The News Sun – August 8, 2013

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THURSDAY August 8, 2013

Road Funding

Our View

Glick releases totals for area

Baseball

Breastfeeding benefits multitude of people

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Cubs come through in ninth

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Weather Cloudy skies today, with rain possible. High 77. Low 62. Rainy Friday. Page A8 Serving Noble & LaGrange Counties

Kendallville, Indiana

GOOD MORNING Kids triathlon deadline is Friday KENDALLVILLE — The deadline to register for the Kendallville Park and Recreation Department’s second annual Kids Triathlon is Friday at 4:30 p.m. at the Youth Center park office, 211 Iddings St. The triathlon for children 5-15 years of age will be Saturday, Aug. 17, at 9 a.m. in Bixler Lake Park. Olympian Amy Yoder Begley will greet participants as they cross the finish line. Registration can be made online at kendallville-in.org/ departments/park.

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School grading ‘manipulation’ found Ritz: ‘Broader issues’ need to be examined INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana’s top education official on Wednesday acknowledged “manipulation” in the way the state’s schools are graded, the latest fallout from an Associated Press report that found her predecessor worked behind the scenes to improve the score of a charter school founded by an influential Republican donor.

Superintendent Glenda Ritz told state school board members that this year’s school ratings would be held up, at least temporarily, as a result of the independent review into the A-F grading system and left open the possibility some of last year’s grades could be changed. The system was established by Tony Bennett, a rising star in the

education reform movement, who last week resigned from his new job as Florida’s schools chief amid the scandal in Indiana. “Upon our preliminary examination, the department has verified that there was manipulation of calculation categories and the department has also determined that there are broader issues that need to be examined,” Ritz said. Ritz, a Democrat, brought up the scandal at Wednesday’s school

Wolf Lake’s Annual Festival Kicks Off

Neese contemplates run for mayor ELKHART — State Rep. Tim Neese said he’s contemplating running for mayor of Elkhart. Neese announced Tuesday in a statement to the media that he has filed paperwork with the Elkhart County Clerk’s office establishing an exploratory committee to evaluate running for mayor of Elkhart in the May 2015 Republican primary race, The Elkhart Truth reports. In doing so, Neese also announced he would not seek another term as representative of District 48 in the state legislature. Neese said he will continue to serve as a state legislator until the current term ends in January of 2015. Neese is the first person to officially declare an interest in running for mayor. Mayor Dick Moore, a Democrat, has not announced whether he will seek a third term, but has suggested that he’s leaning toward running.

Info • The News Sun P.O. Box 39, 102 N. Main St. Kendallville, IN 46755 Telephone: (260) 347-0400 Fax: (260) 347-2693

Index

Classifieds.................................B7-B8 Life.....................................................B5 Obituaries......................................... A4 Opinion ............................................. A5 Sports.........................................B1-B3 Weather............................................ A8 TV/Comics .......................................B6 Vol. 104 No. 217

board meeting, but Bennett’s allies on the Republican-dominated board had little to say. She met privately Wednesday afternoon with Indiana’s Republican legislative leaders, who have started their own investigation. Ritz declined to discuss specifics of the review but said a final report could be ready by Sept. 2. The AP published emails showing a frantic effort by Bennett SEE GRADING, PAGE A8

Nasty slice

Police: Couple hit by train committed suicide BLUFFTON (AP) — Police say the deaths of a couple from northeastern Indiana when they were struck by a train were suicides. Bluffton Police Chief Tammy Schaffer says 26-year-old Samuel Stirlen and 24-year-old wife Kayla Stirlen left notes to family members at their Bluffton apartment, but didn’t explain why they decided to commit suicide. The Bluffton News-Banner reports witnesses said they saw the couple sitting in a car with the doors open near the tracks before they were struck by the train shortly by the train about 8 p.m. Tuesday. One witness says he also saw the couple approach an earlier train.

75 cents

Contractor error cuts phone, internet for tens of thousands BY MIKE MARTURELLO mmarturello@kpcmedia.com

BOB BRALEY

Kiddie royalty selected Wednesday for the 2013 Wolf Lake Onion Days Festival included, from left, Kiddie Prince Joseph Smith, Kiddie King

Parker Nicodemus, Kiddie Queen Alexis Cole and Kiddie Princess Kenna Alexander.

Onion Days get off to rainy start BY BOB BRALEY bbraley@kpcmedia.com

WOLF LAKE — When you open an onion, tears start to fall. As the Wolf Lake Onion Days opened Wednesday, raindrops fell on the festival. While it rained hard at times, the festival was not a rain-out. Events continued, although some were moved under the awning at Noble Township Park, the festival’s main location. Phil Hakey Sr. and Lucy Hakey were recognized as the 2013 festival’s grand marshals and presented with a plaque. The Hakeys are members of Wolf Lake United Methodist Church, where Phil built a new handrail. They are members of the Fort Wayne Corvair Club, Wolf Lake Lions Club and Albion Eagles Club. Phil also belongs to the Albion Sons of the American Legion. The Hakeys volunteer at the Wolf Lake Food Pantry. Phil also dresses as Santa Claus for Avalon Village Nursing Home, Ligonier. The Kiddie King and Queen contest went forward under the awning. Alexis Cole was named the Kiddie Queen, Parker Nicodemus Kiddie King, Kenna Alexander Kiddie Princess and Joseph Smith Kiddie Prince. Food booths and vendors drew attention, and people listened to music from the Auburn Dixielanders. Kids Night proceeded as planned, and the annual Pet Show rounded out the evening.

BOB BRALEY

Lucy Hakey, left, and Philip Hakey Sr. were honored Wednesday as the grand marshals of the 2013 Wolf Lake Onion Days Festival.

The festival continues through Saturday. Today’s events include the pizza-eating contest at Portside Pizza at 5:30 p.m., the three-on-three basketball tournament and the Kiddie and Adult pedal pulls. Registration for the tourney and pedal pulls start in the park at 5:30 p.m., with the events there at 6 p.m.

ANGOLA — Upward of 30,000 Mediacom Internet and phone service customers across northern Indiana lost service for 10 hours due to a fiber optic cable cut Tuesday. “When a fiber cut like this occurs, it has a very negative effect on our customers, and we are very sorry for that,” said Mediacom spokeswoman Phyllis Peters. The cut occurred at about 12:37 p.m. EDT near the Illinois-Indiana border when a private contractor not working for Mediacom was doing soil boring work and cut a major Mediacom fiber cable in multiple places, Peters said. Service was restored at 10:40 p.m. Between 20,000 and 30,000 customers lost phone and Internet service. Complicating the issue was the fact that boring rods used by the contractor became stuck in the soil, Peters said. Once Mediacom crews determined the extent of the damage, they set about replacing the damaged fiber with 800 feet of new fiber. The repair was difficult, because the contractor’s equipment was difficult to remove so repairs could be made. Typically a cut of this magnitude takes 5-7 hours to repair, Peters said. Peters said the fiber that was cut was the main line that services all of northern Indiana. Mediacom television was interrupted for about 20 minutes, Peters said. Television service was SEE NASTY, PAGE A8

New entrance will welcome ENMS students, visitors BY DENNIS NARTKER dnartker@kpcmedia.com

KENDALLVILLE — East Noble Middle School’s new main entrance is more secure, visible and handicapped-accessible. Seventh-graders and their parents attending today’s seventhgrade orientation, which new Principal Andy Deming calls “Knight Transition,” will use the new Riley Street entrance identified by a new East Noble Middle School marquee and ramp. It is the only ramp entrance to the building. “The biggest change students will notice is the entrance and new administrative offices near the entrance,” Deming said Wednesday during a tour of the office area. A classroom and gym concession area have been converted into offices. Visitors using the new entrance will be directed into the office area to sign in and obtain visitor passes. “The structure of the day and the grades are not changing,” Deming said. The old Sheridan Street entrance door will be used for morning student drop-offs and after-school pickups, and all doors including the Sheridan Street doors will be secured during the school day. Visitors must use the new entrance.

ENMS plans tours, orientation session

DENNIS NARTKER

New Principal Andy Deming stands at the new Riley Street main entrance and marquee for East Noble Middle School. Administrative offices have been moved to a new site inside the entrance.

The glass in the set of entrance doors on gymnasium side have been replaced with steel covering, so visitors cannot see into the gym. Earlier this year, the East Noble school board discussed ways to make the middle school more secure and safe for students. They endorsed Superintendent Ann Linson’s recommendation to move

the entrance to the Riley Street side of the building, placing the administrative offices near the entrance. The work was done over the summer primarily by school district maintenance staff and Strawser Brothers Construction. At the Sheridan Street entrance last spring, visitors had to climb a flight of stairs, be “buzzed SEE ENMS, PAGE A8

KENDALLVILLE — Orientation for East Noble Middle School students and parents is scheduled for today from noon to 4 p.m. Students and parents should enter the school through the new Riley Street ramp entrance. Important information will be distributed, and students can tour the classrooms. A Back to School Night for all East Noble Middle School students and parents will be Monday from 5-6:30 p.m. Students and parents can meet the new principal, Andy Deming, assistant principal and athletic director Bill Cain and teachers.


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THE NEWS SUN

AREA • STATE •

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Plan commission approves minor subdivisions City director of planning and zoning Dave Lange reported the plats are compatible with the surrounding land use. The Noble County surveyor, Noble County Highway Department and Noble County Health Department had no issues with the surface drainage, road access and lot sizes, according to Lange. The lots will be approximately 1.4 acres. The Wibles own land adjoining the minor subdivisions. In other business, Lange reported he will be submitting in the future rezoning requests from homeowners in nonresidential zoned areas. Obtaining mortgages can be difficult for homeowners whose homes are not properly zoned.

BY DENNIS NARTKER dennisn@kpcmedia.com

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Ten-year 4-H horse and pony members The Noble County 4-H horse and pony program honored its graduating 10-year members last month at the Noble County Community Fair. From left are Mikayla Antonides, Randi Orr, Renee Zeigler, Kendal Clark and Judith Showalter. Antonides and Orr each received a Ben

Konger Memorial Scholarship award of $500 apiece, presented by Beth Konger. Zeigler received the Noble County Saddle Club Merit Award, presented by Frank Tijerina.

KENDALLVILLE — Preliminary and secondary plats for a two-lot, minor subdivision in the 1200 and 1300 blocks of North Lima Road were approved by the Kendallville Plan Commission Monday night. David and Lori Wible of 1305 N. Lima Road, Kendallville, petitioned commissioners for the plats in the RS, suburban-residential, zoning district. Surveyor Rod Renkenberger, representing the Wibles and Steve Remke, told commissioners it the applicants’ intention to sell the lots for single-family residential homes. Remke is a potential buyer of one of the lots in the 1200 block of North Lima Road.

Glick releases local Additional burglary charges filed against area man road funding totals BY MATT GETTS mgetts@kpcmedia.com

AUBURN — An area man already in the DeKalb County Jail for allegedly burglarizing a home was hit with five similar charges Tuesday. Robert Lee Slone, 52, whose Slone last address was in rural Corunna, has been charged with burglary, a Class B felony; two counts of burglary, a Class C felony; attempted burglary, a Class C felony and receiving stolen property, a Class D felony. Slone has been in the DeKalb County Jail since DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Dave

Cserep allegedly caught him stealing items from a garage in the 100 block of Michigan Street, Corunna, on May 4. The other crimes are alleged to have been committed between Dec. 17, 2012 and April 28 in five DeKalb County locations. Slone also has been charged with being a habitual offender. According to court papers, Slone was sentenced five times between 1985-2010 in Noble County. Two of the convictions were for burglary and two others were for receiving stolen property and residential entry. Slone told police in December he was homeless, but had recently lived in Butler, St. Joe, Spencerville and Albion. He claimed his wife was in a nursing home

and he had a child in foster care. Slone was allegedly caught in the act of burglarizing a rural Butler home on Dec. 17, 2012, by DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Lee Stoy, Butler Police Chief Jim Nichols and Butler Patrolman Jon Bonifer. Slone was originally booked on a parole violation warrant on sentencings relating to 2009 convictions in Noble County, and he was transferred to the Indiana Department of Correction to serve the remainder of his sentence. Stoy said while Slone was in custody, officers attempted to tie him to other burglaries that had been committed in the area. Stoy also was working with the prosecutor’s

office in DeKalb County to determine the proper charge to file in the case. Without letting local authorities know, the Department of Correction released Slone at the end of his sentence on Feb. 15. Police did not become aware Slone was released until approximately a month later. Slone stands accused of burglarizing a property in rural Auburn on April 22, a location in Waterloo on April 23 and a barn in Waterloo on April 28. On May 4, Slone was arrested by Cserep. He faces a Class B felony charge in that incident. The receiving stolen property charge relates to a mo-ped that police allege was reported stolen from Kendallville on Aug. 24, 2012.

Local students make REMC trip to D.C. WASHINGTON — Noble REMC sponsored two local young people to attend the 2013 Electric Cooperative Youth Tour in Washington, D.C., last month. This year’s delegates were Rachel Stohlman of West Noble High School and Mitchell Comparet from Central Noble High School. The tour gives young Hoosiers the opportunity to visit the nation’s capital to learn about government and electric cooperatives. It directly relates to one of the primary cooperative principles — investment in education. “It was an amazing trip,” Stohlman said. “I saw so many interesting things, had a lot of moments that I will remember forever and made a lot of friends. I want to thank Noble REMC for allowing me to go on the Electric Cooperative Youth Tour; it’s a trip of a lifetime.” The trip departed from Indianapolis, then bused to the Flight 93 Memorial and Gettysburg National Military Park Battlefield, both in Pennsylvania;

Arlington Cemetery; the U.S. Capitol; Marine Corps Museum; and several monuments and museums in Washington, D.C. Kevin Dreibelbis, marketing and public relations director of Noble REMC, said the Indiana delegation consisted of 77 students from around the state, each selected by his or her local cooperative. Hoosier students joined 1,500 other delegates representing electric cooperatives from 43 U.S. states. “Noble REMC is pleased to be able to provide this opportunity for local students,” Dreibelbis said. “It’s a great trip, which includes seeing many fascinating national sights, making new friends and learning how everyone can be a leader and make a difference.” Another highlight of the tour was face-to-face lessons on civic participation with Indiana’s congressional leaders, which included meeting with Sen. Joe Donnelly and Rep. Marlin Stutzman, a Republican from LaGrange

by Joseph of Arimathea to wrap Christ’s body after the crucifixion. In 1978, select U.S. scientists from the Air Force, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratory, NASA and several private companies spent five days and nights performing dozens of scientific tests on the Shroud in Turin. The purpose was to determine the nature and composition of the Shroud image and seek answers to the many unresolved and controversial

Northeast Indiana roads, bridges and highways will benefit from significant funding increases over the next two years, state Sen. Sue Glick, R-LaGrange, said in a news release Tuesday. She said the Legislature’s 2014-2015 state budget increases transportation funding by $210 million per year, including $100 million each year for local units of government. Glick released the coming year’s highway funding for local counties, cities and towns. The total for each county shows the increase from the county’s current overall funding levels: • LaGrange County: $5,522,114 overall ($1,396,263 increase). Individual units — LaGrange County government $5,164,840; town of LaGrange $172,589; Shipshewana $43,263; Topeka $75,807; Wolcottville $65,616. • Noble County: $7,142,936 overall ($1,805,933 increase). Individual units — Noble County government $5,769,460; Albion $154,442; Avilla $157,861; Cromwell $33,663; Kendall-

Trine golf outing raises record-breaking $85,000 PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

West Noble’s Rachel Stohlman, and Central Noble’s Mitchell Comparet are shown in front of the White House in Washington, D.C., during the pair’s trip to the nation’s capital last month. The trek was hosted by Noble REMC.

County who represents the area in Congress. Indiana’s electric cooperatives have hosted the Youth Tour since 1960, providing thousands of young Hoosiers the opportunity to visit the nation’s capital and learn about the federal government and the cooperative utility industry. Anyone interested in

applying for the trip must be a high school junior and may contact Dreibelbis at Noble REMC in Albion at 636-2113. Noble REMC is an electric cooperative utility company serving nearly 10,000 customers in Noble, DeKalb and six surrounding counties in northeast Indiana.

Scientist to discuss Shroud of Turin findings ANGOLA — J. Dee German, who performed comprehensive testing of the Shroud of Turin, will speak in Angola Thursday, Aug. 15. German, a member of the U.S scientific team that traveled to Turin, Italy, in 1978, will speak in the St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church Parish Hall, 700 W. Maumee St., at 9 a.m. and 8 p.m., a news release said. The Shroud of Turin is an ancient church relic kept in Turin and is believed by many to be the cloth used

ville $648,407; Ligonier $289,620; Rome City $89,484. • Steuben County: $5,385,020 overall ($1,361,507 increase). Individual units — Steuben County government $4,492,622; Angola $566,223; Clear Lake $22,289; Fremont $140,569; Hamilton $100,726; Hudson: $34,058; Orland $28,534. • DeKalb County: $6,931,873 ($1,752,509 increase). Individual units —DeKalb County government $5,233,141; Altona $12,953; Ashley $64,630; Auburn $837,038; Butler $176,468; Corunna $16,700; Garrett $413,292; St. Joe $30,244; Waterloo $147,407. “Our roads and highways connect visitors to our community’s resources, which is an essential component to boosting economic development,” Glick said. “Because of that, it’s crucial that our infrastructure is efficient enough to support both incoming and outgoing travel. These funds will give us the tools we need to fix any holes in our transportation network, bringing more investments to our area.”

FROM STAFF REPORTS

theories. In his 45-minute presentation, German will explore the nature of the image and cloth, Biblical correlations with its features, its history, 1978 tests and conclusions and current research. He will follow with a discussion of what this work has meant to him. A major restoration of the Shroud was undertaken in 2002. At that time, all 30 of the patches sewn into the cloth in 1534 by nuns to repair damage from a 1532

fire were removed. The Shroud is 14 1/2 feet long and 3 1/2 feet wide bearing the ventral and dorsal image of a crucified man. Since 1578, the Shroud has been kept in Turin and is owned by the Catholic Church. German comes to Angola at the invitation of St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church and parishioners Joe and Barb Caruso and Liatt Peters. The presentations are free and open to the public.

ANGOLA — The Alumni and Friends 23rd Annual Scholarship Golf Outing at Trine University Friday raised an event record sum for Trine scholarships. All proceeds benefit the 2013-14 scholarship fund. “Trine is grateful for the support of our many golfers, friends and sponsors for helping us to raise over $85,000 for student scholarships,” said Trine President Earl D. Brooks II. “I continue to be amazed by the time and generosity from so many that enables Trine to provide scholarships to our deserving students.” In 2012, Trine awarded more than $20 million in institutional scholarships and grants to 98 percent of Trine students. A record-setting 63 teams of four registered for the event sponsored by Metal Technologies Inc.

of Auburn. The first and second flights were followed by lunch and dinner in the Zollner Club House. An awards ceremony closed the day. Lunch was sponsored by AMI Investment Management Inc. of Kendallville; alumnus Steve LaHood and his wife, Wendy, of Sarasota, Fla.; and Chuck and Rita Nedele of Angola. Dinner was sponsored by Rieke Corp. of Auburn, and the eagle sponsor was Jim Ingledue Construction Inc. of Angola. Many other local companies and individuals along with Trine friends supported the event. Next year’s golf outing is scheduled for Aug. 1, while the Florida Scholarship Golf Classic is set for Jan. 23. For more information on either event, contact Racheal Benner at 665-4834 or bennerr@trine.edu.

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AREA • STATE •

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

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Police Blotter • 21 booked into Noble County Jail ALBION — Twenty-one people were booked into the Noble County Jail from Friday through Tuesday, the county sheriff’s department said. • Tyler Dean Brunner, 20, of Columbia City was charged with possession of alcohol by a minor. • Michael Ray Campbell II, 20, of Kendallville was booked on a warrant for alleged theft-receiving stolen property. • Leticia DelGadillo-Gutierrez, 39, of Ligonier was charged with operating a motor vehicle while never receiving a license. • Vicky Lee Ferris, 56, of Albion was charged with domestic battery. • Ismael Hernandez, 29, of Kendallville was charged with operating a motor vehicle while never receiving a license. • Jessie Cole Honaker, 30, of Fort Wayne was booked on an Allen County warrant. • Trinity Lee Hunter, 35,

THE NEWS SUN THE NEWS SUN (USPS 292-440) 102 N. Main St., Kendallville, IN 46755 Established 1859, daily since 1911 ©KPC Media Group Inc. 2013 Recipient of several awards from the Hoosier State Press Association for excellence in reporting in 2012.

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of LaGrange was charged with operating while intoxicated; possession of marijuana, hash oil or hashish; and operating a motor vehicle while never receiving a license. • Jeromy David Hurd, 24 of Garrett was charged with a parole violation on an original charge of carrying a handgun without a license. • Joel Mecklenburg, 31, of Wawaka was charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated endangering a person. • Lonnie Gene Miller, 25, of Ligonier was charged with operating with a Schedule I or II controlled substance in the body; possession of marijuana, hash oil or hashish; and possession of a controlled substance. • Jose Santiago, 18, of Kendallville was charged with possession of alcohol by a minor. • Hillary Anne Smith, 23, of Albion was charged with disorderly conduct and public intoxication. • William A. White, 37, of Albion was booked on a domestic battery warrant. • Michael Ray Campbell II, 20, of Kendallville was charged with disorderly conduct and possession of paraphernalia. • Mark Ian Gaff, 43, of Syracuse was charged with operating while intoxicated. • Brian Green, 19, of Three Rivers, Mich., was charged with possession of marijuana, hash oil or hashish. • Devon Leann Eminger, 32, of Kendallville was booked on a parole violation warrant on an original charge of visiting or maintaining a common nuisance. • Reed Lane Ford, 18, of Kendallville was charged with theft-receiving stolen property. • Jonathan Alejandro Hernandez, 24, of Ligonier was charged with having no operator’s license when required. • John Vincent Meek, 36, of Fort Wayne was booked on a body attachment writ. • Krystal Allison Reeves, 21, of Avilla was charged with false reporting-obstruction/tampering.

• Lloyd Charles Rowlison, 20, of LaGrange was booked on a warrant for possession or methamphetamine, possession of precursors with intent to manufacture meth and possession of paraphernalia.

Bus at community center vandalized GREEN CENTER — Someone vandalized a bus at the Green Township Community Center, the Noble County Sheriff’s Department said. The bus was described as “shot up.” Fire extinguishers had been activated and walls were written on. There was no break-in of the building itself, and no signs of any attempts to do so. No items were stolen. The building is on C.R. 300S near C.R. 300E. An investigation continues. The incident was reported Monday at 7:07 p.m.

8 booked into LaGrange jail LAGRANGE — Local police arrested eight people from Friday through Monday, according to LaGrange County Jail records. • Adam Scott, 26, of the 100 block of West Jackson, Goshen, was arrested Monday by Topeka police on a charge of disorderly conduct. • Rebecca McCue, 37, of the 100 block of West Jackson, Goshen, was arrested Monday by Topeka police on a charge of disorderly conduct. • Nicholas M. Gephart, 23, of the 600 block of North Canal, LaGrange, was arrested Monday by LaGrange County police on a warrant charging him with failure to appear for court on an original charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. • Brian Pruskiewicz, 30, of the 400 block of Susan Street, Sturgis, Mich., was arrested Sunday by LaGrange town police on a charge of operating while intoxicated. • Gregory Adams, 22, of the 5900 block of South S.R. 9, Wolcottville,

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was arrested Saturday by LaGrange County police on a charge of battery. • Joshua Keith, 30, of the 200 block of West Central Avenue, LaGrange, was arrested Friday by LaGrange town police on a charge of operating while intoxicated. • Zabrina Brown, 37, of the 51100 block of Van Drive, Bristol, was arrested Friday by LaGrange County police on a warrant charging her with maintaining a common nuisance. • Russell Lewis, 51, of the 1900 block of East C.R. 400N, LaGrange, was arrested Friday by LaGrange County police on a charge of unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon.

Money stolen from vehicle at fire station WOLF LAKE — Someone stole $210 from a wallet in a vehicle parked at the Noble Township Fire Station, the Noble County Sheriff’s Department said. A carton of cigarettes also was stolen from a vehicle there. The thefts were reported Friday at 8:08 p.m.

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Support for Erin’s House The Noble County Community Foundation and its supporting organization, Community Initiatives, recently awarded Erin’s House for Grieving Children a $2,500 grant to assist with general operating expenses. Erin’s House provides support services that promote healing and recovery of children, teens and their families affected by death. From left are Audrey Ehle, Erin’s House special events coordinator; Rachel Burkholder, Erin’s House marketing and donor relations director; and JoAnna Ness, Noble County Community Foundation summer intern.

Boat stolen KIMMELL — Someone stole a 14-foot aluminum, V-bottom boat from the 2000 block of South C.R. 800W, the Noble County Sheriff’s Department said. The theft was reported Monday at 6:20 p.m.

Fuel tanks filched WAWAKA — Someone stole fuel tanks and a six-gallon gas can from a boat in the 700 block of East Phillips Drive, Wawaka, the Noble County Sheriff’s Department said. The theft was reported Saturday at 10:49 a.m.

Theft reported ROME CITY — A theft was reported Saturday at 5:06 p.m. in the 1300 block of East Terri Court, the Rome City Town Marshal’s Office said. No other information was released.

State Brief • Purdue Calumet leader to talk budget woes HAMMOND (AP) — Purdue University Calumet’s chancellor plans to discuss the campus’ budget crisis during a town hall-style meeting with staff Thursday. Chancellor Tom Keon’s address to employees of the Hammond campus will cover its current enrollment, a $3 million revenue shortfall and possible options for closing the shortfall, campus spokesman Wes Lukoshus said. A projected 7 percent enrollment gap this fall prompted the campus to consider layoffs of tenure-track faculty and staff, Lokushus told the Journal and Courier. It already announced in April that it would cut 50 tenure-track faculty and staff over the 18 months to make up for its enrollment shortage. “We, right now, are kind of weighing our options,” Lukoshus said. “… Nothing’s been determined or finalized.” Purdue Calumet has about 250 tenured and tenure-track faculty. Tenure-track faculty are considered assistant professors. Any further cuts are anticipated to affect both academic and nonacademic staff in roughly equal numbers Administrators say the lower enrollment rates are due in part to increasing numbers of incoming freshmen who’ve already satisfied general education requirements through high school dual-credit courses. Lukoshus said that as more high school students with dual-credit class experience enroll at Purdue Calumet, the number of credit hours that incoming students sign up for declines.

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2013 LAWN & GARDEN • OUTDOOR MISC. 500 gal. LP tank; 330 gal. air tank; wooden swing set; 2000 watt Honda generator; (3) 2001 32’ Prowler travel trailer w/1 slide-out, sleeps 8, fully equipped & self-propelled Toro lawn ready for camping mowers; self-propelled Snapper lawn mower; rear tine tiller; solar powered pond aerator; 4-person paddle boat; 6½ hp Pro-Force upright air compressor; floor Single buggy w/slide-up curtains, model drill press; (2) 20’x30’ rubber tires, brakes canopies (1 has side curtains); 20” 2-sided aluminum roll-around tool bench; 8’ aluminum tool bench; heavy duty revolving bolt bin; gas hedge trimmer; Poulan chainsaw; 32’ aluminum extension ladder; fertilizer spreader; high pressure pump for lawn irrigation wheelbarrows; stock tanks; farm gates; fence posts; lawn cart; lawn & garden tools; Wingard’s folding child carrier bike cart; lots of ratchet tie-downs; screw-in anchors; double burner Mr. Heater; swivel picnic table seats; camping equipment; antique Elgin outboard motor; log chain; outdoor LP railroad light; wooden lawn furniture; Driving harness • Medium driving harness 19” Driving collar • Horse blankets APPLIANCES • FURNITURE • HOUSEHOLD (2) Electric Maytag wringer wash machines; aluminum Wingard double tubs; 15 cu.ft. Crystal Cold LP refrigerator; 12 cu.ft. Servel gas/electric refrigerator; 18 cu.ft. Blizzard LP freezer; 85,000 BTU natural gas Warm Morning stove; 35,000 BTU LP heater; (3) kitchen ranges (2 natural gas, 1 LP); (2) full size bedroom suites; queen bedroom suite; table with 4 padded roller chairs; recliner; sofa; (2) love seats; upholstered chair; buffet; Dial & Sew sewing machine w/cabinet; baby crib; floor lamp w/stand; bookshelf; bassinet; coffee tables; end tables; file cabinet; child’s cupboard; (2) safes; grocery carts; wind-up Amana clock; wind-up Seth Thomas clock; Coleman buggy heater; Coleman iron; (3) Coleman 200A lanterns; cast iron waffle iron; 21” stock pot; meat slicer; 12-place gold-rimmed china set; glassware; kitchenware; (2)

Beginning at 3:30 p.m.

Bible Story sets; Encyclopedia set; lots of books DAVE & VELDA WINGARD - OWNERS THE FOLLOWING ITEMS CONSIGNED BY JEFF & KATHY WHITMER Snow blower attachment for Simplicity tractor • Ping pong table • Fertilizer spreader • Rototiller • Trolling motor APPLIANCES • FURNITURE • HOUSEHOLD Large electric chest freezer; electric refrigerator; electric mini-fridge; gas grill; sofa, loveseat, chair & ottoman set; La-Z-Boy hide-a-bed sofa; large oak entertainment 44” Simplicity lawn mower with center; (2) maple desks; grass catcher computer desk; wooden rocker; oak bench; oak quilt rack; lamp tables & lamps; wooden chiming wall clock; several TVs; VCRs; Disney VHS tapes; Rocky Collector Series VHS tapes; luggage; 12-place Pfaltzgraff stoneware set; 1969 Encyclopedia set; Golden Book Encyclopedia set; Childcraft set; country style pictures & decorations; roll of carpet; pet carrier ANTIQUE FURNITURE • GLASSWARE Oak dining room table with 6 leaves; round oak pedestal table; (6) oak pressed back chairs; (4) oak T-back chairs; full size high oak headboard & footboard with carvings; oak dresser with mirror & carvings; oak pressed back sewing rocker with cane seat; school desk; metal desk; small smoker’s stand; copper boiler with lid; crock butter churn; misc. crocks; misc. stoneware; copper tea kettle; granite coffee pot; wooden coffee grinder; wooden butter bowls; wooden butter paddle; small cast iron kettles; grinding stone; lots of old tools; croquet set; oil lamps; (6) 1858 Mason jars with zinc lids; (15) pink McCoy wall pockets; yellow stoneware; McCoy pieces; (50+) pieces Carnival glass; pink Depression glass; white, aqua, cranberry, iridescent glass; various pieces Hobnail glass; misc. glassware Plus many more items too numerous to mention... Any announcements made day of auction take precedence over printed matter. Terms: cash or check. Not responsible for accidents. Food will be available.

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AREA • NATION •

kpcnews.com

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Deaths & Funerals • Bonnie Sutton

Judith Rudolph

SOUTH MILFORD — Bonnie Sutton, 67, of South Milford died Tuesday, August 6, 2013, in Parkview Regional Medical Center, Fort Wayne. She was a lifetime area Mrs. Sutton resident. Mrs. Sutton had worked at Arden’s, Fibertech, and Aeroquip all in Kendallville. She retired early due to failing health. She was born January 20, 1946, in Kendallville to Charles and Margaret (Firestone) Price. On March 23, 1964, in South Milford she married Delmer Clayton Sutton. He preceded her in death on April 12, 2012. Bonnie dearly loved her grandchildren. She enjoyed watching television and doing crossword puzzles. When her health allowed, she enjoyed shopping. And, she was an especially good cook. Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Tammy and Richard Henschen of Wolcottville; three sons and a daughter-in-law, Jeffrey Clayton Sutton of Kendallville, Troy and Dawn Sutton of South Milford, and Ronnie Sutton of South Milford; five grandchildren, Phyllis Arnold of Wolcottville, Sarah Shepherd of Corunna, Destynie Bellinger of Kendallville, Dillon Henschen of Wolcottville, and Breanda Sutton of Wolcottville; three great-grandchildren, Crystal Burkhead, Johnathon Muzzillo, and Nicholas Niman; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Linda Price of Kendallville and Alberta “Bertie” and Larry Steffe of Auburn; two brothers and a sister-in-law, Ray and Martha Jo Slone of Stroh and Roy Slone of Kendallville; and a brother-in-law, Steve Ryan of Georgia. She was also preceded in death by her father, Charles Price; her mother, Margaret Slone; her stepmother, Zelma Price; and a sister, Sue Ryan. Funeral services will be Friday, August 9, 2013, at 7 p.m. in Young Family Funeral Home, Kendallville Chapel, 222 South State Street, Kendallville with Pastor Craig Burkholder of the Hudson United Brethren Church officiating. Per Bonnie’s wishes, cremation will take place at a later date. Calling is Friday, August 9, 2013, from 4 to 7 p.m. in the funeral home. Preferred memorials are to the American Lung Association. View a video tribute after Friday or send condolences to the family at youngfamilyfuneralhome.com.

HAMILTON — Judith A. Rudolph, 72, passed away Wednesday August 7, 2013 at her home in Hamilton. She was born May 20, 1941 in Corunna to Howard and Dorothy (Falkner) Squier. She married Robert Rudolph Jr. on January 12, 1979 and he passed away May 29, 1988. Surviving are two daughters, Jenyne “Jena” (Gabby) Lash of Hamilton and Angela (Brian) Johnson of Auburn; six stepchildren, Carol Wells, Sherrie Feltz, Terry Rudolph, Pat Rudolph, Linda Likens and Michael Rudolph; eight grandchildren, James Lash of Hamilton, Johnny Carroll II of Lafayette, Tyler Lash of Hamilton, Breanna Johnson of Garrett, Gabrielle Johnson of Garrett, Kaitlin Johnson of Auburn, Tim Schohl of Fort Wayne, Eric Williams of Waterloo and 11 great-grandchildren; eight siblings, Richard (Annis) Squier of Waterloo, Carolyn Spencer of Auburn, Raymond (Joan) Squier of Ocala, Fla., Beverly Smyth of Kendallville, Howard (Kathy) Squier of Ocalla, Fla., Wayne Squier of Ocalla, Fla., Susie (Mark) Tomell of Huson, Mont., John (Peg) Squier of Angola; and her dog Poppy. She was preceded in death by her parents, a son Johnny Wayne Carroll and a grandson, Eric “Deke” Lash. Services are 11 a.m. Saturday, August 10, 2013, at Feller and Clark Funeral Home, 875 S. Wayne St., Waterloo, with Rev. Jeff Alexander officiating. Burial will be in Corunna Cemetery, Corunna. Calling is Friday from 2-8 p.m. at the funeral home. Preferred memorials are to the DeKalb County Humane Shelter. To send condolences visit fellerandclark.com.

Ned Gilbert AUBURN — Ned B. Gilbert, 99, died Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2013, at his home at Smith Farms Manor in Auburn. Mr. Gilbert worked out of Findlay, Ohio for the Meyer Firm as a self-employed painter for over 45 years, retiring in 1978. He attended the Auburn Church of the Nazarene. He was born Sept. 19, 2013, in Pleasant Lake, to Shirley L. and Nettie (Deller) Gilbert. He married Helen M. Cook on Feb. 20, 1937, in East Chicago, Ill., and she died March 9, 2007. Surviving are four nieces, Martha (Larry) Berndt of Snow Lake, Linda Brunetto of Livonia, Mich., Linda DeVore of Nokomis, Fla., and Janet Remus of St. Johns, Mich.; and a nephew, Scott W. Cook Jr. of

Farmington Hills, Mich. In addition to his parents and wife, he was preceded in death by two sisters, Martha Tuttle, and Lilah Gilbert; and four brothers, Lloyd Gilbert, John Gilbert, Ross Gilbert, and Harry Gilbert. Services will be 11 a.m. Friday at Feller and Clark Funeral Home, 1860 S. Center St., Auburn, with Pastor Dan White officiating. Burial will be in Butler Cemetery in Butler. Visitation will be from 10-11 a.m. Friday prior to the funeral service at the funeral home. Memorials may be directed to the Auburn Church of the Nazarene Building Fund. To send condolences, visit fellerandclark.com.

Gary Tharp ANGOLA — Gary Paul Tharp, 69, passed away Tuesday, August 6, 2013 at his home in Angola, Indiana. He was born July 20, 1944 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to Frank G. Tharp and Mary (Marsee) Tharp Todd. He was an auto body repairman at Dunham Motor Sales in Angola, Indiana. He previously owned several body shop businesses in Mr. Tharp Cincinnati, Ohio. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army serving in Vietnam and was a member of the George Anspaugh Post #7205 VFW of Angola, Indiana. He was a member of Fairview Missionary Church, Angola, Indiana. Gary is survived by his wife of 34 years, Connie (Quatkemeyer) Tharp of Angola, Indiana; three sons Jeff and Amy Perkins of Angola, Indiana; Glenn and Marie Tharp of Cincinnati, Ohio; Ryan Tharp of Palm Springs, California; two brothers Wayne Tharp of St. Petersburg, Florida and Greg Todd of Croswell, Michigan; two sisters Judy Pratt of North Carolina and Jamie Reynolds of Lexington, Michigan; and 7 grandchildren Taylor, Aaron, Brayden, Ally, Paige, Sara and Aiden. He was preceded in death by his parents, his sister Brenda Todd and his brothers Lee Todd and Greg Todd. Services will be 10 a.m. Saturday, August 10, 2013, at the Weicht Funeral Home, Angola, Indiana, with Rev. Norman Fuller officiating. Military rites will be performed by the George Anspaugh VFW Post #7205 and the Angola American Legion Post 31. Visitation will be from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.

Friday, August 9, 2013 at the Weicht Funeral Home, Angola, Indiana. Memorials may be made to the Steuben County Cancer Association and to Cameron Hospice and Home Health. You may sign the guest book at weichtfh.com. You may sign the guestbook at www. weicht1854.com

Joy Williamson AUBURN — Joy “Minnie” Williamson, 57 passed away Tuesday August 6, 2013 at her home in Auburn. Minnie worked for 18 years for TI Automotive in Ashley. She was born September 13, 1955 in Monrovia, Calif. Her father and step-mother, Owen and Donna Lowe, survive in Kokomo and Ms. her mother and step-fa- Williamson ther, Phyllis (Stickle) and Don Dowty survive in Churubusco. Also surviving are three daughters and a son, Buffy (Tony) Salinas of Butler, Pepper Williamson of Fort Wayne, Ricki Williamson of Auburn and Rickie “Peanut” Williamson of Auburn; six grandchildren, Hailee Williamson, Madison Williamson, Brittany Salinas, Faven Foster, Bryce Salinas and Gage Williamson; two brothers and four sisters, Marsha (Jimmy) Kline of Kokomo, Karen (Bob) Bainter of Greentown, Donya (Doug) Belh of Churubusco, Donnie Dowty of Wyoming, Ohio, Darrin (Kelly) Lowe of Hustonville, Ky., and Daphnie (Matt) Harmeson of Kokomo. She was preceded in death by a brother Ricky Stickle. Services are 3 p.m. Friday, August 9, 2013, at Feller and Clark Funeral Home, 1860 Center St., Auburn. Burial in Woodlawn Cemetery,

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‘Captain Kangaroo’ actor Allegretti dies NEW YORK (AP) — Cosmo Allegretti, who created and voiced puppet characters like Grandfather Clock and Dancing Bear on the children’s television show “Captain Kangaroo,” has died. He was 86. Allegretti, who had homes in Hampton Bays, N.Y., and New River, Ariz., died of emphysema on July 26 in Arizona, his attorney and friend John Munzel said Wednesday. Allegretti had been a puppeteer but was working

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Tammy Ard LIGONIER — Tammy Lou Ard, 43, of Ligonier, died Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2013, in her residence. Arrangements are pending at Young Family Funeral Home, Kendallville Chapel, 222 S. State St., Kendallville.

Obama cancels Putin meeting

WASHINGTON (AP) — Already faltering, President Barack Obama’s five-year effort to reboot U.S.-Russian relations finally crashed Wednesday, as the White House abruptly canceled his planned face-to-face summit with Russia’s Vladimir Vicki Long Putin. The effort to upgrade the ANNAPOLIS, Md. relationship has fallen victim — Vicki A. Long, 61, to the rapidly shrinking of Annapolis, Md., died common ground between Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, at the former Cold War rivals, AAMC, Annapolis. She was a former resident including extreme differences over the Syrian civil of Auburn and moved to war, Russia’s domestic Maryland following the crackdown on civil rights death of her parents. and — the final straw — She was born Jan. 15, 1958, to Bill and Ruth Long. the asylum granted to NSA leaker Edward Snowden. She is survived by two The U.S. and Russian brothers, David Long of foreign and defense Boca Raton, Fla., and Michael Long of Annapolis, ministers will sit down in Washington later this week, Md. but Obama canceled his She was preceded in planned early September death by her parents. summit in Moscow with Memorials are to The Putin because of what the Providence Center, 930 White House called a lack of Point Pleasant Road, “recent progress” on a wide Glen Burnie, MD 21060 array of critical issues. Such or Langton Green, 3016 steps are not taken lightly, Arundel On The Bay Road, and the decision will almost Annapolis, MD 21403. certainly herald a new frostiness in already chilly ties. “We have informed the Russian government that we believe it would be more KPC Media Group daily constructive to postpone newspapers (The News Sun, the summit until we have The Star and The Herald more results from our shared Republican) do not charge agenda,” the White House for death notices that include said in a statement, citing notice of calling hours, deep differences over missile date and time of funeral defense, arms control, trade, and burial, and memorial global security and human information. An extended rights. “Russia’s disappointing obituary, which includes decision to grant Edward survivors, biographical Snowden temporary asylum information and a photo, is was also a factor that we available for a charge. considered in assessing the Deadline for funeral current state of our bilateral homes placing obituaries is 5 p.m. for next day publica- relationship,” it added. The Kremlin responded tion. The email address is quickly, voicing its own obits@kpcmedia.com. disappointment with the canceled summit and blaming it on Washington’s inability to develop relations as a set painter in the with Moscow on an “equal early days of “Captain basis.” Putin’s foreign affairs Kangaroo.” He volunteered adviser, Yuri Ushakov, to make a replacement when added that the decision the show was dissatisfied was “clearly linked” to the with a puppet created by a Snowden case, a situation professional. that he said wasn’t of He gave life Russia’s making. to characWhile Snowden might ters Bunny have been the immediate Rabbit, catalyst for canceling the Mister summit, the seeds of renewed Moose, U.S.-Russia discord were Rollo the planted more than a year Hippopotago when Putin re-took amus, Miss Allegretti the Russian presidency. Worm, On returning to power, he Cornelius adopted a deeply nationalistic the Walrus, Dennis the and more openly confronApprentice and others. The tational stance toward the show, starring Bob Keeshan, United States than had his started on CBS in 1955 and chosen successor Dmitry aired for more than 30 years. Medvedev, whose 2008-2012 As an actor, Allegretti tenure roughly overlapped appeared in films including Obama’s first term in the “Prince of the City.” White House.

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Lotteries • INDIANAPOLIS — These are the winning numbers drawn Wednesday: Indiana: Midday: 5-9-1 and 8-8-8-2. Evening results for Indiana were not available at press time. Powerball: 5-25-30-5859. Powerball: 32. Ohio: Midday: 5-3-4, 8-5-3-4 and 9-7-5-0-6.

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Wall Street • BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wednesday’s Close: Dow Jones Industrials High: 15,516.21 Low: 15,421.75 Close: 15,470.67 Change: —48.07 Other Indexes Standard&Poors 500 Index: 1690.91 —6.46 NYSE Index: 9568.26 —46.06 Nasdaq Composite Index: 3654.01 —11.76


THE NEWS SUN

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

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Our View •

Letter Policy • The News Sun welcomes letters to the Voice of the People column. All letters must be submitted with the author’s signature, address and telephone number. The News Sun reserves the right to reject or edit letters on the basis of libel, poor taste or repetition. Mail or deliver letters to The News Sun, 102 N. Main St., P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755. Letters may be emailed to dkurtz@kpcmedia.com.

Information about breastfeeding can be found at in.gov/isdh/25939.htm

Breastfeeding benefits babies, mothers, employers, taxpayers Gov. Mike Pence has proclaimed Indiana’s support for World Breastfeeding Week, which is the first week of August. The state of Indiana allows a woman to breastfeed her child anywhere the law allows her to be. In addition, Indiana law provides that state and political subdivisions and employers with more than 25 employees “shall provide for reasonable paid breaks for an employee to express breast milk for her infant, make reasonable efforts to provide a room or other location, other than a toilet stall, where the employee can express breast milk in private and make reasonable efforts to provide for a refrigerator to keep breast milk that has been expressed.” It takes most mothers much time and effort to become truly adept at breastfeeding. Mothers need education and support, beginning with expert instruction and encouragement prior to birth and in the hospital. According to womenshealth.gov, a website provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, early breast milk is liquid gold. Known as liquid gold, colostrum is the thick yellow first breast milk that mothers make during pregnancy and just after birth. This milk is very rich in nutrients and antibodies to protect the baby. Colostrum changes into what is called mature milk. By the third to fifth day after birth, this mature breast milk has the right amount of fat, sugar, water and protein to help the baby continue to grow. It provides all of the nutrients and antibodies the baby needs. For most babies — especially premature babies — breast milk is easier to digest than formula. The cells, hormones, and antibodies in breast milk protect babies from illness. Formula cannot match the chemical makeup of human breast milk. In fact, among formula-fed babies, ear infections and diarrhea are more common. Formula-fed babies also have higher risks of a disease that affects the gastrointestinal tract in preterm infants, respiratory infections, asthma, obesity and Type 2 diabetes. Some research shows that breastfeeding can also reduce the risk of Type 1 diabetes, childhood leukemia and atopic dermatitis (a type of skin rash) in babies. Breastfeeding has also been shown to lower the risk of sudden infant death syndrome. With breastfeeding, there are no bottles and nipples to sterilize. Formula and feeding supplies can more than $1,500 a year. Breastfed babies are sick less often, which can lower health care costs. Mothers and babies both benefit from the physical contact. It can help babies feel more secure, warm and comforted. The skin-toskin contact can boost the mother’s oxytocin, a calming hormone that helps milk flow. In mothers, breastfeeding is linked to a lower risk of Type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, ovarian cancer and postpartum depression Breastfeeding mothers miss fewer days from work because their infants are sick less often. Recent research shows that if 90 percent of U.S. families breastfed exclusively for six months, nearly 1,000 deaths among infants could be prevented annually. The U.S. would also save $13 billion per year because medical care costs are lower for fully breastfed infants than never-breastfed infants. We thank the family members, friends, health care professionals, government officials and employers who encourage women in their decision to breastfeed. OUR VIEW is written on a rotating basis by Grace Housholder, Dave Kurtz, Michael Marturello and Matt Getts. Publisher Terry Housholder is also a member of the editorial board. We welcome readers’ comments.

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A5

Resume blunders from job-seekers bring chuckles Other interests: “Playing with my two dogs (They actually belong to my wife but I love the dogs more than my wife).” This is actually a response a job-seeker gave on his resume. For anyone seeking employment, a resume is a vital personal marketing tool. It’s a document used to present a person’s background and skills, usually in an effort to secure employment. There are resume schools, resume classes and professional resume writers. It’s a billion dollar business helping people write resumes. A resume is the first impression an employer gets of a job-seeker. Why should an employer arrange an interview with a job-seeker who submits a resume riddled with spelling, factual and grammatical errors? Many years ago I applied for a high school English teaching position. I submitted a resume with a cover letter and was called to the assistant superintendent’s office for an interview. On his desk I noticed two orderly piles of resumes that he had received

for the teaching position. When I asked why two piles, he told me one pile had resumes with errors and the other did not. Those with errors were eliminated. Here are more resume blunders from the Bathroom LOL INSIDE Book by Jeff Kobus COMMENT Kreismer, Reyneke and Lori Walsh and resume mistakes Dennis Nartker websites: • “It’s best for employers that I not work with people.” • “My goal is to be a meteorologist. But since I possess no training in meteorology, I suppose I should try stock brokerage.” • “Time is very valuable, and it should always be used to achieve optimum results, and I believe it should not be played around with.” • Hobbies: “Drugs and girls.”

• “Finished eighth in a class of ten.” • Why interested in position: “To keep my parole officer from putting me back in jail.” • “I’m intrested to here more about that. I’m working today in a furniture factory as a drawer.” • Why should an employer hire you: “I bring doughnuts on Friday.” • Hobbies: “Having a good time.” • “Looking for a party time position with potential for advancement.” • Languages: Speak English and Spinach.” • Reason for leaving: “I thought the world was going to end.” • Hobbies: “Enjoy cooking Chinese and Italians.” • “I am about to enroll on a Business and Finance Degree with the Open University. I feel that this qualification will prove detrimental to me for future success.” • “Let’s meet so you can ‘ooh’ and ‘aah’ over my experience.” • “The company made me a scapegoat just like my previous

three employers.” • “I have an excellent track record, although I’m not a horse.” • “Wholly responsible for two failed financial institutions.” These people are probably still looking for work.

Milestone noted Here’s a local sports milestone I learned about recently: Fort Wayne golf professional Scott Pieri shot a 63 at the par 72 Cobblestone Golf Course on Sunday, July 28, establishing a new course record. He scored the 63 from the back tees at 6,976 yards. Holes No. 15 and No. 16 were lengthened last year, adding about 100 yards in total length from the back tees. He failed to birdie two of Cobblestone’s four Par 5s. Head professional Alan Moyer said the new record was announced because of the course changes and added length. DENNIS NARTKER is a reporter for The News Sun. He can be reached at dnartker@kpcmedia.com.

Fiber cut made for a quiet day, sort of When we experience a power outage phone and Internet. of, say three or four hours, people tend to My significant other talked about trying take notice. You might be without heat, you to conduct commerce with a variety of might be without air conditioning. Your retail businesses Tuesday afternoon but was refrigerator, well, don’t open it unless you unable to do so because all of their transacwant to see your food start going tions were conducted through bad. equipment that relied on the When it is the telephone, most Internet. of us have cell phones. When it is It seems as though this has Internet, the outages tend not to last been a bad year for Mediacom long. and Internet interruptions. Brian Then there was Tuesday. Those Glick, our information technology of you who are subscribers of manager, says we have now had Mediacom Internet know well two lengthy outages this summer. how bad Tuesday was. Internet Oh, yes. It impacted us at KPC MICHAEL Media was down nearly 10 hours. Some Group. We rely on the people didn’t get it back up and Internet for a variety of functions MARTURELLO for the production of our newsparunning even on Wednesday, though a reset or restart of the pers, so we, too, had a bit of computer might have jump started difficulty on Tuesday. At least things. there’s a backup Internet provider When I was out of the office at the home office so operations earlier on Wednesday, I was in a were not impacted too harshly. busy lunch spot in town. There But in the outlying offices, that were many people talking about was a different matter. When we how the outage impacted them. One woman learned that Internet would not be back up related about how the credit card system until late in the evening, we decided to go was down at a particular restaurant and you into emergency mode. Now, in the event of either had to pay cash or leave the store bad weather, like a winter storm, we have personnel with your credit card number. set up offices in our homes. I have produced Like that’s going to happen, the woman the front page of The Herald Republican said. from my kitchen table. I overheard a man talking about a friend On Tuesday, my office traveled a whole who was totally cutoff to the outside world two blocks south to Carnegie Public Library because this individual had Mediacom of Steuben County where they have a

dedicated Internet system powered by fiber optics. The staff was just awesome, making sure I was going to be able to work comfortably. They directed me to a couple different places where it would be quiet. Quiet? I am not used to quiet. I am used to interruptions. I am used to noise, whether it is the banging of keyboards (I hope I wasn’t too loud, Carnegie patrons!) or the traffic outdoors or the construction at Cameron Memorial Community Hospital. There are people constantly talking on the phone to sources. Or just talking. And so on. In a library, where people are supposed to be quiet, you hear folks who whisper. All the way across the room. What a great place, Carnegie Public Library. I can’t say enough about the staff at Carnegie for accommodating me and allowing me to work some four hours Tuesday in order to get the paper put to bed. It was the silver lining to an otherwise cloudy day at the office. Now, if I can only figure out a way to sit in one of those comfy, overstuffed leather chairs with a keyboard, mouse and laptop and make it all work. I might end up faking fiber cuts! MICHAEL MARTURELLO is editor of the The Herald Republican. He can be reached at mmar turello@kpcmedia.com.

What Others Say • Congress gets it right with student loan bill It’s a catch-22 for many Americans. They can’t afford a college education because they don’t have enough money. And they can’t make more money because they don’t have a college education. The answer for many is student loans. They borrow money from the federal government, banking on gaining the near-future earning power to pay down their debt. Some compile so much debt that they can’t pay their way out and finally have to file for bankruptcy. But many who borrow heavily for a college education do land better jobs

with better pay and eventually pay off their loans and continue on to a financially rewarding career. Traditionally, student loans have been offered at reasonable rates. That is, before a faux pas by the federal government nearly forced interest rates so high that it would have meant almost certain financial ruin for loan-dependent college students from low-income families. Six years ago, Congress lowered the interest rate on student loans to 3.4 percent. That rate was set to expire last year, but lawmakers delayed action on re-establishing a rate in 2012, so that it wouldn’t become a presidential electionyear issue. The trouble started

this year, when legislators failed to establish a new rate. Beginning July 1, the interest rates on federal student loans automatically doubled from 3.4 to 6.8 percent. On Wednesday, after months of partisan bickering, the House of Representatives finally got it right, passing a bill that will establish the interest rate this year at 3.86 percent for undergraduate loans and 5.42 percent for graduate student loans. The bill, already approved by the U.S. Senate, will also grant relief to those who would have owed the exorbitantly high interest rates on loans taken out after July 1. More importantly, the bill, which President Obama

is expected to sign into law, prescribes a new method for setting the interest rate. Instead of Congress reviewing and modifying the rate yearly, it will be figured by a formula based on market interest rates. The bill also includes a provision for protecting student loans from spikes in the market. A recent report issued by student loan giant Sallie Mae shows that students are increasingly dependent on loans to get a college education. With tuition rates and other college costs spiraling higher and higher, the new law will offer at least a measure of protection against further gouging of students. The Herald Bulletin


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THE NEWS SUN

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Briefs • Inferno roars through airport in Nairobi, Kenya NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A small fire at Kenya’s main airport swelled into a roaring inferno Wednesday that destroyed part of East Africa’s largest aviation hub and hampered air travel across the continent. Firefighters were desperately short of equipment in an area where the county government apparently lacks a single working fire engine. Crews needed hours to get the flames under control and at one point resorted to a line of officers passing water buckets. The early morning blaze gutted the arrival hall, forcing authorities to close the entire airport and airlines to cancel dozens of flights. The flames also charred airport banks and foreign exchange bureaus. No serious injuries were reported.

Egypt: Diplomacy has failed to resolve crisis CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s military-backed interim leadership proclaimed Wednesday that a crackdown against two protest sites is inevitable, saying that nearly two weeks of foreign diplomatic efforts to peacefully resolve its standoff with the Muslim Brotherhood have failed. The government’s statements strongly suggested that Egypt’s sharp polarization may spiral into even more bloodshed as thousands of supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi, a longtime Brotherhood figure, camp out at two main Cairo intersections and hold daily protests outside security buildings. At stake is stability in the Arab world’s most populous country. Already more than 250 people have been killed in violence since the military ousted Morsi last month, including at least 130 Brotherhood supporters in two major clashes between security forces and backers of the deposed president.

Syrian troops kill more than 60 BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian troops ambushed a large group of rebels Wednesday trudging through what once was a secret route through a desert road northeast of Damascus, killing more than 60 fighters in a barrage of machine gun fire and leaving their bodies in the sand. State television claimed those killed came from an al-Qaida-linked group that has joined the battle against President Bashar Assad, whose troops are trying to drive opposition forces from areas surrounding his seat of power in the capital. There were conflicting reports on the attack in Adra, which lies on a supply route between Damascus and rebel-held areas to the east that is often the scene of heavy clashes between the two sides. The dawn attack dealt another heavy blow to opposition troops following a string of recent regime successes. Syrian troops have been on the offensive in the past few months in an attempt to clear out Damascus suburbs held by opposition fighters.

Dead shark found on subway train NEW YORK (AP) — Did a fan of “Shark Week” get carried away? New York City’s transit authority says a conductor found a small dead shark aboard a subway train in Queens on Wednesday. The conductor asked passengers to leave the car and closed it off. The train continued to the end of the line, and then a supervisor placed the shark in a garbage bag and put it in the trash. Photos on the blog Gothamist depict the shark on the subway. It appears to be about 4 feet long, has a cigarette in its mouth with a fare card and Red Bull can nearby.

NATION • WORLD •

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Lawyer: Hasan intent on death sentence FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) — On the first day Maj. Nidal Hasan went on trial for his life, he claimed responsibility for the 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood. He posed no questions to most witnesses. He said the alleged murder weapon was his, even though no one asked. The Army psychiatrist sometimes took notes while acting as his own attorney, but he mostly looked forward impassively and rarely asked for help as witness after witness said he was the shooter. By Wednesday, the lawyers ordered to help him said they had had enough — they couldn’t watch him fulfill a death wish. “It becomes clear his goal is to remove impediments or obstacles to

the death penalty and is working toward a death penalty,” his lead standby attorney, Lt. Col. Kris Poppe, told the judge. That strategy, he argued, “is repugnant to defense counsel and contrary to our professional obligations.” Poppe said he and the other standby lawyers want to take over the case, or if Hasan is allowed to continue on his own, they want their roles minimized so that Hasan couldn’t ask them for help with a strategy they oppose. Hasan repeatedly objected, telling the judge: “That’s a twist of the facts.” The exchange prompted the judge, Col. Tara Osborn, to halt the long-delayed trial on only its second day. She must now decide what to do next, knowing that all

moves she makes will be scrutinized by a military justice system that has overturned most soldiers’ death sentences in the last three decades. Hasan faces a possible death sentence if convicted of the 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated for the attack on the Texas military post. “I don’t envy her. She’s on the horns of a dilemma here,” said Richard Rosen, a law professor at Texas Tech University and former military prosecutor who attended the first two days of trial. “I think whatever she does is potentially dangerous, at least from the view of an appellate court.” Rosen and other experts said that if Osborn allows

Poppe and Hasan’s other standby defense attorneys to take over, the judge could be seen as having unfairly denied Hasan’s right to defend himself, a right guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. But if she lets Hasan continue defending himself, she could be depriving him of adequate help from experienced attorneys. He also noted that it’s extremely rare for defendants to represent themselves in military court. “They don’t want this case to be reversed on appeal,” Rosen said. “The worst thing that can happen would be to retry the case all over again.” Giving Poppe a more active role in the case or having him take over the defense could enable Hasan

to argue he was denied his right to defend himself, added Victor Hansen, another former military prosecutor who teaches at the New England School of Law. “At the end of the day, the defendant has the absolute right who’s going to represent him, including deciding to represent himself,” Hansen said Wednesday. Hasan asked questions of just two witnesses during the first day of trial on Tuesday, and he delivered an opening statement that lasted barely a minute. Hasan rarely looked at Poppe or another standby attorney, Maj. Joseph Marcee, though the two lawyers occasionally whispered among themselves.

Leaders of al-Qaida remain threat WASHINGTON (AP) — Far from being on the brink of collapse, al-Qaida’s core leadership remains a potent threat — and one that experts say has encouraged the terror network’s spread into more countries today than it was operating in immediately after 9/11. President Barack Obama, who ordered the May 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden, has described al-Qaida’s headquarters as “a shadow of its former self” and his spokesman Jay Carney has called it “severely diminished” and “decimated.” The bravado, however, didn’t match the Obama administration’s action this week. Nineteen U.S. diplomatic outposts stretching across the Eastern Hemisphere remain closed, and nonessential personnel have been evacuated from the U.S. Embassy in Yemen after intelligence officials said they had intercepted a recent message from al-Qaida’s top leader about plans for a major terror attack. The new communique came from bin Laden’s replacement, Ayman al-Zawahri, who as early as December 2001 announced plans to decentralize the network and scatter its affiliates across the globe as a way of ensuring its survival. Now, major al-Qaida hubs are thriving along the Iraqi-Syrian border, in North Africa and, in the most serious risk to the U.S., in Yemen. The regional hubs may not take direct orders from al-Zawahri, and terror experts say they rarely coordinate operations with each other or share funding and fighters. But they have promoted al-Qaida’s mission far beyond what its reach was a dozen years ago and, in turn, created an enduring legacy for its core leaders. “Even while the core al-Qaida group may be in decline, al-Qaida-ism, the movement’s ideology, continues to resonate and attract new adherents,” Bruce Hoffman, director of the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University, wrote in a research paper earlier this year. Bin Laden’s death, Hoffman wrote, “left behind a resilient movement that, although seriously weakened, has been expanding and consolidating its control in new and far-flung locales.” On Wednesday, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. has focused on al-Qaida’s affiliates, including the one based in Yemen, after targeting the terror network’s top leaders in Afghanistan and Pakistan. “We’re not naive about the challenges we’re facing,” Psaki said. “We do think a threat still remains.”

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Outdoor THE NEWS SUN

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

The

Star

THE HERALD REPUBLICAN

CONTACT THE OUTDOOR PAGE EDITOR AMY OBERLIN AT outdoorpage@kpcnews.net

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New ACRES guides out

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Russell gets big catch Dominic Russell of Butler caught this 6-pound, 20-inch largemouth bass July 5 at a pond in Avilla.

Kids find snakes, fish at state fair INDIANAPOLIS — Two Indiana Department of Natural Resources favorites — “Snakes Alive” and the Kids Fishin’ Pond — kick off day No. 1 of the Indiana State Fair and will be offered daily through Aug. 18. They will be adjacent to the air-conditioned Natural Resources Building, the hub of DNR State Fair activities. Check dnr.IN.gov/statefair for the entire DNR schedule. During Snakes Alive, interpretive naturalists from across Indiana will talk about snakes Hoosiers might find in their backyards. Start time is 10 a.m. daily at the 150-seat DNR amphitheater. The 312,000-gallon Fishin’ Pond next to the amphitheater is packed with fish ready to be caught and released. Youth fishing is available most days from

9 a.m. to noon and from 4-7 p.m. Parents/guardians should check the daily schedule online or in the State Fair program. New this year, kids will be able to fish with family members on Family Fishing Fridays at the Fishin’ Pond. Also featured each afternoon is a program with at least one live bird of prey. These programs take place at 4:30 p.m. every day. Visitors to the building also can view native Indiana fish in aquariums, pick up free copies of the latest Recreation Guide and other informational brochures, subscribe to Outdoor Indiana magazine at a State Fair special deal, ask questions of DNR experts, visit the Mercantile to purchase unique outdoorsbased items, or just take an air-conditioned break.

HUNTERTOWN — ACRES Land Trust’s new preserve guides are available. There are pictures, descriptions and maps of each of the Land Trust’s preserves in the 136-page booklet. It is available for $10 at the ACRES office, 1802 Chapman Road, Huntertown, and other locations that include Pokagon State Park’s Nature Center in Steuben County and Maplewood Nature Center in LaGrange. Since 1960, ACRES Land Trust has acquired over 4,450 acres of significant natural areas. There are preserves large and small, each with a distinct character and history, from the prairies of Wing Haven Nature Preserve adjacent to Pokagon, to the old growth forests of The Bicentennial Woods near Huntertown, to the waterfalls of Kokiwanee and Hathaway Preserve at Ross Run. In Fort Wayne, the guides are also available at Wild Birds Unlimited, Hyde Brothers Book Store, The Bird Seedery and Reigel’s Pipe and Tobacco Shop on Calhoun Street. They are also on sale at Kosciusko County Convention and Visitors Bureau, Wabash County Historical

For the uninitiated, great meals in the great outdoors may seem like an oxymoron. But with a grounding in the basics, anyone can cook like a pro when away from the kitchen. Adapt accordingly when you’re away from the kitchen. Master the more simple recipes before increasing the challenge level. Avoid complicated, multi-course meals. And don’t try to bring the kitchen with you! Learn to multi-task your gear, and further reduce your load by packing only what you’ll need. Recognize that different types of trips require different approaches to cooking. Campground or backpacking trail? On water or high ground? Small or large group? Short or long trip? Fair or foul weather? Wild animals? These are some of the important questions to ponder before planning your menu and gathering the equipment. Stout gear is ideal for the campground, but light and compact cookware is necessary when carrying it in a pack. On the water, less bulky gear is always a good idea, especially if portaging a canoe or kayak is required. And foul weather and pesky animals will drive you to favor simpler and fast recipes. Prepare accordingly. Understand your gear

options. Stoves and cookware designed specifically for backpacking are compact and lightweight, usually intended for cooking for no more than a few people. In contrast, equipment for the campground setting is designed to be rugged and generally adequate for larger groups. Because this type of gear is carried in your trunk or trailer, instead of on your back, more options are available, such as using cast iron cookware. Consider the range of outdoor cooking techniques available. What are your food preferences and favorite cooking techniques? The answers will determine the types of recipes best suited to your trip as well as the cooking methods to go along with them. Using a pot or pan over a backpacking stove is the most common form of food preparation on the trail, but other forms of cooking are available, if pack weight permits (for example, a pack oven) or local regulations allow (e.g. a campfire). In the campground, the options are nearly endless: pots or pans on the camp stove; grilling, foil cooking, plank cooking, or baking over a campfire; cooking in a Dutch oven over coals; baking in a box oven with coals; using a cooking iron or camp fork over flames; and, of course, the many no-cook options that are available. Keep safety in mind at

Did You Know?

Registration is open for a free DNR program in three cities that will teach participants how to hunt whitetail deer in Indiana. Hunt, Fish, Eat starts Sept. 5 in Fort Wayne, among two other locations. The program is a four-session series, with an optional fifth session. Sessions are once a week and offer hands-on learning in a safe environment.

all times. High heat, sharp utensils, noxious fumes, heavy and hot cook gear, bacteria, viruses, and wild animals with teeth and claws: cooking outdoors without regard to these will ultimately end in injury or illness. Cook only in a fire-safe area in a quiet corner away from the action. Exercise vigilance around any flame. Work slowly and methodically. Don’t cross-contaminate uncooked foods with raw meat or eggs. Sanitize your hands. Keep perishable foods cool. Properly seal and store food items. Maintain your cooking equipment in good working order. Use windscreens to prevent flying embers. Keep you and your camping buddies healthy by being a life-long student of safety! Want to become a acclaimed master chef of the wilderness? Planning, practice, and attention to detail will get you there. Camp Cooking 101 is a part of the new Lipsmackin’ Campin’ series presented by MSR — a fun and informative WebTV series hosted by renowned cookbook authors Tim and Christine Conners. Watch the Camp Cooking 101 video here: http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=g0h7Szg0bWk TIM AND CHRISTINE CONNERS

are expert campers, backpackers, and outdoor chefs and the authors of 5 camp cooking related books.

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Carp catching contest set BLUFFTON — Ouabache State Park will host a carp catching contest on Saturday, Aug. 17. Registration begins at 8 a.m. at the boat house on Kunkel Lake. Anglers should bring their own pole or call ahead to borrow one. The contest will be held 8:30 to 11 a.m. Prizes will be awarded for most carp caught and longest carp. The standard entrance fee of $5 per in-state vehicle and $7 per out-of-state vehicle will be in effect. Ouabache State Park is at 4930 E. S.R. 201, Bluffton.

Solunar Table •

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

ACRES Land Trust’s newest preserve guide features all of its preserves in Indiana and Ohio and is available at its home office as well as Pokagon State Park and Maplewood Nature Center.

Museum and Salamonie Reservoir Nature Center. The booklets can be

ordered for $13 at the ACRES Land Trust web site, acreslandtrust.org.

2013 AM Aug. Minor Major 08 Thu > 7:15 1:04 09 Fri > 8:04 1:52 10 Sat 8:54 2:42 11 Sun 9:46 3:34 12 Mon 10:39 4:27 13 Tue 11:34 5:21 14 Wed Q 12:05 6:15 15 Thu

12:56

7:11

PM Minor Major 7:37 1:26 8:26 2:15 9:16 3:05 10:09 3:57 11:04 4:52 ——- 5:47 12:29 1:25 7:40

Major—2 hours. Minor—1 hour. Sunrise: Today 6:45, Friday 6:46, Saturday 6:47, Sunday 6:48, Monday 6:49, Tuesday 6:50, Wednesday 6:51, Thursday 6:52. Sunset: Tonight 8:49, Friday 8:48, Saturday 8:47, Sunday 8:45, Monday 8:44, Tuesday 8:43, Wednesday 8:41, Thursday 8:40.

DNR offers Hunt, Fish, Eat program in Fort Wayne

Camp cooking not intimidating BY TIM AND CHRISTINE CONNORS

Bullet-in •

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at the top of the main page to get started or call customer service at

1-800-717-4679

Hunt, Fish, Eat is an opportunity for new hunters ages 18 and older to improve their self-reliance skills and to learn to harvest a delicious source of fresh,

local meat. Curriculum will focus on laws and regulations, firearms and safety, locating a hunting spot, tracking and field dressing

your harvest, and handling and preparing your venison for the table. For more information and to register, go to dnr.IN.gov/ fishwild/7548.htm.


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AREA • NATION •

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THE NEWS SUN

Cloudy skies today with a possibility of rain. High of 77 today and a low of 62 expected tonight. Friday will be cloudy with scattered showers possible. Daytime high temperatures will be in the mid-70s. Overnight low of 60 degrees. Mostly sunny Saturday and Sunday. Highs will be in the mid 70s, lows in the 50s.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Sunrise Friday 6:44 a.m. Sunset Friday 8:50p.m.

National forecast

Forecast highs for Thursday, Aug. 8

Wednesday’s Statistics Local HI 82 LO 63 PRC. tr. Fort Wayne HI 82 LO 64 PRC. 0

Sunny

Today's Forecast

Cloudy

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Thursday, Aug. 8

MICH.

Chicago 73° | 66°

South Bend 79° | 61°

AP

Fort Wayne 77° | 66°

Fronts Cold

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

Heading home before Ramadan ends

OHIO

Lafayette 79° | 64°

ILL.

Pt. Cloudy

South Bend HI 82 LO 62 PRC. .5 Indianapolis HI 84 LO 71 PRC. 0

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Indianapolis 86° | 73° Terre Haute 81° | 70°

Today’s drawing by:

Bangladeshi Muslims ride on the roof of an overcrowded train to head home ahead of Eid al-Fitr as it rains in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Wednesday. Muslims

across the world are preparing for the arrival of Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

Zehha

Evansville 91° | 70°

Louisville 88° | 75°

KY.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

Submit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept. P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755

ENMS: Back to School night slated for Monday FROM PAGE A1

in” under security camera scrutiny by office staff and then greeted by a staff member before climbing another flight of stairs and passing classrooms to enter the administrative offices. There will be no greeter at the new entrance.

The ramp also makes the new entrance more accessible for those in wheelchairs. Visitor and handicap parking spaces have been added to the fenced-in, off-street paved area along Riley Street. Notices have been sent

to parents over the summer about entrance and office changes, Deming said. All middle school students and their parents will have an opportunity to see the changes and meet teachers during the Back to School Night, Monday from 5-6:30 p.m.

GRADING: Scandal puts focus on grading systems FROM PAGE A1

and top staff to rewrite the state’s school grading formula after the Indianapolis-based Christel House Academy, founded by GOP donor Christel DeHaan, scored a C. The school’s grade was changed twice in the following days, eventually ending at an A. Several other schools also saw their grades improve as a result. Indiana’s school report card website still shows the school with an A. Bennett has maintained he gave no special treatment to DeHaan’s school, whose founder has given $2.8 million to Republicans since 1998 — including $130,000 to Bennett. He called the report “malicious and unfounded.” But the emails obtained by The Associated Press show that over the course of a little more than a week last September, Bennett ordered his staff to find a way to get an A for Christel House, which he’d held up as a model for other charter

schools. “They need to understand that anything less than an A for Christel House compromises all of our accountability work,” Bennett wrote in a Sept. 12, 2012, email to then-chief of staff Heather Neal, who is now Gov. Mike Pence’s chief lobbyist. In the following days, the school’s grade jumped from 2.9 to a 3.5, and, finally, a 3.75 on a 4-point scale. Along the way, Bennett and his staff debated the legality of changing the grade for the school only and changing the public presentation of graphs to make a high B look like an A. At one point, Bennett suggested revising the cutoff for an A from a 3.51 to a 3.50. By Sept. 21, when grades were released for all the state’s schools, Christel House had a 3.75. Leaders in the national education overhaul movement, who helped build Bennett into a star following Indiana’s passage of sweeping education

changes in 2011, flocked to his support in the wake of the scandal. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush penned an op-ed for the Miami Herald in which he blamed political opponents for Bennett’s demise. The scandal has put a new focus on school grading systems, pushed by Bush and other leaders as a means of holding schools accountable. The grades are used in part to determine school funding and teacher pay and to determine whether “failing” schools are turned over to charters for operation. Critics, including the American Federation of Teachers, have said the scandal is proof that “accountability” systems are scams designed to move control of public schools to charter school operators bankrolling the national movement. In his resignation speech, Bennett called on Indiana’s Republican-appointed inspector general to review the case.

NASTY: Businesses had difficulty with transactions FROM PAGE A1

rerouted through other lines. Mediacom has not determined whether customers will receive

credits for time lost due to Tuesday’s outage. Typically that is reserved for outages caused by acts of God. Numerous businesses in

northeast Indiana, particularly retail, had difficulty conducting transactions or day-to-day operations that relied on Mediacom Internet.

Absolutely NO RESERVE!

Thurs., August 22nd at 6:30pm 1856 CR 40, Auburn, IN 46706

Experts: North Korea expanding nuclear plant VIENNA (AP) — A U.S. institute tracking North Korea’s nuclear weapons program says recent satellite photos show Pyongyang is doubling the size of its uranium enrichment plant, jibing with the country’s announced plans to expand technology that can be used both to create energy and the core of nuclear weapons. The imagery comes from two sources, satellite companies Digital Globe and Astrium Geoinformation Services, and was seen by The Associated Press ahead of publication by the Institute for Science and International Security on Wednesday. In an accompanying note, ISIS said the photos of the Nyongbyon nuclear complex show construction under way to “effectively double” the size of the enrichment hall. That, said ISIS, would allow North Korea to also double the number of centrifuges now enriching uranium. Revealing the existence of a uranium enrichment program three years ago, Pyongyang said

the plant contained 2,000 centrifuges — machines that are linked up in series and spin uranium gas into material that can be used either to power reactors or arm nuclear weapons, depending on the degree of enrichment. That means the 4,000 centrifuges that the space is apparently being expanded for could potentially make twice that amount, giving them the capacity to build up to four bombs a year — should the country decide to use them for that purpose. The most recent satellite photo was taken July 28. ISIS says that measured against earlier images, it shows construction at the Nyongbyon site, including “the expansion of the gas centrifuge building” to twice its previous size. The Washington-based think tank said the images indicate that work on the structure seems to have begun sometime in March. It cited a North Korean government announcement that came shortly afterward

Channel blasted for shark special NEW YORK (AP) — A Discovery network special that speculated about whether a giant prehistoric shark could still exist has drawn a passionate response from viewers and starkly raised the question about the worth of big ratings. The program, “Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives,” opened Discovery’s annual “Shark Week” during the weekend. With an estimated 4.8 million viewers, it had the largest audience of any show in the 26 years that Discovery has made “Shark Week” a part of its summer programming, the Nielsen company said. Yet it drew a heated response online from viewers who said airing a “mockumentary” compro-

mises the network’s reputation. “It’s the ultimate ‘Shark Week’ fantasy,” said Michael Sorensen, Discovery’s senior director of programming. “The stories have been out there for years, and with 95 percent of the ocean unexplored, who really knows?” Discovery’s “Shark Week” Web page and Facebook and Twitter sites filled after the show with complaints from fans who objected to the program, saying they were surprised a science-based network seriously discussed the existence of a fearsome creature when there is no evidence it exists today. The “Megalodon” special was reminiscent of two shows on sister network Animal Planet about mermaids, which also

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got big audiences. In a blog post, actor Wil Wheaton said he is a regular viewer of “Shark Week” but he was disgusted by the show. He said Discovery owes an apology to viewers who have grown to trust the network for its presentation of science. “Discovery Channel betrayed that trust during its biggest viewing week of the year,” Wheaton wrote. “Discovery Channel isn’t run by stupid people, and this was not some kind of a mistake. Someone made a deliberate choice to present a work of fiction that is more suited for the SyFy channel as a truthful and factual documentary. That is disgusting.” Discover magazine’s Christie Wilcox wrote that the show’s “evidence was faked, the stories fabricated, and the scientists portrayed on it were actors. The idea that Megalodon could still be roaming the ocean is a complete and total myth.”

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revealing plans for “readjusting and restarting all the nuclear facilities in Nyongbyon, including (the) uranium enrichment plant.” Government offices in Pyongyang that could comment were shut for the day ahead of publication of the ISIS report. A North Korean diplomat with his country’s mission to the United Nations in New York said he had no comment because he had not yet seen the report. He demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about his country’s nuclear program. Experts believe the plant is meant primarily to provide fuel for the power-hungry country. But centrifuges producing such fuel can be reconfigured to make weapons-grade uranium. That has led to international concerns because of three nuclear weapon tests by the North Koreans — the most recent in February — and the country’s stated intention to continue down the nuclear weapons path.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

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Scores •

Harvey throws shutout

NATIONAL LEAGUE CHICAGO CUBS ....................5 PHILADELPHIA .......................2 ATLANTA .......................................6 WASHINGTON .........................3 PITTSBURGH...........................4 MIAMI .............................................2 N.Y. METS ....................................5 COLORADO ...............................0 INTERLEAGUE CINCINNATI ...............................6 OAKLAND....................................5 BALTIMORE ............................10 SAN DIEGO................................3 AMERICAN LEAGUE DETROIT.......................................... CLEVELAND......................LATE SEATTLE.......................................9 TORONTO....................................7

Area Events •

G I R LS GOLF Fremon t at Leo Invit ational, 8 a.m. West Noble at East Noble, 1 0 a.m.

Briefly • Union files appeal of Rodriguez’s suspension CHICAGO (AP) — The Major League Baseball Players Association formally appealed Alex Rodriguez’s 211-game suspension Wednesday, sending the case to an independent arbitrator. Union spokesman Greg Bouris confirmed the appeal and said the players’ association had no further comment. Rodriguez, who was back at third base and batting third for the New York Yankees against the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday night, said he had “no reaction” to the filing of the grievance. “I don’t think any of us thought it was going to be any different,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “As far as having a reaction, it’s kind of what I expected. It’s part of the process that was negotiated between MLB and the players’ association and you let it play out. I expect him to play a lot. We need him to help us.” Rodriguez was suspended through the 2014 season on Monday when the league penalized 13 players following an investigation into Biogenesis of America, a shuttled Florida anti-aging clinic accused of distributing banned performance-enhancing drugs. The other 12 players accepted 50-game suspensions, but Rodriguez said he planned to fight. Union head Michael Weiner said the punishment for the slugger was “way out of line.” Rodriguez’s punishment was scheduled to begin Thursday, but he is allowed to keep playing until the grievance is heard by arbitrator Fredric Horowitz. He isn’t expected to rule until November or December at the earliest.

On The Air •

GOLF P GA Championship, TNT, 1 p.m. BAS E BALL Little League regional finals, E S P N 2 p.m., E S P N2, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. N F L P R E S EASON Cincinnati vs. Atlant a, E S P N, 8 p.m. TE N N I S Rogers Cup, E S P N2, noon S P ORTS TALK Hawk Sports Talk, WAW K-F M 9 5.5, 7 p.m.

B

NEW YORK (AP) — Matt Harvey pitched a four-hitter for his first career shutout, Wilmer Flores had a three-run double and the New York Mets beat the Colorado Rockies 5-0 on Wednesday night. Harvey (9-3) struck out six and walked none in his 33rd career start. He pitched nine innings of one-hit ball on May 7 but New York lost in 10. Not this time. Flores helped AP make sure of that. Philadelphia Phillies’ Chase Utley, left, collides during Wednesday’s game. Utley was out on the Filling in for injured David with Chicago Cubs catcher Dioner Navarro while play and Navarro left the game with an injury. Wright, Flores cleared the bases in trying to score on a single by Kevin Frandsen The Cubs won 5-2. the eighth against Manny Corpas. Omar Quintanilla and John Buck each had RBI singles off Jhoulys Chacin (10-6), who lost for just the third time in his last 11 starts. Flores got his first big league hit and scored on Quintanilla’s hit in the second inning. The Rockies played without PHILADELPHIA (AP) — has agreed to a two-year contract January 2007. All-Star left fielder Carlos Donnie Murphy hit a tiebreaking through the 2015 season. The deal He wasn’t in the starting lineup Gonzalez for the second straight three-run shot in the ninth inning reportedly is worth around $27 against the Cubs, but drove in night and lost for the eighth time in for his second homer of the game, million. the tying run with a pinch single nine games on their 10-game road lifting the Chicago Cubs to a 5-2 Two-time Cy Young Award in the seventh inning. Utley then trip. win over the Philadelphia Phillies winner Roy Halladay also is a knocked over Navarro in a violent Gonzalez was placed on on Wednesday night. step closer a return from shoulder collision trying to score from the 15-day disabled list before Murphy drove a 3-1 pitch from surgery and will pitch a simulated second base on a single. Navarro Wednesday’s game with a sprained Justin De Fratus deep into the left game Saturday in Clearwater, Fla. held onto the ball and Utley was right middle finger. field seats for his third homer in Utley was thrown out at home out. Navarro was carted off the Orioles 10, Padres 3 two games. He also had a solo plate trying to score the tying run field. X-rays were negative and the Chris Davis hit his major shot in the third. in the seventh. Utley banged knees Cubs said he suffered a contusion. league-best 41st homer in Luis Garcia (0-1) set up with catcher Dioner Navarro on Utley was hitting .277 with 15 Baltimore’s four-run eighth inning Murphy’s winning homer by the play. Navarro was tended to homers and 43 RBIs in 84 games. in the win. issuing three walks, including by trainers and carted off the field. He hasn’t played more than 115 Davis belted a tiebreaking one to Cole Gillespie after Cody Cubs left fielder Thomas Neal left games in a season since 2009 three-run shot into the bleachers in Ransom was picked off first for the game the same inning with a because of chronic knee problems. right-center on the first pitch from the second out of the inning. dislocated right shoulder. Halladay is 2-4 with an 8.65 Colt Hynes. Brian Roberts tacked Pedro Strop (2-1) tossed a Utley’s extension and ERA in seven starts this season. on a sacrifice fly, and the Orioles scoreless eighth for the win and Halladay’s looming return “I’m not interested in coming then broke it open with three more Kevin Gregg worked the ninth for overshadowed a game between back and pitching at the same level runs in the ninth. his 23rd save. two teams buried in the standings. I was earlier this year,” he said. “I Luke Gregerson (5-6) allowed The day wasn’t a complete Utley, who turns 35 on Dec. 17, want to come back and pitch at a singles to Manny Machado and loss for the Phillies. Two people would’ve been a free agent after high level.” Adam Jones before Davis went familiar with the deal told The the season. He’s in the last year of The Phillies won five straight deep, giving him a majors-best 106 Associated Press that Chase Utley an $85 million contract signed in RBIs. division titles from 2007-2011. Jedd Gyorko hit a tying three-run homer in the sixth for San Diego, which has dropped three of four. The Orioles’ scoring outburst handed a win to Francisco Rodriguez (1-0), who struck out two in a perfect seventh inning. Seattle 9, Toronto 7 Humberto Quintero’s homer helped the Seattle Mariners rally for a 9-7 win over the Toronto Blue Jays. Brandon Maurer (3-7), who allowed eight baserunners and no runs in 3 1-3 innings, earned the win. Five Mariners relievers worked Football practices the final seven innings, allowing for the area’s prep no runs and six hits. It’s the first football teams are time since Sept. 28, 2011 against in full swing. Here, Oakland that the bullpen has members of the East thrown at least seven scoreless Noble team practice innings. on Wednesday in Edwin Encarnacion and Adam Kendallville. At left, Lind hit back-to-back home runs Conner Holcomb for the Jays’ five-run third, their prepares to snap 30th and 14th, respectively. It is the ball. At right, Encarnacion’s second straight Paul Dwyer throws 30-homer season. the ball. Aaron Harang went just two-plus innings, allowing seven JAMES FISHER runs and five hits. He walked three and all scored.

Cubs come through in 9th

Donnie Murphy’s late home run lifts Cubs past Phillies, 5-2

Practice makes perfect

Hard at Work

Bruce 2-run homer powers Reds past Athletics CINCINNATI (AP) — Corky Miller got a chance to play a major league game in front of his sons on Wednesday, and the journeyman catcher made the most of the opportunity. Miller had a pair of run-scoring doubles and a key defensive play, helping the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-5 victory over Bartolo Colon and the slumping Oakland Athletics. Jay Bruce hit a two-run homer and a run-scoring grounder for Cincinnati, which won consecutive games for the first time since July 24 in San Francisco and July 25 in Los Angeles. Joey Votto had two hits and Zack Cozart scored twice. Miller has spent most of the season with Triple-A Louisville. He could be headed back to the minors soon with Ryan Hanigan on his way back from a wrist injury. With sons Caden, 8, and Chase, 5, in town for the Reds’ family game, Miller increased his total to five RBIs in 14 games this season.

AP

Cincinnati Reds’ Joey Votto (19) congratulates Jay Bruce after Bruce hit a two-run home run off Oakland Athletics starting pitcher Bartolo Colon during Wednesday’s 6-5 victory.

“It was fun looking up and seeing them,” Miller said.

AL West-leading Oakland, which began the day with a

one-game advantage over Texas, scored as many runs as it had in its previous three games, but still lost for the sixth time in seven games. Colon (14-4) was knocked out in the third inning in his shortest outing of the season. The All-Star right-hander, who was pitching on six days’ rest but weakened by a stomach virus, had made 15 consecutive starts of at least six innings and three or fewer earned runs. “Bartolo didn’t have his best stuff,” manager Bob Melvin said. “His velocity was down a little bit. He had a stomach virus in the bullpen. He’s had it before but worked through it.” “It’s no excuse,” Colon said. “I pitched bad. I wasn’t throwing strikes like I did before the All-Star game. The velocity was down a little, but it is no excuse. I don’t need to rest. The way the team hit today, I believe we can win. If they keep hitting like that we will win.”


B2

SPORTS •

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Tony Stewart has surgery following Iowa crash KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (AP) — Tony Stewart told anyone who would listen why he continued racing anywhere, anytime, regardless of purse or crowd or car. Even after he flipped five times last week, Stewart was quick to offer a stout defense for his short-track weeknight racing while some questioned if his extracurricular racing was putting his championship chances in NASCAR at risk. Well, his championship chances are officially over for this season. The three-time NASCAR champion broke his right leg Monday night at Southern Iowa Speedway in Oskaloosa, where he flipped his 360 winged sprint car while leading with five laps remaining in the 30-lap feature. He had surgery Tuesday on the upper and lower parts of his leg, and Stewart-Haas Racing said he’ll need a second surgery. He remained hospitalized and

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there was no timetable for his return to racing. Max Papis was tabbed to replace Stewart this weekend in the No. 14 Chevrolet at Watkins Glen, where Stewart is a five-time winner and his streak of 521 consecutive starts will end. The 42-year-old Stewart has wrecked three times in the last month in extracurricular racing, and the latest came a day after he finished ninth at Pocono in a NASCAR event to position himself 11th in the Sprint Cup standings with five races remaining to set the Chase for the championship field. But Stewart had long refused to slow down his sprint car racing schedule, and passionately defended it following the June death of friend Jason Leffler in an accident at Bridgeport Speedway in Swedesboro, N.J. He was just as impassioned last Friday at Pocono when asked

JAMES FISHER

Tony Stewart competes in a winged sprint car during a World of Outlaws event during June at Kokomo Speedway. Stewart was injured in a sprint car crash on Monday in Iowa.

about his accident last week in Canada in which Stewart flipped a sprint car five times. His childhood hero, four-time

Indianapolis 500 winner A.J. Foyt, defended Stewart on Tuesday for sticking to his passion and being a true “racer.”

NATIONWIDE SERIES

SPRINT CUP Race: Cheez-It 355 at The Glen Where: Watkins Glen International When: Sunday, 1 p.m. (ET) TV: ESPN 2012 Winner: Marcos Ambrose (right)

CAMPING WORLD TRUCKS

Race: Zippo 200 Where: Watkins Glen International When: Saturday, 2 p.m. (ET) TV: ABC 2012 Winner: Carl Edwards

Race: Michigan National Guard 200 Where: Michigan International Speedway When: August 17, 12:30 p.m. (ET) TV: SPEED 2012 Winner: Nelson Piquet Jr.

Jeff Gordon (left) congratulates Kasey Kahne on his GoBowling.com 400 win. I could, and I got some speed and momentum down the back and beat Jeff to Turn Two,” Kahne said. “That was kind of the race at that point. Once I cleared him getting into Two, from there it was just don’t make a mistake and try to run the quick lap on that last one.” Gordon said he thought he made the right move by driving to the inside on the last restart, but Kahne was too strong on the outside. “I thought I did everything I needed to do, and I looked in my mirror and I really thought that the inside lane got a good run on Kasey, so I thought all I needed to do was get in here and get the bottom and I’d be good,” Gordon said. “But, man, he got a killer run and blasted on the outside of me. Caught me by surprise. In that case, and in that scenario, it just kills your momentum, so I feel fortunate to finish second.” Gordon has five top-10 finishes in the past six races and he’s headed to Watkins Glen, where he has four career victories, but he said his Pocono finish is the best sign in a while that his team is Chase material. “I feel like we’ve pulled together some decent finishes, but it hasn’t been pretty,” Gordon said. “[Pocono] was an impressive run for us internally. Just well-executed ... good [pit] stops. Everything just kind of went our way. I felt like we finally actually went out and earned that one.”

NOTEBOOK

‘Wind Tunnel’ ends 11-year run with demise of SPEED

Rusty Jarrett for Chevrolet

Alan Marler for Chevrolet

Kasey Kahne outduels Jeff Gordon after final restart to take the trophy at Pocono Raceway With the start of the Chase for the Sprint Cup just six weeks away, several likely contenders appear to be hitting their strides while others seem stuck in a rut of mediocre finishes. At Pocono Raceway on Sunday, Jimmie Johnson once again appeared to have the car to beat, but he blew a right-front tire while leading and smacked the wall. But in a show of strength that could be a deciding factor in the 10-race Chase, his team patched up the car and he drove it to a 13th-place finish, which allowed him to increase his points lead over second-place Clint Bowyer from 75 to 77 points. And while Johnson was overcoming his setback, his Hendrick Motorsports teammates surged to the front, with Kasey Kahne outdueling Jeff Gordon to get the win, while Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished fifth. Brickyard 400 winner Ryan Newman, who runs Hendrick cars and engines, overcame slow pit work by his Stewart-Haas Racing team to finish fourth and move up one spot in the standings to 15th. Kurt Busch, whose single-car Furniture Row Racing team has been plagued by inconsistency for much of the season, had a strong Pocono run, finishing third and moving up one spot in the standings to 13th, just 11 points out of 10th place, which is the final spot guaranteed a Chase berth after the regular season finale at Richmond International Raceway on Sept. 7. Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick held on to their points positions, Edwards third and Harvick fourth, but neither were factors at Pocono. Edwards finished 11th despite a penalty for speeding on pit road, and Harvick was 17th. For Kahne, the race was his to lose once Johnson crashed. He wound up leading a race-high 66 laps en route to his second win of the season, but he almost lost the win to Gordon, who passed him on the next-to-last restart. The race’s final caution flag gave Kahne one more chance, and he drove to the outside of Gordon into Turn One and held on for the final two circuits. “I had some help from Kurt Busch, pushed me down the frontstretch, and I just drove into [Turn] One as far as I felt

Kahne celebrates his win at Pocono Raceway on Sunday. And he’s upbeat about his prospects for this week’s race on the road course at Watkins Glen, especially after a secondplace finish on the Cup circuit’s other road course at Sonoma, Calif. “I felt like we learned a lot at the end of the second half of the race at Watkins Glen last year,” he said. “We kind of did a test more for Watkins Glen than we did for Sonoma prior to Sonoma, so I’m hoping that pays off.” For Kahne, a Chase berth seems much more secure. He’s eighth in the standings, 18 points ahead of 11th-place Tony Stewart, but his two victories put him in good position to take a wild card berth should he drop out of the top 10. He said his dominant Pocono victory “gives myself confidence and gives the whole team confidence. It closes the gap.” And he said that making the Chase is very important. “The Chase is what it’s all about in NASCAR,” he said. “You need to make it for the sponsors, for the teams. “We’ve been right there on the edge with the way our summer went. So it was nice to get two wins. It gives us much more hope going in. We’ll just start a lot closer.” Kahne’s crew chief, Kenny Francis, said the second victory makes his job easier for the next few weeks. “It gives you a little more flexibility to be able to take more risks in the upcoming races,” he said. “You’ve already got your two wins. There is a good chance you’re going to make the Chase either way, so now you can maybe take a little more risk.”

Tony Stewart downplays World of Outlaws sprint car flip at Ohsweken Speedway

One of the most popular racing shows on TV signs off for the final time on Sunday. “Wind Tunnel,” hosted by veteran broadcaster Dave Despain, will end its 11-year run on the SPEED channel, which is changing over to Fox Sports 1 and an emphasis on all sports instead of focusing on motorsports. “‘Wind Tunnel’ has been the most relevant and popular show on auto racing for 11 years, and Dave [Despain] has been the conscience,” Robin Miller, a veteran motor sports journalist and regular contributor to the show, said in a release from SPEED. “If you mattered, you were on ‘Wind Tunnel.’ It embraced all forms of motorsports and leaves a void that won’t be filled.”

FOX-TV picks up TV rights to NUMERICALLY more Cup, Nationwide races

SPEAKING

The FOX television network and NASCAR made it official last week, announcing that Fox would up10 Sprint Cup victories Drivers inpick the top broadcast more at Watkins rights Glen by to three in Sprint CupCup points Tony and Stewart, races thetops first 14 who Nationwide have led just among all drivers. lap at Watkins Series races of the one season, begin- Glen inhas theirobtained careers: Clint ning Laps in 2015. NBC the led in the Bowyer, Carl Edwards broadcast rights to the remaining past eight Cup andraces, Matt Kenseth. Cup races and at Nationwide and Fox Watkins has secured the entire Camping Glen by Kyle Busch, Driver in the top World Series schedule. Both tops amongTruck all drivers. 10 in Cup points new arrangements begin in 2015 with no laps led at and continue through theGlen: 2024 seaWatkins Kasey son. Kahne.

3

5

159

1

SPRINT CUP STANDINGS 1. Jimmie Johnson, 772 2. Clint Bowyer, 695 3. Carl Edwards, 688

that saw him race his way into the Chase, win five of the 10 Chase races and the 2011 Cup championship. “Maybe it sparked something then,” Stewart said back in 2011 of his Ohsweken win. He went on to say that while those around him feared for his safety racing sprinters, he feels Tony Stewart finished ninth at it was well worth the risks. Pocono. “It energized me,” he said. “It was like hitting a reset button.” But those worried about Stewart’s safety have reason to be concerned. In May, Josh Burton was killed in a crash in Indiana. In June, one of Stewart’s fellow NASCAR drivers, Jason Leffler, died in a sprint car crash. And on Sunday, sprint car legend Kramer Williamson died from injuries suffered the night before when he flipped numerous times at Lincoln Speedway in Abbottstown, Pa. Williamson, who started racing in 1968, had been inducted into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2008 and the United Racing Co. Hall of Fame in 2010.

4. Kevin Harvick, 675 CIA Stock Photography, Inc.

Tony Stewart, who spends as much of his spare time as possible racing sprint cars, flipped his sprinter five times last week while racing in a World of Outlaws event at Ohsweken Speedway in Ontario, Canada. While his flip wasn’t especially nasty or all that uncommon for sprint car racers, it did get lots of attention because of Stewart’s primary job as a Sprint Cup Series driver and team owner. At Pocono Raceway on Friday, Stewart explained to the assembled media, some of whom have called on him to curtail his extracurricular racing and concentrate on Cup, that the flip really was no big deal. “You mortals have got to learn, you guys need to watch more sprint car videos and stuff,” he said. “It was not a big deal. It’s starting to get annoying this week about that. “That was just an average sprint car wreck. When they wreck, they get upside down like that. That was not a big deal. I guarantee you there were 15 to 20 guys across the country that flipped just like that this weekend and were just fine just like we were.” Stewart bounced back and finished fifth in the main event. Ironically, it was at Ohsweken two years ago that Stewart won a World of Outlaws feature that started a win streak

“He ain’t no prima donna and life is short, and we don’t know how we are going to die or what’s going to happen,” Foyt said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “I just hate to see anybody badmouth Tony for anything he’s doing, and if they are, they are just jealous. People saying he’s putting his businesses at risk? I had three dealerships, people respected me.” Although it sounds cliche, Foyt believes racers want to go out doing what they love. “Tony is a true racer,” Foyt said. “That’s one thing I respect about him. A lot of them people go to NASCAR and become a kingpin in one type of car. Jeff Gordon and Kasey Kahne, they all were sprint car and midget cars drivers first, like Tony, and Tony still is a sprint car driver and it’s a shame he got hurt. But I don’t see where someone can condemn him for it.”

5. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 656 6. Kyle Busch, 646 7. Matt Kenseth, 638 8. Kasey Kahne, 612 9. Jeff Gordon, 602 10. Greg Biffle, 599

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SCOREBOARD •

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

National League Standings East Division Atlanta Washington New York Philadelphia Miami Central Division Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee West Division

W 69 54 51 51 43

L 45 59 60 62 69

Pct GB .605 — .478 14½ .459 16½ .451 17½ .384 25

W 69 66 63 50 48

L 44 46 51 63 65

Pct .611 .589 .553 .442 .425

GB — 2½ 6½ 19 21

W L Pct GB Los Angeles 62 50 .554 — Arizona 57 55 .509 5 San Diego 52 62 .456 11 Colorado 52 63 .452 11½ San Francisco 50 62 .446 12 Tuesday’s Games Atlanta 2, Washington 1 Philadelphia 9, Chicago Cubs 8 Pittsburgh 4, Miami 3 N.Y. Mets 3, Colorado 2 Cincinnati 3, Oakland 1 St. Louis 5, L.A. Dodgers 1 Arizona 6, Tampa Bay 1 Baltimore 4, San Diego 1 Milwaukee 3, San Francisco 1 Wednesday’s Games Cincinnati 6, Oakland 5 Baltimore 10, San Diego 3 Chicago Cubs 5, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh 4, Miami 2 N.Y. Mets 5, Colorado 0 Atlanta 6, Washington 3 L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, late Tampa Bay at Arizona, late Milwaukee at San Francisco, late Thursday’s Games Colorado (Chatwood 7-4) at N.Y. Mets (Gee 7-8), 12:10 p.m. Miami (Fernandez 8-5) at Pittsburgh (Cole 5-5), 12:35 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 6-10) at Philadelphia (E.Martin 0-1), 1:05 p.m. Milwaukee (D.Hand 0-3) at San Francisco (Lincecum 5-11), 3:45 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 10-3) at St. Louis (Westbrook 7-6), 8:15 p.m. Friday’s Games Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m. San Diego at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. Miami at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. Pittsburgh at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. Milwaukee at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. Baltimore at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

American League Standings East Division W L Pct GB Boston 69 46 .600 — Tampa Bay 66 46 .589 1½ Baltimore 63 51 .553 5½ New York 57 55 .509 10½ Toronto 53 61 .465 15½ Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 66 45 .595 — Cleveland 62 51 .549 5 Kansas City 57 53 .518 8½ Minnesota 49 61 .445 16½ Chicago 42 69 .378 24 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 64 49 .566 — Texas 64 50 .561 ½ Seattle 53 61 .465 11½ Los Angeles 51 61 .455 12½ Houston 37 75 .330 26½ Tuesday’s Games Detroit 5, Cleveland 1 Cincinnati 3, Oakland 1 Boston 15, Houston 10 Minnesota 7, Kansas City 0 Chicago White Sox 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Arizona 6, Tampa Bay 1 Texas 8, L.A. Angels 3 Baltimore 4, San Diego 1 Toronto 7, Seattle 2 Wednesday’s Games Cincinnati 6, Oakland 5 Baltimore 10, San Diego 3 Seattle 9, Toronto 7 Detroit at Cleveland, late Boston at Houston, late Minnesota at Kansas City, late N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, late Tampa Bay at Arizona, late Texas at L.A. Angels, late Thursday’s Games Detroit (Scherzer 16-1) at Cleveland (McAllister 4-6), 7:05 p.m. Boston (Lester 10-6) at Kansas City (B.Chen 4-0), 8:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m., 1st game Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. Oakland at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. Boston at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m., 2nd game Texas at Houston, 8:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. Baltimore at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

Major League Summaries Reds 6, Athletics 5 A’s ab r hbi Reds ab rhbi Crisp cf 5 0 0 0 Choo cf 4 1 1 0

S.Smith rf 2 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 3 0 0 0 JChavz p 1 0 0 0 Votto 1b 5 1 2 0 Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 4 0 1 0 CYoung ph 0 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 3 Cook p 0 0 0 0 Paul lf 4 11 0 Doolittl p 0 0 0 0 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Freimn ph 1 0 0 0 Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 Lowrie ss 5 1 1 0 Cozart ss 2 2 1 0 Cespds lf 4 0 0 0 CMiller c 2 0 2 2 Moss 1b 4 2 2 0 Mesorc c 2 0 1 1 Dnldsn 3b 4 2 2 2 HBaily p 1 0 0 0 Callasp 2b 2 0 2 0 MParr p 0 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 2 0 2 2 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 Vogt c 1 0 1 1 Heisey lf 1 0 0 0 DNorrs ph-c 2 0 1 0 Colon p 1000 Reddck rf 3 0 0 0 Totals 37 5115 Totals 32 6106 Oakland 010 103 000—5 Cincinnati 113 010 00x—6 LOB — Oakland 7, Cincinnati 9. 2B — Lowrie (29), Callaspo 2 (15), Paul (11), C.Miller 2 (3). 3B — Sogard (2). HR — Donaldson (17), Bruce (24). S — Cozart, H.Bailey. Oakland IP H R ERBBSO Colon L,14-4 2 2-3 7 5 5 3 2 J.Chavez 2 1-3 3 1 1 1 3 Blevins 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cook 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Doolittle 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati IP H R ERBBSO H.Bailey W,7-10 5 1-3 9 5 5 1 3 M.Parra H,9 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2 LeCure H,15 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Hoover H,8 1 2 0 0 0 0 Chapman S,27-31 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP — by Doolittle (Frazier). Umpires — Home, James Hoye; First, Bob Davidson; Second, Jim Reynolds; Third, John Hirschbeck. T — 3:08. A — 29,746 (42,319). Mets 5, Rockies 0 Rockies ab r hbi Mets ab rhbi Fowler cf 4 0 0 0 EYong lf 3 0 1 0 Blckmn lf 4 0 1 0 Lagars cf 3 1 0 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 0 0 DnMrp 2b 4 0 1 0 Cuddyr rf 3 0 1 0 Byrd rf 4 11 0 Helton 1b 3 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 3 2 1 0 WRosr c 3 0 1 0 Flores 3b 4 1 2 3 Arenad 3b 3 0 1 0 Buck c 4 02 1 LeMahi 2b 3 0 0 0 Quntnll ss 3 0 1 1 Chacin p 2 0 0 0 Harvey p 3 0 0 0 Corpas p 0 0 0 0 CDckrs ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 4 0 Totals 31 5 9 5 Colorado 000 000 000—0 New York 010 100 03x—5 DP — Colorado 2, New York 1. LOB — Colorado 3, New York 5. 2B — Byrd (20), I.Davis (11), Flores (1). Colorado IP H R ERBBSO Chacin L,10-6 7 7 2 2 1 5 Corpas 1 2 3 3 2 0 New York IP H R ERBBSO Harvey W,9-3 9 4 0 0 0 6 Umpires — Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Brian Gorman; Second, David Rackley; Third, Larry Vanover. — 2:20. A — 27,581 (41,922). Mariners 9, Blue Jays 7 Blue Jays ab r hbi Mariners ab rhbi Reyes ss 6 0 1 1 BMiller ss 5 1 2 0 Bonifac lf 4 0 1 1 Frnkln 2b 4 2 1 1 Bautist rf 4 0 1 0 Seager 3b 5 1 1 1 Encrnc 1b 3 2 2 1 KMorls dh 4 1 2 1 Lind dh 3 2 2 1 Ryan pr-dh 0 0 0 0 RDavis pr-dh000 0 Morse rf 3 0 0 0 ClRsms cf 5 0 0 0 EnChvz rf 0 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 3 1 1 1 MSndrs cf 3 2 1 1 DeRosa 2b 4 1 1 0 Smoak 1b 4 0 1 2 Thole c 5 1 2 2 Ackley lf 4 1 2 0 Quinter c 3 11 3 Totals 37 7117 Totals 35 9119 Toronto 052 000 000—7 Seattle 200 160 00x—9 E — Lawrie (7). DP — Toronto 1. LOB — Toronto 12, Seattle 8. 2B — DeRosa (9), Thole (2), K.Morales (28), Smoak (16). 3B — Franklin (1). HR — Encarnacion (30), Lind (14), Quintero (2). CS — Lawrie (2). Toronto IP H R ERBBSO Happ 4 7 7 6 3 2 Loup L,4-4 1 2 2 2 0 0 Lincoln 1 1-3 1 0 0 3 0 Oliver 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Seattle IP H R ERBBSO Harang 2 5 7 7 3 0 Maurer W,3-7 3 1-3 3 0 0 5 2 Furbush H,12 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Medina H,9 1 2-3 2 0 0 1 1 O.Perez H,6 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Farquhar S,3-5 1 1 0 0 0 2 Harang pitched to 2 batters in the 3rd. Happ pitched to 4 batters in the 5th. P — Happ, Loup. PB — Quintero. Umpires — Home, Dale Scott; First, Todd Tichenor; Second, CB Bucknor; Third, Quinn Wolcott. T — 3:35. A — 34,792 (47,476). Orioles 10, Padres 3 Orioles ab r hbi Padres ab rhbi Markks rf 5 1 1 0 Venale rf 4 0 1 0 Machd 3b 4 2 2 1 Denorfi lf 3 1 0 0 A.Jones cf 5 2 3 0 Headly 3b 4 0 1 0 C.Davis 1b 4 2 1 3 Alonso 1b 3 1 1 0 Wieters c 5 1 1 1 Gyorko 2b 4 1 1 3 Hardy ss 5 1 2 3 Amarst cf 4 0 2 0 Pearce lf 3 1 1 0 RCeden ss4 00 0 McLoth lf 1 0 1 0 RRiver c 4 0 1 0 BRorts 2b 3 0 1 1 Stults p 2 0 0 0 Patton p 0 0 0 0 Guzmn ph 1 0 0 0 O’Day p 1 0 0 0 Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0 MgGnzl p 1 0 0 0 Hynes p 0 0 0 0 Urrutia ph 1 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0 FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 OSullvn p 0 0 0 0 Flahrty ph-2b1000

Totals 391013 9 Totals 33 3 7 3 Baltimore 010 110 043—10 San Diego 000 003 000— 3 E — Stults (2), Amarista (4), Gyorko (4). DP — San Diego 1. LOB — Baltimore 7, San Diego 5. 2B — Wieters (22), Pearce (4), Headley (24), Amarista (11). HR — C.Davis (41), Hardy (19), Gyorko (10). SB — McLouth (27), Venable (13). CS — Amarista (1). S — Mig.Gonzalez. SF — B.Roberts. Baltimore IP H R ERBBSO Mig.Gonzalez 6 6 3 3 2 8 Fr.Rodriguez W,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 2 Patton 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 O’Day 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego IP H R ERBBSO Stults 7 5 3 2 1 6 Gregerson L,5-6 0 2 2 2 0 0 Hynes 0 2 2 2 0 0 Thayer 1 1 0 0 0 2 O’Sullivan 1 3 3 3 2 1 Gregerson pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Hynes pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. PB — Wieters. Umpires — Home, Dana DeMuth; First, Angel Hernandez; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Doug Eddings. T — 2:57. A — 21,206 (42,524). Pirates 4, Marlins 2 Marlins ab r hbi Pirates ab rhbi Yelich lf 4 0 2 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 Lucas 3b 4 0 1 0 Walker 2b 3 1 1 0 Stanton rf 4 1 1 0 McCtch cf 3 1 2 1 Morrsn 1b 4 1 1 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 0 1 DSolan 2b 3 0 1 1 RMartn c 4 0 1 0 Hchvrr ss 3 0 1 0 GJones 1b 3 0 1 0 Mrsnck cf 3 0 0 0 GSnchz 1b0 00 0 Brantly c 3 0 0 0 JHrrsn rf 2 1 0 0 Koehler p 2 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 Webb p 0 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Ruggin ph 1 0 0 0 Mercer ss 1 1 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 Morton p 2 0 1 1 Presley ph-rf1000 Totals 31 2 7 1 Totals 26 4 6 3 Miami 000 200 000—2 Pittsburgh 000 120 01x—4 DP — Miami 2, Pittsburgh 2. LOB — Miami 2, Pittsburgh 4. 2B — Morrison (8), Walker (18). HR — McCutchen (16). SB — McCutchen (24), J.Harrison (2). CS — Hechavarria (8), McCutchen (6). S — Mercer. SF — P.Alvarez. Miami IP H R ERBBSO Koehler L,3-7 5 4 3 3 1 8 Webb 2 0 0 0 1 2 A.Ramos 1 2 1 1 0 1 Pittsburgh IP H R ERBBSO Morton W,4-3 7 6 2 2 0 5 Watson H,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Melancon S,7-8 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP — by Webb (J.Harrison), by Koehler (Mercer). WP — Koehler 2. Umpires — Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Gary Cederstrom; Second, Kerwin Danley; Third, Lance Barksdale. T — 2:39. A — 28,173 (38,362). Cubs 5, Phillies 2 Cubs ab r hbi Phillies ab rhbi Lake cf-lf 4 0 2 1 MYong 3b 4 0 1 0 Barney 2b 4 0 0 0 Frndsn 2b 4 0 2 0 StCastr ss 4 0 1 0 LuGarc p 0 0 0 0 DNavrr c 3 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0 Castillo c 0 1 0 0 Asche ph 1 0 0 0 Neal lf 3 0 0 0 Rollins ss 3 0 1 0 DeJess cf 1 0 0 0 DBrwn lf 3 1 1 1 Ransm 1b 3 1 1 0 Ruf 1b 4 00 0 Gillespi rf 3 1 0 0 DYong rf 4 0 1 0 DMrph 3b 3 2 3 4 Mayrry cf 3 1 1 0 TrWood p 3 0 0 0 Kratz c 4 00 0 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Hamels p 2 0 0 0 Russell p 0 0 0 0 Ruiz ph 0 00 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 Utley ph-2b2 01 1 Rizzo ph 1000 Gregg p 0000 Totals 32 5 7 5 Totals 34 2 8 2 Chicago 001 010 003—5 Philadelphia 010 000 100—2 E — D.Brown (4). DP — Philadelphia 2. LOB — Chicago 4, Philadelphia 9. 2B — Ransom (10), Do.Murphy (1), Mayberry (19). HR — Do.Murphy 2 (3), D.Brown (25). SB — Castillo (2). Chicago IP H R ERBBSO Tr.Wood 6 1-3 6 2 2 1 7 Guerrier BS,3-3 1-3 2 0 0 2 0 Russell 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Strop W,2-1 1 0 0 0 1 3 Gregg S,23-27 1 0 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia IP H R ERBBSO Hamels 7 6 2 2 0 3 Lu.Garcia L,0-1 1 2-3 0 2 2 3 2 De Fratus 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 HBP — by Hamels (Do.Murphy). Umpires — Home, Jordan Baker; First, Marty Foster; Second, Tim McClelland; Third, Wally Bell. T — 3:09. A — 36,171 (43,651).

NFL Preseason Thursday, Aug. 8 Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Tennessee, 8 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Cleveland, 8 p.m. Denver at San Francisco, 9 p.m. Seattle at San Diego, 10 p.m. Friday, Aug. 9 N.Y. Jets at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Miami at Jacksonville, 7:30 p.m. New England at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Kansas City at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Arizona at Green Bay, 8 p.m. Chicago at Carolina, 8 p.m. Dallas at Oakland, 10 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 10

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N.Y. Giants at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 11 Buffalo at Indianapolis, 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 15 Detroit at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m. Atlanta at Baltimore, 7:30 p.m. Carolina at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. San Diego at Chicago, 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16 Minnesota at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Oakland at New Orleans, 8 p.m. San Francisco at Kansas City, 8 p.m. Tampa Bay at New England, 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17 Dallas at Arizona, 4:30 p.m. Tennessee at Cincinnati, 7 p.m. Jacksonville at N.Y. Jets, 7:30 p.m. Green Bay at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Miami at Houston, 8 p.m. Denver at Seattle, 10 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 18 Indianapolis at N.Y. Giants, 7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 19 Pittsburgh at Washington, 8 p.m.

WNBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Chicago 13 7 .650 — Atlanta 11 6 .647 1/2 Indiana 10 10 .500 3 New York 9 12 .429 41/2 Washington 9 13 .409 5 Connecticut 6 13 .316 61/2 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 17 3 .850 — Los Angeles 14 7 .667 3Ω Phoenix 10 11 .476 7Ω Seattle 9 11 .450 8 San Antonio 7 14 .333 10Ω Tulsa 7 15 .318 11 Tuesday’s Games New York 93, Washington 88 Los Angeles 74, Connecticut 72 Indiana 64, Chicago 58 Minnesota 93, San Antonio 80 Seattle 80, Phoenix 65 Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled Thursday’s Games Los Angeles at Indiana, 7 p.m. Washington at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Friday’s Games Chicago at Connecticut, 7 p.m. Tulsa at Phoenix, 10 p.m. San Antonio at Seattle, 10 p.m.

PGA Championship Tee Times At Oak Hill Country Club Piitsford, N.Y. Thursday-Friday Hole 1-Hole 10 7:10 a.m.-12:20 p.m. — Rob Labritz, United States; John Senden, Australia; Shane Lowry, Ireland 7:20 a.m.-12:30 p.m. — Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand; Bob Gaus, United States; Luke Guthrie, United States 7:30 a.m.-12:40 p.m. — Marc Leishman, Australia; Josh Teater, United States; Pablo Larrazabal, Spain 7:40 a.m.-12:50 p.m. — Tommy Gainey, United States; Ryan Palmer, United States; David Hearn, Canada 7:50 a.m.-1 p.m. — Michael Thompson, United States; Marcel Siem, Germany; Bo Van Pelt, United States 8 a.m.-1:10 p.m. — Shaun Micheel, United States; Rich Beem, United States; Mark Brooks, United States 8:10 a.m.-1:20 p.m. — Richard Sterne, South Africa; Scott Brown, United States; David Lingmerth, Sweden 8:20 a.m.-1:30 p.m. — Ben Curtis, United States; Marcus Fraser, Australia; Peter Hanson, Sweden 8:30 a.m.-1:40 p.m. — Stewart Cink, United States; Paul Lawrie, Scotland; Rafael Cabrera-Bello, Spain 8:40 a.m.-1:50 p.m. — Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark; Brian Gay, United States; David Lynn, England 8:50 a.m.-2 p.m. — Stephen Gallacher, Scotland; David McNabb, United States; Branden Grace, South Africa 9 a.m.-2:10 p.m. — Caine Fitzgerald, United States; Kevin Streelman, United States; Bernd Wiesberger, Austria 9:10 a.m.-2:20 p.m. — JC Anderson, United States; Jaco Van Zyl, South Africa 12:25 p.m.-7:15 a.m. — John Huh, United States; Ryo Ishikawa, Japan; Danny Balin, United States 12:35 p.m.-7:25 a.m. — Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland; Tom Watson, United States; Paul McGinley, Ireland 12:45 p.m.-7:35 a.m. — Kohki Idoki, Japan; Rod Perry, United States; Nick Watney, United States 12:55 p.m.-7:45 a.m. — Nicolas Colsaerts, Belgium; Jason Day, Australia; Brandt Snedeker, United States 1:05 p.m.-7:55 a.m. — Tim Clark, South Africa; Lee Westwood, England; Bubba Watson, United States 1:15 p.m.-8:05 a.m. — Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain; Webb Simpson, United States; Angel Cabrera, Argentina 1:25 p.m.-8:15 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Vijay Singh, Fiji; Martin Kaymer, Germany 1:35 p.m.-8:25 a.m. — Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Spain; Luke Donald, England; Jordan Spieth, United States 1:45 p.m.-8:35 a.m. — Adam Scott,

Australia; Justin Rose, England; Phil Mickelson, United States 1:55 p.m.-8:45 a.m. — Lucas Glover, United States; Ian Poulter, England; Zach Johnson, United States 2:05 p.m.-8:55 a.m. — Kevin Chappell, United States; Christopher Wood, England; Mike Small, United States 2:15 p.m.-9:05 a.m. — Kevin Stadler, United States; Chip Sullivan, United States; Chris Stroud, United States 2:25 p.m.-9:15 a.m. — Sonny Skinner, United States; Richie Ramsay, Scotland Hole 10-Hole 1 7:15 a.m.-12:25 p.m. — Charley Hoffman, United States; Bob Sowards, United States; Matt Every, United States 7:25 a.m.-12:35 p.m. — Mark Sheftic, United States; Robert Garrigus, United States; Hiroyuki Fujita, Japan 7:35 a.m.-12:45 p.m. — Hunter Mahan, United States; Paul Casey, England; Billy Horschel, United States 7:45 a.m.-12:55 p.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Japan; Steve Stricker, United States; Jason Dufner, United States 7:55 a.m.-1:05 p.m. — Sergio Garcia, Spain; Matt Kuchar, United States; Rickie Fowler, United States 8:05 a.m.-1:15 p.m. — Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Ernie Els, South Africa; Bill Haas, United States 8:15 a.m.-1:25 p.m. — David Toms, United States; Padraig Harrington, Ireland; Y.E. Yang, South Korea 8:25 a.m.-1:35 p.m. — Henrik Stenson, Sweden; Dustin Johnson, United States; Charl Schwartzel, South Africa 8:35 a.m.-1:45 p.m. — Davis Love III, United States; Keegan Bradley, United States; Tiger Woods, United States 8:45 a.m.-1:55 p.m. — Peter Uihlein, United States; Jim Furyk, United States; Thomas Bjorn, Denmark 8:55 a.m.-2:05 p.m. — K.J. Choi, South Korea; Ryan Polzin, United States; Jonas Blixt, Sweden 9:05 a.m.-2:15 p.m. — Scott Stallings, United States; Jason Kokrak, United States; Jeff Sorenson, United States 9:15 a.m.-2:25 p.m. — Scott Jamieson, Scotland; Roberto Castro, United States; Stuart Smith, United States 12:20 p.m.-7:10 a.m. — Mark Brown, United States; Scott Piercy, United States; Brooks Koepka, United States 12:30 p.m.-7:20 a.m. — Derek Ernst, United States; Jeff Martin, United States; Charles Howell III, United States 12:40 p.m.-7:30 a.m. — Ken Duke, United States; Matteo Manassero, Italy; Jimmy Walker, United States 12:50 p.m.-7:40 a.m. — Danny Willett, England; Joost Luiten, Netherlands; Russell Henley, United States 1 p.m.-7:50 a.m.— Freddie Jacobson, Sweden; George Coetzee, South Africa; Harris English, United States 1:10 p.m.-8 a.m. — Boo Weekley, United States; Francesco Molinari, Italy; Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand 1:20 p.m.-8:10 a.m. — Jamie Donaldson, Wales; Ryan Moore, United States; Alex Noren, Sweden 1:30 p.m.-8:20 a.m. — Brett Rumford, Australia; Geoff Ogilvy, Australia; John Merrick, United States 1:40 p.m.-8:30 a.m. — Sang-Moon Bae, South Korea; Woody Austin, United States; Martin Laird, Scotland 1:50 p.m.-8:40 a.m. — Carl Pettersson, Sweden; D.A. Points, United States; Mikko Ilonen, Finland 2 p.m.-8:50 a.m. — Graham DeLaet, Canada; Kirk Hanefeld, United States; Kyle Stanley, United States 2:10 p.m.-9 a.m. — David Muttitt, United States; Charlie Beljan, United States; Brendon de Jonge, United States 2:20 p.m.-9:10 a.m. — Lee Rhind, United States; Chris Kirk, United States; Marc Warren, Scotland

Arena Football Playoffs First Round American Conference Philadelphia 59, Orlando 55 Jacksonville 69, Tampa Bay 62 National Conference Spokane 69, Chicago 47 Arizona 59, San Jose 49 Conference Championships Saturday, Aug. 10 American Philadelphia at Jacksonville, 7 p.m. National Spokane at Arizona, 9:30 p.m. ArenaBowl At Orlando, Fla. Friday, Aug. 16 American champion vs. National champion, 1 p.m.

Transactions American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Signed INF-OF Ryan Raburn to a two-year contract. National League CINCINNATI REDS — Activated RHP Jonathan Broxton from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Pedro Villareal. to Louisville (IL). Can-Am League NEWARK BEARS — Sold the contract of INF Bridger Hunt to San Diego (NL).

MAC hoping to build on banner season CHICAGO (AP) — In the last year, the Mid-American Conference has had a team in the Orange Bowl and a player picked No. 1 in the NFL draft. Now, for an encore — how about a Heisman Trophy? That may seem far-fetched, but Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch finished seventh in the voting last season, and he’s back to try to lead the Huskies to another banner year. Northern Illinois played in the Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, and although the Huskies were beaten soundly, the MAC was celebrating again a short while later when Central Michigan offensive lineman Eric Fisher was the first pick in the draft. “I think the conference is on

the rise, and a lot of great things are happening,” Lynch said. “The whole Heisman campaign, Eric Fisher going No. 1 overall. … I think there’s great things going on, and I think the best is yet to come for this conference.” That remains to be seen. Northern Illinois has a new coach — Rod Carey led the Huskies in their bowl because predecessor Dave Doeren had taken the North Carolina State job. And since the Huskies lost to Florida State in the Orange Bowl by three touchdowns, the MAC champion might need an unbeaten record to repeat Northern Illinois’ feat of reaching a BCS bowl. Northern Illinois made it despite a loss in the regular season.

As for Lynch’s Heisman hopes, he threw for 3,138 yards and 25 touchdowns last season — while running for 1,815 yards and 19 TDs. Numbers like that — if he can repeat them — will get attention. Six teams have won the MAC title in the last nine seasons, and the last three league championship games were down-to-the-wire thrillers. Amid all that apparent parity, Northern Illinois is starting to look like a legitimate dynasty. The Huskies are trying to become the first team to win three straight MAC titles since Marshall won four in a row from 1997-2000. Including the last two conference title games, Northern

Illinois has won 17 straight against MAC opponents. The biggest threat to that streak this year may be a trip to Toledo in November. As for the Huskies’ chances of going undefeated in the regular season, they’ll have to win three nonconference road games to do it — against Iowa, Idaho and Purdue. P.J. Fleck, Western Michigan’s new coach, is the youngest in major college football at age 32. He took that title from Toledo’s Matt Campbell, who is exactly one year older. Fleck is one of three new coaches in the MAC this year. Carey and Kent State’s Paul Haynes are the others.

Elway: Denver Broncos ‘do look good on paper’ DENVER (AP) — John Elway says the Denver Broncos, still stinging from their playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens in January, are primed for greatness in 2013 if they can just stay healthy and hungry. Two of the biggest reasons for his optimism: Von Miller and Peyton Manning. The Broncos executive vice president said he’s hopeful Miller won’t have to sit out all of September for violating the NFL’s drug-abuse policy. The All-Pro linebacker is having a terrific training camp while he appeals a pending four-game suspension. Elway even called Miller, the first player he drafted, the most talented player he’s ever seen on either side of the ball. He was equally effusive in

his praise of Manning, who is throwing the ball better and appears much more comfortable in his second season in Denver. With the offseason addition of Wes Welker to the roster, Elway said he’s “truly jealous of the weapons that Peyton gets to throw to.” After watching the four-time MVP throw the football with such authority this summer and then catching his hilarious new commercial with brother Eli for DirecTV this week, Elway noted that Manning’s pitches are strong this year both on and off the football field. “Great video,” Elway said. “But I will tell him today to stick to his day job.” Elway made his remarks during a keynote address at an event held by the National

Sports Center for the Disabled on Wednesday at Sports Authority Field. Manning’s right arm is noticeably thicker and his throws stronger now that he’s another year removed from a series of neck injuries and surgeries that affected a nerve that runs into his right triceps and cost him all of the 2011 season, his last in Indianapolis. Manning was the Comeback Player of the Year last season when he led Denver to a 13-3 record and the AFC’s top seed before the Broncos lost 38-35 to the Ravens in double-overtime on Jan. 12, snapping their 11-game winning streak. The Ravens went on to win the Super Bowl, but in an odd twist, those two teams will open the 2013 season not

in Baltimore but in Denver on Sept. 5 because baseball’s Orioles are playing at home that same day. It’s the Broncos who are the trendy Super Bowl pick this year despite a series of embarrassing episodes including Miller’s troubles, the suspensions of Elway’s top two assistants for drunken driving arrests and the fax faux pas that led to Elvis Dumervil’s departure in free agency. Elway compared the Broncos’ playoff loss to the Ravens last winter to Jacksonville’s upset of the well-rested Broncos in Denver in 1996 when they also were 13-3 and the AFC’s top-seeded team. The Broncos bounced back that time to win the next two Super Bowls.

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SPORTS BRIEFS • Wigged out Eli and Peyton rapping on new TV ad EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Jay Z and 50 Cent had better watch out. The rap world has a couple of wigged-out new stars — E-Z and $17.5-Mil. Haven’t heard of them? Well, they’re known better on the football field. Quarterbacks and Super Bowl MVPs Eli and Peyton Manning burst onto the music scene this week with a three-minute rap videotape in which P. Manning they promote “Football On Your Phone” for DirectTV. The commercial starts out with the Mannings sitting in barber chairs, wearing wigs that mimicked hair styles of the ‘60s and ‘70s. Eli has a frizzy, curly-haired mop and Peyton wore a straight, long-hair wig worthy of any rocker. The brothers filmed the humorous commercial in one day in their native New Orleans, extolling the value of watching football games on a phone, joking at one point that someone was actually using his phone as a phone. Broncos executive vice president John Elway saw the video and enjoyed the Manning’s performance. “Great video,” said Elway, who will pay Peyton Manning $17.5 million to guide Denver’s offense this season. “But I will tell him today to stick to his day job.”

Indians reward Ryan Raburn with 2-year extension CLEVELAND (AP) — Ryan Raburn was rewarded Wednesday with a two-year, $4.85 million contract extension that includes a $3 million club option for 2016. Released by the Detroit Tigers after last season, Raburn has had a major impact in his first year with the Cleveland Indians, who signed him to a minor league free agent contract in January. Raburn is batting .277 with 13 homers — third most on the team — and 38 RBIs in 66 games. He’s made starts in right field (37), left (seven), second base (two) and designated hitter (five), and Indians manager Terry Francona has batted him everywhere but the No. 1 and 2 spot in the order. Raburn has also been one of the Indians’ most clutch players. He entered Wednesday’s game batting .462 (12 of 26) with 19 RBIs with runners in scoring position and two outs. Raburn was selected by Detroit in the 2001 draft.

Oden finalizes his signing with Heat MIAMI (AP) — Greg Oden has taken his physical, done a bit of house hunting in South Florida and signed on the dotted line. Nearly four years after he last played, he’s officially back in the NBA. The former No. 1 overall pick signed his contract with the two-time defending NBA champion Miami Heat on Wednesday, the last in a series of formalities that needed to be completed before the team could finally announce the move. Oden announced late last week that he was accepting Miami’s offer, one that will pay him about $1 million this coming year and includes a $1.1 million player option for the 2014-15 season. Oden’s last NBA appearance was Dec. 5, 2009, for Portland against Houston. He went up to defend a layup attempt by the Rockets’ Aaron Brooks, fracturing his left kneecap on the play and doing so without even making contact with anyone. Oden collapsed to the floor in obvious agony, was wheeled off the floor after a delay, taken for surgery and the Blazers quickly announced that his season was over. At the time, no one knew that the following three seasons were basically over as well.

Bears CB Hayden out for season with leg injury BOURBONNAIS, Ill. (AP) — Veteran Chicago cornerback Kelvin Hayden will miss the entire season after recently tearing his left hamstring in practice at Soldier Field. Hayden will have surgery to repair the hamstring and will need six to eight months of rehab, Bears coach Marc Trestman said Wednesday. Hayden was injured in practice on Saturday night. The 30-year-old Hayden has 12 career interceptions. Second-year player Isaiah Frey will replace him in the nickel back spot in Friday’s preseason opener at Carolina. Frey, a sixth-round draft pick out of Nevada, has been one of the surprises of training camp with a handful of forced turnovers.

O’Dell’s lead balloons to 9 shots at W.Va. Amateur WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) — Sam O’Dell shot a 3-under-par 69 to extend his lead to nine strokes at the West Virginia Amateur on Wednesday. Barring a major meltdown, he’ll simply need to finish at the Old White TPC Course at The Greenbrier resort on Thursday to pick up his first win in a tournament he’s played since the mid-1990s. Vienna’s Alan Cooke was at 2 under after shooting 74 on Wednesday.


B4

THE NEWS SUN

LEGAL NOTICES •

kpcnews.com

ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT EAST NOBLE SCHOOL CORPORATION County Number 57; School Corporation Number 6060 Any questions regarding this report should be directed to: Brian A. Leitch; Title: Business Manager; Telephone Number: 260-347-2502 RECEIPTS COMPARISONS CALENDAR YEAR 2012 2012 2012 APPROVED BUDGET ACTUAL RECEIPT ACCOUNTS RECEIPTS RECEIPTS GENERAL FUND/FISCAL STABILIZATION FUND 1000 Local Sources $46,000.00 $64,823.43 2000 Intermediate Sources $$20.80 3000 State Sources $22,881,912.00 $23,728,548.71 4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$29,112.80 TOTAL $22,927,912.00 $23,822,505.74 REFERENDUM FUND 1000 Local Sources $$TOTAL $$DEBT SERVICE FUND 1000 Local Sources $4,707,699.00 $4,794,234.28 2000 Intermediate Sources $$3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$TOTAL $4,707,699.00 $4,794,234.28 RETIREMENT/SEVERANCE BOND FUND DEBT SERVICE FUND 1100 Local Sources $240,859.00 $235,582.62 TOTAL $240,859.00 $235,582.62 CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND 1000 Local Sources $2,814,767.00 $2,862,484.19 2000 Intermediate Sources $$3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$129.00 TOTAL $2,814,767.00 $2,862,613.19 SCHOOL TRANSPORTATION FUND 1000 Local Sources $1,632,368.00 $1,662,519.35 3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$82.50 TOTAL $1,632,368.00 $1,662,601.85 SCHOOL BUS REPLACEMENT FUND 1000 Local Sources $269,324.00 $274,363.56 5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$TOTAL $269,324.00 $274,363.56 SPECIAL EDUCATION PRESCHOOL FUND 1000 Local Sources $$3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$TOTALS $$REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT FUND 1000 Local Sources $$3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$TOTAL $$SELF-INSURANCE FUND 1000 Local Sources $$2,734,381.55 3000 State Sources $$4000 Federal Sources $$5000 Other Financing Sources $$6000 Other Items $$222,692.57 TOTAL $$2,957,074.12 GRAND TOTAL $32,592,929.00 $36,608,975.36

Vendor Name East Noble Self-Insurance Fund Internal Revenue Service Indiana State Teachers The Variable Annuity Life Four County Area Vocational Public Employees’ Retirement Indiana Michigan Power Company Midwest Transit Equipment of Fuel Management, Inc. Key Government Finance, Inc Selective Insurance Company NIPSCO DW Sales, Inc. KSS Enterprises Northeast Indiana Special Cenergistic CDW Government, Inc. Avilla Utilities Stewart, Brimner, Peters & Lear American United Life Insurance American General Life Advancced Imaging Solutions Busienss Card API Construction Corp City of Kendallville Kirby Risk Corporation City of Kendallivlle Utilties Tremco Staffmark Advanced Systems Group Sovereign Bank, N.A. Evans Real Estate Development Noble County Disposal, Inc. Region 8 Education Service Norris Truck Service Combustion Mechanical, Inc. The Speech Tree Corp Cole Center Family YMCA Trane Office Depoit Hasler, Inc. Chase Equipment Finance, Inc. Janice S Schmelz McMahon Tire Inc. Hoosier Communication Inc. Kelly A Kneller Williams Electronics, LLC Wagner-Meinert Inc. Apple Inc Central Supply - Ft Wayne Eshelman Excavating, Inc. Cintas Location #338 Xerox Corporation Shepherd’s Fatpipe Networks Day’s Carpet Bobby Layman Chevrolet Container Exchanger NCS Pearson, Inc. GECRB/Amazon Earthline Business Macallister Machinery Co. Inc. Edline LLC AP Exams Five-Star Technology Follett Library Resources Peerless-Midwest, Inc. Brown & Sons Fuel Quill Corporation Jenkins Automotive Netwrix Corporation Komputrol Software Systmes Lan-Con Electric AT&T Scott Mosley Hidy Carpet Installation Strawser Bros. Construction Hewlett-Packard Company Chorus, Inc Muncie Community Schools Lee Company, Inc. Havel

General Amount 1,879,264.99 1,104,028.47 1,092,973.61 628,544.77 418,615.36 412,334.24 32,825.65

Capital Projects Fu Amount 42,942.37 24,782.88 3,697.98 87,003.30 47,282.54 350,503.85

17,549.93 47,331.52 30,233.79 7,028.00 125,258.04 2,633.54 14,805.67 64,553.00 74,877.33 74,613.90 43,872.51 7,289.30 36,087.42 7,111.28 36,780.87 564.13

316,132.89 131,574.00 150,865.70 169,665.80 27,547.86 99,999.01 123,600.00 112,069.31 79,539.74 23,133.00 1,762.70 1,756.53 61,954.38 12,513.32 53,475.00 43,786.00 6,216.67 33,806.21 39,806.42

135.00 5,246.14

108.01 27,731.25

29,815.31

1,432.09 22,380.44 24,006.35

EXPENDITURES COMPARISONS CALENDAR YEAR 2012 2012 2012 APPROVED BUDGET ACTUAL EXPENDITURE ACCOUNTS EXPENDITURES EXPENDITURES GENERAL FUND 11000 Instruction/Regular Programs $13,345,151.00 $13,899,017.08 12000 Instruction/Special Programs $1,667,682.00 $1,625,994.78 13000 Instruction/Adult/Continuing Education $$14000 Instruction/Summer School $79,000.00 $54,427.32 15000 Enrichment Programs $$16000 Remediation Programs $218,898.00 $215,566.48 17000 Payments to Governmental Units in State $480,000.00 $442,577.92 21000 Support Services/Pupils $1,119,650.00 $1,127,497.01 22000 Support Services/Inst. Staff $460,402.00 $414,601.28 23000 Support Services/Gen. Admin $518,170.00 $2,149,492.45 24000 Support Services/Sch. Admin $1,379,344.00 $1,413,188.31 25000 Support Services/Business $219,908.00 $379,950.83 26000 Support Services/Central $1,943,609.00 $1,847,171.24 27000 Student Transportation $$30000 Operation of Non-instructional Srvcs. $411,622.00 $383,831.70 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction $$50000 Debt Services $$60000 Non-programmed Charges $$TOTAL $21,843,436.00 $23,953,316.40 REFERENDUM FUND 11000 Instruction/Regular Programs $$12000 Instruction/Special Programs $$13000 Instruction/Adult/Continuing Eduction $$14000 Instruction/Summer School $$15000 Enrichment Programs $$16000 Remediation Programs $$17000 Payments to Governmental Units in State $$21000 Support Services/Pupils $$22000 Support Services/Inst. Staff $$23000 Support Services/Gen. Admin. $$24000 Support Services/Sch. Admin. $$25000 Support Services/Business $$26000 Support Services/Central $$29000 Support Services/Other $$30000 Community Services $$40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction $$50000 Debt Services $$60000 Non-programmed Charges $$TOTAL $$DEBT SERVICE FUND 25000 Support Services/Business 50000 Debt Services $5,306,205.00 $5,248,985.00 60000 Non-programmed Charges $$TOTAL $5,306,205.00 $5,248,985.00 CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND 22300 Support Services/Inst.Staff $1,115,873.00 $1,398,908.27 25000 Support Services/Business $20,000.00 $18,955.06 26000 Support Services/Central $853,537.00 $877,366.49 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction $$50000 Debt Services $$60000 Non-programmed Charges $1,033,600.00 $1,287,427.31 TOTAL $3,023,010.00 $3,582,657.13 SCHOOL TRANSPORTATION FUND 23000 Support Services/General Administration $25000 Central Services $$26000 Operation & Maintenance of Plant Services $$27000 Student Transporation $1,613,000.00 $2,703,429.51 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction $$50000 Debt Services $$60000 Non-programmed Charges $$TOTAL $1,613,000.00 $2,703,429.51 SCHOOL BUS REPLACEMENT FUND 25000 Central Services $$27000 Student Transporation $214,290.00 $414,825.63 50000 Debt Services $95,000.00 $120,000.00 60000 Non-programmed Charges $$TOTAL $309,290.00 $534,825.63

Transporation Oper Amount 70,247.96 4,715.22 2,082.84 200.00 33,695.01 770.11 8,211.01 318,213.25 24,741.00 157.45 5,739.06

492.59 330.86 117.34

35,332.26

32,052.00 27,234.49

33,000.00 660.00 288.00 31,055.18

27,600.96 22,810.75 1,643.99

23,241.85 23,148.70 22,967.17 22,907.53 797.09 379.00 1,070.89 1,635.00 17,478.25

10,528.57 22,260.38 20,680.69 19,710.14 18,000.00

11,290.14

2,070.45 19,115.08

19,017.54 18,870.00 18,577.00 18,533.50 10,929.38

17,093.00 16,965.00 5,730.62 16,574.21 16,107.12 15,681.50

15,600.00 15,200.00 15,059.37 15,059.00 656.91 14,350.54

14,008.76 296.91 14,639.90

4,478.11

14,360.74 9,190.00 13,405.00

13,323.61 13,000.00 1,230.00

12,928.60 11,532.46 12,236.02

12,170.00 12,019.41 59.22

11,755.15 11,058.00

PAYMENTS IN EXCESS OF $2,500.00 MADE TO VENDORS CALENDAR YEAR 2012 Transp School Bus R Total Amount Amount Vendor Name 1,922,207.36 Continental Press, Inc. 1,199,059.31 Strahm Division of SGI, Inc. 1,097,688.83 Bell Technologix Inc 634,325.59 Worthington Direct 505,818.66 League for the Blind and 493,311.79 Follett Educational Services 384,099.61 Quinlan & Fabish Music Co. 332,691.00 340,902.01 Summit Water Treatment, Inc. 335,763.18 ENA Services LLC 316,132.89 Indiana School Boards Assoc. 203,646.52 Bye-Mo’r Inc. 181,256.94 Centurylink 176,693.80 Pamela S Davis 152,805.90 Neola, Inc. 22,676.37 128,414.44 Enviromental Management 123,600.00 Kerlin Bus Sales & Leasing Inc 114,702.85 Goshen Community Schools 94,345.41 Kendallville Do-It Center 87,686.00 Indiana Dept of Workforce 76,640.03 Steve Weiss Music 76,370.43 National School Boards 61,954.38 Project Lead The Way, Inc. 56,878.42 Ligonier Telephone Company 53,475.00 Tyler Technologies, Inc. 51,075.30 Tri County Water Conditioning 42,634.95 ACM Engineering & 41,034.83 ADTEC 39,806.42 IASP 36,780.87 Kone Inc. 35,896.39 Loadbalancer.org, Inc. 34,586.00 34,586.00 KPC Media Group Inc. 33,000.00 PMC Computer & Surveillance 32,847.00 Otis R. Bowen Center For Human 32,768.63 John Deere Financial 31,055.18 Advance Education, Inc. 29,923.32 Marina Grand Resort 27,731.25 Unity School Bus Parts 27,600.96 Rome City Wastewater Utility 24,242.84 S. Altimus Specialized Services 24,024.43 Kendallville Glass, Inc. 24,006.35 K & L Tool Supply 23,709.56 23,709.56 Grainger 23,241.85 Fitness Warehouse, Inc 23,148.70 Boyce Forms/Systems 22,967.17 E.F. Rhodes and Sons, Inc. 22,907.53 Wolverine Brass 22,615.80 Fire Protection, Inc. 22,260.38 BPM Services 21,059.69 Global Equipment Company 20,781.03 Big C Lumber Co., Inc. 19,635.00 Walmart Commmunity/GECRB 19,548.70 Apperson 19,115.08 Cummins Crosspoint 19,017.54 Craig Ream 18,870.00 Harell’s, LLC 18,577.00 Equiparts 18,533.50 MWM, Inc. 17,093.00 Trinity Hearing Care LLC 16,965.00 Emerick, Diggins & Zabona, PC 16,660.00 Modern Printing Company 16,574.21 Technology Contracting Service 16,107.12 William V. MacGill & Co. 15,681.50 Max Platt Ford-Lincoln Inc 15,600.00 American Rebuilers Inc. 15,200.00 MNW Telecom 15,059.37 King Decorating Co. 15,059.00 Johnstone Supply 14,665.67 Global Indiana, Inc. 14,647.45 Books-A-Million, Inc 14,639.90 Media-X Systems Inc. 14,360.74 Parkview Occupational Health 13,668.11 EBSCO Subscription Services 13,405.00 PSAT/NMSQT 13,323.61 The Reading Warehouse 13,000.00 Noble County Treasurer 12,928.60 Palletone of Indiana, Inc 12,762.46 Providence Capital Netwrk LLC 12,236.02 H.J. Umbaugh & Associates 12,170.00 Russ Moore Transmission 12,019.41 Bassett Electric Motors, Inc. 11,755.15 Nasco, Inc. 11,117.22 Rick Williams

STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS CALENDAR YEAR 2012 Principal Outstanding

Indebtedness Temporary Loans School Bonds Emergency Loans School Bus Loans Holding Company - Public & Private Veteran’s Memorial Loans Common School Loans Indiana Bond Bank/Anticipated Notes Retirement/Severance Bond Debt Other DLGF Approved Debt Qualified School Construction Bonds (ARRA) Qualified Zone Academy Bonds (ARRA) TOTAL Outstanding Encumbrances - All Funds (Include purchase orders, vendor contracts, letters of commitment, leases)

89,585.16 23,460,000.00 $245,000.00 $1,603,962.01 $25,398,547.17 $3,501,132.96

CERTIFIED ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF IN EFFECT JUNE 30, 2012 Administrative Staff: Lowest Salary - $74,310.00; Highest Salary $124,580.00; Average Salary - $83,853.15; Number of Personnel - 19

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8 , 2013

Say

EXPENDITURES COMPARISONS CALENDAR YEAR 2011 (CONTINUED) SPECIAL EDUCATION PRESCHOOL FUND 12000 Instruction/Special Programs $$17000 Payments to Governmental Units in State 21000 Support Services/Students 22000 Support Services/Instruction 25000 Central Services 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction 50000 Debt Services 60000 Non-programmed Charges $TOTAL $$REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT FUND 25000 Central Services 26000 Operation & Maintenance of Plant Services 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction 60000 Non-programmed Charges TOTAL $$SELF-INSURANCE FUND 11000 Instruction/Regular Programs 12000 Instruction/Special Programs 13000 Instruction/Adult/Continuing Eduction 14000 Instruction/Summer School 15000 Enrichment Programs 16000 Remediation Programs 17000 Payments to Governmental Units in State 21000 Support Services/Pupils 22000 Support Services/Inst. Staff 23000 Support Services/Gen. Admin. 24000 Support Services/Sch. Admin. 25000 Central Services $6,817.82 26000 Support Services/Central 29000 Support Services/Other 30000 Community Services 40000 Facility Acquisition and Construction 60000 Non-programmed Charges 2,701,009.51 TOTAL $$2,707,827.33 GRAND TOTAL $32,094,941.00 $38,731,041.00 CERTIFIED SALARY SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE 30, 2012 Years No. of No. of Masters No. of Experience Bachelors people Masters people + 30 hrs people 0 $33,345.92 16 $34,646.41 1 $35,756.83 1 $34,046.18 11 $35,913.56 2 $37,033.98 2 $34,746.45 7 $37,214.05 $38,311.13 3 $35,446.71 3 $38,481.19 1 $39,588.28 4 $36,146.98 8 $39,748.34 3 $40,865.43 5 $36,847.24 7 $41,048.83 2 $42,142.57 6 $37,547.51 4 $42,315.97 5 $43,419.72 7 $38,247.77 2 $43,583.12 8 $44,696.87 8 $38,948.03 2 $44,850.26 7 $45,974.02 9 $39,648.30 2 $46,150.75 4 $47,251.17 10 $40,348.56 3 $47,417.90 6 $48,528.32 11 $41,048.83 3 $48,685.04 5 $49,805.47 12 $41,749.09 1 $49,985.53 3 $51,082.61 13 $42,449.36 2 $51,252.68 9 $52,359.76 1 14 $43,149.62 2 $52,519.82 5 $53,636.91 15 $44,283.38 1 $53,820.31 6 $54,914.06 16 $44,283.38 2 $55,087.46 1 $56,191.21 17 $44,283.38 1 $56,354.60 8 $57,468.36 18 $44,283.38 1 $57,621.75 2 $58,745.51 19 $44,283.38 $58,922.24 6 $60,022.66 1 20 $44,283.38 $60,189.39 2 $61,299.80 21 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 1 $66,575.13 22 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 3 $66,575.13 23 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 4 $66,575.13 1 24 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 5 $66,575.13 2 25 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 5 $66,575.13 26 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 6 $66,575.13 3 27 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 3 $66,575.13 28 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 2 $66,575.13 29 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 3 $66,575.13 30 $44,283.38 $65,358.00 20 $66,575.13 4 78 138 12 Total Number of Certified part-time Employees: 5 Total Number of Certified Full-Time Employees: 223

General Amount 10,819.42

Capital Projects Fu Amount

Transporation Oper Amount

10,652.00 10,531.50 9,994.85 9,894.26 9,865.44 317.00 9,404.69 8,814.00 8,689.81 8,527.46 8,366.96

9,416.77 144.35 8,917.25 117.56 8,350.00 8,171.89 8,105.32

7,178.97 7,119.97 6,501.16 6,422.99 6,275.00 6,194.39 6,192.26 6,010.05 4,212.93

1,527.30 5,724.00 5,480.00

5,405.00 4,598.06 4,847.50 853.06 4,550.00 4,492.36

5,385.91 5,381.00 26.88 5,058.98

558.85

3,735.83 4,455.28

371.14 3,455.00 3,698.00 933.42 4,151.75 150.00 900.76 55.50 1,061.25 3,080.14 3,734.85 3,598.96 3,566.00 2,025.20

4,082.54 950.00 1,978.75 3,284.09 4,154.00

655.00 2,350.63 37.00

150.00 3,115.40 889.75 1,748.02 3,877.17 2,722.84 11.82

3,800.00

3,233.02

446.50

3,062.32 2,238.25 679.70

1,504.62 3,500.00 3,430.00

3,402.50 3,346.30 3,341.38 3,326.18 3,249.95 3,227.00 837.81 3,090.00 3,079.56

3,202.24 3,150.00 2,288.44 3,010.00 2,979.00

2,892.66 2,884.00 2,874.00 2,854.90 2,850.00 2,780.00 2,700.00 2,680.94 2,543.14 2,531.67 2,527.41

Transp School Bus R Amount

Total Amount 10,819.42 10,652.00 10,531.50 9,994.85 9,894.26 9,865.44 9,733.77 9,549.04 8,917.25 8,814.00 8,807.37 8,527.46 8,366.96 8,350.00 8,171.89 8,105.32 7,178.97 7,119.97 6,501.16 6,422.99 6,275.00 6,194.39 6,192.26 6,010.05 5,740.23 5,724.00 5,480.00 5,405.00 5,385.91 5,381.00 5,183.79 5,058.98 4,847.50 4,588.89 4,550.00 4,492.36 4,455.28 4,453.68 4,405.00 4,353.00 4,329.38 4,254.51 4,154.00 4,151.75 4,100.00 4,016.16 4,007.57 3,986.27 3,877.17 3,784.09 3,771.66 3,734.85 3,679.52 3,598.96 3,566.00 3,529.82 3,500.00 3,430.00 3,402.50 3,346.30 3,341.38 3,326.18 3,249.95 3,227.00 3,202.24 3,150.00 3,126.25 3,090.00 3,079.56 3,010.00 2,979.00 2,892.66 2,884.00 2,874.00 2,854.90 2,850.00 2,780.00 2,700.00 2,680.94 2,543.14 2,531.67 2,527.41 Continued to Page B5

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THE NEWS SUN

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Area Activities • Today Onion Days: Most events at Noble Township Park in Wolf Lake. Festival opens at 5 p.m. Kids Night begins at 5:30 p.m. Several events at 6 p.m. Portside Pizza will be site of pizza-eating contest today at 5:30 p.m. At the same time in the park, registration will begin for pedal pull and the three-onthree basketball tournament. Both competitions begin at 6 p.m. The pedal pull has kiddie and adult divisions. Food Pantry: Food available for low-income families in need. Thursdays 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 2:30-4:30 p.m. West Noble Food Pantry, 519 Gerber St., Ligonier. Wolf Lake Free Health Clinic: For uninsured adults. Wolf Lake Free Health Clinic, 524 Branch Court, Columbia City. 1 p.m. Euchre Game: Public welcome. Francis Vinyard VFW Post 2749, 112 Veterans Way, Kendallville. 1 p.m. Food and Clothing Pantry: Furniture also available. For more information call 438-8678. Helping Hands, 275 Martin St., Rome City. 2 p.m. Kendallville Shuffleboard Club: Provided by shuffleboard. Outdoor Recreation Complex, 425 S. Allen Chapel Road, Kendallville. 5 p.m. Zumba Class: Provided by zumbafitnessnj.com. Presence Sacred Heart Home, 515 North Main St., Avilla. 6 p.m. 897-2841 Bingo: Sponsored by Sylvan Lake Improvement Association. Rome City Bingo Hall, S.R. 9, Rome City. 6 p.m.

Celebrate Recovery Meeting: Meets each Thursday. CrossPointe Family Church, S.R. 3 and Drake Road, Kendallville. 7 p.m.

Friday, August 9 Rummage Sale: Something for everyone. Bag sale is Saturday. Immaculate Conception Catholic Church Hall, corner Oak and Diamond streets, Kendallville. 9 a.m. Community Table: Free Meal & Groceries: Free meal from 10:30 am-11:30 am, and Community Harvest food truck delivering at 11 a.m. Trinity Assembly of God Church, 1288 W. Union St., Ligonier. 10:30 a.m. Central Noble Food Pantry: Provides dry goods, health and beauty products, dairy and meat. Call Bonnie Brownell at 564-8160 for more information. Central Noble Food Pantry, 104 N. Orange St., Albion. 1 p.m. Friendship Food Pantry: Contact Friendship Food Pantry at 349-1623 to donate. If interested in volunteering for Thanksgiving or any other time, please contact Friendship Food Pantry at 349-1623. Hours: Wednesdays from 1-3 p.m. nd 4-6 p.m. Fridays 2-4 p.m. Friendship Food Pantry, 2004 E Dowling St, Kendallville. 2 p.m. 349-1623 Rome City Farmers and Artisans Market: Vendors of produce and local artisans are invited to set up and sell their wares. Market features in the past have been homemade baked goods, locally grown produce, flowers, shrubs and unique handmade items. Sycamore Park, S.R. 9 North of Bridge, Rome City. 4 p.m.

Celtic music, dance to fill Cole KENDALLVILLE — The Gothard Sisters will present the first concert of the 2013-2014 Noble County Concert Association series on Wednesday, Sept. 11, at Cole Auditorium at East Noble High School. They will delight the audience with Celtic music and dance. The young women are three sisters from the Pacific Northwest. They are all violinists, as well as championship Irish dancers, having won awards in America as well as Ireland. Greta, Willow and Solana originally started as an Irish dance group, then added their violins and now have guitar, bodhran and voice to add to their repertoire. They perform mainly on the Pacific Coast, but have had summer tours in the Midwest as well. Greta Gothard, age 25, started playing violin when she was 5 years old by studying the Suzuki method for classical violin. Greta was home-schooled through high school, while attending the Academy of Music Northwest in 2001, and the Seattle Conservatory of Music in 2002. She was an active member of the Seattle Youth Symphonies for more than 10 years, holding leadership positions in the junior and youth orchestras. Greta is also an open championship level Irish dancer and three-time world qualifier in the Western region, placing eighth and nineth at the Oireachtas. Now she manages to teach several young Suzuki students privately between her performing engagements while also coaching at the Chamber Music Madness workshops for younger children in Seattle, empowering kids and teens through a love of the chamber music repertoire. In 2007, she started playing guitar to expand her musical knowledge, and has since become fascinated by Celtic music played in a variety of

different ways. Greta enjoys arranging music, composing, teaching, running websites, studying videography and video editing, and performing regularly as part of her active performance group, the Gothard Sisters, with her sisters Willow and Solana. Willow Gothard, age 23, is an accomplished Irish dancer, having placed repeatedly in Open Championship, earning fifth and fourth at the Western Region Oireachtas, 20th at the North American National Championships and earning the elusive recall at the 2008 World Championships of Irish dance in Philadelphia. Willow, who was homeschooled, has been playing classical violin since the age of 5 and has performed in orchestras and chamber music ensembles. She interns and helps kids in the Seattle area learn to love music through chamber music. Willow learned how to play the bodhran in 2007 and now lends her rhythms and driving force to the Gothard Sisters’ arrangements. In 2010, she also started to play the mandolin and continues to expand her musical knowledge, as reflected in her growing compositions and original Celtic tunes and melodies. Willow teaches private dance students at her home, and sews every single costume that the Gothard Sisters wear in their live shows and videos by hand so they are completely unique. Solana Gothard, age 17, is barely old enough to drive but has accomplished a lot in her young life. She was the youngest dancer from the Pacific Northwest ever to qualify for the World Championships of Irish dancing when she placed sixth at the Western Region Oireachtas in 2006. She was 11 years old at the time. Solana, who is homeschooled and mostly self-taught, has always been fond of words and song, and is

the lead singer for the Gothard Sisters. Her strong, sweet vocals are uniquely clean and pure. Solana has also played classical violin since she was 3 years old, which is also around the same time that she started Irish dance lessons. She has recently learned how to play the bodhran and other rhythm and percussion instruments

to add to the sound variety in the Gothard Sisters’ live shows. Solana continues to study classical violin with the Gothard Sisters’ longtime violin teacher and mentor, Lawrence Fisher. She is currently assistant concertmistress of the Cascade Youth Symphony orchestra in Seattle, Wash.

In loving memory of

Tom W. Hart

Life is a journey of sweetness and sorrow, of yesterday’s memories and hopes for tomorrow, of pathways we choose and detours we face with patience and humor, courage and grace, of joys that we’ve shared and of people we’ve met who have touched us in ways we will never forget. Tom fought the good fight and finished the course and kept the faith. Thanks to everyone who sent flowers, cards and brought food, also to our church family for the dinner, to Liberty Freewill Baptist Church and everyone who prayed for us through the years of Tom’s illness. Thanks, also to Dr. Chandler, Dr. Warrener, Dr. Sowden, Dr. Godly, Dr. Cardillo and Cathy Roberts and Parkview Home Health and Hospice, you will always have a special place in our hearts. Charlotte, Bob & Vicki, Mark & Jenni, Cheryl & Kevin, Sarah, Tommy, Bobby, Adam, Kyle and Jared

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Continued from Page B4 POSITION MEDIA SUPERVISOR ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ELEM BASKETBALL COORDINATOR ELEM BASKETBALL COORDINATOR ELEM BASKETBALL COORDINATOR ELEM BASKETBALL COORDINATOR ELEM BASKETBALL COORDINATOR STUDENT COUNCIL-ELEM AV STUDENT COUNCIL-ELEM SS STUDENT COUNCIL-ELEM NS STUDENT COUNCIL-ELEM RC STUDENT COUNCIL-ELEM WC NCA CHAIRPERSONS-ELEM AV NCA CHAIRPERSONS-ELEM SS NCA CHAIRPERSONS-ELEM NS NCA CHAIRPERSONS-ELEM RC NCA CHAIRPERSONS-ELEM WC SCIENCE FAIR-ELEM AV SCIENCE FAIR-ELEM SS SCIENCE FAIR-ELEM NS SCIENCE FAIR-ELEM RC SCIENCE FAIR-ELEM WC ELEM NEWSPAPER AV ELEM NEWSPAPER SS ELEM NEWSPAPER NS ELEM NEWSPAPER RC ELEM NEWSPAPER WC SPELL BOWL AV SPELL BOWL SS SPELL BOWL NS SPELL BOWL RC SPELL BOWL WC MATH BOWL AV MATH BOWL SS MATH BOWL NS MATH BOWL RC MATH BOWL WC ELEM TECH SITE COORDINATOR AV ELEM TECH SITE COORDINATOR SS ELEM TECH SITE COORDINATOR NS ELEM TECH SITE COORDINATOR RC ELEM TECH SITE COORDINATOR WC ELEM DEPT HEADS AV ELEM DEPT HEADS SS ELEM DEPT HEADS NS ELEM DEPT HEADS RC

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AMOUNT 176.73 1,310.49 1,310.49 1,310.49 1,310.49 1,310.49 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 310.12 276.77 276.77 276.77 276.77 276.77 420.16 420.16 420.16 420.16 420.16 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 266.76 1,480.56 1,480.56 1,480.56 1,480.56 1,480.56 500.19 500.19 500.19 500.19

EXTRA-CURRICULAR SALARY SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE 30, 2013 ELEM DEPT HEADS WC 500.19 MS MEDIA SUPERVISOR JR NAT HONOR SOC SPONSOR AV 533.53 HIGH SCHOOL JR NAT HONOR SOC SPONSOR SS 533.53 HS HEAD FOOTBALL JR NAT HONOR SOC SPONSOR NS 533.53 HS ASSISTANT FOOTBALL JR NAT HONOR SOC SPONSOR RC 533.53 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL JR NAT HONOR SOC SPONSOR WC 533.53 HS HEAD BASKETBALL BOYS MIDDLE SCHOOL HS ASSISTANT BASKETBALL BOYS HEAD FOOTBALL, 8TH GRADE 1,850.70 FRESHMAN BASKETBALL BOYS HEAD FOOTBALL, 7TH GRADE 1,850.70 HEAD BASEBALL ASST FOOTBALL, 8TH GRADE 1,237.13 ASSISTANT BASEBALL ASST FOOTBALL, 7TH GRADE 1,237.13 HS HEAD TRACK BOYS BASKETBALL, 8TH GRADE BOYS 1,850.72 HS ASSISTANT TRACK BOYS BASKETBALL, 8TH GRADE GIRLS 1,850.72 HEAD WRESTLING BASKETBALL, 7TH GRADE BOYS 1,850.72 ASSISTANT WRESTLING BASKETBALL, 7TH GRADE GIRLS 1,850.72 STRENGTH AND COND COORD VOLLEYBALL, 8TH GRADE 1,587.27 HEAD GYMNASTICS VOLLEYBALL, 7TH GRADE 1,587.27 ASSISTANT GYMNASTICS MS WRESTLING 1,237.13 HS HEAD SOCCER BOYS MS ASST WRESTLING 880.33 ASSISTANT SOCCER BOYS MS HEAD TRACK BOYS 1,237.13 HS HEAD CROSS COUNTRY B&G MS HEAD TRACK GIRLS 1,237.13 HS ASST CROSS COUNTRY B&G MS ASSISTANT TRACK BOYS 880.33 HS HEAD SWIMMING BOYS MS ASSISTANT TRACK GIRLS 880.33 HS ASSISTANT SWIMMING BOYS MS CROSS COUNTRY BOYS 1,237.13 HEAD VOLLEYBALL MS CROSS COUNTRY GIRLS 1,237.13 ASSISTANT VOLLEYBALL MS GOLF BOYS 1,237.13 HEAD SOFTBALL MS GOLF GIRLS 1,237.13 ASSISTANT SOFTBALL SOCCER HEAD COACH BOYS 1,237.13 HS HEAD TENNIS BOYS SOCCER HEAD COACH GIRLS 1,237.13 HS ASST TENNIS BOYS SOCCER ASST COACH BOYS 880.33 HS HEAD GOLF BOYS SOCCER ASST COACH GIRLS 880.33 HS ASST GOLF BOYS MS SPORTS & FITNESS COORD 1,250.47 SUMMER SOFTBALL BAND DIRECTOR-MS 706.93 SUMMER BASEBALL YEARBOOK SPONSOR-MS 1,237.13 THEATRE HEAD DIR HOLIDAY SHOW CHEERLEADER SPONSOR-MS 987.04 THEATRE HEAD DIR SPRING MUSICAL STUDENT COUNCIL-MS 533.53 THEATRE STAFF COSTUMER SCIENCE FAIR-MS 533.53 THEATRE ORCHESTRA CONDUCTOR SIGN CLUB 246.76 WINTER PROD/THEATRE ASST DIR MATH BOWL SPONSOR-MS 533.53 THEATRE MUS DIR-HOLIDAY SHOW SPELL BOWL SPONSOR-MS 533.53 THEATRE MUS DIR-SPRING MUSICAL NCA CHAIRPERSONS-MS 310.12 TECHNICAL DIRECTOR MS DEPT HEADS 500.19 AUDITORIUM MANAGER MS DRAMA DIRECTOR 246.76 THESPIAN CLUB SPONSOR MS INTRAMURALS, RATE/HOUR 15.34 THEATRE STAFF CHOREOGRAPHER TECH SITE COORDINATOR-MS 1,480.56 THEATRE STAFF-BOX OFFICE SOUND CO 706.93 AUD TECH NON-SCHOOL RATE/HOUR MS JUNIOR BETA NAT HON SOCIETY 533.53 STUDENT COUNCIL

NON-CERTIFIED EMPLOYEE CLASSIFICATIONS AND RANGE OF PAY RATES 2012-2013 Classifications Range of Pay Rates I. Instructional and Supplementary Pupil Services a. Library Aides 10.87 - 12.21/hour b. Kindergarten Aides 10.87 - 12.21/hour c. Special Education Aides 10.87 - 12.21/hour d. Prime Time Aides 10.87 - 12.21/hour e. Prekindergarten/Head Start Aides 10.87 - 12.21/hour f. Sign language/interpreter 13.20 - 14.81/hour g. Other 10.87 - 12.21/hour II. Cafeteria and Food Service a. Managers/Head Cooks 13.99 - 15.07/hour b. School Lunch Director 43,387 c. All Other Food Service Employees 11.12 - 13.16/hour III. Health Services a. Nurses 18.06 - 21.53/hour b. Social Worker 40,076- 44,965/year c. Occupational/Physical Therapy 51,450 - 68,223/year IV. Office/Clerical/Secretaries 11.77 - 17.17/hour V. Executive/Administrative/Accounting a. Business Manager 78,000 - 83,281 b. Maintenance/Transportation Director 25,000 - 49,400 c. Community Relations/Publicity Director d. Administrative Assistant 41,400 VI. Maintenance/Custodial/Warehouse/Security/Transportation a. Building Custodians 11.90 - 17.21/hour b. Bus Drivers 78.84/day c. Maintenance 17,16 - 22.66/hour c. Other 7.25 - 8.00/hour VII. Computer Services 21,203 - 74,767 VIII. Other Total number of non-certified part-time employees - 43 Total number of non-certified full-time employees - 212

ASSESSED VALUATION AND TAX RATES CALENDAR YEARS 2012 AND 2013 2012 2013 Assessed Valuation $1,013,586,549 $969,571,956 Tax Rate - General Fund $0.0000 $0.0000 Tax Rate - Referendum Fund $0.0000 $0.0000 Tax Rate - Debt Service Fund $0.4300 $0.5024 Tax Rate - Retirement/Severance Bond Debt Service Fund $0.0220 $0.0123 Tax Rate - Capital Projects Fund $0.2571 $0.2723 Tax Rate - School Transportation Fund $0.1491 $0.1268 Tax Rate - School Bus Replacement Fund $0.0248 $0.0468 Tax Rate - Special Education Preschool Fund $0.0000 $0.0000 *The school corporation general fund will only have a tax rate if an excess levy appeal has been approved. Per HB 1001 passed in 2008. STUDENT ENROLLMENT AS PER OCTOBER 1, 2012 Kindergarten - 296; Grade 1 - 262; Grade 2 - 267; Grade 3 - 281; Grade 4 - 266; Grade 5 - 283; Grade 6 - 311; Elementary Ungraded; Grade 7 - 273; Grade 8 - 292; Grade 9 - 314; Grade 10 - 285; Grade 11 - 348; Grade 12 - 285; Secondary Ungraded; Post Graduates; Total - 3,763 I hereby certify that the financial report is true and accurate in every respect to the best of my knowledge and belief. I further certify that all contract, vouchers, and bills for all payments made by the school corporation are in its possession and open to public inspection. Date: August 1, 2013 Signature: A. Stephen Pyle Secretary, Board of School Trustees East Noble School Corporation 126 W Rush Street Kendallville, Indiana 46755 NS,00348872,8/8,hspaxlp

176.73 10,227.19 4,054.86 2,467.60 10,227.19 4,054.86 2,467.60 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 1,940.73 4,054.86 1,764.00 10.00 10.00 1,323.83 1,323.83 440.17 987.04 1,147.10 987.04 987.04 1,454.01 1,454.01 530.20 880.33 1,454.01 20.01 1,940.73

FORENSICS ASSISTANT FORENSICS SHOW CHOIR DIRECTOR BAND DIRECTOR ASSISTANT BAND DIRECTOR NCA CHAIRPERSON CHEERLEADER SPONSOR HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK KNIGHTETTE SPONSOR DIRECTOR KNIGHTETTE ROUTINES FFA FCCLA BI-PHY-CHEM NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY FOREIGN LANGUAGE ART CLUB SUPER BOWL ASSISTANT SUPER BOWL SPELL BOWL ASSISTANT SPELL BOWL SADD SCIENCE FAIR COORDINATOR SCIENCE FAIR SPONSOR JUNIOR/SENIOR PROM JUNIOR/SENIOR COUNSELORS JUNIOR MAGAZINE SALES SENIOR GRADUATION INTRAMURALS, RATE/HOUR HS PERCUSSION SPONSOR HS HEAD BASKETBALL GIRLS HS ASSISTANT BASKETBALL GIRLS FRESHMAN BASKETBALL GIRLS HS SOCCER GIRLS HS ASSISTANT SOCCER GIRLS HS HEAD TRACK GIRLS HS ASSISTANT TRACK GIRLS HS TECHNOLOGY SITE COORDINATOR HS HEAD SWIMMING GIRLS HS ASST SWIMMING GIRLS HS HEAD TENNIS GIRLS HS ASST TENNIS GIRLS HS HEAD GOLF GIRLS HS ASST GOLF GIRLS CAREER PATHWAYS

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2,944.44 2,117.47 4,635.08 1,147.10 880.33 310.12 2,580.97 1,153.77 880.33 880.33 530.20 530.20 530.20 530.20 530.20 530.20 530.20 440.17 530.20 440.17 530.20 1,237.13 530.20 880.33 880.33 440.17 440.17 15.34 880.33 10,227.19 4,054.86 2,467.60 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 2,117.47 1,480.56 4,054.86 2,117.47 4,054.86 1,940.73 4,054.86 1,764.00 1,000.38

LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given the Noble County Plan Commission will hold a public hearing on the following items: Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) Public Hearings in preparation for Amendments Said public hearing will be held in the Dekko Meeting Room, Noble County Office Complex-South, 2090 N State Rd 9, Albion, Indiana, at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, August 21, 2013. Proposed amendments to Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) are on file in the office of the Noble County Plan Commission for public examination. Said amendments will include minimum dwelling unit size changes for OS, A1, RE, R2, R4, MH, and VM, and modifications to Section 5.19, Environmental Standards (Geothermal Systems). Noble County Plan Commission Nathan Miller, Zoning Administrator NS,00349170,8/8,hspaxlp

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DUSTIN BY STEVE KELLEY & JEFF PARKER

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

Contractor wants to fire wife, save marriage DEAR ABBY: I am a self-employed general contractor, and have been for the most part successful. My wife, “Janine,” worked in the mortgage industry, but because of the economic downturn hasn’t worked in three years. After her mom provided some financial help to my business eight months ago, Janine decided she wanted to work for me doing the office work and bookkeeping. The problem is, she doesn’t show up until late afternoon and stays only a short while. She doesn’t get any work done, and then she leaves. She constantly rushes to get the bills paid at the very last minute. Although my wife is college-educated, she really can’t handle the job. Her work ethic is terrible. I started my company and I’m the boss. When Janine doesn’t agree with me about

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON

GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS

BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL

and inappropriate. If her being in your office is connected to the money her mother loaned you, my advice is to repay it immediately before your wife’s “dabbling” as a business partner disrupts the business any further. You may love Janine, but if the only thing holding your marriage together is allowing her to play at working in the office, then I’m sorry to say you don’t have much of a marriage. Wake up and smell the coffee. You need an assistant and your wife needs something else to occupy her time. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby atDearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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AUGUST 8, 2013 6:00

On this date: • In 1942, during World War II, six Nazi saboteurs who were captured after landing in the U.S. were executed in Washington, D.C.; two others who’d cooperated with authorities were spared. • In 1974, President Richard Nixon announced his resignation, effective the next day, following damaging new revelations in the Watergate scandal.

THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM

Infant hip dysplasia is treatable condition The ball of the femur slips in and out of the socket because the ligaments that hold the two bones together are very loose or because the cup-shaped socket is not deep enough. This condition usually is present at birth, but it can develop after birth, during ASK infancy or DOCTOR K. childhood. Usually just one hip is Dr. Anthony affected, but in about percent Komaroff 20 of children with this condition it affects both hips. The condition is more common in babies who were breech deliveries. It also seems to run in

families. It happens more often in little girls than in little boys, and more often in firstborn infants. We don’t know why. Doctors routinely check for developmental dysplasia of the hip in newborns and at follow-up well-baby visits. If the doctor feels unusual movement of the hip, he or she will use ultrasound or X-rays to confirm the diagnosis. Left untreated, developmental dysplasia of the hip can lead to a shortened leg, arthritis, difficulty walking and long-term pain. But with early treatment, most children can walk normally and have normal hip function. Treatment depends on the child’s age: • Newborns usually wear a special device, such as the Pavlik harness or the Frejka splint. These devices keep the top of the femur in the socket the right way.

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DEAR DOCTOR K: My baby has developmental dysplasia of the hip. What is this? How will it be treated? DEAR READER: Because I’m not a pediatrician, I haven’t seen a baby with developmental dysplasia of the hip since I was in medical school. But I talked with pediatrician colleagues here at Harvard Medical School and refreshed my memory. Our hips are designed to support our full weight while allowing movement in all directions. To accomplish this, the rounded top of the thigh bone (femur) fits into a cup-shaped socket in the pelvis called the acetabulum. The “ball” of the femur sits inside the socket. In developmental dysplasia of the hip, the ball at the top of the femur moves in and out of the socket either partway or all the way. That’s not supposed to happen: It makes the hip unreliable in supporting the baby’s weight.

something, she yells so loud I’m sure the people who work next door can hear her. I have talked to her about this, and we have fought about it. I tried to fire her but she says if she can’t work for my business, DEAR we might well get ABBY as divorced. I never wanted a Jeanne Phillips partner and didn’t ask for one, and now I feel trapped with an employee from hell. I love Janine and don’t want a divorce. How can I get her to quit and still stay married? — NEEDS HELP IN CALIFORNIA DEAR NEEDS: Your wife’s behavior is immature

The hip ligaments gradually tighten and the hip joint usually stabilizes. • For infants age 1 month to 6 months, the doctor will try a harness or splint. If these devices don’t help, the doctor will consider gently (and nonsurgically) putting the head of the femur in place while the child is under anesthesia. This is called a closed reduction. The child then wears a body cast (spica cast) until the hip joint is normal. • Most children age 6 months to 2 years can be treated with closed reduction and a spica cast. Some require open surgery. • For children older than 2 years, surgery is often needed, followed by a spica cast. DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.

Crossword Puzzle •


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Regional Drivers Wanted for Local Company REQUIREMENTS INCLUDE: •CLASS A CDL •2 YEARS DRIVING EXPERIENCE •ABILITY TO WORK IN A RELAXED ATMOSPHERE •HOME MOST WEEK NIGHTS & EVERY WEEKEND

Call 800-272-8726 Or email resume to:

LOST: Female Boxer, dark brown, red collar w/tags last seen in Orland on S 327. 260 829-6604 Reward Diamond Ring. Free formed 14 karat white & yellow gold 1 karat princess cut with small band of diamonds Call 260-333-3437

mary@cmwtrans port.com ■

THE BLUE GATE GARDEN INN is now

HIRING PART-TIME & FULL TIME team Members for the following positions:

•HOUSEKEEPING •FRONT DESK •FOOD SERVICE Please apply at the Craft Barn located across the street from the Blue Gate Restaurant in Shipshewana. Ask for John. Download an application at:

Riegsecker.com

✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ General

JOURNAL GAZETTE Routes Available In: Auburn & LaGrange

General Brokaw Theater hiring nights & weekends. Apply in person. General

UP TO $1000/ MO.

Call 800-444-3303 Ext. 8234 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Health

Reading Individual diagnosis and teaching. Licensed and experienced. Call Kathy 260-833-1697

AUCTION

Lennard Ag Company in Howe, IN is NOW HIRING: CDL-A and POTATO TRUCK DRIVERS Seasonal semi-truck and straight-truck drivers needed to drive along-side our harvesters in the fields and deliver to our Howe, IN location. All local fields – no overnights. Looking for safe, reliable, and professional drivers.

JOBS

Call Lennard Ag @ (260) 562-3900 for more information or apply at:

EMPLOYMENT ■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ Restaurant

Part Time Servers & Bartender Apply in person St. James Restaurant Avilla

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ Cleaning

0450 W. 750 N. Howe, IN 46746 Located south of IN for an immediate interview. (Turn West at the Valero Gas Station and Holiday Inn Express on SR 9) General

Apply in person: Eshelman Excavating 5999 E. US 6 Kendallville M-F • 8:30 am-3:30 pm

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ General

THE BLUE GATE RESTAURANT is now

Part Time Janitorial position available, must be flexible, in the Topeka area, 15-20 hours a week, $9.00 per hour. Call

260 307-1254 Cleaning

Part Time Janitorial position available, must be flexible, in the Ashley area, 15-20 hours a week, $8.50 per hour. Call

HIRING PART-TIME & FULL TIME team members for the following positions: • SERVERS • COOKS • RETAIL STAFF •PART TIME 3rd SHIFT CLEANERS • BARISTA/CASHIER Please apply at the Craft Barn located across the street from the Blue Gate Restaurant. Ask for John. Download an application at

Riegsecker.com.

260 307-1254 ■ ✔ ■ ✔■ ✔ ■ Custodial

Garrett Keyser Butler is looking for a

custodian 2nd shift Includes all areas of custodial duties & floor maintenance (stripping and waxing of tiled floors). No phone calls please Apply at:

900 E Warfield St. Garrett, IN 46738 EOE ■ ✔ ■ ✔■ ✔ ■

SEARCHING FOR THE LATEST NEWS?

CLICK ON

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

CLASSIFIED Don’t want the “treasure” you found while cleaning the attic? Make a clean sweep ... advertise your treasures in the Classifieds. kpcnews.com

Toll Free: 1-877-791-7877

We are accepting applications for the following positions:

RN Nursing Team Leader FT Day shift Apply on line at: www.presencehealth .org/lifeconnections

Or Contact Angie Smith Dir. of Nursing 260-897-2841 for an interview EOE ✦ ✧ ✦ ✧ ✦ ✧

Needed in the Butler area. Must have clean background. Send Resume via e-mail to: pharrison@emsinc .com

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ Timbers Steak House & Seafood Now Hiring Exp. Cooks & Servers 1212 W. Maumee St. Angola, IN

Drivers GORDON TRUCKING CDL-A Drivers Needed! Up to $4,000 Sign On Bonus! Starting Pay Up to .46 cpm. Full Benefits, Excellent Hometime, No East Coast. Call 7 days/wk! TeamGTI.com 888-757-2003 General Can You Dig It? Heavy Equipment Operator Training! 3 Weeks Hands On Program. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. National Certifications. VA Benefits Eligible. 1-866-362-6497 AC1213

Janitorial

APARTMENT RENTAL

Auto Mechanic Best Deal Auto Sales Hiring ASE Certified auto mechanics. Seasoned or right out of school. If you are looking for a great place to work where you will be appreciated for the work you do, call Best Deal Auto Sales. We offer great pay, up to (4) weeks paid vacation. Monthly bonuses. Call: 260-357-0099 ext. 107 Ask for Dave

Your connection to local and world news

kpcnews.com

Big Turkey Lake 1 BR, $600/mo. all util. Included carport 260 249-8302 Garrett Land contract, 4 BR Handyman special, $500/mo. 615-2709

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wk also LaOtto location. 574-202-2181

LAKE RENTALS Golden Lake Furnished apt. w/AC. Pontoon boat use. $250/wk. 928-727-2178

ALL POSITIONS Apply in person at:

Or Call Job Line 1-888-395-2020 ext 3336 State your name, number & city with your message.

JANITORIAL/HUDSON $8-$9HR start. Second shift. Part time, Monday thru Friday, approx. 25 hrs/wk. Must have clean background. Apply on line at: www.thecleaningco .com Questions? Call 1-888-832-8060 M-F between 8:00 - 4:00 only

HOMES FOR RENT

Now hiring for

Drivers DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW at Stevens Transport! New drivers earn $750 per week. No CDL? No Problem! CDL & Job Ready in 15 days. 1-877-649-9611

Full and Part Time Cleaners

Avilla Recently remodeled 2 BR 1 BA up, $525 + elect. 260 242-0567

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■

Position offers: • 12 hour shifts • Every third weekend • Excellent benefits and wages Email resume to: resume@sturgis hospital.com Or send to: Sturgis Hospital Attn: Human Resources 916 Myrtle Ave. Sturgis, MI 49091 (269) 659-4440 Fax (269) 659-6713

APARTMENT RENTAL

Restaurant

Restaurant

Email: classifieds@kpcnews.net Fax: 260-347-7282

PRESENCE SACRED HEART HOME

The Cardio Respiratory Department of Sturgis Hospital has a 72 hour full time night position for a Certified eligible and/or registered Respiratory Therapist. MI licensure required or willing to obtain.

Janitorial

EQUIPMENT OPERATOR/ LABORER

✦ ✧ ✦ ✧ ✦ ✧ Health

The Bull Pen Cafe in Fremont, IN Must be able to work nights and weekends. No phone calls, please.

CDL-A & Potato Truck Drivers

TUTORS

EMPLOYMENT

NOW OPEN TILL 7 PM ON TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS

2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS ALMOST 1,000 SQ FT! GRISWOLD ESTATES (260) 927-0197 900 Griswold Ct., Auburn, IN 46706 www.griswoldestates@ mrdapartments.com

Angola ONE BR APTS. $425/mo., Free Heat. 260-316-5659 Auburn 2 BR SENIORS 50+ $470. No Smokers/Pets (260) 925-9525 Avilla 1 & 2 BR APTS $450-$550/ per month. Call 260-897-3188

HOMES

EMPLOYMENT

RENTALS

NOTICES

GARAGE SALES

To ensure the best response to your ad, take the time to make sure your ad is correct the first time it runs. Call us promptly to report any errors. We reserve the right to edit, cancel or deny any ad deemed objectionable or against KPC ad policies. Liability for error limited to actual ad charge for day of publication and one additional incorrect day. See complete limitations of liability statement at the end of classifieds.

HOMES FOR SALE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD Toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE Garrett Beautiful doublewide lease to own! $1,400 moves you in! More homes available to choose from. We also have 3 handyman specials for sale with $400 down + lot rent. Call Katt @ 260-357-3331 for more information and to view your new home! Garrett Owner financing starting at $400 down + lot rent & with the lease to own option. We help you save while you live in your new home! Call Katt @ 260-357-3331 for more information and to view your new home! Mobile Homes for Sale in Waterloo, Rome City & Butler. Small parks. No big dogs. Ref req’d. (260) 925-1716

REAL ESTATE SERVICES USDA 100% GOVERNMENT LOANS!-- Not just for 1st time buyers! All credit considered! Low rates! Buy any home anywhere for sale by owner or realtor. Academy Mortgage Corporation, 11119 Lima Road, Fort Wayne, IN 46818. Call Nick at 260-494-1111. NLMS146802. Some restrictions may apply. Equal Housing Lender. Se Habla Espanol. (A)

GARAGE SALES Albion Skinner Lake-Arthur Dr. SR 8 to Skinner Lk. W. Dr. to Arthur Dr. (1.5 mi. off 8) Fri. 9-5 • Sat. 9-12 5 Households Angola 110 N. Cross St. Thurs. - Sat. • 8 - 4 Kenmore range, couch, chest freezer, pools, cabinets, storage buildings, Boyd bears, & much more. Angola 1100 N 330 W Foxfire additon off Landis Rd. Wed. 3-7, Thurs. 8-7 & Fri. 8-11 Furniture, scrapbooking, household items, electronics, toys

Angola 1330 MAIN ST 4 MILES SOUTH OF ANGOLA PLEASANT LAKE FRI & SAT • 8-5 VERA, COACH, BARSTOOLS, ALL SIZE JUNIORS SILVER JEANS GIRLS 7-14 BOYS 14 UP TO MENS 36, DVDS, XBOX. 260 444-7046 Angola 3445 W. Loon Lake Rd Thurs. & Fri. * 8-? Bike, bike child cart, dirt bike, 4 wheeler, household, TVs, computer desk, pontoon cover, kids clothes all genders/sizes, punching bag, snowblower, Scentsy & Coach items. Angola 391 S 425 W (At storage units on 20) Friday Only • 7 - 4 Boys/mens clothes, NB-adult XL, girls/womens 18 mos./ adult XL, toddler bedding, high chair, crib, girl’s bikes, maternity, much more. Auburn 105 S. Wilson St. Thurs. - Sat. • 8 - ? Selling Nerf & Air Soft gun collection. Frogs & lots of misc. deco. Mini X box & other games, many name brand clothes; boys & girls thru adults. Items will make nice ChriVtmas gifts. Don’t miss it. Auburn 1309 Sanders Dr. Thurs. - Sat. HUGE SALE A little bit of everything. Down sizing. Household, antiques, collectibles, toys, building supplies, clothing, & much more. Auburn 1316 Elm St. Fri. 8-5 • Sat. 8-12 Womens, children’s, boutique brand name clothing, baby items, home decor, furniture. Auburn 1500 Sanders Dr. Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 4 Baby items, girl’s, adult clothes, toys, media, collectibles, tanning, furniture, misc. Auburn

1607 Sprott Street Aug. 9th &10th 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM Misc. items. Everything must go! Auburn 2002 N Indiana Ave. 2 houses N of Reike Pk. Thurs. & Fri. • 8 - 5 Sat. • 8 - noon 3 Family Sale Furniture, various items. Auburn

GARAGE SALES

GARAGE SALES

GARAGE SALES

Auburn 2919 CR 36 (N on Main St. to CR 36 turn Left, go past Auburn Hills entrance on right) Thurs. & Fri. • 9 - 6 Sat. • 9 - 4 DAUGHTER MOVING OUT SALE ! Name brand girl’s clothing, shoes, Abercrombie, Nine West, Lucky Brand, jewelry & purses, small table & chairs, futon, small microwave, 3 wooden high back bar stools, lamps & misc. kitchen items.

Hamilton Lake 1195 Lane 221 Fri. & Sat. • 10 - 5 Sun. •10 - 2 MOVING SALE Furniture, beds, household items, tools, table saw, golf cart. Everything goes. 419-966-7816

Kendallville 835 S Main Street Thurs. & Fri. • 9-5 Clothing women’s 3X and infant to 2T, blankets, pots & pans and lot of misc.

Auburn 3263 CR 46A (Old Brick Rd.) Thurs. - Sat. • 9 - 5 Over 1,000 pieces of Auburn Rubber toys, tables of name brand clothes, camper, Harley Davidson motorcycle. A little of Everything. Auburn 328 S. Iwo St. Aug. 8 & 9 • 8 - 5 Aug. 10 • 9 - 1 Children thru adult clothing, Coleman camping grill, camping supplies, ent. center, household items, Little Tikes, Thomas the Train, NASCAR, John Deere, Legos, Disney. Auburn

4218 CR 35

Thurs. & Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1 Collectible cars and car banks, Eureka Air Speed sweeper, pool chair, misc. Auburn 607 Helen Avenue Off of Indiana Ave. Fri. & Sat. * 9-3 Three Family Sale Baby girl clothing 0-2T, 3 girl carseats, baby toys, girl ride on toys, mens & womens clothing, Elvis collectibles, angels, TVs, DVDs, & misc. Auburn Thoroughbred Lane (Hunter’s Glen) **2 Garage Sales August 8 * 8-4 Children & adult clothing & toys, bikes, American Girl itty bitty twins, & misc. items. Avilla

101 S. Cherry St. Calvary Methodist Church Thurs. * 4-7 Fri. * 9-5 Sat. * 9-12

Saturday only $1.50 BAG SALE Corunna 3263 SR 327 Fri., Aug. 9 • 8 to 5 Sat., Aug. 10 • 8 to 4 First Freedom Baptist Church Yard & Bake Sale Cromwell 9275 W 450 N Aug. 9 * 8-4 Aug. 10 * 8-2 Antiques & collectibles, household items, clothes, children’s books. Flint 7230 W 150 N 1 mile N of Flint Fri. & Sat. * 9-5 Exercise equip & lots of misc. Fremont Corner of Fremont Rd. & Copeland August 8 & 9 * 8-4 Most items 50 cents

Kendallville 1048 West Lisbon Rd . 1 mi. W of SR 3 Thurs. & Fri. * 9 - 5 Sat. * 9-12 Moving Sale Furniture, antiques, brand name boys & junior girls clothes, & lots more. Kendallville 113 S State St. Very large yard sale! Thurs., Fri., & Sat. * 8-6 Pocket knives, jewelry, old fishing lures, DVDs & VHS, glassware, collectibles, Christmas ornaments, lots of misc. Kendallville 1509 Brookview Blvd. Sat. Aug. 10 • 9 - 5 Antiques, (china, lamps, toolbox, silverplated, crystal & brass decor), outdoor equip., asstd. dolls, teddy bears, board games, action figures, linens, asstd. home/kitchenware, electronics, seasonal decor. Cleaning out the attic after 39 years. Kendallville 2510 Shiregreen Crt. Cobblestone Thurs. & Fri. • 8 - 5 Sat. • 8 - noon LARGE MOVING SALE FURNITURE, ent. & computer centers, 4-TVs, lamps, housewares, lots of home decor from Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel & Pier 1, kitchen goods. Lots of nice clean merchandise. Kendallville 402 North Shore Dr. Little Long Lake Fri., Aug. 9 * 8-6 Sat., Aug. 10 * 8-5 Garage/Estate Sale Furniture, decorative, household, womens, 2002 Harley Davidson Sportster 1200 Kendallville 558 S. Main Thurs. - Sat. • 8 - 5 Collectibles, tool box & tools, stove, dryer, exercise bike, 24 in. ladder, truck box, antiques, Elvis memorabilia, air nailers, Kinetic water softener. Too much to mention. Kendallville 603 S. Allen Chapel Rd. (1000 E) Fri. & Sat. 9-5 ESTATE SALE Nice stereo cabinet, sofa & matching chair, Montgomery Ward antique bedroom set, tools. Too much to list. No early birds. Kendallville 619 Mott Friday only Name brand girl teen clothes, women’s clothes, & misc. Kendallville 640 W Waits Rd Aug. 8 & 9 * 8-4 Aug. 10 * 8-12 TV, TV stand, books, puzzles, movies, CDs, X-mas decorations, & more.

Kendallville 8820 N. Angling Rd. Fri. 9-5 • Sat. 9-4 CALLING ALL 2nd THRU 5th GRADE ELEMENTARY TEACHERS Hundreds of books, bulletin board sets, games, etc. in mint condition. CASH ONLY Kendallville ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH SALE AUG. 8 - 10 • 9 - 5 1000 E - North 1 MI. OFF OF US6 Lots of jewelry, antiques, toys, dishes, books, pictures & frames, household & misc. cheap. Come shop all proceeds to church. Ligonier 7750 W. Highland Dr off Rochester Road, south of U.S. 6 Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Lots of Stuff! Clothes: Teen girls sizes; Men's and women's 2x and 3x Portable basketball hoop, paperback books, household mis. old freezer that works but needs TLC; old fridge haul away for scrap metal. Lots of bargains. Huge sale of Barbies dolls, accessories, clothes, furniture, Olson twins,Little Mermaid and Eric and more Barbies. All used but in good shape. Priced to sell in individual lots or start a collection and buy it all for $130. Montgomery 1030 E Copeland Rd *At Ray Quincy Aug. 9, 10 & 11 * 8-4 Estate Sale Coca Cola collection, antiques, dishes, tools, vintage LPs, & much more. Nevada Mills 5365 W Bachelor Rd. Fri day & Sat. • 9 - 5 Sunday • 10 - 2 Estate of Gordon Grabill & Moving Sale Nearly new clothes, kids - XL, new wedding dress, nice Weber grill, 2 egg incubators, laptop computer, duck & goose decoys, smoker, exercise bike, meat saw & grinder, glassware, boots & shoes, books & teacher’s school supplies. Lots of misc. Pleasant Lake

McNamara Storage Units Huge Warehouse Sale 1340 W. Main St. Downtown Pleasant Lake 2 blocks NW of Pleasant Lake School 260 475-5850 Aug. 8, 9 &10 9:00 am - 5:00 pm Furniture, antiques, tools, lawn & garden supplies, toys, and much, much more.

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Sudoku Puzzle Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

5 3

4

6

7

1

1

2 9

4 5

9 2

4

3

5

3

4 1 2

4

3

2146 CR 40 Friday Only 8:00 - 4:00 Auburn 2904 CR 56 Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 7 Antique toys & misc., Harley parts, PS2 Box games & guitars, Jr. girls, prom dresses, adult clothes, kitchen items, decor, scrubs.

Hudson 8390 W. State Road 4 Friday Only •8-5 Clothing, patio furniture, pictures, & lots of misc.

Kendallville 8417 N 550 E Saturday Only • 8 - 3pm Name brand teen girl’s clothes, Vera Bradley, electronics, games, computer stuff, bedding, decor. Lots of great stuff.

9

5

6 7

3

3 8

7

6

Difficult rating: MEDIUM 8-08


kpcnews.com

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013

GROGG-MARTIN-MISHLER FARM EQUIPMENT CONSIGNMENT AUCTION Conducted by Grogg-Martin Auctioneering LLC Located on the east side of Topeka, Indiana at the TOPEKA LIVESTOCK AUCTION.

Saturday, September 7, 2013 9:00 a.m. Attention Consignors & Buyers:

Deadline for Advertising is August 20th Consignments Made Before August 20th Will Be Advertised FREE of Charge!! List your farm consignments for advertising as soon as possible. Attendance at our past auctions has been tremendous with most all of the items selling. Set Up Days will be September 4, 5 & 6 with help to unload and load. No consignments taken after 6:00 pm on September 6, 2013!

nery into Turn that unused machi appears ent ipm equ d cash now, as use . to be in great demand Let us advertise your equipment so our buyers can be informed as to what will be at the auction.

For more information, or to list your consignment, call auctioneers. ————————————————–– Auctioneers —————————————–––– JERRY O. GROGG AU01002223 LaGrange, IN OfďŹ ce 260-463-3180 Cell 260-499-0474 DALLAS MARTIN AU01029776 Topeka, IN Cell 260-463-6173 ROBERT MISHLER AU08701553 LaGrange, IN OfďŹ ce 260-463-2828 Cell 260-336-9750

REAL ESTATE & PERSONAL AUCTION

GARAGE SALES

TOOLS

PETS/ANIMALS

Saint Joe 6824 County Road 64 Thurs. & Fri. • 8-5 Sat. • 8-12 -1/2 price Multi Family Sale! Clothes from infant to adult, toys & more.

1 - 10 In. Tablesaw, 1- 10 in. bandsaw, table/belt sander, 2 Sears routers. 260 854-2777

ADOPTABLE CATS 453-DSH,M,3 yrs., Gry/white(Barley) 442-DSH,F,born 2/13,Gry/Tan/org. (Violet) 425-DSH,F,born 4/8/13,Tortoiseshell (Delancy) 422-DSH, M, born 4/8/13,Buff/white(Leo) 380-DSH,M,born 4/12,Blk.(Sparrow) 371-DSH,2-3 yrs., F,Blk/white(Josie) 343-DSH,M,Gry/ white,2-3 yrs.(Maxwell) 338-DSH,M,born 4/13, Blk. (Vinny) 336-DSH,F,2 yrs., blk/tan tiger(Liberty) 335-DSH,Gry. Tiger,M,3 yrs.(Fievel) 334-DSH,White/Gray, NM,2 yrs.(Pickles) 332-DSH,brn 4/2/13, org.,M(Pistol Pete) 328-DSH,Calico,F,born 5/8/13(Lacy) 327-DSH,Bro/Tan tiger, brn 5/8/13,F(Shiann) 326-DSH,Bro/Tan/wh, born 5/8/13,M(Marlow) 325-DSH,Blk/Tan/ Org.,brn 5/8/13,f(Josie) 320-DSH,M,born 4/24/13,Blk/wh(Dozer) 315-DSH,NM,1 yr.,Org.(Dusty) 310-DSH,F,born 2/26/13,Blk/Tan tiger(Purr-kins) 304-DSH,Blk.,F,born 5/3/13(Twizzler) 303-DSH,Blk/Tan,M, born 5/3/13(McCoy) 302-DSH,Blk/Tan, F,born 5/3/13(Lena) 301-DSH,Blk.,M,born 5/3/13(Zippy) 300- DSH,Blk/Tan,F, born 5/3/13(Ashlynn) 299- DSH,Blk.,M,born 5/3/13(Gordy) 268-DSH,Born 4/21/13,M,Blk.(Myles) 265-DMH,M,Born 4/21/13,Blk/Tan tiger(Channing) 264-DSH,F,Born 4/21/13,Blk/Tan tiger(Zoey) 258-DMH,F,4-5 yrs., blk/tan tiger(Saddie) 255-DSH,F,Calico,1 yr. (Tonya) 254-DSH,Blk/Tan tiger, born 4/16/13,F(Macey) 253-DSH,Blk/Tan tiger, born 4/16/13,M(Oakley) 251-DSH,Blk/Tan tiger, born 4/16/13,F(Candy) 249-DSH,F,2 yrs., Blk/Tan tiger (Sandy) 235-DSH,F,1 yr., White w/Gray. (Sonja) 216-DSH,NM,born 8/12,Org.(Bridge) 199-DSH,born 4/2/13,Blk.M,(Magic) 198-DSH,born 4/2/13,Blk.F,(Luna) 196-DSH,born 4/2/13,Blk.F,(Mocha) 195-DSH,born 4/2/13,Blk/wh,F(Latta) 177-DSH,F,born 3/24/13,Blk/wh(Annie) 173-DSH,M,Tan/Blk/ Gry.brn 3/24/13 (Atlas) 150-DSH,SF,2-3 yrs.Bro/Blk/wh(Whimsy) 136-DSH,F,Blk/Tan tiger,3 yrs.,(Loveina) 133-DSH,Bro/Blk. Tiger,F,2-3 yrs.(Nollie) 130-DSH,Blk/White,F, born 3/6/13 (Carmen) 128-DSH,Gry/white,F, Born 5/3/12(Lilly) 105-DSH,F,1 yr., Blk/ Tan/Org.(Apricot) 57-DSH,Blk/white,2 yrs.,SF(Star) 1183-DMH,F,2-3 yrs., Blk (Joni) 1079-DMH,2 yrs., Blk/white,F(Tinker) 1003-DSH,F,2 yrs.,Blk/Tan/Org(Jenna) 995-DSH,SF,1-2 yrs.Blk/white(Myra) 986-DSH,F, 2 yrs,Blk/Tan tiger(Vivien) 773-DSH,F,Tortoiseshell,1 yr.(Princess) 543-DSH,SF,Blk/ Tan/Org,2-3 yrs.(Kira) 327-DSH, Blk/ Tan, SF,DOB 5/9/12(Keeki) Humane Society of Noble County, Inc. 1305 Sherman St. Kendallville, IN 46755 260-347-2563

SPORTING GOODS

ST. JOE 5604 State Road 1 Thurs. & Fri. • 8-5 Sat. • 8-?? 6 Family Garage Sale Men’s, women’s & kids clothes & lots of misc.

GUN SHOW!! Lafayette, IN - August 10th & 11th, Tippecanoe County Fairgrounds, 1401 Teal Rd., Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3 For information call 765-993-8942 Buy! Sell! Trade!

ST. Joe 5675 County Road 55 Corner of 56 & 55 2 mi. East of Pickle Factory August 8 & 9 * 9-5

EXERCISE EQUIPMENT

Waterloo 1005 S Wayne St. Fri. & Sat. * 8-4 Cookie jars, West Morland chickens on nest, new 5 piece patio set, collectible glassware.

Schwinn, computer controlled stationary bike, $250 260-750-4936

Waterloo 1696 CR 31 2 mi. N of UPS Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 5 MULTI FAMILY Garage & Estate Sale Antiques, collectibles.

WANTED TO BUY TIMBER WANTED All species of hard wood. Pay before starting. Walnut needed.

Waterloo 3555 N Center Street Aug. 8,9,10 • 8 to 5

Huge Sale Clothes, glass, odds and ends, misc.

260 349-2685

Located at 525 N. Main St., Avilla, IN (right in front of the Provena Sacred Heart Home) on:

STUFF

SAT., SEPT, 14, 2013 BEGINNING at 9:00 a.m. REAL ESTATE to sell at 12:45 p.m. Open House Friday, August 16, 2013 from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

REAL ESTATE Real estate includes 1½-story, 1,776 sq. ft. home with 3 bedrooms, basement, & 1,248 sq. ft. detached garage, all situated on a 2-acre lot. This is a clean home that has been well taken care of. Terms: $3,000 non-refundable down payment with balance LQ GD\V 3RVVHVVLRQ RQ ÂżQDO FORVLQJ 7D[HV WR EH SUR rated as of closing day. For inspection or appointment to see, call Jerry Grogg, Inc. at 260-463-2828 or 1-800-5489905. HOUSEHOLD & ANTIQUES ‡ ANTIQUE DISHES & COLLECTABLES ‡ MISCELLANEOUS & RECREATION EQUIPMENT Terms: Cash, Good Check or Credit Card Not Responsible for Accidents Warm Lunch by Riehl Tasty Food Wagon

Anna M. Watson Revocable Trust, owner 525 N. Main St., Avilla, IN Jerry O. Grogg Dallas Martin Jeff Burlingame Robert Mishler

AU01002223 AU01029776 AU19300021 AU08701553

LaGrange Topeka Angola LaGrange

260-499-0474 260-463-6173 260-499-1083 260-336-9750

For more information go to www.jerrygrogg.com

AT YOUR SERVICE BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL

REMODELING

BANKRUPTCY FREE CONSULTATION

Remodel homes, paint & patch. Call for an estimate. 260 761-2195 Ext. 3

MERCHANDISE Electric Pallet Lift $125.00 260 242-6631

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QUEEN PILLOWTOP MATTRESS SET Can deliver, $125. (260) 493-0805

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FRUIT & PRODUCE

Steuben County

665-3117

The Blueberry Patch U-Pick. Excellent picking everyday. 0540 CR 5 • Corunna 260 281-2051

THE NEWS SUN LaGrange & Noble Counties

347-0400

Wysong Blueberries GREAT picking! M, W, Th, & Sat. -7:00 AM-noon & M, W, Th 4:30 - 7:30 PM Already picked berries 1 mi. E of Wawaka on US 6. 260-760-6982

The

DeKalb County

925-2611 357-4123

$25.00 TO START

Collect: 260-424-0954 act as a debt relief agency under the BK code

ROOFING/SIDING County Line Roofing FREE ESTIMATES Tear offs, wind damage & reroofs. Call (260)627-0017

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ADOPTABLE CATS 676-DSH,F,3 yrs., Blk/Tan/Org.(Crystal) 675-DSH,F,born 3/13,Blk/Tan tiger (Skittles) 670-DSH,Org.,M,born 5/13 (D.J.) 669-DSH,F,Gry.Tiger,2 yrs. (Vanna) 668-DSH, F, 1 yr.,Tan/Blk tiger (Crystal) 667-DSH, F,1 yr., Org. (Peach) 653-DMH,SF,White/ Blk.,5 yrs.(Nellie) 652-DMH,NM,3-4 yrs.,Bro/Blk.,declawed (Thatcher) 650-DSH,F,born 4/13, Gray (Lulu) 633-DSH,M,3 yrs., Blk (Allen) 631-DSH,F,Delute Calico,born 5/13 (Sahaira) 630-DSH,M,Blk/Tan tiger,5/13 (Ben) 629-DSH,SF,Blk/white, 2yrs.,declawed(Cutie) 627-DSH,M,born 5/16/13,Org.(Tom) 626-DSH,M,Org. tabby, bon 5/16/13 (Alex) 623-DLH,M,born 2/12,Blk.(Asher) 622-DSH,Blk/Tan/ White,F,born 4/13 (Penny) 619-DSH,4 yrs., Gry.,F (Sugar) 616-DMH,Org.,M,born 4/13(Kojak) 613-DSH,M,3yrs.,White w/Blk.(Bongo) 608-DSH,M,born 5/13,Gry/white(Mozart) 607-DSH,M,born 3/13,seal point(O’Brien) 606-DSH,F,born 3/13,gry/tan/wt(Lyssa) 605-DSH,F,born 3/13,seal point(Jubilee) 601-DSH,M,born 5/13,Yellow/wh(Chump) 600-DSH,F,1 yr, White/Gry. (Clare) 597-DSH,M,born 2/13,Org/white(Dozer) 596-DSH,M,born 2/13,Org(Dugger) 595-DSH,M,born 2/13,Buff/white(Doodle) 594-DSH,M,born 2/13,Buff/white(Echo) 593-DSH,Blk/Tan tiger,F,born 6/30/13 (Miylee) 592-DSH,M,2 yrs., Blk.(Mack) 591-DSH,2 yrs.,Blk.,M (Kalub) 565-DSH,F, 3 yrs., Blk. (Tilly) 562-Himalayan,SF, declawed,5 yrs,Chocolate (Madaline) 557-DSH,M,DOB 2/13, Blk/Tan tiger(Bonkers) 552-DSH,NM,White/Blk/ Tan,3-4 yrs.(Tucker) 543-DSH,F,DOB 2/13, Blk/white(Meowzer) 494-DSH,F,DOB 4/28/13,Blk/Tan(Darcy) 467-DSH,Org/White, M, 1 yr. (Max) Humane Society of Noble County, Inc. 1305 Sherman St. Kendallville, IN 46755 260-347-2563 AKC Yorkie Puppies born June 14, will top out at 10 lbs. 2 Females- $500/each 419-212-4466 FREE Male, friendly, neutered, declawed tiger cat to a good home 260-242-4814

Steuben, DeKalb, Noble/LaGrange

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Call Jeff 260-854-9071 Qualified & Insured Serving You Since 1990

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Be “At Their Service� Call today to be a featured business.

877.791.7877

SAND • GRAVEL • SEPTIC TANKS BACKHOE • BULLDOZING ASPHALT AND SEAL COATING DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING LOTS

William Drerup & Son 1772 N. 750 E Avilla, Indiana 46710 BRYAN DRERUP 260-897-2375

Established in 1963

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AUTOMOTIVE/ SERVICES $ WANTED $ Junk Cars! Highest prices pd. Free pickup. 260-705-7610 705-7630

COUNTRY HOME AT

PUBLIC AUCTION LOCATION: 0325 S. CR 51, WATERLOO, IN. South of Hamilton, Indiana to Railroad St. (800 S) by railroad tracks; west to CR 51 approx. 1-½ mi.; then south to auction site.

FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 16, 2013 AT 6 PM Website at: www.oberlinweb.com E-mail: oberlinrealestate@frontier.com

BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY HOME ON 10 ACRES FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP, DEKALB COUNTY

SOS SERVICE, INC. Hydraulic Cylinder, Ram & Pump Repair

360 N. Hetzler Ct. • Angola, IN

877-535-0767 Ext. 16

Located here on a beautiful landscaped 10 acres is a great two-story 11-room country home with 3 bedrooms, 2-½ baths, ďŹ nished basement, 4,256 square feet living area, covered porch area, 2 ďŹ replaces, 2 kitchens, plenty of storage area, 40’x40’x12’ pole barn for your storage, large garden and several fruit trees. Approximately 7 acres of woodland. This would be a great place to raise your family. Located in Franklin Township, DeKalb County in the Hamilton Community School District. Be sure to check out this property. AGENCY: Oberlin Real Estate and Auctioneers, Inc. and its representatives are exclusive agents for the seller. Conduct of the auction and increments of bidding are at the direction and discretion of Oberlin Real Estate and Auctioneers, Inc. Announcements made day of auction take precedence over printed matter. No buyer’s premium charged. INSPECTION DATES: Be prepared ďŹ nancially to buy this property. Come to the preview on Sat., Aug. 3 and Fri., Aug. 9th from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. for your viewing or you may call 260-488-2813 for information or private showing.

OWNER: JOSH PFEIFFER Hamilton, IN • (260) 488-2813

REAL ESTATE AND AUCTIONEERS, INC.

AUTOMOTIVE/ SERVICES

MERCHANDISE UNDER $50

SETSER TRANSPORT AND TOWING

Boys Arizona Jeans Size 14 Husky, never worn. $4.00. (260) 925-0221

USED TIRES Cash for Junk Cars! 701 Krueger St., K’ville. 260-318-5555

California Ivy hand painted Poppytrail China pieces (6). $50.00. (260) 347-5840

ATTENTION: Paying up to $530 for scrap cars. Call me 318-2571

Chase Authentics Jeff Gordon winter jacket size large. New. $40.00. (260) 475-5749

IVAN’S TOWING Junk Auto Buyer

Coleman 2-Mantle Dual Fuel Lantern $25.00. (260) 837-7644

up to $1000.00 (260) 238-4787

Couch with fold out bed $40.00 (260) 349-2668

CARS 2002 Subaru Outback LL Bean Edition 1 owner, 96k mi., to settle the estate of Father James Rose $6,800. 260 349-2668

Day Lite Slide & Movie Screen. $5.00. (260) 925-2672 Dell Dimension Computer with disk and monitor, keyboard. Stuck in safe mode. $50.00. (260) 347-0851

1 & Only Place To Call--to get rid of that junk car, truck or van!! Cash on the spot! Free towing. Call 260-745-8888. (A)

Desk 36� long x 22 1/2� wide. 3 compartments on top. $40.00. Albion area, (260) 804-4591

Guaranteed Top Dollar For Junk Cars, Trucks & Vans. Call Jack 260-466-8689

Drafting Table For Sale Looks brand new, black with drawer. $50.00. (260) 750-8680

TRUCKS

Exercise Fitness Disc. Practically new. $35.00. Lake George, Fremont, (260) 577-4020

1998 GMC Sierra 1500 Ext Cab 163,693 miles with cap. Good condition. $4,200.00. Call 00348812(260) 573-9571

Foosball Table For Sale Hardly used & has all the pieces. $50.00. (260) 750-8680

SUV’S

Full Size Bicycle $30.00 (260) 927-1780

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee Larado 4x4. Fully serviced, new brakes on front & rear, 4.0 Litre inline 6 cyl., good tires, battery tested good, no rust, Burgundy in color, factory Alloy wheels, CD/cassette player, factory power moon roof, Navigation system, cold A/C, Keyless entry, luggage rack, gauge package, tilt/cruise, P.W., P.D.L., 118K miles, has been well maintained, very good cond. $5,400/OBO (260) 349-1324 May see at 720 1/2 Arcadia Court, Friendly Village, Kendallville.

Full Size Bicycle $35.00 (260) 235-2036 Girls 24� Bike $20.00 (260) 544-4196 Girls Huffy Bicycle All Pro, 26�. Good cond. Only $35.00 cash (260) 357-3753 Gold Frame Classic Style Wall Mirror. Approx. 54�lx39�h. Great for any large area or dining room. $50.00. (808) 757-3130 Graco Winnie the Pooh & Tigger car Snug Ride brand. Everything has been cleaned. $25.00. Kendallville, (260) 582-9458

1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee, runs good, $2,500. or make offer. 260 316-3263

Graco Winnie the Pooh and Tigger baby carrier. Has canopy. Everything has been cleaned. $25.00. Kendallville, (260) 582-9458

MOTORCYCLES 2007 Road King Classic Harley Davidson

Guitar. Make Cleca Designed in USA. Excellent cond. $35.00 obo. Albion, (260) 242-7094

FLHRC, 96 cu. in. 1584 cc, 6 speed trans, extra chrome, custom exhaust, custom seat, loaded. Only 15,109 miles. Over $26,000 invested. For Sale $16,500/obo

Hand Winch $30.00 (260) 235-2036 HP 3050A Printer includes ink cartridge. Never used. $30.00. (260) 349-8248

260 449-9277

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All Phase Remodeling and Handyman Service - No Job too Big or Small !!! Free Estimates

BILL DRERUP 260-897-2121

REALLY TRULY LOCAL...

Payment Plans, Chapter 13 No Money down. Filing fee not included. Sat. & Eve. Appts. Avail. Call

Star

PETS/ANIMALS

WHEELS

B8

Auctioneers: Duane Oberlin #AU01004908, Don Oberlin #AU10600017

MERCHANDISE UNDER $50

Kenwood Stereo System/Surround Sound. Radio, CD, amplifier, 5 speakers, subwolfer. $50.00. Can text, (260) 336-9999

1 pr. Mens Reebok Football Shoes. Very good cond. Worn 1 season. Size 10 1/2. $20.00. (260) 349-9282

KPC LIMITATIONS

1963 Kendallville Yearbook. Excellent with no markings. $20.00. (260) 357-4466

LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY: KPC assumes no liability or financial responsibility for typographical errors or for omission of copy, failure to publish or failure to deliver ad vertising. Our liability for copy errors is limited to your actual charge for the first day & one incorrect day after the ad runs. You must promptly notify KPC of any error on first publication. Claims for adjustment must be made within 30 days of publication and, in the case of multiple runs, claims are allowed for first publication only. KPC is not responsible for and you agree to make no claim for specific or consequential damages resulting from or related in any manner to any error, omission, or failure to publish or deliver.

2 Ice Fishing Rods & Reels. $15.00 for the pair. Albion, (260) 242-7094 20� Bicycle $20.00 (260) 235-2036 36 Cup West Bend Automatic Coffee Maker. Used twice, $25.00. (260) 837-7644 7 ft. Couch Cover Floral print, multi color. Like new. $15.00 obo. Albion, (260) 564-4924 Beautiful Large Oval Ornate Mirror. $20.00. (260) 349-8248 Bed Frame $20.00 (260) 235-2036

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