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WINNING AS EASY AS 1-2-3? NOT FOR MERCER

Student of the month

BOYS BASKETBALL, B1

NEWMAN HIGH, A10

TELEGRAPH

Monday, January 11, 2016

SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851

LEE COUNTY | UNSOLVED MURDER

Why would anyone want to kill Amy? It’s a question that authorities and family members have been asking for 20 years – and they’re determined to find an answer

BY KATRINA J.E. MILTON Shaw Media kmilton@shawmedia.com

Amy Todd Fleming loved to bake and spend time with her family. Sherie Newman, Fleming’s sister, remembers Fleming baking cookies for family and friends at Christmastime, giving her homemade goods away to her grandparents and the elderly. Newman wishes her sister could have

made cookies with her nieces and nephews this past Christmas. It has been 20 years since Fleming last baked cookies. It’s been 20 years since she last laughed with her father and 20 years since her mother heard her voice. On Jan. 11, 1996, Fleming, 25, was found strangled at her home off Route 30 in rural Lee County. AMY CONTINUED ON A9

Amy Fleming was found murdered 20 years ago at her rural Lee County home. The case remains unsolved. Submitted

SAUK VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

BIRD WATCHING

Opening for business

SOARing with the eagles A bald eagle stretches its wings Saturday as Kay Neumann of SOAR (Saving our Avian Resources) speaks during the 32nd annual Bald Eagle Watch at Clinton Community College. SOAR’s program was part of the event, which was presented by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and Stewards Upper Mississippi River Refuge. SOAR is an Iowa-based nonprofit organization dedicated to raptor rehabilitation, education and research. Next year’s annual Bald Eagle Watch is scheduled for Jan. 7. Read this story at saukvalley.com to see more photos.

Sauk and its partners have big plans for small businesses, with or without grants BY CHRISTOPHER HEIMERMAN cheimerman@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5523 @CHeimerman_SVM

DIXON – In some capacity, a Small Business Development Center will soon return to Sauk Valley Community College. Should the college be awarded grants it applied for a few months ago, a four-employee staff will provide companies and entrepreneurs business advice, information, training and technical assistance. In the meantime, the college’s first-year president, David Hellmich, hopes to open the center by Feb. 1, with a one-person staff: a director with a small business background. If the grants come in, the operation would be fleshed out. Hellmich said that consid-

David Hellmich

John Thompson

ering the host of committed partners to the project, the grant applications are “very strong.” They were submitted ahead of the Oct. 8 deadline, and a response was expected in November. “Worst-case scenario, the grants never come through and we’ll use the funds from our partners and college funds,” Hellmich said. BUSINESS CONTINUED ON A5

DIXON

She really was a one-of-a-Kime Community gives its thanks to retiring Next Picture Show director BY CHRISTOPHER HEIMERMAN cheimerman@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5523 @CHeimerman_SVM

A snowy owl gives the crowd an icy stare Saturday during SOAR’s educational program. Photos by Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com

$1.00

TODAY’S EDITION: 20 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 164 ISSUE 177

INDEX

ABBY ................... A7 COMICS ............... A8 CROSSWORD....B10

LIFESTYLE ........... A7 LOTTERY ............. A2 OBITUARIES ........ A4

DIXON – As her sendoff as executive director of The Next Picture Show wore on Saturday night, Bonnie Kime got a bit mistier, and she wasn’t the only one. Artists of all levels and art-lovers alike lined up to share their favorite memories with Kime – whether in person or in a book for those who couldn’t get the words out without crying. Kime, longtime director of The Next Picture Show, is retiring at the end of the month, and Sat-

OPINION .............. A6 POLICE ................ A2 STATE .................. A4

Online extra

Read this story at saukvalley.com to watch Stephanie Christensen and her daughter, Joy Feofanov, provide music during Bonnie Kime’s sendoff at The Next Picture Show. urday’s opening reception for the Regional Art Survey served double-duty: Not only did it kick off the event that showcases local artists, it served as an opportunity for the community to say “thanks” to a woman who put her heart into art.

Today’s weather High 18. Low 7. More on A3.

TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE PAPER, CALL 815-284-2224

KIME CONTINUED ON A5

Need work? Check out your classifieds, B6.


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