghan ShannonKerry ShannonJudy HorwatichMichelle BronstedMary LestinaChris & Cliff SprungTom & Helen

KroeningJerry & Virginia

JohnsonJohn & Alicia Van

Hecke & FamilyJoe & Julie Malucha

& FamilyJack & Betty SindorfFrank & Judy RamlowRoy & Ruth Ann

HackbartKay A. MoenKatie FeeneyJohn FeeneyRuth ChadwickPaul ChadwickRich NickelAmy NickelAbby BoeslAJ BoeslGabbi GilletteRebecca FormellaAndrew FormellaCarol BetzholdDale BetzholdDick JacunskiAlex & Katherine

JacunskiSue & Pat JacunskiNicole JacometLucas JacometNancy NeuserSteven ReichLindsay ShermanJeanne ShermanKavan ShermanRuth MeindlEmil MeindlKristine RoznowskiJill BoeslTroy BoeslJim & Sharon CullDoris SenglaubTy RoznowskiAnna GilleSara GilleAllie FarrisKaren A. PhilleoTom O’BrienDeborah L. LancourPam & John

CharlestonJoyce PetersdorffRita SchroederIvy BauerAnn ShanabargerMarie AkreKrista DittrichRalph C. BuzzellPatrick BurnsGregg BrunolikJoAnn TheeringerKevin BayMichael BayMr. & Mrs. Tom WirtzSara WirtzSusan WirtzJane WirtzLucy WirtzMax WirtzJanie StreffCraig StreffKeith & Denise

JohnsonTom & Nancy MrozDavid & Kate KaiserThe Davidson FamilyKeith & Michele

CampbellArnie & Therese

CampbellMichael S. KaminskiVincenca S. KaminskiConrad M. KaminskiMary E. MalloyFrom Oakwood

Church:Carol LaCasseTerry LaCasseRoseann DonahueLaura OttuschLinda KosekHarry KosekMel YenterConnie HaynesRoger EllisBecci TerrillElizabeth ColeBonnie RomanowichNellita LeePeter LeeLee FamilyJerry & Pat GorskiThomas & Marlene

FreckmanFrom Christ the Life

Lutheran Church:Jared Coonen

Deb CoonenTim CoonenErin CoonenLinsey CoonenMichael FigueiraEllen FigueiraJeraldine DobbsRebecca FeltzGreg SlaterJoan SlaterNancy SchultzRichard SchultzKaren WorgullJeff WorgullFrank JanssenChristine JanssenNoah JanssenRebekah JanssenSamuel JanssenJulia JanssenBetty PalmerGerhard PalmerTed HikadeConnie HikadeSteven HarrisonSarah HarrisonTed Hikade Sr.Stephanie HikadeCraig HikadeGrace MichowKathy WendtDebi OblamskiRick OblamskiRev. Timmothy HeathSusanne HeathMichael FeltzTom CrowleyKerry CrowleyMatt SchmidtAmber HawkinsonJoanne FieldJoel EnglishDebbie EnglishElaine HillsNoel & Tim AicherFrom Queen of

Apostles Parish:Ann & Mike

HeckenkampDick & Rita MichaletzDonna ArmstrongGreg BrostowitzJill BrostowitzJohn Paul BrostowitzVictoria BrostowitzElizabeth BrostowitzJessica MerkelClemie MerkelBob & Gina SchwisterKen & Donna Mae

ZandtMonica R. DailyMarion EisenmanShirley RogahnJim RischerBill & MaryAnn EderJohn & Nancy

CiancioloDan & Carla ZimmerThe McCourt FamilyAnna PitzoCarol HochJim HochWilliam J. WoolleyKathleen LaetschClaire & Jim SchultzMarna & Larry

OlenchekTom NettesheimJudy HuschkaPete, Clare & Steve

WalchliFran Bolan FamilyFrank & Joanne

PantusMaureen WursterPaul & Julie FarrellHenry & Kathie

SteareJim & Faye SheehanBob & Betty MeyerTony & Theresa JaceDavid & Becky

NieblerJudy NauertEmily TobyBayan TobyEvelyn TobyEllory TobyMark TobyMichele TobyKevan TobyAndrew TobyKristine SchroederKaren SchroederJack & Nancy KoeppRay & Kay ThibaultJeff & Melissa

EngaldoDylan & Lauren

EngaldoMrs. Nona ToddDaniel T. O’ConnorBernd DavidsonBernadine DavidsonBarbara PassanteClare PfeiferJack PfeiferBill & Mary Ann EderMaria HughesAl HerinkKay EngmanJan VeronaTodd ClareyJessica MerkelJohn & Lyn SpitzAdam SpitzKatherine SpitzFrank SoyaFrancin SoyaEd & Donna

Pulvermacher

Dave & Jean DunkerJohn & Jane LoseeMary KestellAnne I. MannGeri ToshnerLinda Kroll & Ron

KrollMary Weber & Steve

WeberBob Eales FamilyLarry Wehrheim

FamilyMary Ann MohrDorothy DuchowKathy EvertBarb StarFrom St. Paul’s Parish

- Genesee Depot:John & Susan

ZewiskeBeth WestlundRon TryczynskiKathy WolfMichael WolfLinda BautzNicholas BautzHelen Hogan & Rick

HoganMike ZignegoAl SchimpfJim WinieckiEleanore GreskDuane & Lillian MillerMike & Jeanne ErtlKaren GrandeJim GrandeKerry GrandeMarilyn JablonskiDean JablonskiDoug & Connie

EmeneckerKaren FarrellCathy Treutelaar &

Dave TreutelaarKaren ShadleyPeter & Kathy DuffekDouglas BatzlerJoan PoehneltJerry PoehneltNancy MarshGreg & Cathy BolinBarb & Ron BishopGene & Marion

Hessen FamilyRoger & Linda VarnerJeff & Ann KrumrichCindy L. FrechetteBryan & Pat PopowskiWayne & Kathy LoisJim & Marcy DunlapPeter, Bety, Tyler &

Dustin McFadzenBarb KrumraiRobert & Mary GrallSteve & Ruth PalzkillLarry & Jennifer

GeislerRobert & Vera

SwitalskiGary & Gail NoelJames B. HotzTim HeikkinenJohn P. Isely, Jr.Mary Jo IselyArt & Kathy ScheuberGrant & Nancy

BastianTeresa JonesVictor JonesFaustina JonesIeva NeimantaitePeggie SmithCindy BeauchampDarrell BeauchampAnna BeauchampMary BeauchampJohn BeauchampJanet ShanahanJohn LammersMary Kay LammersMichelle Lammers

BreiderMike BreiderPaul LammersMichelle Gottschalk

LammersBetty PechaBob & Margaret

SchumannSue RasmussenDave RasmussenFather Ralph GrossMary Frances LinzerGary & Dianne

KruegerJohn & Annette

MorgenKathy PierceMike O’LearyJ D *Jeff KarasLarry GeislerMargot SchumacherTim & Mary AltersLarry & JoAnn PrestaBonnie & Bob

SchaeferTom & Amy McGuineMary KralTerri TraftonDawn SarandosFrom St. Anthony on

the Lake:Deacon Dennis &

Mary PetrieFr. Paul HartmannFred WeberMatt WeberJoy WeberBrittany WeberAshley WeberAllison Tippeny

James CoughlinDeacon Mike & Sue

FinleyFredette FamilyMary EstradaNancy & Eugene

NorbyLyle GolemgeskeMarion GolemgeskeRick SchuellerHelen RehbergerBarbara WeberAudrey AndersonMark & Cindy BauerJennifer & Chuck

UngerPhilip HeinleMr. & Mrs. John

CampionBarb HeinleBruce & Marianne

MillerNick Kroll FamilyThe Liska FamilyMark & Julie GoyetteDave & PatLechtenbergMary CumiskeyPeter CumiskeyThomas CumiskeyShirley CumiskeyHarold FandelFrom St. Joseph’s

Parish - Big Bend:Tim CollinsSandy CollinsBrian CollinsKelly CollinsSam CollinsBen CollinsBrad CollinsCrystal CollinsZach CollinsCeclia CollinsCarol CollinsShirley StadlerFrancis StadlerGerald KrenkeLois KrenkeLee TurayLaina MarenBob CraigPat & Larry WolfRandi BautchKaren HardtkeTim BollisPatty BollisMichele WhitehouseJohn Babeck Jr.Lynn BarnickelKaren JeszkaJeff SeefeldMaryAnne SeefeldJennifer FrankDelphine WryczaJanis RichardsonCarol MengelJudith DoravaEmil DoravaAmy GallenbergCharles RileyMary RileyMike HoganJanice HoganJudy WolfeBill wolfePat StarcevicJim Whitehouse*Joan C. Bauber*Aletha DuerstFr. Kevin McManamanRosie NeumanJeanne & Gene

O’ConnellDon CzajkaDonna CzajkaSandra Wanasek

Shirley GoffLeonard AdamskiMarie AdamskiGreg & Diane

LemmersJean WelsfordAva MarenMason MarenFaye MarenTerry HenrichsCarol SammerBernie SammerPaul ReitzKathy ReitzStacy AbrahanAlexis LaBadieCaitlyn LaBadieLori LaBadieJim LaBadiePatricia I. KolinskiTrinie LaplanderRobert J. LaplanderJudy WirthLarry WirthMike & Mary MutzaGreg & Sharon

WuergerJim & Judy

DobrzynskiJoe KingFay KingJeff KingSarah KingSean KingEthan KingDavid KingJenni KingMatthew KingRebecca KingAngela KingAlex KingMara KingDaniel KingConnor KingFrom St. Mary’s,

Waukesha:Christopher PeychalBeverly PeychalIsabella PeychalCatherine JuniRoger HelmLaureli HelmDaniel CarpenterKrista DraegerJoAnn WeinkaufVeronica Joan SnyderDave & Carol

GramlingKelli A. McKenzieGinn FamilyPaul & Vina StillwellPhyllis KaebischBehrendt FamilyMarilyn StiglerMary FaheyRon & Fran LyonMichael RasinoleBarb & Roger MekkaMary NavinCharlie WieberJulianna GoldheerJason & Jessica

Pechloff FamilyBrian SchmitzMike Jeske & Lee

JeskeJohn & Mary PandlBarbara ThompsonRev. Dennis G. BuhlKaren & Bob RoseckyTom KornowskiSallie SaundersJack McCafferyAlice McCafferyMary McCafferyPat & Joanne

McCaffery

Esther ComoMr. & Mrs, Robert

Foreman & FamilyAnn Gairy & FamilyMargie HansonRosie VillaJosie RockettRon & Kathy RydbergTerry & Mary BourqueJoan MacGregorClara WintersBob & Cathy DayJohn & Nora EiblJean & Charles KowisBob & Diane JostThe Bowers FamilyThe Kyle FamilyThe Medina FamilyDr. John L. BuhlRobert HansenMary Jane BurkeMatthew & Sara

HuebischJoe & Abby MazzaBetsy & Gene MathesMary Beth MathesCliff & Leigh Lanigan-

StanischMike JohnsonMary Ellen AspensonChar GuzmanTom & Terri BernacchiThe Norgal FamilyChris & Wendy Brown

FamilySr. Deb MurphyDan & Michelle

MorganMary MillerBob & Ginger BiebelAngela LeowMargaret WeidmanThe Polacheck FamilyJim & Pat ToftLaurie & Kevin TanelCarol & Rick SnookLaurie & Steve

WestorBud & Carol

SchneiderRon & Elenore PietteElsie J. ArmstrongRon & Michelle GrallJoseph & Joyce EiblKarl H. RickerChris & Stacey Smart

& FamilyGrace HoranThe Rodriguez FamilyJames R. Schroeder

FamilyKris RiedelCarol SeegersJanis, Jim, Brian &

Matthew TrebbyMike & Kelly SaveltoelRobert & Joanne

KraklowKlein FamilyDurward GauthierAndrew G. MartinCarol MartinPeter R. DilibertiBetty KnoebelJane PlechatyDenise LissSally MagnanSuzanne FrankBridget CarpenterAnn CarpenterErin CarpenterGary & Rita KrivosSt. John Neumann

Parish

*means name spellingwas unclear

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • THE FREEMAN • 7AWWW.GMTODAY.COM

WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFEWAUKESHA COUNTY CHAPTERMary Carey, PresidentP.O. Box 12, Waukesha, WI 53187 (262) 434-0821

Please join us in this endeavor and speak for those whocannot speak for themselves. Use membership formbelow:

Name ________________________________________

Address ______________________________________

City _________________________ Zip _____________

Phone ________________________________________

Single ($10) ____________ Family ($15) ____________

Make check payable to: WRL–Waukesha Co. Chapterand mail to the address below.

Pay more, get lessTo the editor:

Pay more, get less.These four words describe our federal

government perfectly.With our local government we can

have a direct influence on results. We areclose to those we elect, we see results andcan personally express approval or dis-approval with our votes at election time.Budgets and spending are fairly openand accessible.

With state government, things getmore difficult. It’s not easy to siftthrough the actions and legislation andmotivation of our officials further upthe ladder in Madison.

And then we have the feds in Washing-ton, D.C. They pass laws in book formthat no one has time to read, let aloneunderstand.

The myriad agencies and bureaus andcommittees then publish thousands ofrules and regulations to implement thelaws. Hundreds and thousands of

appointed bureaucrats we don’t elect,don’t know, regulate more and more ofour personal lives. And waste billions ofour taxes.

Every new law or regulation causesthe population of the feds to expandfaster than a herd of rabbits. It’s posi-tively scary to think about how manybureaucrats have been spawned by the“Unaffordable Care Act” (Obamacare).

Elections should work, but it’s hard tosee any progress. Our Republican lead-ership needs spinal transplants!

Our prayers are more important thanin the past. May the God bless Americaand we the people.

Frank HooverWaukesha

THOMASSOWELL

TODAY’SINSPIRATION

“Forgiveness is afunny thing. It warmsthe heart and cools

the sting.”— William Arthur Ward

‘Diversity’ in action

Islamic terrorist attacks in Europe, andEuropean governments’ counterattacks aremore than just a passing news story.

Europe is currently in the process of pay-ing the price for years of importing millionsof people from a culture hostile to the funda-mental values of Western culture. And this isby no means the last of the installments ofthat price, to be paid in blood and lives, forsmug elites’ utopian self-indulgences inmoral preening and gushing with the magicword “diversity.”

Generations yet unborn will still be payingthe price, whether in large or small install-ments, depending on how long it takes for theWest to jettison utopianism and come to gripswith reality.

Meanwhile, in the United States, no oneseems to be drawing any lessons about thedangers of importing millions of people from

fundamentally differentcultures across our openborder. In America, “diver-sity” has still not yet lost itsmagical ability to stopthought in its tracks andbanish facts into the outerdarkness.

Perhaps here, as inEurope, that verbal magiccan only be washed away inthe blood of innocent vic-tims, many of them yetunborn.

To cross our open borderwith Mexico, you don’t haveto be Mexican or even fromCentral America. You canbe from Iran, Syria or otherhotbeds of Middle Easternterrorism.

It is one of the monumen-tal examples of politicalirresponsibility that thesouthern border has notbeen secured during admin-istrations of either party,despite promises and pos-

turing.Many fine people have come here from

Mexico. But, as with any other group, someare just the opposite. With open borders, how-ever, we don’t even know how many peoplewho cross that border are Mexican, much lessanything more relevant, like their education,diseases, criminal records or terrorist ties.

There are some politicians — bothDemocrats and Republicans — who just wantto get the issue behind them, and are pre-pared to leave the consequences for others todeal with in the future, just as they are leav-ing a staggering national debt for others todeal with in the future.

These consequences include irreversiblechanges in the American population. Ethnic“leaders” and welfare state goodies guaran-tee the fragmentation of the population, withnever-ending strife among the fragments.People who enter the country illegally willget, not only equal benefits with the Ameri-can people who created those benefits, theywill get more than many American citizens,thanks to affirmative action.

We cannot simply let in everyone whowants to come to America, or there will be noAmerica to come to. Cultures matter — andnot all cultures are mutually compatible, asEuropeans are belatedly learning the hardway. And “assimilation” is a dirty word tomulticulturalists.

State and local officials who blithely violatetheir oath to uphold the law, and indulgethemselves in the moral posturing of declar-ing their domains to be “sanctuaries” for peo-ple who entered the country illegally, areunlikely to reconsider until disastrous conse-quences become far too big to ignore — whichis to say, until it is too late.

Meanwhile, harsh punishments arereserved for people in business who fail tocarry out the law-enforcement duties thatelected officials openly declare they are notgoing to carry out.

To many in the media, the only questionseems to be whether we are going to be“mean-spirited” toward people who want tocome here — especially children who werebrought here, or sent here, “through no faultof their own.”

It is as if those children had some pre-exist-ing right to be in the United States, whichthey could lose only if they did somethingbad themselves. But those children had nomore right to be here than children in India,Africa or other places with millions of chil-dren living in poverty.

Surely we can think ahead enough to real-ize that children living in this country ille-gally are going to grow up and have childrenof their own, with cultures and values oftheir own — and ethnic “leaders” to promotediscontent and hostility if they don’t get asgood results as people who have the prevail-ing American culture, beginning with theEnglish language.

You can’t wish that away by saying themagic word “diversity” — not after we haveseen what “diversity” has led to in Europe.

(Scholar and author Thomas Sowell is asenior fellow at the Hoover Institution, a pub-lic policy research center at Stanford Universi-ty. His syndicated column runs Mondays andThursdays in The Freeman.)

Taking abite out ofcrime fears

The murder of Citgo station clerk SaeedSharwani rattled the community last week.When the Waukesha Freeman asked onlineif residents thought Waukesha was anunsafe place to live, the vast majority ofcommentators agreed.

As I drove past the Citgo station last weekwith a car full of Boy Scouts, a couple oftelevision stations were parked in the lot.They were reporting the news that an arresthad been made.

I was surprised that all of the boys in thecar knew of the alleged robbery and mur-der. The admittedly anecdotal evidence sug-gests that the crime has attracted the inter-est of their parents more than other newsstories about Waukesha.

Certainly, high-visibility crimes like thisone are going to add to our perceptionsabout crime. The near randomness of theincident, as well as the high visibility of thelocation of the crime, only adds to our fears.

Can we no longer walk into any gas sta-tion in Waukesha without fear of gettingcaught in the crossfire?

A little perspective isin order. While Wauke-sha residents may feelunsafe, and the high-visi-bility crimes add to thatfeeling, Waukesha is stilla comparatively safeplace to live.

The city budget does have crime statisticsfor 2012 comparable to other cities roughlyour size. In 2012, we had 117 violent crimesand 1,305 property crimes. West Allis, whereone of the the alleged suspects in the gasstation murder is from, had 315 violentcrimes and 4,836 property crimes.

But that’s Milwaukee County, right?OK, let’s look at that hotbed of crime, La

Crosse. Despite having a much lower popu-lation of 51,522 people, they had 300 violentcrimes and 3,854 property crimes. Even EauClaire is a wretched hive of scum and vil-lainy compared to Waukesha with 192 vio-lent crimes and 2,739 property crimes.

But crime must be getting worse, right?Well, no, it isn’t. The overall trend is down-ward, just as it is in the rest of the country.

The Lovely Doreen and I have lived inWaukesha for nearly 15 years. We moved toWaukesha mostly because we liked thehouse and the neighborhood. Imagine oursurprise a few years later when the localelementary school was referred to as a“ghetto school” by some parents who didn’twant their children transferred there.

Really? We live in the ghetto? The closestWaukesha gets to a crime-ridden, poverty-blighted area is when an Elvis imperson-ator sings, “In the Ghetto.”

I grew up on the northwest side of Mil-waukee. To get to the “ghetto,” compara-tively speaking, I just had to ride my bicycleabout 20 minutes. Now when I drive throughmy old neighborhood I realize that theurban decay of crime and poverty havecrept much closer to the ancestral home ofthe Wigdersons. There is no way I wouldever consider moving back.

Unlike my old ’hood, I don’t even thinktwice about stepping outside onto the side-walk to waste time looking for meteor show-ers with my son. The biggest threat to me isneck strain.

Nor do I think I’m putting myself in dan-ger when I say I’m not carrying a gun forself-defense when I walk to the root beerstand. We can even walk home from the barsdowntown at night without a police escort.

The police blotter that runs daily in theWaukesha Freeman is still seen by most ofus as entertainment. Actually, it’s surpris-ingly good entertainment for those outsidethe city of Waukesha, too.

Among my friends it’s a common jokeabout not wanting to end up in the policeblotter. That’s not because it’s a long list ofterrible crimes. It’s because most of thememorable incidents involve someone look-ing stupid.

When the police blotter ceases to be enter-taining, then we should be concerned.When news of a murdered gas station atten-dant ceases to be front-page news, then wereally need to worry. When the newspaperstops reporting violent crimes becausethey’re all too common, then we need toworry.

Until that day comes, and I pray it neverdoes, the most dangerous part about livingin Waukesha is the daily commute on thefreeways.

(James Wigderson is a blogger publishingat http://www.wigderson.com and a Wauke-sha resident. His column runs Thursdays inThe Freeman.)

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

We cannotsimply let in

everyone whowants tocome to

America, orthere will be

no America tocome to.Cultures

matter — andnot all cul-tures aremutually

compatible, asEuropeans are

belatedlylearning thehard way.

As candidate, and then again as presi-dent, Barack Obama promised to restorehealthy middle-class prosperity lost dur-ing the worst economic crisis in genera-tions.

It is the right focus and one that herevisited as the centerpiece of Tuesdaynight’s State of the Union address. Mid-dle-class families are hurting, and noeconomic recovery can sustain momen-tum without a healthy middle class.While the U.S. economy has reboundedfrom the Great Recession and the stockmarket is in overdrive, middle-class jobsremain the great weakness in this recov-ery.

Jobs are being added at the fastestpace since 1999, but mostly for the mosthighly paid or the least compensated.The middle class has seen little in theway of pay raises or tax relief. Middle-class incomes are back to where theywere in the mid-1990s while the cost of acollege education and a new home con-tinues to rise. Middle-income familiesnow earn less and have less in net worththan when Obama took office.

In his speech, the president proposedhiking capital gains taxes on top incomeearners, eliminating tax breaks on largeinheritances, imposing new fees on largefinancial firms and offering other mea-sures to give tax breaks to middle-classAmericans. While laudable in someaspects, the plan to aid the middle classfalls short on political and fiscal reality.

What we didn’t hear from the presi-dent is a political path toward gettingeven a fraction of his wish list from tra-ditional economic conservatives. This is

the crowd that dominates Congress.Many share his concerns about a teeter-ing middle class, and he needs their sup-port for anything of substance to pass.But the president presented more of alaundry list of populist one-off proposalsthan a comprehensive tax plan designedto attract bipartisan support. It givesmainstream conservatives nothing toembrace.

As a result, Obama has strengthenedthe hand of the GOP’s most resistantwing. Differences are negotiable withina package of comprehensive individualand corporate tax reforms. As stand-alone measures, such hot-button mea-sures only encourage gridlock.

We urge the president to be morestrategic. He should reach out, for exam-ple, to House Ways and Means ChairmanPaul Ryan, a respected Republican voiceon fiscal policy, who wants to overhaulthe U.S. tax code, close tax breaks for cor-porations and individuals and lower taxrates to boost economic growth.

While there are key differences in theapproaches of Ryan and Obama, middle-class Americans are going to see reliefonly if Congress and the White Housecan find common ground on larger taxchanges for corporations and individu-als. The president had an opportunity tosignal a willingness to step out of hiscorner to a joint session of CongressTuesday night. He didn’t.

Real, strategic middle-class reliefshould be more important than trying tolay a political foundation for the 2016elections.

— The Dallas Morning News

State of the Union misseson achievable goals

The FREEMANWaukesha County’s Daily Newspaper

Established in 1859 to fight slavery OPINION Bill Yorth, Editor-in-ChiefArthur Thomas, Managing Editor

EDITORIAL BOARD

8A • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 WWW.GMTODAY.COM

LETTERS POLICY: Letters should be typewritten, signedand include phone number and address so that we may verifyauthenticity. Neither phone number nor address will be print-ed when letters appear. We reserve the right to edit lettersfor length and clarity. Send letters to: Editor,The Freeman, P.O.Box 7,Waukesha,WI 53187.Or email: [email protected].

A little perspectiveis in order.

Open Meetings & Open Records LawSection 19.31,Wisconsin Statutes“In recognition of the fact that a representative government of theAmerican type is dependent upon an informed electorate, it isdeclared to be the public policy of this state that all persons areentitled to the greatest possible information regarding the affairs ofgovernment and the official acts of those officers and employeeswho represent them.“Further, providing persons with such information is declared to bean essential function of representative government and an integralpart of the routine duties of officers and employees whose responsi-bility it is to provide such information.”

The Freeman is proud to support this policy.

SOUND OFF Responders are required to sign their names. Pleaseprovide a phone number for verification and the com-munity where you live.Your phone number will not bepublished.Phone: 513-2641Email: [email protected]

JAMESWIGDERSON

Waukesha is no hive of scum and villainy

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Waukesha Police Department

TUESDAY7:01 a.m. — A caller in the 200

block of Hinman Avenue reporteda man walking around a house

with his hood up, whichhe found suspicious.Police checked theimmediate area butwere unable to findanyone.

8:17 a.m. — A caller reportedseeing a sleeping bag with some-thing in it near the intersection ofWindsor Drive and South EastAvenue.

8:29 a.m. — A caller in the2300 block of Michigan Avenuereported her daughter’s car wassplashed with paint for the secondtime.

9:55 a.m. — A caller reportedseeing a suspicious gas can sit-ting on the side of the road in the2100 block of Delafield Street.Police didn’t see anything unusualabout the can.

10:20 a.m. — A caller in the1400 block of Big Bend Roadreported misplacing her child’sschool-issued iPad.

10:29 a.m. — A man wasreportedly going through recy-cling bins and urinating in publicnear the intersection of Geneseeand Main streets.

10:36 a.m. — A man came tocheck on his estranged, incarcer-ated wife’s apartment in the 400block of North WashingtonAvenue and found that it mighthave been broken into.

11:41 a.m. — A caller in the400 block of East Newhall Avenuefound a bunch of clothes andshoes all over her back yard.

11:59 a.m. — Two laptops weretaken from the 200 block of NorthEast Avenue.

12:26 p.m. — A caller reportedgraffiti on a retaining wall onSpringdale Road.

1:35 p.m. — A caller in the1000 block of Madison Streetreported someone went throughhis vehicle and stole less than $5in change.

1:50 p.m. — A caller reporteda teenager with a mustache drag-ging a woman by her arm near

the intersection of GrandviewBoulevard and Michigan Avenue.

2:41 p.m. — A caller reportedreceiving a call from someoneclaiming to be from PublishersClearing House, who said theywould be at her house in 1.5hours and she should get somemoney to pay the taxes on it.Police told her to lock her doorsand dial 911 if they show up.

3:21 p.m. — No one wasinjured in a car vs. school busaccident in the 100 block of EastSunset Drive.

3:34 p.m. — One person wasarrested for disorderly conductafter a caller reported a teenagerwith drug paraphernalia givingsecurity a “hard time” at theWaukesha Public Library, 321Wisconsin Ave.

3:41 p.m. — A caller in the1200 block of Lincoln Avenuereported that her neighbor wasantagonizing her dog by videotap-ing it and calling it names throughthe fence. The neighbor toldpolice the caller leaves the dogoutside for more than an hourevery day and it barks incessant-ly, so she was videotaping it asevidence so the caller would getan excessive dog barking citation.

4:21 p.m. — A caller in the 400block of Wisconsin Avenue report-ed someone is stealing his mailevery single day, because he wasexpecting money and gift cards inthe mail and never received them.Police determined he was

scammed.5:57 p.m. — Three vehicles,

including a mail truck, wereinvolved in a collision at the inter-section of East and Collegeavenues.

6:15 p.m. — A caller reportedthat someone was hurt and bleed-ing at a group home in the 1000block of Oakland Avenue. Thedirector of the house said thecaller is obsessed with police andfire staff and will do anything forattention, including calling 911.

7:13 p.m. — A caller in the1100 block of Anoka Avenuereported receiving a voicemailthat said “This is your drug deal-er. I just wanted to make sure weare still meeting in the alley tomor-row. Bring your money.”

9:05 p.m. — A caller atMenard’s, 2315 BluemoundRoad, reported a woman was inthe store for five hours, boughtvery random items, and tried touse her driver’s license as pay-ment.

9:10 p.m. — Someone stole anauxiliary cable and a phonecharger from an unlocked vehiclein the 200 block of Carroll Street.Another caller reported someonestole a GPS and some sunglass-es from her car.

10:37 p.m. — Officersobserved a man pulling on cardoors at Boucher Chevrolet, 1421E. Moreland Blvd. Police deter-mined he worked for the dealer-ship’s security company.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • THE FREEMAN • 9AWWW.GMTODAY.COM RECORDS

POLICE BLOTTER

DEATHS

DELAFIELD

Catherine A.‘Cathy’ Mislinski

Catherine A. “Cathy” Mis-linski of Delafield, after a ful-filling life of adventure andexploration, had to battleovarian cancer for the past 19months. She fought with apositive attitude and with theinspiration of her lovingchocolate Lab, Sagamore,constantly by her side. OnTuesday, January 20, 2015, atthe age of 60 years, Cathyreached the end of this jour-ney.

Cathy is survived by hermother, Jean Mislinski;brother, Larry (Carol) Mislin-ski; loving sister Pat Stras-burg; sister Sandy Machado;and loving nieces Angie andCarmen. She is further sur-vived by her constant com-panion, and motivator tofight, Sagamore. Cathy willalso be missed by her incredi-ble, loving friends, FayeAbler and Sarah Remley.

She was preceded in deathby her best friend and lovingpartner, Mary Zosel, and herfather, Joseph Mislinski.

Cathy was a psychothera-pist for over 30 years, acareer she embraced andenjoyed. She loved workingwith clients, and valued allthose she worked with. Sheimpacted the lives of manypeople and was well-respect-ed in her profession.

A visitation for Cathy willbe held from 3:30 p.m. untilthe time of the 5:00 p.m.memorial service on Satur-day, January 24, at Christ theServant Lutheran Church,2016 Center Road, Waukesha,WI 53189. The Rev. Jay McDi-vitt will be officiating.

Cathy’s family and friendswould like to give a specialthank you to her doctors,Janet Turner and WilliamBradley, for the care and com-passion they gave Cathy.

In lieu of flowers, memori-als should be directed inCathy’s name to WisconsinOvarian Cancer Alliance,13825 W. National Ave., Suite103, New Berlin, WI 53151.

Cesarz, Charapata & Zin-necker Funeral Home, Cre-mation and Pre-Planning Ser-vices is serving the family.For further information,please call 262-542-6609, or fordirections, an online obitu-ary, or to leave a condolence,please visit www.Waukeshas-FuneralHome.com.

(Freeman — Jan. 22, 2015)

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OCONOMOWOC

Paul L. SangerPaul L. Sanger, age 76 of

Oconomowoc, passed awaypeacefully with hisfamily by his side onTuesday, January 20,2015.

Paul is survived by his ex-wife, Monica; children, Ran-dall (Sheryl) Sanger, Renee(Michael) Redman, Rick(Vicki) Sanger and Robert(Jennifer) Sanger; grandchil-dren Jordain, Austin, Alex,Brock, Brandon, Lily, Jackand Luke; sisters Alice andMary Ann; along with otherrelatives and friends.

He was preceded in deathby his parents, Paul andMartha Sanger, and siblingsKenneth, Clarence, Art,Robert, Beatrice, Pearl andVictor.

Paul was raised in Gre-sham and attended GreshamHigh School, where he partic-ipated in many sports. Aftergraduating high school, heenlisted in the U.S. Army andwas a member of the 82ndAirborne out of Fort Bragg,N.C. In 1963, Paul marriedMonica Dolata and raised hisfamily in Hartford. Heworked as a cement mason inthe construction tradethroughout the greater Mil-waukee area. Paul enjoyedthe outdoors including hunt-ing, fishing, golfing and play-ing softball. He had a hole-in-one at Paganica Golf Coursein Oconomowoc. In 1990 Paulmoved to Oconomowoc,where he eventually retired.Paul was a beloved father,generous grandfather and aloyal friend who will bemissed by his family andfriends.

A memorial service forPaul will be held atPagenkopf Funeral Home,1165 E. Summit Ave.,Oconomowoc, on Friday, Jan.23, at 2:00 p.m. Visitation willbe from 1:00 p.m. until thetime of the service led byFather Ralph Gross.

In lieu of flowers, dona-tion’s in Paul’s name can bemade to the Wounded War-rior Project, www.wounded-warriorproject.org or by mailto: Wounded Warrior Project,PO BOX 758517, Topeka, KS66675.

Pagenkopf Funeral Homeis serving the family. Formore information, call 262-567-4457 or visitwww.pagenkopf.com.

(Freeman — Jan. 22, 2015)

WAUKESHA

Gordon ‘Gordie’ L. Burrie

Gordon “Gordie” L. Burrie,a lifetime resident of Wauke-sha, walked into the light and

peace of God’slove and mercysurrounded by hisfamily and friendsin the evening ofTuesday, January

20, 2015, at the age of 78. The visitation for Gordie

will be held on Saturday, Jan-uary 24, from 10:00 a.m. untilthe time of the 12:00 p.m.memorial celebration at FirstUnited Methodist Church,121 Wisconsin Ave., Wauke-sha, WI 53186. Please see Fri-day’s Freeman for the com-plete obituary.

Cesarz, Charapata & Zin-necker Funeral Home, Cre-mation and Pre-Planning Ser-vices is honored to serve thefamily. For online obituaryor to leave a condolence,please visit www.Waukeshas-FuneralHome.com, or call262-542-6609.

(Freeman — Jan. 22, 2015)

WAUKESHA

Frederick N. SchmidtAug. 21, 1917 — Jan. 20, 2015

Frederick N. Schmidt, 97,of Waukesha, passedpeacefully to eternal lifeon January 20, 2015, after ashort illness. Fred wasborn August 21, 1917, inEagle, to the late Dr. Fred-erick M. and LauraSchmidt. On August 31,1940, Fred marriedGertrude L. Andofer.

Fred founded F.N.Schmidt & Associates, asales agency firm. He wasan avid pilot and proudmember of the Quiet Bird-men.

As an Eagle Scout of 81years, Fred was an activeScouter throughout hislife, having served asPotawatomi Area Councilpresident and recognizedwith the Silver BeaverAward, St. George Medal,and the NESA OutstandingEagle Scout award. He washonored that four sons andseven grandchildren alsoachieved the Eagle rank.

He leaves behind onedaughter, Kay (Bill) Daviesof St. Louis Park, Minn.,and five sons: Dr. Tom(Linda) Schmidt of Brook-field, Fred (Teresa)Schmidt of De Pere, John(Carol) Schmidt of Muk-wonago, Bill (Bette)Schmidt of Waukesha, andDr. Joe (Julie) Schmidt ofDousman.

He will be rememberedforever by his grandchil-dren, Laura (Rob) Ander-son of Edina, Minn.; Matt(Michelle Banta) Davies ofGolden Valley, Minn.; Mike(Rebecca) Davies ofAustin, Texas; AlisonSchmidt of Kerala, India;Amy Rosenberg of LosAngeles; Beth (Adam)Abler, Green Bay, WI; ToddSchmidt, Chicago, IL; ReedSchmidt, Chicago, IL;Diana (Jeff) Endres ofVerona; Drew Schmidt ofMukwonago; Dr. DerekSchmidt of Waukesha;Paige Schmidt (fiance AlexCoulter) of Waukesha; NicSchmidt of Dousman; andAngela Schmidt of Dous-man.

Fred was thrilled to begreat-grandfather to Lind-sey and Will Anderson,Ava Perez, Aston and Elli-son Abler, and Samanthaand Andrea Davies.

He will also be fondlyremembered by specialfamily friends Paul andKathy Erdmann and Bruceand Carol Erdmann.

He was preceded indeath by his wife,Gertrude; brother ThomasSchmidt; and two grand-daughters, Leslie andRachel Schmidt.

The family extends a spe-cial thanks to Dr. MartinKern and the nursing staffof Linden Grove, Wauke-sha.

Visitation will be held onFriday, January 23, from4:00 PM until 7:00 PM atthe Randle-Dable-BriskFuneral Home, 1110 S.Grand Ave., Waukesha. Asecond visitation will takeplace on Saturday, January24, from 9:30 AM until the10:45AM eulogy, followedby the funeral Mass at11:00AM at St. John Neu-mann Catholic Church,2400 W. State Highway 59,Waukesha, WI 53189. TheRev. Curt Frederick willpreside. Entombment willbe at St. Joseph CatholicCemetery.

In lieu of flowers, memo-rials to the Boys Scouts ofAmerica Potawatomi AreaCouncil Friends of Scout-ing, Waukesha MemorialHospital Foundation, or toa charity of your choiceare appreciated.

Randle-Dable-BriskFuneral Home, Crematoryand Preplanning Servicesis honored to serve thefamily. For further infor-mation, please call thefuneral home at 262-547-4035 or visit our website atwww.waukeshafunerals.comfor directions or to leavethe family an online trib-ute message.

(Freeman — Jan. 22, 2015)

OCONOMOWOC

Majorie Jean LohmanDec. 13, 1915 — Jan. 15, 2015

Majorie Jean Lohman wasborn December 13, 1915, in

Neilsville, toIrving andBessie (Sweet-land)Andrews. Shefound peaceJanuary 15,2015, at Angels-Grace Hospice.

On August 26, 1939, shemarried Walter H. Lohman.He and their son Keith prede-ceased her.

She is survived by sonsWalter (Shirley) of Waukeshaand Alan (Judy) of SturgeonBay; daughters-in-law,Romayne Lohman ofPalmyra and Sandra Fisherof Waukesha; five grandchil-dren, Scott (Rachel) Lohmanof Sister Bay, Jennifer (Dean)Peterson of Endeavor, Eliza-beth (Chris) Gallagher ofWaukesha, Christopher(Leann) Lohman of Sturte-vant and Andrew Lohman ofSturgeon Bay; five great-grandchildren; sister Mari-lyn Parker of Edmonds,Wash.; cousin Peggy Gammaof Wisconsin Rapids; andspecial friend Mona Lind-gren of Watertown.

After becoming a widow in1969, Marjorie attendedWCTC to receive her LPNdegree and worked for manyyears at Northview. Follow-ing retirement, she enjoyedmore than 15 years living inFlorida. She enjoyed knit-ting, quilting, crafts andreading. As the consummatemother who lovingly caredfor children and grandchil-dren, she will be rememberedforever with fondness.

Special THANK YOU to thestaff at Avalon Square andRiver Hills West in Pewaukeefor the kind and gentle caregiven to Marjorie.

A memorial service will beheld in the spring.

(Freeman — Jan. 22, 2015)

NATIONAL NEWS

NEW JERSEY

Video shows man shot by New Jerseypolice raising his hands

BRIDGETON, N.J. (AP) — With the dash-board camera in their cruiser rolling, policepulled a Jaguar over for running a stop signon a dark night. But things suddenly turnedtense when one of the officers warned hispartner that he could see a gun in the glovecompartment.

Screaming over and over ‘‘Don’t you(expletive) move!’’ and ‘‘Show me yourhands!’’ at the man in the passenger seat, theofficer reached into the car and appeared toremove a silver handgun. Then, the passen-ger, despite being warned repeatedly not tomove, stepped out of the Jaguar, his handsraised about shoulder level. The officersopened fire, killing him.

Jerame Reid and the man driving the carwere black. The officer who spotted the gun,Braheme Days, is black; his partner, RogerWorley, is white. Both officers have beenplaced on leave while prosecutors investi-gate.

OHIO

Grand jury indicts man held in Capitol terror plot

CINCINNATI (AP) — A man accused ofplotting to attack the U.S. Capitol was indict-ed by a grand jury on Wednesday on chargesincluding attempting to kill federal officialsand employees.

The indictment charges Christopher LeeCornell with two counts that carry possiblesentences upon conviction of up to 20 yearseach: attempted murder of governmentemployees and officials and solicitation tocommit a crime of violence. Cornell, who’s20 years old, also faces a firearms-relatedcharge.

WASHINGTON, D.C.

House GOP abruptly drops plans to debate abortion bill

WASHINGTON (AP) — In an embarrass-ing setback, House Republicans abruptlydecided Wednesday to drop planned debate ofa bill criminalizing virtually all late-termabortions after objections from GOP womenand other lawmakers left them short ofvotes.

The decision came on the eve of the annu-al March for Life, when thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators stream to Washing-ton to mark the anniversary of the 1973Supreme Court decision that legalized abor-tion.

AP source: FBI completes federalprobe of Ferguson shooting

WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. official saysthe FBI has finished its investigation into thepolice shooting of an unarmed, black 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri.

The Justice Department has not yetannounced whether it will file a federal civilrights charge against former police officerDarren Wilson. But experts have said the

high legal standard of proof would makesuch a prosecution unlikely. Wilson wascleared in November by a grand jury in theAug. 9 death of Michael Brown.

WORLD NEWS

CUBA

U.S., Cuba spar over migration policyat historic Havana talks

HAVANA (AP) — The United States saidWednesday it dispatched additional ships tothe Florida Straits to halt Cuban rafters butrebuffed demands for broader changes to U.S.migration rules that dominated the first dayof talks between Cuban officials and thehighest-ranking U.S. delegation to the islandin more than three decades.

Cuba urged the U.S. to end immigrationprivileges that grant virtually automaticlegal residency to any Cuban who touchesU.S. soil. Its government blames the Cold Warpolicy for luring tens of thousands ofCubans a year to make perilous journeys bysea and land to try to reach the United States.Still, many Cubans are worried the elimina-tion of the rules would take away theirchance to have a better life in the U.S.

JAPAN

Abe ‘fighting against time’ seeking to free hostages

TOKYO (AP) — Japan is doing all it can tofree two hostages the Islamic State group isthreatening to kill unless it receives $200 mil-lion, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe saidWednesday, vowing never to give in to terror-ism.

Abe said he was consulting with leaders inthe region. A convoy carrying Japanese Vice-Foreign Minister Yasuhide Nakayama leftthe embassy in Jordan’s capital Amman onWednesday for an unknown location in thecity. Jordan’s King Abdullah II later met withhim, according to Jordan’s Petra News Agen-cy.

YEMEN

Shiite rebels,Yemen’s president reach deal to end standoff

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Shiite rebels hold-ing Yemen’s president captive in his homereached a deal with the U.S.-backed leaderWednesday to end a violent standoff in thecapital, fueling fears that a key ally in the bat-tle against al-Qaida has been sidelined.

The late-night agreement, which promisesthe rebels greater say in running the Arabworld’s poorest nation in exchange forremoving its fighters from President AbedRabbo Mansour Hadi’s residence and keyareas of the capital, left unclear who reallycontrols the country.

The power vacuum has raised fears thatYemen’s al-Qaida’s branch, which claimedthe recent attack on a French satirical week-ly and is considered by Washington the ter-ror group’s most dangerous affiliate, willonly grow more powerful as Yemen slidestoward fragmentation and the conflictbecomes increasingly sectarian. The ShiiteHouthis and Sunni terror group are swornenemies.

TODAY’S BRIEFING

MADISON

Officials warn casinocompact doesn’t protect state

MADISON (AP) — Gov.Scott Walker’s administra-tion says the MenomineeNation’s new gamblingcompact doesn’t guaranteethe state wouldn’t have topay a rival tribe hundredsof millions of dollars.

Walker has until Feb. 19to approve the Menomi-nee’s request to build an$800 million casino inKenosha.

The Ho-Chunk Nation’scompact allows them toreduce payments to offsetlosses linked to a Kenoshacasino. The Forest CountyPotawatomi contend itscompact requires the stateto refund hundreds of mil-lions if the new casino goesforward.

The state announced anew compact with theMenominee on Tuesdaythat calls for the tribe tocover the difference if Ho-Chunk and Potawatomipayments dip below $37.5

million. But Walker’sadministration warns thecompact doesn’t protect thestate if the Potawatomi winback payments in court.

Evers fears ‘divisive mandates’ are coming

MADISON (AP) — Wis-consin state Superinten-dent Tony Evers says hefears ‘‘more divisive man-dates’’ for public schoolsare coming, and he is call-ing on the Legislature to‘‘hit the pause button.’’

Evers made the com-ments Wednesday at theannual state education con-vention in Milwaukee,without elaborating onwhat he meant. Hisspokesman Tom McCarthysays he was referring to aschool accountability billthat Republicans are work-ing on. The Assembly ver-sion of the accountabilitybill would force failing pub-lic schools to close, but law-makers are working onchanges.

The Senate bill that does-n’t have those sanctions isscheduled for a hearingnext Tuesday.

Baldwin defends actionsin Tomah VA investigation

MADISON (AP) — Wis-consin U.S. Sen. TammyBaldwin is responding to anaccusation that she didn’tdo enough to bring atten-tion to overprescription ofopiates at the VA MedicalCenter in Tomah.

Baldwin’s office receiveda report on the problems inAugust from the Depart-ment of Veterans Affairs’inspector general. Baldwinshared the report with aconstituent but didn’t publi-cize it more widely until lastweek, after a report was pub-lished on the death of aMarine Corps veteran beingtreated at Tomah. She thencalled on the VA secretary toorder a comprehensiveinvestigation at Tomah.

In a statement, Baldwindetailed her efforts last yearto get the VA to look intocomplaints about Tomah.

RACINE

Police investigating shotsfired at transit center

RACINE (AP) — Authori-

ties are investigating anapparent shooting at theStreet Transit Center inRacine.

Police say they werecalled to the transit centerat about noon Wednesdayon a report of shots fired.

Officers found one vic-tim.

Police haven’t releasedany details on the severityof that victim’s injuries.They said it’s an activeinvestigation and no addi-tional information is beingreleased at this time.

STATE NEWS

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DogsFrom Page 1A

Mountain Dogs. “And it’snice to not always be think-ing about exams instead ofjust sitting around goingbrain dead.”

While many studentssaid they simply enjoy therespite from studying,Beckman noted that thedogs sometimes servemore serious purposes.This week, the canines pro-vided an interventionmethod as school staffresponded to a studentwith high levels of anxietyand depression.

“That student was readyto walk out the door andwe were able to convincethe student to come backand spend some time withthe dogs and he went on tocomplete his exams,” shesaid.

Dawn Perry-Giersch,owner of PJ and Shaina,said her dogs have provid-ed their services atAlzheimer’s treatmentfacilities and hospice cen-ters. To be certifiedthrough Therapy Dogs

International, the dogshave to demonstrate thatthey will remain calmaround loud noises,wheelchairs, walkers andin emergency situations,such as a patient falling,Perry-Giersch said.

“I’ll go anywhere anyonewants to see them,” Perry-Giersch said. “It is veryrewarding because thepatients get some happi-ness, the dogs give uncon-ditional love and it helpsthe staff.”

A particular favorite ofher dogs is Read to Rover, alibrary program thatallows children to developtheir literacy skills whilereading to therapy dogs.

“PJ loves story time,”she said. “He’s just a ham.”

Wherever they go, Perry-Giersch said, the dogsreceive the same response.

“I go to the hospice cen-ter, and you see it in thepatients and staff — theybring happiness,” she said.“You can see it now, theywant the attention. And Ithink that’s true of alldogs. Any dog can lightenthe mood in the room.”

Email: [email protected]

MaloneFrom Page 1A

Other robberiesThomas was also

charged with armed rob-bery related to a Jan. 10robbery of a 7-Eleven at19600 W. Bluemound Road,in which Thomas allegedlyfired a shot to scare theclerk, but the clerklaughed and threw the reg-ister drawer at him beforechasing him out of thestore. According to thecriminal complaint,Thomas told police Maloneaccompanied him to thatrobbery, which he saidtook place down the streetfrom a hotel from whereThomas’ sister had beenarrested for prostitution,and Cotton drove themthere.

Cotton told police thatshe drove to the Town ofBrookfield because theysaid they needed to pick upsome money from a man ata hotel, but when Thomasand Malone returned toher vehicle, one was upsetat the other for almostshooting him.

Police asked her why, ifshe knew Thomas and Mal-one had been involved in arobbery and shooting inthe Town of Brookfield,she would agree to drivethem a second time lessthan a week later toWaukesha. She said “itwas simply in her natureto help people,” accordingto the complaint.

Thomas allegedly admit-ted to robbing a bank, a gasstation, store and liquorstore in Milwaukee Countyas well. Thomas allegedlyfired one round at the storeclerk and another into theceiling while robbing Coun-ty Beer and Liquor on 60thStreet in West Allis on Jan. 7.

Police are still searchingfor Malone, and the owner ofthe Waukesha Citgo hasoffered $5,000 in rewardmoney for information lead-ing to his capture.

Malone is described as abald, 5-foot-11-inch, 160-pound black man.

Anyone with pertinentinformation should callWaukesha police at 262-524-3831.

Email: [email protected]

CHICAGO (AP) — Lawyersfor U.S. Sen. Ron Johnsonsought on Wednesday torevive the Wisconsin Republi-can’s challenge to the federalhealth care overhaul, arguingbefore an appellate panel thathe was indeed harmed byexecutive rules associatedwith the legislation.

The oral arguments heardby three judges of the 7th U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals inChicago centered on thoserules, adopted after PresidentBarack Obama’s health carereform, which let congres-sional staffers keep favorableinsurance benefits.

The main question for theappellate court is whether therules harmed Johnson him-self in some way, which hemust show for the lawsuit toproceed. A U.S. district courtjudge in Wisconsin dismissedJohnson’s suit in July, con-cluding that Johnson failed to

show howrules confer-ring benefitson his stafferssomehow hurthim.

But John-son’s lawyer,Paul Clement,said Wednesday that therules, among other things,sullied Johnson’s reputationin his constituents’ eyesbecause his staffers were get-ting exclusive benefits othersweren’t entitled to.

Johnson and other legisla-tors, even as critics of therules, would still be subject toaccusations that ‘‘they arebeing treated better thantheir constituents’’ and‘‘feathering their nest,’’Clement said.

Government attorneyMark Stern responded thatthere’s no precedent to backthe view that a damaged polit-

ical reputation constitutedthe kind of harm required fora lawsuit to go ahead.

If Johnson prevails, saidJudge Ann Claire Williams,an appointee of DemocratBill Clinton, politicianseverywhere might start filingsuits on the grounds thatadhering to a new law or ruleundermined them politically.

‘‘Where do we draw theline?’’ she asked.

Clement responded thatthis case is unique because itdirectly affects the operationsof U.S. lawmakers’ staffs.

Congress included in the2010 health care bill a require-ment that members ofCongress and their staffsmove off the federal employ-

ee health care plan and intoonline marketplaces to putthem in the same situation asall uninsured Americans.

Johnson filed his suit ayear ago after the Office ofPersonnel Managementdecided lawmakers and theirstaffs should be able to con-tinue to get the same healthcare benefits — coveringabout 75 percent of their pre-mium costs — even after leav-ing the federal health insur-ance program they had beenon for years.

The two other appellatejudges who will decide John-son’s appeal are Republicanappointees Joel Flaum andWilliam Bauer. A ruling isexpected within severalmonths.

Both Clement and Sterndeclined to comment afterWednesday’s hearing.

Johnson attorneys try to revive Obamacare lawsuit in appellate court

Issue on appeal: Did health-care reform rules hurt senator?

Johnson

What do you think?Phone: 513-2641Email: [email protected]

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through Feb. 15, The AlmontGallery, 342 W. Main St.,Waukesha. www.almont-gallery.com.

Bachelor of Fine Arts' Exhibi-tion, through Feb. 1, Universityof Wisconsin-Milwaukee ArtsCenter Gallery, 2400 E. Ken-wood Blvd. arts.uwm.edu/art-design.

“Tell Me A Story,” through Feb.8, Villa Terrace Decorative ArtsMuseum, 2220 N. TerraceAve., Milwaukee. 414-278-8295 or www.villaterracemuse-um.org.

Michael Imes exhibition, 9 a.m.to 5 p.m. Mondays throughSaturdays, Sharon Lynne Wil-son Center for the Arts, 19805W. Capitol Drive, Brookfield.Free. www.wilson-center.comor 262-781-9470.

Community Art Critique, 9 a.m.to 11 a.m., second Saturday of each month, TheClinton Street Gallery, 336 W.Main St., Waukesha. $10 perpiece. 262-446-0665.

“Fine Contemporary Art in aLandmark Setting,” 11 a.m. to4 p.m. Tuesdays through Satur-days, Peltz Gallery, 1119 E.Knapp St., Milwaukee. 414-223-4278.

Works by Amy Cropper, asso-ciate professor of art at Car-roll University, ongoing,Waukesha Public Library, 321Wisconsin Ave., Waukesha.262-524-3680.

The Potter’s Shop Gallery, 10a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondaysthrough Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4p.m. Saturdays, 335 W. MainSt., Waukesha. 262-547-1920.

Allison Art House, 10 a.m. to 5p.m. Wednesdays through Fri-days and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sat-urdays, evening hours byappointment, 234 Brook St.,No. 5, Waukesha. 262-970-9570.

Almont Gallery, 10 a.m. to 6p.m. Mondays through Thurs-days, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays,10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdaysand noon to 3 p.m. Sundays,342 W. Main St., Waukesha.262-542-1522.

St. Paul Gallery, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Satur-days, 136 E. St. Paul Ave.,Waukesha. 262-253-4829.

Lil Gabriel Boutique and Galle-ria, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mon-days through Thursdays, 10a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays and Sat-urdays, 19035 W. Capitol Drive,No. 106, Brookfield. 262-781-5858.

Mafu Jiang and Shauna Wang,paintings, ongoing, Lil GabrielBoutique and Galleria, 19035W. Capitol Drive, No. 106,Brookfield. 262-781-5858.

Beverly Designs, boutique andgallery, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.Mondays through Thursdays,10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Fridays, 10a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays andby appointment, 149 E. Wis-consin Ave., Oconomowoc.262-567-3650.

Griffin Gallery, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat-urdays and noon to 4 p.m. Sun-days, 133 E. Wisconsin Ave.,Oconomowoc. 262-567-1826.

Current Gallery of Fine Art, 11a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursdays andFridays and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Saturdays and by appointment,N88-W16475 Main St.,Menomonee Falls. 262-255-3588.

The Painted Bean CoffeeHouse and Art Gallery, 6:30a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mondaysthrough Fridays, 8 a.m. to 2p.m. Saturdays, 1315 Wiscon-sin Ave., Grafton. 262-377-4374.

Raku Night, last Friday of themonth, The Potter’s Shop, 335W. Main St., Waukesha. 262-547-1920.

“Man At Work,” art collection,ongoing, Grohmann Museum,Milwaukee School of Engineer-ing, 1000 N. Broadway, Mil-waukee. 414-277-2300 or visitwww.msoe.edu.

“Shaping Creativity Out of Clay,” presented by the Waukesha Clay Art Guild,10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondaysthrough Fridays, 10 a.m. to 4p.m. Saturdays, The Potter’sShop, 335 W. Main St., Wauke-sha. 262-547-1920.

“Works On Paper and In Porce-lain,” presented by PaulaMurray and Ludmila Armata,ongoing, Elaine EricksonGallery, 207 E. Buffalo St., Mil-waukee. 414-221-0613.

“The Gold Coast Exhibition ofKpetenkple,” ongoing, DavidBarnett Gallery, 1024 E. StateSt., Milwaukee. 414-271-5058.

Adult pottery classes and indi-vidual instruction, beginnerand intermediate classes,The Potter’s Shop, 335 W. MainSt., Waukesha. Call to register.262-547-1920 or visit www.clayartguild.com.

BooksBook and Movie Club: “The

English Patient,” 1 p.m.Thurs-day, Oconomowoc PublicLibrary, 200 W. South St. Free.262-569-2193 orwww.oconomowoc.lib.wi.us.

Read to Drake, 10 a.m. to noonSaturday, Delafield PublicLibrary, 500 Genesee St. Free.262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

Great Lives Book Club:“Alexander Hamilton: Ameri-

can,” 1 p.m. Monday, Brook-field Public Library, 1900 N.Calhoun Road, HarnischfegerRoom. Free. 262-782-4140,option 1 or www.ci.brook-field.wi.us.

Book and Movie Club: “Wherethe Heart Is,” 6:30 p.m. Mon-day, Oconomowoc PublicLibrary, 200 W. South St. Free.262-569-2193 orwww.oconomowoc.lib.wi.us.

Book to Art Adult Book Club,11 a.m. to noon Jan. 31,Delafield Public Library, 500Genesee St. Free. 262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

Delafield Public Library’s ABook Club Walks Into a Bar:“Attachments,” 7:30 p.m. Feb.5, Revere’s Wells Street Tav-ern, 505 Wells St. Free. 262-646-6230 or www.delafieldli-brary.org.

Read to Drake, 10 a.m. to noonFeb. 14, Delafield PublicLibrary, 500 Genesee St. Free.262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

Tuesday evening book group,6:30 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. secondTuesday of each month, HalesCorners Public Library, 5885 S.116th St. 414-529-6150 orwww.halescornerslibrary.org.

Forest Ridge book group, 2:30p.m. to 3:30 p.m. second Tues-day of each month, Hales Cor-ners Public Library, 5885 S.116th St. 414-529-6150 orwww.halescornerslibrary.org.

Writers Ink, 7 p.m. first and thirdMondays of the month for critiquing for publication, workshops andwriting-related speakers, 4702S. Packard Ave., Cudahy. 414-744-9644 or visit www.writ-ersinc.writernetwork.com.

Waukesha Writers’ Workshop,10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. thirdMonday of each month, Brook-field Highlands Senior Apart-ments, 20825 George HuntCircle, Town of Brookfield. 262- 679-0862.

“Great Lives” Biography Bookclub, 1 p.m. fourth Monday ofthe month, Brookfield PublicLibrary, 1900 N. CalhounRoad, Brookfield. 262-782-4140.

Mystery book discussiongroup, 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. second Monday of the month, New Berlin PublicLibrary, 15105 Library Lane,New Berlin. 262- 785-4980.

Muskego Public Library, onlinebook clubs, Mondays throughFridays, sent via e-mail, signup at www.chapteraday.com/library/muskego.

Armchair Travel Book Club, 10a.m. third Tuesday of themonth, Brookfield PublicLibrary, 1900 N. CalhounRoad, Brookfield. 262-782-4140.

It’s All Elementary MysteryBook Club, 7 p.m. secondTuesday of the month, Brook-field Public Library, 1900 N.Calhoun Road, Brookfield.262-782-4140.

Writers’ Roundtable, 1 p.m. to 3p.m. and 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Tuesdays, Redbird Writing Stu-dios, 3195 S. Superior St., Mil-waukee. 414-481-3029.

Browsing and Reading Societyadult book group, 7 p.m. sec-ond Tuesday of each month,Muskego Public Library, S73-W16663 Janesville Road,Muskego. 262-971-2102.

Chapter One Writers Group, 7p.m. to 9 p.m. second andfourth Tuesdays of each month,Martha Merrell’s Books & Cafe,231 W. Main St., Waukesha.262-662-4834.

Book discussion group, 7 p.m.first and third Wednesdays ofthe month, Waukesha PublicLibrary, 321 Wisconsin Ave.,Waukesha. 262-524-3682 orvisit www.waukesha.lib.wi.us.

Adult book discussion group,7 p.m. third Wednesday of themonth, New Berlin PublicLibrary, 15105 Library Lane,New Berlin. 262-785-4980.

Preschool story hour,9:45 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. everysecond Tuesday of the month, Alice Baker Memo-rial Public Library, 820 E. MainSt., Eagle. 262- 594-2800.

Talking About Books, 7:30 p.m.first Thursday of the month,Brookfield Public Library, 1900N. Calhoun Road, Brookfield.262-782-4140.

Muskego Writers Workshop, 7p.m. fourth Thursday of themonth, Muskego PublicLibrary, S73-W16663Janesville Road, Muskego.262-927-2102.

Margaret Rozga, 8:30 a.m. to 2p.m. July 19, AllWriters' Work-shop, 234 Brook St., Wauke-sha. $85. 262-446-0284 orwww.allwritersworkshop.com.

DanceAll ages individual dances from

much of the world, 7 p.m. to9:45 p.m. first, third and fourthTuesday of each month, HartPark Muellner Building, 7300 W.Chestnut St., Wauwatosa. $4.262-662-2293.

Milwaukee Rebels Swing DanceClub, beginners West Coastswing lesson, 6:30 p.m. to 7:30p.m., intermediate, 7:30 p.m. to8:30 p.m., Sundays, 2499 S.Delaware Ave., Milwaukee; opendancing, second and fourthWednesday of the month, HotWater, 818 S. Water St., Milwau-kee. $5. 262-901-0252 orwww.milwaukeerebels.com.

Zumba fitness dance classes,ongoing, 10:15 a.m. to 11:15a.m. Saturdays, 5:30 p.m. to6:30 p.m. Wednesdays, FredAstaire Studios, 15760 W. Capi-tol Drive, Brookfield. $10 perclass. 262-796-1121.

Ballroom and Latin dance,swing, salsa private andgroup lessons from beginnerto advanced, 7 p.m. Thursdays,Main Street Ballroom, 309 W.Main St., Waukesha. 262-832-0176 or visit www.mainstreet-ballroom.com.

GypsyMoonDance classes –beginner Mideastern bellydance technique and combos, 2p.m. Sundays; level 2 and 3 trib-al fusion belly dance techniqueand choreography, 3 p.m. Sun-days; vaudeville and cabaret ofall levels, 4 p.m. Sundays; gypsyskirt dance – Latin and Turkishfusion, 5 p.m. Sundays; Knightsof Columbus, 1800 S. 92nd St.West Allis. www.gypsymoon-dance.com.

Ballet, belly dance, ballroom,tap, hip-hop, wedding rou-tines and hip-hop, presentedby a master graduate andchoreographer Donna Jean-né, South 42nd Street and WestOklahoma Avenue, Milwaukee.414-384-1700.

Dance lessons for all levels ofexperience, for ages 3 to adult,ongoing, Dance Tracks, 132 N.Grand Ave., Waukesha. 262-436-0007.

Modern, modern-jazz, ballet, tap,African, African workout, hip-hop, Pilates,yoga and Nia, ongoing registra-tion for classes and workshopsfor beginners to advanceddancers, Mondays through Fri-days, Danceworks Studio, 1661N. Water St., Milwaukee. 414-277-8480 or visit www.dance-works1661.org.

Nia and tai chi classes, 10 a.m. to11 a.m. Mondays and Wednes-days, acting studio, University ofWisconsin-Waukesha, 1500 N.University Drive, Waukesha.262-521-5460.

Line dancing, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.Mondays and Fridays, Brook-field Senior Community Center,2000 N. Calhoun Road, Brook-field. 262-796-6675.

Latin fusion, 7:15 p.m. Mondays,Calhoun Station, 1849 S. Cal-houn Road, New Berlin. $6. 262-614-8898.

Lyengar yoga: stretch, restoreand strengthen with a certi-fied instructor, 5:30 p.m. to 6:30p.m. Mondays, Body AwarenessCenter, 1234 N. Prospect Ave.,Milwaukee. $66 for six weeks.414-347-1865.

Square dancing, mainstreamand plus, 1 p.m. Mondays, Wil-son Park Senior Center, 2601 W.Howard Ave., Milwaukee. $10 forfive weeks. 414-282-5566.

Cardio salsa, 7:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m.Tuesdays, University of Wis-consin-Waukesha, 1500 N. Uni-versity Drive, Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

Pilates classes, 5:45 p.m. to 6:45p.m. Tuesdays, field house, UW-Waukesha, 1500 N. UniversityDrive, Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

Zumba dance classes, 7:15 p.m.to 8:15 p.m. Tuesdays andWednesdays, UW-Waukesha,1500 N. University Drive,Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

International/multiethnic/multi-cultural line dancing,6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. first, third,fourth and fifth Tuesdays, Muell-ner Building, second floor, Hart Park, 7300 W.Chestnut St., Wauwatosa.Beginner to advanced. $3instructions, no partner required.262-662-2293.

Folk dancing instruction forbeginners, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.Tuesdays, Hart Park, 7300 W.Chestnut St., Wauwatosa. $3.262-662-2293.

Astor Street Dance Studio,dance and fitness classes for allages, 1228 N. Astor St., Milwau-kee. 414-208-9021 or www.mil-

waukeebellydance.com.Jumpin’ Jive basic swing

lessons, 8 p.m. Tuesdays,Wherehouse Dance Club, 818S. Water St., Milwaukee. 262-547-9464.

Beginning swing dancelessons, 6:15 p.m. beginners,7:30 p.m. intermediate, open DJdancing Tuesdays, 4917 Sev-enth Ave., Kenosha. 262-654-3522.

Vagabond Ski and Social Clubdance and meeting, firstWednesday of the month,Knights of Columbus, 3200 S.103rd St., Greenfield. 414-669-1800.

Krakow’s Polish Dancers of Mil-waukee County, 7 p.m.Wednesdays, Collins-MeyerVFW Clubhouse, 2900 W. Lin-coln Ave., Milwaukee. 414-383-7177.

Nia Technique, 7:15 p.m.Wednes-days, Body Awareness Center,1234 N. Prospect Ave., Milwau-kee. 414-333-0014.

New country dance lessons, lineand partner dancing, all levelswelcome, 6:45 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.Wednesdays, Circle B, Highway60, Country Keg, Highway NN,Cedarburg. 262- 367-4846.

Jumpin’ Jive basic swinglessons, 8 p.m. Wednesdays,Grafton Ale House, 1208 13thAve., Grafton. 262-547-9464.

Country western dance lessons,partners and line, 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thurs-days, Hoeppner-Horn Brothers VFW Post 5716,17980 W. Beloit Road, NewBerlin. $5. 262- 679-1684.

Irish Song Circle, 7 p.m. secondand fourth Thursdays,O’Donoghues, 13225 W. Water-town Plank Road, Elm Grove.262-641-2730.

Syrena Polish Folk DanceEnsemble, 6:30 p.m.Thursdays, St. Hedwig’s Schoolgym, 1150 E. Brady St., Milwau-kee. 414-350-9740.

Tap classes, 9 a.m. beginners,9:45 a.m. continuing beginners,10:30 a.m. intermediates, 11:15a.m. advanced, Thursdays,ongoing, Wilson Park SeniorCenter, 2601 W. Howard Ave.,Milwaukee. $30 for 10 lessons.414-282-5566.

Country dance, 7:30 p.m. andlessons at 6:45 p.m. Thursdays,Pat’s Oak Manor, 1804 15thAve., South Milwaukee. 414-762-8188.

Dance at the wedding lessons,6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thurs-days, Briese’s Brew Pub, 117022nd Ave., Kenosha. $5. 262-654-3522.

Beginner social dance lessons,6:30 p.m. Thursdays, Murphy’sPub, 3322 Sheridan Road,Kenosha. 262-654-3522.

Beginner Latin ballroom danc-ing for couples, 7:45 p.m. to8:45 p.m. Fridays, UW-Wauke-sha, 1500 N. University Drive,Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

Adult Latin dance class, 6:30p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Foote-Work Dance & Exercise, 7420W. State St., Wauwatosa. 414-774-9990.

Cashel Dennehy School of IrishDance presents an Irish Ceilidance with a live Irish band, 8p.m. to 11:30 p.m. the first Fridayof every month, Irish Culturaland Heritage Center, 2133 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee. $6general admission, $4 seniors,$3 students with ID, $2 kids ages4 to 17. 414-784-4878.

Nia dance, 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Sun-days, UW-Waukesha, 1500 N.University Drive, Waukesha.262-521-5460.

Ballet, 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sundays,UW-Waukesha, 1500 N. Univer-sity Drive, Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

Belly dance, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sun-days, UW-Waukesha, 1500 N.University Drive, Waukesha.262-521-5460.

Couples Latin, swing and ball-room dance, 5 p.m., 6 p.m. and7 p.m. Sundays, UW-Waukesha,1500 N. University Drive,Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

Ethnic line dancing, 4 p.m. to4:50 p.m. Sundays, UW-Wauke-sha, 1500 N. University Drive,Waukesha. 262-521-5460.

FilmMonday Movie Matinee: “The

Judge,” 1 p.m. Feb. 16,Delafield Public Library, 500Genesee St. Free. 262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

“Gone Girl,” 6 p.m. Jan. 22;“Magic in the Moonlight,”2:15 p.m. Jan. 22, MenomoneeFalls Public Library, W156-N8436 Pilgrim Road. 262-532-8920 or home.mf.lib.us.

Monday night movies, 6:30 p.m.second and fourth Mondays,Waukesha Public Library, 321Wisconsin Ave. 262-524-3682.

Movie Matinees, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.Tuesdays, Elm Grove PublicLibrary, 13600 Juneau Blvd.,O’Neill Room. Free. www.elm-grovelibrary.org, 782-6717.

HealthFind Your Inner Strength with

Tai Chi, 1 p.m. Feb. 10,Delafield Public Library, 500Genesee St. Free. 262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

Tai chi, 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sun-days and 10:30 a.m. to noonTuesdays, The Lynden Sculp-ture Garden, 2145 W. BrownDeer Road, Milwaukee. $6members and $9 nonmem-

bers. www.lyndensculpturegar-den.org.

Outpatient neurological sup-port group, first Tuesday ofeach month, Aurora MedicalCenter, 36500 Aurora Drive,Summit. www.aurora.org or262-434-2600.

Ostomy support group, 7 p.m.to 8:30 p.m. first Wednesday ofeach month, Aurora HealthCenter, 9200 W. Loomis Road,Franklin. 414-421-1090.

Tai chi and Qigong classes,Mondays, Lake Park LutheranChurch, 2647 N. Stowell Ave.,Milwaukee. $35 per month.414-350-5248 or www.ymaaw-isconsin.com.

Gilda’s Club young survivorswellness group, 6:30 p.m. to 8p.m. second Wednesday ofeach month, Christ Church,13460 N. Port WashingtonRoad, Mequon, 414-962-8201;Gilda’s Club breast cancernetworking, 6:30 p.m. to 8p.m., second Tuesday of eachmonth; Relaxation Tech-niques Workshop, 10 a.m. to10:30 a.m. Tuesdays; Gilda’sClub family and friendsgroup, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.weekly on Thursdays; Gilda’sClub gynecological cancernetworking, 6:30 p.m. to 8p.m. fourth Monday of eachmonth; Gilda’s Club post-treatment networking, 6:30p.m. to 8 p.m. first Wednesdayof each month; Gilda’s Clubwellness group, 10:30 a.m. to12:30 p.m. Tuesdays; JewishCommunity Center, 6255 N.Santa Monica Blvd., WhitefishBay. 414-962-8201, ext. 102.

Fibromyalgia support group,5:45 p.m. to 7 p.m., every otherMonday, Advanced Pain Man-agement Office, 7400 W. Raw-son Ave., Suite 143, Franklin,262-456-7242 or 262-902-7673.

Survivors of Suicide, 7 p.m. to 9p.m. third Monday of themonth, National Alliance for theMentally Ill Waukesha, 217Wisconsin Ave., Waukesha.262-524-8886.

Diabetes support group, 6:30p.m. to 8 p.m. second Mondayof the month, CommunityMemorial Hospital, W180-N8085 Town Hall Road,Menomonee Falls. 262-251-1000.

KidsKids’ Night Out!: “Superhero

Academy,” 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.Jan. 31, Waukesha CountyMuseum, 101 W. Main St.,Waukesha. $20 per child;includes pizza dinner. 262-521-2859, ext. 246, www.wauke-shacountymuseum.org.

Lego Club: Team Blue, 4 p.m. to4:45 p.m. Feb. 4, PewaukeePublic Library, 210 Main St.Free. 262-691-5670, ext. 932,or www.pewaukeelibrary.org.

Lego Club: Team Blue, 4 p.m. to4:45 p.m. Feb. 18, PewaukeePublic Library, 210 Main St.Free. 262-691-5670, ext. 932,or www.pewaukeelibrary.org.

Discovery Club: “Rockin'Rhymes,” 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.Feb. 19, Waukesha CountyMuseum, 101 W. Main St.,Waukesha. $4 per child, $3 fornonmember adults, free formember adults. 262-521-2859,ext. 224, or www.waukesha-countymuseum.org.

LecturesMeribeth Sullivan on Wauke-

sha's recycling program, 7p.m. Feb. 5, Waukesha PublicLibrary, 321 Wisconsin Ave.Free. 262-524-3682.

“Clean Water, Healthy Lawns,”with Jane Jenk of the Wauke-sha County Parks and LandUse, 7 p.m. Feb. 10, BrookfieldPublic Library, 1900 N. Cal-houn Road. Free. www.brook-fieldlibrary.com.

Ed Kraus, master gardener, 1p.m. Sunday, Boerner Botani-cal Gardens, 9400 BoernerDrive, Hales Corners. Free.www.purpledazedaylilies.com.

“Front Lines” speaker series,10:30 a.m. Sundays, OakwoodChurch, 3041 Oakwood Road,Hartland. 262-367-1212 [email protected].

“Windows to Understanding”lecture series, 1 p.m. thirdMonday of the month, OliveWood Theatre at Tudor OaksRetirement Community, S77-W12929 McShane Drive,Muskego. Free. 414-529-0100.

National Council for Geocos-mic Research Organization,6 p.m. fourth Monday of themonth, Wauwatosa LionsClub, 7336 St. James Ave.,Wauwatosa. $7 and $10. 920-474-7404.

South Shore SpeculatorsInvestment Club, 6:30 p.m. fourth Monday of themonth, Bella’s Fat Cat, 2737 S. Kinnickinnic Ave., Mil-waukee. 414-817-1450.

Waukesha Toastmasters ClubNo. 1173 meetings, 6:30 p.m.to 8:30 p.m. the second andfourth Thursdays of the monthat the Goodwill CommunityCenter, Conference Room,1400 Nike Drive, Waukesha.

The public is welcome.www.waukeshatoastmasters.com.

Free lectures to improve yourlife through creative use ofyour mind, 11 a.m. Sundays,Spiritual Living Center ofGreater Milwaukee, MarianCenter for Non-profits, 3211 S.Lake Drive, Milwaukee. 414-327-7849 or visitwww.rsgm.net.

Museums“Stitching History from The

Holocaust,” through Feb. 28,Milwaukee Jewish Federation,1360 N. Prospect Ave., Milwau-kee. $6 adults, $5 seniors, $3students, $15 families.www.jewishmuseummilwau-kee.org.

Chudnow Museum ofYesteryear, open 10 a.m. to 4p.m. Wednesdays through Sat-urdays, noon to 4 p.m. Sun-days, 839 N. 11th St., Milwau-kee. $5 adults, $4 seniors andstudents, free for childrenunder 6. 414-273-1680 orwww.chudnowmuseum.org.

Dousman Stagecoach InnMuseum, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. firstand third Sundays of eachmonth, 1075 Pilgrim Parkway,Brookfield. $5 adults, $2 chil-dren ages 6 through 12, $3seniors, free for children 5 andunder. www.elmbrookhistori-calsociety.org.

O’Brien/Crites Field AviationMuseum, 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily,Crites Field terminal, 2525 Avi-ation Drive, Waukesha. Free,donations accepted. 262-549-0472.

Waukesha County HistoricalSociety & Museum, ever-changing interactive exhibitsincluding Civil War, earlytechnology, dollhouses,antique toys, architecture,fur trading post and historicsprings, 101 W. Main St.,Waukesha. 262-521-2859 orvisit www.wchsm.org.

Commemorative Air Force Wis-consin Wing, dedicated torestoring World War II aircraftto flying condition, 9 a.m. to2 p.m. Saturdays, NorthviewRoad (east of WaukeshaCounty Expo Center), Wauke-sha. 262-547-1775.

Octagon House, 10 a.m. to 4p.m. daily, 919 Charles St.,Watertown. 920-261-2796.

“Palmyra Answers the Call inWorld War II” and “One Hun-dred Years of Aviation inPalmyra,” 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Saturdays, Palmyra HistoricalSociety, Turner Museum,downtown Palmyra. 262-495-4245.

Betty Brinn Children’s Muse-um, hands-on museum forchildren 10 and younger andtheir families, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Tuesdays through Saturdaysand noon to 5 p.m. Sundays;closed Mondays, 929 E. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $5 perperson or free for museummembers and children 1 andyounger. 414-291-0888.

Discovery World Museum,museum of science, eco-nomics and technology, 9a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday throughFriday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur-day and Sunday, 815 N. JamesLovell St., Milwaukee. Adults$7, seniors $6, students $4.75,children 2 and younger free.414-765-9966.

Milwaukee Public Museum, 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throughWednesday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.Thursday, Friday and Sunday,8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday,800 W. Wells St., Milwaukee.$12 adults, $10 seniors, teensand students with ID, $8 chil-dren, free for kids 2 and under.414-278-2700 or 414-278-2728.

Pabst Mansion, restored 19th-century mansion, featuringexhibits of Victorian dolls, adollhouse and ornamentalartifacts, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.Mondays through Saturdays andnoon to 3:30 p.m. Sundays,2000 W. Wisconsin Ave., Mil-waukee. Adults $8, seniors 65and older $6, children 6 to 17 $3.414-931-0808.

Milwaukee Art Museum, 10 a.m.to 5 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednes-days, Fridays, Saturdays andSundays, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.Thursdays, 700 N. Art MuseumDrive, Milwaukee. $12 adults,$10 students, seniors and activemilitary, free for children 12 andunder. 414-224-3200.

Mitchell Gallery of Flight, 6 a.m.to 10 p.m. daily, Gen. MitchellInternational Airport, 5300 S.Howell Ave., Milwaukee. 414-747-5300.

Haggerty Museum of Art, Mar-quette University, 530 N. 13thSt., Milwaukee. 414-288-7290.

“Hard-Hat Restoration Tours,”ongoing, Historic Indian AgencyHouse, Agency House Road,Portage. 608-742-6362.

Clark House Museum, 7 p.m to 9p.m. Wednesdays and byappointment, 206 E. WisconsinAve., Pewaukee. 262-691-0233.

Honey of a Museum tours, 9 a.m.to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Fri-day, Honey Acres, N1557 High-way 67, town of Ashippun. 920-474-4411.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • THE FREEMAN • 11AWWW.GMTODAY.COM timeout

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If you would like to submit information to be featured in Time-Out, send it to [email protected].

“View Through A Lens”When: through Feb. 15

Where: The Almont Gallery, 342 W. Main St.,WaukeshaMore info: 262-542-1522 or www.thealmontgallery.com

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MusicSuzanne Grzanna, 6:30 p.m. to

10:30 p.m. Feb. 20, March 14,April 11, May 9 and June 13,Packing House, 900 E. LaytonAve., Milwaukee. www.packing-housemke.com.

Taylor Dane with John Waite, 8p.m. Friday, The NorthernLights Theater, 1721 W. CanalSt., Milwaukee. $45, $40, $35.www.paysbigcasino.com.

The City Pines, 8 p.m. Saturday,The Coffee House, 1905 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.414-534-4612 or www.the-cof-fee-house.com.

Christine Lavin and Don White,7:30 p.m. Saturday, UnitarianChurch North, 13800 N. PortWashington Road, Mequon.$22 in advance, $16 for stu-dents, $25 at the door.www.wsss.org.

Rob Anthony, 8 p.m. Jan. 30,Pikes Peak at the SchauerCenter, 147 N. Rural St., Hart-ford. $22 premium, $19 stan-dard. 262-670-0560 orwww.schauercenter.org.

Jon Mueller Death Blues:Ensemble, 8 p.m. Jan. 31,Alverno College’s Pitman The-atre, 3431 S. 39th St., Milwau-kee. $25. www.alvernopre-sents.alverno.edu.

Cold War Kids, 8 p.m. Feb. 1,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $22.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

The Diamonds — BandstandBoogie, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.Feb. 6, Schauer Center, 147 N.Rural St., Hartford. $34 and$30 adults, $10 students. 262-670-0560 or www.schauer-center.org.

Dark Star Orchestra, 8 p.m. Feb.7, Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$22 in advance, $25 day ofshow. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Happy 300th, “Lipinski” Strad,7 p.m. Feb. 10, Schwan Con-cert Hall at Wisconsin LutheranCollege, 8815 W. WisconsinAve., Wauwatosa. $10 to $35.www.franklymusic.org.

The B-52s, 8 p.m. Feb. 13, TheNorthern Lights Theater, 1721W. Canal St., Milwaukee. $65 to$75. www.paybig.com.

Sleater-Kinney, 8 p.m. Feb. 15,Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $25.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Cherub, 8 p.m. Feb. 13, PabstTheater, 144 E. Wells St., Mil-waukee. $15 in advance, $17day of show. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Ladysmith Black Mambazo,8:30 p.m. Feb. 15, Pabst The-ater, 144 E. Wells St., Milwau-kee. $45 and $35. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

Josh Radin, 8 p.m. Feb. 19,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $25. 414-286-3663or www.pabsttheater.org.

Hozier, 8:30 p.m. Feb. 21, River-side Theater, 116 W. WisconsinAve., Milwaukee. $29.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Barry Manilow, 10 a.m. Feb. 24,BMO Harris Bradley Center,1001 N. Fourth St., Milwaukee.$16.75 to $126.75. 414-227-0400 or www.bmoharrisbradl-eycenter.com.

Zoso: The Ultimate Led Zep-pelin Experience, 8 p.m. Feb.27, Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032N. Fourth St., Milwaukee. $18.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Lotus, 8:30 p.m. Feb. 28, TurnerHall Ballroom, 1032 N. FourthSt., Milwaukee. $19.50 inadvance, $22 day of show. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

The Musical Box: Foxtrot, 8p.m. March 5, Pabst Theater,144 E. Wells St., Milwaukee.$39.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

The British Invasion Tour, 8p.m. March 6, Pabst Theater,144 E. Wells St., Milwaukee.$35.50, $45.50, $55.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Traffic Jam, 8 p.m. March 8,Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $39.50.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Gaslight Anthem, 8 p.m. March12, Pabst Theater, 144 E. WellsSt., Milwaukee. $25. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

Zakir Hussain, 8 p.m. March 13,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $45, $50, $55. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Gaelic Storm, 8 p.m. March 17,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $29.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

Mike + The Mechanics, 8 p.m.March 19, Pabst Theater, 144E. Wells St., Milwaukee. $75and $39.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

TV on the Radio, 8 p.m. March24, Pabst Theater, 144 E. WellsSt., Milwaukee. $32.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

The Decemberists, 8 p.m. March25, Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$32.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Celtic Thunder, 8 p.m. March 26,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $45 and $55. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Gov't Mule, 8 p.m. March 26,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,

Milwaukee. $29.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

Benjamin Booker, 8 p.m. March27, Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032N. Fourth St., Milwaukee. $15.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Willy Porter, 8 p.m. March 27,Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $20.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Brit Floyd, 8 p.m. March 27,Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $35.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

“The Sing Off Live,” 8 p.m.March 28, Riverside Theater,116 W. Wisconsin Ave., Mil-waukee. $35.50. 414-286-3663or www.pabsttheater.org.

ZZ Top, 8 p.m. March 29, River-side Theater, 116 W. WisconsinAve., Milwaukee. $49.50 and$75. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Twin Shadow, 8 p.m. April 11,Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $13 inadvance, $15 day of show. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Who’s Bad, 8 p.m. April 10, Turn-er Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $18.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Steve Winwood, 8 p.m. April 19,Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $45,$55, $75. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Neutral Milk Hotel, 8 p.m. April24, Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$35.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Milky Chance, 8 p.m. May 14,Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $18 inadvance, $20 day of show. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Murder By Death, 8:30 p.m. May28, Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032N. Fourth St., Milwaukee. $15.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Johnny Mathias, 7:30 p.m. May28, Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$49, $69, $89, $135. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

John Mellencamp, 7:30 p.m.June 5, Riverside Theater, 116W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$118.50, $79.50, $59.50,$49.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Music Under Glass, 6:30 p.m. to9 p.m. selected dates throughMarch 19, Mitchell ParkDomes, 524 S. Layton Blvd.

Concert series, 12:30 p.m. everythird Friday, Spring CreekChurch, N35-W22000 W. Capi-tol Drive, Pewaukee. $10 gen-eral admission, $5 studentsages 5 to 17.www.springcreekonline.com.

Theater“The Dastardly Ficus and

Other Comedic Tales of Woeand Misery,” selected datesthrough Sunday, Lake CountryPlayhouse, 221 E. CapitolDrive, Hartland. www.lake-countryplayhouse.net.

“Five Presidents,” selecteddates through April 5, Quadrac-ci Powerhouse, 108 E. WellsSt., Milwaukee. Start at $20.414-224-9490 or www.milwau-keerep.com.

The Moth GrandSLAM II, 7 p.m.show Thursday, Turner HallBallroom, 1032 N. Fourth St.,Milwaukee. $20. 414-286-3663or www.pabsttheater.org.

“Good People,” selected datesthrough Feb. 15, QuadracciPowerhouse, 108 E. Wells St.,Milwaukee. Start at $20. 414-224-9490 or www.milwau-keerep.com.

“Dancing With The Stars: Live,”8 p.m.Thursday, Riverside The-ater, 116 W. Wisconsin Ave.,Milwaukee. $49.50, $55.50,$79.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Chris Tucker, 8 p.m. Friday,Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $40and $60. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’sNest,” 7:30 p.m.Thursday; 7:30p.m. Friday; 2 p.m. and 7:30p.m. Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday;7:30 p.m. Tuesday; 7:30 p.m.Wednesday; 7:30 p.m. Jan. 30;2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Jan. 31,Sunset Playhouse, 800 ElmGrove Road, Elm Grove. Tick-ets range from $10 to $20. 262-782-4430 or www.sunsetplay-house.com.

Winter Tales by the Fire: Flo-rentine Opera’s “Goldie B.Locks and the Three SingingBears,” 6 p.m. Saturday,Sharon Lynne Wilson Centerfor the Arts, 19805 W. CapitolDrive, Brookfield. Tickets $7.www.sunsetplayhouse.com,262-782-4430.

“Give My Regards to Broad-way,” 7:30 p.m. Monday; 2 p.m.and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, SunsetPlayhouse, 800 Elm GroveRoad, Elm Grove. $16 to $20.262-782-4430 or www.sunset-playhouse.com.

“The Male Intellect: An Oxy-moron?” 7:30 p.m. Friday and2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday,Marcus Center for the Perform-ing Arts, 929 N. Water St., Mil-waukee. $50. 414-273-7121 orwww.marcuscenter.org.

Howie Mandel, 8 p.m. Jan. 31,Riverside Theater, 116 W. Wis-consin Ave., Milwaukee. $45and $95. 414-286-3663 or

www.pabsttheater.org.Sebastian Maniscalco, 8 p.m.

Feb. 6, Turner Hall Ballroom,1032 N. Fourth St., Milwaukee.$35.50. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

“Mama Won't Fly,” 7:30 p.m.Feb. 6 and Feb. 7, Feb. 13 andFeb. 14, 2 p.m. Feb. 8 and Feb.15, North Middle School audi-torium, N88-W16750 GarfieldDrive, Menomonee Falls. $15adults, $13 seniors and stu-dents. 262-255-8372 orwww.fallspatioplayers.com.

“Funny Money,”7:30 p.m. Feb. 6;7:30 p.m. Feb. 7; 2 p.m. Feb. 8;7:30 p.m. Feb. 13; 3:30 p.m.and 7:30 p.m. Feb. 14; 2 p.m.Feb. 15; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 20,Waukesha Civic Theatre, 264W. Main St., Waukesha. $10 to$23. 262-547-0708 orwww.waukeshacivictheatre.org

“My Funny Valentine,” 7:30 p.m.Feb. 12, Waukesha Civic The-atre, 264 W. Main St., Wauke-sha. $10 to $23. 262-547-0708or www.waukeshacivicthe-atre.org.

Alton Brown Live! 8 p.m. Feb.14, Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.$35.50, $45.50, $55.50. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Tony & Tina’s Wedding, select-ed dates Feb. 12 through Feb.21, Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032N. Fourth St., Milwaukee. $65.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

“Mamma Mia!” Feb. 20 throughFeb. 22, Marcus Center for thePerforming Arts, 929 N. WaterSt., Milwaukee. $30 to $80.414-273-7206 or www.marcus-center.org.

“Dinosaur Train Live!” 11:30a.m. and 3 p.m. March 7, PabstTheater, 144 E. Wells St., Mil-waukee. $15, $23, $27. 414-286-3663 or www.pabstthe-ater.org.

Carly Aquilno, 8 p.m. March 7,Turner Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $24.50.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Bo Burnham, 8 p.m. March 11,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $31.25. 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org.

Jim Jefferies, 8 p.m. March 14,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $25. 414-286-3663or www.pabsttheater.org.

“The Beauty and The Beast,”March 17 through March 22,Marcus Center for the Perform-ing Arts, 929 N. Water St., Mil-waukee. 414-273-7206 orwww.marcuscenter.org.

“Chuggington Live! The GreatRescue Adventure,” 11 a.m.and 2 p.m. May 10, MilwaukeeTheatre, 500 W. Kilbourn Ave.$18, $28, $38, $48. 800-745-3000 or www.ticketmaster.com.

C.S. Lewis’ “The GreatDivorce,” 8 p.m. April 11 and 4p.m. April 12, Pabst Theater,144 E. Wells St., Milwaukee.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Colin Mochrie and Brad Sher-wood, 8 p.m. April 24, PabstTheater, 144 E. Wells St., Mil-waukee. $29.50 and $49.50.414-286-3663 or www.pab-sttheater.org.

Blue Man Group, April 17through April 19, Marcus Cen-ter for the Performing Arts, 929N. Water St., Milwaukee. 414-273-7206 or www.marcuscen-ter.org.

Chris Hardwick, 8 p.m. May 8,Pabst Theater, 144 E.Wells St.,Milwaukee. $35. 414-286-3663or www.pabsttheater.org.

“The Book of Mormon,” beginsMay 19, Marcus Center for thePerforming Arts, 929 N. WaterSt., Milwaukee. 414-273-7206or www.marcuscenter.org.

Etc.“Can You Eat Your Way Clear of

Disease?” 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.Jan. 29, Good Harvest Market,1850 Meadow Lane, Pewau-kee, $45; Planning Your Veg-gie Garden workshop, 10a.m. to noon Feb. 7, NuGene-sis, N68-W33208 Highway K,Town of Merton, $15; HealthyHeart Treats Cooking Class,5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Feb. 11,Good Harvest Market, 1850Meadow Lane, Pewaukee, $45;Asian Fusion Cooking Class,5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Feb. 25,The National Café, 839 W.National Ave., Milwaukee, $45.800-969-3588 or www.nugene-sisfarm.org.

Milwaukee County FarmersMarket, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Satur-days through April 11, MitchellPark Domes, 524 S. LaytonBlvd., Milwaukee.www.mcwfm.org.

Terrific Telescopes, 7 p.m. to 8p.m. every Friday through Feb.27, University of Wisconsin-Mil-waukee Manfred Olson Plane-tarium, 1900 E. Kenwood Blvd.$ 3 .www.planetariuim.uwm.edu.

Ghost Hunters with JasonHawes and Steve Gonsalves,8 p.m. Friday, Pabst Theater,144 E. Wells St., Milwaukee.$29.50. 262-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

Lego Architecture! Activity, 2p.m. to 4 p.m., Friday, ElmGrove Library, 13600 JuneauBlvd. Free. 262-782-6700 or

www.elmgrovewi.org.After Hour Wii Night, 6 p.m. to 8

p.m. Friday, Delafield PublicLibrary, 500 Genesee St. $1 forpizza. 262-646-6230 orwww.delafieldlibrary.org.

Artworks Clearance Sale, 8a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday,Waukesha County Expo Cen-ter, 1000 Nor thview Road,Waukesha. www.waukesha-countyexpocenter.com.

Winterfest, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Sunday, Boerner BotanicalGardens, 9400 Boerner Drive,Franklin. $5, free for childrenunder age 5. www.boernerb-otancialgardens.org.

Winter Farmers Market, 11 a.m.to 2 p.m. Sunday, TippecanoePresbyterian Church, 125 W.Saveland Ave., Milwaukee.414-481-4680 orwww.tippechurch.org.

After Hour Wii Night, 6 p.m. to 8p.m. Friday, Delafield PublicLibrary, 500 Genesee St. $1 forpizza. www.delafieldlibrary.org,262-646-6230.

Artworks Clearance Sale, 8a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday,Waukesha County Expo Cen-ter, 1000 Nor thview Road,Waukesha. www.waukesha-county.gov.

Lake Country Libraries’ Memo-ry Project Kick-Off forAlzheimer’s Patients, 10:30a.m. to noon Jan. 30, Pewau-kee Public Library, 210 MainSt. Free. www.pewaukeeli-brary.org, 262-691-5670, ext.932.

Milwaukee Northwestern Mod-ern Railroad Exhibit, 10 a.m.to 3 p.m. Jan. 31, DelafieldPublic Library, 500 GeneseeSt. Free.www.delafieldlibrary.org, 262-646-6230.

Wisconsin Antique DealersAssociation Show, 11 a.m. to9 p.m. Friday, Feb. 6; 10 a.m. to5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7,Waukesha County Expo Cen-ter, 1000 Nor thview Road,Waukesha. Admission $6;parking free. www.wisconsi-nantiquedealers.com, 262-548-7200.

Find Your Inner Strength withTai Chi, 1 p.m. Feb. 10,Delafield Public Library, 500Genesee St. Free.www.delafieldlibrary.org, 262-646-6230.

Open house, 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.Feb. 10, Kosciuszko Communi-ty Center, 2201 S. Seventh St.,Milwaukee. 414-645-4624 orwww.countyparks.com.

Lunch and Learn Program:“Historic Breweries and Tav-erns in Waukesha County,”11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 11,Waukesha County Museum,101 W. Main St., Waukesha.$10 for members, $12 for non-members. www.waukesha-countymuseum.org, 262-521-2859, ext. 224,

[email protected] Club: “Rockin’

Rhymes,” 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.Feb. 19, Waukesha CountyMuseum, 101 W. Main St.,Waukesha. $4 per child, $3 fornonmember adults, free formember adults. www.wauke-shacountymuseum.org, 262-521-2859, ext. 224, [email protected].

Tripoli Shrine Circus, Feb. 26through March 1, UW-Milwau-kee Panther Arena, 400 W. Kil-bourn Ave., Milwaukee. 414-908-6001 or www.uwmilwau-keepantherarena.com.

Lake Country Libraries’ Memo-ry Project Kick-Off forAlzheimer’s Patients, 10:30a.m. to noon Jan. 30, Pewau-kee Public Library, 210 Main St.Free. 262-691-5670, ext. 932,or www.pewaukeelibrary.org.

Chili fundraiser, 11 a.m. to 3p.m. Feb. 7, United MethodistChurch, 305 E. Main St., Eagle.$7 adults, $5 children ages 4through 10, free for children 3and under.

The Milwaukee Bonsai Soci-ety’s “Winter Silhouettes,” 9a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 8, MitchellPark Domes, 524 S. LaytonBlvd., Milwaukee. www.milwau-keebonsai.org.

Lunch and Learn Program:“Historic Breweries and Tav-erns in Waukesha County,”11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 11,Waukesha County Museum,101 W. Main St., Waukesha.$10 for members, $12 for non-members. www.waukesha-countymuseum.org, 262-521-2859, ext. 224,[email protected].

Westoberfest, 7 p.m. Feb. 28,Tuscan Hall Banquet Center,409 Delafield St., Delafield. $30in advance, $35 at the door.www.waukeshawestathletics.com.

Extreme Midget Wrestling Fed-eration, 7:30 p.m. April 3, Turn-er Hall Ballroom, 1032 N.Fourth St., Milwaukee. $15 inadvance, $20 day of show, $25ringside. 414-286-3663 orwww.pabsttheater.org.

American Legion & AuxiliaryDJ Martin Unit No. 8, meet-ings are held second Mondayof each month at 7 p.m.,Waukesha Elks Club onSpringdale Road. 262-542-4545.

Bunco, 12:45 p.m. every Tues-day, Oconomowoc Area SeniorCenter, 210 S. Main St.,Oconomowoc. 262-567-4288.

“Take A Break! ParentingYoung Children,” sponsoredby People to People, 9:30a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Wednes-days, The Women’s Center,505 N. East Ave., Waukesha.262-547-4600.

Cudahy Historical Societyopen house, 10 a.m. to noon,last Saturday of the month,

Cudahy Railroad Depot, 4647S. Kinnickinnic Ave., Cudahy.Free. wwwcudahyhistoricalso-ciety.org.

Oconomowoc Quilters Guild, 7p.m. third Thursday of themonth, Lord of Life Church,N60-W35980 Lake Drive.www.oconomowocquilters.com

Free lectures, 10:30 a.m. everySunday, Marian Center forNonprofits, 3211 S. Lake Drive,St. Francis. 414-327-7849 orwww.rsgm.net.

Fresh produce stand, 7 a.m. to9 p.m. daily, Machine ShedRestaurant, N14-W24145Tower Road, City of Pewaukee.262-523-1322.

International Clown Hall ofFame, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon-days through Fridays and byappointment year-round,Tommy Thompson Youth Build-ing, Wisconsin State Fair Park,640 S. 84th St., West Allis. 414-290-0105.

“Grieving the Death of a Part-ner,” 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. or 7 p.m.to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, St. Luke’sMedical Center, 2900 W. Okla-homa Ave., Milwaukee. Prereg-ister by calling 414-328-6280.

Pettit National Ice Center, pub-lic ice skating, 7 p.m.to 9 p.m. Mondays, 11 a.m.to 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.Tuesdays through Thursdays,11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. to10 p.m. Fridays, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.and 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdaysand 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.to 9 p.m. Sundays, 500 S. 84thSt., West Allis. 414-266-0100.

Ozaukee Ice Center, public ice skating, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.Mondays through Fridays, 1p.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays andSundays, 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Fridays, family skating; and9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.Wednesdays, senior skate forages 55 and older, 5505 W.Pioneer Road, Mequon. $4.50adults, $3.50 seniors and chil-dren 18 and younger. 262- 375-1100.

Senior ice skating, 10 a.m.to 11 a.m. and family skate night, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, Pettit NationalIce Center, 500 S. 84th St.,West Allis. 414-266-0100.

Friends of the Alice BakerMemorial Public Library,7 p.m. fourth Tuesday of themonth, Alice Baker MemorialPublic Library, 820 E. Main St.,Eagle. 262-594-2800.

Photographers Anonymous, 7p.m. last Tuesday of the month,Riveredge Nature Center, 4458W. Hawthorne Drive, Newburg.262-375-2715.

Greater Milwaukee Rose Soci-ety, 7 p.m. second Tuesday ofthe month, Boerner BotanicalGardens, 9400 Boerner Drive,Hales Corners. 414-774-5567or www.milwaukeerose.org.414-425-7039.

WWW.GMTODAY.COM12A • THE FREEMAN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 timeout

To submit informationIf you would like to submit information to be featured in TimeOut, email info to [email protected].

Chris TuckerWhen: 8 p.m. FridayWhere: Riverside Theater, 116 W.Wisconsin Ave., MilwaukeeMore info: 414-286-3663 or www.pabsttheater.org

“Mama Won’t Fly”When: Feb. 6 through Feb. 8, Feb. 13 through Feb. 15Where: North Middle School auditorium, N88-W16750 Garfield Drive, Menomonee FallsMore info: 262-255-8372 or www.fallspatioplayers.com