GAZ_08302014

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W eekend SV

Saukvalley.com

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Serving Lee, Whiteside, Carroll, Ogle and Bureau counties Saturday&Sunday, August 30-31, 2014 $2.00

First snaps for prep football teams

SVM PREVIEWS THE VOLLEYBALL SEASON HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS, B1

SPECIAL SPORTS SECTION

WEEKEND ENTERPRISE | LAW ENFORCEMENT IN THE SAUK VALLEY

COMMUNITY

Armed forces A look back in time Antique farming techniques and equipment were on display last weekend at the Farm Heritage Festival at East Jordan Church in rural Sterling. PAGE C12

2014 ELECTION | U.S. SENATE

Durbin offers an ear, but no solutions

Illustration by Alex T. Paschal/ apaschal@saukvalley.com

Police: Military equipment today necessary to avoid being ‘outgunned’ "9 #(2)34) 7!22%. s CWARREN SAUKVALLEY COM s 800-798-4085, ext. 5521 A man in full-body armor sits atop an armored vehicle, his sniper rifle pointed into a crowd of people. Clouds of tear gas. Back-lit silhouettes of people hurling bottles and bricks. Police raise their guns, forming a human barricade – their faces obscured by masks. Those are the images from Ferguson, Missouri, in the weeks since a police officer shot and killed an unarmed black teen-

ager, his body left lying in the street for 4 hours. The protests in Ferguson that followed the shooting have been mostly peaceful, but when night falls, the scene has changed into one that calls to mind images from Iraq, from Syria, from the riots of the Arab Spring. But this is America, viewers say. How could that happen here? And, most important, could it happen where I live, too?

The easy answer is yes, it could. The national government has been slowly doling out used military equipment to local police departments since the implementation of the Pentagon’s 1033 Program. Put into law in 1996, the program was created to transfer out-of-use Department of Defense property – small arms, ammunition, and various other equipment – into the crime-fighting hands of state and local agencies that otherwise might not be able to afford it. POLICE CONTINUED ON A9

WEEKEND ENTERPRISE | LOCAL SCHOOLS

Kids these days: Late to bed, early to rise Officials not in favor of later start to school day BY JERMAINE PIGEE jpigee@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5525

If school didn’t start until 8:30 a.m., students would be more awake in class, according to 12-year-old Ashley Vences.

“You would be more focused,� said Vences, a seventh-grader at Challand Middle School in Sterling. “You would not be so tired.� The American Academy of Pediatrics this week recommended that middle and high schools delay the start of classes until 8:30 a.m. or later. Studies have found that most U.S. students in middle school and high school don’t get the recommended amount of

Scattered T-storms

VOLUME 6 ISSUE 53 52 Pages

Today: 80/65 For the forecast, see Page A10

sleep – 8.5 to 9.5 hours on school nights – and that most high school seniors get an average of less than 7 hours. T a d E v e r e t t , Tad Everett Sterling superintendent of the Sterling superintendent School District, said students should not go to bed as late as many of them do on school nights.

He takes the cake

For guitar cakes and others with a creative flair, try Midnight Cake Shop. See Page C1

“If kids went to bed 30 minutes earlier, there would be no need for us to start school 30 minutes later,� Everett said. “Kids could get more sleep if they went to bed earlier.� Students at Sterling High School report to class at 8 a.m. – 30 minutes earlier than what the AAP suggests. Students at Challand Middle School start classes at 7:50 a.m. LATER CONTINUED ON A4

What to watch Join Andy Samberg for a look at the fall television lineup Also inside USA Weekend: Roasted Brussels sprouts Childhood vaccines Jennie Garth

Senator hears concerns of local business leaders BY PAM EGGEMEIER peggemeier@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5570

DIXON – U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin says that as he has campaigned throughout the state, communities big and small have brought one business issue to the forefront. “I’m hearing at every level of business that they are getting killed U.S. Sen. by online retail,� Dick Durbin Durbin said. “It’s the biggest issue affecting municipalities because of the lost sales tax.� The Springfield Democrat was at the Dixon Chamber of Commerce on Friday to listen to the concerns of about 20 local business and government leaders. A three-term senator and majority whip, Durbin is being challenged by GOP state Sen. Jim Oberweis of Sugar Grove. Durbin said the Main Street Fairness Act he co-sponsored in 2011 would help Main Street retailers compete with online merchants and bring uncollected sales taxes back to the cities. DURBIN CONTINUED ON A2

Happy Labor Day! Just a reminder that there will be no paper Monday because of the holiday, and Sauk Valley Media offices will be closed. We will resume our normal publication schedule Tuesday.

Index Births.............. C11 Lottery .............. A2 Business........... C1 Markets .......... A11 Classified .......... D1 Obituaries ......... A4 Comics ....... B5-B6 Opinion............. A6 Community ..... C12 Scoreboard ...... B4 Scrapbook ....... C3 Crossword Saturday ..... D5-D6 Sports .............. B1 Services ............ C11 Crossword Sunday ............. C8 Travel .............. C10 Dave Ramsey ... C1 Weather.......... A10 Dear Abby ........ C4 Wheels ............. D8


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