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The Star is the daily newspaper serving DeKalb County in northeast Indiana.
Citation preview
Index•
Classifi eds ................................. B7-B8Life ..................................................... A3Obituaries ......................................... A4Opinion ............................................. A5Sports......................................... B1-B3Weather............................................ A6TV/Comics .......................................B6
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. 302
GOOD MORNING
PHOTO CONTEST
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Football ScoreboardEast Noble 10Leo 7
Woodlan 32Prairie Hts. 6
Dwenger 45Angola 7
Bremen 35Churubusco 28
Carroll 42Warsaw 7
Weather Chance of showers
today. High 52.Low tonight 32.
Partly sunny Sunday.High 49. Low 33.
Page A6
SATURDAYNovember 2, 2013
Auburn, Indiana k p c n e w s . c o m 75 cents
The Serving DeKalb County since 1871Star
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106 Peckhart Court
Auburn, Indiana
260.927.82671/4 mile west of I-69
on State Road 8
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ComingSunday
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your school’s mascot or nickname came from? Read about their origin
in Sunday’s Life section. Pages C1 and C2.
Clip and SaveFind $77 in coupon savings
in Sunday’s newspaper.
BY KATHRYN BASSETT AND MATT [email protected]@kpcmedia.com
Schools in northeast Indiana could be a little safer with the help of grant money recently awarded by state offi cials.
A total of eight school corpora-tions in the area will receive a combined $302,700 for school resource offi cers or security equipment.
The maximum grant allowed by the state is $50,000. Four school corporations in this part of the state will receive that amount.
The DeKalb Central school district’s director of safety, Dick Knapp, said its $50,000 will be used in areas including increasing security systems at building entrances and helping reduce the time it would take to respond to a security incident.
“We’re looking at ways to
greatly reduce the amount of time it takes us to become aware of (a situation) and then respond,” Knapp said.
Each school corporation was required to provide its own funds to match the grant amount requested.
The matching grant requirement caused some problems for the East Noble School Corp., which will receive $25,000 after asking for $50,000.
Superintendent Ann Linson said the matching fund portion required the funds to be spent after July 1. Nowhere in the grant applica-tion process did it indicate that deadline date, she said. East Noble offi cials even asked someone from the state if expenditures made between Jan. 20 and June 30 would be acceptable. At that time, East Noble offi cials were told they could include expenditures
Local schools receive safety grants
DAVE KURTZ
Volunteers from Lakewood Park Christian School help Friday with the Holiday Loaf project to support Children First. Amina Thompson sorts loaves into rows for Landon Krafft, who wraps them in plastic.
Kiwanis Holiday Loaf on sale
OCTAVIA LEHMAN
State fi nals send-offJordan McDaniel, left, and Mallory McCoy, in orange, lead the DeKalb Baron Brigade down the track Friday night at the DeKalb High School football fi eld, after a special performance of the
show “We Are DeKalb.” A large crowd of friends, family and community members gave the marching band a send-off for today’s marching band state fi nals at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A suspected gunman was in custody Friday following a shooting at Los Angeles airport that killed a TSA offi cer and wounded other people.
LAX Police Chief Patrick Gannon says the gunman entered the terminal, pulled a rifl e from a bag and began shooting. The gunfi re continued at a screening checkpoint before he entered a secured area. Offi cers took him into custody after a shootout. “As you can imagine, a large amount of chaos took place in this entire incident,” he said.
A law enforcement offi cial said 23-year-old suspect Paul Ciancia is from New Jersey and was wearing fatigues and carrying a bag containing a hand-written note that said he “wanted to kill TSA and pigs.” The offi cial requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.
Los Angeles Fire Department Battalion Chief Armando Hogan says fi ve people were taken to hospitals after the shooting: the gunman, the TSA offi cer who died, two other people who were shot, and one person with a broken ankle. A sixth person was treated at the scene for ringing in the ears
Shotsfi redat LAX
BY KATHRYN [email protected]
AUBURN — With the produce now harvested and the soil tilled, DeKalb County Resource Garden chairman Dave Bassett rates the garden as a success.
“For the fi rst year, I think it went really well,” said Bassett. “I think it’s something that’s good for the county.”
The garden was planted in a one-acre site on the south side of the Northeast Indiana Solid Waste
Management District’s composting site on C.R. 36-A, northwest of Auburn.
Labor such as planting, weeding, watering and harvesting was carried out by DeKalb County Community Corrections clients who were required to complete community-service hours. Produce from the garden was used to feed inmates at the county jail and given to local food banks.
Community service workers were under the supervision of
mentors who were responsible for telling them which tasks to complete and giving gardening advice. Community Corrections staff made periodic visits to monitor the workers.
The garden season ran from May 18, when the fi rst vegeta-bles were planted, to the end of September, when the ground was tilled and composted.
During the season more than 1,000 pounds of food
Community garden grows success
SEE SAFETY, PAGE A6
SEE GARDEN, PAGE A6
Turn back clocks for time shift tonight
WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s time to fall back.
Most Americans will be able to get an extra hour of sleep this weekend thanks to the annual shift back to standard time.
The change offi cially occurs at 2 a.m. Sunday, but most people will set their clocks back before heading to bed tonight.
Residents of Hawaii, most of Arizona and some U.S. territories don’t have to change since they do not observe daylight saving time.
Public safety offi cials say this is also a good time to put a new battery in the smoke alarm, no matter where you live.
Daylight saving time returns at 2 a.m. local time March 9.
A total of 47 area businesses are now selling Holiday Loaf for $4 each to support Children First.
Auburn Kiwanis Club members began baking the loaves this weekend at Auburn Presbyterian Church.
In 1971, baker Erton Manon offered his recipe to Kiwanis as a fundraising project to benefi t Children First. Volunteers from both organizations bake, wrap and sell “pumpkin bread” in area communities. Many local businesses agree to sell the bread on behalf of Kiwanis, with proceeds benefi ting Children First.
“It’s good for the community, because the proceeds support services to children and families. My customers like having the opportunity to purchase it while in the store, and having Holiday Loaf available encourages shoppers,” said Karen Butler, owner of Auburn’s Legacy Hallmark: “It’s a win/win for the entire community.”
For the past two years Hart’s in Waterloo has sold the most loaves.
Businesses where Holiday Loaf is sold:
Ashley: Farmers State Bank;
Auburn: A Cut Above, Auburn Chrysler, Auburn City Hardware, Beacon Credit Union, Ben Davis Ford, Buttermore Appliance, Campbell & Fetter Bank, Carbaugh Jewelers, Classic City NAPA, Community State Bank, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Heimach Center, DeKalb County Council on Aging, Legacy Hallmark, Mettert’s Water Care, Peoples Federal Savings Bank, Richards Restaurant, Satisfaction Style Salon/Upword Living, Shear Expressions Salon, Sprinkling Can, The Star newspaper offi ce;
Garrett: Beacon Credit Union, Garrett Hardware, Garrett New Market Grocery, Hair Depot, Peoples Federal Savings & Loan;
Corunna: Albright’s
Grocery;Waterloo: Farmers State
Bank, Hart’s, Peoples Federal Savings Bank;
St. Joe: Sechler’s Pickle Store;
Butler: Donaldson’s Ace Hardware, Farmers and Merchants State Bank, NAPA;
Kendallville: Baker’s Fruit & Flower Farm, Rural King;
Albion: Albion Village Foods, Community State Bank;
Ligonier: Campbell & Fetter Bank;
Avilla: Peoples Federal Savings Bank;
Angola: Accents, Campbell & Fetter Bank, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Panache SalonSpa, Rural King;
Fremont: Pickle Factory — Outlet Mall; and
Hamilton: Farmers State Bank.
Children First provides services for families and children in fi ve counties — DeKalb, LaGrange, Noble, Steuben and Whitley.
TSA offi cer killed,gunman in custody
SEE LAX, PAGE A6
A2 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
The Star (USPS 181-300)118 W. Ninth St., Auburn, IN 46706Established 1871, daily since 1913
©KPC Media Group Inc. 2013
Recipient of several awards from the Hoosier State Press Association for
excellence in reporting in 2012.
DELIVERY SERVICE — MISSED/DAMAGED
NEWSPAPERS If your newspaper was damaged or had not been delivered by 6:00 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7 a.m.
Saturday and Sunday, call customer service by 10 a.m. and we will ensure a replacement copy is delivered to you.
CIRCULATION CUSTOMER SERVICE TELEPHONE
HOURS1-800-717-4679
Monday through Friday 6 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
7 a.m.-10 a.m.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES — Motor and Foot Routes
Delivery Type: 7-DAY FRI./SAT./SUN.
Monthly: $15.40 $8.003 Months: $46.20 $22.506 Months: $89.00 $44.001 Year: $169.00 $85.00
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Out of Four-County Area
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Monthly: $18.00 3 Months: $54.00 6 Months: $108.00 1 Year: $216.00
NEED EXTRA COPIES?If you would like extra copies of a particular issue of The Star, they are available at the Auburn offi ce for $1.25 per copy daily, and $1.75 per copy Sunday.
Published by KPC Media Group Inc. at 102 N. Main St.
Kendallville, IN 46755Published every day except
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TheStar
Offi cers arrest threeAUBURN — Local
police offi cers arrested three people Thursday night and Friday, DeKalb Jail records said.
Brandon Shirk, 20. of the 900 block of Baer Pass, Garrett, was arrested Thursday at 7:21 p.m. by the Garrett Police Depart-ment on a charge of theft, a Class D felony.
Tina M. Nodin, 37, of the 900 block of South Randolph Street, Garrett, was arrested Thursday at 8:05 p.m. by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Depart-ment on warrants charging her with possession of methamphetamine, a Class B felony; possession of a controlled substance, a Class C felony; and three Class A misdemeanors, possession of marijuana, possession of paraphernalia and conversion.
George B. Schewe, 52, of the 800 block of South Cowen Street, Garrett, was arrested Friday at 6:43 a.m. by the Garrett Police
Department on charges of operating a vehicle while intoxicated at the Class A and Class C misdemeanor levels.
Rear-end collision injures passenger
AUBURN — A passenger suffered an injury in a rear-end collision Thursday at 5:17 p.m. near 7th and Division streets, the Auburn Police Department reported.
Cindy S. Nicholass, 41, of Butler reported neck pain after the crash, police said.
Nicholass was riding in a 2004 Chevrolet Impala driven by Casey W. Boggs Jacobs, 17, of Butler. He was traveling west on 7th Street when a vehicle in front of him stopped suddenly. Jacobs stopped, but 1998 Chevrolet Blazer behind him, driven by Jessica A. Roark, 32, of St. Joe. collided with the rear of his vehicle.
Police estimated total damage of $1,000 to $2,500.
Correction•
Police Blotter•
Food bank is open Tuesday morningsAUBURN — The Indian Village Food Bank is open
Tuesdays from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at 602 Erie Pass, Auburn.
Friday’s edition listed incorrect hours for the food bank. We apologize for the error.
N
OPEN
SUN. 2-4
PM
810 N. RILEY RD., KENDALLVILLE
You will feel right at home when you step into the entry of this 3 BR, 3 BA ranch home on a full basement. Living room features vaulted ceiling, hardwood floors and gas log fireplace. Kitchen features beau-tiful oak cabinets, ceramic flooring, breakfast bar and all appliances to stay. MLS#680336. $185,900. DIRECTIONS: US 6 to Riley Rd.
north to property.
Hosted By: Terri Deming
260-347-5176
CHRISTMAS BAZAARFriday, Nov. 8
7:00 am-5:00 pm
Saturday, Nov. 98:00 am-12:00 pm
Auburn Methodist Church1203 E. 7th Street
Lunch 11:00 am-1:00 pm
GIFTS • CASSEROLE SHOP & BAKE SHOPPecan Rolls • Regifting Items
FRIDAY
Charlie VanHorneOwner/Broker
209 N. Main St.,Auburn, IN
128 Madison St.AUBURN - Super nice 3 BR north Auburn home. Secluded location with golf course views. Completely remodeled inside and out. 3-car deluxe
garage. Full basement, all new appliances, high efficiency furnace with central air conditioning.
$86,000
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260-925-6900
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MIKE THOMAS ASSOCIATES/F.C. TUCKER 1560 Shook Dr., Auburn (north of The Home Depot)
260-925-6900View all of our listings atmikethomasrealtor.com
OPEN HOUSE
NEW LISTINGS
405 STEEPLECHASE, AUBURN5 BEDROOM RANCH. Spacious 5 BR, 3-1/2 BA family home in east Auburn subdivision. 3-way fireplace and side-load 3-car garage. Finished lower level with 2 BR, full BA, family room & bonus rooms. Custom fenced backyard & 6" wall construction. MLS#201315329. $289,900. Linn Aldrich 927-5878.
2818 CR 36, AUBURNRANCH ON WALKOUT BASEMENT. Make your appt. soon. Very attractive decor & popular colors. Recently redecorated 3 BR, 2 BA home. 4-season room, new garage door and geothermal heat. Lovely view of pond, great yard & garden spot! MLS#201316147. $129,900. Char Suntken 927-3699.
1310 CULBERTSON, AUBURNCompletely redone 3 BR, 2 BA ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Fireplace in family room for cozy, chilly nights, new windows, flooring, bathrooms, appliances, kitchen cabinets & garage doors. Just move in! MLS#201312678/9005848. $109,900. Linn Aldrich 927-5878. Directions: East on 7th St. to Iwo. Left to Culbertson and right to 1310.
1422 URBAN AVENUE, AUBURNGREAT RANCH. Charming home w/attached garage, gas heat & central air. All appliances, including washer/dryer & stainless steel dishwasher. Large fenced backyard with trees & very nice shed. MLS#201316120. $85.900. Linn Aldrich 927-5878.
1805 MAPLE LANE, GARRETTMOVE RIGHT IN! Updated home features 3 BR, 1-1/2 BA, living room, family room, new kitchen complete with appliances, new full BA, newer flooring, lots of updates. 2-car attached garage, covered porch, nice spacious yard, great location and immediate possession. MLS#201315936. $89,900. Teri-Davis Foster 260-927-3168.
810 INNKEEPERS CT., WATERLOOIMMACULATE RANCH. This home is perfect! 3 BR, 2 BA and ready to sell. Home is spacious and very well cared for. MLS#201315533. $99,900. Chelsea Koehl 402-2234.
OPEN SUN. 2-4 PM
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OpenHomes
213 Fairview Blvd., KendallvilleOpportunity knocks. Building currently used as doctor’s office. Entry foyer to an 11x16 waiting room. 13x17 receptionist/office area. 3 rooms 9x13, 11x13 and 9x15, all with individual sinks and countertops. Half bath on main plus kitchenette and storage closet. 420 sq. ft. finished upper level now used as a private office area with bath. $135,900. MLS#673807.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
1603 Edgewood Drive, KendallvilleGreat home! Great neighborhood! Beautiful cape cod in Brookside Es-tates. Kitchen with all appliances, hardwood cabinets, pantry & breakfast bar and breakfast nook with a bay window. Formal dining room, entry foyer, large living/family room. Split floor plan, 2-1/2 baths, master suite with double vanity and two walk-in closets. Six-panel doors. Wrap-around covered porch. $244,000. MLS#676484.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
N N
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NEW PRICE
505 Oak Crest Drive, KendallvilleGreat setting around this beautiful 4 BR, 2-1/2 bath, two-story home on a finished basement. Complete new roof, siding and windows all in the last 4-7 years. Oak cabinetry in the kitchen. Built-ins in the rec. room. Stone fireplace, patio and patio doors off the dining room. Come take a look. All appliances stay. $169,900. MLS#201316215.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
127 S. Sheridan Street, KendallvilleMove-in ready home within 2 blocks of Kendallville middle school. Covered front porch to enjoy those summer evenings. Large entry foyer open to a comfy living room and dining room. All with hardwood floors. Large eat-in kitchen with ceramic tile floor and all appliances included. Main level also has a large full bath and an enclosed back porch where laundry is located. $76,500. MLS#201316121.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
N N
NEW LI
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DeKalb County Public Meetings•
Monday8:30 a.m. — DeKalb County Commis-
sioners, courthouse, Auburn.8:30 a.m. — DeKalb County Council,
Commissioners Court, courthouse, Auburn.6:30 p.m. — Ashley Fire Advisory
Board, Fire Hall.7 p.m. — Hamilton Town Council, Head
Start Building, 900 S. Wayne St.7 p.m. — Butler Board of Works, 213 S.
Broadway.6 p.m. — Altona Town Board, Altona
Town Hall.7:30 p.m. — Butler City Council, City
Hall, 213 S. Broadway.
TuesdayNoon — Auburn Redevelopment
Commission, City Hall council chambers, 210 E. Ninth St.
5:30 p.m. — Garrett Board of Public Works and Safety, City Hall.
6 p.m. — Auburn Common Council, council chambers, City Hall, 210 E. Ninth St.
7 p.m. — Garrett Common Council, City Hall, 130 S. Randolph St.
7 p.m. — Ashley Plan Commission, Ashley Community Center, 500 S. Gonser Ave.
Wednesday4:30 p.m. — Waterloo Redevelopment
Commission, Town Hall.4:30 p.m. — Butler Redevelopment
Commission, 213 S. Broadway.6:30 p.m. — Butler Park Board, utility
offi ce, 213 S. Broadway.6:30 p.m. — DeKalb Central school
board, superintendent’s offi ce, 3326 C.R. 427, Waterloo, closed executive session to discuss litigation.
Thursday8:30 a.m. — DeKalb County Drainage
Board, Commissioners Court, second fl oor of DeKalb County Courthouse, 100 S. Main St., Auburn.
4 p.m. — Ashley Park Board, Ashley Community Center, 500 S. Gonser Ave.
BY KATHRYN [email protected]
AUBURN — An Auburn man is facing multiple criminal charges involving a string of break-ins at proper-ties including two churches.
Nicholas Wilson, 24, of the 900 block of Griswold Court, is charged in six separate cases with two counts of burglary of a structure used for religious worship, a Class B felony; burglary of a dwelling, a Class B felony; burglary, a Class C felony; forgery, a Class C felony; and fi ve charges of theft, a Class D felony.
One of the charges — burglary of a structure used for religious worship — was fi led in September. The
remaining charges were fi led Oct. 29. During an initial hearing on the newer charges in DeKalb Superior Court II Friday, Judge Monte Brown set bail at $33,500,
According to police affi davits of probable cause for Wilson’s arrest, Wilson is accused of breaking into the Garrett Presbyterian Church on Sept. 1. Police were called to the church on a report of a suspicious person walking around the church, attempting to open windows. When police arrived, they saw a man, later identifi ed as Wilson, inside the church with something in his hand, an affi davit said. Ultimately police found Wilson under
a pew, the affi davit said. Wilson told police he was there to sleep because his apartment was 91 degrees. He said the item in his hands had been a soda cup from a gas station. However, police did not locate a soda cup, the affi davit said.
While serving the warrant for Wilson’s arrests in that case, police recovered items that had been reported as stolen in other cases, documents say.
Those cases involved; a July break-in at the Auburn Alliance Church where items including a safe, Blue Ray player, vacuum, keyboard, tool box, tools and an alarm clock were stolen; and the Aug. 30 break-in of a home in the
1100 block of North Walsh Street in Garrett where a laptop, cigarettes and $80 were reported missing.
Wilson also is accused of the July 30 theft of a credit card and driver’s license from a vehicle in Garrett. In that case, he also is charged with forgery by using the credit card to purchase $30 worth of pizza.
He also is accused of breaking into a garage in the 500 block of South Lee Street in Garrett and taking items including clothing, a radar detector, duffl e bags, loose currency and various pins and the theft of a GPS and sunglasses from a truck that was parked in the 100 block of South Britton Street in Garrett.
Man charged in string of break-ins
BY AARON [email protected]
AUBURN — In a special meeting Friday morning, the DeKalb County Council approved the DeKalb County Airport Authority’s 2014 budget.
The council voted 6-0 to set a $649,700 budget for the airport. The fi gure is down from $678,496 the airport initially requested
and $662,564 the airport was granted for 2013.
The council had ordered cuts of each agency’s budget during sessions in September.
Although the Airport Authority is an independent taxing unit, the County Council must approve its budgets by law. The council mistakenly missed the airport’s budget during
its Monday meeting, when other budgets were approved, and was forced to hold a special meeting Friday. The council had to suspend its rules and approve the budget on three readings in a single motion.
The state’s deadline to receive budgets is Monday.
No one from the public spoke at a public hearing on the airport budget.
DeKalb council OKs airport budget
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TheStar kpcnews.com A3SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
#AC31200004
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Selling at Auction! Tues., Nov. 12th at 6:30pm 401 W. Auburn Drive, Auburn
Open House: Mon., Nov. 4th from 5-6:30pm
Visit: LittlejohnAuctions.com for complete information! Owner: Helen Decker
(260) 925-5400Toll-free 1-888-838-7653
131 Ensley Ave.Auburn, IN 46706
www.castleonerealty.com
Featured Listings
704 N. Van Buren St. • AuburnNothing left to do but move right in! 3 bedroom home, master on main. Brand new kitchen including new cabinets, granite countertops, all new appliances, remodeled bath with jetted tub. All new paint on the interior and exterior, new water heater, 2 new window air conditioners, updated electrical, insulated exterior walls and attic. It’s all been done! MLS#201207091.
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401 N. Union • AuburnCharming 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath home on corner lot. This 1,586 sq. ft. ranch is bigger than it looks. Features include tons of cabinet space in kitchen, separate pantry off the breakfast nook, dining room, enclosed porch to meet and greet your guests and a bonus family room with fireplace for all your gatherings. Nice attached garage with screened-in porch out back. MLS#201311765.
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409 S. Indiana • AuburnThis 2+ bedroom, 2 story home is close to McKenney-Harrison Elementary school. Features 1.5 baths, replaced windows, GFA and CA are 3 years old. Large detached garage with alley access. MLS#201311873.
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211 Kingswood • KendallvilleAttractive and completely refreshed throughout! What a great home for starting out or slowing down. All new flooring, paint, fixtures, window treatments, etc. All brand new appliances in the eat-in kitchen. Close to YMCA, Bixler Lake and schools. MLS#201212442.
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480 S. Oak St. • WaterlooImmediate possession! Charming Victorian style 3 BR home. Den could also be a 4th BR. Spacious living room area with dining room and large kitchen. Your handyman will enjoy the oversized garage with workshop area! Home sits on an oversized lot. MLS#201211195.
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Doug MarshREALTOR®
Consultant
Michelle Snyder
Principal Broker615-6289
Lynda Carper
Associate Broker413-2018
KristieConradREALTOR ®
414-5660
Kristin Blevins
Associate Broker413-2465
“The Malcolm
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REALTORS ®
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TrinaWatsonREALTOR ®
573-3978
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MicoleaDepewREALTOR ®
570-5472
1409 Elm St. • AuburnThis amazing 3 BR home situated on a large lot with mature trees offers slate floors, stainless steel, canned lighting and eat-in kitchen, gas log fireplace, vaulted ceilings & hardwood in the living room, 6 panel doors throughout, walk-in pantry, ceramic floors in bathroom and master bedroom offers crown molding, full bath & walk-in closet. In the finished basement is an entertainment room. MLS#201313434. Hosted by Kristie Conrad 260-414-5660.
70
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OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-3 PM
5471 SR 101St. Joe
337-0337SPECIALIZING IN PERSONAL SERVICE
ACTION REALTYAllen HolmanBroker/Owner
260-909-0337Visit our Website @
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8251 N. SR 9, ROME CITYHorse lover’s paradise! This property features a 1,440 sq. ft. 3 bedroom home sitting on nearly 20 acres. Barn is set up for an operating horse farm, featuring 12 box stalls. All stalls are insu-lated and double walled, 20x20 shop area, 50x110 indoor riding arena, 15x12 lab area, stock area, hay storage, tack room, and cement walkways throughout barn. Barn also has an attached 20x36 apartment, with full bath and separate entrance. This property is a must see for any horse lover! Reduced to $359,000.
LAND CONTRACT
AVAILABLE
135 S. PARK LANE, BUTLERGreat 3 bedroom property! This property has been well maintained with many new updates. Newer furnace, new water heater, all windows have been replaced and exterior has been wrapped for no maintenance, newer carpet throughout, and new walk-in shower. Large kitchen with plenty of storage space, most appliances remain with home. Large backyard with raised garden beds, patio space, and storage shed. Price reduced to $54,800.
LAND LISTINGS
• 90 acres - CR 61• 135 acres - SR 8• 141 acres - St. Joe• 295 acres - CR 66
• 27.5 acres - SR 8• 80 acres - CR 19• 31 acres - East Bavin Rd. REDUCED.
• 40 acres - CR 63
LAND TRACTS
LAND - 190 acres. Excellent hunting. Trails throughout. Within 1 mile of I-69.LAND - 75 acres. Wooded, lakefront on Lone Hickory Lake.LAND - 50 acres. Wooded, lakefront on Lone Hickory Lake.LAND - Double lot in Pokagon Hills, next to Big Otter Lake.LAND - 6 acres approved building site with woods next to west side of property on CR 59. $34,500.LAND - 2 acre building site on SR 8. REDUCED.
LAND - 5 excellent wooded and partially wooded lots - ranging from 5-15 acres - in Noble County on 300 S and 950 E, 2 miles from SR 3 and 10 miles from Dupont Rd.LAND - Nice buildable corner lot in Garrett, 2 blocks west of high school. $10,500.LAND - (2) 4 acre wooded lots with driveway on Scipio Road.LAND - (3) 5 acre wooded lots, 385 ft. frontage on SR 101.LAND - 191 acres, hunting property on CR 47.LAND - 122 acres, 90 tillable. Wallen Road. Great income potential.LAND - 44 acres. Mostly wooded. South Whitley. REDUCED.
IMM
EDIATE
POSSESSION
6874 FRONT ST., SPENCERVILLEGreat location! This property is located on a quiet street, spacious lot with large mature trees with easy access to Auburn or Fort Wayne. Home features 3 bedrooms, spacious family room and plenty of storage. Eat-in kitchen, with large walk-in pantry, plenty of oak cabinets for storage, and appliances are remaining with home. Master bedroom is on main level with large attached bath. Home features many updates. Reduced to $79,900.
REDUCED
4437 SR 8, AUBURNGreat property close to Auburn, situated on 2 acres with additional acreage available! This property has had many updates including new roof (‘04), new wiring and plumbing (‘10), new driveway (’12), new furnace (’12), and many more! Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large laundry area with closet storage, cabinets and sink. Family room has Vermont Weathered Board and newer carpet, original hardwood flooring throughout home under carpets. Kitchen has plenty of counter and cabinet space, large dining room. 3 car attached garage. Reduced to $144,500.
REDUCED
www.wiblerealty.com
“Serving Northeast Indiana Since 1945”
925-4068 • 508 S. Grandstaff Dr., Auburn
ANDY JAGODA . . . . . . . . . . . .908-1412SCOTT KNAPP . . . . . . . . . . . . .927-5537SUE STOOPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . .750-7451CINDY GEORGE . . . . . . . . . . . .908-3714
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LISTINGS OVER $100,0006891 E. Hopewell Rd., Avilla .................................................................................................................................. $295,0004740 CR 47, Auburn ................................................................................................................................................ $265,9003575 Franklin Dr., Auburn ...................................................................................... OPEN SUNDAY 1-3 PM ........ $257,5001108 Essex, Auburn ................................................................................................................................................ $239,0005368 Bear Creek Pass, Auburn ............................................................................................................................... $217,5001125 N. Dewey, Auburn .......................................................................................................................................... $214,9005442 County Road 427, Auburn .....................................NEW LISTING................................................................ $205,0005855 N 500 W, Angola ............................................................................................................................................ $164,5002075 W. Long Lake Rd., Pleasant Lake .................................................................................................................. $139,900601 Greenbriar, Auburn .......................................................................................................................................... $136,9003533 SR 327, Corunna ............................................................................................................................................ $129,900805 S. Main St., Auburn ......................................................................................................................................... $125,000702 Helen Ave., Auburn.......................................................................................................................................... $114,9001312 Lori Lea, Auburn ............................................................................................................................................ $113,9001307 Virginia Lane, Auburn ................................................................................................................................... $112,9001204 Hideaway Dr., Auburn ................................................................................................................................... $109,900
LISTINGS UNDER $100,0001309 Culbertson Court, Auburn ............................................................................. OPEN SUNDAY 1-3 PM .......... $99,900905 Ontario Lane, Auburn ..............................................NEW LISTING.................................................................. $98,0002154 US 6, Waterloo ................................................................................................................................................. $86,9005504 CR 75A, St. Joe ................................................................................................................................................ $85,000708 N. Van Buren, Auburn ....................................................................................................................................... $81,5001506 Seneca Court, Auburn ...........................................NEW LISTING.................................................................. $79,900301 Lenox, Garrett .................................................................................................................................................... $79,900713 S. Lee St., Garrett ............................................................................................................................................... $79,900601 S. Guilford St., Garrett ....................................................................................................................................... $77,900605 N. Peters, Garrett ............................................................................................................................................... $77,5001413 Urban Ave., Auburn ......................................................................................................................................... $74,900440 W. Union, Waterloo ........................................................................................................................................... $75,000804 S. Indiana, Auburn ............................................................................................................................................. $74,900505 S. Wayne St., Waterloo ..................................................................................................................................... $69,9005464 County Road 427, Auburn .....................................NEW LISTING.................................................................. $69,900345 S. Washington St., Waterloo ............................................................................................................................. $68,900349 N. Park Lane, Butler ........................................................................................................................................... $67,500147 W. Oak St., Butler ............................................................................................................................................... $63,900580 Meadows Lane, Waterloo ................................................................................................................................. $59,900114 S. McClellan, Auburn ......................................................................................................................................... $59,9004687 US 6, Waterloo ................................................................................................................................................. $47,900222 S. Cowen St., Garrett ......................................................................................................................................... $44,900
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1303 Prestwick Way, AuburnThis lovely 4 BR, 3 full BA home with over 3,200 finished sq. ft. is located in Bridgewater. Enter into the large foyer with beautiful tiled floors. Open floor plan with kitchen and nook flow into the LR with fireplace. Master suite on main floor with sliding door access to the open deck! Bedrooms 2 and 3 are also on main level. Basement has 28x27 family room with adjoining 17x14 bar area, 4th bedroom, full bath, 33x12 storage/exercise room, and 13x15 mechanical/workshop. Audio systems wired throughout house and the Bose surround sound system in the basement, this home is great for entertaining! The 14x15 deck overlooks pond and #3 golf tee & golf hole.
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REALESTATE
SHOWCASE
An Apple a DayThe teen library will host
“An Apple a Day” Monday from 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Teens will learn how to cook apple treats in the microwave.
Creative writingThe creative writing
group for adults will meet Monday from 6:30-8 p.m. in the board room at the library. November is National Novel Writers Month.
Writers will receive feedback and be motivated by other writers.
The group is for adults 18 and older.
Lunch Bunch: Brick Wall Solutions
What happens when researchers have exhausted all obvious possibilities? The genealogy group, Lunch Bunch, will share about personal brick walls and learn about some solutions at its next meeting Tuesday from noon to 1:30 p.m. in the Learning Lab at
the Willennar Genealogy Center.
Grandma Goose Saturday story time
Grandma Goose will share her favorite books on Saturday, Nov. 9, from 10:30-11:15 a.m.
No registration is required.
Chess ClubThe teen library will host
chess club Saturday, Nov. 9, from 2-4 p.m. Chess players of all abilities are invited to come and play.
‘V is for Veterans Day’The A.T.L.A.S. Club
will celebrate Veterans Day Thursday from 3-3:45 p.m.
Students will make cards to give to the Auburn Veterans Affairs Offi ce. Several activities also will take place that will teach students about veterans.
Happy ‘Hunger Games’The teen library will gear
up for the theatrical release
of “Catching Fire” with a special screening of the “Hunger Games” Thursday from 4:30-6:30 p.m.
The event will be complete with food, trivia and “Hunger Games”-related activities.
Knifty KnittersStruggling with a knitting
problem? Help is available from the Knifty Knitters
Beginning and experi-enced knitters are welcome to join the club Thursday from 6-7:45 p.m.
Veterans DayAll library facilities
will be closed Nov. 11 in observance of Veterans Day.
Giving thanksThe Third Place: A
Teen Library will create a Thankful Tree Tuesday, Nov. 12, from 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Teens will make craft cut-outs of things for which they are thankful. Treats will be served.
Pets of the WeekColt, a male terrier mix,
arrived at the shelter May 1 as a stray from the Ashley area.
Kizzy is a female calico cat. She arrived at the shelter Feb. 6. She is young, spayed and up-to-date on routine vaccinations.
Shelter needs assistance
The DeKalb Humane Society is need of several items at the shelter.
The shelter needs cat litter, Purina brand canned/dry cat and dog food and canned/dry kitten and puppy food, bleach, dish soap, hand sanitizer, liquid laundry detergent, paper towels, 30-gallon sized trash bags and stamps.
Horse and pony banquet Sunday
AUBURN — The DeKalb County Horse & Pony Club will host its annual awards banquet Sunday at 1 p.m. in the Exhibit Hall on the DeKalb County 4-H Fairgrounds.
4-H Horse & Pony Club members, family and friends are invited.
Library providing seminar on the Affordable Care Act
AUBURN —The Eckhart Public Library will host a session on the “Ins and Outs of the Affordable Care Act” Tuesday from 6-7 p.m. in the Close Community Room.
The session will be led by the DeKalb County Purdue Extension in conjunction with the Indiana Farm Bureau. The two agencies will help address common questions about the Affordable Care Act, also commonly known as Obamacare.
Legislation for the ACA passed in 2010.
The session will provide information on trends in health care and what the ACA legislation means for consumers.
The event is free and open to the public. To register, call the library’s information desk at 925-2414, ext. 120.
Community meal at Cupbearer Cafe
AUBURN — Inspiration Ministries will host a free community meal Thursday at the Cupbearer Cafe, 138 E. Seventh St.
The meal will be served at 5:30 p.m.
Red Tree will perform at 6:30 p.m. Trevor Wright of Keystone Community Church will share a message following the music.
Community meals also are planned at the Cupbearer Thursday, Nov. 14 and Thursday, Nov. 21. All meals are free and begin at 5:30 p.m.
Kizzy
Colt
HARLINGEN, Texas (AP) — In a Texas abortion clinic, about a dozen women waited Friday to see the doctor, already aware that they would not be able to end their pregnancies there.
A day after a federal appeals court allowed most of the state’s new abortion restrictions to take effect during a legal challenge, about a third of Texas’ clinics were barred from performing the procedure.
Thursday’s ruling made Texas the fourth and largest state to enforce a provision requiring doctors who perform abortions to have
admitting privileges in a nearby hospital. In places such as the Rio Grande Valley and rural West Texas, the mandate put hundreds of miles between many women and abortion providers.
Anti-abortion groups welcomed the court’s surprise decision, which they insisted would protect women’s health. The ruling came just a few days after a lower federal court put the law on hold.
If women did not know about the ruling before they arrived at Reproduc-tive Services of Harlingen, clinic administrator Angie
Tristan told them. Abortions are a two-day process in Texas. On Fridays, women arrive here for their initial consultation with the doctor. On Saturdays, they return for the procedure.
Despite Tristan’s explanation that they would not be able to have abortions on Saturday, some women decided to stay on the slim hope that something would change.
A panel of judges at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled that Texas can enforce the law while a lawsuit challenging the restrictions moves forward.
The law that the Legisla-ture passed in June also bans abortions at 20 weeks and, beginning in September 2014, requires doctors to perform all abortions in
surgical facilities.But it’s the provision
about admitting privileges that has idled Dr. Lester Minto’s hands here in Harlingen, near the Texas-Mexico border.
After the law was adopted, the clinic began preparing to close, shredding old patient records and drawing down their inventory, ordering only enough supplies to keep going for a month at a time.
Minto, who has been performing abortions for 30 years, predicted the women he sees would take dangerous measures in their desperation. He made clear he would not perform abortions Saturday if they remain prohibited, but he did not rule out taking other steps in the future.
Reinstatement of abortion law closes Texas clinics
James KilgoreLAGRANGE —
James F. Kilgore, 72, of LaGrange, died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013, in IU Health Goshen Hospital, Goshen.
Mr. Kilgore was a lifetime resident of LaGrange.
He retired from the Indiana Department of Transpor-tation in highway mainte-nance and he was also a barber in LaGrange.
He was born Oct. 15, 1941, in Fawn River Township, Michigan, to Charles Albert and Virginia (Minzey) Kilgore.
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Ken (Mary) Kilgore and Charles D. (Cindy) Kilgore, all of LaGrange; two stepdaughters, Hillari Bates of LaGrange and Laura (Robert) Frend of Wawaka; several grandchildren; one brother, Dave (Michelle) Kilgore of Kendall-ville; and one sister, Pat Forsyth.
He was preceded in death by his parents and two sisters, Sally Brinkman and Nancy Martin.
Graveside services will be at 3 p.m. today in Greenwood Cemetery with Pastor Sam Weimer offici-ating.
Young Family Funeral Home in Kendallville is in charge of arrangements.
Condolences may be sent to the family at www.youngfamilyfuneralhome.com.
Wannetta BegleyPLEASANT LAKE
— Wannetta A. ‘‘Susie’’ Begley, 95, died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013.
Visitation will be from 3-6 p.m. Sunday at Johnson Funeral Home, Hudson.
Graveside services will be at 1 p.m. Monday at Wright Cemetery, Hudson.
Lonnie VanDyneLOGANSPORT —
Lonnie E. VanDyne, 56, of Logansport died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013, at his residence.
Mr. VanDyne worked for Kauffman manufac-turing.
He was a United States Navy veteran.
Born on May 28, 1957, He was born May 28, 1957, to Ronald and Shirley (Elston) VanDyne. They survive.
He married Connie Popejoy on Aug. 2, 1989, in Logansport. She survives.
Also surviving are two sons, Timothy (Marsha) Bullock of Logansport and Jeremy Pion of Fort Wayne; three daughters, Esther Bullock of Monticello, Jennifer VanDyne and her fi ance Alex Donathen of Logansport, and Stephaine May of Fort Wayne; two brothers, Ricky (Teresa) VanDyne of Angola and Randy (Deb) VanDyne of Salem Center; four granddaughters; and two grandsons.
A celebration of life service will be held at noon Saturday, Nov. 30, at the Ashley Church of God in Ashley, with Pastor Randy VanDyne offi ciating.
Visitation will be held from 11 a.m. until time of services.
Memorials are to the American Cancer Society.
Gundrum Funeral Home in Logansport and Cass County Crematory are in charge of arrangements.
Memorials are to the American Cancer Society.
You may sign the guestbook and leave online condolences at www.gundrumcares.com.
Clarence MillerGOSHEN — Clarence L.
Miller, 82, of Goshen died Friday, Nov. 1, 2013, at St. Joseph Medical Center, Mishawaka.
Visitation will be from 5-8 p.m. Sunday and from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Monday at Woodlawn Mennonite Church, 62861 C.R. 41, Goshen.
Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Woodlawn Mennonite Church. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Goshen.
Miller-Stewart Funeral Home in Middlebury is in charge of arrangements.
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THE ONLINE EDITIONS AT:kpcnews.com
MY COMMUNITYSubmit your news
& photos at
Obituaries appear online at this newspaper’s Web site. Please visit the Web site to add your memories and messages of condolence at the end of individual obituaries. These messages from friends and family will be attached to the obituaries and accompany them in the online archives.
LONDON (AP) — The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration says it is relaxing restrictions on the use of smartphones and other electronics inside fl ights by American carriers. Passengers are still barred from making calls or downloading data off a cellular network, but the OK on using laptops, consoles, e-readers, and other electronics at the beginning and end of each fl ight will come as a relief to many travelers. Here’s a look at what may be in store for air travelers in the rest of the world.
Will others follow the FAA’s footsteps?
That seems likely. Across the Atlantic, Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority on Friday said it welcomed the FAA’s move, noting that electronic devices were a fact of modern life and “naturally passengers want to use them when they fl y.” Still, it said that European authorities in Brussels would have the fi nal say over whether to loosen rules across the continent.
One academic who has studied the issue said European regulators fi rst followed America’s lead in banning the use of the devices during takeoff and landing and were likely to follow America’s lead again now that the situation had changed.
“American safety is regarded as a gold standard,” said Joseph Lampel, a professor of strategy and innovation at London’s City University and a critic of the current rules. He acknowledged that European regulators had become increasingly independent of their American counterparts, but said it still seemed likely that they would relax the restrictions, which he said “never made any sense.”
There was no answer at the European Aviation Safety Agency on Friday, a public holiday in some parts of Europe.
What happens if not everyone agrees to follow the rules?
Conceivably, a passenger traveling from New York to London would be allowed to use a games console on takeoff but would have to turn it off before landing. If that passenger took the same plane home, he or she would have to turn the console off on takeoff but be allowed to use it on landing. It’s a confusing scenario aviation offi cials say they’re working to avoid.
“That’s exactly the kind of situation that (the International Civil Aviation Organization) is trying
to mitigate right now,” said spokesman Anthony Philbin. “Our main concern is that we don’t want to see separate regulations set in place in different places in the world.”
Philbin said a group of international state and industry representatives is currently studying the issue.
How are international airlines reacting?
Airlines across the globe said they were still digesting the FAA’s turnaround, but a few of them released statements suggesting they both expected and welcomed similar moves elsewhere.
Air New Zealand, the country’s national carrier, said it seemed “probable that a similar approach will be adopted in this jurisdic-tion in time.” Qantas,
Australia’s largest airline, said in a statement that it was “always interested in regulatory develop-ments that could benefi t passengers” and would be looking closely at the FAA’s decision. British Airways didn’t offer an opinion on the FAA decision, but noted it had recently become the fi rst airline to allow customers to use their cell phones as soon as the plane left the runway.
German airline company Lufthansa, which has long championed the use of data services in the cabin, welcomed the FAA decision but said it was concerned that rules might now vary according to the airline or the destination.
“We hope these standards will be featured worldwide,” spokesman Michael Lamberty said.
FAA relaxing electronics restrictions
AP
A passenger checks her cell phone before a fl ight, Thursday, in Boston. The Federal Aviation Administration issued new guidelines Thursday, under which passengers will be able
to use devices to read, work, play games, watch movies and listen to music, from the time they board to the time they leave the plane.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSFriday’s Close:Dow Jones IndustrialsHigh: 15,649.40Low: 15,543.25Close: 15,615.55Change: +69.80Other IndexesStandard&Poors 500
Index: 1761.64 +5.10NYSE Index: 10,018.15
+8.50Nasdaq Composite Index:
3922.04 +2.33NYSE MKT Composite:
2428.83 —15.41
INDIANAPOLIS — These are the winning numbers drawn Friday:
Indiana: Midday: 8-5-1 and 4-3-3-3. Evening: 3-5-5 and 7-1-2-7. Mix and Match: 5-8-13-25-44. Quick Draw: 5-7-10-16-18-19-22-24-35-40-41-47-48-51-52-58-61-67-75-80. Poker Lotto: 2 of Clubs, 10 of Clubs, 2 of Diamonds, 4 of Hearts, 7 of Spades.
Mega Millions: 32-35-49-62-67. Mega Ball: 1. Megaplier: 5.
Ohio: Midday: 9-0-8, 0-4-6-0 and 3-0-6-4-7. Evening: 4-4-0, 5-4-8-8 and 5-4-0-5-7. Rolling Cash 5: 05-08-19-24-32.
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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.
Our Letter Policy
•
International spying is a double-edged sword
Mass surveillance of American citizens hit the news cycle first. Now, international spying on foreign leaders by the National Security Agency — or NSA — has hit the headlines.
This has undoubtedly infuriated individuals overseas, fueling concerns that American officials are indiscrimi-nately collecting vast amounts of mobile phone and email data globally. It’s really no secret that our country collects data from sources around the world. So does every intelligence service with such capabilities internationally. They likely also spy on the U.S. or would if they could.
However, our security officials need to ensure we’re collecting information because we need to, not merely because we can.
For instance, Spanish media reports indicated the NSA allegedly spied on 60 million phone calls placed in Spain between Dec. 10 of last year and Jan. 8. Those reports followed the revelation that the NSA eavesdropped on millions phone calls in France and other countries.
In the post-9/11 world, that may be what it takes to keep the world safe. However, such measures must be weighed against the needs of our interna-tional relationships and ever increasing global economy.
Some heads of state have indicated the allegations have deteriorated trust in the Obama administration. This could come
back to hurt us during trade agreement negotiations or when we really do need intelligence information that we haven’t gathered ourselves.
While counterterrorism efforts are obviously vital, spying on close allies seemingly does more to undermine our relationships than anything else. An inside memo obtained by The Guardian newspaper indicated that eavesdropping on foreign leaders actually produced “little reportable intelligence.”
We should not lose sight of the mission to keep America safe, but analyzing the political and economic costs and benefits of international spying is still essential.
Aiken (S.C.) Standard
Taxpayers’ $7 billion subsidy to fast-food profi ts
Is fast food so vital to the nation that taxpayers should spend $7 billion a year to supplement the industry’s profi ts? Imagine the outcry if that was proposed.
And yet a study by economists at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Ur-bana and the University of California at Berkeley’s Labor Center says it’s already happening.
Seven billion dollars a year is what it costs taxpayers for Medicaid, food stamps and the other public assistance programs for fast-food workers who are paid poverty-level wages.
A second report, “Super-Sizing Public Costs” by the National Employ-ment Law Project, said low wages and
missing benefi ts at the 10 largest fast-food companies in the country cost taxpayers about $3.8 billion a year.
Another way to look at it: McDonald’s posted $1.5 billion in third-quarter profi ts. Taxpayers paid $1.2 billion last year for public assistance to the McDonald’s workforce. That’s $300 million per quarter, a 20 percent contribution to the company’s bottom line.
It’s enough to give you indigestion. …The “Fast Food” researchers calculated
that the cost to Missouri taxpayers, where about 49 percent of fast-food workers receive public assistance, is about $146 million a year.
Post-Dispatch reporter Kavita Kumar wrote Tuesday that Allan MacNeill, a Webster University political economist, said the public cost was probably underes-timated. That’s because it did not include managers and people who work fewer than 10 hours a week.
The study also looked at only fi ve of the largest federal public assistance programs, excluding other federal and state programs that would have pushed the fi gures higher, MacNeill said.
By under-paying employees, companies push their real cost of doing business onto the public at large. This can be called corporate welfare. Or socialism. But not capitalism.
Fast-food workers should be paid a living wage. The corporations that hire them must stop relying on the public for anything more than buying the occasional burger.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
What Others Say•
TheStar kpcnews.com A5SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
BY LINDSAY WINSLOW BROWNIn all of life’s craziness,
and with most of my family living several hours away, I’m realizing the importance of friendship — at home, church, work and the gym, and in the neighborhood. People tend to gravitate to those who are like them. Moms connect with other moms. Working professionals network with others in the business. Students form study groups. Athletes come together as teams and leagues.
Author and theologian C.S. Lewis once said, “Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another: “What! You too? I thought that no one but myself …”
As hunting season is under way, I can’t help but think about one of my newest friends. Laura Freeze and I met about a year ago. Maybe longer. I don’t remember. Time fl ies. This summer, after taking a tour at DeBrand Fine Chocolates and sharing stories, we started spending time together.
I love making new friends. It’s great to learn about their hobbies, interests and passions. We also learned that we’re probably related. She’s named after her great-grandmother, Laura Winslow. My maiden name is Winslow. According to the family history books, we’re kin. We just haven’t connected all the dots yet.
Like Laura, I’m a working mom and a Christian. She’s a
special education teacher who is able to reach and connect with children in a meaningful way. We both love “The Andy Griffi th Show,” canning, talking and the idea of adventure. Our
husbands graduated from high school together, and we each have one son — she has Little Greg, and I have Connor. The
only difference is, when I was pregnant, I watched documen-taries on television — she went deer hunting and was waist high in chest waders in icy water while fi shing for steelhead near Cleveland. Wait. That’s not the only difference. She likes green-handled antique cooking utensils, and I like red.
Laura is cool. Like many of my friends, she has no intention of fi tting into a box. She’s hunted and fi shed since she was a kid — and now I fi nd myself wanting to branch out. I’m adding those to my list — somewhere between fl ying, running, singing and baking. I just have to get my license, practice shooting and I’m set.
Laura appreciates the subtleties of life — sunsets, quiet lakes, dewy mornings, the crunch of autumn leaves. Some of her early memories include long country rides with a shake or pop from the Brown House, fi shing at her uncle’s pond, long walks with her mom, and excitedly meeting her dad and brothers at the door after hunting. Every chance she got, she went to her dad’s bait shop
in Auburn, where she learned that every person is treated with respect whether they were rich or poor, educated or not.
This summer, we canned tomato juice together. If you’re going to preserve nature’s bounty, it’s best to do it with a friend. We laughed and shared stories the whole time; we hardly noticed we were working. It became clear to me in those times that her family’s love of hunting and fi shing created a bridge to keep them together. Laura had the opportu-nity to share the experience of harvesting her fi rst deer with her brother, Tom. To this day, she still goes fi shing with Tom and her other brother, Tim.
Laura says her husband,
Greg, is her best friend. They do everything together. They fi sh for walleye and perch on Lake Erie. In the late winter and early spring they make maple syrup together — in a sugar shack they built. They canoed 37 miles in the Canadian wilderness together.
It’s a blessing to call Laura a friend. I appreciate her sense of adventure, love of nature and willingness to share her skills and talents with others.
LINDSAY WINSLOW BROWN of Auburn is a wife and mom who loves to write about her friends, family and experiences. Contact her at [email protected] and/or read more at justthis crazy.com.
New friendships among life’s biggest blessings
Guest Column
•
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
“Laura Freeze — like many of my friends — has no intention of fi tting into a box,” writes Lindsay Winslow Brown.
I’ve always avoided reporting on the Federal Reserve. I know it’s more important than much of the stuff I cover, but it’s so boring. How can I succeed on TV reporting on the Fed? Fed chairs even work at being dull.
Alan Greenspan said he tried to be obscure because he didn’t want to spook markets. He called his obfuscation “Fedspeak.” It’s a far cry from the clarity of his language — and principles — when he was young and a disciple of libertarian Ayn Rand.
Outgoing Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his likely successor, Janet Yellen, are almost as boring.
But we should watch what they do. The Fed can
destroy your savings and your future. The current crew of Fed bureaucrats has raised the Fed’s balance sheet to a stunning 4 trillion dollars.
As Sen. Rand Paul’s father, retired congressman Ron Paul, put it, “No secret cabal of government offi cials should have the authority to create money out of thin air.”
He makes a good point. For three decades, Ron Paul was virtually alone among politicians in questioning the Fed. But now there are more.
Jim Bruce’s documentary “Money for Nothing” is a great beginner’s guide to the Fed. Bruce points out that the last two Fed chairmen, appointed by both Republicans and Democrats, have quietly increased central planning of our economy. Govern-ment now controls more of our economy than ever before. This is not a good thing.
The Fed was created to prevent bank runs. It would be a lender of last resort and create stability.
Yet 16 years after the Fed’s creation, the Fed’s low interest rates fueled the Roaring Twenties and led to the greatest stock market crash in history. Then the Fed’s tight money worsened the Depres-sion.
I’m told they learned from their mistakes. For four decades after that, the Fed usually kept increases in the size of the money supply gradual, steady and predictable. Except for one nasty period, infl ation has been kept in check.
But now the Fed is charged with two sometimes clashing missions: preserving a stable currency and reducing unemploy-ment.
There’s great pressure for the Fed to time these decisions just right in order to avoid economic downturns and — some argue — to make current political offi ce-holders look good. Increasingly, investors and Wall Street analysts obsess over what the Fed will do, instead of paying attention to inventions, productivity and real wealth-creation.
The Fed, created to shore up capitalism, has become an instrument of government economic management not so different from a socialist planning board: a tiny handful of powerful people attempt to fi ne-tune the entire economy. Its main mission has become continually goosing economic activity through infusions of new cash to maintain the illusion that good times will never falter.
The result isn’t stability, but one economic bubble after another.
The Fed’s manipulations fi t well with President Obama’s “stimulus spending” efforts. But neither seems to do the trick. This post-recession “recovery” is among the weakest ever. Japan’s central bank tried the same stimulus for the past 15 years, since its economic crash. That didn’t work either.
Instead of following Japan’s example, we should learn from Canada. The Canadians had no central bank when the Great Depression began, just private banks issuing currency backed by gold. During the 1930s, not even one Canadian bank failed. Thousands failed in the U.S.
The massive bank bailouts a few years ago — taxpayer money showered on the richest institutions that have ever existed — are based on the assumption that those banks are “too big to fail.”
It would be more accurate to say that those banks and the Federal Reserve that dominates them are too big and too powerful, so much so that they risk dragging us all down with them if they fail. No dozen people should be granted so much power.
JOHN STOSSEL is host of “Stossel” on the Fox Business Network. He’s the author of “Give Me a Break” and of “Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity.” More information at johnstossel.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit creators.com.
End the Fed
JOHN
STOSSEL
•
The Fed was created to prevent bank runs. It would be a lender of last resort and create
stability.
•
A6 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
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made during that time period toward their matching fund requirement.
Only when the grant came back half accepted was the error realized.
“We’re not very happy,” Linson said. “We thought we had everything in
place.” She said it was “disappointing when the rules of the game are hidden.”
The $25,000 will go toward making Kendallville Police Department Sgt. Chris Shearer a full-time school resource offi cer at East Noble Middle School.
SAFETY: Three Steuben County schools selected for state grantsFROM PAGE A1
VIDEO FEATURES on
were harvested. Vegeta-bles grown at the garden included tomatoes, onions, caulifl ower, broccoli, green beans, peppers, lettuce, potatoes, melons and cucumbers.
A total of 46 community service workers spent 649.75 hours during 50 days working at the garden, according to Community Corrections program coordi-nator Lisa Culler.
Bassett credited the garden’s success with the support it received from numerous partners.
The DeKalb County Commissioners awarded $10,000 to establish the resource garden program. Community Corrections was responsible for the labor force, and the DeKalb County Extension offi ce provided guidance, volunteer recruitment and organiza-tion. The DeKalb County Council on Aging also
assisted with recruitment and management.
The DeKalb County Surveyor’s Offi ce defi ned the garden’s boundaries, and the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department transported and prepared the produce. DeKalb High School students grew the starter plants, and the Northeast Indiana Solid Waste Management District provided the garden location, a well, power, and many other extras, Bassett said.
Steel Dynamics Inc. donated material for a driveway base, and TFC Canopy provided a shade and rain canopy. Kaufman Well Drilling installed a well. Garden Gate assisted with seeds and supplies, and Home Depot assisted with tools and equipment. Signature Construction and Eaton Clutch set up the canopy. Speedway Redimix provider concrete and Seiss
Construction carried out the concrete work. Walmart Distribution Center provided bottled water for workers.
“Though our fi rst year was met with some challenges, including turning a hard farm fi eld into a garden, lots of rain early in the season, needing a few more volunteers and a dry mid-season, we persevered and stayed well under our budget,” Bassett said.
Next year, Bassett said, soil conditions will be better, and compost already has been spread and tilled into the ground.
“I foresee turning 1,000 pounds (of food) into a lot more produce,” Bassett said.
Bassett also hopes that more people will step up and volunteer to be garden mentors next year.
“I think it was a success for the county,” said Bassett. “I think it’s something that will continue to grow.”
GARDEN: Partners’ support boosts garden successFROM PAGE A1
ILL.
MICH.
OHIO
KY.
© 2013 Wunderground.com
Today's ForecastSaturday, Nov. 2
City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for
Chicago50° | 45° South Bend
48° | 41°Fort Wayne
50° | 41°
Lafayette52° | 39°
Indianapolis57° | 41°
Terre Haute52° | 36°
Evansville55° | 43° Louisville
57° | 48°
Sunrise Sunday 7:15 a.m.
Sunset Sunday 5:34 p.m.
Today skies will be cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs will be in the low 50s. Low tonight of 32 degrees. Partly sunny and cooler Sunday with a daytime high of 49 and an overnight low of 33 expected. Monday will be partly cloudy. High temperature of 51, low of 42 degrees.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
National forecastForecast highs for Saturday, Nov. 2
Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High
-10s 100s-0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 110s
Today’s drawing by:Aaron ConastatSubmit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept.P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755
Local HI 49 LO 42 PRC. 0Fort Wayne HI 51 LO 42 PRC. 0
South Bend HI 48 LO 42 PRC. 0Indianapolis HI 57 LO 40 PRC. 0
Friday’s Statistics
from gunfi re.The TSA said both
surviving shooting victims are TSA offi cers.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti says the airport shooter was carrying a lot of additional ammunition. “There were more than 100 more rounds,” he said.
One of the victims taken to Harbor-UCLA Medical Center arrived without signs of life, says trauma surgeon David Plurad. Doctors worked for over an hour
to try to revive the man, but were unsuccessful. He died from gunshot wounds to his chest and abdomen. Another man was shot in the shoulder and is expected to survive.
Another person was released from Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. The hospitals did not identify the patients, citing privacy issues.
Union and TSA offi cials say the TSA offi cer shot at LAX was the fi rst ever killed in the line of duty.
J. David Cox Sr., national president of the American Federation of Government Employees, says the offi cer was one of the behavioral detection offi cers stationed throughout the airport looking for suspicious behavior.
Dr. Lynne McCullough, an emergency medicine physician, says the hospital was capable of taking up to 50 patients. “As it turned out, very thankfully, we received only three” patients, she said.
LAX: Shooter had more than 100 rounds leftFROM PAGE A1
BERLIN (AP) — Edward Snowden is calling for international help to persuade the U.S. to drop its espionage charges against him, according to a letter a German lawmaker released Friday after he met the American in Moscow.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, meanwhile, has conceded that some of the NSA’s spying has reached too far and will be stopped.
Snowden said he would like to testify before the U.S. Congress about National Security Agency surveillance and may be willing to help German offi cials investigate alleged U.S. spying in Germany, Hans-Christian Stroebele, a lawmaker with Germany’s
opposition Greens, told a news conference.
But Snowden indicated in the letter that neither would happen unless the U.S. dropped its espionage charges — a policy shift the Obama administration has given no indication it would make.
Stroebele’s meeting with Snowden on Thursday took place a week after explosive allegations from the Der Spiegel news magazine that the NSA monitored Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cellphone prompted her to complain personally to President Barack Obama. The alleged spying has produced the most serious diplomatic tensions between the two allies since Germany opposed the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Germany’s top security offi cial said he would like to arrange for German author-ities to talk to Snowden about those allegations and other U.S. surveillance operations that have enraged Europeans.
Snowden has said he no longer has the NSA materials but his knowledge of U.S. spying efforts could be seen as invaluable by other nations.
“He pointed out that he was active in the U.S. secret services, the NSA and CIA, not just as an administrator or something like that who had access to computers, but also … participated in operations,” Stroebele said of Snowden.
Snowden seeking help
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — A U.S. drone strike killed the leader of the Pakistani Taliban on Friday, intelligence offi cials in the two countries and Taliban militants said. The death is a major blow to the group a day after the government said it started peace talks with the militants.
Hakimullah Mehsud, who is believed to have been behind a failed car bombing in New York’s Times Square as well as brazen attacks inside Pakistan, had
a reputation for being partic-ularly ruthless.
He was widely reported to have been killed in 2010, but later resurfaced. The tribal areas where the drone attacks occur are dangerous to visit, making it diffi cult for journalists to independently confi rm information.
A senior U.S. intelli-gence offi cial said the U.S. received positive confi r-mation Friday morning that he had been killed. Two Pakistani intelli-
gence offi cials in North Waziristan also confi rmed his death as did two Taliban commanders who said they had seen the remnants of the militant commander’s mangled body.
The strike killed four other suspected militants, according to the two Pakistani intelligence offi cials.
The Taliban commanders said at least four missiles struck just after a vehicle in which Mehsud was driving entered the compound.
Drone kills Taliban leader
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CROSS COU NTRY Preps, IHSAA State Finals at Wabash Valley Sports Center, Terre Haute: DeKalb’s Mark Beckmann and West Noble’s Brandon Arnold in boys’ race, 1 p.m.; Fremont’s Abby Hostetler and Prairie Heights’ Aspen Dirr in girls’ race, 1:45 p.m. Col lege, Tr ine in M IAA Championships at West Ottawa Golf Club, Hol land, Mich. , 11 a.m.COLLEG E FOOTBALL Hope at Trine, 1 p.m.COLLEG E SOCCE R Women, Tr ine at Alma, noon Men, Trine at Olivet, 2:30 p.m.
Area Events•
Briefl y•
Ward has 1st NHL hat trick
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Joel Ward scored three goals for his fi rst NHL hat trick, and Braden Holtby coasted to a shutout in the Washington Capitals’ 7-0 fi ght-fi lled rout of the Philadelphia Flyers on Friday night.
Jason Chimera added a goal and three assists, and Nicklas Backstrom and Mikhail Grabovski each had three points.
BY JUSTIN [email protected]
LEO-CEDARVILLE — When two teams with great defenses square off on the football fi eld, every little mistake and special teams play is magnifi ed. Take the Leo-East Noble game as an example. The two teams faced off in the Class 4A Sectional 19 semifi nals Friday and had given up 5.8 points and 13.5 points per game, respectively.
East Noble had excellent fi eld position for most of the evening, starting its offensive drives on the Leo half of the fi eld six times in a 10-7 victory. In contrast, the host Lions (10-1) did not start on the East Noble side of the 50-yard line once.
Leo began fi ve series inside its black zone (own 20) and two of them can be credited to strong play from the Knights’ punt team.
“Special teams and defense were key tonight. Our offense wasn’t near as good as it has been the last few games, give credit to (Leo’s) defense for that,” East Noble coach Luke Amstutz said. “The kicking game… both defenses played great, but the fi eld position in the kicking game was the difference tonight.”
On both scoring drives, the Knights (9-2) were in the red zone right away.
A blocked Leo punt put East Noble in prime position for its fi rst score. Brandon Mable fi nished the 18-yard series in three plays, scoring from eight yards out 1:10 into the second quarter.
Mable fi nished with 68 yards and the touchdown on 30 rushes. Bryce Wolfe had 30 rushing yards to add.
East Noble moves onJAMES FISHER
East Noble running back Brandon Mable runs upfi eld during Friday’s IHSAA Sectional football
game at Leo. The Knights won 10-7.
Knights overcome previously unbeaten Leo
BY KEN FILLMOREkfi [email protected]
WOODBURN — Prairie Heights provided some resistance Friday and will make some Woodlan ball carriers feel sore this morning. But the Warriors still proved to be too much for the Panthers with a 32-6 victory in a Class 2A Sectional 34 semifi nal game at Etzler Field.
Woodlan (8-3) will host Bremen (8-3) in the sectional fi nal this coming Friday. The Lions outscored visiting Churubusco 35-28 last night. The Panthers fi nished the season at 5-6.
In Woodburn Friday, Woodlan compiled 444 yards of total offense, including 395 rushing. Warrior star running back Jaylin Bennett rushed for 311 yards and two touchdowns on 38 carries. He unoffi cially has 2,169 yards this season.
Heights had 184 total yards, and 168 of those came through the air. Senior Kyler West completed 12-of-24 passes for 168 yards, and threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to classmate Bobby Blum with 7 minutes, 35 seconds left. But West also threw four interceptions.
Senior Corey Johnson caught six passes for 84 yards for the Panthers while Blum had three receptions for 62 yards.
But Woodlan’s size up front on both sides of the ball handled Prairie Heights. Panther coach Vincent Royer knew the giant challenge his team was up against and thought his guys represented themselves and their community very well.
“All the practices were good this week. We watched fi lm like we were supposed to,” Royer said. “We had fi ve defensive shutdowns. We have growth in our program.
“I applaud the support we had down here. That makes the kids want to play hard.”
Heights did not back down physically and dealt with Bennett all the way until the fi nal play of the game. Seniors Alex Bentley, Dylan Stayner and Zach Shepard were always around the football in leading the defense.
Heights season ends in defeat
BY PHIL [email protected]
FORT WAYNE — Bishop Dwenger showed why it’s one of the best teams in Class 4A early in Friday night’s Sectional 19 matchup with Angola.
The Saints scored 28 points in the fi rst quarter and returned a punt for a touchdown less than 30 seconds into the second quarter en route to beating the Hornets, 45-7, in Fred Zollner Stadium in Fort Wayne. Angola ends its season with a 6-5 record.
“That’s a very talented ball club. They’re going to probably give somebody fi ts,” said Angola coach Josh Schoeff. “They just got some athletes in some key spots and we just had a tough time matching them speed-for-
speed, pound-for-pound. I was proud of the way our guys fought in the second half. Our hats off to those guys, they had a great game plan and executed it well.”
Dwenger, ranked seventh in the Indiana Football Coaches Association poll and 11th in the Associated Press poll, takes on No. 8/9 East Noble in the sectional fi nal on Friday. The Knights defeated No. 5 Leo, 10-7.
Dwenger went right at Angola from the get-go. The Saints went 56 yards on the game’s opening drive, capped off by a seven-yard touchdown pass from Mike Fiacable to Gabriel Espinoza.
It got worse quickly. On Angola’s third play from scrimmage, BD’s Alex Schenkel
just took the ball out of Troy Zvirblis’s hands while churning for extra yards and took it 22 yards for a touchdown and a 14-0 lead less than four minutes into the game.
“Any time you’re giving up 14 points in a matter of what seemed to be two plays, 30 seconds or what have you, it’s tough to overcome for anybody,” Schoeff said.
Following an Angola three-and-out, Dwenger only needed three plays to go 51 yards for a TD, with Fiacable fi nding Peyton Philpot on a short pass and Philpot running the ball in for a 21-yard TD and a 21-0 lead. The Hornets struggled on their next possession, too, losing the ball on a fumble on just the
second play.Dwenger did have to work
for the next touchdown, needing nine plays and a fourth-down conversion on the 33-yard drive. But on fi rst-and-goal from the 8, Fiacable hit Tyler Tippman for a touchdown and a 28-0 advantage.
Twenty-one seconds into the second quarter, Bishop Dwenger’s Ryan Watercutter fi elded a put at his own 45 and ran 55 yards for a touchdown and a 35-0 lead. The Saints would add their fi nal touchdown of the fi rst half with 6:55 left on a seven-yard run by Andrew Gabel to push the lead to 42-0.
Dwenger head coach Chris Svarczkopf pulled his starters after that touchdown.
Angola season comes to end against Dwenger
JAMES FISHER
East Noble quarterback Bryce Wolfe looks to the sidelines for a play call during play Friday against Leo.SEE KNIGHTS, PAGE B2 SEE PANTHERS, PAGE B2
SEE HORNETS, PAGE B2
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013 kpcnews.com BTheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICAN
B2 THE STAR kpcnews.com SPORTS •
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
SOUTH BEND (AP) — Notre Dame quarterback Tommy Rees has been making teams pay lately for challenging his arm.
Rees was 17 for 22 passing last week against Air Force for 284 yards and fi ve touchdowns, including eight completions of 15 yards or more as he took advantage of the Falcons’ defense crowding the line of scrimmage.
“If a team wants to hunker down and get those safeties low, we’ve got to be able to throw the ball over their heads and get them to play back. That helps out the running game if you can stretch those safeties out. We took advantage of some good looks,” he said.
Rees competed 61 percent of his passes through three games, throwing for 300 yards or more in each. But he completed just 42 percent of his passes in the next three, throwing four interceptions. With Notre Dame (6-2) trying to make a push for a BCS bowl berth, Rees seems to have regained his touch. Despite missing most of the second half against USC with a neck injury, the past two weeks Rees is completing 72 percent of his passes with no interceptions and seven touchdowns.
Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly attributes part of Rees’ midseason struggles to the opponents, pointing out that Michigan State,
Oklahoma and Arizona State all have good pass defenses. He also believes Rees is feeling more comfortable in the pocket and playing more confi dent.
Rees will be looking to take advantage of a Navy secondary undergoing changes with corner-back Parrish Gaines moving to free safety a week ago to try to strengthen Navy’s run defense, which is giving up 188 yards rushing per game. Freshman Brendon Clements took over at cornerback, making eight tackles and a pass breakup in an overtime win over Pittsburgh.
“Having two tall, rangy guys back there at the safety spots strengthens us against the run,” Navy defensive coordinator Buddy Green said.
Notre Dame is favored by 16 points.
Five things to know about the Navy-Notre Dame game on Saturday:
OUTCOACHED: Notre Dame’s 35-17 loss to Navy in 2010, the Cadets’ most lopsided win over the Irish since 1963 with 367 yards rushing, is one Kelly won’t forget. “We felt like there’s only been a couple of times since we’ve been here where we’ve let the players down. As coaches, you never want to feel that way. I take full responsibility for that. You want your team prepared. That’s
why we’re in this profession, to prepare our kids, and we weren’t prepared properly. So we’ve redoubled our efforts based on that game to make sure that never happens again.”
LOPSIDED RIVALRY: Although Notre Dame started playing USC in 1926, a year before its fi rst game with Navy,
the Irish have played the Cadets more than any other team with 86 games. That’s because the Irish didn’t play the Trojans 1943-45 because of World War II. Notre Dame leads the series with Navy 73-12-1 and won an NCAA-record 43 straight until the Cadets won three of four games from 2007-10. Notre Dame has scored at least 50
points against the Cadets in two straight victories. Navy knows it needs to play well to win. “We have to try to be perfect in everything we do because that’s the only way we’ll have a chance to beat them,” Navy quarterback Keenan Reynolds said.
ANOTHER OPTION: Playing the option for the second straight week, after beating Air Force 45-10, is a double-edge sword for Notre Dame. The Irish have an extra week of practice against the option, but Navy also has seen how Notre Dame’s defends the option. “They have answers. They’ve been running the triple option way more than people have been defending it. So we have to be prepared because nobody runs the triple and the details of it better than Navy,” Kelly said.
SCORING AVERAGE: The Irish are scoring 28 points a game. When scoring at least 28 points against Navy, the Irish are 40-1. The lone loss was in 2007, a 46-44 defeat in three overtimes. Navy is 5-1 against Notre Dame when its scores at least 28 points, losing 52-31 in 1990 at Giants Stadium.
NO NIX: Nose guard Louis Nix III, who sat out against Air Force with knee tendinitis, will sit out again against Navy. Nix wasn’t expected to play much against either because he’s not well-suited to play against the option.
Rees playing well as Irish prepare for Navy
AP
Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly talks with quarterback Tommy Rees (11) during a game against Oklahoma. The Irish will face Navy.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Purdue women’s basket-ball will have a different look this season. The results should be familiar.
The perennial Big Ten title contender returns three starters and nine letter winners from last year’s
25-9 squad that won the league tournament and a game in the NCAA tourna-ment.
Though the Boiler-makers lost their top two rebounders in Drey Mingo and Sam Ostarello, coach Sharon Versyp is confi dent
that her trio of senior guards, Courtney Moses, K.K. Houser and Dee Dee Williams, can lift the team.
“We will be a different team, but I think having our three seniors that have played since they’ve been freshman have brought us great leadership,” Versyp said.
Moses has been named preseason All-Big Ten by both the coaches and the media after averaging 13.3 points per game last season. Houser averaged 11.3 points and 4.7 assists. Williams started 28 of 34 games last season.
But that kind of veteran leadership doesn’t ensure the Boilermakers a champi-
onship. The conference should be very strong overall. Nebraska, Penn State and Michigan State are receiving national recognition and are ahead of the Boilermakers in the preseason Big Ten media poll.
“We just have to go out every day and get better,” Versyp said. “It’s about growing and developing our younger kids. We feel like we have talent but there is inexperience and we feel like we have a solid blend of fi ve experienced players and seven that are coming in.”
Another guard, sophomore April Wilson, averaged 5.4 points.
Purdue women look like Big Ten contenders
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“No one scores many points against (Leo). They have some big guys and tackle very well. It is hard to move the ball against them. We thought we missed some things… We didn’t see some cuts at times. When it came down to it, we were able to punch the ball in on the goal line,” Amstutz said.
Jared Teders didn’t need much help on his shining moment in his team’s win. His 32-yard fi eld goal sailed true for what turned out to be the game winner.
Dustin Wells set up his Knight teammate with a recovery of a fumbled snap at the Leo 17. East Noble ran three plays before Teders put his stamp on the game.
“In the last two years, we have been on the losing end to most of those (close) games. It is great for us in a big game to do this. We have blown some teams out in the big games and pulled away, but we hadn’t held on and fi nished on defense to win by three. You are going to have to do that. Sometime in the playoffs you will have to win by three or less,” Amstutz said.
Although the East Noble defensive line was outsized by a large Leo offense, it had no problem doing its job. The Knight line, anchored by defensive end Keaton Osborn and tackle Sid Napier, kept the Lion offense on the ropes and held it to 69 total rushing yards.
For the second straight week, the Knights’ opponent recorded no second-half fi rst downs until the fourth quarter. Leo moved the chains for the fi rst time in the half with 6:44 left in the game before Walker Boyles hammered Lions quarterback
Kray Klopfenstein for one of the team’s fi ve fumbles two plays later. Knight defenders pounced on three of those Leo fumbles.
“We just hit hard. We never stopped. We executed and got to the holes. If we got through unblocked, we hit them harder,” Osborn said. “They were a good team. We expected them to come out hard.”
With 1:24 remaining in the game and no timeouts, Leo slowly tried to march following a touchback from a Boyles punt. The Lions ran six plays in the span of a minute, gaining 15 yards. Osborn forced Klopfenstein out of the pocket and the Knight secondary smothered the Leo receivers as the pass fell incomplete with less than 10 seconds left.
East Noble’s tournament run continues on Friday against Bishop Dwenger (8-3). Dwenger defeated Angola, 45-7, Friday night in the semifi nals. Since the Saints do not have a home
fi eld, a venue has yet to be determined.
The Knights are 2-3 against the Saints since 1999. East Noble last won in 2003 when it defeated Dwenger, 42-28, in semistate.
EN players and Amstutz do not know much about their next opponent, but one thing is for sure: They will be ready for a battle, especially on the defensive side of the ball.
“I’m ready to smoke them. I am ready to hit them hard… Harder than they have been hit before,” Napier said.
KNIGHTS: East Noble sends Leo to 1st defeatFROM PAGE B1
Shepard made at least a couple of tackles for losses in the fi rst half and delivered a shot in the chest of Woodlan senior quarterback Corbin Smith in a fl urry after a mishandled snap by the Warriors in the second quarter.
“Shepard was on fi re tonight,” Royer said.
Stayner blocked two I Sar kicks in the fi rst half, one on a 22-yard fi eld goal attempt in the fi rst quarter
and the other on a point-after attempt in the second quarter.
David Rodriguez recovered a fumble and Johnson recovered an onside kick for PH. Rodriguez and senior Joey Barry both had big kickoff returns.
Barry played in his second game since returning from a serious knee injury which kept him out for half of the season. He played on special teams only in Heights’ 15-7 fi rst-round
home win over Wabash last week.
“Having Joey Barry back was high quality. He came back and fought,” Royer said.
Bennett scored on runs of 55 and 39 yards for the Warriors, who led 19-0 at the half. Senior 278-pound fullback Deandre Woods scored on two 1-yard plunges, and senior Greg White added a 16-yard scoring run on a reverse late in the second quarter.
PANTHERS: Barry returns for Prairie HeightsFROM PAGE B1
JAMES FISHER
East Noble coach Luke Amstutz urges the crowd to cheer during a key defensive play on Friday at East Noble defeated Leo, 10-7.
East Noble 10, Leo 7East Noble 0 7 3 0 — 10Leo 0 0 0 7 — 7Scoring SummarySecond QuarterEN — Brandon Mable 8 run (Jared Teders kick) 10:50Third QuarterEN — Teders 32 fi eld goal, 2:16 Fourth QuarterLeo — Zach Stoner 23 pass by Kray Klopfen-stein (Zach Ferran kick) 1:46Team Statistics EN LeoFirst Downs 10 10Rushes-yards 42-9 132-69Comp-Att-INT 5-10-1 12-25-0Passing Yards 36 81Total plays-yards 52-127 57-150Penalties-yards 5-31 4-50Punts-average 3-40.3 5-21.6Fumbles-lost 3-2 5-3INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING: EN — Mable 30-68, TD; Bryce Wolfe 8-30; Tyler Leazier 1-0; Grey Fox 3-(-7). LEO — Jordan Hissong 9-30; Logan Leiter 15-29; Stoner 1-6; Kray Klopfenstein 3-5; Logan Wood 3-3; Chris Horn 1-(-4).PASSING: EN — Wolfe 5-7, 36 yards; Sible 0-3, INT. LEO — Hissong 2-5, -3 yards; Klopfenstein 10-20, 84 yards, TD.RECEIVING: EN — Mable 3-18; Bret Sible 2-18. LEO — Stoner 3-43, TD; Chandler Fields 5-26; Jordan Eldridge 2-10; Phil Federspiel 1-5; Leiter 1-(-3).
Angola struggled moving the ball in the fi rst half, running 19 plays for exactly zero yards.
“It’s a little bit different than playing backyard football out here,” Schoeff said. “They have some guys that have some real genuine athletic ability that we don’t see very often. And that’s tough for us to game plan.”
The Hornets did fi nd some success in the second half and scored a touchdown with 5:16 left in the game. On a 4th-and-goal play from the 7, Jacob Roddy — who was hit as he threw the ball — found Austin Bauer in the end zone to cut Dwenger’s lead to 45-7.
“I was proud of the fact that our guys did continue to fi ght all the way through to the end and that’s what we’re going to take away from it,” Schoeff said. “We like to accentuate the positives in our program, and one thing we’ll take away is we got some guys that gained experience and that was very valuable for them.”
Dwnger’s only points in the second half came on a 36-yard fi eld goal from Trey Casaburo.
Bauer led the Hornets with 42 receiving yards as
they fi nished with 77 yards of total offense to Bishop Dwenger’s 325. Simon Gardner led the Angola rushing attack with 33 yards. Roddy was 3 of 8 passing for 42 yards.
Sixteen different players received carries for Bishop Dwenger, led by Ryan Cinadr, who had 48 yards. Fiacable was 8 of 10
passing for 90 yards and three touchdowns — all in the fi rst half. Watercutter led with 42 receiving yards.
“I”m just really proud of all our seniors and the strides they’ve made for each other and this program,” Schoeff said. “We’re going to be in much better shape going forward because of their invest-ments.”
HORNETS: Angola held to 77 yards of total offenseFROM PAGE B1
PHIL FRIEND
Angola quarterback Jake Roddy looks to the sidelines for a play call.
Bishop Dwenger 45, Angola 7Angola 0 0 0 7 — 7Bishop Dwenger 28 14 3 0 — 45First quarterBD — Espinoza 7 pass from Fiacable (Casaburo kick), 8:48BD – Schenkel 22 fumble return (Casaburo kick), 8:26BD – Philpot 21 pass from Fiacable (Casaburo kick), 5:06BD — Tippmann 8 pass from Fiacable (Casaburo kick), :50.3Second quarterBD — Watercutter 55 punt return (Casaburo kick), 11:39BD — Gabet 7 run (Casaburo kick), 6:55Third quarterBD — Casaburo 36 fi eld goal, 1:32Fourth quarterA — Bauer 7 pass from Roddy (Stites kick), 5:16Team Statistics A BDFirst downs 4 13Rushes-yds. 31-35 43-235Passing yards 42 90Comp-Att-Int 3-9-0 8-10-0Total plays-yds. 40-77 53-325Penalties-yds. 1-5 8-70Fumbles-lost 3-2 1-1INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING: A — Gardner 12-33, Zvirblis 7-5, Spears 1-3, Bauer 5-0, Roddy 6-(-6). BD — Cinadr 7-48, Stroud 4-32, M. Fiacable 4-29, Tippmann 4-27, Philpot 3-26, Blackmon 6-25, Kelty 4-10, Gabet 2-9, O’Boyle 1-9, Harris 1-8, Steigmeyer 1-7, Weddle 1-5, Steele 1-2, Fean 2-2, N. Fiacable 1-0, Buenconsejo 1-(-4).PASSING: A — Roddy 3-8-0 42, Zvirblis 0-1-0 0. BD — M. Fiacable 8-10-0 90.RECEIVING: A — Bauer 3-42. BD — Watercutter 2-42, Espinoeza 2-15, Philpot 2-13, Cinadr 1-12, Tippman 1-8.
SPORTS BRIEFS•
Jeter and Yankees reach $12 million, 1-year deal
NEW YORK (AP) — In a sign of confi dence Derek Jeter will return to shortstop next season, the New York Yankees agreed Friday to a $12 million, one-year contract with their captain.
Jeter, who turns 40 next June, was limited to 17 games this year after breaking his ankle in the 2012 playoffs. He spent four stints on the disabled list in the most frustrating season of his 19-year career.
This deal, agreed to Friday between owner Hal Steinbrenner and agent Casey Close, was achieved without the rancor surrounding Jeter’s previous contract.
As part of the agreement in December 2010, Jeter had salaries of $15 million in 2011, $16 million in 2012 and $17 million in 2013. That deal included an $8 million option for 2014 that escalated to $9.5 million because he won a Silver Slugger Award in 2012, when he led the major leagues with 216 hits.
Jeter needed to be helped off the fi eld at Yankee Stadium after he broke his left ankle Oct. 13, 2012, during the AL championship series opener against Detroit. While he vowed to be back for opening day, he was limited to fi ve spring training games and 11 at-bats, stayed behind when the team broke camp for rehabilitation at New York’s minor league complex in Tampa, Fla., and broke the ankle again.
He missed the 91 games of the season, then felt pain his right quadriceps when he returned July 11. He went back on the DL, returned July 28 for three games, then strained his right calf.
Back in the lineup on Aug. 26, he played through Sept. 7, when he left for a pinch-runner after singling against Boston. While scans of the left ankle were negative, the Yankees said four days later his season was over.
Prep Football ScoresSectionalsCLASS 6ASectional 1Lake Central 31, Merrillville 0Sectional 2Penn 30, Chesterton 0Sectional 3Carroll (Ft. Wayne) 42, Warsaw 7Sectional 4Carmel 35, Fishers 20Sectional 5Indpls Pike 34, Indpls Ben Davis 32Sectional 6Warren Central 14, Indpls N. Central 7Sectional 7Southport 27, Indpls Tech 10Sectional 8Center Grove 35, Jeffersonville 0CLASS 5ASectional 9Mishawaka 27, S. Bend Adams 0Munster 21, Michigan City 13Sectional 10Elkhart Central 35, Goshen 21Concord 23, Elkhart Memorial 7Sectional 11McCutcheon 42, Kokomo 13Westfi eld 42, Lafayette Harrison 14Sectional 12Ft. Wayne Snider 15, Ft. Wayne Wayne 7Ft. Wayne North 42, Huntington North 20Sectional 13Indpls Cathedral 35, Zionsville 21Anderson 35, Richmond 24Sectional 14Floyd Central 27, Jennings Co. 0Whiteland 24, Franklin 22Sectional 15Bloomington North 49, Bedford N. Lawrence 7Bloomington South 55, Martinsville 22Sectional 16Terre Haute North 38, Castle 13Ev. North 33, Terre Haute South 28CLASS 4ASectional 17E. Chicago 51, Griffi th 19Gary West 46, Highland 27Sectional 18S. Bend St. Joseph’s 49, S. Bend Washington 27New Prairie 42, Plymouth 21Sectional 19E. Noble 10, Leo 7Ft. Wayne Dwenger 45, Angola 7Sectional 20Norwell 42, Jay Co. 12New Haven 47, Frankfort 0Sectional 21New Palestine 53, Muncie South 0Mt. Vernon (Fortville) 16, Greenfi eld 13Sectional 22Indpls Roncalli 28, Lebanon 0Indpls Chatard 49, Danville 6Sectional 23Shelbyville 25, E. Central 22Columbus East 49, Greenwood 14Sectional 24Ev. Reitz 49, Silver Creek 15Jasper 28, Ev. Central 7CLASS 3ASectional 25Andrean 52, Calumet 12Glenn 43, Hammond 0Sectional 26Twin Lakes 27, Fairfi eld 21Jimtown 14, Rochester 6Sectional 27Ft. Wayne Concordia 48, Bellmont 15Ft. Wayne Luers 18, Heritage 13Sectional 28W. Lafayette 34, Western 7Yorktown 49, Northwestern 7Sectional 29Tri-West 32, Edgewood 18Indpls Brebeuf 24, Western Boone 0Sectional 30Guerin Catholic 27, Indpls Marshall 0Indian Creek 34, Hamilton Hts. 27Sectional 31Brownstown 52, N. Harrison 13Charlestown 41, Brown Co. 24Sectional 32Gibson Southern 29, Ev. Memorial 23CLASS 2ASectional 33Rensselaer 43, North Judson 14Bowman Academy 28, Boone Grove 21Sectional 34Bremen 35, Churubusco 28Woodlan 32, Prairie Hts. 6Sectional 35Delphi 40, Southmont 21Tipton 28, Lafayette Catholic 24Sectional 36Alexandria 27, Elwood 26Oak Hill 55, Bluffton 22Sectional 37Speedway 39, Cascade 0Indpls Ritter 48, Monrovia 12Sectional 38Indpls Scecina 48, Winchester 8Shenandoah 40, Knightstown 20Sectional 39Paoli 55, Clarksville 12Triton Central 28, Providence 7Sectional 40Ev. Mater Dei 35, Sullivan 20Southridge 27, N. Posey 21CLASS ASectional 41W. Central 54, Culver 38Winamac 41, Whiting 20Sectional 42Pioneer 41, Carroll (Flora) 6Frontier 27, Caston 0Sectional 43S. Adams 14, Adams Central 13Southwood 42, Southern Wells 22Sectional 44Clinton Prairie 52, Indpls Shortridge 50Tri-Central 35, Sheridan 7Sectional 45Northeastern 28, Monroe Central 7Eastern Hancock 62, Cambridge City 0Sectional 46S. Putnam 26, W. Washington 13Indpls Lutheran 50, Edinburgh 28Sectional 47Attica 13, N. Vermillion 7Fountain Central 34, N. Central (Farmersburg) 20Sectional 48Linton 28, Tecumseh 24Perry Central 28, N. Daviess 12
NFL StandingsAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 6 2 0 .750 179 144N.Y. Jets 4 4 0 .500 143 211Miami 3 4 0 .429 152 167Buffalo 3 5 0 .375 176 213SouthIndianapolis 5 2 0 .714 187 131Tennessee 3 4 0 .429 145 146Houston 2 5 0 .286 122 194Jacksonville 0 8 0 .000 86 264NorthCincinnati 6 2 0 .750 197 144Baltimore 3 4 0 .429 150 148Cleveland 3 5 0 .375 148 179Pittsburgh 2 5 0 .286 125 153WestKansas City 8 0 0 1.000 192 98Denver 7 1 0 .875 343 218San Diego 4 3 0 .571 168 144Oakland 3 4 0 .429 126 150NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 4 4 0 .500 230 186Philadelphia 3 5 0 .375 176 211Washington 2 5 0 .286 173 229N.Y. Giants 2 6 0 .250 141 223SouthNew Orleans 6 1 0 .857 196 120Carolina 4 3 0 .571 170 96Atlanta 2 5 0 .286 166 184Tampa Bay 0 7 0 .000 100 163NorthGreen Bay 5 2 0 .714 212 158Detroit 5 3 0 .625 217 197Chicago 4 3 0 .571 213 206Minnesota 1 6 0 .143 163 225WestSeattle 7 1 0 .875 205 125San Francisco 6 2 0 .750 218 145Arizona 4 4 0 .500 160 174St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 165 198Thursday, Oct. 31Cincinnati at Miami, lateSunday, Nov. 3Minnesota at Dallas, 1 p.m.Tennessee at St. Louis, 1 p.m.Atlanta at Carolina, 1 p.m.New Orleans at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.Kansas City at Buffalo, 1 p.m.San Diego at Washington, 1 p.m.Philadelphia at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.Baltimore at Cleveland, 4:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at New England, 4:25 p.m.Indianapolis at Houston, 8:30 p.m.Open: Arizona, Denver, Detroit, Jacksonville, N.Y. Giants, San
FranciscoMonday, Nov. 4Chicago at Green Bay, 8:40 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 7Washington at Minnesota, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 10Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m.Philadelphia at Green Bay, 1 p.m.Jacksonville at Tennessee, 1 p.m.Cincinnati at Baltimore, 1 p.m.St. Louis at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.Seattle at Atlanta, 1 p.m.Oakland at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.Carolina at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.Denver at San Diego, 4:25 p.m.Houston at Arizona, 4:25 p.m.Dallas at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.Open: Cleveland, Kansas City, N.Y. ets, New EnglandMonday, Nov. 11Miami at Tampa Bay, 8:40 p.m.
Postseason BaseballWILD CARDNL: Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 2AL: Tampa Bay 4, Cleveland 0DIVISION SERIESAmerican LeagueBoston 3, Tampa Bay 1Boston 12, Tampa Bay 2Boston 7, Tampa Bay 4Tampa Bay 5, Boston 4Boston 3, Tampa Bay 1Detroit 3, Oakland 2Detroit 3, Oakland 2Oakland 1, Detroit 0Oakland 6, Detroit 3Detroit 8, Oakland 6Detroit 3, Oakland 0National LeagueSt. Louis 3, Pittsburgh 2St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 3St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 1Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 1Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 1Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3Los Angeles 13, Atlanta 6Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 3LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIESAmerican LeagueBoston 4, Detroit 2Detroit 1, Boston 0Boston 6, Detroit 5Boston 1, Detroit 0Detroit 7, Boston 3Boston 4, Detroit 3Boston 5, Detroit 2National LeagueSt. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2St. Louis 3, Los Angeles 2, 13 inningsSt. Louis 1, Los Angeles 0Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 0St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2Los Angeles 6, St. Louis 4St. Louis 9, Los Angeles 0WORLD SERIESBoston 4, St. Louis 2Boston 8, St. Louis 1St. Louis 4, Boston 2St. Louis 5, Boston 4Boston 4, St. Louis 2Boston 3, St. Louis 1Boston 6, St. Louis 1
NBA StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBPhiladelphia 2 0 1.000 —Toronto 1 1 .500 1New York 1 1 .500 1Brooklyn 0 1 .000 1½Boston 0 2 .000 2Southeast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 1 1 .500 —Charlotte 1 1 .500 —Miami 1 1 .500 —Orlando 1 2 .333 ½Washington 0 2 .000 1Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 2 0 1.000 —Detroit 1 0 1.000 ½Chicago 1 1 .500 1Cleveland 1 1 .500 1Milwaukee 1 1 .500 1WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBHouston 2 0 1.000 —San Antonio 1 0 1.000 ½Dallas 1 1 .500 1Memphis 0 1 .000 1½New Orleans 0 2 .000 2Northwest Division W L Pct GBMinnesota 2 0 1.000 —Oklahoma City 1 1 .500 1Denver 0 1 .000 1½Portland 0 1 .000 1½Utah 0 1 .000 1½Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBPhoenix 1 0 1.000 —Sacramento 1 0 1.000 —Golden State 1 1 .500 ½L.A. Clippers 1 1 .500 ½L.A. Lakers 1 1 .500 ½Thursday’s GamesChicago 82, New York 81L.A. Clippers 126, Golden State 115Friday’s GamesOrlando 110, New Orleans 90Philadelphia 109, Washington 102Charlotte 90, Cleveland 84Milwaukee 105, Boston 98Atlanta 102, Toronto 95Minnesota 100, Oklahoma City 81Houston 113, Dallas 105Detroit at Memphis, lateMiami at Brooklyn, latePortland at Denver, lateUtah at Phoenix, lateL.A. Clippers at Sacramento, lateSan Antonio at L.A. Lakers, lateSaturday’s GamesCleveland at Indiana, 7 p.m.Chicago at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.Charlotte at New Orleans, 8 p.m.Memphis at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Toronto at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.Houston at Utah, 9 p.m.San Antonio at Portland, 10 p.m.Sacramento at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.Sunday’s GamesBrooklyn at Orlando, 6 p.m.Washington at Miami, 6 p.m.Boston at Detroit, 6 p.m.Phoenix at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.Minnesota at New York, 7:30 p.m.Atlanta at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
NHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAToronto 14 10 4 0 20 48 32Tampa Bay 13 9 4 0 18 43 33Boston 12 8 4 0 16 35 22Detroit 13 7 4 2 16 29 34Montreal 14 8 6 0 16 40 27Ottawa 13 4 6 3 11 39 43Florida 13 3 8 2 8 26 46Buffalo 15 2 12 1 5 23 43Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 14 10 4 0 20 45 33N.Y. Islanders 13 5 5 3 13 42 43Washington 13 6 7 0 12 41 38Carolina 13 4 6 3 11 26 39N.Y. Rangers 12 5 7 0 10 20 37Columbus 12 5 7 0 10 33 33New Jersey 12 3 5 4 10 26 37Philadelphia 12 3 9 0 6 20 37WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAColorado 11 10 1 0 20 35 16Chicago 13 8 2 3 19 45 38St. Louis 11 8 1 2 18 42 25Minnesota 14 7 4 3 17 34 34Nashville 13 6 5 2 14 27 37Winnipeg 14 5 7 2 12 34 40Dallas 12 5 6 1 11 31 36Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GASan Jose 13 10 1 2 22 51 24Anaheim 14 10 3 1 21 44 36Phoenix 14 9 3 2 20 48 44Vancouver 15 9 5 1 19 42 41Los Angeles 14 9 5 0 18 40 36Calgary 12 5 5 2 12 36 43Edmonton 14 3 9 2 8 36 54NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Thursday’s GamesBoston 3, Anaheim 2, SOPhoenix 5, Nashville 4, SON.Y. Rangers 2, Buffalo 0Friday’s GamesN.Y. Islanders 5, Ottawa 4, SOWashington 7, Philadelphia 0Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 2Tampa Bay 3, Carolina 0St. Louis 4, Florida 0Minnesota 4, Montreal 3
Colorado at Dallas, lateDetroit at Calgary, lateSaturday’s GamesChicago at Winnipeg, 3 p.m.Anaheim at Buffalo, 7 p.m.St. Louis at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at New Jersey, 7 p.m.Boston at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.Carolina at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.Florida at Washington, 7 p.m.Pittsburgh at Columbus, 7 p.m.Toronto at Vancouver, 7 p.m.Montreal at Colorado, 10 p.m.Detroit at Edmonton, 10 p.m.Nashville at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.Phoenix at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.Sunday’s GamesDallas at Ottawa, 1 p.m.Calgary at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.New Jersey at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Big Ten StandingsLegends Conf. All Games W L W LMichigan St. 4 0 7 1Michigan 2 1 6 1Nebraska 2 1 5 2Minnesota 2 2 6 2Iowa 2 2 5 3Northwestern 0 4 4 4LeadersOhio St. 4 0 8 0Wisconsin 3 1 5 2Penn St. 1 2 4 3Indiana 1 2 3 4Illinois 0 3 3 4Purdue 0 3 1 6Saturday’s GamesMinnesota at IndianaIllinois at Penn StateMichigan at Michigan StateNorthwestern at NebraskaOhio State at PurdueWisconsin at Iowa
Mid-American StandingsEast Conf. All Games W L W LBuffalo 4 0 6 2Ohio 3 1 6 2Bowling Green 3 1 5 3UMass 1 3 1 7Akron 1 4 2 7Kent St. 1 4 2 7Miami (Ohio) 0 4 0 8WestBall St. 5 0 8 1N. Illinois 4 0 8 0Toledo 3 1 5 3Cent. Michigan 2 2 3 5W. Michigan 1 4 1 8E. Michigan 0 4 1 7Saturday’s GamesNorthern Illinois at UMassKent State at AkronEastern Michigan at ToledoTuesday’s GamesBowling Green at Miami Ohio at BuffaloWednesday’s GameCentral Michigan at Ball State
MIAA Standings Conf. All Games W L W LAlbion 3 0 5 2Adrian 3 1 6 2Hope 3 1 6 2Olivet 2 1 6 1Kalamazoo 1 2 3 4Trine 0 3 3 4Alma 0 4 0 8Saturday’s GamesOlivet at Albion, 1 p.m.Hope at Trine, 1 p.m. Adrian at Kalamazoo, 1 p.m.
Mid-States Football Assoc.Mideast League Standings
Conf. All Games W L W LSaint Francis (IL) 3 1 5 3Saint Francis (IN) 2 1 5 2Taylor 2 1 4 3Marian 2 1 4 4Robert Morris (IL) 2 2 6 3Siena Heights 1 3 4 4Concordia (MI) 0 3 1 6Saturday’s GamesConcordia (MI) at Saint Francis (IN)Saint Francis (IL) at Siena HeightsTaylor at Marian Olivet Nazarene at William PennSaint Xavier at Saint AmbroseGrand View at Waldorf
College Football ScheduleSaturday, Nov. 2EASTVirginia Tech (6-2) at Boston College (3-4), NoonIllinois (3-4) at Penn St. (4-3), NoonColumbia (0-6) at Yale (3-3), NoonBryant (4-4) at Robert Morris (3-4), NoonTemple (1-7) at Rutgers (4-3), NoonN. Illinois (8-0) at UMass (1-7), NoonPenn (4-2) at Brown (4-2), 12:30 p.m.Stony Brook (3-4) at Maine (6-2), 12:30 p.m.Wake Forest (4-4) at Syracuse (3-4), 12:30 p.m.Bucknell (3-4) at Colgate (3-5), 1 p.m.Holy Cross (3-6) at Fordham (8-0), 1 p.m.Lafayette (2-5) at Georgetown (1-7), 1 p.m.Jacksonville (4-4) at Marist (5-3), 1 p.m.Cornell (1-5) at Princeton (5-1), 1 p.m.Monmouth (NJ) (4-4) at Sacred Heart (7-2), 1 p.m.CCSU (3-5) at Wagner (2-6), 1 p.m.Dartmouth (3-3) at Harvard (5-1), 5 p.m.St. Francis (Pa.) (3-4) at Duquesne (4-3), 6:10 p.m.Delaware (6-2) at Towson (8-1), 7 p.m.SOUTHSouthern Miss. (0-7) at Marshall (4-3), NoonBethune-Cookman (7-1) at NC Central (4-4), NoonMississippi St. (4-3) at South Carolina (6-2), 12:21 p.m.North Carolina (2-5) at NC State (3-4), 12:30 p.m.Mercer (7-1) at Davidson (0-8), 1 p.m.Tennessee St. (7-2) at E. Kentucky (5-3), 1 p.m.Furman (3-5) at Georgia Southern (4-3), 1 p.m.W. Kentucky (4-4) at Georgia St. (0-8), 1 p.m.Hampton (3-5) at Morgan St. (2-6), 1 p.m.Va. Lynchburg (2-5) at NC A&T (4-3), 1 p.m.Campbell (1-7) at Stetson (1-6), 1 p.m.Middle Tennessee (4-4) at UAB (2-5), 1 p.m.Warner (0-9) at Gardner-Webb (4-4), 1:30 p.m.New Hampshire (4-3) at William & Mary (5-3), 1:30 p.m.Howard (3-5) at Delaware St. (3-5), 2 p.m.Florida A&M (2-6) at Norfolk St. (2-6), 2 p.m.Rhode Island (3-6) at Old Dominion (5-3), 2 p.m.Charleston Southern (7-2) at Presbyte-rian (3-4), 2 p.m.SC State (5-3) at Savannah St. (1-8), 2 p.m.Samford (6-2) at The Citadel (2-6), 2 p.m.Murray St. (5-3) at UT-Martin (5-3), 2 p.m.Villanova (4-4) at James Madison (5-3), 2:30 p.m.Charlotte (4-4) at Coastal Carolina (8-0), 3 p.m.MVSU (1-7) at Grambling St. (0-8), 3 p.m.Chattanooga (6-2) at Appalachian St. (2-6), 3:30 p.m.Georgia (4-3) vs. Florida (4-3) at Jacksonville, Fla., 3:30 p.m.VMI (1-7) at Liberty (4-4), 3:30 p.m.Clemson (7-1) at Virginia (2-6), 3:30 p.m.Albany (NY) (1-7) at Richmond (3-5), 4 p.m.Alabama A&M (2-6) at Alcorn St. (7-2), 5 p.m.Jacksonville St. (6-2) at Austin Peay (0-8), 5 p.m.Tulane (6-2) at FAU (2-6), 5 p.m.New Mexico St. (1-7) at Louisiana-La-fayette (5-2), 5 p.m.East Carolina (5-2) at FIU (1-6), 6 p.m.Pittsburgh (4-3) at Georgia Tech (5-3), 7 p.m.Alabama St. (6-2) at Kentucky (1-6), 7:30 p.m.Arkansas St. (3-4) at South Alabama (3-4), 7:30 p.m.Miami (7-0) at Florida St. (7-0), 8 p.m.
SE Louisiana (6-2) at McNeese St. (7-1), 8 p.m.Cent. Arkansas (5-3) at Northwestern St. (3-5), 8 p.m.MIDWESTOhio St. (8-0) at Purdue (1-6), NoonWisconsin (5-2) at Iowa (5-3), NoonButler (6-3) at Dayton (6-2), 1 p.m.Tennessee Tech (3-6) at E. Illinois (7-1), 1 p.m.San Diego (5-3) at Valparaiso (1-7), 1 p.m.Morehead St. (3-5) at Drake (4-4), 2 p.m.N. Iowa (4-4) at Illinois St. (4-4), 2 p.m.Indiana St. (1-7) at Missouri St. (3-6), 2 p.m.Urbana (6-2) at SE Missouri (1-7), 2 p.m.Youngstown St. (7-1) at South Dakota (4-4), 2 p.m.S. Illinois (4-4) at W. Illinois (3-6), 2 p.m.Kent St. (2-7) at Akron (2-7), 3:30 p.m.Minnesota (6-2) at Indiana (3-4), 3:30 p.m.Iowa St. (1-6) at Kansas St. (3-4), 3:30 p.m.Michigan (6-1) at Michigan St. (7-1), 3:30 p.m.Northwestern (4-4) at Nebraska (5-2), 3:30 p.m.Navy (4-3) at Notre Dame (6-2), 3:30 p.m.Tennessee (4-4) at Missouri (7-1), 7 p.m.E. Michigan (1-7) at Toledo (5-3), 7 p.m.SOUTHWESTWest Virginia (3-5) at TCU (3-5), 3:30 p.m.Kansas (2-5) at Texas (5-2), 3:30 p.m.UTSA (3-5) at Tulsa (2-5), 3:30 p.m.Sam Houston St. (6-2) vs. Stephen F. Austin (3-5) at Houston, 4 p.m.Auburn (7-1) at Arkansas (3-5), 6 p.m.Nicholls St. (4-4) at Lamar (3-5), 7 p.m.Oklahoma St. (6-1) at Texas Tech (7-1), 7 p.m.UTEP (1-6) at Texas A&M (6-2), 9 p.m.FAR WESTArmy (3-5) at Air Force (1-7), NoonArizona (5-2) at California (1-7), 3:30 p.m.Montana St. (6-2) at N. Colorado (1-7), 3:40 p.m.San Jose St. (4-3) at UNLV (5-3), 4 p.m.Hawaii (0-7) at Utah St. (4-4), 4 p.m.Weber St. (1-7) at Portland St. (4-4), 4:05 p.m.Montana (6-2) at Sacramento St. (4-4), 4:05 p.m.Texas St. (5-3) at Idaho (1-7), 5 p.m.E. Washington (6-2) at Idaho St. (3-5), 5:05 p.m.North Dakota (2-6) at N. Arizona (6-2), 7 p.m.Cal Poly (3-5) at UC Davis (3-6), 7 p.m.Colorado (3-4) at UCLA (5-2), 7:30 p.m.Boise St. (5-3) at Colorado St. (4-4), 8 p.m.New Mexico (2-5) at San Diego St. (3-4), 8 p.m.Nevada (3-5) at Fresno St. (7-0), 10:30 p.m.
Womens College Basketball Preseason Top 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ preseason women’s college basketball poll, with fi rst-place votes in parentheses, 2012-13 fi nal records, total points based on 25 points for a fi rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and 2012-13 fi nal ranking: Record Pts Prv1. UConn (36) 35-4 900 32. Duke 33-2 860 53. Stanford 33-3 799 44. Tennessee 27-8 752 105. Louisville 29-9 714 166. Notre Dame 35-2 705 27. Kentucky 30-6 678 78. Maryland 26-8 668 129. California 32-3 662 610. Baylor 34-2 569 111. Oklahoma 24-11 461 —12. North Carolina 29-7 452 1313. Penn St. 26-6 392 814. Dayton 28-3 368 1815. LSU 22-12 365 —16. Texas A&M 25-10 363 917. Nebraska 25-9 340 2418. Purdue 25-9 225 2119. Colorado 25-7 205 1920. Michigan St. 25-9 177 —21. Oklahoma St. 22-11 144 —22. South Carolina 25-8 143 1723. Iowa St. 24-9 126 2324. Georgia 28-7 99 1425. Gonzaga 27-6 81 —Others receiving votes: West Virginia 77, UCLA 70, Vanderbilt 61, Green Bay 48, DePaul 44, Chattanooga 41, Georgia Tech 39, Creighton 21, Middle Tennessee 11, Marist 10, Missouri 10, Texas 7, Washington 6, Florida St. 2, Quinnipiac 2, James Madison 1, South Florida 1, UT-Martin 1.
World Golf Ranking1. Tiger Woods USA 12.562. Adam Scott AUS 8.943. Phil Mickelson USA 8.064. Henrik Stenson SWE 8.025. Justin Rose ENG 7.326. Rory McIlroy NIR 6.817. Steve Stricker USA 6.478. Matt Kuchar USA 6.409. Brandt Snedeker USA 6.1510. Jason Dufner USA 5.7111. Zach Johnson USA 5.2212. Graeme McDowell NIR 5.0313. Jim Furyk USA 5.0114. Luke Donald ENG 4.9015. Keegan Bradley USA 4.8716. Webb Simpson USA 4.7117. Jason Day AUS 4.7018. Charl Schwartzel SAF 4.4719. Sergio Garcia ESP 4.3620. Jordan Spieth USA 4.2621. Lee Westwood ENG 4.2022. Ian Poulter ENG 4.0923. Dustin Johnson USA 4.0824. Ernie Els SAF 4.0425. Bill Haas USA 3.7426. Hunter Mahan USA 3.7327. Nick Watney USA 3.7228. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 3.7029. Bubba Watson USA 3.6730. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 3.51
LPGA Player of the Year Standings
1. Inbee Park, 2902. Suzann Pettersen, 2523. Stacy Lewis, 2004. Beatriz Recari, 965. So Yeon Ryu, 886. Hee Young Park, 787. Shanshan Feng, 718. I.K. Kim, 689. Na Yeon Choi, 649. Karrie Webb, 6411. Lexi Thompson, 6312. Jiyai Shin, 6013. Angela Stanford, 5714. Amy Yang, 5415. Cristie Kerr, 5316. Ilhee Lee, 4817. Paula Creamer, 4718. Lizette Salas, 4619. Catriona Matthew, 4520. Caroline Hedwall, 4121. Jessica Korda, 3922. Chella Choi, 3822. Jennifer Johnson, 3824. Karine Icher, 3425. Morgan Pressel, 3326. Jodi Ewart Shadoff, 3227. Anna Nordqvist, 2928. Pornanong Phatlum, 2828. Yani Tseng, 2830. Gerina Piller, 24
WGC-HSBC Champions Scores
FridayAt Sheshan International Golf ClubShanghaiPurse: $8.5 millionYardage: 7,266; Par: 72Second RoundDustin Johnson 69-63—132Bubba Watson 68-69—137Boo Weekley 70-67—137Rory McIlroy 65-72—137Tommy Fleetwood 68-70—138Sergio Garcia 70-68—138Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 67-71—138Ernie Els 69-69—138Graeme McDowell 69-69—138Ian Poulter 71-67—138Jin Jeong 70-69—139Wen-Chong Liang 72-67—139Phil Mickelson 71-68—139Justin Rose 68-71—139
Keegan Bradley 71-68—139Graham Delaet 71-68—139Jordan Spieth 68-71—139Billy Horschel 71-69—140Louis Oosthuizen 70-70—140Jason Dufner 73-67—140Gaganjeet Bhullar 69-71—140Luke Donald 70-71—141Mikko Ilonen 72-69—141Francesco Molinari 72-69—141Jamie Donaldson 67-74—141Mark Brown 72-69—141Matteo Manassero 72-70—142Chris Wood 71-71—142Paul Casey 69-73—142Ken Duke 70-72—142Kevin Streelman 70-73—143Peter Hanson 70-73—143Gregory Bourdy 75-68—143Brian Gay 71-72—143Hao Tong Li 72-71—143Scott Hend 69-74—143Derek Ernst 71-72—143David Lynn 74-70—144Rickie Fowler 74-70—144Darren Fichardt 70-74—144Bill Haas 72-72—144Martin Kaymer 70-74—144Thongchai Jaidee 76-68—144Ryan Moore 70-74—144Peter Uihlein 71-73—144Lee Westwood 71-73—144Bo Van Pelt 77-67—144Wenyi Huang 70-74—144Hiroyuki Fujita 75-70—145Jonas Blixt 70-75—145Masahiro Kawamura 73-72—145Michael Hendry 72-73—145Scott Piercy 72-73—145Jaco Van Zyl 72-73—145D.a. Points 72-74—146Stephen Gallacher 73-73—146Michael Thompson 74-72—146Thomas Bjorn 74-72—146Jimmy Walker 73-73—146John Merrick 72-75—147Richard Sterne 74-73—147Kiradech Aphibarnrat 69-78—147David Howell 72-75—147Brandt Snedeker 73-74—147Daniel Popovic 77-71—148Ashun Wu 74-75—149Nick Watney 75-74—149Seuk-Hyun Baek 81-68—149Branden Grace 77-72—149Henrik Stenson 74-76—150Raphael Jacquelin 81-70—151Miguel Angel Jimenez 75-76—151Mu Hu 76-75—151Brett Rumford 75-77—152George Coetzee 75-77—152Ryo Ishikawa 81-72—153Ming-Jie Huang 83-77—160Hideki Matsuyama 71-WD
WTA Garanti Koza Tournament of Champions
FridayAt Armeec ArenaSofi a, BulgariaPurse: $750,000Surface: Hard-IndoorRound RobinSinglesGroup SerdikaAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova (6), Russia, def. Alize Cornet (7), France, 6-2, 6-2.Standings: Halep, 3-0 (sets 6-0); Pavlyuchenkova, 2-1 (4-2); Cornet, 1-2 (2-24; Svitolina, 0-2 (0-4); Kirilenko, 0-1 (0-2), withdrew.Group SredetsElena Vesnina (5), Russia, def. Ana Ivanovic (2), Serbia, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (1).Samantha Stosur (4), Australia, def. Tsvetana Pironkova (8), Bulgaria, 6-1, 6-4.Standings: Stosur, 2-1 (5-2); Ivanovic, 2-1 (5-3); Vesnina, 2-1 (4-4); Pironkova, 0-3 (1-6).
TransactionsBASEBALLMajor League BaseballMLB — Suspended Chicago White Sox minor league RHP Nicholas Blount (Great Falls-Pioneer) 50 games after testing positive for an amphetamine. Suspended Chicago Cubs minor league SS Elliot Soto (Daytona-FSL) 50 games after a second violation for a drug of abuse.American LeagueCHICAGO WHITE SOX — Sent RHP Simon Castro outright to Charlotte (IL).CLEVELAND INDIANS — Exercised the 2014 contract option on RHP Ubaldo Jimenez, who voided the contract. Declined the 2014 contract option on OF Jason Kubel. Agreed to terms with INF Ryan Rohlinger and RHP J.C. Ramirez on minor league contracts.DETROIT TIGERS — Declined their 2014 contract option on RHP Jose Veras. Announced LHP Darin Downs was claimed off waivers by Houston and OF Matt Tuiasosopo was claimed off waivers by Arizona. Reinstated INF Danny Worth from the 60-day DL.KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Named Brian Poldberg manager of Omaha (PCL), Vance Wilson manager of Northwest Arkansas (Texas) and Darryl Kennedy manager of Wilmington (Carolina).NEW YORK YANKEES — Agreed to terms with SS Derek Jeter on a one-year contract.OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Exercised the 2014 contract options on LHP Brett Anderson and OF Coco Crisp. Declined to exercise the 2014 contract options on C Kurt Suzuki and OF Chris Young.TEXAS RANGERS — Claimed RHP Chaz Roe off waivers from Arizona (NL).TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Exercised the 2014 contract options on RHP Casey Janssen, 1B Adam Lind and INF Mark DeRosa. Declined the 2014 contract option on INF Munenori Kawasaki. Reinstated OF Melky Cabrera, LHP Brett Cecil, RHP Brandon Morrow, INF Maicer Izturis, LHP Juan Perez, RHP Josh Johnson and RHP Ramon Ortiz from the 60-day DL.National LeagueNEW YORK METS — Declined the 2014 contract option on LHP Johan Santana.BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationPHILADELPHIA 76ERS — Exercised the third-year team options on F Arnett Moultrie and G Tony Wroten.FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueNFL — Suspended Jacksonville WR Justin Blackmon indefi nitely for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy.HOCKEYNational Hockey LeagueNHL — Suspended Toronto F Carter Ashton two games for boarding Calgary F Derek Smith in an Oct. 30 game.DETROIT RED WINGS — Recalled G Petr Mrazek from Grand Rapids (AHL). Agreed to terms with RW Zach Nastasiuk on a three-year entry-level contract.ECHLECHL — Suspended Las Vegas’ Adam Huxley three games and fi ned him an undisclosed amount for his actions in an Oct. 29 game against Florida.Southern Professional Hockey LeaguePEORIA RIVERMEN — Signed C Adam Hartley.LACROSSENational Lacrosse LeagueCOLORADO MAMMOTH — Signed T Joey Cupido, T Cam Holding, T Jamie Lincoln, T Cameron Mann, F Carter Bender and D Patrick O’Meara.SOCCERMajor League SoccerD.C. UNITED — Declined its option on MF-F Syamsir Alam.COLLEGEARKANSAS — Suspended men’s junior basketball F Ky Madden two exhibition games and the season opener for a violation of team rules.IOWA — Dismissed LB Marcus Collins after being charged with drunken driving.RAMAPO — Named Bridgette Quimpo softball coach and transpor-tation coordinator.TENNESSEE — Announced the NCAA ruled DL Maurice Couch permanently ineligible following a September report that he received improper benefi ts.
SCOREBOARD•
kpcnews.com B3SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
SOCCER Premier League, Chelsea vs. Newcastle, NBCSN, 7:40 a.m. Premier League, Manchester United vs. Fulham, NBCSN, 9:55 a.m. Premier League, Arsenal vs. Liverpool, NBC, 1:30 p.m. MLS Playoffs, New England vs. Sporting Kansas City, NBCSN, 8 p.m.AUTO RACING Formula One, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix qualifying, CNBC, 9 a.m. NASCAR Sprint Cup, AAA Tex-as 500 final practice, Fox Sports 1, 2 p.m. NASCAR Nationwide, O’Reilly Auto Parts 300, ESPN2, 3:30 p.m.S PORTS TALK East Noble Footbal l Coaches Corner, WAWK-FM 95.5, 11 a.m.H.S. CROSS COUNTRY IHSAA State Finals, ustream.tv/channel/terre-haute-north-video, noonGOLF Champions Tour, Charles Schwab Cup Championship, Golf Channel , 4:30 p.m. HSBC Champions, Golf Channel, 11 p.m.COLLEGE FOOTBALL Ohio State vs. Purdue, BTN, The Fan 1380 AM, WBNO-FM 100.9, noon Wisconsin vs. Iowa, ABC, noon Virginia Tech vs. Boston Col-lege, ESPN2, noon Ill inois vs. Penn State, ESPN, noon Hope vs. Trine, WEAX-FM 88.3, 12:30 p.m. Southern Mississippi vs. Mar-shall , CBS Sports, 12:30 p.m. Middle Tennessee vs. UAB, Fox Sports 1, 1 p.m. Minnesota vs. Indiana, WAWK-FM 95.5, BTN, 3:30 p.m. Michigan vs. Michigan State, ABC, 3:30 p.m. Clemson vs. Virginia , E S PN, 3:30 p.m. Navy vs. Notre Dame, N BC, 3:30 p.m. Georgia vs. Flor ida, CBS, 3:30 p.m. Northwestern vs. Nebraska, BTN, 3:30 p.m. Iowa State vs. Kansas State, Fox Sports 1, 3:30 p.m. Hawaii vs . Utah State, CBS Sports , 4 p.m. Toledo vs. Eastern Michigan, The Fan 106.7 FM, 6 p.m. Auburn vs. Arkansas, E S PN2, 6 p.m. Tennessee vs. Missouri , E S PN, 7 p.m. Oklahoma State vs. Texas Tech, Fox, 7 p.m. Colorado vs. UCLA, Fox Sports 1, 7:30 p.m. Miami vs. Flor ida State, ABC, 8 p.m. Boise State vs. Colorado State, CBS Sports , 8 p.m. UTE P vs. Texas A&M, E S PN2, 9 p.m.HORS E RACI NG Breeders’ Cup: Juveni le Fi l -l ies, N BCS N, 3:05 p.m. ; World Championships, N BCS N, 3:30 p.m. ; Classic , N BC, 8 p.m.NBA BASKETBALL Chicago vs. Philadelphia, WGN, 7:30 p.m.
On The Air•
WEST LAFAYETTE — Landowners who to want preserve their agricultural land and prevent future development can consider granting a conservation easement.
A conservation easement is the gifting of the development rights on a piece of land to a land trust, which is a private, nonprofi t organization that works to conserve land. In doing so, the landowner not only ensures the land can never be commercially developed, even if sold, but also receives federal income tax deductions.
“Conservation easements on farmland are authorized by Indiana
law,” said Gerry Harrison, Purdue Extension agricul-tural economist. “The grantee, or charitable entity, has the responsi-bility under the law to see that the land is not developed for anything other than the landown-er’s retained purposes: agricultural production and perhaps a homestead.”
In this type of voluntary agreement, the landowner retains land ownership, while the land trust makes sure that the terms of the conservation easement are followed. Landowners can reserve certain rights in the deed of the agreement, such as building a house or farm facilities — something Harrison said they should be careful to consider.
Landowners considering a conservation easement also should consider a current tax amendment that allows greater-than-normal
tax deductions.“The gift of a conser-
vation easement provides a federal income tax charitable deduction,” Harrison said. “The allowable charitable deduction was expanded by an amendment to the Internal Revenue Code in 2006. That provision was temporary, but has been extended through 2013.”
The temporary provision allows farmers or ranchers to deduct 100 percent of their contribution base (adjusted gross income computed without any net operating loss carryback to the taxable year) in a given year if at least 50 percent of their income is derived from farming.
For example, if a farmer had an adjusted gross income of $100,000 and gave a $90,000 conser-vation easement, plus $10,000 in other charitable
contributions, he or she could deduct the entire $90,000 in the tax year of the donation, as well as the additional $10,000. With a higher value conservation easement, the taxpayer could carry over anything above $100,000 for a maximum of 15 years.
Farming and ranching corporations that donate conservation easements also can qualify for the 100 percent limit.
According to Harrison, ongoing government budget discussions mean the extension of the enhanced deduction for the gift of a conservation easement might or might not be available after 2013.
Even if the enhanced deduction provision is not extended beyond the end of the year, Harrison said, gifting a conserva-tion easement still has tax benefi ts.
B4 kpcnews.com AGRIBUSINESS •
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KPCToday’s Today’s
11-2
WESTFORD, Vt. (AP) — A new cyber tool that helps map crops and monitor irrigation systems came to life after a University of Vermont researcher realized farmers just weren’t very good at keeping records.
“They would guess a lot,” said Heather Darby, an agronomist from the Univer-sity of Vermont Extension. “Or they’d write it down on little scrap pieces of paper or cigarette packs, like anything they had laying around they’d write it on, and then they’d show up for class, and we’d try to decipher all these little notes.”
Noticing that farmers had grown accustomed to carrying cellphones, whether in the fi eld, on tractors or in the barn, she developed the goCrop Web and mobile app.
The project was awarded about $400,000 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture this spring to expand the app for use around the Northeast and California, where soil conditions are different, and add functions for mapping, grazing and pest manage-ment.
Across the country,
farmers are relying on new cyber tools to manage manure and fertilizer applications, monitor irrigation systems, coordinate harvests and check the weather and real-time agricultural markets.
“The tech-savvy farmer is able to speed up the decision-making cycle and do his or her job much more effectively,” Ben Potter, technology editor for Farm Journal, wrote in an email.
In Giltner, Neb., Zach Hunnicutt carries his iPad and smartphone wherever he goes on his farm, and he uses a combination of apps. He said he used his iPad to monitor humidity levels during a soybean harvest at the 2,500-acre farm.
The tools digitize informa-tion that used to be kept in notebooks and stores it in the cloud, where it can be shared with fellow farmers and can’t blow out of a pickup or tractor and get lost.
The FieldView app interfaces with their tractor and planter at planting time and creates maps to reference what hybrids they’ve planted where. SoilWeb tells him what soil type he’s standing
on and what’s near him so he doesn’t have to look at maps or read through the legend. The farm can also control their irrigation pivots from a smartphone.
From a practical standpoint, Hunnicutt said, the app helps farmers check irrigation systems without burning fuel and tells them when something shuts down.
It also lets farmers know that crops are getting water when they need it, he said.
“So there’s a defi nite bottom line improvement just straight from those applica-tions,” he said.
According to Josh Flint, editor of Prairie Farmer, which focuses primarily on Illinois agriculture, one of the latest developments is the use of aerial drones to scout fi elds faster.
“Farmers are defi nitely adopting more technology at a rapid pace,” Flint said.
The 50 or so dairy farmers in Vermont using the goCrop app, which costs about $250, can get crop reports to see what they’ve done to each fi eld for the whole year. They can print and send their records to the state instead of sitting down at the end of the year and compiling notes.
The app could also save them money by preventing farmers from wasting fertil-izer.
“So next year when we get ready to spread manure, I’ll have everything all documented, and it will tell us how many loads of manure
we can put on,” said Tony Pouliot, who farms with his father in Westford. “Then when we come in to plant the corn, I know how much fertilizer to use because of the program. …There’s no guessing. It’s all straight forward.”
Farmers also can use the app while cutting corn or grass in the fi eld.
“In the fi eld chopping, you add the number of takes. You can just keep hitting the tab on your iPhone. That’s another load, that’s another. It’s kind of neat,” said Nancy Fiske, of Windfall Acres Farm in Franklin.
But the big benefi t is reducing the need for manual record keeping.
“It’s a constant challenge to get dairy farmers to record keep at all,” said Richard Kersbergen, a University of Maine extension professor.
Kersbergen says the state is planning to evaluate and potentially revise its program for managing nutrients on farms and fi nd alternate ways for farmers to meet the law.
“GoCrop would defi nitely be a potential useful tool in that manner.”
More farmers using high-tech apps to sow crops
The goCrop app is one of many new high-tech applications being used by farmers across the nation to increase crop production.
AP
JUDY OXENGER JOHNSTON
Corn harvest in SteubenThe Stoy Farms corn harvest on S.R. 120 near 850 East in Steuben County last week came during the fi rst snow fall of the season.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — It’s a beast of a weed, creeping north into the Midwest from cotton country.
Palmer amaranth can shoot up as high as 7 feet, and just one plant can produce up to a million seeds. Herbicide is increas-ingly futile against it, and the weed’s thick stems and deep roots make it hard work to clear by hand. It can slash yields and profi ts when it gets out of control.
Midwestern weed scientists are sounding the alarm because the plant recently turned up in Iowa and can cause deep losses in corn and soybean yields.
“This is not just a nuisance. This is a game-changer,” warned Purdue University weed scientist Bill Johnson, whose state has well-established pockets of the plant.
Cotton growers in the South already spend about $100 million a year to try to keep it out of their fi elds, University of Georgia scientist Stanley Culpepper said.
“This is a crop robber,” said W.C. Grimes, who farms 1,600 acres of cotton, peanuts and corn near Twin City in eastern Georgia. “It will steal your profi t. It will choke your cotton out, and anything else you’re trying to grow.”
Grimes said he was losing up to 200 pounds of cotton per acre until farmers learned the key to overcoming Palmer
amaranth’s resistance to glyphosate — sold under brand names like Roundup — was to continuously change herbicides.
His advice to Midwest-erner farmers: Keep your eyes open and do whatever it takes to kill the weed as soon as it turns up.
One thing that makes Palmer amaranth so much tougher than other weeds is that one plant can produce 500,000 to 1 million seeds. A combine can scatter seeds from a couple plants across an entire fi eld, Johnson said, and the untrained eye can’t tell the difference between Palmer amaranth and more common but less aggressive Corn Belt weeds, such as waterhemp and other kinds of pigweed.
Palmer amaranth probably took root in Kendell Culp’s fi elds near Rensselaer in northwestern Indiana last year, but he wasn’t aware of it until a seed salesman spotted it this summer. Culp pulled it up by hand — fi lling a pickup truck bed from one spot and a half load from another.
“Unfortunately I think it’s going to be a pretty diffi cult weed to control for us,” Culp said. He’s working with a consultant on strategies for deploying herbicides on his 1,750 acres of corn, soybean and wheat.
Palmer amaranth often hitches a ride on dirt stuck to farm machinery. It may also hide in grass seeds planted as cover for conser-vation programs.
‘Beast’ of a weed headed into Midwest
Conservation easements on the rise
KPC Media Group Inc.kpcnews.com
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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency (FSA) announced Friday that the processing and disbursement of 2013 crop commodity loans has resumed.
The commodity loan programs provide interim fi nancing to producers for agricultural commodities stored after harvest and then sold throughout the year. Crop year 2013 commodity loan-making was suspended
Oct. 1 of this year, to make changes necessary to accommodate the automatic funding reductions known as sequester. Sequestration is mandated by the Budget Control Act of 2011.
Producers requesting 2013 crop commodity loans on their harvested commod-ities will have a 5.1 percent reduction to the loan amount upon its disbursement, due to the sequestration. Commodity loans issued by marketing associations and
loan servicing agents are also subject to the sequestra-tion reduction.
During the period that loan-making was suspended, producers were still able to submit loan applications to their county FSA offi ces, marketing associations and loan servicing agents.
For further information about commodity marketing loans, farmers may contact their local county FSA offi ce or go online to fsa.usda.gov.
Crop commodity loans resumed
AshleyASHLEY CHURCH OF GOD101 N. Gonser St. Ashley; Pastor Bob Neace, 260-587-9565; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Prayer Service 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m.; Tuesday Farm Wagon 10 a.m.; or visit our website at AshleyChurchofGod.comASHLEY UNITED METHODISTSunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Pastor Don Wadkins. BARKER’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST3439 C.R. 4, Ashley; Pastor Rick Pettys (260) 417-0248. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:45 a.m.INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPEL1302 Gosner St., Ashley; Mark Marquart, Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Evening Service, 6 p.m. Wed. Service, 6 p.m.LOVE DIVINE BAPTIST CHURCHCorner Of C.R. 23 & S.R. 4. Pastor Phil Lucas, 854-4465. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.; Worship 11 a.m.; Thurs. Prayer Service 6:30 p.m. PLEASANT CHAPEL CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN1993 C.R. 8, Ashley, Phone 587-3856; Parsonage: 2028 C.R. 8, Ashley; Valarie Kline, Pastor; 587-3122; Email: [email protected]. Sunday Wor-ship, 9:15 a.m.; Bible Study, 10:30 a.m. ST. JOHN’S UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST0027 C.R. 23, Ashley, Near S.R. 4. Kim Nusbaum, Pastor, 541-0910; [email protected]; Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Saturday, “Worship While You Work” Service, 5:30 p.m.
AuburnAUBURN ALLIANCE CHURCH805 Old Brick Road; Phone 925-1320; auburnalliancechurch.org. Pastor Shaun DuFault; Sunday Group Bible Studies, 9 a.m., Studying Exodus in Morning Worship, 10 a.m., Studying Hell in Evening Worship, 6 p.m.; Wednesday: Acts 2 Prayer Group, 6:45 p.m.; Community Squared, 7 p.m.AUBURN BAPTIST(Southern Baptist) 500 W. Ensley Ave.; Phone 337-1002; Rev. Bill Weaver, Pas-tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Evening Worship, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday: Prayer & Bible Study, 6:30 p.m.; CEF Kids Club 6:15-7:30 p.m.AUBURN CHURCH OF CHRIST208 W. Eighteenth St.; Office, 1103 S. Jackson St., 925-3363; Joseph Heins, Minister, 260-443-4480; Travis Fox, Assoc. Minister, 927-7082. Sunday School, 9:15 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Adult Bible Study, Sunday At 6 p.m. & Thursday At 10:30 a.m.; Teen Meeting Wednesday, 6:30-8 p.m. AUBURN PRESBYTERIAN (USA)111 West Twelfth St. Pastor, The Rev. Lyle Ewing. Church Office, 925-2987. Handicapped Accessible. Sunday Worship, 10 a.m.; Friends’ Table, Monday, 11 a.m.; Wednesday Morning Prayer, 7 a.m.; Wednesday Evening Bible Study, 6:30 p.m.; Holy Communion, First Sunday Of The Month; Website: auburnpc.org.AUBURN UNITED PENTECOSTALSeventeenth & Jackson St., Rev. Edward R. Hughes, Pastor. Sunday Services, 2 p.m.; Tuesday Bible Study, 6:30 p.m.; Phone 760-2593.BURNING BUSH MINISTRIES1800 E. Seventh St., Auburn (Heimach Center, East Entrance), 657-5932.Paul Butler, Pastor; Sunday: Prayer 10:30 a.m., Worship 11 a.m.CHURCH OF CHRIST IN AUBURN401 S. Jackson St., Tenth & Jackson Streets, A Cappella Music & Communion Every Sunday. Toby Miller, Minister. 925-0385. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study, 7 p.m.; Fellow-ship Meals, Noon 1st Sunday Of Month.CHURCH OF THE CORNERSTONE1800 E. Seventh St. (Heimach Senior Center); 925-4360; Rev. Henry Dean Woolard. Sunday Worship & Sermon, 9 a.m. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE2301 N. Main St., 925-3480. The Rev. Dan White, Senior Pastor; Doug Thomas, Associate Pastor; Justin Couch, Chil-dren’s Pastor. Sunday: 8:15 a.m. Break-fast Together (Doughnuts, Coffee, Juice); 9 a.m. Sunday School For All Ages; 10 a.m. Worship/Children’s Church. Tuesday: 6 p.m. Cup Of Cold Water Meal; 6:30 p.m. Elevate For Kids Ministry (Transportation Available). Wednesday: 6:30 p.m. Cup Of Cold Water Meal; 7 p.m. Fahrenheit 412, Teen Ministery (Transportation Available). Thursday: 11 a.m. Intercessory Prayer Time.DAYSPRING COMMUNITY CHURCH(A Missionary Church Congregation)2305 N. Indiana Ave. Office: 925-4599; Website dayspringchurch.com. Pastoral Staff: Bill Lyne, Jason Slone, Shawn LaRue, David Foster, Jeanette Beland. Saturday: Worship Gathering, 5 p.m.; Sunday: Worship Gatherings, 9:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.; Middle School Worship 11 a.m.; High School Worship 6:22 p.m.; Dayspring Kids During All Worship Gatherings. Youth & Adult Small Groups Meet During The Week.FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH(Disciples Of Christ) 910 N. Indiana Ave.; 925-2798. Rev. Betty Sivis, Pastor; Sun-day Church School (All Ages) 10:45 a.m.;
Worship Service, 9:30 a.m. Recreation Activities Announced. FIRST UNITED METHODIST1203 E. Seventh St., 925-0885. The Rev. Ted Jansen, Senior Pastor; Rev. Allison Yankey, Associate Pastor. Sunday Traditional Service, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday Grow Hour, 9:45 a.m.; Sunday Contem-porary Service, 11 a.m. Nursery Care All Sunday Morning. Handicap-Accessible. Communion 1st Sunday Of The Month. Children’s & Adult Choirs, Youth Groups, Adult Bible Studies, Women’s Groups Available. Email: [email protected] COMMUNITY CHURCHSteven Ardhuerumly, Pastor, Phone 925-0475; 2 1/2 Miles South Of Auburn On C.R. 427. Sunday: Bible Peer Groups, 9 a.m.; Community Worship, 10:15 a.m.; Children’s Choir Practice, 5 p.m.; Wednesday: Prayer Chapel, 6 p.m.; Gen-eration (Grades 7-12), 6:30 p.m.; Bible Alive (4-Years-Old - 6th Grade), 7 p.m.; Frontline (Adult), 7 p.m. Transportation Available For Generation & Bible Alive. Website: HeritageAuburn.com. IMMACULATE CONCEPTIONCATHOLIC CHURCH500 E. Seventh St. Rectory, 925-3930; Religious Education Office, 925-1621; Father Derrick Sneyd, Pastor. Masses: Saturday, 5 p.m. Sunday, 8 & 10:30 a.m.; Daily Masses: Monday, 6:30 p.m.; Tues-day-Thursday, 8 a.m.; Friday, 12:05 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. Holy Days, Vigil At 5:30 p.m., 12:05 p.m. & 7 p.m.; Reconciliation (Confessions): Saturday, 4-5 p.m., Daily A Half-Hour Before Masses & Anytime By Request.INDIAN VILLAGE CHURCH OF GODCorner Of Erie Pass & Superior Drive, One Block North of DeKalb Health; 925-1795. Raymond Warner, Pastor. Sunday Morning Prayer Time, 8:45 a.m., Sunday School 9 a.m., Sunday Worship, 10 a.m., Food Bank Tuesday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Ladies Sharing Bible Study, Wednesday, 10 a.m.; Midweek Prayer Service, Wednesday, 6 p.m.; Andrew Ministry, Thursday, 1:15 p.m.JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES KINGDOM HALL1020 Ensley Ave.; Public Meeting, Sun-day, 10 a.m.; Watchtower Study, Sunday, 10:35 a.m.; Congregation Bible Study, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.; Theocratic Ministry School, Thursday, 8:05 p.m.; Service Meeting, Thursday, 8:40 p.m.KNOWING JESUS FELLOWSHIP310 N. Main St. (YMCA); Sunday Worship 10 a.m.; Thursday Home Group 7 p.m.; Robert Sturges 260-471-0660.LIFE REDEEMED APOSTOLIC CHURCH115 S. Indiana Ave.; Pastor Randall L. Rinehart; Phone 260-302-6674; Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday Worship 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 p.m.LIVING WATERS OUTREACH117 W. Thirteenth St. Sunday Praise &Worship, 10:30 a.m.ST. ANDREW EVANGELICAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH(Reformed Tradition) 316 W. Fourth St., 925-8464; Pastor, The Rev. Glen Francis; Sunday Worship, 9 a.m. Followed By Fellowship & Sunday School For All Ages. Men’s Bible Study, Tuesday, 6:30 a.m.; Wednesday Bible Study & Youth Activities, 6:30 p.m. Sept.-May. Activities & Pastor’s Message Online At saintadrewepc.orgST. JAMES ORTHODOX MISSIONLiturgy & Study Group, Sundown Saturday; For Information Write: P.O. Box 212, Auburn, IN 46706.ST. MARK’S LUTHERANNorth American Lutheran Church (NALC) Ninth & Van Buren. Phone 925-3882. Marcus J. Carlson, Pastor; Laura Deckard, Director Of Music & Wor-ship Arts; Carly Everingham, Youth Direc-tor; Saturday Worship, 5:30 p.m. Sunday Worship, 9:30 a.m., Sunday School, During Worship Service (Sept.-May Only); Holy Communion Every Saturday & Sunday; Confirmation Wednesday, 6 p.m. (Sept.-May); Sunday Service Broadcast On Local Cable Channel 20 At 11 a.m. Each Sunday. Handicapped Accessible With Elevator.SOUL’S HARBOR ASSEMBLY OF GOD3810 C.R. 40-A. Phone 925-1958. Pastor David Snodderly. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship & Children’s Church, 10:30 a.m.; Evening Service, 6 p.m.; Tuesday: Youth, 6-8 p.m. Wed. Activities, All 6:30 p.m. Nursery For All Services. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH (LCMS)1801 N. Main St., 925-2440, Rev. Jonathan Nack, Pastor; Sunday Worship, 9 a.m.; Communion Will Be Served On The First & Fourth Sunday; Sunday School & Adult Bible Classes 10:15 a.m.; Confirmation Class For Grades 6-8, Wednesday, 6:30-8 p.m.; & Women’s Bible Study, Thursday, 2 p.m. Listen To The Church Of The Lu-theran Hour & Worship For Shut-ins.
Rural AuburnASSEMBLY OF HOPES.R. 8 & C.R. 45, East Of Auburn. Phone 357-5981. Sunday Bible Study, 10:30 a.m.CEDAR LAKE CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN2939 C.R. 15 At C.R. 28, One Mile South & 1 1/2 Miles East Of Corunna. Duane Grady, Pastor. 281-2021. Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m. COUNTY LINE CHURCH OF GOD7716 North County Line Road; 627-2482; Pastoral Staff: Stuart Kruse,
Dane Kruse, Kevin McIntire, Nathan Tat-man, Mary Ellen Rayle, Steve Schlatter, Nick Holliday; Sunday Worship, 9:30 & 11 a.m.; Wednesday Groups, 6:30 p.m.; Creative Play School, Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-noon.; countylinechurch.org.HOPEWELL UNITED BRETHREN6852 C.R. 35; John Erwin, Pastor. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Youth Group, 6:30 p.m. LAKEWOOD PARK BAPTIST (GARBC)5555 C.R. 29, Auburn. Phone 925-2006. Clare Jewell, Senior Pastor; Worship Service 10:30 a.m.-11:45 a.m. Sundays; Adult Bible Study 9 a.m.-10:10 a.m. and Children’s Ministries 9 a.m.-Noon Sundays. Christian School, 925-1393.MAPLE GROVE UNITED METHODISTC.R. 28 & 19. Jim Kemerly, Pastor; Sunday Morning Worship, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday School, 10:15 a.m.MEESE CHAPEL METHODIST2906 C.R. 60, Auburn; Gary Ford, Pastor, 760-4985; Sunday Worship 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 10:15 a.m.NORRIS CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTC.R. 40-A & 47; Church Phone, 925-1096; Rev. Susan Smith Bryden; Worship, 10:15 a.m.; Sunday School 9 a.m.; norrischapel.org.
ButlerBUTLER CHURCH OF CHRIST173 W. Oak St. Dennis Bingham, Youth Minister; Dawn Steere, Noah’s Ark Preschool Director. Services: Sunday School 8:30 a.m.; Worship 9:45 a.m.; Pre-teen, Jr. High, & Sr. High Youth Groups, Sundays, 6-7:30 p.m. Phone: 868-2687, Fax 868-2582; Website: butlerchurchofchrist.org.CHRIST’S CHURCH(CHRISTIAN CHURCH)127 W. Main St., Butler; Phone 868-6924. Dale Rabineau, Minister; Lisa Rabineau, Director Of Education; Jenn Skrocki, Youth Director. Sunday Bible Classes 8:45 a.m., Worship 10 a.m.CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE500 N. Beech St.; Paul Patton, Pastor; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Wor-ship, 10:30 a.m.; Evening Service, 6 p.m.; Wed. Prayer Meeting At 6 p.m.FAITH CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES7301 C.R. 28, Butler, 8/10 Mile East Of Butler, Just Off U.S. 6; Non-Denomi-national; Phone 260-920-0743; Pastor Frances Mock; Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday & Wednesday Evening Worship, 6 p.m.FREE BIBLE TABERNACLEJames & Washington Streets. Pastor Joe Albertson; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Worship, 11 a.m.; Sunday, Youth 4:30 p.m., Evening Worship 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday Evangelistic Service, 6:30 p.m.LAMB OF GOD MENNONITE132 W. Oak St., Butler; Pastor Denny Eicher. Sunday Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday Evening, 6 p.m.; Wednesday Evening Service, 7:30 p.m.SEABREEZE MINISTRIES404 S. Federal St. Pastor Lathan Snyder. Family Worship Services: Sunday At 10 a.m.; Tidal Wave Youth Group: Wednesday At 5 p.m.; Adult Bible Study: Wednesday At 6 p.m.; Phone: 260-927-5683.ST. MARK’S LUTHERAN (ELCA)217 W. Main. Sunday School During School Year, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:30 a.m. All Year.UNITED METHODIST501 W. Green St. Rev. Kevin Marsh, Pastor; Worship Service 9:30 a.m.; Sunday School 10:45 a.m.
Rural ButlerBIG RUN CHURCHRichard Woolever, Minister; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:15 a.m.CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY OF GOD7521 U.S. 6, P.O. Box 153, Butler. Pastor James Garner; Phone 927-5614; Sunday prayer, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 6 p.m.CROSSROADS OF ZIONBellefontaine Rd. & C.R. 79. Rev. Jack Smith, Pastor, 488-2803. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Church Service, 10:30 a.m. JERUSALEM COMMUNITYCHURCH6795 C.R. 12. Rev. Stanley P. Hammond.
Services: Sunday 2 p.m. Phone: 495-9006.MT. PLEASANT UNITED METHODISTC.R. 40 & 59; Christine Fodrea, Pastor; Worship 10:05 a.m.; Sunday School 9 a.m.NEWVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST5107 C.R. 75A, Butler; Phone: 337-5384; Darrin Langford, Minister; Bible School, 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; Youth Groups, 6 p.m.; Evening Worship 7 p.m.
CorunnaCHURCH OF CHRISTMichigan & Walnut Streets. Todd Steere, Minister; Sunday Bible School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.FIRST FREEDOM BAPTIST CHURCH3263 S.R. 327. Ron Bell, Pastor; Sunday Worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday Worship, 6 p.m.UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRISTChurch, 281-2992; Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Christian Education Leader, Stephanie Taylor; Youth Group, 5-7 p.m. Sunday evenings.ZION LUTHERAN (Missouri Synod)0389 C.R. 12, Corunna; 3 Miles North Of U.S. 6 On S.R. 327, West 1/2 Mile On C.R. 12. Office, 281-2286; Pastor Al Wingfield, Vicar Stephen Koziol. Sunday School (Nursery) 9 a.m.; Worship (Nursery), 10 a.m. Holy Communion, 1st & 3rd Sundays. All Confirmation Classes, 9 a.m. Wednesday: Soup & Sandwich Supper, 6 p.m.; Worship & Holy Communion, 7 p.m.
Garrett ALTARSTAR UNITED METHODIST1403 C.R. 68; Pastor Jill Wright, 755-6243; Sunday Worship, 9 a.m.; Adult Bible Study, Tuesday, 1 p.m.; Church Phone 413-0126.APOSTOLIC LIGHTHOUSE109 S. Randolph St.; Pastor Thomas Mann, 517-617-1614 ; Sunday Worship, 11 a.m.; Thursday Service, 7 p.m. CEDAR CREEK CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN5952 C.R. 7, Garrett; P.O. Box 295 Garrett, IN 46738; Brad Hardesty, Pastor. 357-3773. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Sunday Worship, 10 a.m.CHRISTIAN UNION BRETHREN IN CHRISTP.O. Box 38, 4395 C.R. 7, Garrett. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; The Rev. Joe Laher, Pastor. Pastor’s Phone Number Is 927-8847. Church Phone Number Is 357-4850.CHURCH AT GARRETT1370 S. Randolph St., Garrett. Worship Service Sunday 10 a.m., Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Phone 357-1829.DEKALB COUNTY CHURCH OF CHRIST700 S. Randolph St. Minister Ed McDowd; Church, 357-0738. Sun.: Bible Study For All Ages, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Evening Service, 6 p.m.; Wed. Bible Study, 7 p.m.FIRST BAPTIST1357 S. Randolph St.; Phone 357-4755; Pastoral Staff: Pastor David Mix, Sunday School, 9:15 a.m.; Worship & Children’s Church, 10:15 a.m.; Evening Worship 6 p.m.; Wednesday: Bible Study & Children’s Choir, 6 p.m.; Adult Choir, 7 p.m.FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST213 E. King St.; Phone 357-3625; Brother Bud Owen, Senior MinisterSunday: Worship, 8:30 & 10:45 a.m. With Nursery, Toddler Church & Kid City Offered During Both Services; Bible School 9:45 a.m.; Children’s Youth Group, Jr. & Sr. High School Youth Groups & Adult Worship 5:30 p.m.; Adult Bible Study 6 p.m. Wednesdays: Mid-Week Boost. FREEDOM TO WORSHIP CHURCH OF GODBaseline Road, Altona. Rev. Joe Freeman, Pastor. Services 2 p.m. Sunday, 6 p.m. Wednesday.HOLIDAY LAKESNew fellowship At Holiday Lakes; Worship Services, Sunday 10 a.m. & Thursday, 6:30 p.m.; Robert & Jeannette Sturges. Call 471-0660. LIVING WATERS COMMUNITY BAPTIST711 S. Randolph St.; Dean Morris, Pastor; Services, Sunday School, 9:15 a.m.;
Worship, 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study, 6:30 p.m. Wed. Service, 6:30 p.m.NEW LIFE HOUSE OF WORSHIP130 N. Randolph St., Garrett; Pastor J.C. Banks Jr., 357-4550; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m., Sunday Evening Worship, 6 p.m.; Tues-day 6 p.m.; Thurs. Bible Study 6 p.m.PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (USA)201 S. Franklin St. (at the corner of Franklin & Keyser); Pastor: Rev. William Haworth; Church: 357-3534; Sunday: Sunday School for all ages, 9 a.m.; Coffee Fellowship, 10 a.m.; Worship & Children’s Church Downstairs During Worship, 10:15 a.m.ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC300 W. Houston St.; Phone 357-3122; Father Andrew Nazareth, Pastor; Masses: Saturday, 5 p.m.; Sunday, 8 & 10:30 a.m.; Monday, 6 p.m.; Tuesday Through Saturday, 9 a.m.; Holy Day, 9 a.m. Vigil, 6:30 p.m.THE CROSSING, A CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE105 W. 6th Ave.; Church, 357-5769; Pastor Kyle and Katie Lowry, Sunday School, 9:30 a.m., Welcome, 10:20 a.m., Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Youth Group/Community Dinner 5:30 p.m., Youth Group 6 p.m.; thecrossinggarrett.orgUNITED METHODIST110 W. Houston St.; 357-3315. Rev. Dr. Scott Shoaff, Pastor. Sunday Worship Service, 9:25 a.m. Sunday School, 10:45 a.m.WORLD HARVEST FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER133 S. Randolph St., Garrett; 357-4500. ZION EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN1349 S. Randolph St.; Rev. Andrew Yea-ger; Office 357-4545; Sunday Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday School & Bible Classes, 10 a.m.; Holy Communion, Every Sunday; Wednesday Evening Worship, 6 p.m.
HamiltonALVARADO UNITED METHODISTC.R. 800 E, Northeast Of Hamilton. Pastor Lucretia Snyder, 463-1936. Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 10 a.m.HAMILTON CHURCH OF CHRIST4040 Church St. 488-2719. Jeff Alexander, Minister. Sunday Prayer & Mediation, 9:15 a.m., Room 5; Bible School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 p.m.HAMILTON UNITED METHODIST 7780 S. Wayne St. 488-2803. Pastor Jack Smith; Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 10:15 a.m.HAMILTON WESLEYAN CHURCHTerry Lake Road. Pastor David Leitzel, 488-2746. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Sun. Worship, 10 a.m.; Wed. Clubhouse, 6:30-8 p.m.LAKEVIEW COMMUNITY CHURCH3130 E. Bellefontaine Rd. Pastor Jess Jessup, Office, 488-2080. Sunday: fellowship, 10 a.m.; Worship, 10:30.
HelmerHELMER INDEPENDENT BAPTISTC.R. 700 S, Helmer, North Of The Tracks To The First Street, Then Left. Pastor Rick Davis. Worship, 10 a.m.HELMER UNITED METHODISTState Road 327; Pastor Donna Holcomb. Sunday School, 9 a.m., Sunday Church, 9:45 a.m., Thursday Bible Study, 7 p.m.
HudsonUNITED BRETHREN IN CHRISTRev. Craig Burkholder, Pastor; Phone 587-3208. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Youth Group, 6 p.m., Prayer Time, 6 p.m.UNITED METHODISTDon Wadkins, Pastor; Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 10 a.m.
St. JoeCHURCH @ JOE’S(St. Joe Church of Christ)507 Jefferson St., St. Joe, Michael D. Booher, Pastor; Office 337-0442 Or Cell 336-2727. Web: [email protected]. Email: [email protected]. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Worship Service,
10 a.m.; Youth Groups Sunday Eve, 6:30 p.m.; Tuesday Night Women’s Bible Study, 7 p.m.; Nursery Is Available.COBURN CORNERS CHURCH OF CHRISTS.R. 101 & C.R. 64, St. Joe; Thomas Cupka, Minister; Phone 238-4567; Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Sunday Worship, 10 a.m.; Wednesday Bible Study, 6 p.m. During School Year;Handicapped Accessible; Assisted Listening Available; Nursery Available; Preschool During School Year; Preschool Phone: 238-4679; Church website: coburncorners.org; email: [email protected] CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP215 Widney, St. Joe; 337-5470. Fellowship 9:30 a.m.; Praise & Worship 9:45 a.m.ST. MARK LUTHERAN302 Washington St.; Phone 337-0172; Pastor Floyd Shoup; Worship, 10:16 a.m. Followed By Fellowship & Refreshments; Wednesday Dinner, 6:15 p.m.; Wednes-day Service, 7 p.m.; Holy Communion, Every Service.
SpencervilleST. PETER LUTHERANState Road 1 & C.R. 68. Phone 337-5028. Church 9 a.m.; Church School, 9:15 a.m.; Coffee Time, 10 a.m.; Christmas Eve Service, 10 p.m.; Holy Communion First Sunday & Festivals.UNITED METHODIST5681 Church St., Sunday School 9 a.m.-10 a.m., Morning Worship 9 a.m.-10 a.m., Youth Group Kids Club Every Tuesday 6 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Pastor Ken Herb, 471-1041.ST. TIMOTHY’S ANGLICAN EPISCOPAL17434 Markle Road, Pastor Daniel Webb, 238-4024, Services 10 a.m. Sunday, 7 p.m. Wednesday.
WaterlooAGAPE ASSEMBLY OF GOD960 Lincoln St.; Pastor Tom Neddersen, Phone (260) 414-5009; Sunday School 9 a.m., Worship 10 a.m.; Wednesday6:30 p.m. Youth Group; Thursday6:30 p.m., Praise & Prayer.CEDAR LAKE CHURCH OF CHRIST1492 C.R. 27. Jonathan Pennington, Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship & Communion, 10:30 a.m. FREEWILL BAPTIST2833 C.R. 27; Ron Stambaugh, Minister, 837-7360; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:45 a.m.; Evening Service, 6 p.m. (1st Sunday). Bible Study Wednesday, 6 p.m.HOUSE OF YAHVAHC.R. 400 S & 200 E. Kendallville, Sabbath Saturday, New Testament, 10:30 a.m. Call 837-2025.NEW HOPE CHRISTIAN CENTER900 S. Wayne St. Pastoral Staff: Ralph O. Diehl, Sean Hartzell, Randy Stine. Services: Saturday 6 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. (ASL Interpreted At 10:30 a.m.); Wednesday Kids Club, T.V. (Youth) & Adult Next Level Connection Groups, 7 p.m.; Phone 837-3631; Website: NewHope.in.NEW LIFE HOUSE OF WORSHIP300 W. Douglas St., 925-4181; Pastor JC Banks Sr.; Saturday Service 6 p.m.; Sunday Service 10 a.m.NEW LIFE LUTHERAN CHURCH365 Lockhart St.; Pastor Merle Holden, 574-215-4288; Sunday Service, 10:30 a.m.; Communion Every Sunday; Junior Church During Worship.ST. MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL CATHOLIC CHURCH1098 C.R. 39; Rev. David Carkenord, Pastor. Saturday Mass 6 p.m.; Sunday Mass, 8 & 10:30 a.m.; Confessions, Saturday, 4 p.m. Or By Appointment.UNITED METHODIST300 W. Maple; Phone 837-6441. Pastor Mike Halferty. Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m. Communion, 1st Sun. Wednesday Bible Studies, 9 a.m.; Choir, 7 p.m.; A.A., Sunday At 7 p.m.; Nursery; waterlooumc.org.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013 AREA CHURCHES kpcnews.com THE STAR B5 •
For a detailed listing of churches in your
area, log on to kpcnews.com/churches.
The Star will print the area church listings the first weekend
of each month.
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THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM
GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS
BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL
BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER
DEAR DOCTOR K: Oft en when I step outside from a dark room into the sunlight, I sneeze. Why does this happen?
DEAR READER: My colleague, Dr. Robert Shmerling, looked into this question once. I learned from him that there are many people like you, and even more who suddenly sneeze when they move suddenly from a warm environment to a cold one (or vice versa).
Why do we sneeze in the fi rst place? It’s a complex refl ex we all are born with, as it protects our lungs. It begins with nerve endings in the soft membranes that line the nose. When something irritating enters the nose with the air we breathe in and lands on the membranes, the nerve endings react. Th ese triggers send messages to the throat, chest and abdomen to contract to forcefully rid the nasal passage of its contents. Th e sneeze
forcibly ejects nasal air back out of the body (and away from the lungs).
It’s similar to vomiting when we’ve eaten something
that the stomach really doesn’t like. Th e irritating substance that came down through the mouth gets ejected right back out through the mouth.
If sneezing is supposed to protect the lungs, why would anyone sneeze when he or she steps into the
sunlight? How does sunlight threaten the lungs? It doesn’t. Something has gone wrong with the refl ex: It is triggered
for no good reason.No one knows why some
people sneeze at the sight of bright light. It’s possible that bright light triggers the other nerves involved in sneezing. Maybe the light fl ooding into the eye, or squinting in reaction to bright light, causes a crossed signal of sorts, making the body think a sneeze is in order.
Another unknown is why the muscles of the face, including the eyelid muscles, are also involved in sneezing. Scientists think the eyes might shut during a sneeze to keep out fl ying particles. (Th ough the idea that you cannot keep your eyes open during a sneeze is a myth. If you tried hard enough, you could probably do it.)
Humans actually expel more material from our mouths when we sneeze than from our noses. Th at’s why it’s important to cover both your mouth and nose when
sneezing.Dr. Shmerling tells me
that he once saw an Internet video of a woman sneezing every time she walked from the shadowy spot of a room into the bright light near a window.
Apparently she was using this sensitivity to light — called “photic” sneezing — to audition for an allergy medica-tion commercial. She found a profi table use for her “talent.”
Photic sneezing is harmless and can actually be useful. Ever have that annoying “need-to-sneeze” feeling, but the sneeze just won’t come? Look briefl y at a light. Oft en that will encourage the sneeze.
If you really want to avoid sneezing next time you come out of a dark space, keep your sunglasses handy.
DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.
Bright-light sneezing has unknown cause
SATURDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 2, 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 Nov. 2: • In 1783, Gen. George Washington issued his Farewell Orders to the Armies of the United States near Princeton, New Jersey. • In 1959, game show contestant Charles Van Doren admitted that he’d been given questions and answers in advance when he appeared on the NBC-TV program “Twenty-One.” • In 1963, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dihn Diem was assassinated.
Almanac•
B6 kpcnews.com COMICS • TV LISTINGS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
•
DEAR ABBY: I am 19 and a new bride. My husband is in the Army. We’re very happy, but I just found out that I’m pregnant — I’m not sure how far along yet — and I feel torn about what to do. My husband wants a child very badly, but he did say he would support whatever decision I make. While I have no objection to having a child, I know my family will make me feel guilty if I do by saying they are disappointed, that I should have waited and that I’m “throwing my life away.” Abby, I am so confused. I don’t know what to do. I want my family to support me and be there when I have our fi rst child. — PRESSURED AND CONFUSED DEAR PRESSURED: Was your family disappointed and saying you were throwing your life away when you married your
husband? If the answer is no, then why would they accuse you of doing so because you are pregnant?
You are an adult, albeit a young one, and a wife. Th e fi rst thing you need to do is see a gynecologist and fi nd out how far along you are. Your next step is for you and your husband to decide
if you are emotionally and fi nancially ready to be parents. No one can decide this for you, but your family’s possible “disappointment” should not enter into your decision. If they are not
supportive, your in-laws might be. DEAR ABBY: I have friends who exclude me or take off with other friends before I can get to where they are meeting. What can I do to get them to call me? Why am I their whipping post? — FRIEND-CHALLENGED IN KANSAS DEAR CHALLENGED: Friends don’t treat friends the way you are being treated. Th ere is nothing you can do to get them to behave diff er-ently. You are letting them do this because you’re hoping that if you ignore their insensitivity and rudeness, they will accept you.
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 www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
DEAR ABBY
Jeanne Phillips
•
Woman expecting fi rst child facing decisions
ASK DOCTOR K.
Dr. Anthony
Komaroff
•
kpcnews.com B7SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2013
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NEW YORK (AP) — A federal appeals court block of a judge’s ruling that found the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk policy discriminated against minorities may be short lived, depending on the outcome of next week’s mayoral election.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Thursday that the ruling by U.S. District Judge Shira A. Scheindlin would be on hold pending the outcome of an appeal by the city, a fi ght that could be dropped if Democrat Bill de Blasio, who is leading the polls by 39 points, has his way.
De Blasio has said he would drop objections to the decision, which had called for a monitor to oversee major changes to the police tactic.
His Republican rival, Joe Lhota, said the city’s next mayor must push forward with the appeal.
“For the next 60 days, we don’t want an outsider coming in who doesn’t know anything about crime fi ghting, putting the lives of our police offi cers and the lives of the public on the line,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday on his weekly WOR Radio show.
Police offi cers have “had their names dragged through the mud over the past year and I think they deserve a lot better than that,” Bloomberg said. “We want them to understand that we support them and we are in conformity with the require-ments of the law.”
The topic became an election fl ashpoint, resonating nationwide. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly was shouted down over the tactic by students during a speech at Brown University earlier in the week.
“This is indeed an important decision for all New Yorkers and for the
men and women of the New York City police department who work very hard day in and day out to keep this city safe,” Kelly said Thursday.
The three-judge panel also took the unusual step of removing Scheindlin from the case. It said she ran afoul of the code of conduct for U.S. judges by misapplying a related case ruling that allowed her to take the case, and by giving media interviews during the trial. It noted she had given media interviews and public statements responding to criticism of the court. In a footnote, it cited interviews with the New York Law Journal, The Associated Press and The New Yorker magazine.
In the AP interview, Scheindlin said reports that Bloomberg had reviewed her record to show that most of her 15 written “search and seizure” rulings since she took the bench in 1994 had gone against law enforce-ment was a “below-the-belt attack” on judicial independence. She said it was “quite disgraceful” if the mayor’s offi ce was behind the study.
Scheindlin said in a statement later Thursday she consented to the interviews under the condition she wouldn’t comment on the ongoing case.
“And I did not,” she said.
Scheindlin said some reporters used quotes from written opinions that gave the appearance she had commented on the case but “a careful reading of each interview will reveal that no such comments were made.”
In 2007, Scheindlin told the same lawyers who had argued a similar case before her to bring the stop and frisk case to her, because she said the two were related. Not long after, the current case was fi led by the attorneys.
The appeals court said a new judge would be assigned at random to handle further decisions and said it would hear arguments in March on the formal appeal by the city. That judge may choose to make alterations to Scheindlin’s rulings, but it would be unlikely.
Scheindlin decided in August that the city violated the civil rights of tens of thousands of blacks and Hispanics by disproportion-ally stopping, questioning and sometimes frisking them. She assigned a monitor to help the police department change its policy and training programs on
the tactic.Stop and frisk has been
around for decades, but recorded stops increased dramatically under Bloomberg’s administration to an all-time high in 2011 of 684,330, mostly of black and Hispanic men. Four minority men who said they were targeted because of their races fi led a lawsuit, and it became a class-action case.
To make a stop, police must have reasonable suspicion that a crime is about to occur or has occurred, a standard lower than the probable cause needed to justify an arrest. Only about 10 percent of the stops result in arrests or summonses, and weapons are found about 2 percent of the time.
Scheindlin heard a bench trial that ended in the spring and coincided with a groundswell of backlash against the stop-and-frisk tactic. She noted in her ruling this summer that she wasn’t putting an end to the practice, which is constitu-tional, but was reforming the way the NYPD implemented its stops.
Stop-and-frisk may hinge on election
AP
Police offi cers take a report from a woman who had her phone stolen in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, New York, recently. A federal appeals court on Thursday blocked a judge’s order requiring changes to the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk program and removed the judge from the case.
Police offi cers have “had their name dragged
through the mud over the past year and I think
they deserve better.”
Michael Bloomberg
Mayor of New York
•
DETROIT (AP) — The government shutdown dampened — but didn’t stall — Americans’ demand for new cars and trucks.
The 16-day shutdown slowed U.S. auto sales in the fi rst two weeks of October, but they picked up speed in the last two weeks. Sales rose 11 percent to 1.2 million.
General Motors, Ford, Nissan and Chrysler all recorded double-digit sales gains, while Toyota, Honda and Hyundai saw smaller increases. Of major automakers, only Volkswa-gen’s sales fell.
Stable fuel prices, low interest rates and the increased availability of credit pushed people to buy regardless of the political wrangling, said Kurt McNeil, GM’s vice president of U.S. sales.
“All those things that have been driving the economy? They’re still there,” he said.
Pickup trucks sold well as business improved for contractors and other workers. Sales of the Chevrolet Silverado, GM’s top selling vehicle, jumped 10 percent to nearly 43,000, and Chrysler’s Ram truck was up 18 percent. Sales of Ford’s F-Series pickups rose 13 percent and topped 60,000 for the sixth month in a row.
SUV sales were also strong. Sales of Nissan’s Pathfi nder, which was recently redesigned, nearly doubled from last October. Sales of the Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban large SUVs both jumped more than 50 percent.
The weak spot was small cars and hybrids, which have been struggling to win
buyers as gas prices fall. Gas prices averaged $3.27 per gallon at the end of October, the lowest level of the year. The national average has dropped 31 cents since Labor Day, according to AAA.
Toyota Prius hybrid sales fell 7 percent while the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid was down 32 percent. The tiny Fiat 500 fell 36 percent.
Sales of Ford’s Focus small car were down 17 percent, while its C-Max small hybrid fell 20 percent. Ford recently announced plans to idle the Michigan factory where those vehicles are made for two weeks this fall because of weak demand.
U.S. consumers have started to gradually shift from smaller, more fuel-effi -cient cars to larger vehicles, said Jesse Toprak, an analyst with the TrueCar.com auto pricing web site.
Stable gas prices aren’t the only reason, he said. Cheap fi nancing and sweet lease deals have made larger vehicles more afford-able, cutting the monthly payments so people can afford them even if gas prices go up.
“History has shown us that consumers in the U.S. would rather buy a larger vehicle given the choice,” Toprak said.
GM’s sales rose 16 percent, with increases in all of its brands. GM’s revamped Chevrolet Malibu midsize car was up 64 percent, while sales of the Cadillac ATS small car more than doubled. Ford’s sales increased 14 percent. Sales of the Ford Fusion midsize sedan jumped 71 percent over last October.
Shutdown slows,but doesn’t killauto sales in US
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EMPLOYMENT
General1st & 2nd shift CNCMachine openings
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HHAs to provide care inthe Ossian, Zanesville
and Bluffton areas.Must be able to workevenings and week-
ends. For more informa-tion please contact
Melissa at260-824-4747. You mayapply at our Bluffton of-fice at 201 E. Market St.
or online at: www.CorpsOfAngels.com (A)
RE
NT
AL
SR
EN
TA
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APARTMENTRENTAL
GRISWOLD ESTATES
*Restrictions Apply
DEPOSITS START AT $99!
NOW OFFERINGWEEKLY RENTALS!
FREE HEAT!AS THE
TEMPERATURE GOES DOWN SO DOES OUR RENT
(260) 333-5457900 Griswold Ct., Auburn, IN 46706
THE EXPERT@sk
APARTMENTRENTAL
Don’t Fumble Don’t Fumble Your Chance!!Your Chance!!
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!
1 & 2 BedroomApt. Homes
• Free Heat • Free Hot/ Softened Water
CROSSWAITCROSSWAITESTATESESTATES
FREE HEAT, WATER, FREE HEAT, WATER, SEWER & TRASHSEWER & TRASHRESIDENTS PAY RESIDENTS PAY ELECTRIC ONLYELECTRIC ONLY
LOW RENTAL RATESLOW RENTAL RATESCall today to schedule Call today to schedule a Tour!a Tour!
260-668-4415260-668-4415199 Northcrest Road199 Northcrest Road
Angola, IN 46703Angola, IN 46703PETS WELCOME!PETS WELCOME!
Restrictions apply.Restrictions apply.www.mrdapartments.comwww.mrdapartments.com
E-mail to: crosswaitestates@E-mail to: [email protected]
A New ApartmentHome Awaits You at
AlbionNice 1 BR upstairs
(260) 636-2239
AngolaONE BR APTS.
$425/mo., Free Heat.260-316-5659
APARTMENTS$49 Deposit
12 Month Lease Nov. & Dec.
$200. OFF fullmonth’s rent.
Spacious 1 & 2 BR,Peaceful, Clean,
Pet Friendly.No appl. fee.
260-868-2843
www.whereUmatter.com
◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆
AuburnNice 2 BR, 1 BA w/
W/D on full basementw/front porch in nicequiet neighborhood.
260 925-2041 or260 235-0797
Avilla1 & 2 BR APTS$450-$550/ per
month. Call260-897-3188
APARTMENTRENTAL
GarrettNice & Clean w/lots ofroom, 2 BR possible 3,
WD hook up plusstorage area. $700/mo.
all util. included.260 316-1835
Waterloo1 BR Apt.- Very Nice!
$350/mo. + util. Stove& refrig. Furnished .
(260) 235-0901
HOMESFOR RENT
Angola4660 W Nevada Mills
Very nice 2 BR.$675mo. No smoking
No Pets 260-316-3090
AuburnLand contract, 4 BRgarage, $600/mo.
260 615-2709
WaterlooLand contract, 3 BRgarage, $450/mo.
260 615-2709
MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT
Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wkalso LaOtto location.
574-202-2181
WANT TO RENT
KendallvilleLooking to rent farm
ground SW ofKendallville. Will pay
$125/acre. Call260 410-0009
Noble/LaGrangeLooking for Hunting
Ground.Willing to payreaso able price.(260) 768-8162
HO
ME
SH
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ES
kpcnews.com
BREAKING NEWS
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% GOVERN-MENT--Loans! Not justfor 1st time buyers! Allcredit considered! Lowrates! Buy any homeanywhere for sale by
owner or realtor. Acad-emy Mortgage Corpora-tion, 1119 Lima Road,Fort Wayne, IN 46818.
Call Nick at260-494-1111.
NLMS146802. Somerestrictions may apply.Equal Housing Lender.Se Habla Espanol. (A)
MOBILE HOMESFOR SALE
Little Long LakeSeasonal Lake FrontTrailer on rented lot
$15,000419-966-0328
GA
RA
GE
SALE
SG
AR
AG
E SA
LES
GARAGE SALES
Auburn115 Orchard Dr.Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 6MOVING SALE
Household, furniture,yard equipment, tires
& misc.
Auburn1800 E. 7th St.*
EnormousRummage &
Boutique Sale!Thurs. & Fri. • 8 - 4
Bag Sale onSaturday •9 - 12
Auburn904 Elm Street
Sat. Nov. 2 • 9-2Wood TV Armoire ,
Rabbit cage, car seats.Bath spa,
Yamaha keyboard, clothes 1/2 price!
Avilla305 W. Albion St. Sat. Nov. 2 • 9-1
Lots of Vera BradleysGreat Selection &
Prices! Last Chance..See you There!
Ligonier406 W. Second St.Nov. 1 & 2 • 9 - 5
Ladies sweatshirts, col-lector plates w/holders,
dishes, pot & pans.Too much to list. Stop& see. You will enjoy.
ST
UF
FS
TU
FF
MERCHANDISE
4 Row Corn Planter30 in row.by Massey
Ferguson. &14ft. Field Cultivator
925-3408
Covington MemorialGardens Ft. Wayne,
Crypt #37B - Unit 3 inVeteran’s Section. in-cludes vault Veterans
Plaque. $2,000.(260) 347-2894
Misc.sized GalvanizedSteel & Aluminum pier
posts, cross bars,stringers & some life
jackets (260)824-2606
New Dayton subpump1/2 hp, $125.00260 925-1125
“Rascal” Electric Mobil-ity Heavy Duty 3-wheel
long Scooter with 2 newreplacement wheels &
ramp for truck. $800.00.(260) 347-2894
FURNITURE
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
SPORTING GOODS
Old Exile 16 gaugeshotgun $100 obo.
242-7435.
Remington 270game master Model
760 S#130776 Tasco3-9 scope$450.00
260-316-8577
WANTED TO BUY
TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before
starting. Walnut needed.
260 349-2685
WANTED: Coin collec-tions - silver, gold, old
guns, Native Americanarrow heads, slate, etc.
Call Tim Carlintoll free
1-866-704-7253
FARM/GARDEN
APPLES & CIDER Mon.-Sat. • 9-5:30
Sun. • 11-5GW Stroh Orchards
Angola (260) 665-7607
PETS/ANIMALS
Free to Good HomeRomeo, 7 year old maleCat,declawed,neutered,vaccinated 489-4440 [email protected]
PETS/ANIMALS
FREE to good home:Kittens 11 weeks old,
1Male, 1 Female , pre-fer to adopt together.
(260) 349-9093
FREE: Kittens 8 weeksold, 1 female, 2 males.
Litter box trained.260 494-6355
FREE: To good homeneutered Lab/Shepherdmix, 7 yrs. old. Moving
cannot take with.260 665-3492
WH
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LS
WH
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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 $530 forscrap cars. Call me
318-2571
IVAN’S TOWINGJunk Auto Buyerup to $1000.00(260) 238-4787
CARS
1 & ONLY PLACE TOCALL--to get rid of thatjunk car, truck or van!!
Cash on the spot!Free towing. Call
260-745-8888. (A)
Guaranteed Top DollarFor Junk Cars, Trucks& Vans. Call Jack @
260-466-8689
INDIANA AUTO AUC-TION, INC.--Huge
Repo Sale Thursday,Nov. 7th. Over 100 re-
possessed units forsale. Cash only. $500deposit per person re-
quired. Register8am-9:30am to bid. No
public entry after9:30am. All vehiclessold AS IS! 4425 W.Washington Center
Road, Fort Wayne. (A)
TRUCKS
1994 Dodge Dakotaxt cab, v6, Auto, BLKGood Cond. $1000
(260)582-9282
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
10 in 1 Casino Gameplugs into TV. Withinstructions. Asking
$5.00. (260) 833-1049
12 Lighted ChristmasHouses, $50.00.(260) 925-1267
19 Assorted WickerBaskets. Excellent
cond. Many shapes& sizes. $25.00.(260) 316-2089
2 - Winterforce Studded175/70R13, $40.00.
(260) 573-9352
4 Lizzie McGuire Chap-ter Books. $5.00.
Call or text,(260) 582-9458
40 gal. Natural Gas HotWater Heater. 8 yrs.old, good cond. Youhaul from Pleasant
Lake. $25.00.(260) 475-5458
6’x28” Shelved Cabinetwith doors on bottom.
$20.00. (260) 350-7846
7 Hanna MontanaChapter books. $5.00.
Call or text,(260) 582-9458
8’ FluorescentLight Bulb, $3.50(260) 318-3961
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Adult School Desk,attached chair. $20.00.
(260) 350-7846
Amazon Kindle TouchLighted Leather Cover.
Color wine purple.Never used. Bought for
a tablet but didn’t fit.$5.00. (260) 927-9070
Antique Bath Basin$49.00
(260) 318-3961
Antique Bath Tub$49.00
(260) 318-3961
Antique Flint & WallingPitcher Pump. $45.00.Eves, (260) 347-3388
Antique Flint & WallingTall Pump w/pipe.
$50.00. Call evenings,(260) 347-3388
Antique Single BottomPlow. $50.00. Call eve-nings, (260) 347-3388
Antique Stand$49.00
(260) 318-3961
Beautiful ReversibleTwin size comforter,
sheets, pillow cases &dust ruffle. All for
$20.00. (260) 837-7690
Bird Cage stands 22” hx 15” w has carry han-
dle & perch has 2 open-ings for food & water
color is white & purple.$15.00. (260) 582-9458
Blanchard GrindingWheels, 2 for $20.00
(260) 318-3961
Blue 8 ft. CouchFair cond., $50.00 obo
(260) 570-3659
Camper RefrigeratorWorks good, $25.00.
(260) 235-0708
Channel WindowVisors. No tape needed.For 2005 Truck, $25.00.
(260) 553-1951
Christmas Music BoxRocking Horse, $2.00.
(260) 925-0896
Christmas Music Boxes3 Choir Boys, $5.00.
(260) 925-0896
Christmas Table ClothOblong, never used.
$3.00. (260) 573-1675
Computer, new monitor,keyboard. Works,
$40.00. (260) 925-1267
Dept. 56 KnottinghillLighted Church. $30.00.
(260) 347-0951
Disney Princes Table& 2 chairs. $10.00.
(260) 316-2266
Fish Tank72”x18”x20” deep,
$50.00. (260) 897-2036
Free StandingDormeyer Mixer with 2
bowls. $40.00.(260) 925-1267
Freestanding ShowerEnclosure. 32” sq. with
copper pipe. $25.00.Mike, (317) 408-7454
Glass Dinette Table4 chairs on rollers.
Good shape, $45.00.(260) 333-2552
Heavy Duty PrinterStand. 30”x30”, $15.00.
Call Mike, Angola,(317) 408-7454
Homelite Leaf Blower$30.00
(260) 582-9282
Igloo Max Cold 5 gal.Beverage Cooler.
Excellent cond. Asking$5.00. (260) 833-1049
Indoor Starter PlantGreenhouse. 5 shelveson wheels with plasticzipper cover. $25.00.
(260) 925-4570
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Ladies Black LeatherJacket Motorcycle style.
Large. $20.00.(260) 347-6881
Large Dog CageFolds down, divider &
bottom. Excellent cond.$50.00. (260) 837-8106
Large EntertainmentCenter on wheels with
fold out & glassedcabinet. Excellent cond.(260) 856-2083, lv msg
Large Little Tykes Pic-nic Table. Good shape.$35.00. (260) 316-2266
Late 50’s early 60’sfloor model console ste-
reo with solid oak top.$40.00. (260) 856-2083
Little Tykes Doll Cribhas drawers & remov-
able tube. $10.00.(260) 350-7846
Little Tykes Toy ChestSlide opening & flat top.$10.00. (260) 350-7846
Logitech CordlessKeyboard & Mouse
with disc & instructions.Asking $5.00.(260) 833-1049
London Fog WinterDress Coat, size 42.
Gray, $40.00.Butler, (260) 760-0419
London Fog WinterDress Coat, size 46.
Tan, $40.00.Butler, (260) 760-0419
Longaberger SleighBasket with liner& fabric. $25.00.(260) 347-0951
Lots of BeadsColors - sizes - shapes.
Whole lot for $50.00.(260) 925-1267
Miche Purse with 4changeable fronts.
$35.00. (260) 343-8268
Oak Blanket Rack$40.00
(260) 235-0708
Old School TeachersDesk. File, pencil & 4
other drawers. $50.00.(260) 347-1380
Older Sewing Machinein cabinet. Works good,
Fleetwood. $35.00.Butler, (260) 760-0419
Over 300 RecipesCowboy Cookbook withblack & white photos of
cowboys. Excellentcond. $15.00.
(260) 856-2083
Pioneer Amplifier withBass Boost, $50.00.
(260) 343-8268
Poulen Chain Saw14” works good, $40.00.Butler, (260) 760-0419
Rainbow Table Top AirCleaner. Great forsmoker, $15.00.(260) 856-2083
Refrigerator$50.00
(260) 235-0708
Round Candle Holder/Bird Cage 10 1/2” h x 81/2” w with 1 clip open-ing. $15.00. Call/text,
(260) 582-9458
Rubbermaid Cooler onwheels. 4 cup holder
top. Asking $5.00.(260) 833-1049
Sears Power WasherGood motor, pump
needs work. Some newparts included. $50.00.
(260) 499-7908
Set of Queen BedSheets, flannel, $3.00.
(260) 573-1675
Skil 10” Table SawCarbide tipped blade,
stand. $40.00.Mike, (317) 408-7454
Sled with Ice Skates &Wreath attached.
$25.00. (260) 347-0951
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Square DancingPetticoat, $10.00.
LaGrange,(260) 463-3231
Steel Toe Boots 9WUsed little, w/Guards,
black. $35.00.Butler, (260) 760-0419
Sturdy Computer Table20”x36” adjustable
height. $15.00. MikeAngola, (317) 408-7454
Subwoofer Box with 2 -10” Infinity Speakers.
$50.00. (260) 343-8268
Teen Girls CoatSize M, black fur hoodon coat. Never worn.
$5.00. (260) 573-1675
Three 215-70-16 gen-eral tires, 3/4 tread.
$50.00. (260) 488-4973
Treadmill$20.00
(260) 347-9164
Twelve HardcoverCookbooks (Family Cir-cle) in excellent cond.
$25.00. (260) 856-2083
Twin Size BedIn excellent cond.,
$49.00. (260) 837-7690
Under Counter full sizemicrowave GE. All partsto install. Like new withsensor model. Almond.$40.00. (260) 333-2552
Variety of ChildrensBooks. 16 in all. $10.00
for all. Call or text,(260) 582-9458
Vintage Black Woolbelow knee dress coatwith Mink collar. Size
10-12, $50.00.(260) 347-1380
Vintage Trench CoatNever worn. Doublebreasted, Khaki, calflength. Size 42-46.
$50.00. (260) 347-1380
Weight Bench. Excel-lent shape, $25.00.
Mike, (317) 408-7454
Wheel Chair$35.00
(260) 573-1675
Women’s 26” MurrayBicycle with new seat,
good tires. $50.00.(260) 856-2083
Youth Full Face MCHelmet, Bell, red,$15.00. Call Mike,
Angola, (317) 408-7454
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.
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