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COMETS BATTLE TOP TEAM IN CLASS 2A
Newman senior hardly all business
BOYS BASKETBALL, B1
STUDENT OF THE MONTH, A11
TELEGRAPH
Monday, January 20, 2014
SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851
PROPHETSTOWN | 6 MONTHS AFTER THE FIRE
‘Everything is going to be all right’ Business owner upbeat despite rebuild, illness BY MATT MENCARINI mmencarini@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 529
PROPHETSTOWN – Cindy Eriks would rather be in Prophetstown cooking food for her customers – her “family” – instead of sitting in her apartment in Dixon. But in the place where her apartment and restaurant, Cindy Jean’s Restaurant, stood on July 14, 2013, there is now nothing but snow on the ground. Last Wednesday was the 6-month anniversary of the July 15 fire that destroyed eight buildings in downtown Proph-
You can help Prophetstown has set up a fund, “Rebuild Prophetstown Strong,” to help clean up and rebuild the downtown. Donations can be made at Farmers National Bank branches, in Prophetstown, Geneseo and Morrison, as well as at IH Mississippi Valley Credit Union locations.
etstown. The fire started about 2 a.m. that morning, in a recycling bin behind Cindy Jean’s Restaurant, which Eriks owned and lived above. By the spring, construction on the first new building could begin, Mayor Steve Swanson said. The town controls five of the eight lots, he added, and officials hope to acquire two more, making it easier to entice
developers to build by donating the lots to them. Eriks has had more to deal with in the past 6 months than just being displaced. She was diagnosed with post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome, also known as chronic Lyme disease, she said, and recently found a specialist who thinks he can treat her. REBUILD CONTINUED ON A10
Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
Since the July 15 fire in downtown Prophetstown, Cindy Jean’s Restaurant owner Cindy Eriks has been living in an apartment in Dixon. Her son, Josh, has been attending school at the University of Illinois.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. | CELEBRATING HIS LIFE
STERLING
Closeout special for Kmart employees Former co-workers share memories, say farewell at party BY CHRISTI WARREN cwarren@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 521
Michael Krabbenhoeft/mkrabbenhoeft@saukvalley.com
Community members hold hands while they sing “We Shall Overcome” at the closing of the Community Celebration of Peace and Justice on Sunday at the First Congregational Church in Sterling.
Voices, dreams know no bounds More than 100 gather to share talents, civil leader’s vision BY CHRISTI WARREN cwarren@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 521
STERLING – Something was just a little bit off with the First Congregational Church’s sound system
Sunday night. When the group of people gathered in its pews stood to sing along to a recording, about halfway through, it stopped. That song was “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” widely rec-
ognized as the black national anthem. That group of people was gathered to celebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Leading the more than 100 people in song was Irene Lew-
is-Wimbley, and, rather than give up when the recorded music faltered, the congregation’s voices swelled to overcome the void, filling the vaulted ceiling with sound.
DIXON – More than 100 former Kmart employees, and their friends, came together on Saturday at Dixon’s Comfort Inn and Suites to say farewell to a business they’d come to love. The party was organized by an informal employee committee spearheaded by Shane Bielema, 26, who had worked at Kmart since October 2006. Bielema created a Facebook group for all the past employees to share their memories, and the idea kind of took off from there, he said. KMART CONTINUED ON A12
DREAMS CONTINUED ON A2
OGLE COUNTY | SPENDING IN THE SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT
Money in agency’s budget left unspent Treasurer: Projects, for whatever reason, did not happen BY MATT MENCARINI AND DAVID GIULIANI news@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, Ext. 591
OREGON – Government agencies often spend every cent they get.
$1.00
TODAY’S EDITION: 24 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 163 ISSUE 183
Sometimes they don’t. In the past 2 years, Ogle County Sheriff Michael Harn has left unspent more than $1 million from his annual budgets. According to the county treasurer’s numbers, Harn didn’t spend $766,000 in his budget last fiscal year and $572,000 the previous year. His budget includes law enforcement, corrections, and building and grounds for all county property.
INDEX
ABBY ................... A7 COMICS ...............B6 CROSSWORD....B11
In the 2013 budget, Harn’s unspent money included $350,000 for repairs and maintenance of buildings, including redoing the heating and cooling system for a county building, Treasurer John Coffman said. The sheriff handles the county’s buildings and grounds. “Projects were planned,” Coffman said, “and for whatever reason didn’t happen.” BUDGET CONTINUED ON A4
LIFESTYLE ........... A7 LOTTERY ............. A2 OBITUARIES ........ A4
Michael Krabbenhoeft/ mkrabbenhoeft@saukvalley.com
Ogle County Sheriff Michael Harn
OPINION .............. A6 POLICE ................ A2 SPORTS ...............B1
Shane Bielema, a former employee at the Kmart in Sterling, created a Facebook group for all the employees who worked at the Sterling store.
Today’s weather High 28. Low -4. More on A3.
Need work? Check out your classifieds, B8.
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