The Star - December 12, 2013
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Transcript of The Star - December 12, 2013
Index•
Classifi eds ................................. B6-B7Life ..................................................... A6Obituaries ......................................... A4Opinion ............................................. A5Sports......................................... B1-B3Weather............................................ A8TV/Comics .......................................B5
The Star118 W. Ninth St. Auburn, IN 46706
Auburn: (260) 925-2611Fax: (260) 925-2625
Classifi eds: (toll free) (877) 791-7877 Circulation: (toll free) (800) 717-4679
Info•
Vol. 101 No. 341
An immature bald eagle stands on the edge of the ice on Hamilton Lake’s Muskrat Bay while eating a bite on Wednesday morning. There were mature eagles nearby, reports Brad Stevens. Birding enthusiast Fred Wooley, who is naturalist at Pokagon State Park, estimated the age of the bird at around 2 years old. It is not from the nesting family that has made its home at Pokagon.
Eagle on icePHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Auburn, Indiana k p c n e w s . c o m 75 cents
Weather Partly cloudy, high 19. Low tonight 16.
High near 30 Friday. Overnight low in
lower 20s.Page A8
THURSDAYDecember 12, 2013
The Serving DeKalb County since 1871
Waterloo Changes Page A2
Town manager leaving for new jobScary Stuff Page A6
Area group exploring paranormal
GOOD MORNING
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BY KATHRYN [email protected]
INDIANAPOLIS — While her expressions of remorse are “commendable,” a 38-year sentence handed down to a woman for her role in the shooting of Waterloo Deputy Marshal Steve Brady is appropriate, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday.
Julie Marie King of Auburn pleaded guilty to aiding in attempted murder, a Class A felony, as part of an agreement fi led in DeKalb Superior Court II.
On May 6, Judge Monte Brown sentenced King to 45 years in prison with seven years suspended and 38 years to serve — the maximum allowed under terms of the plea agreement.
King appealed, contending the sentence was inappropriate in light of the nature of the offense and her character.
Reviewing the case history, the Court of Appeals noted that in October 2011, King allowed a married couple, Ralph and Cassie Hardiek, to move in with her after the Hardieks became homeless.
The three friends regularly used methamphetamine, and Cassie Hardiek began serving time for a drug offense. King and Ralph Hardiek then began a casual sexual relationship.
On Dec. 8, 2011, Ralph Hardiek failed to appear for a sentencing hearing after pleading guilty to dealing in methamphetamine. Between Dec. 8 and Dec. 11, Hardiek and King drove to Coldwater, Mich., where they had several guns illegally modifi ed by Thomas McCauley.
McCauley fi led the trigger guards off several handguns, including a .44-special revolver, and sawed the barrel off a shotgun, the Court of Appeals said. On Dec. 13, King drove to a gun store in New Haven, where she bought ammuni-tion for the .44-special and gave it to Hardiek.
The Court of Appeals noted King and Hardiek planned to move to another state, but they were low on money. On Dec. 13, 2011, they returned to McCauley’s home. In the early morning of Dec. 15, King and Hardiek began knocking on the doors of houses in DeKalb County. The inhabitants of two
Deputy-shooting sentence upheldCourt agrees with 45-year term
King
SEE SHOOTING, PAGE A8
DENNIS NARTKER
In a ceremony Wednesday at American Legion Post 86 in Kendallville, state Rep. David Ober, R-Albion, announced the late Don Moore of Kendallville had been awarded the Sagamore of the Wabash by Gov. Mike Pence. Ober presented the honor to Don Moore Jr. From left are Noble
County Councilman Dr. Jerry Jansen, who was appointed to fi ll Moore’s unexpired term on the Noble County Council; Kendallville Mayor Suzanne Handshoe; Don Moore’s wife, Cindy; Don Moore Jr.; and Ober. Don Moore’s photo is at far right.
BY DENNIS [email protected]
KENDALLVILLE — With family members and city and county offi cials looking on, state Rep. David Ober, R-Albion, presented Don Moore Jr. with his father Don Moore’s Sagamore of the Wabash honor in a brief ceremony Wednesday at American Legion Post 86.
“It’s amazes me how infl uential he was to everyone,” Moore Jr. said about his father.
Don Moore died Jan. 13. He was one of the community’s most energetic supporters and the owner of radio station WAWK-FM The Hawk in Kendallville.
Moore served as an Army intelligence analyst in the Vietnam War. He was an entrepreneur, operating Don Moore Productions
and Minuteman Mowing Services. He served as Noble County Council president, Kendallville Chamber of Commerce president, Kendallville Downtown Business Association president and commander of American Legion Post 86.
The Sagamore of the Wabash award is one of the most presti-gious honors given by the offi ce of Gov. Mike Pence. It recognizes Hoosiers for citizenship, distin-guished service to humanity, leadership and inspiration of others.
“We’re here to pay tribute to a man who was huge part of this community,” said Ober. “He gave me advice that I follow today. He said if you do your job right, you’re not a politician — you’re a leader.”
Ober, Kendallville Mayor Suzanne Handshoe and Dr. Jerry Jansen, who was appointed to the Noble County Council to fi ll Moore’s unexpired term, were infl uential in supporting Moore for the honor.
“There was no R or D after Don’s name. He had a big heart for his community,” said Handshoe.
Jansen recalled how he got to know Moore 30 years ago when they were in Kendallville Jaycees. He spoke about Moore’s service to his community.
Don Moore Jr. said if his dad saw something that needed to be done, he did it.
“If you want something done and done right, do it yourself, he always told me. He didn’t do things for the recognition or the glamour, he did them because of the cause,” Moore Jr. said.
Governor honors area manLate Don Moore becomes Sagamore
Choirs plan holiday breakfast, concert
DeKalb High School choirs are planning two holiday events in the next few days.
DeKalb Show Choirs will serve breakfast Saturday from 7:30-9:30 a.m. at Applebee’s in west Auburn. Tickets cost $5 for adults and $3 for ages 5-10 to dine on all-you-can-eat pancakes and sausages with drink. Santa Claus will greet children, and the DeKalb Dynamix choir will perform.
The entire choir depart-ment will present the annual Christmas Spectacular in the school auditorium Monday at 7:30 p.m. Tickets cost $4 in advance and $6 at the door.
BY MATT [email protected]
WASHINGTON — As a budget hawk, U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R-Howe, says there is a lot not to like about the budget proposal he will be voting on today.
It won’t shrink the national debt, which stands at $17 trillion and counting, Stutzman said. The budget will cut $23 billion into the budget defi cit over the next 10 years, but actually will increase the defi cit in the short term.
“It’s still way out of balance,” Stutzman said of government spending.
On the upside, the proposal would provide a degree of certainty and stability.
Those are the main issues Stutzman will be weighing before deciding how to cast his vote. He is not alone in putting
some serious thought into his choice.
Indiana’s delegation to the U.S. Senate is also waiting until more details are known about the budget deal before deciding on a yay or nay
vote.“While I look forward to
reviewing the details, I am concerned that this deal may be another missed opportunity
Stutzman, Hoosiers undecided
Stutzman
WASHINGTON (AP) — A newly minted budget deal to avert future government shutdowns gained important ground Wednesday among House Republicans who are more accustomed to brinkmanship than compromise, even though it would nudge federal defi cits higher three years in a row.
There was grumbling from opposite ends of the political spectrum — conservatives complaining about spending levels and liberal Democrats unhappy there would be no extension of an expiring program of benefi ts for the long-term unemployed.
Yet other lawmakers, buffeted by criticism after last October’s partial government shutdown, found plenty to like in the agreement and suggested it could lead to future cooperation. The plan was announced Tuesday evening by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Paul Ryan,
R-Wis., and quickly endorsed by President Barack Obama.
A House vote was expected as early as Thursday as lawmaker race to wrap up their work for the year.
“A lot of folks will probably vote for it even though they would rather not support this type of legislation, but we have to get the spending issue completed so that there is some consistency in the future,” said Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., called the agreement “a breath of fresh air” that could lead to further progress. Added House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, “If you’re for more defi cit reduction, you’re for this agreement.”
Boehner also took a swipe at outside groups that helped steer Republicans toward the politically damaging shutdown and opposed
Budget compromise gains grudging support
WASHINGTON (AP) — With time running short, the nation’s health care rolls still aren’t fi lling up fast enough.
New signup numbers Wednesday showed progress for President Barack Obama’s health care law, but not enough to guarantee that Americans who want and need coverage by Jan. 1 will be able to get it. Crunch time is now, as people face a Dec. 23 deadline to sign up if they are to have coverage by New Year’s.
That means more trouble for the White House, too, after months of repairing a dysfunctional enroll-ment website. Next year could start with a new round of political recriminations over the Afford-able Care Act, “Obamacare” to its opponents.
The Health and Human Services Department reported that 364,682 people had signed up for private coverage under the law as of Nov. 30. That is more than three times the October fi gure, but still less than one-third of the 1.2 million that offi cials had projected would enroll nationwide by the end of November. The administration’s overall goal was to sign up 7 million people by next March 31, when open enrollment ends.
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius assured Congress on Wednesday that “we are seeing very, very positive trends” now that Health-Care.gov is working reasonably well. She also announced that she’d asked the department’s inspector general for an indepen-
Healthrolls lagging
SEE STUTZMAN, PAGE A8
SEE BUDGET, PAGE A8
SEE HEALTH, PAGE A8
Three Indiana sites join Superfund list
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The federal Environmental Protection Agency has added sites in South Bend, Indianapolis and Garden City to its national priorities list of Superfund sites.
The EPA says being placed on the list doesn’t obligate it to pay for the cleanup, but does identify the size and nature of the cleanup challenges.
Nine sites were added to the list overall.
Signup deadline only 11 days away
BY MIKE [email protected]
ANGOLA — A proposed injunction against Angola would prevent the city from enforcing its sexually oriented business laws against Alva Butler and the Showgirl strip club he has tried unsuccessfully to open.
The injunction also would also nullify zoning changes that effectively have prevented the former Slider’s Grill and Bar site from being used as a sexually oriented business.
The proposed injunction
is sitting before U.S. Federal District Court Judge Robert L. Miller, South Bend. The proposed injunction was fi led by attorneys for Butler, who along with his wife, Sandra, sued the city in March after their efforts to open a strip club were thwarted by law changes in Angola.
Miller requested the proposed injunction language be fi led with the court in a Nov. 13 hearing. He said his request didn’t necessarily mean he would grant the motion.
“It’s not a bad thing that he’s asking for a proposed order and fi ndings of fact,” said Matthew Hoffer, one of Butler’s attorneys.
Butler, of Fort Wayne, bought the former Slider’s property, 310 W. Wendell Jacob Ave., in August 2012 with the intent of opening a Showgirl strip club. Butler is the founder of the Showgirl clubs in Fort Wayne and is current owner of Showgirl III. Showgirl I is owned by Butler’s son, James Butler.
In hearings in federal
court in October and November, Butler’s attorneys, Bradley Shaffer and Hoffer, of Lansing, Mich., argued that city offi cials intentionally enacted laws and enforced building codes to prevent Butler from opening.
Attorneys for the city have argued that Angola offi cials were correct in their application of existing laws and the creation of new ordinances as they related to sexually oriented businesses and zoning. When Butler bought the former Slider’s, the C-2 zone in which the property lies allowed sexually oriented businesses.
In November, the city changed its zoning to allow such businesses only in an industrial zone.
Both sides have until Dec. 20 to fi le fi ndings of fact concerning the motion for preliminary injunction.
If the judge follows the recommended language from Shaffer and Hoffer, the city would not be able to apply its sexually oriented business ordinance against Butler and his company, BBL Inc. Also, the city would not be allowed to require that Butler get an improvement location permit to convert the former restaurant to a strip club.
Judge receives proposed Showgirl injunction
A2 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
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PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Cub Scouts collect food for charityAuburn Cub Scout Pack 3169 sponsored a food drive to benefi t local families in need. All of the food collected was donated to RSVP
Community Center for Caring Food Bank in Auburn.
AUBURN — Judge Kevin Wallace sentenced seven people for criminal offenses during hearings Monday in DeKalb Superior Court I.
• Albert Toms II of the 1300 block of North 140W, Angola, was fi ned $50 and must pay court costs for cruelty to an animal, a Class A misdemeanor.
• Matthew Emenhiser of the 600 block of Spencerville Street, Hicksville, Ohio, received a 180-day suspended sentence and one year of probation for conver-sion, a Class A misdemeanor. He was fi ned $50 and must pay court costs.
• Kent Fell of the 300 block of
South Franklin Street, Waterloo, was sentenced to 60 days of incarceration for operating a vehicle with an unlawful alcohol concentration, a Class C misdemeanor. The sentence may be served on community correc-tions if he qualifi es. He was fi ned $150 and must pay court costs. His driving license was suspended for 180 days.
• Donald Leverton Jr. of the 6400 block of C.R. 327, Garrett, was sentenced to 60 days in jail, all suspended except 20 days, for operating a vehicle with an unlawful alcohol concentration, a Class C misdemeanor. He received one year of probation and was
fi ned $500. He must pay court costs, and his driving license was suspended for 90 days.
• Peter Murdoch of Bradenton, Fla., was sentenced to 12 months in jail, all suspended except 60 days, for operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor. He was placed on probation through Dec. 9, 2014, and was fi ned $500. He must pay court costs and his driving license was suspended for 180 days.
• James Johnston of the 300 block of South Walsh Street, Garrett, received two one-year sentences for operating a vehicle while intoxicated and posses-sion of marijuana, both Class A
misdemeanors. The sentences will be served at the same time and are suspended except for 90 days. The first 30 days must be served in jail and the remaining 60 days may be served on community corrections if he qualifies. He was placed on probation through Dec. 9, 2014, and was fined $500. He must pay court costs, and his driving license was suspended for 180 days.
• Daniel J. Poole Jr., of Jackson, Mich., received a one-year suspended sentence and one year of probation for posses-sion of a controlled substance, a Class A misdemeanor. He was fi ned $1 and must pay court costs.
Judge sentences 7 offenders for crimes
BY AARON [email protected]
WATERLOO — DeWayne Nodine has resigned as Waterloo’s town manager, a position he’s held for more than a decade.
Nodine has accepted a position with the city of Fort Wayne as a program manager with City Utilities. His resignation is effective Friday, though he will remain with the town on a part-time basis until a replacement is hired.
“It’s been a great experi-ence,” Nodine told the
Waterloo Town Council Tuesday evening. “Every once in a while, I think it’s just time to move on, and that time has come.”
Council President Candi Surber praised the work Nodine has accomplished during his tenure as the town’s manager, saying he has saved the town untold thousands and, likely, millions of dollars through his expertise and understanding. Surber said replacing Nodine will be no small task.
“We would not be here tonight without his
leadership,” said Surber. “I have not served a day without him being here, and I cannot imagine how this town got along back in the day. We are indebted to you, DeWayne, and we thank you. You will be missed.”
The council will advertise for the position. Surber could not say when the town hopes to have a new town manager in place, other than to joke, “Tomorrow.”
In other business Tuesday evening, the council awarded annual
Pillar of the Community awards to three individuals and a corporation. Receiving the award, which honors those who make signifi cant contributions to make the town a better place to live and work, were: Jerry and Jo Hart of Hart’s Super Valu; Chris Albright of Country Stone; and Nucor Building Systems. The Nucor award was accepted by Emily Vanover and Jeremy Pfefferkorn.
The council also:• approved a $5,304
project to install new high-tech lift station
monitors on the lift stations at MetalX and the Waterloo Grille. Nodine said the new monitors will alert offi cials to power failures or fl uctu-ations in voltage or amps. Data can be viewed from off-site anywhere with an Internet connection, Nodine said.
• awarded a construc-tion contract to Hamilton Hunter Builders Inc. for work on the Waterloo Grant Township Public Library’s expansion project. The $1,375,470 job will be paid once a bond issue is released next week. The
library will hold a ground-breaking ceremony Dec. 29 at 3 p.m.
• approved an interim salary ordinance that grants town employees (other than council members) 2 percent raises, and police offi cers 6 percent raises. The council will revisit the salary ordinance next year, it said.
• renewed its contract with town attorney David Kruse that raises his pay 2 percent.
• reappointed Paula McGrath to the board of the DeKalb County Council on Aging.
Waterloo’s town manager leaving for new post
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indianapolis police offi cer’s lawsuit against the original seller of a handgun later used to wound him might have to overcome a state law that gives gun sellers signifi cant immunity.
The lawsuit fi led Tuesday in a Marion County court by the Washington-based Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence claims KS&E Sports of Indianapolis negligently sold the handgun used to shoot Offi cer Dwayne Runnels in 2011.
Runnels was wounded in the leg during an exchange of gunfi re in which Demetrious Martin was killed. Tarus Blackburn pleaded guilty to federal charges of illegally selling the weapon to Martin, who couldn’t legally possess a fi rearm because he was a convicted felon.
The lawsuit claims Blackburn accompanied Martin to KS&E Sports in October 2011, bought a gun and then sold it to Martin in the store’s parking lot. The lawsuit alleges the gun shop’s workers should have known Blackburn was making a “straw purchase” for Martin.
“I’m bringing the lawsuit because I do not want criminals to get guns,” Runnels said. “I don’t want another offi cer or a civilian to be shot by one of these criminals, and every offi cer out there puts their life on the line every day that they go to work.”
Woundedoffi cer suesgun dealer
AREA • STATE kpcnews.com THE STAR A3•
Offi cers arrest threeAUBURN — Local
police offi cers arrested three people Tuesday and Wednesday, according to police records.
Stacey S. Fitzwater, 24, of the 500 block of East King Street, Garrett, was arrested Tuesday at 1:55 p.m. by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department for alleged failure to appear for a probation violation hearing.
Krystal Delong, 27, of the 1200 block of Ashwood Drive, Auburn, was arrested Tuesday at 11:35 p.m. by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department for alleged contempt of civil court.
Tina M. Hicks, 46, of the 100o block of South Main Street, Auburn, was arrested Wednesday at 4 p.m. by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department on a warrant charging her with theft, a Class D felony.
Police Blotter•
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
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Th ank you toIndependent Full Gospel Church
for providing a Live Nativity onSaturday,
December 14th
Briefl y•
New Year’s Eve party benefi ts fi refi ghters
AUBURN — The annual Smokin’ New Year’s Eve Fundraiser will take place Dec. 31 to benefi t Auburn fi refi ghters.
The event will take place at the Auburn Moose Family Center, 402 S. Main St. Doors will open at 7 p.m., with music by Choice beginning at 8:30 p.m. Admission includes party favors, snacks, a cash bar and champagne at midnight.
Tickets cost $12 per person and may be purchased at Carbaugh Jewelers, Auburn fi re stations, Auburn Moose Family Center or from any Auburn fi refi ghter. Only 95 tickets remained as of Wednesday.
The event is sponsored by Auburn Firefi ghters Local 2454.
KATHRYN BASSETT
Diaper drive for domestic violence victimsThe DeKalb County Domestic Violence Task Force is partnering with DeKalb County law enforcement agencies to conduct the annual Bottoms Up diaper drive. The task force provides diapers to domestic violence victims with small children who cannot purchase diapers due to lack of money. The diaper drive will run
through Dec. 31. The task force needs diapers in all sizes, but especially sizes 4, 5 and 6, as well as wipes. Donations may be dropped off at any police department in DeKalb County. Showing one of the donation boxes are Auburn Police Offi cer Krista Johnson and task force member Mark Pomeroy.
BY JEFF [email protected]
BUTLER — Rosema-ma’s Thrift Shop opened in November in the former Lane Realty building at 400 W. Main St. in Butler.
Owner Chris Crager of Butler said she needed something to do with her free time, and a thrift store is a business she always wanted to run.
The business name came from her grandchil-dren. Crager explained her house features roses in every room, and they began calling her “Rosemama.”
The business features home decor items; clothing of all sizes, including plus sizes; new and costume jewelry; leather and regular coats; toys; knick-knacks; Colts blankets and Marilyn
Monroe collectible plates among its merchandise.
In the future, Crager wants to offer concrete plaques and consignment opportunities. She plans to turn over inventory on a regular basis.
Crager and her late husband formerly operated Stateline Nursery & Novelties for about 10 years.
Butler thrift shop opens
JEFF JONES
Butler resident Chris Crager is the owner of Rosemama’s Thrift Shop, which
opened in November in the former Lane Realty building at 400 W. Main St.
Regional Roundup•
Off-track betting moving to New HavenFORT WAYNE (AP) — The Hoosier Park horse track is
looking to pull in more gamblers to its Fort Wayne off-track betting parlor with a $2 million project moving it to a new location.
The Indiana Horse Racing Commission on Tuesday unanimously approved the Anderson-based track’s proposal. The betting parlor will move from its site since 1996 on the city’s north side to a New Haven shopping center near a supermarket and a state license branch offi ce.
Offi cials of Hoosier Park parent company Centaur Gaming estimate the betting parlor’s revenue will jump by 50 percent in two years. Wagering at the Fort Wayne OTB has dropped by about one-third since 2008 to $7.7 million in 2012.
Golf cart regulations nixedNEW HAVEN (AP) — The plug has been pulled on a
proposal aimed at legalizing and regulating the use of golf carts on the streets of New Haven.
The City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to kill the proposed ordinance after several contentious meetings on the issue.
Councilman Ron Steinman called the decision a sad one. He said golf carts will still be driven on city streets, but they will be unlicensed and without age limits, lights or safety standards.
Hoosiers sign up for health exchangeINDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Nearly 2,800 Indiana residents
chose a health insurance plan through the federally run online exchange during its second month of operation — about four times the number who obtained coverage through the glitch-plagued exchange in its fi rst month, the federal government said Wednesday.
A total of 3,492 Indiana residents chose health insurance plans through the exchange between Oct. 1 and Nov. 30, according to fi gures released by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. That’s up from just 701 Hoosiers who selected health plans during the exchange’s fi rst month.
But the nearly 3,500 Indiana residents who obtained health plans through the exchange by Nov. 30 is only a tiny fraction of the more than 500,000 Hoosiers eligible to do so.
Fire chief resigns after racial postingsOWENSBURG (AP) — The chief of a southwestern
Indiana volunteer fi re department has resigned after being confronted about postings on his Facebook page saying he was a racist and had joined the Ku Klux Klan.
Sean Sargent resigned Tuesday after about a year as chief of the Owensburg Fire Department in rural Greene County.
Jackson Township Trustee Paul Trampke oversees the fi re department. Trampke says he was shocked by Sargent’s postings and confronted him after hearing of complaints about them to the sheriff’s department.
KENDALLVILLE — Graphic Packaging is planning to occupy a vacant building in the East Industrial Park to gain warehousing space and improve its shipping movements.
Wednesday morning, the Kendallville Redevel-opment Commission recommended a two-year tax abatement on a vacant building with an assessed value of $869,500 and fi ve years of sliding abatement on approximately $80,000 of improvements to the building. The City Council
is expected to vote on the abatements at its meeting Tuesday night.
The project will not create new jobs, but will help retain the company’s 143 employees, according to an application for the tax abatement.
Judy Geist, a Graphic Packaging representative, told commissioners the company’s manufacturing plant at 301 Progress Drive in the East Industrial Park currently uses a warehouse at 2705 Marion Drive for product storage, but the company needs more space.
Plant adding warehouse
KOKOMO (AP) — The city of Kokomo has purchased a former steel plant site that has undergone years of environmental cleanup and plans to use the land to try to reduce damage from future fl ooding.
The Kokomo Tribune reports the sale of the Continental Steel Superfund site marked the end of nearly 10 years of discus-sions between city offi cials and Howard County. The city bought the property for $5,000 and purchased 54 fl ood-damaged properties in the area for $500 apiece.
Plans for the Continental Steel land parcels include the continued development of a 60-acre soccer complex and the development of a roundabout.
The city also is planning development of a storm-water basin at a quarry site.
Kokomo buyssteel plant for fl ood control
VIDEOVIDEO FEATURES FEATURES onon
Elayne LaFlameCLEAR LAKE — Elayne
M. LaFlame, age 89, died Tuesday, December 10, 2013, in Angola, Indiana.
Born April, 27, 1924, Elayne grew up in Chicago, Illinois, and Montigue,
Michigan. She and her late husband, Frank E. LaFlame, raised their family in Dayton, Ohio.
After Frank retired from General Motors,
they spent time traveling the United States in their RV. They also enjoyed their winters in Bonita Springs, Florida, and summers at Clear Lake, Indiana. They loved having their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren visit them wherever they found themselves.
Elayne was a wonderful cook and seamstress and an avid reader. She and her husband enjoyed hosting their extended family at their home in Clear Lake, Indiana, partic-ularly during the holidays. She enjoyed boating during the summer and snowmobiling in the winter. Elayne was still taking grandchildren and great-grandchildren for rides on her speedboat up until just a few years before her death.
Elayne is preceded in death by her husband of 59 years Frank; her parents, Espy Harper and Florence Crow; a daughter, Susan, and son, John (“Jack”).
She is survived by a brother, John Harper of West Palm Beach, Florida; a daughter, Vicki Biddinger (David) of Beverly Hills, Michigan; sons, Steve LaFlame (Michele) of Dayton, Ohio, and Gregory LaFlame (Cindy) of North Canton, Ohio; nine grandchil-dren; 14 great-grandchildren, many nieces and nephews; her faithful canine companion of 12 years, Nikki; and her special friends Lori and Denny Fulton of Fremont, Indiana.
Funeral service for Elayne will be held on Saturday, December 14, 2013, at 10 a.m. at St. Paul Catholic Church, 8780 E. 700 (Clear Lake), Fremont, IN 46737, with burial to follow at a later date at Calvary Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio.
Beams Funeral Home in Fremont is in charge of arrangements.
Condolences may be sent online to www.beamsfuner alhome.com.
Dustin TuckerKENDALLVILLE —
Dustin Michael Tucker, 40, of Kendallville died Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013, at Wesley Healthcare in Auburn
Mr. Tucker attended the New Life Tabernacle in Kendall-ville.
He was born in Kendallville on Aug. 1, 1973, to Jesse Elias Tucker and
Hazel Belle (Frain)Tucker Samples.
Surviving are two sisters, Colleen Vanschoyck of Talcum, Ky., and Tresha Kelley of Kendallville; and five brothers,
Donald Tucker of Peru, Dowine and Janie Tucker of Rome City, James Dawson and Julie Tucker of Kendallville, Randy Tucker of Fort Wayne and Richard and Sheila Tucker of Kendallville.
He was preceded in death by his parents; two brothers, Gary Tucker and Marion Tucker; and two sisters, Lavancha Tucker and Rilla Tucker.
Visitation will be today from 3-7 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home in Kendall-ville.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Friday at the funeral home, James Archambeault, pastor of New Life Tabernacle, officiating. Casketbearers will be Richard Tucker, Jon Kelley, Dalton Wayne Ritchie, Carey Tucker, Charles Tucker and Jesse Kelley. Burial will be at Woodruff Cemetery, LaGrange County.
Memorials are to Noble County Humane Shelter.
Send a condolence to the family at www.hitefu neral home.com.
Jerry MoonBUTLER — Jerry
Edward Moon, 81, of Butler died Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013, at DeKalb Health in Auburn.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Weicht Funeral Home in Angola.
Burial will be in the Circle Hill Cemetery in Angola.
Visitation will be from 10 -11 a.m. Saturday prior to the service.
John JacksonASHLEY — John D.
Jackson, 70, of Ashley died Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013, at Lakeland Nursing Home in Angola.
Mr. Jackson was a self-employed contractor.
He was a charter member of Fremont Moose #2387 and was a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church in Waterloo.
He was born in Ashley on Aug. 10, 1943, to Cecil and Delores (Gaetz) Jackson.
Surviving are two sons, Todd and Travis; a daughter Renee; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Jerome ‘‘Jerry’’ and Cathy Jackson of Fremont and Edward and Polly Jackson of Brighton, Colo.; a sister, Rose Marie Grogg of Hudson; and several grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by a son, Matthew, and two brothers, Larry and Tom.
Visitation will be from 5-7 p.m. Friday at Johnson Funeral Home in Hudson.
Burial will be at a later date.
Memorials are Masses to the church.
To send online condolences go to www.dalejohnsonfh.com.
Frederick MorrowPLYMOUTH —
Frederick C. Morrow passed away Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013, at his apartment at Miller’s Merry Manor in Plymouth. He was 90 years old.
A Plymouth native, he owned and operated Morrow Insurance Agency for 36 years, served as a city councilman for 17 years, and was a community leader who worked for decades on behalf of the aviation board, Plymouth Chamber of Commerce, Industrial Development Corporation and other civic organi-zations. In 1995, Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh awarded him the Sagamore of the Wabash, the highest civilian honor granted in the Hoosier state. In 2000, Plymouth High School honored him with its
Distinguished Alumni Hall of Fame Award.
He was born on June 17, 1923, in Plymouth to Fred A. and Velma (Loeffl er) Morrow. He married Shirley J. Moore in Bloomington, Indiana, on July 30, 1949. She survives.
During World War II, he served in the Army/Air Force, reached the rank of 2nd Lieutenant, and earned his wings fl ying B-17s, B-25s and B-29s.
Following his military service, he attended Indiana University in Bloomington and studied business. Upon his graduation in 1949, he returned to Plymouth and worked for Gibson Insurance Agency before starting Morrow Insurance Agency in 1953. He received many awards from the Westfi eld Insurance Company for being a top-performing agency. He retired from the insurance business in 1989.
Committed to civic service, Mr. Morrow helped create in the early 1950s the Plymouth Industrial Development Corporation (PIDCO), which became a model for communities seeking to expand their economic base. He helped direct that organization for more than 20 years.
In the early 1960s, he also served on the committee that created the Plymouth Municipal Airport, and he served many years as the Aviation Board president. Likewise, he served roughly 25 years on the Board of Directors for the Plymouth Chamber of Commerce, including a term as president; helped establish and coached in Plymouth’s Little League baseball program; served on the committee to expand Plymouth High School in the 1960s; served as President and Drive Chair for the Plymouth United Way; served two decades on the United Telephone of Indiana Board of Directors, and was a Rotary member for more than 50 years. Upon being elected and re-elected to the Plymouth City Council, he served from 1970 to 1987.
He was a longtime and active member of First United Methodist Church of Plymouth.
A devoted family man, Mr. Morrow was beloved by his wife, children, and grandchildren who appreci-ated his stories, infectious laugh, wise counsel, and attentiveness. Always full of good cheer and
optimism, he had many close friends.
A sports enthusiast, Mr. Morrow loved following IU basketball and football, as well as all Plymouth High School sporting events. He also enjoyed fi shing and golfi ng and remained physically active late in his life. He was especially proud of his college frater-nity, Sigma Chi, and was honored by the IU chapter as a Lambda Signifi cant Sig in 1983.
Along with his wife Shirley, he is survived by two sons and their wives, Dr. Douglas and Barbara Morrow of Auburn, Ind., and David and Christine Morrow of Plymouth; one daughter and her husband, Susie and John Kreighbaum of Plymouth; nine grandchil-dren, Matthew (Sarah) Morrow, James Morrow, Andrew Morrow, Nathan Morrow, Phillip (Amanda) Kreighbaum, Marjorie (Joey) Hernandez, Claire Morrow, Katie Morrow and Maggie Morrow; and one great-grandchild, Raelynn Hernandez. He is also survived by a brother-in-law, Harold (Mary Ann) Moore; a sister-in-law, Ann (Bob) Allen, and many nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother-in-law, Charles Thomas Moore.
Services will be at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 15, 2013, at First United Methodist Church of Plymouth, with the Rev. Larry Marhanka offi ciating. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Visitation will be at the church from 1-3 p.m. Sunday, immediately preceding the service.
Memorials may be given to the “Marshall County Community Foundation/First United Methodist Church Endowment.”
James WilsonJames Lee Wilson, 57,
of Hamilton, passed away Tuesday, December 10, 2013 at Lutheran Hospital in Fort Wayne.
Services are pending with Oberlin-Turnbull Funeral Home, 3985 East Church Street, Hamilton.
Larry CushingCOLDWATER, Mich.
— Larry C. Cushing, 83, of Coldwater passed away on Monday, December 9, 2013, at the Community Health Center of Branch County.
The funeral service will be today, Thursday, December 12, 2013, at 2 p.m. at Bethel-Gilead Community Church with Pastor Jim Erwin offi ciating. Interment will follow at Knauss Cemetery in Kinderhook.
Visitation will be held prior to the service, beginning at noon up until the time of the service at 2 p.m. at Bethel-Gilead Church.
Arrangements are being cared for by Dutcher Funeral Home.
Larry was born July 2, 1930, in Coldwater, Mich., to Clayton and Lydia (Whitcomb) Cushing.
He graduated from Coldwater High School in 1948 and married Clara J. Owens on February 14, 1973, in Ypsilanti.
Larry was a member of Bethel-Gilead Community Church.
He enjoyed working on the family farm and camping with Good Sam’s RV Club. Larry had a great love of music and enjoyed playing trumpet and singing.
Larry is survived by his wife Clara; his sons, Larry (Jane) Cushing of Howe, Indiana, Earl Robinson of Detroit, and John (Pam) Robinson of Fort Wayne, Indiana; his daughters, Ranae (T.J. Ciaffane) Cushing of Tecumseh, Kansas, Valerie Cushing of Dayton, Nevada, Nancy (Charles) Mault of St. Petersburg, Florida, and Mary (Joel) Quick of Fort Wayne, Indiana; 13 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his parents; his son, David Robinson; and his grandson, Greg Cushing.
Memorials may be directed to CHC Home Health and Hospice.
To send online condolences go to www.dutcherfh.com.
Deaths & Funerals •
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Legion post invites Vietnam veterans to open house program on Agent Orange
To the editor:Calling all veterans! Especially Vietnam
veterans!The Garrett American Legion Post 178. Will
have an open house on Dec. 16, 2013. The topic of this open house will be “Agent Orange” and the illnesses that are associated with it and the people who should be or should have been covered.
If you are a Vietnam veteran or your family member was a Vietnam veteran, please make time to attend. We plan on starting at 6 p.m. sharp! After a short presentation, there will be time for some questions.
Please inform all veterans that you know and invite them to be here. Again, that is Dec. 16, 6 p.m. at 515 W. Fifth Ave., Garrett.
Admission is free! This is an open house! You do not need to be a member!
There will be food available to purchase. Gibby normally starts to serve food at 5:30 p.m.
Since it is an open house, you will be able to purchase adult beverages. This is on a Monday night, and we have our weekly drawing at 8 p.m., so get here early if you can for good seats. Remember, this is a free presentation!
Our Post 178 is a non-smoking post, but there is a covered smoking area on our deck.
Our Post 178 opens at 3 p.m. on Monday at 515 W. Fifth Ave. (on the south end of town), Garrett.
Thomas KelleherPost 178, Garrett
Generous donations made Coats for the Needy a success
To the editor:We would like to thank everyone who helped
make our Coats For the Needy a huge success.First of all, thanks to our church family. Thanks
to the following businesses who allowed us to place the boxes in their plants for their employees to donate coats, hats and mittens: Ace Hardware, Autoline, Colormaster, DeKalb Molded Plastics, Heidtman Steel, Kaiser’s Super Market, Multimatic and Tri Wall. Without all of you it would not have been possible.
Jean CampButler Church of Christ
Concert, decorated homes bring joy to children’s choir
To the editor:Saturday afternoon we had the pleasure of
joining with the newly formed DeKalb Community Children’s Choir, led by Pam Pierson, at the Peabody Public Library in Columbia City. We were also joined by the Youth Chorale and Chamber Choir of the Fort Wayne Children’s Choir. We had a wonderful audience in Columbia City and the young singers were absolutely fantastic. We then traveled by bus to Auburn to perform for the DeKalb Choir’s local community at the Nazarene Church on the north end of town. We were so pleased with the facility and the welcome we received from the audience, and hope that it will be the fi rst of many visits to your city.
On the way home, after nearly 10 hours together, our bus of tired singers headed back through the dark streets toward Columbia City. As we drove down through the beautiful old homes that line your streets, the children suddenly burst into applause when they saw those stately homes completely decked out for Christmas. I was surprised that the owners didn’t look out the windows to see who was cheering and clapping at 9 p.m. Then they erupted into a wild chorus of “Jingle Bells” — in tune, of course.
Thank you to the owners of those beautiful homes along Main Street — we want them to know how much cheer they provided to a group of singers who had spent their entire day singing for others.
See you next year at our Rejoice Concert!Becky Walter, director, Whitley Community
Children’s ChoirColumbia City
Stay out of decent, hard-working people’s lives
To the editor:This is an open letter to Obama and his kind.You and your kind need to stay out of decent,
hard-working people’s lives.You people are neither decent nor do you know
hard work.We as American citizens will prevail over your
anti-American government.Paul L. Holman
Ashley
On the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, Shipfi tter 1st Class John “Jack” Garrett was aboard the light cruiser USS Saint Louis tied up next to its sister ship, the light cruiser Helena, in Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.
His job on the heavily armored ship was hull maintenance and repair, but not on that morning. The 20-year-old Fort Wayne native was getting ready to go ashore when Japanese bombers, torpedo planes and fi ghter
aircraft attacked the U.S. Navy fl eet in the harbor.Seventy-two years later, the 93-year-old Pearl Harbor
veteran rode in a military-style jeep in Saturday’s Kendall-ville Area Chamber of Commerce Christmas Parade, exposed to the freezing, wintry temperatures.
“It wasn’t bad. I had on a hooded coat,” he said.Garrett is one of only about 2,500 Pearl Harbor
survivors still alive.“I’m blessed,” he said this week, when talking about
the death and destruction that surrounded him from the surprise Japanese attack and the close calls he had while serving on the USS Saint Louis throughout the war in the Pacifi c.
A total of 353 Japanese aircraft fl ying from four aircraft carriers attacked in two waves, sinking fi ve battleships and damaging four more battleships, three destroyers and three cruisers and destroying 169 U.S. aircraft on the ground and damaging 159 others.
More than 2,000 U.S. service personnel lost their lives.
“We fi rst heard about the raid when the captain ordered general quarters over the ship’s radio,” said Garrett, who has lived in Rome City since 1987. Garrett was assigned to a damage-control team and stayed below decks. “The ship’s boilers were cold, and after GQ we had to put water in the boilers and prepare to get the ship underway.“
Most of the crew members were below decks and learned about what was going on from offi cers stationed on the bridge. The only other crew members on the top deck were those manning the 6-inch and 5-inch gun turrets and anti-aircraft batteries.
“We heard the explosions going on, but stayed below at our stations,” said Garrett.
The Saint Louis backed away from its mooring and moved into the channel to get out of the harbor. The cruiser was the fi rst ship to escape into the open sea with no damage. A Japanese mini-sub fi red two torpedoes, but they missed the ship.
“We were lucky, and that’s one reason why the ship came to be called Lucky Lou,” he said. The Helena was bombed and sustained damage.
On Dec. 10, the Saint Louis returned to Pearl Harbor. “I saw the big aircraft hangar down on Ford Island, sunken ships and smoke still coming from damaged ships,” said Garrett, a retired Pullman & Higgins fi eld foreman.
The Saint Louis would participate in 11 major naval battles in World War II and earn 11 battle stars. Garrett was in all of them. The ship was bombed, torpedoed and even hit by a Japanese kamikaze aircraft, but kept in the fi ght. Later in the war, Garrett was reassigned to the topside repair party and his job was to keep spent shell casings that fl ew out a gun turret from piling up on the deck.
In the battle of Kula Gulf on July 1, 1943, the Saint Louis was part of a U.S. naval group that intercepted a Japanese convoy headed for Guadalcanal. A Japanese cruiser and destroyer were sunk and transports damaged.
“We were so close, I could see the Japanese soldiers jumping over the side,” said Garrett.
The Saint Louis got hit with two torpedoes. One was a dud, and the other blew off armor platting and damaged the ship’s bow.
“I was about 50 feet away when the torpedo hit and blown off my feet. They thought I was blown overboard,” Garrett said. He was wounded in his left leg but not seriously.
Whenever the Saint Louis was damaged, it put into the closest port for repairs and rejoined the war.
In the battle of Kolombangara a Japanese torpedo blew off the ship’s bow, killing 23 sailors. The damage was so extensive, the ship had to return to San Francisco for repairs.
“We had a top speed of 33 knots (38 mph), but only could do 3 to 5 knots crossing the Pacifi c,” said Garrett. A new bow section was waiting for the ship when it docked.
Several times during the war, Japanese propaganda reported the sinking of “Lucky Lou.”
A total of 49 members of the crew lost their lives during the ship’s service in the war.
Garrett was privileged to be aboard the Saint Louis when it anchored in Tokyo Bay for the Japanese surrender on the battleship USS Missouri. He could see the Missouri in the distance. “I think we were invited because President Truman was from Missouri and the surrender was on the Missouri,” he said.
After the war he returned to Fort Wayne, got married in 1946 and he and his wife, Rita, raised three children. She passed away in 1987. He has seven grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren.
“She was a good ship, the Saint Louis. She traveled more miles and shot more shells than any other American ship during the war,” said Garrett.
Even though he has two knee replacements and a hip replacement, Garrett doesn’t use a cane. He’s a life member of the VFW and participates in the combined Kendallville Francis Vinyard VFW Post 2749 and Rome City American Legion Post 381 honor guard for veterans’ funerals.
He’s extremely proud of his service to his country and has a Lucky Lou license plate on his car.
“I’m really blessed in many ways,” he said.
DENNIS NARTKER is a reporter for The News Sun. He can be reached at dnartker@
Pearl Harbor survivor recalls ‘Lucky Lou’
We welcome your letters to the editor. Every letter must include the author’s fi rst and last name, address and telephone number. Only the name and city of residence will be published. Send letters to: The Star, 118 W. Ninth St., Auburn, IN 46706. Letters may be emailed to [email protected]. We reserve the right to reject letters because of libelous statements, personal attacks or content that is otherwise unfair or offensive.
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TheStar kpcnews.com A5THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
INSIDE COMMENT
Dennis Nartker
•
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
A Japanese torpedo heavily damaged Jack Garrett’s ship, the light cruiser USS Saint Louis, during a World War II naval battle in the Pacifi c.
John “Jack” Garrett
Letters To The Editor•
What Others Say•
Pence preschool plan deserves broad support
Indiana has for years lagged most other states in providing early childhood education options for families. The lack of access to high-quality preschool isn’t merely an inconvenience; it’s a handicap that undercuts student achievement and, eventually, economic growth.
So it was encouraging this past week to hear Gov. Mike Pence propose what could become the most aggressive expansion of preschool in the state’s history. Under the governor’s plan, families with incomes up to 185 percent of the federal poverty level — about $43,500 for a family of four — would be eligible for vouchers to help pay for preschool for children who are a year or so away from entering kindergarten.
“As result of a lack of quality early education opportunities, children, especially those from low-income households, often are unprepared when they enter kindergarten,” Pence said Thursday in announcing his 2014 legislative agenda.
There’s nothing groundbreaking about that thought, of course. Research overwhelmingly confi rms the value of early childhood education, and has for many years. But it is encouraging to hear an
Indiana governor make the point given state leaders’ historic lack of leadership on the issue.
Early childhood advocates were naturally complimentary of the proposal, but the complaints from frequent Pence critics — including teachers union President Teresa Meredith and House Democratic education leader Greg Porter — were disappointing.
Meredith contends that the state should put off moving forward on a preschool initiative until after it lowers the age for mandatory school attendance (now at a much-too high age 7) and requires all students to attend kindergarten. But those ideas likely would require lengthy legislative campaigns — to the point where today’s preschool-age children might well be in middle school before such changes were made given the General Assembly’s past go slow approach on other education proposals.
Porter, although supportive of state-fi nanced preschools in general, objected to funneling state dollars to religious-affi liated schools through vouchers. But, as with the K-12 voucher program, families would make decisions about where to spend the money, not the state. And the state money may well be enough to prompt secular schools to open or expand.
The Pence proposal isn’t without potential problems. It’s critical for the state, for instance, to ensure that tax dollars go only to high-quality preschools. As a Star investigation has demonstrated this fall, a lot of substandard day cares and preschools are operating in the state, often with little regulatory oversight. If managed the right way, the voucher program could help strengthen already good schools and divert children from weaker operations. But it’s essential to put strong accountability measures in place on how and where vouchers can be used.
A fi nal point: Some lawmakers have questioned whether Pence’s legislative agenda is too ambitious for the short, non-budget-writing 2014 session. Let’s banish that thought. Indiana leaders need to adopt a mind-set of pushing forward aggressively on most education, economic and quality-of-life issues — because of our state’s many needs but also because the world is moving faster than ever and those who plod along will get left behind.
Although much welcomed, the Pence preschool plan is modest in scope when compared to what other states already have done. There’s no need for overly cautious delay in acting on it.
The Indianapolis Star
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Thurstons headline concert SundayThe Thurstons will perform 6 p.m. Sunday during the evening service at Cedar Lake Church of Christ in Waterloo. The group is led by Dave and Marni Thurston, who started the group in 2005 with the longtime dream of spreading the gospel through music. The Thurstons have released six recordings and one DVD. In 2007, The Thurstons released their fi rst single to radio and maintained a top 40
position for 14 weeks on the gospel charts with the song “God’s Word Will Stand,” written by Steve Hurte and Greg Day. The Thurstons have shared the stage with The Booth Brothers, The Perrys, Mercy’s Mark, The Toney Brothers, Signature Sound, Greater Vision, Gold City, The Hoppers and The Talleys. A freewill offering will be taken for the concert.
Keystone plans community dinner
AUBURN — Keystone Community Church of Auburn will host a free community turkey dinner Saturday from 1-4 p.m.
The church is at the Westedge Mall near Sears.
For more informa-tion, contact Trevor at 573-6390.
Free community meals provided
AUBURN — The Inspiration Hospitality Team will provide a free community meal Thursday at 5:30 p.m. in the Cupbearer Cafe, 138 E. Seventh St.
Red Tree, a progressive rock band from Montpelier, Ohio, will perform at 6:15 p.m. Ralph Diehl, pastor of New Hope Christian Center, Waterloo, will speak at 7 p.m.
The Christian Motorcy-clists Association will provide a free community meal Thursday, Dec. 19, at 5:30 p.m. Music and a message provide by the organization will begin at 6:15 p.m.
The Inspiration Hospitality Team will provide a free community meal Thursday, Dec. 26, at 5:30 p.m. The New Hope Senior Choir will share music at 6:15 p.m. Guest speaker Larry Beaty will share at 7 p.m.
BY AMY [email protected]
ANGOLA — A cold rush of air, a whisper in the night — small, unexplained perceptions can raise the hair on the back of one’s neck.
The Steuben Paranormal Society is delving into the county’s past and uncanny nuances of the present. The members meet at the Carnegie Public Library of Steuben County, and have done local investiga-tions that produced creepy fi ndings.
Sisters Valerie and Melanie Varner started the group due to lifelong experiences that piqued their interest in the paranormal. After the Varners created a page on Facebook — which now has more than 100 likes — Vicky Habib and Michele Billman, both of Angola, joined them.
Habib, who has lived in Angola around 30 years, said she vividly witnessed an image at one of the county’s rumored haunted sites, the Strand Theater.
“There was this guy standing up on the roof of the theater,” Habib said.
In 2009, someone posted “The Movie Man” in Indiana as one of the ghosts and hauntings at waymarking.com. It is one of seven Hoosier locations on the site, which also includes the Strand Theater in Kendallville. The Angola haunting is report-edly a sobbing man at the theater.
“You will hear the story in blogs all over the nation,” said Melanie. She said the ghostly man is said to be yelling “Marie, Marie.” The owner of the Strand, Dana Thompson, said the tale goes that a woman, very white and ghostly, went to the theater one day but never exited. Others who live in the building have said they have seen a woman walking through the walls on the third story.
“I think it’s a wives’ tale,” said Melanie. She is not overly intimidated by dark graveyards or the idea of hunting down a tortured soul, but does like to say “a little protection prayer” beforehand.
She urged anyone with Steuben County ties who has an interest in the paranormal to join them.
Billman said she’s long experienced unnatural infl uences. When she lived in a house on Williams Street, she said, there was force that would seem to push her as she went down the stairs. She said her neighbors at the time had similar unexplained occurrences.
“I’ve seen people in my house as I am outside of my house looking in,” said Billman, noting that her husband, Doug Billman, has remarked on the same thing only to go inside and fi nd no one.
Billman grew up in a haunted house, she said, built new by her parents in Fort Wayne.
“Every night something happened,” Billman said. “The lights would go on, footsteps.” She heard footsteps on the roof of the house, scratching sounds on the walls and had violent dreams. She said it was a terrifying long-term experi-ence that left her wanting to help others who may have withstood similar ghostly attacks.
“You are not the only one,” she said. There are ways, she said, to live with a haunting and purify a space.
“I went to the library every day and had all these big stacks of books on the paranormal,” she said.
“Back then, you didn’t talk about it as much,” noted Habib. “I used to have nightmares every night of people being murdered … gunshots.”
She said it may be residual energy from a very emotional occurrence, repeating itself over and over.
Valerie said she had numerous run-ins as a
child with an “imaginary friend” called Shirley in the house she grew up in near Ashley. Shirley was in her mid-30s and may have been a wandering remnant of Steuben County’s past.
The Varners live in their great-grandparents’ home in Pleasant Lake and have documented the face of a bearded man in the window while looking in. The women said ghosts are often witnessed in such a way, inside a dwelling while others are looking in.
“It could be where a traumatic part of their life was spent,” said Melanie,
who is interested in the spirit of a woman stabbed to death in the Pleasant Lake cemetery in the early 1970s.
In their quests, the group uses basic equipment, such as cameras and recording devices, and their own perception. Melanie has a recording on a small, hand-held device taken at Lakeside Cemetery near Fremont on Oct. 30. It sounds like a raspy laugh.
All the members of the group have stories to tell, like the smells and sounds of eggs and bacon cooking in an empty kitchen or the
whiff of a familiar perfume when no one else is around.
“You just have that feeling,” said Melanie. The Varners have a strong lineage in Steuben County, and said they think some of their ancestors may have made spiritual marks.
“A lot of people have stories and seem to believe in the paranormal,” said Valerie. Stories are welcomed on the Facebook page or at [email protected]. The group is looking for homes and other Steuben County structures to stake out and hunt for haunts.
Steuben Paranormal Society on the prowl for haunts
AMY OBERLIN
Melanie Varner, Valerie Varner, Vicky Habib and Michelle Billman stand at the mausoleum at Circle Hill Cemetery in
Angola. They’ve investigated the crypt, as well as other graveyards in Steuben County.
“I’ve seen people in my house as I am outside of my house looking in.”
Michele Billman
Steuben Paranormal
Society member
•
Heimach Center hosts Christmas celebration Tuesday
AUBURN — Space is still available to sign up for the Christmas holiday celebration Tuesday at the Heimach Senior Activity Center, 1800 E. Seventh St.
A potluck luncheon will be served at 11:30 a.m. Wesley Healthcare will provide ham and potatoes. Guests are asked to bring vegetables, salad or a dessert to share.
The Melody Makers Homemakers Chorus, a Purdue Home Extension Choir, will perform at 12:20 p.m.
The group sings annually at Purdue University and the Indiana State Fair.
The event will end with a special Christmas bingo.
To sign up, call 925-3311.
S U N D A Y S The Star
925-2611 ✃ 1-800-717-4679
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
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Legal Copy DeadlinesCopy due PublishWed. 4 p.m. .............................Mon.Thurs. 4 p.m. ............................Tues.Fri. 4 p.m. ............................ Wed.Mon. 4 p.m. .......................... Thurs.Tues. 4 p.m. .............................. Fri.Annual Reports & Budgets due 5 working days before the publish date.
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PUBLIC NOTICEPersonal Property of Kylee Shisler,
Unit C116 will be sold 10 days fromthis notice to satisfy Owner’s Lien.Sold to the highest bidder, AuburnSelf Storage 5387 CR 427 Auburn,IN (260) 925-6378.
TS,00363069,12/12,hspaxlp
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALETO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN
DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE ANDALL INTERESTED PARTIES
By virtue of a certified copy of a de-cree to me directed from the Clerk ofCircuit Court of DeKalb County, Indi-ana, in Cause No. 17D01-1002-MF-00027 wherein Deutsche Bank Na-tional Trust Company, as Trustee forFirst Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust2006-FF16, Asset-Backed Certifi-cates, Series 2006-FF16 was Plain-tiff, and Benjamin T. Colburn, wasDefendant, requiring me to make thesum as provided for in said Decreewith interest and cost, I will expose atpublic sale to the highest bidder, onthe 23rd day of January, 2014, at thehour of 2:00pm or as soon thereafteras is possible, at 215 E 8th St.,Auburn, IN 46706, the fee simple ofthe whole body of Real Estate inDeKalb County, Indiana.
The following described real estatesituate in DeKalb County, State of In-diana, to-wit: The East 45 feet of thewest 86 feet 8 inches of Lots Num-bered Eight (8), Nine (9), Ten (10),Eleven (11) and Twelve (12) in BlockNumbered Three (3) in the OriginalPlat of the Town, now City ofGarrett.More commonly known as:212 W Baltimore St, Garrett, IN46738
Parcel No.: 17-05-33-478-016.000-013 & 17-05-33-478-017.000-013 &17-05-33-478-015.000-013 & 17-05-33-478-014.000-013 & 17-05-33-478-013.000-013
Together with rents, issues, in-come, and profits thereof, said salewill be made without relief fromvaluation or appraisement laws.
Sheriff of DeKalb County212 W Baltimore St
Garrett, IN 46738The Sheriff’s Department does not
warrant the accuracy of the street ad-dressed published hereinJames L Shoemaker 19562-49Doyle Legal Corporation, P.C.41 E Washington Street Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46204
SERVICE DIRECTED TO:Benjamin T. Colburn 212 W. Balti-
more St. Garrett, IN 46738. Type ofService: SHERIFF.
NOTICEDOYLE LEGAL CORPORATION,
P.C. IS A DEBT COLLECTOR. THISIS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT, AND ANY INFORMATONOBTAINED WILL BE USED FORTHAT PURPOSE.
TS,00362967,12/12,19,26,hspaxlp
NOTICE OF MARSHAL’S SALEUNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURTNORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
FORT WAYNE DIVISIONCASE NO. 1:13CV00101
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,PLAINTIFF,
V.DEBRA L. HALL,
DEFENDANT.Notice is hereby given that pursu-
ant to an order of foreclosure andsale of real estate entered by theUnited States District Court for theNorthern District of Indiana, FortWayne Division, on the 22nd day ofOctober, 2013, in this cause, the un-dersigned United States Marshal forthe Northern District of Indiana, willconduct a public sale at the DeKalbCounty Courthouse, Auburn, Indiana,on the 4th day of February, 2014, at12:00 p.m. (local time), of the follow-ing described real estate:
Lot Numbered Seventy-three (73)in Northridge Addition, Section III, anaddition to the City of Garrett, as perplat thereof, recorded in Plat Book 6,Page 171, of the records in the Officeof the Recorder of DeKalb County,Indiana.
Commonly known as: 807 Green-field Ct., Garrett, IN 46738.
This public sale will be made with-out relief from valuation or appraise-ment laws and the property shall besold as an entirety. The UnitedStates Marshal will accept, and seekcourt confirmation of, the highest bidoffered for this property. The suc-cessful bidder must tender paymentin the form of a cashier’s or certified
check or money order, on such termsas the Marshal directs. The pur-chaser shall receive a deed theretoafter court confirmation of the sale,subject to the express condition thatthere are no warranties of title. Theinterest acquired by the purchaser atsaid sale shall be subject to any lienof DeKalb County, Indiana for realproperty taxes in regard to said realestate, and further subject to any lienof a municipality for sewer fees as-sessed against the real estate, whichlien is duly and properly recorded inthe recorder’s office in the county inwhich the real estate is located priorto delivery of the deed to the pur-chaser.
For further particulars regardingthis sale, prospective bidders arehereby referred to the order of theUnited States District Court in theabove-captioned case.
Myron N. SuttonUnited States Marshal
Northern District of IndianaTS,00360116,12/5,12,19,26,hspaxlp
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALETO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN
DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE ANDALL INTERESTED PARTIES
By virtue of a certified copy of a de-cree to me directed from the Clerk ofCircuit Court of DeKalb County, Indi-ana, in Cause No. 17D01-1208-MF-00132 wherein JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association wasPlaintiff, and Earl K. Hirschy a/k/aEarlin Keith Hirschy and Susan K.Hirschy a/k/a Susan Kay Hirschy,were Defendants, requiring me tomake the sum as provided for in saidDecree with interest and cost, I willexpose at public sale to the highestbidder, on the 23rd day ofJanuary, 2014, at the hour of 2:00p.m. or as soon thereafter as is pos-sible, at 215 E 8th St., Auburn, IN46706, the fee simple of the wholebody of Real Estate in DeKalbCounty, Indiana.
Part of the Southeast Quarter ofSection 10, Township 34 North,Range 13 East, DeKalb County, Indi-ana, described as follows: Com-mencing at the Northwest corner ofsaid Southeast Quarter; thenceSouth on the West line thereof249.15 feet to the point of beginning;thence East at right angles 697.79feet; thence South at right angles227 feet; thence West at right angles191.84 feet; thence North at right an-gles 177 feet; thence West at rightangles 505.95 feet to said West line;thence North on said West line 50feet to the point of beginning, con-taining 1.58 acres, more or less.Morecommonly known as: 3125 County
Rd 37, Waterloo, IN 46793Parcel No.: 17-06-10-400-003.000
-007Together with rents, issues, in-
come, and profits thereof, said salewill be made without relief fromvaluation or appraisement laws.
Sheriff of DeKalb CountyGrant Township
3125 County Rd 37Waterloo, IN 46793
The Sheriff’s Department does notwarrant the accuracy of the street ad-dressed published hereinS. Brent Potter 10900-49Doyle Legal Corporation, P.C.41 E Washington Street Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46204
SERVICE DIRECTED TO:Earl K. Hirschy a/k/a Earlin Keith
Hirschy 3125 County Road 37 Wa-terloo, IN 46793. Type of Service:SHERIFF.
Susan K. Hirschy a/k/a Susan KayHirschy 3125 County Road 37 Wa-terloo, IN 46793. Type of Service:SHERIFF.
NOTICEDOYLE LEGAL CORPORATION,
P.C. IS A DEBT COLLECTOR. THISIS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT, AND ANY INFORMATONOBTAINED WILL BE USED FORTHAT PURPOSE.
TS,00362974,12/12,19,26,hspaxlp
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALETO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN
DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE ANDALL INTERESTED PARTIES
By virtue of a certified copy of a de-cree to me directed from the Clerk ofCircuit Court of DeKalb County, Indi-ana, in Cause No. 17D01-1301-MF-00013 wherein JPMorgan ChaseBank, N.A. was Plaintiff, and Noel D.Bailey, was Defendant, requiring meto make the sum as provided for insaid Decree with interest and cost, Iwill expose at public sale to the high-est bidder, on the 23rd day ofJanuary, 2014, at the hour of 2:00pm or as soon thereafter as is possi-ble, at 215 E 8th St., Auburn, IN46706, the fee simple of the wholebody of Real Estate in DeKalbCounty, Indiana.
The East Ten (10) feet of Lot Num-bered Twelve (12) and the WestSixty (60) feet of Lot NumberedEleven (11) in Dawson's Second Ad-dition, Plat #2, to the City of Garrett,DeKalb County, Indiana.More com-monly known as: 604 E. Hill St., Gar-rett, IN 46738
Parcel No.: 17-09-03-327-018.000-013 and 17-09-03-327-017.000-013
Together with rents, issues, in-come, and profits thereof, said salewill be made without relief from
valuation or appraisement laws.Sheriff of DeKalb County
604 E. Hill St.Garrett, IN 46738
The Sheriff’s Department does notwarrant the accuracy of the street ad-dressed published hereinJames L Shoemaker 19562-49Doyle Legal Corporation, P.C.41 E Washington Street Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46204
Noel D. Bailey 604 E. Hill St. Gar-rett, IN 46738
NOTICEDOYLE LEGAL CORPORATION,
P.C. IS A DEBT COLLECTOR. THISIS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT ADEBT, AND ANY INFORMATONOBTAINED WILL BE USED FORTHAT PURPOSE.
TS,00362965,12/12,19,26,hspaxlp
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALETO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN
DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE ANDALL INTERESTED PARTIES
By virtue of a certified copy of a de-cree to me directed from the Clerk ofthe Superior Court of Dekalb County,on Cause No. 17D01-1304-MF-000051 wherein Home GuardianTrust, was Plaintiff and Shelley K.Smith A/K/A Shelley Kay Smith andUnknown Tenants/Occupants of0261 US Highway 6, Corunna, IN46730, were the Defendants, requir-ing me to make the sum as providedfor in said Decree with interest andcost, I will expose at public sale tothe highest bidder, on at the hour ofat 215 East 8th Street, Auburn, IN46706, the fee simple of the wholebody of Real Estate in De KalbCounty, Indiana.
Existing Legal Description from Sur-vey Book 1 page 204, Legal descrip-tion is the same as Deed Record 222page 73.
TRACT I: A part of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 21, Township 35North, Range 12 East, FairfieldTownship, DeKalb County, Indianaand is intended to encompass Deedrecord 171 page 219 of 0.69 acres ofTerry and Scharlotte Long and addi-tional acreage being described asfollows: Beginning at a concretehighway right-of-way marker believedto be Station 1149+00 from StateHighway Plans, said concrete markerbeing North 88°39' East (an as-sumed bearing and basis for all otherbearings to follow) 442.69 feet,thence North 03°00' West, 134.60feet from the Southwest corner of theSoutheast Quarter of Section 31;thence North 72°57'08" West, 157.87feet measured to a stone found (be-lieved to be the Southwest corner ofthe aforesaid Deed Record 171 page
219); thence North 66°00'41" West,43.70 feet to the Southeast corner ofLot 4 amendment to Wells Subdivi-sion; thence along Lot 4, North00°28'02" West 261.04 feet; thencecontinuing along said Lot 4, North85°04'54" East, 81.19 feet; thencestill continuing along Lot 4, North00°28'02" West, 160.14 feet to a 1/2inch rebar, thence South 89°51'24"East, 76.49 feet measured to a spikenail found; thence South 04°17'26"East, 493.38 feet measured to thePoint of Beginning, containing 1.53acres, more or less.
TRACT II: Being a part of Lot 4 anamendment to Wells Subdivision inthe Southeast Quarter of Section 31,Township 35 North, Range 12 East,Fairfield Township, DeKalb County,Indiana, described as follows: Begin-ning at a rebar at the Southeast cor-ner of said Lot 4; thence North66°00'41" West, 38.0 feet to a 1/2inch rebar; thence North 07°33'32"East, 247.74 feet to a 5/8" rebar onthe line of Lot 4; thence along theline of Lot 4 South 00°28'02" East,261.04 feet to the Point of Beginning,containing 0.10 acres more or lessquantity of land as set forth in saiddescription.
SUBJECT TO ALL LIENS, EASE-MENTS AND ENCUMBRANCES OFRECORD.
More commonly known as: 0261US HIGHWAY 6, CORUNNA, IN46730
Parcel No. 17-01-31-400-008.000-004, 17-01-31-400-018.000-004,and 17-01-31-400-023.000- 004
Together with rents, issues, in-come, and profits thereof, said salewill be made without relief fromvaluation or appraisement laws.
Donald LauerSheriff of Dekalb County, Indiana
Fairfield Township0261 Us Highway 6
The Sheriff's Department does notwarrant the accuracy of the street ad-dress published.Dennis V. FergusonStephen K. AndrewsJohn. C. CoxTraci B. ShuttzPlaintiff AttorneysBleecker Brodey & Andrews9247 N. Meridian St., Ste 101Indianapolis, IN 46260(317) 574-0700
SHELLEY SMITH, 109 1/2 SFRANKLIN ST GARRETT, IN 46738.TYPE OF SERVICE: PERSONALOR COPY.
UNKNOWN TENANTS/OCCU-PANTS 0261 US HIGHWAY 6 CO-RUNNA, IN 46730. TYPE OF SERV-ICE: PERSONAL OR COPY.
TS,00362975,12/12,19,26,hspaxlp
‘12 Years a Slave’leads nominationsfor SAG Awards
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Steve McQueen’s historic saga “12 Years a Slave” topped the nominations list for the 20th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards Wednesday,
cementing it as a solid Academy Awards prospect with four nomina-tions.
John Wells’ dysfunc-tional family
adaptation “August: Osage County,” which hits theaters Dec. 25 and features an all-star cast including Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts, also picked up awards-season momentum with three nominations, including outstanding performance for the cast.
The SAG nominations are one of Hollywood’s fi rst major announcements on the long road to the March 2 Oscars. Also key are the Golden Globe nominations, which will be revealed today.
People•
McQueen
AP
Pope Francis delivers his speech during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican Wednesday. He was selected as Time magazine’s Person of the Year.
NEW YORK (AP) — Time magazine selected Pope Francis as its Person of the Year on Wednesday, saying the Catholic Church’s new leader has changed the perception of the 2,000-year-old institu-tion in an extraordinary way in a short time.
The pope beat out NSA leaker Edward Snowden for the distinction, which the newsmagazine has been giving each year since 1927.
The former Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected in March as the fi rst pope from Latin America and the fi rst Jesuit. Since taking over at the Vatican, he has urged the Catholic Church not to be obsessed with “small-minded rules” and to emphasize compassion over
condemnation in dealing with touchy topics like abortion, gays and contra-ception.
He has denounced the world’s “idolatry of money” and the “global scandal” that nearly 1 billion people today go hungry, and has charmed the masses with his simple style and wry sense of humor. His appearances draw tens of thousands of people and his Pontifex Twitter account recently topped 10 million followers.
“He really stood out to us as someone who has changed the tone and the perception and the focus of one of the world’s largest institutions in an extraor-dinary way,” said Nancy Gibbs, the magazine’s managing editor.
The Vatican said the
honor wasn’t surprising given the resonance in the general public that Francis has had, but it neverthe-less said the choice was a “positive” recognition of spiritual values in the international media.
“The Holy Father is not looking to become famous or to receive honors,” said the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi. “But if the choice of Person of Year helps spread the message of the Gospel — a message of God’s love for everyone — he will certainly be happy about that.”
It was the third time a Catholic pope had been Time’s selection. John Paul II was selected in 1994 and John XXIII was chosen in 1962.
Pope Time’s top person
BEIRUT (AP) — The U.S. and Britain said Wednesday they were suspending deliveries to rebels in northern Syria of nonlethal aid such as communications equipment and laptops after some of the gear was seized by Islamic militants.
The decision refl ected fears of the growing strength of al-Qaida-linked forces among the rebels in the civil war, complicating the West’s goal of bolstering the moderate opposition and persuading President Bashar Assad to step down.
Humanitarian aid such as food and blankets would not be affected, offi cials said, as a blustery storm dumped snow and torrential rain in the region and plunged temperatures below freezing, heaping more misery on refugees inside and outside Syria.
The suspension dealt another blow to the Syrian opposition, highlighting diminishing international support for their cause as the extremists rapidly expand their hold across rebel-held territories.
The decision by the U.S. and Britain comes few days after ultraconser-vative opposition factions took control of Free Syrian Army bases and warehouses containing lethal and non-le-thal weapons at the Bab al-Hawa crossing between Syria and Turkey.
The bases belonged to the FSA’s Supreme Military
Council, led by Gen. Salim Idris, a secular-minded, Western-backed moderate.
Their takeover by the Islamic Front, a new alliance of six of the most powerful Islamic rebel groups in Syria, was an embarrassing setback for Idris, who has seen his infl uence greatly diminished by the rise of al-Qaida affi liated militants fl ush with cash, weapons and battleground experience.
“We have seen the reports that Islamic Front forces have seized the headquarters in question and warehouses belonging to the Supreme Military Council, and we’re obviously concerned by those reports,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said in announcing the suspension. “We’re still gathering facts and consulting with Gen. Idris and the Supreme Military Council staff to inventory the status of U.S. equipment and supplies that have been provided to the SMC.”
State Department spokes-woman Jen Psaki said U.S. assistance “continues through other neighboring countries to other parts of Syria.”
Britain’s Foreign Offi ce said it “will not be making any deliveries of equipment” to the FSA while it investi-gates those attacks. It said it intends to resume assistance as soon as conditions on the ground allow for its “safe delivery.”
US, Britain tosuspend aid torebels in Syria
Zimmerman won’tface new charges
MIAMI (AP) — George Zimmerman will not face domestic violence charges because his girlfriend did not wish to pursue the case and there was scant evidence of a crime, a state prosecutor said Wednesday.
Samantha Scheibe’s decision not to cooperate and the lack of other corrob-orating evidence would have made the case diffi cult to prove, State Attorney Phil Archer in Seminole County said in a statement.
“There is no reasonable likelihood of a successful prosecution,” Archer said.
Zimmerman, 30, had faced charges of aggravated assault, battery and criminal mischief following a Nov. 18 confrontation at the central Florida house he shared with Scheibe. She initially told police Zimmerman pointed a shotgun at her face during an argument, smashed her coffee table and pushed her out of the house.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The NSA chief said Wednesday he knows of no better way his agency can help protect the U.S. from foreign threats than with spy programs that collect billions of phone and Internet records from around the world.
Pleading with the Senate Judiciary Committee to not abolish the National Security Agency’s bulk-col-lection programs, Gen. Keith Alexander warned that global threats are growing — specifi cally in Iraq and
Syria — that pose what he called “an unacceptable risk” to America.
“How do we connect the dots?” Alexander said, referring to often-hidden links between a foreign terror threat and a potential attack on the U.S. “There is no other way that we know of to connect the dots. … Taking these programs off the table is absolutely not the thing to do.”
The committee’s chairman, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said it was troubling that the govern-
ment was sweeping up millions, if not billions, of Americans’ records. He has proposed legislation to prohibit the NSA from the bulk collection of U.S. phone records, and said Wednesday that he was concerned that Americans’ Internet records also were vacuumed up before the program ended in 2011. That program now focuses only on people who live outside the United States — which could include Americans living abroad.
Alexander acknowledged
the privacy concerns that have dogged the NSA since leaker Edward Snowden revealed the programs in June. And he said the NSA was open to talking to technology companies for a better solution without compromising security.
“It’s like holding onto a hornet’s nest,” Alexander said. “We’re getting stung.”
But, “If we let this down I think we will have let the nation down,” he said.
Leahy’s proposal has broad bipartisan support, especially in the House,
where it is being pushed by Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., who was the chief congressional architect of laws that gave the government broad surveil-lance powers in the days following the 2001 terror attacks.
But lawmakers who oversee U.S. intelligence agencies have proposed more modest reforms that call for greater oversight of the NSA and the creation of penalties for people who access classifi ed information without authorization.
NSA chief: Surveillance offers best protection
A8 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •
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by Congress to make the tough choices needed that will secure our long-term fi scal future,” U.S. Sen. Dan Coats said in a news release. “I believe Congress needs to live by the budget levels it passed in 2011 or replace them with real, targeted spending reforms.”
“I am encouraged that
budget negotiators from both sides of the aisle have put together a long-overdue proposal that would cut the defi cit, provide for two years of budget certainty, and prevent another govern-ment shutdown that would further harm our economy,” U.S. Sen Joe Donnelly said in a prepared statement. “I applaud their bipartisan
efforts, and I will continue to study the details before we take a vote in the Senate.”
Stutzman said he received his copy of the budget Wednesday morning and has less than 36 hours to digest all its nuances before voting.
Stutzman said Republican Party leaders are encour-aging members to vote for the budget.
STUTZMAN: Coats calls for making tough choicesFROM PAGE A1
houses did not respond. The inhabitant of a third house — a woman — answered the door, the court said.
King said her car was stuck and asked for help getting it towed. The woman declined and told police about her encounter with King, the court said.
Waterloo Deputy Marshal Stephen Brady began looking for King’s vehicle to assist King and Hardiek. When he found them, he asked King for identifi ca-tion. While King and Brady were talking, Hardiek fi red the .44-special, hitting Brady in the side of the face. King and Hardiek then fl ed and hid under the deck of a house a couple of blocks away, the court noted.
When police found King and Hardiek, they ordered them to come out, but they did not respond. Hardiek then pointed a gun at the offi cers, and the offi cers responded by opening fi re, the court said. Hardiek and King were both hit. Hardiek died fromhis wounds, and King sustained multiple shots to her arm and head, lost part of a fi nger and has nerve damage, the court noted.
Reviewing the nature of the offense, the court noted King knew Hardiek wanted
to avoid jail at any cost and had threatened to set himself on fi re, yet she purchased ammunition for him in a crime spree that spanned two states.
The court said a camera found by officers in King’s purse contained video made in the two weeks before the shooting, showing Hardiek saying he would consider anything to avoid going to jail, including “suicide by cop” or setting himself on fire. During that two-week period, King and Hardiek had weapons modified illegally in Michigan and then used them in attempted robberies, the court noted.
After Hardiek shot Brady, Hardiek and King left him for dead and hid under a deck while heavily armed, the court said. When King was pulled from under the deck, she had a knife in her boot and a handgun up her sleeve, the court added.
“We cannot say the sentence is inappropriate in light of the nature of the offense,” the court said in its decision.
The court also ruled King had not shown the sentence was inappropriate in light of her character.
The court found King had a criminal history in
Michigan spanning back to her teenage years. Her criminal record includes two misdemeanor counts for possession of alcohol not in a vehicle in 1996 and 1999; a felony count of controlled substance use in 1999; and a misdemeanor count of transporting open intoxicants. Three felony charges of robbery, unlawful imprisonment and felony fi rearms charges arising from an alleged attempted robbery on Dec. 14, 2011, remain pending in Michigan, the court noted.
In Indiana, King has a Class A misdemeanor conviction for conversion in 2011.
“Her history of criminal activity and extensive drug abuse, despite sober periods, show a continued disdain for the law, and the instant offense is much more serious than her prior convictions,” the court said in its ruling. “Further, her parental rights to her daughter were terminated in 2009, and she was on probation at the time of the instant offense. While her agreement to plead guilty and her expression of remorse are commendable, we cannot say that her thirty-eight-year executed sentence is inappropriate in light of her character.”
SHOOTING: King had gun, knife when arrested
dent investigation into contracting and management factors that contributed to the technology failure.
Yet the revamped federal website serving 36 states continues to have issues, and some states running their own sites also face problems. Oregon had signed up only 44 people as of Nov. 30.
That’s created stress and uncertainty not only for the uninsured but also for other people who now have insurance but are seeking to avoid an interruption in coverage in January.
Those who are trying to preserve their coverage
include some of the more than 4 million people whose individual plans were canceled because they didn’t measure up under the law — as well as hundreds of thousands who are in federal and state programs for people with serious health problems, from cancer to heart disease to AIDS.
Democratic lawmakers say they are relieved the website is fi nally working, but some are not convinced the turnaround is complete.
“How confi dent I am? I’m hoping that we’re moving in the right direction,” said Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., after
Wednesday’s Energy and Commerce Committee hearing. “And if we fi nd the day has come and we fi nd that it’s not what we had hoped, then I think there should be changes.” The law should be fi xed, not repealed, he said.
Sebelius said at least 1.9 million people appear to be waiting just offstage to sign up. They’ve been found eligible to enroll, but haven’t yet picked a plan.
If they’re all procrasti-nators who rush forward on Dec. 23, the website would be overwhelmed. It can only handle 50,000 people at a time.
HEALTH: Only 44 people had signed up in OregonFROM PAGE A1
A year after Newtown,gun control still stalled
the current deal before it was sealed. “They’re using our members, and they’re using the American people for their own goals. This is ridiculous,” he said, evidently referring to the Club For Growth, Heritage Action and other organiza-tions.
Modest in scope, the deal underscores how much ambitions have shriveled since the summer of 2011, when Obama and Boehner held private but unsuccessful talks on a “grand bargain” to reduce defi cits by $4 trillion over a decade.
In the current climate, though, it means a return to something approaching
a routine, where spending committees will be able to write and pass individual bills each year, removed from the threat of a shutdown.
As drafted, the bill would reverse $63 billion in across-the-board spending cuts scheduled to take effect in the current budget year and the next one, easing a crunch on programs as diverse as environmental protection and the Pentagon.
It would offset the higher spending with $85 billion in savings over a decade from higher fees and relatively modest curtail-ments on government benefi t programs.
Nearly a third of the
total savings would come nearly a decade from now, in 2022 and 2023, partly from extending a current 2 percent cut in payments to Medicare providers. Also, future federal workers would pay more toward their own retirement, fees would rise on air travelers and corporations would pay more to the government agency that guarantees their pension programs.
With the increased spending to begin immedi-ately and much of the savings delayed, Congres-sional Budget Offi ce estimates showed the deal would push defi cits higher than currently projected in the current year and each of the next two.
BUDGET: Bill reverses $63 billion in planned cuts
FROM PAGE A1
NEWTOWN, Conn. (AP) — Having already lost her 6-year-old son, Nicole Hockley insists she won’t lose the fi ght to reduce gun violence — no matter how long it takes.
She is among a group of “accidental activist” parents brought together one year ago by almost unthinkable grief after the Newtown school massacre. The shootings were so horrifi c that many predicted they would force Congress to approve long-stalled legisla-tion to tighten the nation’s gun laws.
They did not.A divided Congress
denied President Barack Obama’s calls for changes. The national gun lobby, led by the National Rifl e Association, is arguably stronger than ever. And surveys suggest that support for new gun laws is slipping as the Newtown memory fades.
A new Associated Press-GfK poll fi nds that 52 percent of Americans favor stricter gun laws, while 31 percent want them left as they are and 15 percent say they should be loosened. But the strength of the support for tighter controls has dropped since January,
when 58 percent said gun laws should be tightened and just 5 percent felt they were too strong.
After a year of personal suffering and political frustration, Hockley and other Newtown parents are fi ghting to stay optimistic as their effort builds a national operation backed by an alliance of well-funded organizations working to pressure Congress ahead of next fall’s elections. The groups are sending dozens of paid staff into key states, enlisting thousands of volunteer activists and preparing to spend tens of millions of dollars against politicians who stand in the way of their goals.
It may well take time, they say, to counter the infl uence of the NRA on Capitol Hill.
“I know it’s not a matter of if it happens. It’s a matter of when. This absolutely keeps me going,” says Hockley, who joined a handful of Newtown parents in a private White House meeting with Vice President Joe Biden this week. “No matter how much tragedy affects you, you have to fi nd a way forward. You have to invest in life.”
Hockley’s son Dylan
was among 26 people shot to death — including 20 fi rst graders — last Dec. 14 inside Sandy Hook Elemen-tary. The shooter, 20-year-old Adam Lanza used a military-style assault rifl e in the Friday-morning attack that ended when he killed himself.
The shootings profoundly changed this small Connecticut community and thrust gun violence back into the national debate. Led by Obama, gun control advocates called for background checks for all gun purchasers and a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines.
Hockley and other Newtown parents hastened into action, privately lobbying members of Congress for changes. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s organization, Mayors Against Illegal Guns, has spent roughly $15 million this year on advertising to infl uence the debate. And former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot in the head while meeting with constit-uents in 2011, launched a national tour calling for background checks.
Yet Congress has enacted
FROM PAGE A1
ILL.
MICH.
OHIO
KY.
© 2013 Wunderground.com
Today's ForecastThursday, Dec. 12
City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for
Chicago23° | 4° South Bend
21° | 4°Fort Wayne
23° | 6°
Lafayette26° | 4°
Indianapolis22° | 8°
Terre Haute24° | 7°
Evansville28° | 9° Louisville
28° | 15°
Sunrise Friday 7:59 a.m.
Sunset Friday 5:12 p.m.
Very cold with partly clear skies today. High of 19. Low tonight of 16 degrees. Warmer Friday with daytime highs nearing 30 degrees. Overnight temperatures will be in the low 20s. Snow Saturday with accumula-tion expected. Highs will be in the upper 20s. Nighttime low of 20.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
National forecastForecast highs for Thursday, Dec. 12
Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High
-10s 100s-0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 110s
Today’s drawing by:Bryce MillhouseSubmit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept.P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755
Local HI 22 LO 2 PRC. .75Fort Wayne HI 24 LO 3 PRC. .50
South Bend HI 23 LO 3 PRC. .75Indianapolis HI 28 LO 2 PRC. tr.
Wednesday’s Statistics
BY JAMES FISHERjfi [email protected]
KENDALLVILLE — The streak continues.
East Noble’s girls hoops team won its fourth-straight on Wednesday, using a run in each half to secure a 60-42 noncon-ference victory over Fort Wayne Northrop.
“We’re still able to put little runs together and pull away from teams,” explained East Noble coach DeAnn Booth. “Our post play also continues to help us.”
Kourtney Edwards led the Knights with 17 points. The senior also had fi ve rebounds.
“We did what we needed, it was another great win,” Edwards said. “We have set high expecta-tions for this season.”
Chandler Jones added 10 points, with nine points and seven rebounds for Kavan Edwards.
Both Edwards are 6-1 post players, but not related.
“Having two 6-1 girls, it’s challenging for most teams to match up with us,” Kavan Edwards said.
Also scoring for the Knights were Kerri Schrock (7 points), Tiffani Wilson (5), Jacey Cauhorn (5), Jaymee Wolfe (5) and Madison Cook (2).
Northrop was led by 20 points
and six rebounds from Aleah Swary.
The Knights held a 35-26 rebounding advantage. They also benefi ted from a strong effort at the free throw line, hitting 21-of-27 attempts.
“Much better production, which I thought was key,” Booth said.
The Knights were coming off a 78-41 Northeast Hoosier Confer-ence win over New Haven and also have victories this season against Eastside, Lakeland, Fort Wayne North Side and now Northrop.
“We don’t dwell on streaks like that, we like to play game to game,” Booth said. “We have a conference game on Friday and would like to extend it.”
Northrop stuck with East Noble until the Knights struck with their 11-0 fi rst-half run. The Bruins led 4-0 at the outset and had a 9-7 lead late in the opening period.
“We were forcing it too much early,” Kourtney Edwards said. “We just needed to slow it down and be patient, and we did better.”
Wolfe converted a traditional 3-point play to put East Noble ahead 10-9 — beginning the string of 11-consecutive points
for the Knights — and Cauhorn’s bucket to end the opening stanza
gave the squad a 12-9 advantage.
BTheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.comTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
LOCAL High School Sports Report, 95.5 FM, 7 p.m. Don Fischer IU Sports Report, 95.5 FM, 7:15 p.m. “Hawk Sports Talk”, 95.5 FM, 7:30 p.m. GOLF European PGA Tour, The Nelson Mandela Championship, first round, at Mount Edge-combe, South Africa, TGC, 6:30 a.m. Asian Tour, Thailand Championship, second round, at Bangkok, TGC, 11:30 p.m.MEN’S COLLEGE BAS-KETBALL FAU at DePaul, FS1, 9 p.m.NBA BASKETBALL L.A. Clippers at Brooklyn, TNT, 8 p.m. Houston at Portland, TNT, 10:30 p.m.NFL FOOTBALL San Diego at Denver, NFL, 8 p.m.PREP BASKETBALL Whitney Young (Ill.) at Apple Valley (Minn.), ESPN2, 7 p.m.SOCCER UEFA Europa League, Swansea City at St. Gal-len, FS1, 1 p.m. UEFA Europa League, Anji at Tottenham, FS1, 3 p.m.WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Kentucky at DePaul, FS1, 7 p.m.
Scores•
WEDNESDAY’S GAMESLOS ANGELES .........................3TORONTO ....................................1
CHICAGO .....................................7PHILADELPHIA .......................2
WEDNESDAY’S GAMESORLANDO ................................92CHARLOTTE ...........................83
L.A. CLIPPERS .......................96BOSTON ....................................88
OKLAHOMA CITY ............116MEMPHIS .............................100
SAN ANTONIO ...................109MILWAUKEE ...........................77
NEW YORK ..............................83CHICAGO ..................................78
TODAYBOYS BASKETBALL Bethany Christian at Howe School, 6 p.m. NorthWood at West-view, 6 p.m. West Noble at Bre-men, 6 p.m.GIRLS BASKETBALL Howe School at SB Career Academy, 6 p.m.WRESTLING West Noble at Fair-field, 6:30 p.m. Lakeland at Fremont, 6:30 p.m. Central Noble at Churubusco, 6:30 p.m. Huntington North at Prairie Heights, 6:30 p.m. Leo at Garrett, 6:30 p.m.SWIMMING Bishop Dwenger at East Noble, 6 p.m. Northrop at Angola, 6:30 p.m.
Area Events•
On The Air•
COLLEGE BASKETBALLN.D. STATE ................................73NOTRE DAME ........................69
PHIL FRIEND
2013 KPC Media Group All-Area Boys Soccer TeamThe 12th annual KPC Media Group All-Area Boys Soccer Team will be featured in Sunday’s edition. Front row (left to right): Nick Byler and Dustin Cunningham of Lakeland, and Karsten Cooper and Dayton Sweet of Garrett. Middle row: Brian Macias, Co-Prep of the Year Uriel Macias and Abel Zamarripa of West Noble, and Matt Patton, Aaron Berkey and Kaleb Williams of East Noble. Back row:
Ross Gramling, Landon Cochran, Grant Lockwood, Chase Secrist and Co-Prep of the Year Brennan Cochran of DeKalb. Not pictured are Tarrin Beachey, Jacob Berkey and Bucky Carpenter of Westview, Hunter Yoder and Bradey Gerke of Lakewood Park Christian, Christian Granados of Prairie Heights and Coach of the Year Jed Freels of DeKalb.
Knights drive past Northrop
BY KEN FILLMOREkfi [email protected]
FREMONT — Fremont’s girls basketball team started better than Reading (Mich.) did Wednesday and kept the Rangers at a distance in winning the non-conference contest 49-41.
The Eagles (5-2) scored the fi rst seven points of the game. Reading did not score until it made a free throw with 2 minutes, 57 seconds left in the opening quarter.
FHS extended its lead over the fi nal couple minutes of the second quarter while leading player Shae Rhonehouse was on the bench with three fouls. The Eagles led 28-13 at intermission after Reading only made 2-of-24 fi eld-goal attempts in the fi rst half.
It was not smooth sailing for the young Fremont squad as it had 26 turnovers. But its lead was never really threatened.
“We held our own with Shae out of the game,” Eagles coach
Neal Frantz said. “We shot the ball fairly well.
“They are aggressive and are good in their man-to-man defense,” he said of the Rangers. “But we had so many unforced turnovers.
The Eagles forced 23 Reading turnovers while shooting 53 percent from the fi eld (18-34).
Rhonehouse led Fremont with 22 points, six rebounds, three steals, three assists and a blocked shot. Freshman guard Kayla Stroop added 10 points, three rebounds and two steals.
“Kayla is coming along. She is giving us good minutes,” Frantz said. “Her offense is getting a little better. She runs the fl oor pretty well.
“Every time we get on the fl oor, I just want to see progress. That is all we can do.”
Senior center Miranda White added nine points, 10 rebounds and four assists for Fremont. Melissa Beer had fi ve points and
Kaileigh Folland scored three.Senior Brittany Marquart and
junior Jami Hubbard combined for 18 points on 6-of-31 shooting from the fl oor for Reading. Marquart had 13 points and six steals. Hubbard, who Frantz regarded as the Rangers’ best player, had fi ve points and seven rebounds.
Junior Tayler Coe had nine points and fi ve rebounds for Reading, who only shot 22 percent from the fi eld (11-51). The Rangers did outrebound the Eagles 36-29.
Fremont will host Hamilton on Saturday in a Northeast Corner Conference game that will start a basketball tripleheader between the two schools. This girls’ contest will start the action at 4:30 p.m. The boys’ junior varsity game will start around 6 p.m., followed by the varsity boys game.
The Eagles won the junior varsity game on Wednesday over the Rangers, 28-22.
Fremont girls defeat Rangers
KEN FILLMORE
Fremont junior Kaileigh Folland goes up for a layup during the third quarter of a non-confer-ence high school girls basket-ball game with Reading (Mich.) Wednesday night.
JAMES FISHER
East Noble’s Lanie Allen, middle, is fouled as she attempts to drive the lane in Wednesday’s win over Northrop.
SEE KNIGHTS, PAGE B2
The run continued into the second period, where Kourtney Edwards had a putback score and two free throws, Wilson connected on a bucket, and Wolfe added a free throw. The effort allowed East Noble to take its lead to nine, at 18-9, with six and a half minutes left in the half.
The East Noble lead went to as much as 11 points late in the quarter and the Knights led 25-17 at the break.
The second run began with a traditional 3-point play from Kourtney Edwards midway through the third period. She also had three free throws during the run and Kavan Edwards had the other three points in a 9-0 spurt.
The Knights led 40-23
following the second run and took a 42-31 margin into the fi nal period.
“Nothing fl ashy, but we were able to win a physical game,” Booth said. The Knights play at home against Bellmont on Friday in a NHC contest.
East Noble JV 39, Northrop 8
East Noble’s junior varsity had a tremendous effort on defense, holding Northrop to just two points in the fi nal three periods. The Bruins were scoreless the entire third period and had just one point apiece in the second and fourth periods.
Nine players scored for the East Noble JV, led by 10 points from Katie Kline. Paige DeCamp added eight points and Lydia Walter-house fi nished with six
points and a team-high six rebounds.
KNIGHTS: EN led by 11 entering fourth quarterFROM PAGE B1
B2 kpcnews.com SPORTS •
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
Distributed by Universal Uclick for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. (800) 255-6734. *For release the week of December 9, 2013.
Jeff Burton’s future plans, both on and off the track, were announced last week. He’ll start by running some test sessions and a limited Sprint Cup schedule for Michael Waltrip Racing, and he’ll begin working with NBC Sports Group, which has signed him to a multi-year contract to be an analyst when the network begins broadcasting NASCAR races in 2015. “Jeff Burton was always the first person we would seek out when there was breaking news or an issue that needed to be covered throughout our previous contract with NASCAR, so he was the first person we called for this role,” Sam Flood, executive producer, NBC Sports and NBC Sports Network, said in announcing the hir-ing of Burton. “His insights, keen observations and many trophies have earned the respect of everyone involved with the sport.” Burton will begin his TV work in 2014 by contributing to NASCAR programming on NBCSN. “This is an exciting new challenge, and I am thrilled to be join-ing the NBC Sports family,” said Burton. “I will prepare for each race as if I were driving in it, and I look forward to sharing my experience, views and insights with all the dedicated and passion-ate NASCAR fans.” On the driving side, his first stint behind the wheel with his new team is set for Charlotte Motor Speedway, where he’ll substitute at a test session for Brian Vickers, who is out of action because of blood clots. Burton will make his first start at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 9 in a No. 66 Toyota and is expected to make
several more starts in 2014. “Michael Waltrip Racing has two teams and drivers racing for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship in 2014, and our third team will play a very important role in that pursuit,” team co-owner Rob Kauffman said in announcing the addition of Burton to the team he operates with Michael Waltrip. “We were extremely fortunate to have a driver as experienced and respected as Jeff Burton come available. He will be able to have an immediate impact as we continue to strive for that last 1 percent that separates cham-pions from contenders.” Waltrip will drive the No. 66 in the season-opening Daytona 500 on Feb. 23. In his full-time NASCAR career, Burton made 691 Cup starts, with 21 wins, the most recent coming in 2008 when he won twice. On the Nationwide side, he has 306 career starts, with 27 wins, but none since 2007, when he won five times. He will be joined in the NBC TV booth by new lead announcer Rick Allen, who now works as Fox Sports’ race announcer for NASCAR’s Camping World Truck Series and the ARCA Racing Series.
Josh Wise moves to Phil Parsons Racing Josh Wise has been hired to drive the No. 98 Chevrolet for Phil Parsons Racing in 2014. The Riverside, Calif., native spent the past two seasons driving for Front Row Motorsports.
Swan Racing expands to two teams Swan Racing announced that it is expanding to a two-team operation and will have Parker Kligerman and Cole Whitt driving its Toyota Camrys on the Sprint Cup circuit next season.
Exxon Mobil extends sponsorship of Stewart Exxon Mobil has extended its multi-year sponsorship with Tony Stewart and Stewart-Haas Racing. Mobil 1 will be the primary sponsor of Stewart’s No. 14 Chevy for 11 races in 2014 and will be an associate sponsor for the remainder of the season.
Dollar General increases sponsorship of Kenseth Dollar General, the Goodlettsville, Tenn.-based retailer, will increase its sponsorship of Matt Kenseth’s No. 20 Toyota to 27 races in 2014, up from 17 this year.
NUMERICALLYSPEAKING
Sprint Cup races in 2013 in which Mike Bliss did
not qualify — the most of any driver.
Sprint Cup races in 2013 in which Michael
McDowell did not finish — the most of any driver.
Nationwide Series drivers with more than $1 million in race winnings in 2013
— Austin Dillon, Sam Hornish Jr. and Kyle Busch.
Top-10 finishes in 2013 by Sam Hornish Jr., tops
among all Nationwide Series drivers.
26
7
3
For those who were at Talladega, Ala., on May 4, 1975, the events that trans-pired were not to be forgotten. Even those who were just casual fans of the sport at that time were heartbroken over the death that day of 20-year-old Randy Owens. Owens was the brother-in-law of Richard Petty. His sister, Lynda, Richard’s wife, had helped raise him while their mother worked, and he was an eager member of the crew of Petty’s No. 43 cars. On Lap 141 of the Winston 500, Petty, in contention for the win, came down pit road with a fire in the left front of his car. As Owens attempted to use a pressurized water tank to help extin-guish the flames, the tank exploded, sending Owens flying into the air and killing him. Petty, who jumped from his car and attempted to get help for Owens, summed up one of the saddest aspects of the incident in his comments to reporters that day. “He was just a kid and had those two little, bitty boys,” Petty said. Last week, the story came full circle when Trent Owens, the youngest of those little, bitty boys, was hired as crew chief of the No. 43 Ford at Richard Petty Motorsports. The official release announcing the hiring of Owens didn’t even men-tion that Owens is the nephew of the team’s namesake. And Owens doesn’t bring up the subject unless he’s asked about it. But when he does talk about his family, it’s clear that he’s proud of the connection. Owens said that when he was hired to crew chief the car his father once worked on, it was a special moment. “When the opportunity came up, and then when the announcement was made, I was pretty emotional about it,” said Owens, who was just four months old when his father died. His brother, Travis, now the brake specialist for the No. 31 Chevrolet at Richard Childress Racing, was two at the time. The Owens brothers, who spent most of their younger years living in Darlington, S.C., remained close to Richard and Lynda Petty as they grew up. They went to races at Darlington,
Rockingham and Martinsville with the Pettys. In the sum-mertime, the Pettys would pick up the boys and take them to Daytona for the July Cup races. It was during one of those trips that young Trent Owens witnessed one of NASCAR’s greatest moments. “My aunt and uncle took us to Daytona, and we got to be there for his 200th win,” Owens said, adding that he still cherished the Victory Lane photos that show him standing in front of the car holding the checkered flag. By the time he was a teen-ager, Owens was spend-ing his summers in North Carolina with the Pettys and working in the family race shop. “I made money for school for the next year,” he said. And his Aunt Lynda told him stories of the father he never knew. “She made me well aware of my dad’s ambitions,” he said. Eddie Wood, a member of the Wood Brothers racing team of Stuart, Va., was about the same age as Randy Owens and knew him back in the day. Then as now, the Woods and the Pettys were big rivals, but also great friends. “Randy worked with [Petty Enterprises crew chief] Dale Inman, just like my brother Len and I worked with our Uncle Leonard,” Wood said. “Randy was a go-getter, and from what I can tell, Trent is cut from the same cloth.” Trent Owens started his major league NASCAR career as a driver, running 12 races in the Camping World Truck Series before deciding that his true calling was on top of the pit box as a crew chief. He’s worked with a host of driv-ers over the years, winning five Nationwide Series races with five different drivers. He spent the past season working with Kyle Larson, and his move to the No. 43 and driver Aric Almirola is his first full-time foray into the elite Sprint Cup Series. Owens said that his career as a crew chief has been helped by his driving experience and by working with vari-
ous Sprint Cup drivers over the years. “Having driven in the past, I can understand quicker what a driver is telling me about the car,” he said. “And working with Cup drivers has taught me a lot in a hurry.” He said his goal is to try to make the No. 43 team into a consistent top-15 or top-10 outfit and to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup. “If we can be around the top 10 by the beginning of the summer, we’ve got a possibility of making the Chase,” he said. “And if we can run in the top five, we’ve got a chance to win a race.” One thing Owens knows for sure is that his new boss — his uncle — is not only NASCAR’s all-time win leader as a driver — with 200 victories — but also one of the most knowledgeable people in the garage today. “There’s no fooling him,” Owens said. “He’s sharp when it comes to race cars and the people that work on them. And he’s so good at life skills in general. “He’s a stern boss, but he’s a good boss. I’m happy to get this opportunity, and I’m looking forward to seeing what I can do with it.”
Trent Owens (left) served as crew chief for Kyle Larson’s team in the Nationwide Series in 2013.
Trent Owens’ career comes full circle as he moves to Sprint Cup as a crew chief for 2014 season
Jeff Burton
NOTEBOOKTr
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s
Jeff Burton’s on- and off-track plans announced for 2014 season and beyond
Nic
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/Get
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ASCA
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Owens will serve as crew chief for Aric Almirola’s Sprint Cup team in 2014.
Tren
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25
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East Noble 60, Northrop 42Northrop
Players fgm-fga ftm-fta pts rb ast stRidley 1-7 0-0 3 1 1 4K. Jones 5-10 3-4 13 5 1 2Judy 0-1 0-0 0 2 0 0Swary 8-18 1-2 20 6 0 1Luebbert 1-4 0-0 2 5 1 2Wricks 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 0S. Jones 1-4 2-4 4 2 1 2Banks 0-1 0-0 0 2 0 0Totals 16-46 6-10 42 26 4 12
East NoblePlayers fgm-fga ftm-fta pts rb ast stSchrock 1-4 5-6 7 6 6 2Cook 1-3 0-0 12 2 0 0Ko. Edwards 5-11 7-9 17 5 1 2Ka. Edwards 4-6 1-2 9 7 0 2Cauhorn 2-3 0-0 5 2 2 1Slone 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 0Wilson 2-6 0-0 5 1 2 2Allen 0-3 0-0 0 0 0 1Jones 1-1 7-7 10 2 0 0DeCamp 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 0Wolfe 2-5 1-2 5 2 1 0Totals 18-42 21-27 60 35 13 10Northrop 9 8 14 11 — 42East Noble 12 13 17 18 — 60Three-point shooting - Northrop 4-12 (Swary 3-6, Ridley 1-3, Jones 0-3), East Noble 3-6 (Cauhorn 1-1, Jones 1-1, Allen 0-1, Wolfe 0-2), Total Fouls - Northrop 21, East Noble 13. Fouled out: K. Jones, Allen. Offensive Rebounds - Northrop 7, East Noble 10. Turnovers - Northrop 21, East Noble 22. Blocked shots - Swary (2), Judy, Ka. Edwards.
HOUSTON (AP) — The Houston Texans will attempt to end the worst skid in franchise history in a place where they’ve never won.
Houston plays the Colts on Sunday, looking to stop an 11-game losing streak and win for the fi rst time in Indianapolis. The Texans also have lost 11 in a row there.
Running back Ben Tate said they aren’t worried about where they’re playing this week, all they’re focused on is winning.
“If we can get it anywhere, if we play in a parking lot — just getting a win,” Tate said. “I don’t think it really matters. I don’t know how much coaches are really thinking or going to emphasize that. It’s just getting a win period. I don’t care if we
play them at the Galleria mall. We just want to win.”
Though some Texans noted that playing in Indianapolis is louder than many places, they couldn’t pinpoint exactly why they’ve had so much trouble there.
“I have no answer for that other than we just haven’t,” said Andre Johnson, who has been on the team for all but the fi rst trip to Indianapolis in 2002.
Johnson said that the old RCA Dome was louder and more diffi cult to play in than Lucas Oil Stadium.
Houston has certainly had some good chances to pick up wins there, but has fell short time after time. In the early days of the franchise, they were rarely even competitive in Indianapolis. Their fi rst six losses there
were by an average of more than 19 points.
They’ve fared better since the new stadium opened in 2008 and have lost by more than a touchdown only twice. They came closest to ending the skid in 2011, but Reggie Wayne caught a 1-yard touchdown pass with 19 seconds left to give the Colts a 19-16 win.
“I can’t tell you that there’s one specifi c reason why this team has never won there,” defensive end J.J. Watt said. “Obviously, we’re looking to change that. That’s never something that you want to have on your resume.”
They’ll try to turn things around in the fi rst game since coach Gary Kubiak was fi red on Friday.
Colts unfriendly to Texans
SCOREBOARD kpcnews.com B3•
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
National Football LeagueAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 10 3 0 .769 349 287Miami 7 6 0 .538 286 276N.Y. Jets 6 7 0 .462 226 337Buffalo 4 9 0 .308 273 334South W L T Pct PF PAy-Indianapolis 8 5 0 .615 313 316Tennessee 5 8 0 .385 292 318Jacksonville 4 9 0 .308 201 372Houston 2 11 0 .154 250 350North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 9 4 0 .692 334 244Baltimore 7 6 0 .538 278 261Pittsburgh 5 8 0 .385 291 312Cleveland 4 9 0 .308 257 324West W L T Pct PF PAx-Denver 11 2 0 .846 515 345Kansas City 10 3 0 .769 343 224San Diego 6 7 0 .462 316 291Oakland 4 9 0 .308 264 337NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PAPhiladelphia 8 5 0 .615 334 301Dallas 7 6 0 .538 357 348N.Y. Giants 5 8 0 .385 251 334Washington 3 10 0 .231 279 407South W L T Pct PF PANew Orleans 10 3 0 .769 343 243Carolina 9 4 0 .692 298 188Tampa Bay 4 9 0 .308 244 291Atlanta 3 10 0 .231 282 362North W L T Pct PF PADetroit 7 6 0 .538 346 321Chicago 7 6 0 .538 368 360Green Bay 6 6 1 .500 316 326Minnesota 3 9 1 .269 315 395West W L T Pct PF PAx-Seattle 11 2 0 .846 357 205San Francisco 9 4 0 .692 316 214Arizona 8 5 0 .615 305 257St. Louis 5 8 0 .385 289 308x-clinched playoff spoty-clinched divisionThursday’s GameJacksonville 27, Houston 20Sunday’s GamesGreen Bay 22, Atlanta 21Baltimore 29, Minnesota 26Kansas City 45, Washington 10Tampa Bay 27, Buffalo 6Miami 34, Pittsburgh 28Philadelphia 34, Detroit 20Cincinnati 42, Indianapolis 28New England 27, Cleveland 26N.Y. Jets 37, Oakland 27Denver 51, Tennessee 28San Francisco 19, Seattle 17San Diego 37, N.Y. Giants 14Arizona 30, St. Louis 10New Orleans 31, Carolina 13Monday’s GameChicago 45, Dallas 28Thursday, Dec. 12San Diego at Denver, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Dec. 15Philadelphia at Minnesota, 1 p.m.Washington at Atlanta, 1 p.m.San Francisco at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.Seattle at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.Chicago at Cleveland, 1 p.m.Houston at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.Buffalo at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.New England at Miami, 1 p.m.Kansas City at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Carolina, 4:05 p.m.Arizona at Tennessee, 4:25 p.m.New Orleans at St. Louis, 4:25 p.m.Green Bay at Dallas, 4:25 p.m.Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m.Monday, Dec. 16Baltimore at Detroit, 8:40 p.m.
NHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GABoston 31 21 8 2 44 86 62Montreal 32 19 10 3 41 85 71Detroit 32 15 9 8 38 87 85Tampa Bay 30 17 10 3 37 85 76Toronto 32 16 13 3 35 87 90Ottawa 32 12 14 6 30 92 105Florida 32 10 17 5 25 73 106Buffalo 31 7 22 2 16 53 92Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 32 21 10 1 43 98 71Washington 31 17 12 2 36 98 90Carolina 32 13 13 6 32 75 91N.Y. Rangers 32 15 16 1 31 70 84New Jersey 32 12 14 6 30 73 82Philadelphia 30 13 14 3 29 68 78Columbus 31 13 15 3 29 78 86N.Y. Islanders 32 9 18 5 23 80 111WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 33 22 6 5 49 122 91St. Louis 29 20 6 3 43 100 67Minnesota 32 18 9 5 41 77 75Colorado 29 20 9 0 40 83 68Dallas 29 14 10 5 33 83 86
Winnipeg 32 14 14 4 32 83 90Nashville 31 14 14 3 31 71 89Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAAnaheim 33 21 7 5 47 106 86Los Angeles 32 21 7 4 46 88 63San Jose 31 19 6 6 44 103 78Vancouver 33 18 10 5 41 88 81Phoenix 30 17 8 5 39 97 94Calgary 30 11 15 4 26 79 100Edmonton 32 11 18 3 25 89 109NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Tuesday’s GamesBuffalo 2, Ottawa 1, SOWashington 6, Tampa Bay 5, SOFlorida 3, Detroit 2, SON.Y. Islanders 3, San Jose 2, SOColumbus 5, New Jersey 4Los Angeles 6, Montreal 0Nashville 4, N.Y. Rangers 1St. Louis 2, Winnipeg 1Chicago 6, Dallas 2Phoenix 3, Colorado 1Boston 2, Calgary 1Edmonton 5, Carolina 4, OTWednesday’s GamesLos Angeles 3, Toronto 1Chicago 7, Philadelphia 2Minnesota at Anaheim, lateThursday’s GamesColumbus at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.Montreal at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.Buffalo at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.Detroit at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.Toronto at St. Louis, 8 p.m.Dallas at Nashville, 8 p.m.Colorado at Winnipeg, 8 p.m.Carolina at Calgary, 9 p.m.N.Y. Islanders at Phoenix, 9 p.m.Boston at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.Minnesota at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.Friday’s GamesNew Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.Washington at Florida, 7:30 p.m.Edmonton at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
NBA StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBBoston 10 14 .417 —Toronto 7 13 .350 1Brooklyn 7 14 .333 1½Philadelphia 7 16 .304 2½New York 5 15 .250 3Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 16 6 .727 —Atlanta 11 11 .500 5Charlotte 10 12 .455 6Washington 9 11 .450 6Orlando 7 15 .318 9Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 19 3 .864 —Detroit 10 13 .435 9½Chicago 8 11 .421 9½Cleveland 8 13 .381 10½Milwaukee 5 17 .227 14WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBSan Antonio 17 4 .810 —Houston 15 7 .682 2½Dallas 13 9 .591 4½New Orleans 10 10 .500 6½Memphis 10 11 .476 7Northwest Division W L Pct GBPortland 18 4 .818 —Oklahoma City 17 4 .810 ½Denver 13 8 .619 4½Minnesota 11 11 .500 7Utah 4 19 .174 14½Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 15 8 .652 —Phoenix 12 9 .571 2Golden State 12 10 .545 2½L.A. Lakers 10 11 .476 4Sacramento 6 13 .316 7Tuesday’s GamesIndiana 90, Miami 84Cleveland 109, New York 94San Antonio 116, Toronto 103Brooklyn 104, Boston 96Oklahoma City 101, Atlanta 92Minnesota 121, Detroit 94Milwaukee 78, Chicago 74Phoenix 114, L.A. Lakers 108Wednesday’s GamesOrlando 92, Charlotte 83L.A. Clippers 96, Boston 88Minnesota 106, Philadelphia 99San Antonio 109, Milwaukee 77Oklahoma City 116, Memphis 100New Orleans 111, Detroit 106, OTNew York 83, Chicago 78Utah at Sacramento, lateDallas at Golden State, lateThursday’s GamesL.A. Clippers at Brooklyn, 8 p.m.Houston at Portland, 10:30 p.m.Friday’s GamesCleveland at Orlando, 7 p.m.Charlotte at Indiana, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at Toronto, 7 p.m.New York at Boston, 7:30 p.m.Washington at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.Brooklyn at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.Memphis at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.Minnesota at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.Sacramento at Phoenix, 9 p.m.Utah at Denver, 9 p.m.Houston at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Prep FootballMr. Football votingINDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Here are the top fi nishers from the 2013 Indiana Mr. Football balloting. The votes are compiled from a panel of Indiana Football Coaches Association members:1. Terry McLaurin, WR, Indianapolis Cathedral, 192. Jake Purichia, QB, Cardinal Ritter, 93. Matt DeSomer, QB, Andrean, 84. Sammy Mireles, RB, Elwood, 45. Austin Roberts, WR, Carmel, 3Note: Five other players each received one or two votes.TOP PLAYERS BY POSITIONWR--Terry McLaurin, Indianapolis CathedralTE--Zach Gegner, Warren CentralOL--Cal Scifres, Indianapolis RoncalliQB--Jake Purichia, Cardinal RitterRB--Sam Mireles, ElwoodK--Brandon Dowers, BrownsburgDL--Dillon Dallas, Center GroveLB--Galen Robinson Lake CentralDB--Ryan Neal, Merrillville
Prep Boys Basketball ScoresCrawford Co. 55, Mitchell 38Ev. Harrison 78, Ev. Central 66Huntington North 58, New Haven 57, OTLawrence Central 56, Lawrence North 54S. Bend Riley 72, Oregon-Davis 29
Prep Girls Basketball ScoresCorydon 54, Austin 42Cowan 41, Blue River 34E. Noble 60, Ft. Wayne Northrop 41Ev. Harrison 64, Ev. Reitz 60Ev. Mater Dei 63, Ev. North 33Fremont 49, Reading, Mich. 38Highland 48, Calumet 19Homestead 64, Angola 25Indpls Attucks 60, Indpls Marshall 32Lapel 66, Madison-Grant 55Leo 51, Bellmont 24McCutcheon 63, Lafayette Catholic 58Mishawaka Marian 52, Jimtown 17N. Harrison 62, S. Central (Harrison) 48N. Knox 42, White River Valley 34New Castle 46, Connersville 37Peru 44, N. Miami 43Richmond 64, Franklin Co. 35Shenandoah 65, Muncie South 43South Oldham, Ky. 52, Floyd Central 50Southwood 49, Mississinewa 31Terre Haute South 62, Indpls Tech 39Tipton 81, Elwood 69Triton 55, Tippecanoe Valley 48Union City 46, Centerville 38
College Basketball Boxes North Dakota St. 73, Notre Dame 69N. DAKOTA ST. (7-3)Felt 0-2 0-0 0, Alexander 5-14 4-5 16, Dupree 2-2 0-0 4, Brown 1-2 1-2 3, Braun 3-6 5-6 13, Wright 4-11 0-0 9, Kading 0-0 0-0 0, Bjorklund 11-14 4-6 26, Aaberg 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 27-53 14-19 73.NOTRE DAME (7-3)Sherman 3-9 4-4 10, Atkins 4-8 4-5 12, Grant 0-5 9-11 9, Jackson 3-7 2-2 11, Connaughton 8-21 0-0 21, Burgett 0-1 0-0 0, Knight 1-3 1-3 3, Vasturia 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 20-56 20-25 69.Halftime — N. Dakota St. 39-37. 3-Point Goals — N. Dakota St. 5-10 (Braun 2-3, Alexander 2-4, Wright 1-2, Felt 0-1), Notre Dame 9-29 (Connaughton 5-15, Jackson 3-6, Vasturia 1-2, Burgett 0-1, Atkins 0-2, Grant 0-3). Fouled Out — Bjorklund. Rebounds — N. Dakota St. 33 (Alexander 14), Notre Dame 32 (Sherman 10). Assists — N. Dakota St. 13 (Bjorklund 4), Notre Dame 16 (Grant 5). Total Fouls — N. Dakota St. 19, Notre Dame 15. A — 7,662. No.
Wisconson 78, Milwaukee 52MILWAUKEE (9-3)Kelm 7-10 2-3 17, Tiby 3-10 4-4 11, Arians 3-5 0-0 9, Aaron 0-3 0-0 0, McWhorter 2-5 0-0 4, Moore 0-1 0-0 0, Wichmann 2-3 0-1 4, Niang 2-4 0-0 4, Roelke 1-1 0-1 3, Richard 0-1 0-0 0, Panoske 0-3 0-0 0, Lyle 0-1 0-0 0, Gustavson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-47 6-9 52.WISCONSIN (11-0)Dekker 5-8 1-2 12, Kaminsky 6-11 2-2 16, Brust 7-13 0-0 18, Jackson 5-7 1-2 12, Gasser 1-6 0-0 3, Hayes 2-2 0-0 4, Hill 0-1 2-3 2, Dukan 0-4 0-0 0, Koenig 3-4 0-0 6, Brown 0-1 0-0 0, Anderson 0-1 0-0 0, Bohannon 2-3 0-0 5. Totals 31-61 6-9 78.Halftime — Wisconsin 45-25. 3-Point Goals — Milwaukee 6-17 (Arians 3-4, Kelm 1-1, Roelke 1-1, Tiby 1-3,
McWhorter 0-1, Moore 0-1, Lyle 0-1, Aaron 0-2, Panoske 0-3), Wisconsin 10-26 (Brust 4-8, Kaminsky 2-4, Bohannon 1-2, Dekker 1-2, Jackson 1-2, Gasser 1-3, Anderson 0-1, Koenig 0-1, Dukan 0-3). Fouled Out — None. Rebounds — Milwaukee 26 (Arians, Tiby 5), Wisconsin 35 (Dekker 8). Assists — Milwaukee 8 (McWhorter 2), Wisconsin 16 (Dekker 6). Total Fouls — Milwaukee 13, Wisconsin 16. A—16,987.
Champions League Results(Home teams listed fi rst)Group StageWednesdayGroup EChelsea (England) 1, Steaua Bucharest (Romania) 0Schalke (Germany) 2, FC Basel (Switzerland) 0Group FMarseille (France) 1, Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 2Napoli (Italy) 2, Arsenal (England) 0Group GAtletico Madrid (Spain) 2, FC Porto (Portugal) 0Austria Vienna (Austria) 4, Zenit St. Petersburg (Russia) 1Group HAC Milan (Italy) 0, Ajax (Netherlands) 0Barcelona (Spain) 6, Celtic (Scotland)Tuesday Group AManchester United (England) 1, S. Donetsk (Ukraine) 0Real Sociedad (Spain) 0, Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 1Group BFC Copenhagen (Denmark) 0, Real Madrid (Spain) 2Galatasaray (Turkey) 1, Juventus (Italy) 0 (susp. Tuesday, fi nished Wednesday)Group CBenfi ca (Portugal) 2, Paris SG (France) 1Olympiacos (Greece) 3, Anderlecht (Belgium) 1Group DBayern Munich (Germany) 2, Manchester City (England) 3Viktoria Plzen (Czech Republic) 2, CSKA Moscow (Russia) 1
GROUP STAGEFINAL STANDINGSTop two teams in each group advancex-advanced to second roundGroup A GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Man. United 6 4 2 0 12 3 14x-Leverkusen 6 3 1 2 9 10 10S. Donetsk 6 2 2 2 7 6 8Real Sociedad 6 0 1 5 1 10 1Group B GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Real Madrid 6 5 1 0 20 5 16x-Galatasaray 6 2 1 3 8 14 7Juventus 6 1 3 2 9 9 6Copenhagen 6 1 1 4 4 13 4Group C GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Paris SG 6 4 1 1 16 5 13x-Olimpiakos 6 3 1 2 10 8 10Benfi ca 6 3 1 2 8 8 10Anderlecht 6 0 1 5 4 17 1Group D GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Bay. Munich 6 5 0 1 17 5 15x-Man. City 6 5 0 1 18 10 15Viktoria Plzen 6 1 0 5 6 17 3CSKA Moscow 6 1 0 5 8 17 3Group E GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Chelsea 6 4 0 2 12 3 12x-Schalke 6 3 1 2 6 6 10FC Basel 6 2 2 2 5 6 8Steaua Buch. 6 0 3 3 2 10 3Group F GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-B. Dortmund 6 4 0 2 11 6 12x-Arsenal 6 4 0 2 8 5 12Napoli 6 4 0 2 10 9 12Marseille 6 0 0 6 5 14 0Group G GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Atletico M. 6 5 1 0 15 3 16x-Zenit St. P. 6 1 3 2 5 9 6FC Porto 6 1 2 3 4 7 5Austria Vienna 6 1 2 3 5 10 5Group H GP W D L GF GA Ptsx-Barcelona 6 4 1 1 16 5 13x-AC Milan 6 2 3 1 8 5 9Ajax 6 2 2 2 5 8 8Celtic 6 1 0 5 3 14 3
TransactionsBASEBALLAmerican LeagueDETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to terms with OF Rajai Davis on a two-year contract.NEW YORK YANKEES — Acquired RHP Kyle Haynes from Pittsburgh to complete an earlier trade.OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Acquired OF Billy Burns from Washington for LHP
Jerry Blevins.National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Promoted Tony Perezchica to minor league fi eld & infi eld coordinator and Dan Carlson to minor league pitching coordinator.LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Announced the retirement of 3B Jerry Hairston Jr.PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with RHP Charlie Morton on a three-year contract.SAN DIEGO PADRES — Acquired a player to be named or cash consider-ations from Houston for RHP Anthony Bass and a player to be named or cash considerations.ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Angel Castro on a one-year contract.BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationCHARLOTTE BOBCATS — Signed F Chris Douglas-Roberts from Texas (NBADL). Waived F James Southerland.GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS — Signed C Hilton Armstrong from Santa Cruz (NBADL).NBA Development LeagueDELAWARE 87ERS — Named Larry Meli chief operating offi cer.FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueNFL — Fined Dallas CB Orlando Scandrick $21,000, for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Chicago WR Brandon Marshall and Dallas DE George Selvie $21,000, for a hit below the knees against Chicago QB Josh McCown in a Dec. 9 game.DALLAS COWBOYS — Activated DE Edgar Jones off the injured reserve/return list.MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed RB Bradley Randle to the practice squad.SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Placed S Jeron Johnson on injured reserve. Signed S Perrish Cox. Signed LB Mike Taylor to the practice squad.TENNESSEE TITANS — Signed DE Adewale Ojomo to the practice squadHOCKEYNational Hockey LeagueNHL — Suspends Ottawa D Jared Cowen two games for an illegal check to the head of Buffalo F Zemgus Girgen-sons during a Dec. 10 game.DETROIT RED WINGS — Recalled G Petr Mrazek from Grand Rapids (AHL). Reassigned G Jared Coreau from Toledo (ECHL).NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Recalled F Ryan Strome from Bridgeport (AHL).NEW YORK RANGERS — Recalled D Dylan McIlrath from Hartford (AHL).OTTAWA SENATORS — Reassigned F Mike Hoffman to Binghamton (AHL).American Hockey LeagueBRIDGEPORT SOUND TIGERS — Reassigned F Nick Larson to Stockton (ECHL). Loaned D Mike Dalhuisen to Stockton.ECHLIDAHO STEELHEADS — Announced F Austin Smith was loaned to HC Assat (Finland). Added F Mitchell Good to the roster.READING ROYALS — Announced D Michal Cajkovsky was loaned to the team by Hershey (AHL).SOUTH CAROLINA STINGRAYS — Signed F Parker Stanfi eld.Central Hockey LeagueDENVER CUTTHROATS — Announced D Lee Moffi e was reassigned to the team by Lake Erie (AHL). Signed F Daniel Barczuk.QUAD CITY MALLARDS — Placed G Nick Niedert on Waivers, Announced G Ty Rimmer was reassigned to the team by Oklahoma City (AHL).LACROSSEMajor League LacrosseOHIO MACHINE — Traded D Kyle Hartzell to New York for MF Matt Dolente, MF Kevin Cooper and the 13th pick in the 2014 collegiate draft.MOTORSPORTSNASCAR — Named Brent Dewar chief operating offi cer. Promoted chief marketing offi cer Steve Phelps and senior vice president of racing operations Steve O’Donnell to executive vice presidents and general counsel Gary Crotty to chief legal offi cer.SOCCERMajor League SoccerLA GALAXY — Named Matt Reis goalkeeper coach.NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION — Announced the retirement of G Matt Reis.SEATTLE SOUNDERS FC — Traded MF Mauro Rosales and a No. 13 alloca-tion ranking to Chivas USA for the rights to F Tristan Bowen and a No. 2 alloca-tion ranking.COLLEGEBOISE STATE — Named Bryan Harsin football coach.VIRGINIA UNION — Named Joe Taylor director of athletics.
SPORTS BRIEFS•
MIAA commissioner to retireKALAMAZOO, Mich. — David L.
Neilson will retire as Michigan Intercolle-giate Athletic Association commissioner at the conclusion of the 2013-14 academic year.
Neilson’s retirement was announced on Tuesday by Kalamazoo College president Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, who is the vice chairwoman of the MIAA Presidents’ Council. Neilson is the eighth commissioner in the MIAA’s 126-year history and the conference’s third-longest serving commis-sioner, serving in that post since 2002.
“These last 12 years have been a labor of love for me, and I will always regard this position as the highlight of my profes-sional career,” Neilson said. “I have been blessed in being able to represent the nine great institutions that comprise the nation’s oldest collegiate athletic conference.”
Neilson has been a member of the NCAA Division III Commissioner’s Association for 12 years and was a founding board member of the associa-tion’s Sportsmanship and Ethical Conduct Committee. He has also been a member of the NCAA Division III Strategic Planning and Finance Committee for six years, making him the committee’s longest-serving member.
“Dave Neilson has brought not only a passion for intercollegiate athletics, but also professionalism, fairness, and deep respect for the academic mission of the member schools in his role as MIAA commissioner,” Wilson-Oyelaran said. “He has been a tireless advocate for our student-athletes and will be sorely missed.”
Cathedral receiver McLaurin wins Mr. Football
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Terry McLaurin of Indianapolis Cathedral has won this year’s Indiana Mr. Football award.
The versatile play-maker received 19 votes from a panel of Indiana Football Coaches Association members. Cardinal Ritter quarterback Jake Purichia was second with nine votes, followed by Andrean quarterback Matt DeSomer with eight.
McLaurin is listed as a receiver, which is where he’s expected to play at Ohio State. But Cathedral coach Rick Streiff also used him as a kick returner, at running back and even on defense. He was the perfect fi t in each role.
Pacers-Heat game most watched ever for NBA TV
NEW YORK (AP) — The Indiana Pacers’ 90-84 victory over the Miami Heat on Tuesday night was the most-watched game ever on the league’s NBA TV outlet.
The network says Wednesday that the telecast averaged 920,000 viewers, topping out at more than 1 million from 10:15 to 10:30 p.m. EST.
The game, the fi rst since Miami’s seven-game victory in last season’s Eastern Conference fi nals, surpassed the 868,000 total viewers that watched a Lakers-Port-land game on Oct. 31, 2012.
The previous highest game this season came Sunday, when 691,000 watched Kobe Bryant’s return for the Lakers.
Local Sports Briefs•
Girls Prep BasketballHornets lose to Spartans
ANGOLA — Angola lost to Class 4A fourth-ranked Homestead 64-25 Wednesday night at Central Gym.
The Spartans (6-0) outrebounded the Hornets 32-17 and forced 23 Angola turnovers. Homestead led 27-14 at the half, then outscored AHS 21-4 in the third quarter.
Karissa McLaughlin had 16 points, eight rebounds and four steals to lead Homestead. Sydney Buck and Grace German each had 11 points.
Kaitlyn Brandt had nine points and four rebounds for the Hornets (4-5). Claire Grubb added eight points.
Prep SwimmingAMS girls beat FW South
ANGOLA — Angola’s girls swim team defeated Fort Wayne South Side 116-54 Tuesday in the Hornets’ home-opening meet at the YMCA of Steuben County. The Hornet boys lost to the Archers 101.5-57.5.
Angola’s girls won all three relays and had seven different individual race winners: Taylor Raugh in the 200-yard freestyle, Kate Watkins in the 200 individual medley, Hayley Beckwith in the 50 freestyle, Sydney Robinson in the 100 butterfl y, Maria Clemens in the 500 freestyle, Sarah Wilson in the 100 backstroke and Mackenzie Simmons in the 100 breaststroke.
For the Hornet boys, Nathan Bourne won the 200 IM and the 100 butterfl y. Chris Clemens won the 100 breaststroke and was part of Angola’s winning 400 freestyle relay team.
Girls: Angola 116, F.W. South 54(all Angola swimmers unless otherwise mentioned)200 medley relay — 1. Angola (M. Clemens,
Simmons, Robinson, Beckwith) 2:15.38, 3. Angola (S. Wilson, Sauer, Korte, C. Merritt) 2:38.89. 200 freestyle — 1. Raugh 2:28.82, 5. Korte 3:14.57, 6. Staley 3:25.13. 200 individual medley — 1. Watkins 2:46.4, 2. McMillen 2:53.48, 3. J. Stadtmiller 3:04.6. 50 freestyle — 1. Beckwith 28.2, 2. Simmons 28.68, ex. C. Merritt 36.82. 100 butterfl y — 1. Robinson 1:17.31, 2. Beckwith 1:20.31, 3. Watkins 1:23.33. 100 freestyle — 1. Case (FWSS) 1:09.44, 4. Schmidt 1:16.44, 5. Stanley 1:18.7, 6. Sauer 1:19.9. 500 freestyle — 1. M. Clemens 6:41.59, 2. McMillen 6:58.33.200 freestyle relay — 1. Angola (Simmons, Olson, Beckwith, M. Clemens) 2:03.5, 2. Angola (Blue, Schmidt, Watkins, McMillen) 2:07.46, 4. Angola (J. Stadtmiller, Stanley, Korte, Sauer) 2:24.81. 100 backstroke — 1. S. Wilson 1:16.34, 2. M. Clemens 1:17.68, 3. Olson 1:21.28. 100 breaststroke — 1. Simmons 1:21.42, 2. Blue 1:34.92, 3. Schmidt 1:39.46. 400 freestyle relay — 1. Angola (Robinson, Raugh, Blue, McMillen) 4:40.1, 2. Angola (Sauer, Stanley, C. Merritt, Olson) 5:19.74, ex. Angola (Schmidt, McElroy, Staley, J. Stadtmiller) 5:27.42.
Boys: F.W. South 101.5, Angola 57.5(all Angola swimmers unless otherwise mentioned)200 medley relay — 1. South Side (Tribbett, Manuel, McCord, Marshall Reber) 1:57.87, 2. Angola (B. Weaver, C. Clemens, Bourne, Crody) 2:00.76. 200 freestyle — 1. Marshall Reber (FWSS) 2:09.46, 2. B. Thompson 2:20.75. 200 individual medley — 1. Bourne 2:15.59. 50 freestyle — 1. Tribbett (FWSS) 25.97, 2t. Crody 28.28, 4. B. Weaver 28.77, 5. B. Thompson 29.44. 100 butterfl y — 1. Bourne 1:01.84. 100 freestyle — 1. McCord (FWSS) 57.01, 3. Crody 1:01.5, 4. K. Stadtmiller 1:10.07, 6. Ridenour 1:21.29. 500 freestyle — 1. Tidwell (FWSS) 6:51.32. 200 freestyle relay — 1. South Side (Tribbett, Manuel, McCord, Marshall Reber) 1:49.24, 2. Angola (B. Thompson, Crody, B. Weaver, Bourne) 1:51.97. 100 backstroke — 1. Marshall Reber (FWSS) 1:05.08, 2. B. Weaver 1:14.97, 5. Ridenour 1:53.54. 100 breaststroke — 1. C. Clemens 1:17.5, 3. K. Stadtmiller 1:37.06. 400 freestyle relay — 1. Angola (B. Thompson, Ridenour, K. Stadtmiller, C. Clemens) 4:56.11.
WrestlingRailroaders fall to Snider
FORT WAYNE — The Garrett wrestling team lost to Fort Wayne Snider, 47-24, on Tuesday night. Picking up fi rst-period pins for Garrett were Gabe Gunion (170 pounds) and Bo Davis (195). Anton Novy (106), Dylan DeMarco (113), Jaden Barker (132) and Ivan Jacobs (285) all won by decision.
Fort Wayne Snider 47, Garrett 24106: Anton Novy (G) dec. Brendan Forish (S) 8-7. 113: Dylan DeMarco (G) dec. Zeran Courter (S), 7-4. 120: Jaydon Nance (S) pinned Dalton Halferty (G), 1:38. 126: Jordan Pace (S), FF. 132: Jaden Barker (G), dec. Austin Votaw (S), 15-8. 138: Bobby Humphrey (S) tech. fall Dustin Alwine (G), 3:47 18-3. 145: Nicholas Miller (S) pinned Jordan Gunion (G), 0:27. 152: Greggory McCullar (S) pinned Michael Sexton (G), 2:59. 160: Dustin Wells (S) pinned Derrek Metzger (G), 0:39. 170: Gabe Gunion (G) pinned Jamison Stiebeling (S), 1:40. 182: Russell
Davies (S) pinned Ryan Hathaway (G), 1:00. 195: Bo Davis (G) pinned Michael Villeda (S), 0:50. 220: Noah Masonneuve (S) pinned Cordell Camp (G), 1:15. 285: Ivan Jacobs (G) dec. Matthew Swartz (S), 5-4.
Middle School Girls BasketballDMS squads split with Indian Springs
AUBURN — The DeKalb eighth-grade girls basketball team defeated Indian Springs, 31-25, on Monday night. The Patriots played great defense and capitalized on key steals to secure the win. Leading the Patriots in scoring were Leigha Brown with 14 points, Madison Ring with 10 points and Allison Marlowe with seven points. Brown also led with six rebounds and four steals.
DeKalb’s seventh-grade team fell to Indian Springs, 37-13. The Indian Springs defense was too much for the Patriots, which struggled with the pressure. Leading the Patriots in scoring was Bethany Kelley with eight points, Bethany Lancaster and Nicole Hagen with two points and Brooke-destinee Lockwood with one point. Lockwood led the team in rebounds with fi ve and Becca Schutt led with fi ve steals.
Seventh Grade Boys BasketballLocomotives top county rival Lakewood Park
GARRETT — Garrett defeated Lakewood Park Tuesday night, 44-33. The Locomotives were once again led by a strong effort from Avery Morrison with 19 points and 10 rebounds. Morrison had help from his teammates for an overall balanced attack. Other players chipping in were Korbyn
Yarian with nine points and 10 rebounds, nine points from Kobe Lucarelli and fi ve points from Bryce Wilson.
Garrett used a 15-7 third quarter to pull ahead of the Panthers, which couldn’t overcome foul trouble to get back into the game. The Panthers had two scorers in double digits with Zeke Farnsworth’s 16 points and Quentin Lesser adding 10 points. Jake Ingram added fi ve points and Jacob Barkey had two points.
LPC wins fi rst gameAUBURN — The Lakewood
Park Christian seventh-grade team notched its fi rst win of the season with a resounding 43-9 win over Lakeland Christian Academy on Saturday. Zeke Farnsworth scored a game-high 27 points. The Panthers also got eight points from Quentin Lesser and four points from Jake Ingram. Caleb Kruse and Jacob Barkey also had baskets for Lakewood.
Eighth Grade Boys BasketballLocomotives top LPC
GARRETT — Garrett defeated Lakewood Park Christian, 44-28, on Tuesday night. The Locomo-tives outscored the Panthers, 18-5, the second half to pull away. Leading the Locomotives were Hayden Greene with 12 points and nine rebounds, Dillon McCann with 11 points, Micah Malcolm with eight points, Carter Back with six points and 10 rebounds, Jacob Bevis with four points, Cameron Smith with three points and Cole Kelham with four assists. Andrew Wertman, Juan Arambula, Clayton Sobieski and Caleb Smith also contributed in the team’s victory.
Lakewood Park scored the
fi rst eight points of the game but couldn’t hold on. The Panther scoring was led by Colton Edgar with 17 points. Chase Yoder scored six points, with Carter Gonzales, Harrison Roberts and Drew Lyons also scoring.
LP tops Lakeland ChristianAUBURN — Lakewood Park
Christian defeated Lakeland Christian Academy, 40-25, on Saturday. The Panther enjoyed a balanced offense attack with nine players scoring in the game, led by Colton Edgar’s 11 points. Christian Mosley and Elijah Gardner added fi ve points each, while Carsten White, Harrison Roberts and Carter Gonzales all had four points. Zach Krafft, Isaac Schlotterback and Chase Yoder also had baskets.
GymnasticsLocals compete in Indianapolis invitational
INDIANAPOLIS — A handful of girls from Tri-State Gymnas-tics competed at the Indiana State Fall Invitational in Indianapolis this last weekend. Here are their results.
Level 4Leah Goodwin (Bronson, Mich.) – All-Around, 33.825 (fi fth); vault, 8.475 (fi fth); bars, 7.225 (sixth); beam, 9.075 (third); fl oor, 9.05 (six).Brooke Bowers (Waterloo) — All-Around, 34.3 (ninth); vault, 8.4; bars, 8.3; beam, 9.0 (fourth); fl oor, 8.7.Level 6Kristen Azzue (Waterloo) — All-Around, 33.475 (14th); vault, 8.425; bars, 7.15; beam, 9.05 (fi fth); fl oor, 8.85.Lauren Blythe (Auburn) — All-Around, 34.3 (13th); vault, 8.1; bars, 7.9; beam, 8.725; fl oor, 8.875.Sarah Boyd (Waterloo) — All-Around, 34.575 (eighth); vault, 8.6; bars, 7.8; beam, 9.10 (third), fl oor, 9.075 (fi fth).Ashtyn Evans (Auburn) — All-Around, 34.3 (11th); vault, 8.55; bars, 8.575 (fi fth); beam, 8.25; fl oor, 8.975 (ninth).Level 8Avery Evans (Auburn) — All-Around, 33.96 (seventh), vault, 8.325; bars, 9.25 (second); beam, 7.55; fl oor, 8.8.Danielle Fisher (Bronson, Mich.) — All-Around, 30.825 (13th); vault, 8.225 (eighth), bars, 5.4; beam, 8.3 (ninth); fl oor, 8.9 (seventh).
2o13 AM PMDec. Minor Major Minor Major
12 Thu 1:19 7:31 1:43 7:5513 Fri 2:02 8:14 2:26 8:3814 Sat 2:44 8:57 3:09 9:2115 Sun 3:29 9:41 3:53 10:0516 Mon > 4:15 10:27 4:39 10:5117 Tue > 5:03 11:15 5:27 11:3918 Wed F 5:52 ——- 6:16 12:04
19 Thu > 6:42 12:31 7:05 12:54Major—2 hours. Minor—1 hour.
Sunrise: Today 7:58, Friday 7:59, Saturday 7:59, Sunday 8, Monday 8:01, Tuesday 8:01, Wednesday 8:02, Thursday 8:03.Sunset: Tonight 5:13, Friday 5:13, Saturday 5:13, Sunday 5:13, Monday 5:13, Tuesday 5:14, Wednesday 5:14, Thursday 5:14.
Solunar Table•
OutdoorCONTACT THE OUTDOOR PAGE EDITOR AMY OBERLIN AT [email protected] TheOutdoorPage.com
TheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICANB4 kpcnews.com THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
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Business Weekly
THE NEWS SUN
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TheAdvance Leader
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Fremont youth gets fi rst buckWyatt Claxton, 8, of Fremont, shot his fi rst buck while hunting with his Grandpa Gary
Helbert in October in the Fremont area.
BY PAUL OAKESCabin fever.The term comes from
being cooped up during a prolonged storm, usually in winter and because of heavy ice and/or snow. The walls of your cabin keep moving in on you and there is a strong urge to go out, in spite of the weather.
From now until ice out, we warm-days-only fi shermen will be resisting the pull to get out there and cast a line. Some will even try ice fi shing as a cure but you can’t just try cutting holes and watching bobbers, it is a developed sport, over
time and experience.Some of us tie fl ys to
kill time. Planning next summer’s exotic trips is another pastime. Getting out old home movies as reminders of past jaunts can soothe the itch, some. And one of my favorites is to pull the fi llets from the freezer and organize
a mid-winter fi sh fry. A collection of fi shing buddies at the half-way point — since the way you can tell when a fi sherman is lying is when his lips are moving — can make for a lively evening and help bridge the gap until spring.
The thought of getting that fi rst strike in March or April should help. And honestly, guys and gals, it won’t be that long! Pray for lots of snow to fi ll up our lakes.
PAUL OAKES is a retired fi sherman who lives in Angola.
Cabin fever busters help melt away the winter blues
A collection of fi shing buddies can make for a lively evening and help
bridge the gap ’til spring.
•
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Barrows’ buck a 9-pointerMcClain Barrows, 9, shot his fi rst deer, a 9-point buck, on opening day of deer season this fall near Orland. He is shown with his grandfather Lynn Barrows and father, Kevin Barrows.
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Heller harvests deerIsabelle Heller, 12, harvested this 6-point buck on Nov. 16, on the fi rst day of gun season, with help from her grandfather, Ron Vaughn. Heller is the daughter of Chris and Amy Heller.
House fi nches may be found at feeders across much of North America and if you see these little birds, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology would like to know about it.
Scientists specifi cally want to know if the birds you see appear healthy or if they have redness and swelling around the eyes — signs of a bacterial disease (Mycoplasma gallisep-ticum) that fi rst appeared
in 1994 and is now found in house fi nch populations from coast to coast.
This special push to track both sick and healthy house fi nches is being carried out through the Cornell Lab’s Project FeederWatch, an annual winter survey of feeder birds that runs from November through April. New participants are invited to sign up to help at FeederWatch.org. Making
the correct ID is important, so there’s additional help provided in distinguishing among similar species, such as the Purple Finch and Cassin’s Finch.
“House fi nches are providing a unique window into disease dynamics,” says Wesley Hochachka, Assistant Director of Bird Populations Studies at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “We want to understand how this disease
is spreading.” To learn more about FeederWatch and to sign up, visit www.
FeederWatch.org or call the Cornell Lab toll-free at 866-989-2473.
Cornell lab asking for public house fi nch reports
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
A male and female house fi nch are shown; the male has a redder color.
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COMICS • TV LISTINGS kpcnews.com B5•
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON
DUSTIN BY STEVE KELLEY & JEFF PARKER
ALLEY OOP BY JACK AND CAROLE BENDER
FRANK & ERNEST BY BOB THAVES
THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM
GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS
BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL
BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER
DEAR DOCTOR K: In previous columns you’ve mentioned something called the “placebo eff ect.” Can you explain what that means?
DEAR READER: We used to think the placebo eff ect was imaginary. Today, I think the evidence indicates otherwise: It’s an example of our remarkable powers of self-healing.
A placebo is a pill or other treatment that is inactive. It may look identical to a real drug, but it doesn’t really have the drug in it. It’s also called a “sugar pill,” although the inactive substances in it don’t include table sugar.
Researchers use placebos in clinical studies. Th ey compare the results for a group of people who got an active treatment with the results for a group of people who got the placebo treatment. Typically, neither the people in the study nor their doctors know if they are taking the real medicine
or the placebo until aft er the study is ended. Th is is how researchers can tell how well a treatment worked.
Even when people taking the real drug do better
than the people taking the placebo, something interesting oft en happens: Th e people taking the placebo sometimes report that they also feel better since they started taking it.
For many years, most of us in the medical profession
assumed such people were just imagining that they were feeling better. Aft er all, the placebo pill contained no active substance that
could aff ect the chemistry of the body. We called it the “placebo eff ect.”
What’s behind that eff ect? When real medicines work, they oft en do so by supplying a chemical that is missing in the body. However, they also sometimes stimulate natural healing powers.
Take pain, for instance. Like all symptoms, pain is experienced in the brain. It also can be treated by the brain. Endorphins are brain chemicals that are naturally released when a person experiences pain, reducing its intensity. Th ere is growing evidence that when a placebo leads to pain relief, it is because taking the placebo stimulates the production of endorphins.
It’s not just pain. In Parkinson’s disease, for example, a defi ciency of a natural brain chemical makes it diffi cult for a person to move in a coordinated way. A pill that supplies
that defi cient chemical can improve the condition. One study showed that when people with Parkinson’s disease took a placebo pill (instead of the real pill), their brains responded by naturally making more of the missing chemical. Th at’s why they improved. It was not their imagination: It was natural healing that was stimulated by their belief in the pill.
Belief surely plays an important role. Studies show that people are more likely to respond to a placebo when they are told it is powerful or that it is expensive. People who believe in acupuncture are more likely to feel better following real acupuncture and during sham acupunc-ture. Studies like these have opened our eyes to what the placebo eff ect really is.
DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.
‘Placebo effect’ can stimulate natural healing
THURSDAY EVENING DECEMBER 12, 2013 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30
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Crossword Puzzle•
On this date Dec. 12: • In 1917, Father Edward Flanagan founded Boys Town outside Omaha, Neb. • In 1985, 248 American soldiers and eight crew members were killed when an Arrow Air charter crashed after takeoff from Gander, Newfoundland. • In 2003, Paul Martin succeeded Jean Chretien as Canada’s prime minister. Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger was knighted by Britain.
Almanac•
DEAR ABBY: As the education director of the East Bay Bicycle Coalition, I work hard to encourage safe and courteous cycling for everyday transportation in Northern California. Th ere are a number of points I would like to address to “Caring Reader, Sacramento, Calif.” (Sept. 13). “Caring” described seeing bicyclists run stop signs, not wear protective gear, texting/talking on cellphones, and suggested a greater enforce-ment of the law. Rolling through stop signs is, indeed, just as illegal as it is while driving a vehicle, except in Idaho where cyclists may treat stop signs as yields. Talking or texting on a cellphone while biking isn’t currently illegal in the state of California. I feel that using cellphones while biking is an unsafe practice, and I encourage cyclists (or drivers) to simply pull over before making or taking a call.
Helmets are required gear only for bicyclists under the age of 18 in California. However, it is not illegal for an
adult to bike without a helmet. You said in your response that people who cycle at night should avoid wearing dark clothes to increase their visibility, but clothes color alone has been shown to have little or
no eff ect on visibility in dark conditions. During low-light times of day like dawn or dusk, wearing bright or fl uorescent clothes is a good strategy, but at night bicyclists should rely on lights and refl ectors to be seen.
Th e law in California stipulates that bicyclists must have a white headlight, a red rear refl ector and yellow or white refl ectors on their wheels or spokes as well as on their pedals, shoes or ankles. I also recommend adding a red rear light, and additional lights and refl ectors at the front, rear and sides of the bike, or on one’s clothing or helmet. Highlighting one’s silhouette with lights and refl ectors will increase visibility substan-tially aft er dark. — ROBERT PRINZ, CALIFORNIA DEAR MR. PRINZ: You’re welcome. And thank you for kindly sharing your expertise with my readers. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
DEAR ABBY
Jeanne Phillips
•
Common sense cankeep bicyclists safe
ASK DOCTOR K.
Dr. Anthony
Komaroff
•
B6 kpcnews.com THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
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Mediacom offers an exciting work environment, competitive
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Choose Job ID 5657 or 5706.
The News Sun has an opening for a Part-Time Assistant District Manager.
The primary responsibility of the position is to assist the district manager with overseeing our home delivery operation.
We are seeking an individual who is out-going and dependable, has good communication skills and doesn’t mind working at night. Delivery and management experience in any industry are a plus but not necessary. Work hours are nor-mally between 1:00 am and 7:00 am and include weekends.
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AUCTION
ANDREAS AUCTIONSATURDAY
DECEMBER 14, 2013TIME: 9:30 AM
LOCATION: 5420 N OLD 102
COLUMBIA CITY, IN46725
EAST END OFSHINER LAKE
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TRAPPING, ARCH-ERY, FISHING, CAMP-
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JOB
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EMPLOYMENT
ConstructionConcrete Workers
Wage based on exp.Kessel Const.260 347-3366
Drivers
3 Good, depend-able truck
drivers to haulsteel. Homemost nights.
(260) 925-4512
EMPLOYMENT
Drivers
We are currently seek-ing a 1st shift short hauldriver, and a 2nd shift
yard driver. Candidatesmust possess a Class A
CDL license, have aminimum of three yearsflatbed experience, anda clean driving record.We offer an excellent
wage and benefit pack-age. Forward resume
to:rcrandall@dexteraxle
.comor apply in person at:
Dexter Axle500 South 7th Street
Albion, IN 46701
EOE
■■ ■■ ■■ ■■Medical
We Love OurEmployees!
Come Join OurTeam!
CNAsRNs
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Please
North Ridge Village
600 Trail Ridge Rd.Albion, IN 46701
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EMPLOYMENT
General
Lennard AgCompanyHowe, IN
Skilled F/T and P/TLabor needed forfarming business.
OperatorsMechanics
Graders/Sorters
Graders must be ableto shovel and lift up to
50 lbs. regularly.
Must have strong workethic, attention to
detail, and leadership qualities.
Pay based on skill set.
Ability to work a variedschedule and long
hours, depending onthe season.
Sundays required.
Send resume to careers@
lennardag.com
or apply in person to:
0450 W. 750 N.Howe, IN 46746(Turn West off of
SR 9 at the ValeroGas station)
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Accepting applicationsfor CNA's,LPN's,RT's
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■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■Cook
EXPERIENCEDCOOK
WANTED
30-40 hours per weekFlexible hours
Must work weekendsand holidays.
Insurance andBenefits
Apply at:Smith Farms Manor
406 Smith DriveAuburn, IN
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Please send resume to:
RV Transport, Inc.8100 W. 700 S.
Topeka, IN 46571
No walk-ins orphone calls please!
■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■
Welders
ExperiencedTIG & StickWeldersWANTED
in & around theFt. Wayne Area $30.00 + per hr.And Benefits!
Please Call Brian @
260-417-8356
DriversCDL TRAINEES
NEEDED! *No Experi-ence Required. *Learnto Drive for US Xpress.*Train & be Based Lo-cally! *Earn $800 per
Week After SponsoredTraining Program.1-800-882-7364
DriversDriver Trainees! Get
Fee-Paid CDL TrainingNow! Learn to drive for
US XpressNew Driver’s can earn$800/wk & Benefits!NO EXPERIENCE
NEEDED!Be trained &based lo-cally! 1-800-882-7364
EMPLOYMENT
DriversGORDON TRUCKINGCDL-A Truck Drivers.Up to $5,000 Sign-onBonus & $.56 CPM!
Solo & Teams. Dedi-cated/Home Weekly
Available! Call 7days/wk! EOE888-757-2003
GordonTrucking.com
GeneralMcCammon Trucking,
Inc.--Now hiring profes-sional drivers. Excellentpay. Good safety bonus
program. Home onweekends. Prepass and
Prepass plus. Smallfamily owned company.
Call 1-800-950-0493.(A)
RE
NT
AL
SR
EN
TA
LS
APARTMENTRENTAL
GRISWOLD ESTATES
*Restrictions Apply
ALL DEPOSITS ARE $99
(260) 333-5457900 Griswold Ct., Auburn, IN 46706
ONE MONTHFREE RENT &
$0 APPLICATIONFEE!
FREE HEAT!
260-349-0996260-349-09961815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 467551815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 46755
nelsonestates@mrdapartments.commrdapartments.commrdapartments.com
NELSON ESTATESCALL TARA TODAY!CALL TARA TODAY!
Up to $1000 in Up to $1000 in FREE rent!FREE rent!
• Free Heat & • Free Heat & Hot/Soft Water! Hot/Soft Water! • $99.00 Deposits! • $99.00 Deposits! • Pet-Friendly • Pet-Friendly Community! Community! • A Great Place to • A Great Place to Call Home! Call Home!
Our Gift Our Gift To You..To You..
HURRY, OFFER EXPIRES 12/14/13HURRY, OFFER EXPIRES 12/14/13
APARTMENTRENTAL
1 Bedroom 1 Bedroom Apartment Apartment AvailableAvailable
• Basic rent starting at $391• Security Deposit $200• Water, sewer & trash pickup included in rent
Rental assistance is available for
qualifi ed applicants.ELIGIBILITY
REQUIREMENTS:62 years & older or disabled of any legal age may apply.
Rent based on all sources of income and
medical expenses.Rosedorf Park Apartments
Phone/Fax 260-357-5180For hearing impaired only call TDD 1-800-743-3333
“This institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider
& Employer”
AngolaONE BR APTS.
$425/mo., Free Heat.260-316-5659
Auburn $99 First Month -2BR-VERY NICE!
SENIORS 50+ $465No Smokers/ No Pets
(260) 925-9525
Avilla1 & 2 BR APTS$450-$550/ per
month. Call260-897-3188
HOMESFOR RENT
Angola/Silver Lake3 BR 2 BA 2 story,walkout basement,
No Smoking, No Pets$800 mo. + util.
Kendallville4 BR 2 BA, Att. Garage,
Stove & D/W$750/mo. + $1000 dep.
502 Seagraves260 347-5268
WaterlooLand contract, 3 BRgarage, $400/mo.
260 615-2709
MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT
AvillaNice 3 BR Trailer
$550 mo.+ $550 Dep.(260)318-2440
Hamilton Lake
2 BR, updated, largekitchen & LR, one blockto lake, nice park, oth-
ers available. $450/mo.(260) 488-3163
Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wkalso LaOtto location.
574-202-2181
THE EXPERT@sk
HO
ME
SH
OM
ES
HOMES FOR SALE
All real estateadvertising inthis newspaperis subject to theFair Housing
Act which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preferencelimitation or discriminationbased on race, color, relig-ion, sex, handicap, familialstatus, or national origin, oran intention, to make anysuch preference, limitationor discrimination." Familialstatus includes children un-der the age of 18 living withparents or legal custodians;pregnant women and peo-ple securing custody of chil-dren under 18. This news-paper will not knowingly ac-cept any advertising for realestate which is in violationof the law. Our readers arehereby informed that alldwellings advertised in thisnewspaper are available onan equal opportunity basis.To complain of discrimina-tion call HUD Toll-free at1-800-669-9777. Thetoll-free telephone numberfor the hearing impaired is1-800-927-9275.
USDA 100% HOMELOANS--USDA 100%Home Loans. Not just1st time buyers! Lowrates! Buy any homeanywhere. Academy
Mortgage Corporation,11119 Lima Road, Fort
Wayne, IN 46818.Call Nick Staker260-494-1111.
NLMS-146802. Somerestrictions may apply.Largest Independent
Mortgage Banker. Indi-ana Corp State Li-cense-10966. CorpNMLS-3113 LO Li-
cense-14894. EqualHousing Lender. (A)
MOBILE HOMESFOR SALE
GarrettMOBILE HOMES FORAS LOW AS $550.00
A MONTH - LEASE TOOWN! WE HAVE
2 & 3 BR TO CHOOSEFROM. WE ALSO DO
FINANCING.CALL KATT TODAY
260-357-3331
ST
UF
FS
TU
FF
MERCHANDISE
10 in. Dob all metaltelescope w/extras.
$400.260 833-2744
Christian Novels individual or by the lot.
$1.00 and up.(260) 242-7435
FREE: 6’ ChristmasTree, multi-colored
lights. 357-5590
Large 12 piece Light upNativity Scene, with
Manger & Star.$160.00( 260)463-3058
Soapstone HeritageWood Stove, heats upto 1,900 sq. ft. used3 mos. $3,250. new
selling for $1,500. firm.260 475-1283
FURNITURE
12 pc. Rattan Furnituremoving from lake home
$350.00260 854-3748
Bored?Check out
Happenings in Friday’s
newspaper!
• Valid Driver’s License• Responsible Adult• Reliable Transportation• Available 7 days a week
45 S. Public Sq., Angola, INPhone: 260-318-2978
E-mail: [email protected] are independent contractors and not employees.
Adult Motor Route in Steuben County
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS
Circulation DepartmentContact: Violet Grime
CARRIERCARRIEROPPORTUNITIESOPPORTUNITIES
kpcnews.com B7THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013
AT YOUR SERVICEWe Know
What Makes YOU
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THE NEWS SUNTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALDREPUBLICAN
StarSSSSSSSThe
BUSINESS &PROFESSIONAL
BANKRUPTCYFREE CONSULTATION$25.00 TO STARTPayment Plans, Chapter
13 No Money down. Fil-ing fee not included. Sat.& Eve. Appts. Avail. CallCollect: 260-424-0954
act as a debt relief agencyunder the BK code
HOMEIMPROVEMENT
All PhaseRemodeling
and HandymanService - No Job
too Big or Small !!!Free Estimates
Call Jeff260-854-9071
Qualified & InsuredServing You Since
1990
ROOFING/SIDING
County Line RoofingFREE ESTIMATES
Tear offs, winddamage & reroofs.
Call (260)627-0017
Sudoku Answers 12-12
Make Plans Now To Attend
Thursday, Friday & Saturday December 19, 20 & 21, 2013
Held at the Michiana Event Center
For more information contact Robert Mishler at 260-336-9750 or visit our website at midwestfarmexpo.com
Thursday, F
WednesdayThursdayFriday
Free Seminars Thursday and Friday
aayayyyesessdddaydaadayayyyyyyyyyyyyy
yaaayayyyyyyy
yyyy
AUCTIONEERSJerry O. Grogg AU01002223 LaGrange Dallas Martin AU01029776 Topeka Robert Mishler AU08701553 LaGrange Jeff Burlingame
PLATO CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
The December auction will be held at The Michiana Event Center in between Sturgis, MI and Howe, IN on State Road 9 or M66 in Michigan in conjunction with the Midwest Farm Expo. (7605 N. State Road 9, Howe, IN 46746)
AUCTION DATE: SATURDAY DECEMBER 21, 2013BEGINNING AT 9:00 AM (WITH 2 RINGS)
MILLER NITRO SPRAYER * TRACTORS * JD 6620 COMBINE * JD 6850 FORAGE CHOPPER2000 Miller Nitro 200HT sprayer with 3050 hours, 90’ booms, 14.9-46 rub-ber, 1200 gal tank, 250 hrs on new Cummins eng, new hydra pump in Aug, JD auto steer wiring harness, no hard parts, good machine; 1997 CIH 8940 MFWD tractor, CHA 4700 hrs, 4 remotes, new front tires 18.4-46 axle duals all 6 tires are Firestone radials, 2nd owner of tractor for last 10 yrs, very nice you won’t be disappointed; John Deere 4240 CHA tractor 18.4-34 duals, nice; 1985 John Deere 4450 MFWD tractor, CHA, 15 spd pwr shift, 7900 hrs, 2 remotes, 540/1000 pto, 20.8-38 rubber, good tractor; John Deere 8650 tractor with Kinze repower, 20.8-38 matching axle duals (80%), 3 pt, pto, quick hitch; IH 656 gas utility tractor shows 3600 hrs with IH 2000 loader and good 18.4-30 tires; Ford 4000 diesel utility tractor with loader, pto and 3 pt; Farm Pro 2420 diesel 2 wd tractor; Kubota B7800 30 hp 4x4 compact tractor hydra trans, 1000 hrs with loader; John Deere 2030 gas utility tractor w/ shuttle, 3 pt and pto, very nice; Deutz Allis 9130 tractor CHA, 18.4- 38 inch tires and 3 remotes, this tractor has only run a tmr mixer its whole life, it also had a new clutch put in when motor was overhauled 800 hours ago; Allis Chalmers 180 diesel 4500 hrs, good rubber; Farmall A, restored; Farmall SA, restored; IH 706 gas wide front tractor with cab; MM U, in good cond; MF 1080 diesel tractor with duals and wts; 1976 Oliver 2255 tractor with Cat 3150 eng, cab, 20.8-38 rubber and 5000 hrs, good solid tractor selling to buy smaller tractor; Allis Chalmers WD tractor; Allis Chalmers WD45 with newer over size rear tires; 1947 Farmall M M&W 9 speed trans and original IH disc brakes, rare tractor; 1983 John Deere 6620 combine, 3900 eng hrs, new upper feeder house bearings, feeder house shaft and bearings, clean grain elevator chain sprockets and shaft, big chopper, locally owned and very well maintained, nicest one you will fi nd; John Deere 916 fl ex head; John Deere 643 corn head; John Deere 215 fl ex head; 2002 John Deere 6850 4x4 kernal processor self propelled forage harvester sn z06850x505933, 3350 engine hours, 2645 cutter head hours; John Deere 666R 6-row corn head; John Deere 645a pickup head;
BACKHOE * CAT DOZER * SKIDSTEERS * GEN SET * STUMP GRINDERCase Super K 4x4 backhoe, 4000 hrs, ext hoe and cab; Case 580 Super E diesel backhoe, machine is rough but good mechanically; Caterpillar D3 dozer 6-way blade, good iron; Gehl 5635 skidsteer hi-fl o hydra, Deutz diesel, and 12x16.5 tires; Gehl 4400 gas skidloader; Lincoln arc welder/generator with Kohler eng; Deutz 6 cyl, 130 hp, 100 KW, 3 ph generator only 5 yrs old mounted on trailer, good cond; Vermeer 631 stump grinder with new rebuilt Wisconsin 4 cyl eng; Lull 4000# all terrain lift; generator traffi c arrow with diesel generator;
FARM EQUIPMENT * IRRIGATION John Deere 235 22’ wheel disc with wheels on wings; NI 12A m spreader, very good condition; Farmhand 417 grinder mixer with sheller unit; Gehl 99 high throw forage blower; John Deere 7000 8RN liq corn planter with lots of add ons, Yetter single disc fert openers, Precision seed meters, Cruiser closing wheels, in furrow fert, Sensor 1 monitor (2 yrs old); Brillion cultimulcher 15’ crowfoot front and rear; 8’x12’ steel deck fl at rack wagon; John Deere tandem axle forage wagon with 3 beaters; Clay 2500 gal manure tank with hoses and vacuum pump new rims; 15’ hay wagon on good gear; John Deere 145 front end loader with 5’ bucket and brackets; Snyder Super Nurse 2000 gal tank w/hoops and 3” Banjo valve; PTO irrigation pump w/Berkley B4JRMBMCCW pump 1000 gpm @ 90 psi;1990 Willmar Model 500 spreader, new spreader spindles this year; Feeder wagon; 4-2500 gal poly fert tanks, good condition; Berkley irrigation pump with 40 hp elec motor, works good; White 5100 6RN lig, air planter, notil coulters, row cleaners and more, it’s set up right; John Deere pto m spreader; Rhino 7’ rotary mower; John Deere 6’ rotary mower; New Holland BR780A round baler with monitor; 3 pt 5 wheel hay rake; 30’ feeder wagon; New Holland HT154 12-wheel hay rake with kicker wheel; John Deere 3975 forager chopper with monitors and kernel processor; JD3 row corn head; JD hay pickup; Westerndorf WL-42 HD All-Matic front end loader, brackets for White tractor; JD 7000 male row planter set 4 row with 6 boxes, with fertilizer;
TRUCKS AND AUTOS * TRAVEL TRAILER * KUBOTA RTV * GMC BIG WHEELS FLOATER TRUCK * TRAILERS
2000 Chevrolet K2500 reg cab 4x4 pickup with 6.0 gas eng, 190K miles GN hitch; 2001 Ford Excursion 4x4 leather 128k miles; Oldsmobile Alero; 1999 Dodge Caravan; Kubota RTV 900 diesel 4x4 UTV, 463 hrs with hydra dump; 1999 Prowler 29J 30’ bumper pull RV trailer with 14’ slide out, nice unit; 1984 Ford F-8000 tandem, 167,703 miles, 20 ft fl atbed, no hoist, Hendrickson Spring suspension, springs replaced two yrs ago, 3208 Cat engine 210 hp, Allison automatic transmission with additional manual low range transmission; 1978 GMC Big Wheels fl oater truck 427V8 and Allison trans with New Leader dry fertilizer and lime spreader bed; 1987 Wilson 48’ alum livestock pot belly trail-er; 1997 Ford F350 bucket truck; 2006 Towmaster T-20 tag trailer; (the following list of trucks come from the south Texas, Oklahoma and others and are rust free) - 2008 Chevrolet 3500 Duramax, Allison trans 4x4 dually crew cab truck with fl atbed, GN hitch and 140k miles; 2008 Ford F350 6.4 diesel 6 spd trans, 4x4, dually crew cab, fl atbed with GN hitch with 140K miles, white; 2011 Ford F250 6.7 diesel, auto trans, 4x4, crew cab, longbed, only 89k miles, white; 2008 Ford F250 6.4 diesel, auto trans, 4x4, crew cab, leather, XD rims, red; 2006 Dodge 2500 quad cab, 4x4 173K miles, 6 spd trans, Cummins, long bed;
MISC Honda EB 6500 generator with elec start; stick shop welder, gas powered; Lin-coln arc welder/generator with Kohler eng; Deutz 6cyl 130 hp 100KW 3ph gen-erator only 5 yrs old mounted on trailer, good cond; Lama working chute with head restraint, belly straps, good padding like new; Paul 3000# portable cattle chute with scales and squeeze sides, good cond; Spread All grain bin fan 1 hp 3450 rpm; South Bend Lathe 36” bed 3 & 4 jaw chucks; 1000 gal LP tanks; 4 John Deere corn head gear boxes for a 643; Tires: 2-Michelin 11R22.5 trail-er, 2-Michelin 275/80R22.5 s, 3-Firestone 20.8R42 2 tubes, 1-Goodyear 20.8R42, 1-Goodyear 380/85R46, pair of 16.9 30 front wheel assist tires 65 percent tread;
FROM COUNTY HWY DEPT AND MUNICIPALITIES 1997 International Single Axle Dump Truck Model # 2654, 466 DTE engine, 8 speed transmission; 1996 Ford F750 single axle dump truck with only 11,000 miles with Galion bed, 7.0 gas eng, Allison trans, truck is very good condi-tion but has had small fi re under cab; 1995 Ford Pickup Truck Model # F 250; 2002 Chevrolet Tahoe; 2004 Chevrolet Impala car; 2001 Chevrolet Impala car; 2006 Ford Crown Victorian car; 2007 Chevrolet Impala car; 2007 Ford Crown Victorian car; 2000 Ford Crown Victorian car; 2008 Ford Crown Victorian car; *Large load of Craftsman returns, shelf pulls and some new items, also Hus-ky wrenches and assorted tools; “NEW” Creekside 8x12 log cabin with side porch; *Semi load of “NEW” gates 6’-20’ cattle grain bunks, horse and cattle hay bunks, head gates, cattle chute with head gate
Expecting much more than what is listed due schedule
for printing.Go to midwestfarmexpo.com for pictures for full sale bill.
For more info, call Robert Mishler at 260-336-9750*NO HOUSEHOLD* *AUCTION WILL BE HELD OUTDOORS*
* Terms: Cash, Good Check and Credit Cards* If you missed the advertising deadline, don’t hesitate to bring your consign- ments. You can still call for online advertising or bring them to the auction yard.* We will be checking in consignments ONLY on December 19 & 20, 8:00 till dark each day. * Make plans to attend the Be sure and to take in all of the free seminars & exhibits. Go to midwestfarmexpo.com for schedule of events and more information.
Sell your merchandise priced $50 or less for FREE in KPC Classified.
Kiss it Goodbye, Make some FAST CASH with the nifty fifty program.
Up to 12 words plus phone number.
Clip and mail in or drop off at any KPC office.
Name:Address:
City/State/Zip:
Telephone #:
MAIL TO: KPC Nifty 50PO Box 39 • Kendallville, IN 46755
NIFTY FIFTYwith KPC’s
Kiss
it... G dbye
SmartShopperTHE NEWS SUN
THE HERALDREPUBLICAN StarSSSSSSSSSThe
Limit six per family or household per month, not to exceed 24 in a 12 month period. NO multiple phone numbers. Used merchandise only. Must be mailed or dropped off. No phone calls please. Will begin within one week of receipt. One item per ad. Same item 2 times only. When space available.
need holiday cash?need holiday cash?need holiday cash?need holiday cash?Sell your unwanted items
and pocket the cash.
Prices starting
at $26
Call Classifi eds
Today
1-877-791-7877
FURNITURE
2 Recliner lift chairs,1 is 2 mos. old, paid$1,100 asking $850.
Other 2 yrs. old asking$400. Both like new.
260 385-2308
Brand NEW in plastic!QUEEN
PILLOWTOPMATTRESS SETCan deliver, $125.
(260) 493-0805
BUILDINGMATERIALS
PIONEER POLEBUILDINGS
Free EstimatesLicensed and Insured
2x6 Trusses45 year WarrantedGalvalume Steel
19 ColorsSince 1976
#1 in MichiganCall Today
1-800-292-0679
CHRISTMAS TREES
12 Ft. Artificial TreeFrom Nisco, $225Beautiful Tree!
(260)351-4225
FIREWOOD
FIREWOOD FOR SALELarge truck load
$65.00. Can deliver260 927-4138
SPORTING GOODS
GUN SHOW!!Evansville, IN - Decem-ber 14th & 15th, Van-derburg 4-H Center,
201 E. Boonville-NewHarmony Road, Sat.
9-5, Sun 9-3 For information call765-993-8942
Buy! Sell! Trade!
TV/STEREO/ENT
For Sale:Polk Audio Surround
SoundBar with subwoofer.
$150.00. 260-665-1732
WANTED TO BUY
TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before
starting. Walnut needed.
260 349-2685
1 & ONLY PLACE TOCALL--to get rid of thatjunk car, truck or van!!
Cash on the spot!Free towing. Call
260-745-8888. (A)
FARM MACHINERY
Attentio Farmers - Buywholesale on most farm
products. Save up to60% on filters, motors,parts, bins, tires, belts,implements, fertilizer,etc. A+ BBB rated 18
year old company.800-471-7915
PETS/ANIMALS
Free to Good Home:2 yr. old cat, Sally May,Indoor, very loveable,
Black & Brown(260)599-4122
FREE: 8 kittensblack & white, cream,
yellow, spotted.260 242-1992
WH
EE
LS
WH
EE
LS
AUTOMOTIVE/SERVICES
$ WANTED $Junk Cars! Highest
prices pd. Freepickup. 260-705-7610
705-7630
SETSER TRANSPORTAND TOWINGUSED TIRES
Cash for Junk Cars!701 Krueger St.,
K’ville. 260-318-5555
ATTENTION:Paying up to $1000 forscrap cars. Used tires4 sale also. 318-2571
IVAN’S TOWINGJunk Auto Buyerup to $1000.00(260) 238-4787
CARS
2011 FordTaurus LTD
57,000 HW mi.$19,250 obo
260-243-5666
CARS
Hot Rod Loaded57 Ford Fairlane 500
Lincoln 1996 Mark VIIIengine, chrome, newtrans. I have all new
parts to finish. Will sell,trade or somebody tofinish. 260 495-4751
Guaranteed Top DollarFor Junk Cars, Trucks& Vans. Call Jack @
260-466-8689
VANS
2002 Pontiac Montana1 owner, clean,
154K miGreat family ride
$4500260-403-5397
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
18 Ladies FashionPurses. $25 for all
(260)319-4113
1993 ChristmasLongaberger, $50.00.
(260) 357-8009
2 Rubber made type 35gal. hard plastic trashbarrels w/snap on lids.
$10.00 ea. Angola665-9769
30 VHS Classics (StarWars, etc.) & Action(The Witness, etc.)$20.00. Call or text,
(260) 336-7774
35 + DesignerPerfumes. (Charlie,Navy, Wings, etc.)
$35.00. Call or text,(260) 336-7774
48x25 Antique Mirror,wood frame, 2 shelves.
$30.00. Call or text,(574) 535-3124
50 Children’s VHS.Mostly Disney. $50.00.
Call or text,(260) 336-7774
6 Vintage Blue BallGlass Jars w/Zinc Lids.
1/2 gal. qt. & pints.$30.00. Call or text,
(260) 336-7774
9 Ft. Christmas Tree w /lights. Sold for $400,
5 yrs ago. $50847-533-2745
Ashbury Inn Dept. 56Lighted house $45.00
(260)347-0951
Baby SwingHardly used, $25.00
(260) 463-6979
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Baby Tub &Baby Saucer
$20.00 for both(260) 463-6979
Black portable elec-trolog infra red space
heater, used once, withmonitor & manual.
Purchased new $140.now $50 firm. Angola
260 665-9769
Christmas Tree w/Stand. 10 Ft. +. Down-
sizing. some lights.Great cond. $50 obo.
(260)488-2394
Circular carpenter’sSkilsaw with new blade.
Great gift. $25.00Angola 665-9769
Commercial contractoruse electric stapler,
never used. Great forinstalling ceiling tile,dry wall, carpets.
$25. w/T-50 staples.Angola 665-9760
Deep 2 Drawer FileCabinet, wood. $50.00.
(260) 357-8009
Four Sturdy BrownVinyl Barstools. Stoolswith backs. $25.00 for
all. (260) 349-1319
Four, White, WoodenKitchen Chairs. $15.00for all. (260) 349-1319
Free: Culligan WaterSoftener parts & tank
(260) 351-4244
Futon Mattress$25.00
(260) 357-8009
Heavy Duty PunchingBag, $20.00 obo.(260) 351-4244
Heavy Yard Swing. Willneed painting. $35.00.
(260) 316-3742
High Chair, rocker, deskAll in one, $50.00
(260) 463-6979
Ice Fishing MickeyMouse Boots-size 9$25. (260)347-0951
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Large Christmas QuiltTapestry * Beautiful$40. (260)319-4113
Sm. Christmas QuiltVery Cute. $15(260)319-4113
Small Electric Grill ChefII. Never used, good for
sandwiches. $12.00.(260) 316-3742
Solid Wood Fireplacewith Firebox.
$50.00260 242-1992
Symbol OrthoFull Size Mattress, boxspring set, clean. $50.
260 351-3440
Toilet Stool Overheadcabinet. 18 wide x 36
tall x 6” deep. Like new.$25.00. Call or text,
(574) 535-3124
Toro 625 Walk behindSnow blower. Runs,needs a little tuning.
$45.00. (260) 665-7300
Trim Line Exercise Bikew/ Rowing Handles.$40 (260)925-3880
White WestinghouseElectric Stove. $50
(260)665-1113
KPCLIMITATIONS
LIMITATIONS OFLIABILITY:
KPC assumes no liabil-ity or financial responsi-bility for typographicalerrors or for omission ofcopy, failure to publishor failure to deliver ad -vertising. Our liability forcopy errors is limited toyour actual charge forthe first day & one incor-rect day after the adruns. You must promptlynotify KPC of any erroron first publication.Claims for adjustmentmust be made within 30days of publication and,in the case of multipleruns, claims are allowedfor first publication only.KPC is not responsiblefor and you agree tomake no claim for spe-cific or consequentialdamages resulting fromor related in any mannerto any error, omission,or failure to publish ordeliver.
Nascar Fans!Check out Thursday’s
Sports Section!
Check Out Our Preowned Inventory @ www.jimschmidtford.com
Call us at 419-542-7776 or 800-344-5722
*Must finance with Ford Motor Company for discount. W.A.C.www.JimSchmidtFord.com
OVER
Pre-Owned In Stock!The Best Price in a
100 Miles!
New 2014 Ford Escape SEStk#FT14048, This Escape SE front wheel drive features Securicode keyless entry, Sync, and a rear view
camera. It is powered by Ford’s 1.6L 4 cylinder EcoBoost engine and super smoth shifting 6-speed automatic transmission. Plenty of giddy-up and fuel efficiency. It’s a win/win! Ruby red metallic with
charcoal cloth seats! Good lookin’ machine!MSRP $26,840Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,096Ford Factory Rebate* $1,000Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $1,000
Sale PriceYou Save $4,096
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C.
May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2013 Ford Edge SEStk#FT13466, This Edge front wheel drive SE features Sirius XM satellite radio, reverse sensing system and Sync, plus all weather matss. Keep your ride clean!
Ingot silver metallic with black cloth seats...very stylish!
MSRP $29,920Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,130Ford Factory Rebate** $2,500
Sale PriceYou Save $5,130
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualifyfor additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees.
W.A.C. May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford Fusion SEStk#FC14062, The Fusion wil not disappoint! It has it all - great looks, fuel economy, and high end features! Sunset metallic (hot new color for 2014) charcoal cloth seats...SHARP! It has 18” painted sport whls, rear
spoiler, Sync, rear view camera. Powered by Ford’s 2.5L 4 cylinder engine and 6-spd automatic transmission!
MSRP $27,030Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,438Ford Factory Rebate* $1,500Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $500
Sale PriceYou Save $4,438
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify foradditional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C.
May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford Escape SEStk#FT14060 This Escape SE front wheel drive features Sirius/XM, SYNC, power drives seat and rear view camera to
name a few options. It is powered by Ford’s 1.6L 4 cyl. Eco boost engine and super smooth shifting 6 speed auto transmission. Plenty of giddy up and fuel efficient, it’s a Win-Win!!
MSRP $26,445Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,040Ford Factory Rebate* $1,000Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $500
Sale PriceYou Save $3,540
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to
$1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 20113 Ford F150 Supercrew XLT 4x4Stk#FT13374 This F150 features 4.2” LCD auto, climate & productivity screen, SYNC, reverse sensing, chrome pkg,
all weather mats! Seat 6 with the 40/20/40 split bench seat. Ford’s 5.0L V8 teamed up with a 6 spd auto trans.MSRP $44,040Equipment Group Savings $1,750Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $4,447Ford Factory Rebate* $4,250Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $1,000
Sale PriceYou Save $11,447
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford Focus SEStk#FC14068 Tuxedo Black metallic with charcoal cloth seats....Sedan SE good looking combo. This little cutie is equipped with SYNC, all weather mats, heated mirrors and front cushions. 2.0L 4 cyl engine, 6 speed automatic
transmission! Winning combo right here... great looks and 38 mpg on the highway!MSRP $20,900Sync & Sound Discount $490Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $1,621Ford Factory Rebate** $2,000Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $500
Sale PriceYou Save $4,611
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualifyfor additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C.
May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
BEST TRADE
HOURS:Mon, Tues & Thur: 9am-7pm
Wed & Fri: 9am-5:30pmSaturday: 9am-3pm
405 West High St.Hicksville, OH
1-800-344-5722
New 2013 Ford F150 Supercrew FX2Stk#FT13284 This F150 features reverse sensing system, pwr sliding rear window, heated
memory mirrors and pwr adjustable pedals. This hot lookin’ truck is power by Ford’s 3.5L V6 Eco Boost engine and 6 spd auto transmission. Get in and prepare to be impressed.
MSRP $41,545Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $4,404Ford Factory Rebate** $2,250Ford Motor Cerdit Rebate** $1,000
Sale PriceYou Save $7,654
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford F250 Supercrew XLStk#FT14066, This F250 Superduty SuperCrew XL 4x4 with a 158” wheelbase features tow pkg, XL Trim, keyless
entry, upgraded door trim panel & electronic shift on the fly! Oxford white with steel cloth! Powered by Ford’s 6.2L V8 engine with a 6-speed automatic transmission! Plenty of torque & horesepower!
MSRP $38,630Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $3,537Ford Factory Rebate* $2,500Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $1,500
Sale PriceYou Save $7,537
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to $1,000
matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2013 Ford F350 Crew Cab 4x4Stk#FT14057, This F350 Superduty Supercrew Lariat 4x4 Longbed features: Snow Plow Prep and Lariat
Ultimate Pkgs plus skid plates, chrome clad cast, 20” aluminum whls, & heavy duty alternator! Very sharp black leather interior! Powered by Ford’s 6.7L Powerstroke V8 Diesel engine, teamed up
with a super smooth shifting 6-speed auto transmission! Plenty of torque & horsepower!
MSRP $63,990Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $6,705Ford Factory Rebate* $1,500Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $1,500
Sale PriceYou Save $9,705
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify foradditional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C.
May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2013 Ford Edge SELStk#FT13454, This Edge front wheel drive SEL features the 204A Equipment Group Package (see listing below)
plus all weather mats. Keep your ride clean! Power liftgate, handsfree and 18” chrome clad wheels...bling for your car...cool! Mineral gray metallic with medium light stone leather...awesome combo!
MSRP $35,070Equipment Group Savings $215Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,902Ford Factory Rebate* $2,500Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $500
Sale PriceYou Save $6,117
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford Taurus SELStk#FC14060 This wonderful Taurus SEL has SYNC with voice activation. Available SIRIUS/XM and
MY KEY plus the 3.5L V6 is Flex Fuel compatible and is teamed up with a smooth shifting 6 spd auto transmission! Trunk has plenty of room for several sets of golf clubs or luggage for family vacation.
MSRP $29,795Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $2,616Ford Factory Rebate* $3,750Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $750
Sale PriceYou Save $7,116
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify foradditional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C.
May require up to $1,000 matching down payment, trade or cash.
New 2014 Ford Fiesta SStk#FC14038 Great value!! This car is new with full factory warranty...you could be the
first one to have their name on the title of this great car!!! This Fiesta has SYNC voice activated system plus 1.6L 4 cylinder engine & 6 spd auto transmission makes this car a blast to drive!
MSRP $15,890Jim Schmidt Ford Discount $824Ford Factory Rebate* $1,000Ford Motor Credit Rebate* $500
Sale PriceYou Save $2,324
*Some rebates may only apply with Ford Motor Credit, financing. You may qualify for additional rebates. Price does not include tax, title and dealer fees. W.A.C. May require up to $1,000 matching
down payment, trade or cash.
B8 kpcnews.com THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2013