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  • 7/26/2019 27 Hildreth Liquor Mart

    1/9

    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 2015B4 SPORTS

    a Giant legacy

    Indiana(CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1)

    But as IU opened pre-season training camp onThursday it did so with aproven quarterback whoranks second in programhistory in completion per-centage at 60.6 percent andhas started 14 games in hisIU career.

    Redshirt junior widereceiver Ricky Jones,who was in the samerecruiting class with

    Sudfeld in 2012, said histeammate has come backstronger and more accu-rate than ever.

    This is the best I haveever seen Nate right now,Jones said.

    I even wrote it onTwitter. Hes throwing

    dimes on every ball.Even if we had run a badroute hes putting the ballright in the pocket. Its

    going to be special. I likehow he is throwing the ballright now.

    IU offensive coordinatorKevin Johns likes what he

    has seen, too. Johns saidSudfeld just appears evenmore ready this seasonthan ever before.

    I think hes back, saidJohns, in his fifth seasonwith the Hoosiers.

    I think that he is physi-cally throwing the ball aswell as he has ever thrownit. The injury being hisnon-throwing shoulderhelped a lot so he didntlose a lot of development inthe passing game.

    But Johns said theressomething else thatsbetter with Sudfeld even

    more than his ability tothrow hard, crisp and accu-rate passes.

    He just has a differentfocus, a different senseof urgency if you will,Johns said.

    Its pretty cool. Ivenever seen him have it.When hes on the field hesinto it. When he was afreshman I was alwayschallenging to be like this.He would have it for 15minutes in the 7-on-7 timebut by the end of the teamperiod he would be drifting.He just wasnt as good.

    Now hes taking everyrep with an extreme senseof focus and it has made adifference in his game.

    CATCH A GAMEHeres a look at the Hoosiers schedule for the upcoming season:

    Sept. 5 vs. S. Illinois, 4 p.m.

    Sept. 12 at FIU, 8 p.m.

    Sept. 19 vs. W. Kentucky, 4 p.m.

    Sept. 26 at Wake Forest, TBA

    Oct. 3 vs. Ohio State, TBA

    Oct. 10 at Penn State, noon

    Oct. 17 vs. Rutgers, 3:30 p.m.

    Oct. 24 at Michigan State, TBA

    Nov. 7 vs. Iowa, TBA

    Nov. 14 vs. Michigan, TBA

    Nov. 21 at Maryland, TBA

    Nov. 28 at Purdue, TBA

    NEW YORK

    From the football field to the broadcastbooth, Frank Gifford was a star. Anda winner.

    An NFL championship in1956 with the New York Giants.

    An Emmy award in 1976-77 astelevisions outstandingsports personality. Inductioninto the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 77.

    Gifford, as well known for serving as a buf-fer for fellow announcers Don Meredith andHoward Cosell on Monday Night Footballas for his versatility as a player, diedSunday. He was 84.

    Frank Gifford was an icon of the game,both as a Hall of Fame player for the Giantsand Hall of Fame broadcaster for CBS andABC, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said.Franks talent and charisma on the field andon the air were important elements in thegrowth and popularity of the modern NFL.

    In a statement released by NBC News,Giffords family said he died of natural

    causes Sunday at his Connecticut home.His wife, Kathie Lee Gifford, is a host forNBCs Today.

    We rejoice in the extraordinary life hewas privileged to live, and we feel gratefuland blessed to have been loved by such anamazing human being, his family said.

    Pictured: New York Giants halfback Frank Giffordparticipates in a workout Sept. 9, 1958, in New York.Gifford died Sunday at age 84.

    NFL Hall of Famer,longtime broadcaster

    Gifford dies at 84

    STORY &

    PHOTO BY

    The AssociatedPress

    Customer

    As an added bonus, for every

    pizza you have delivered by

    Pizza Hut, you will receive

    a free copy of

    The Tribune!

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    to sign up for

    Tribune home delivery!

    Call 523-3332 to order your

    Pizza Hut delivery today!

    The Seymour Tribune & Pizza Hut Announce

    Each week, every customer of The Tribune

    will be eligible to win a FREElarge specialty

    or 3 Topping Pizza from Pizza Hut!

    Winners will be announced every

    Firday. Coupon valid only at Seymour

    and North Vernon stores.

    Call to schedule your FREEin-home estimate today!

    (812) 372-00081-800 NEXT WINDOW

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    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Text us forinformation

    on: Specials,

    Events, &

    Updates 512 W. Tipton St., Seymour 522-4422

    1 1/2 oz...Don Q Cristal

    1/2 oz...fresh lime juice

    3/4 oz... Agave Nectar

    or simple syrup

    1 oz...Watermelon Puree

    1...Watermelon Wedge

    To make Watermelon Puree: dice seedless

    watermelon into cubes and blend until

    pureed. Shake rum, lime juice, agave nectar,

    watermelon puree and ice. Strain into coupe

    glass rimmed with sugar. Garnish with thinly

    sliced watermelon wedge.

    Watermelon

    Daiquiri

    On Friday, Stewart again hadto revisit that tragedy. Attorneysrepresenting the Ward familyfiled a wrongful death lawsuitagainst Stewart, another hurdlein what has been a season with-out much hope until recently,and Sunday marked the one-yearanniversary of Wards death.

    Stewart finished last after hiscar broke a rear gear midwaythrough the 90-lap race.

    In the last road race of hisNASCAR career, Jeff Gordonhad brake problems andfinished 41st to take another bighit in points.

    AJ Allmendinger, the defend-ing race winner and pole-sittergunning for another victory thatwould have given a second Chaseberth for the one-car JTGDaugherty team, led the first 20laps with Martin Truex Jr. intow, but he was passed the nexttime around and dropped tothird as the No. 47 Chevy beganto fade.

    Sorry man. I dont think itsgoing to happen today,Allmendinger told crew chiefBrian Burns while running inthe top 10 just past the halfwaypoint of the race. Im just hang-ing on there. Theyre just eatingme alive.

    Moments later, Allmendingerstopped on the track with anapparent power failure, eliminat-ing him from contention. He fin-ished 24th.

    The race turned on strategy.Truex, who started second, pit-ted after a red flag just past the

    midpoint of the race as the topeight drivers stayed out.Harvick, who pitted two laps

    before Truex, then gained thelead on a restart on lap 61, pass-ing Kenseth and pulling out to alead of over a half-second withTruex third.

    Harvicks crew told him hewas two laps short on fuel as therace wound down, but he didenough conserving to salvage apodium finish. Truexs chancesdisappeared when he suffered aflat left front tire and was forcedto pit with 22 laps left around the2.45-mile natural terrain course.

    Sweep(CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1)

  • 7/26/2019 27 Hildreth Liquor Mart

    2/9

    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2015B4 SPORTS

    Customer

    As an added bonus, for every

    pizza you have delivered by

    Pizza Hut, you will receive

    a free copy of

    The Tribune!

    Call 523-7055

    to sign up for

    Tribune home delivery!

    Call 523-3332 to order your

    Pizza Hut delivery today!

    The Seymour Tribune & Pizza Hut Announce

    Each week, every customer of The Tribune

    will be eligible to win a FREElarge specialty

    or 3 Topping Pizza from Pizza Hut!

    Winners will be announced every

    Firday. Coupon valid only at Seymour

    and North Vernon stores.

    Veterans Day is Wednesday, November 11Please see below for information needed.

    Full Name of Person Being Honored_________________________________

    Served In _________________________

    Dates of Service ____________________

    Submitted by ______________________Photo Enclosed or Attached

    _______ Yes _______ No

    e Tribunewill have a Veterans Day Page.We want to honor those who have servedour nation. You may submit a photo ifdesired. We will feature each submittedname on November 11. Entries may besubmitted by email to [email protected], mailed to or dropped off at our offi ce,located at 100 St. Louis Ave., Seymour, IN47274. Entries must be received in ouroffi ce no later than Wednesday, November4 at 5 pm, to be guaranteed to be in thepaper. ere is no charge to submit arememberance.

    Remember

    Ingredients

    Directions

    1 chocolate cake, crumbled2 Cups crushed Oreos1 Cup Peppermint Schnapps24 oz Milk Chocolate Chips1 (4.5 oz) Andes mint candies, chopped

    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Text us for information on:

    Specials, Events, & Updates

    512 W. Tipton St., Seymour 812-522-4422

    Mint Chocolate Cake Balls

    Mix cake crumbles and crushed Oreos withPeppermint Schnapps to form a moistdough. Form into 1 balls and freeze for 3hours. Melt chocolate and candies, coatcake balls in chocolate and place on waxedpaper to harden.

    Reports: Colts Luckhas fractured ribs

    Colts quarterback AndrewLuck has been playing withfractured ribs, Fox Sportsreported Sunday.

    The report was con-

    firmed by ESPN and NFL.com. Fox Sports and ESPNalso questioned the valid-ity of the Colts injuryreports during Weeks 4 and5. It had been reported bythe Colts that Luck had aninjured right shoulder.

    After Fox Sports brokethe story, Colts generalmanager Ryan Grigson saidSunday our injury reportsare accurate. If people haveany questions about playerinjuries, they should referto our injury reports.

    Fox Sports reported thatLuck sustained fractured

    ribs in Week 3 against theTennessee Titans, the samegame in which he hurthis shoulder. ESPN NFL

    Insider Adam Schefter pre-viously reported that Luckhad a rib injury that hadlargely healed.

    Luck missed two gameslast month because of whatthe Colts said was a shoul-der injury. Backup quarter-back Matt Hasselbeck ledthe team to wins against theJaguars and Texans. TheColts have not listed Luckwith a rib injury on anyinjury reports this season.

    The NFL policy on injuryreports requires each teamto list significant or note-worthy injuries for everyplayer even if the team iscertain that he will playin the upcoming game.The league considers it anintegrity issue and can dis-cipline violators with finesor forfeiture of draft picks.

    As a matter of policy, the

    NFL will investigate theissue.

    The 3-4 Colts play at the 6-0Carolina Panthers tonight.

    American Pharoah winsClassic in final race

    LEXINGTON, Ky. Hail and farewell,American Pharoah.

    The Triple Crown cham-pion won the $5 million

    Breeders Cup Classic by6lengths Saturday, tak-ing charge out of the gatein his final race beforeretirement.

    The 3-year-old colt ran1miles in a track-record2:00.07 as the sentimen-tal 3-5 favorite amongthe crowd of 50,155 atKeeneland. Fans stood20-deep all along the rail,cheering and snapping cell-phone photos of the super-star horse and jockeyVictor Espinoza.

    Except AmericanPharoah didnt hear them.He wears ear plugs to muf-fle any sounds that mightstartle him.

    This was for Pharoah,trainer Bob Baffert said.We wanted him to go outthe champion he is.

    American Pharoahtook on seven rivals afterSmooth Roller and champi-on mare Beholder droppedout. Beholder had the speedand the class to potential-ly make the race a contest,but a lung ailment side-lined her on Thursday.

    It probably didnt matter

    how many faced AmericanPharoah on a cloudy,cool day in the cradle ofAmerican horse country.

    He smashed the old trackrecord of 2:05.36 by morethan five seconds.

    The winner is one of themost amazing things Iveseen, said Irishman AidanOBrien, who trained last-place Gleneagles.

    It was a feel-goodmoment for a sport thathas been battered andbruised all the troublesof declining attendance anddrug controversies were

    wiped away in two magicalminutes.

    Its a horse racing fairytale and I just happen to bein it, Baffert said.

    BRIEFS

    SPORTS

    BYJENNAFRYERAP AUTO RACING WRITER

    MARTINSVILLE, Va.

    As the adoring crowd lin-gered in the darkness atMartinsville Speedway,Jeff Gordon took amoment to soak it in.

    In a 23-year career that is one longhighlight reel, his victory Sundayoverwhelmed the NASCAR great. Hehad just earned a spot in the champi-onship race, a chance to race for anelusive fifth title. It was, in his mind,one of my finest moments Ive ever

    had.So Gordon, who at 44 years old cel-

    ebrated his ninth Martinsville win byjumping along the track like a littleboy on Christmas morning, climbedinto the grandstands to share theemotion of the victory with the fans.

    I dont know what it feels like tobe a rock star, but thats as close asit can get, Gordon said. Thats arock star moment right there.

    He has Matt Kenseth to thank forthis storybook ending to his career.

    Kenseth intentionally wrecked JoeyLogano payback from an incidentthree races ago to take the race lead-er out with 47 laps remaining. Logano

    had the dominant car, and Kenseth,who was in an earlier wreck withBrad Keselowski, came back on thetrack 10 laps down and drove Loganointo the wall.

    Logano had led 207 of the 500 lapsand was furious. His father, Tom, hadto be pushed into the team hauler bythe crew chief as the crowd cheeredwildly in support of Kenseth.

    Although NASCAR chairman BrianFrance has championed on-trackincidents, Kenseth could be sanc-tioned because he was not racing forthe win.

    I think what was disappointing

    ... a driver thats not competing fora win, in fact, was many laps downwhen that happened, in our minds,thats a little bit different than twodrivers really going after it comingout of turn four for a win, said SteveODonnell, head of NASCARs racingoperations.

    Denny Hamlin, who last weekaccused Kevin Harvick of deliber-ately causing an accident to pre-serve his spot in the Chase for theSprint Cup championship field, saidthe level of aggression is out of hand.Hes teammates with Kenseth, andboth were eliminated from title con-tention last week.

    GOINGFOR 5Jeff Gordon wins drama-filled race to earn spot in championship

    Jeff Gordon celebrates Sunday after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto raceat Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Va. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

  • 7/26/2019 27 Hildreth Liquor Mart

    3/9

    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2015B4 SPORTS

    Customer

    As an added bonus, for every

    pizza you have delivered by

    Pizza Hut, you will receive

    a free copy of

    The Tribune!

    Call 523-7055

    to sign up for

    Tribune home delivery!

    Call 523-3332 to order your

    Pizza Hut delivery today!

    The Seymour Tribune & Pizza Hut Announce

    Each week, every customer of The Tribune

    will be eligible to win a FREElarge specialty

    or 3 Topping Pizza from Pizza Hut!

    Winners will be announced every

    Firday. Coupon valid only at Seymour

    and North Vernon stores.

    1 oz Kinky Pink Liqueur1oz Vodka3oz Cranberry JuiceSplash of Lime juice

    Shake with ice, strain &serve in martini glass

    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Text us for information on: Specials, Events, & Updates

    512 W. Tipton St.

    Seymour

    812-522-4422

    3oz Kinky Blue Liqueur1oz Irish Whisky2oz Ginger Ale

    Serve in ice-filled highballor rocks glass

    KinkyVampire

    Kinky Werewolf

    Veterans Day is Wednesday, November 11Please see below for information needed.

    Full Name of Person Being Honored_________________________________

    Served In _________________________

    Dates of Service ____________________

    Submitted by ______________________

    Photo Enclosed or Attached

    _______ Yes _______ No

    e Tribunewill have a Veterans Day Page.We want to honor those who have servedour nation. You may submit a photo ifdesired. We will feature each submittedname on November 11. Entries may besubmitted by email to [email protected], mailed to or dropped off at our offi ce,located at 100 St. Louis Ave., Seymour, IN47274. Entries must be received in ouroffi ce no later than Wednesday, November4 at 5 pm, to be guaranteed to be in thepaper. ere is no charge to submit arememberance.

    Remember

    423 N. Ewing St.Seymour, IN 812.522.1526Hours: M-F 10-7 Sat 10-4

    FishSTAND

    The

    Mon. Cod Fish dinner.Tues. 10 pc Pollock dinner.

    Wed. Catfish dinner.

    Thurs. Large Pollock dinner.Fri. Shrimp dinner.

    Sat. Chicken Sandwich dinner.

    Includes, entree, fries, slaw & drink

    DAILY SPECIALS

    wasnt as much about justmaking it to state, but plac-ing as high as we could atsemistate. It was a hugeaccomplishment for thesegirls to step up and runwell and show how strongthey were.

    Ashton Chase led theOwls with a 13th-place

    finish in 18 minutes,56.7 seconds for 5,000meters (3.1 miles).

    It was really nice to seeAshton not be afraid andstep up there, Sunburysaid. Shes a competitor.

    Seymours Emma Brocktook 16th in 19:07.3.

    When those girls areboth on, its a nice 1-2 com-bination for us, Sunburysaid. Emma had a badrace for us last week, and itwas good to see her comeback strong today. She hasmore in her. Her confidenceis there.

    Also for the Owls, MeganWinter finished 28th in19:42.2. Oriana Moralestook 33rd in 19:51.3, while

    Claire Loebker was 36th(19:55.2), Abby Voss 48th(20:12.3) and MayaHauersperger 139th(22:35.4).

    Meanwhile, the Seymourboys finished 13th with 327points. The top six teams,led by No. 7 ColumbusNorth with 70 points, quali-

    fied for state.I told the boys if we

    didnt make it to state, Imdisappointed for them, but

    Im not disappointed inthe season weve had byany means, Seymour boyscoach Randy Fife said. Icouldnt be any happierwith the progress wevemade, to see the hardwork they put in pay divi-dends for them. Its been awonderful season forthem.

    Tim Molinari led theOwls with a 32nd-place fin-ish in 16:44.3. Cameron

    Deppen took 90th in 17:27.1,while Alex Lovins was 104th(17:37.3), Jacob Voss 115th(17:44.6), HunterBauserman 117th (17:46.8),Cooper Morrow 148th(18:16.9) and TrentHohenstreiter 125th(18:47.0).

    If you look just at thetimes, it wasnt as good asthe last two weeks, Fifesaid. But the last twoweeks, the course has notbeen as crowded. Today,you had double the amountof runners.

    Two Seymour boys run-

    ners fell during the race,and another lost a shoe andfinished the race with oneshoe.

    Part of that stuff hap-pens in cross-country, andyou have to overcome it,Fife said. The kids ranhard today. I dont doubttheir effort by any means.Theyre just not happy withtheir times.

    Brownstown CentralsJake McCullough, whocompeted as an individual,finished 114th in 17:44.0.

    Crothersville had twoindividuals competing in

    the girls race. BreannaBarger took 110th in 21:49.8,and Tristan Maschino was155th in 23:20.1.

    MIKE WOLANIN | FOR THE TRIBUNE

    Seymours Alex Lovins com-petes in Saturdays BrownCounty Semistate cross-countryrace at Eagle Park in Nashville.

    Pace(CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1)

    BRIEF

    GOLFKaufman shoots 10-under61 to win Shriners tourneyLAS VEGAS

    Smylie Kaufman wonthe Shriners Hospitals forChildren Open on Sundayin his fifth PGA Tour start,shooting a 10-under 61 andwaiting to see if anyonecould catch him.

    Kaufman played the final11 holes in 9 under with aneagle and seven birdies. The23-year-old former LSU play-er set up the eagle with a3-wood drive to 15 feet on thepar-4 15th and closed witha 20-foot birdie putt on thepar-4 18th to post 16-under268 at TPC Summerlin.

    Kevin Na, third-round leader

    Brett Stegmaier, Patton Kizzire,Cameron Tringale, Jason Bohnand Alex Cejka tied for second,a stroke back.

    Na, coming off playoffloss last week to EmilianoGrillo in the season-open-ing event, made a 25-footbirdie putt on the 16th to tiefor the lead, but bogeyed

    the par-3 17th.

    BYNOAHTRISTER

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    EAST LANSING, Mich.

    For three quarters, NateSudfeld and Indianamatched Michigan

    State touchdown for touch-down and, aside from a cou-ple missed extra points by theHoosiers, the game was even.

    That word close is reallydriving me nuts nowadays,Sudfeld said.

    The final score actuallywasnt all that close. Indianalost to the seventh-rankedSpartans 52-26 on Saturday,allowing 24 unanswered

    points in the fourth quarter.But the Hoosiers certainlydidnt look overmatched.

    Were going toe to toe withsome pretty good teams,Indiana coach Kevin Wilsonsaid. Were looking at themin the eyes and going toe totoe. Im not into moral victo-ries. Im not trying to justifyanything. We just need to winand thats what we talkedabout after the game.

    Connor Cook threw for 398yards and four touchdowns forMichigan State. The Spartansnever trailed in the secondhalf, but it was touch and gountil Cook found R.J. Shelton

    for a 10-yard touchdown pass

    with 4:57 remaining to giveMichigan State a 12-point lead.The Spartans tacked on two

    more TDs after that.Griffin Oakes missed two

    extra points and a field goalfor the Hoosiers (4-4, 0-4), andthey allowed over 50 points forthe second consecutive weekafter losing 55-52 to Rutgers.

    Sudfeld threw for 308 yardsand three touchdowns.

    The Spartans won by doubledigits for the first time in BigTen play. Their victory lastweekend when Michiganspunter fumbled a snap on thefinal play and the Spartansscored a touchdown was the

    talk of college football, butMichigan State didnt need anylast-second dramatics this time.

    One of the things we try andpoint towards is how will weplay after a big moment?Michigan State coach MarkDantonio said. We make a bigdeal about that.

    Michigan State trailed 7-0 inthe first quarter when Cookthrew a 22-yard touchdown passto Shelton right as it began torain hard at Spartan Stadium.The sheets of rain preventedIndiana from doing much ofanything on its next possession,and then the downpour easedwhen Michigan State got the

    ball back.

    HARD TRUTHIUs upset bid fizzles against Spartans

    Indiana quarterback Nate Sudfeld, right, is hit byMichigan States Jon Reschke after releasing a

    pass during Saturdays game in East Lansing,Mich. Michigan State won 52-26.THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.B4 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016 SPORTS

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    COLUMBUS OFFICE|5975 25th St., Columbus, IN 47203812-376-6838

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    512 W. Tipton St., Seymour 812-522-4422

    Preparation:Fill a cocktail shaker with ice; add tequila(or Absolut Apeach), Grand Marnier, cherryliquor and peach juice. Shake vigorouslyfor 10 seconds and pour into a chilledfluted glass or large martini glass.

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    The Seymour Tribune & Pizza Hut Announce

    Each week, every customer of The Tribune

    will be eligible to win a FREElarge specialty

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    Fun in

    the Heart

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    Seymour

    PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.

    Jordan Spieth had to workhis way through about 100people who blocked his

    path to the first tee at PebbleBeach. They held out tournamenttickets, caps, glossy photos andMasters flags for him to sign,

    and some asked him to stop forpictures.Unusual about this day is

    what happened after he finallyreached the tee and drilled a3-iron down the middle.

    The crowd followed along forthe next four hours.

    They wanted to see Spieth, theNo. 1 player who is still trying toget used to the attention.

    A year ago, he was No. 9 in theworld and still had only one PGATour victory on his ledger.

    Now hes the Masters and U.S.Open champion who last yearmade the most spirited run atthe Grand Slam since Jack Nick-laus in 1972. He is the 22-year-old

    who earned $22 million last year,including his bonus for winningthe FedEx Cup. He is the firstAmerican since Tiger Woodsto reach the top of the worldranking.

    And he has his own bobblehead, which corporate partnerAT&T is giving away to the first8,000 fans Saturday.

    Fans tried to follow him ontothe fairways and were waitingfor him as he walked off thegreen. Spieth finally asked if theselfies could wait until after hewas done.

    Honestly, its something Ihave not gotten used to, Spiethsaid. Who knows how long it willtake? It makes you appreciatesome of these other guys whohave gone before you and havebeen able to do it.

    Fame among fans is one thing.The real challenge for Spieth

    this year is being a target for theother players, and the scrutiny

    he now faces from the press andthe public.

    He already is getting more atten-tion than he wants for his globaltravels over the last four months.Spieth spoke of being tired inAbu Dhabi, which fueled opinionsthat he was chasing appearance

    money instead of preparing to winanother green jacket.Winning five times on the

    PGA Tour, including two majors,and reaching No. 1 in the worldinevitably comes with a bulls-eye on his back. And it probablygot even bigger when Spiethstarted the new year with aneight-shot victory at Kapaluain which he became only thesecond player in PGA Tour his-tory to reach 30-under par in a72-hole event.

    Spieth, however, saw that aseasing the burden.

    It was the first one of the year,all the questions of a new year ...and then actually going out and

    getting the job done, that wasbig, he said. That was the onlyPGA Tour event Ive played, andthats where Im most comfort-able playing, where I play mybest golf. So its still real early.

    The attention remains issquarely on Spieth, and he

    understands that. He also knowsfrom experience how quickly itcan change, which is why thistalk about a Big Three makeshim uncomfortable.

    I think it needs time, hesaid. If youre going to say BigThree ... youre using a term forthree of the greatest five or sixplayers of all time. We had oneseason. Yeah, it was exciting andfun. But the point is its so early.Theres so much yet to see. Younever know whos going to be upthere at the end of the year.

    Doug Ferguson covers golf for The As-sociated Press. Send comments to [email protected].

    Spieth: The target inside, outside the ropes

    DOUG FERGUSON

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Jordan Spieth tees off Jan. 30 dur-ing the third round of the SMBC Sin-gapore Open at Sentosa Golf ClubsSerapong Course in Singapore.

    THEASSOCIATEDPRESS

    LONDON

    Two tennis umpires havebeen banned and fourothers are under inves-tigation for corruption,authorities said Tuesday.

    The sanctions were con-firmed by the InternationalTennis Federation in re-sponse to a story publishedonline by The Guardian.

    Kirill Parfenov of Ka-zakhstan was banned forlife in February 2015 forusing Facebook to contactanother official in an at-tempt to manipulate thescoring of matches, theITF said in a statement.

    Denis Pitner of Croatiawas suspended for a yearin August after passing ondetails on the physicalwell-being of a player to acoach during a tournamentand regularly logging onto a betting account fromwhich bets were placed ontennis matches, the ITFsaid.

    Four other unidentifiedofficials were suspendedwhile investigations con-tinue into their conduct.

    In order to ensure noprejudice of any futurehearing we cannot pub-licly disclose the natureor detail of those inves-tigations, the ITF said.Should any official befound guilty of an of-

    Tennisumpiresbanned2 affected; 4 more

    under investigation

    BYJENNAFRYER

    The Associated Press

    CHARLOTTE, N.C.

    NASCAR announced adramatic overhaul of itsbusiness model Tuesday,shifting to a franchise-like

    system that is intended toprovide actual value andfinancial stability to teamowners after decades ofheavy reliance on sponsors.

    The change gets awayfrom the independentcontractor model that hadbeen used since NASCARs1948 inception. A car ownerwas responsible for all thefinancial obligations torace each week, dependingon sponsorship to help footthe bills. When a sponsorpulled its funding, a carowner could go broke andbe left with nothing butracing equipment.

    This is a very com-plicated agreement, tosort out, with 60 years ofhistory doing business ina certain way, NASCAR

    chairman Brian Francesaid. To restructure thingsin the manner that we didwas a very tall order toaccomplish.

    Michael Waltrip Racinghad nothing but old cars,used equipment and a

    building to sell when itclosed its doors in No-vember. Now MWR has twoof the 36 coveted chartersand the ability to sell themto the highest bidder. Acharter guarantees rev-enue and a position in whatwill now be a 40-car SprintCup field, down from 43.

    I think what weve donehere is now weve put theteams on a more stablefooting, MWR co-ownerRob Kauffman said. Ithink it really allows theteams to invest for thefuture. If youre living yearto year, you cant really

    think about the long-term.Here what youre able todo is say, OK, Im goingto take this risk on thisyoung driver, see how they

    work out, develop this crewchief, this crew member,even some of the technicalsides, even your basic busi-ness infrastructure. Its astep in the right direction.

    Every organization isallowed a maximum of four

    charters. But in order toget one of the 36, a car hadto attempt every race since2013.

    The charters went toRichard Petty Motorsports(2); Richard ChildressRacing (3); Team Penske(2); Hendrick Motorsports(4); Roush Fenway Racing(3); Chip Ganassi Racing(2); Joe Gibbs Racing (3);Michael Waltrip Racing (2);Stewart-Haas Racing (3);Furniture Row Racing (1);Front Row Motorsports (2);JTG Daugherty Racing (1);Tommy Baldwin Racing(1); Germain Racing (1);

    Go Fas Racing (1); BKRacing (2); Premium Mo-torsports (1); Circle SportRacing (1); and HScottMotorsports (1).

    NASCAR changes givevalue, stability to owners36 charters awarded; guarantee revenue, spot in field

  • 7/26/2019 27 Hildreth Liquor Mart

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    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND. B3MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2016SPORTS

    Customer

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    a free copy of

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    JORDAN MOREY | THE TRIBUNE

    Seymours Dylan Wilson defends South Ripleys Ty Tucker onSaturday at Lloyd E. Scott Gymnasium.

    THE McCAMMON FILEName: Carley McCammon

    Parents: Brad and Luanne McCammon

    Sibling: Kelsey

    Sports:Basketball, three years; track,one year

    Athletic awards: All-county, Indiana Eli teNorth-South game junior-senior year

    Organizations:Beta Club, StudentCouncil, class president, Letter M Club

    Plans after high school: Attend college,study elementary education

    Favorite food: Chicken Alfredo

    Favorite TV show:Parks andRecreation

    Favorite band:Maroon 5

    Favorite movie: Bridesmaids

    Favorite team:Indiana Pacers

    Q&AWhats it like attending Medora?

    I cant imagine going to schoolanywhere else and being in a bigschool. I love being here and beingpart of small atmosphere. Its greatbecause you get more one-on-onetime with your teachers. The teachersand students are more involved andeverybody kind of interacts with one

    another. Ive definitely had an awe-some experience playing here.

    What was it like playing for your dad?

    Coaches have a tendency, if theyhave a child on the team, they tend to

    take it out harder on them. But I thinkits made me have stronger characterbecause Ive learned to accept criti-cism, Ive gotten used to it, and Ivelearned to take it positively instead ofbeing offended by it, and Ive gottenused to it.

    Did you have an advantage playingat home?

    We love the home games. Kenny(Flynn) does a great job of announcingand getting the crowd really into it.Its cool to see the whole communitycome out and support us.

    to build on that and keeppushing until we can getthere.

    Cummings broke thedry spell with a layupat 2:56 to make it a 43-39score, but the best theOwls could do was matchpoints with the visitorsover the next two minutes.

    Ripley made 14-of-18free throws in the fourth,and 20-of-26 on the night,while the Owls were 11-

    for-12 on the night.The Raiders did notshoot any free throws inthe first half, and Millerwas the only Seymourplayer to go to the lineand he was 5-for-6 duringthat time.

    The Owls started outcold by missing their firstfive shots and fell behind7-0 before Miller made alayup at 4:08.

    Ripley held a 12-5 lead

    at the end of the periodbefore Miller pulled theOwls into the tie at thehalf by scoring all 13 oftheir points in the secondquarter.

    Miller topped all playerswith 26 points, whileBloom finished with four3-pointers while hitting4-for-4 at the line for 16points.

    Cory Walker topped theRaiders with 24 points,Elijah Roepke scored 15and Brady Meyer 12.

    (The team is) playingsome really good basket-ball for three quarters of

    these games, Cough said.I think this was our sev-enth or eighth game thisyear that has been realdown the stretch and wehavent been able to getover the hump and find away to win.

    The Owls shot 15-for-43from the floor, and theRaiders were 17-for-36.

    Seymour will travel toGreensburg on Tuesdaynight.

    SEYMOURCONTINUED FROM PAGE B1

    (9.3), second in bars (9.15)and third for the vault(9.15).

    SHS Kellsye Warnerturned-out a solid day,finishing fourth in the all-around at 35.125.

    Warner placed fifth onthe bars (8.75), sixth for

    beam (8.7) and floor (9.1)and tied for eighth onthe vault with teammateJenna Thomas scoring8.6.

    Thomas scored over ninepoints for the first timeon the floor, finishing inseventh totaling 9.05.

    Avery DeHart was theother placer for the Owls,placing third on the beam(9.1) and finishing 10th onthe bars (7.975).

    The girls are reallyfocusing on execution andcleaning which is gettingthem their 9s, Mel-lencamp said. Looking

    forward to sectionals the

    girls just need to remainconsistent in their trainingand sticking solid routines.I think vault is where wehave the most room forimprovement from everyteam member.

    Mellencamp said thather team is producingsome of the highest scoresin recent memory.

    The past invitationalshave been good training

    for the team to be in amulti team competition,Mellencamp said. Thedistractions during compe-tition are higher at thesemeets and today the girlsdid not let it bother them.This invite fired the girlsup sectionals and they arenow looking forward toperforming.

    The skills sets are hit-ting clean on all the eventsand the team potential aswell as individual perfor-mances is greater than ithas been in past years.

    The Owls will host Jef-fersonville on Tuesday at

    Gymnastics Lane.

    FIREDCONTINUED FROM PAGE B1

    Academy in the HenryvilleTipoff Tournament.

    I used to be one of

    the shorter people andI got used to being ableto handle the ball, andI think that helped me,and after I grew I wasstill able to handle theball as well as have someheight, she said.

    I like playing againstman because we dontsee it a lot. Teams aremore-and-more going toa 2-3 zone. I like when weplay man-to-man becausewe have girls that arequick off the dribble,and we can create somescoring opportunities offof that.

    McCammon said sheenjoyed playing full-courtdefense. When we havethe numbers, and no oneis in foul trouble, we canhave a pretty effectivepress. I really like our(half-court) zone. I likebeing down low.

    The senior began herbasketball career inmiddle school, and playedthree years in high school,and was a full-timestarter the past two years.

    We had a lot of talentmy freshman year, shesaid. I think it helped(starting as a freshman),

    because ever since Iwas young, and my dadcoming into our prac-tices and transitioningin with all those girls,

    and playing with all thattalent helped me improve.Thats why I improved somuch that season.

    McCammon said thatseason she watchedthe older players onthe team and how theyled, and she tried to dothat this season, along

    with the other seniors,Jadelyn Dean and TaraRichey.

    Were in that positiontheyre in when we were

    freshman, she said. Itskind of cool to see thattransition and see thosegirls grow up. We hadgreat girls this year.

    This past season, Mc-Cammon was named acaptain.

    Its a big honor tobe able to do that, she

    said. Even though its alot of responsibili ty, itsrewarding. You go outthere and kind of set theexample. Its kind of neat

    to see how everyone fallsinline.

    McCammon said thathaving a strong mentalgame is a key to success.

    I would say mental isa really important part ofsports, she said. When-ever you have an off gameits usually more or you

    in your own head thananything else. You have tokeep your cool and learnhow to refocus and stay inthe game.

    ROLECONTINUED FROM PAGE B1

    and it produced results.The second match, not somuch.

    The Owls other semi-state qualifier, freshmanBrandon Penegar, lost inthe first round at 120. Hewas pinned in 42 secondsby another Northviewwrestler, Austin Cook.

    He took a good, hardshot, and the kid hit oneof those moves thatskind of crazy, Seymourcoach Todd Weaver said.It caught us off guard,and we went to our backand couldnt fight off ourback.

    Weaver was pleased with

    the way Penegar competed.He was obviously going

    to come out and competehard because thats the

    kind of kid he is, Weaversaid. He had a great weekof practice and went outand was doing a lot of the

    things we were talkingabout. Im really proud ofthe freshman to get to thesemistate.

    SHORTCONTINUED FROM PAGE B1

    AARON PIPER | THE TRIBUNE

    Above:Seymour freshman Brandon Penegar, left, wrestles Northview junior Austin Cook during a 120-pound match at asemistate tournament Saturday at Evansville.Below:Seymour senior Garrett Johnson, top, wrestles against Gibson South-ern freshman Clay Singleton during a 138-pound match.

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    SLOW STEADYnExotic flavors come together in set-and-forget recipe

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    CHOCOLATE STOUT CAKEDirections:

    For cake: Preheat oven to 350F. Butter three 8-inchround cake pans with 2-inch-high sides. Line with parchmentpaper. Butter paper. Bring 2 cups stout and 2 cups butter tosimmer in heavy large saucepan over medium heat. Add co-coa powder and whisk until mixture is smooth. Cool slightly. Whisk flour, sugar, baking soda, and 1 1/2 teaspoonssalt in large bowl to blend. Using electric mixer, beat eggsand sour cream in another large bowl to blend. Add stout-chocolate mixture to egg mixture and beat just to combine.

    Add flour mixture and beat briefly on slow speed. Usingrubber spatula, fold batter until completely combined. Dividebatter equally among prepared pans. Bake cakes until testerinserted into center of cakes comes out clean, about 35

    minutes. Transfer cakes to rack; cool 10 minutes. Turn cakesout onto rack and cool completely.For icing: Bring cream to simmer in heavy medium

    saucepan. Remove from heat. Add chopped chocolate andwhisk until melted and smooth. Refrigerate until icing isspreadable, stirring frequently, about 2 hours. Place 1 cake layer on plate. Spread 2/3 cup icing over.Top with second cake layer. Spread 2/3 cup icing over. Topwith third cake layer. Spread remaining icing over top andsides of cake.

    Glaze 2 cups whipping cream 1 pound bittersweet (not unsweetened)

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    (preferably Dutch-process) 4 cups all purpose flour 4 cups sugar 1 tablespoon baking soda 1 1/2 teaspoons salt 4 large eggs 1 1/3 cups sour cream

    Hildreths Liquor MartIngredients:

    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNT Y, IND. A7MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2016HORIZONS

    Smiths partner for theDeath March is John Bassett,who has been bicycling for thepast eight years.

    Its a very healthy thingto do, Bassett said aboutbicycling. Hes dropped about30 pounds in that time and iskeeping it off. The 66-year-oldenjoys being outside and saysbicycling is less hard on hisknees and ankles than othercardio sports and activities.

    Bassett enjoys riding inthe winter, saying, Its kindof unique. In winter, a lot ofpeople quit and ride trainersor go to the Y. Bassett saysriding indoors is just not the

    same. He believes that aslong as people wear layeredclothing in the proper ways,cycling outside even in thewinter is better.

    We do different rides thanwhat we do in the summer,

    Bassett said. Even the dogsbehave differently. They seethe lights coming and just sort-of stand there and watch us.

    No matter what the condi-tions are, Bassett said itsproper clothing that makes allthe difference for wintertimebiking. You dont want toget wet, he said, explainingthat means not only not get-ting rain or snow on interiorclothes but also not having abuildup of sweat on the inte-rior layer of clothing. Wearinga first layer that wicks mois-ture out to other layers, addinga layer for warmth and a toplayer to keep out rain andsnow is necessary for mostrides, he said.

    Proper shoes or bootsfor winter biking also help,

    Bassett said. I wear wintercycling shoes. Some guys useshoe covers.

    But whatever someone isriding or wearing, Bassettsaid everyone is welcome tojoin the rides. We as a club

    will take anyone. Anyone iswelcome to go with us. We postthe actual route aheadof time.

    There will be all sorts ofbicyclists at the Death MarchRide, according to Bassett.Bikers from all over the stateparticipate. It kind of attractsthe cycle track racers, moun-tain bikers, road bikers wholike to do that riding, too,Bassett said. His first year forthe ride was last year, whenthere was severe flooding inthe area that made it difficultto negotiate some of the roads.We were riding with waterover our front tires, Bassettsaid, adding, Thats the waythis race goes.

    For bicyclists of all types whomay not want to travel outside

    of Bloomington, theres anotherpossibility fast approaching.The Terrible, Horrible BikeRide will be Feb. 13 with tworoutes that will take bicyclistsaround the city, both beginningat City Hall.

    This will be the fifth year forthe ride, which was begun as away to support bicycling year-round, according to Jacqui

    Bauer, sustainability coordi-nator for Bloomington, whohelped form the ride.

    We do kind of play up theriding in actual bad weather,Bauer said, adding that forthree or four years they haveactually had good weather.

    There was talk of havinga makeup day, a sun date,similar to a rain date for goodweather, but that never wentanywhere, Bauer said. Havingperiods of good weather inJanuary or February is good,too, she said.

    Last years ride was theworst year, weather-wise,Bauer said. It snowed the

    night before. It was turninginto slush by the time we gotout, and it warmed up thatday. It was only dicey when Iwas riding over to get readyfor the ride.

    The Terrible, Horrible Bike

    Ride has a 3-mile route thatheads east and then loopsthrough the Indiana Universitycampus. The 7-mile route takes

    bicyclists to the Indiana 45/46Bypass, where they use theunderpass and then loop backto City Hall.

    We try to make surepeople know theres a safeway to get across the bypass,Bauer said.

    The ride attracts bothseasoned bicyclists and inex-perienced bikers and familieswith children, Bauer said.All are welcome to learnmore about biking and routesthat can be used year-round,she said.

    Bauer knows a lot of theroutes around Bloomingtonbecause she bikes about 1

    miles to work most days.I dont bike in ice or reallyheavy snow or heavy rain,she said. The cold, Ive gotthe clothes figured out. Itry not to let the weatherstop me.

    SNOWCONTINUED FROM PAGE A6

    Start to finish:3 to 5hours ( hour active)

    Servings:4

    4 tablespoons canola orvegetable oil, divided

    20 black peppercorns

    1 star anise

    3-inch cinnamon stick

    6 whole cloves

    2 teaspoons cuminseeds

    6 cloves garlic, crushed

    1-inch chunk freshginger, grated

    2 teaspoons chili powder

    5 tablespoons white winevinegar

    1 medium red onion,finely sliced

    28-ounce can crushedtomatoes

    1 teaspoon kosher salt

    1 teaspoon sugar

    2 pounds bonelesspork shoulder, trimmedand cut into 1-inch cubes

    Plain Greek-style yogurt

    Cooked basmati rice

    Set the slow cookerto saute mode. Add 1tablespoon of the oil andheat until hot. Add thepeppercorns, star anise,cinnamon, cloves and

    cumin. Cook for 2 minutes,stirring constantly, until thepeppercorns and clovesswell and are fragrant.Transfer the spices to amortar and pestle or spicegrinder. Grind until smooth,then add the garlic, gingerand chili powder. Grindagain, then transfer to a

    small bowl and stir in thevinegar. Set aside.

    Heat the remaining 3 table-spoons of oil in the slowcooker. When hot, add theonions and cook, stirringoften, until brown and cara-melized. Add the tomatoes,and cook for 5 minutes.Add the spice paste, saltand sugar. Stir well, thenadd the pork. Coat the porkwith the paste then add just

    enough water to cover themeat. Stir well, then coverand cook for 3 hours onhigh or 5 hours on low, oruntil the meat is completelytender and straining to holdits shape.

    Serve topped with gratedginger, dollops of yogurtand basmati rice.

    Slow Cooker Pork Shoulder VindalooBYMEERASODHAThe Associated Press

    Theres a real joy inslowing down in thekitchen. Gone is the

    frantic stress of trying to getdinner on the table in an in-stant and in its place comesa different type of gentlecooking. It allows beautifulsmells to waft through thehouse and ingredients tomingle and develop overtime into something deep,rich and flavorful.

    Of all slow cooked dishes,Goan pork vindaloo is

    my favorite. Originally aPortuguese stew made withmeat, garlic and wine, thedish made its way to Indiain the 1500s with Portugueseexplorers. Like so manyother dishes, it then was re-interpreted. Today, vindaloocurry is a sweet, hot andsour dish popular all overthe world.

  • 7/26/2019 27 Hildreth Liquor Mart

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    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND. MONDAY, JULY 27, 2015 A5

    HuckleberryLemonade

    2 oz. 360 Huckleberry

    4 oz. Lemonade

    Serve over ice in a

    collins glass, garnish

    with lemon wedge.

    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Text us for

    information

    on: Specials,

    Events, &

    Updates 512 W. Tipton St., Seymour 522-4422

    Customer

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    pizza you have delivered by

    Pizza Hut, you will receive

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    to sign up for

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    Pizza Hut delivery today!

    The Seymour Tribune & Pizza Hut Announce

    Each week, every customer of The Tribune

    will be eligible to win a FREElarge specialty

    or 3 Topping Pizza from Pizza Hut!

    Winners will be announced every

    Firday. Coupon valid only at Seymour

    and North Vernon stores.

    THETRIBUNE

    OBITUARIES/NEWStribtown.com

    William P. Billy ByronNORTH VERNON

    William P. Billy Byron,79, of North Vernon, died at7:09 p.m. Friday, July 24,2015, at Our Hospice of

    South Central IndianaInpatient Facility inColumbus.

    Survivors include a broth-er, Daniel P. (Lynne) Byronof Carmel; and a sister,Kathleen (Richard) Stadlerof Carmel.

    A Mass of Christian buri-al will be at 6 p.m.Wednesday at St. MarysCatholic Church in NorthVernon with the Rev.Michael OMara officiating.Interment will be at St.Marys Cemetery.

    A rosary service will beat 12:30 p.m. Wednesday at

    Sawyer-Pickett Funeraland Cremation Service inNorth Vernon. AlsoWednesday at the funeralhome, a Moose servicewill be at 4:30 p.m., andvisitation will be from1 to 5:30 p.m.

    Memorials may be madethrough the funeral hometo the St. Vincent de PaulSociety, North VernonMoose Lodge or OurHospice of South CentralIndiana.

    Phyllis Jean LeeCOLUMBUS

    Phyllis Jean Lee, 71, ofColumbus, died at 3 a.m.Saturday, July 25, 2015,at Kindred Health inColumbus.

    Survivors include a son,Rob (Rosie) Lee ofColumbus; three daugh-ters, Terry (Robert) Whiteand Tamara (Charles)Parker, both of Columbus,and Tracy (Dennis)McCollum of NorthVernon; four sisters, JulieWhittington of NorthVernon, Elsie McManee ofClifford, Myrna Lucas ofColumbus and BarbaraLee of Indianapolis;

    17 grandchildren; 38 great-grandchildren; and onegreat-great-grandchild.

    The funeral service willbe at noon Wednesday atDove-Sharp and RudicelFuneral Home andCremation Services inNorth Vernon with DoreneBowman officiating. Burialwill be at Vernon Cemetery.

    Visitation will be from11 a.m. until time of ser-vice Wednesday at thefuneral home.

    Memorials may be madeto the Kindred AlzheimersUnit.

    Suzanne Zarick MosbeyEVANSVILLE

    Suzanne Zarick Mosbey,50, of Evansville, passed

    away Friday, July 24, 2015,at her home.

    BornMarch 3,1965, inSeymour,she was thedaughter ofJoe andMary LouZarick, bothof whomsurvive. Shewas married to Dallas J.Mosbey, who also survives.

    Suzanne was an occupa-tional therapist at theEvansville PsychiatricChildrens Center. Her faithand her family were hermain priorities in life. Sheenjoyed helping people andhad a gift of helping any-one in need, whether a

    family member, a neighboror a stranger. She wasalways the person to be thelistening ear, the shoulderto cry on and the friend tooffer just the right words ofencouragement to people.She had a positive outlookon life and an infectiouslaugh that would make allthose around her smile.

    She was a member ofAnnunciation Parish andGood Shepherd CatholicChurch.

    Besides her husband andparents, survivors include adaughter, Taylor Mosbey;

    son, Michael Mosbey; step-son, Mitchell Mosbey;brothers, David, Stephenand Gregory (Judy) Zarick;sisters, Kathryn (Brian)

    Harbrecht and Sara (Jim)Gutting; sister-in-law,Nancy Zarick; and manynieces and nephews.

    She was preceded indeath by a brother,Joseph Zarick.

    The funeral service willbe at 10 a.m. Wednesday atGood Shepherd CatholicChurch in Evansville withFather Zach Etienne andFather Bernie Etienne offi-ciating. Burial will be at St.Joseph Catholic Cemetery.

    Visitation will be from2 to 7 p.m. Tuesday with avigil service at 7 p.m. atAlexander Newburgh Chapelin Newburgh and from9 a.m. until time of serviceWednesday at the church.

    In lieu of flowers, memo-rials may be made to the

    Suzanne Mosbey MemorialFund, 700 S. Green RiverRoad, Suite 2000,Evansville, IN 47715.

    Online condolences maybe made at alexandernewburghchapel.com.

    Randolph Smitty SmithSEYMOUR

    Randolph John SmittySmith, 91, of Seymour,passed awayThursday,July 23, 2015,at home sur-rounded byhis loving

    family.Born Sept.

    23, 1923, inIndianapolis, he was theson of Randolph J. and

    Luna Reed Smith, both ofwhom preceded him indeath. On Nov. 2, 1946, inSeymour, he married EthelG. Albertson, who precededhim in death Jan. 5, 2002.On Nov. 27, 2003, inSeymour, he married IreneHill, who also precededhim in death.

    Smitty was a member ofThe Point (formerly FirstChurch of the Nazarene).He was a U.S. Army veteranof World War II. He workedat Cummins Engine Co.when he was younger.He then started SmittysGulf Service in 1956,which he ran until 1963.In 1963, he started SmittysTransmission Service, whichhe owned and operated untilhis retirement. He was the

    maintenance supervisor forthe Seymour WastewaterTreatment Plant. He was amember of SeymourCountry Club, where heenjoyed golfing everychance he got, and he was amember of Hoosier Hackerstraveling golf league. Heenjoyed hunting and fishingin his spare time.

    Survivors include his chil-dren, Randolph Randy(Mary) Smith III, Patty(Michael) Cockerham,Sherry (Junior) Dowling,Cindy (James) Campbell,Rhonda (Jerry) Sutherland

    and Thomas (Peggy) Hill;10 grandchildren, RandolphJ. (Kelly) Smith IV, AdamW. (Trish Surfus) Smith,Chad M. (Renae)

    Cockerham, Bryan B.J.(Amy) Cockerham, DustinL. (Mary) Dowling, ShawnE. Israel, Chad (Amy)Sutherland, Matt (Tara)Sutherland, Thomas(Angela) Hill and KelseyHill; several great-grand-children; two brothers,Robert L. Smith andEdward Wayne Smith; sis-ter, Dorothy Storey; andseveral nieces and nephews.

    Besides his parents andwives, he was preceded indeath by a granddaughter;grandson; three brothers,Ernest Smith, Farrell RaySmith and Orville Scott;and four sisters, ErmaSmith Sutton, HelenJohnson Maxwell, LelaJohnson Scott Curry andMargaret Smith Marling.

    The funeral service willbe at 1 p.m. today at VossChapel in Seymour with Dr.Garrett Mills and the Rev.Steve Greene officiating.Burial will be at RiverviewCemetery with full militarygraveside rites conductedby Veterans of ForeignWars Post 1925, AmericanLegion Post 89, DisabledVeterans 47 and Koreanand Vietnam Veterans, allof Seymour.

    Visitation will be fromnoon until time of servicetoday at the funeral home.

    Memorials may be made

    to The Point or donorschoice of charity.

    Online condolences maybe made at vossfuneralservice.com.

    Seymour

    Randolph John SmittySmith, 91

    North Vernon

    William P. Billy Byron, 79Elsewhere

    Phyllis Jean Lee, 71Suzanne Zarick Mosbey, 50

    SMITH

    MOSBEY

    4-H ROYALTY ANNOUNCED

    SUBMITTED PHOTO

    Candidates for 4-H Royalty are, seated from left, Derrick Maxie, son of Linda Begley and Dennis Maxie; Matthew Stuck-wisch, son of Ed and Sara Stuckwisch; and Ryland Nierman, son of Brian and Amy Nierman; and standing from left, Chel-sea Reynolds, daughter of Marty and Lori Reynolds; Kayla Schneider, daughter of James and Kim Schneider; Kaitlin King,daughter of Julie King; and Sophie Kreis, daughter of Heidi Wintin.

    TRIBUNESPORTSFollow your favorite

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    The Associated Press

    FORT WAYNE

    Thousands of motor-driv-en cycles, the vast majoritymopeds and scooters, havebeen registered with theIndiana Bureau of MotorVehicles since a new lawwent into effect in Januarythat placed more stringentrequirements on riders oftwo-wheel vehicles.

    Until now, no one knewhow many of these unitswere actually on Indianaroads. Lawmakers put inplace the new requirementsso police can better enforcesafety laws while also track-ing accidents and injuries.

    More than 17,000 twowheel vehicles were regis-tered with the BMVthrough the end of June.

    Fort Wayne police Lt.Tony Maze said manyyounger teens were previ-ously operating mopeds and

    scooters with little experi-ence or even basic under-standing of traffic laws.

    Now anyone operating amoped has to be at least15 years old and it has to be

    registered with the BMV. Thedriver also has to receive anendorsement by taking a25-question test focusingmostly on signs and signals.

    The law does not requireinsurance, though ridersyounger than 18 must wear ahelmet. Passengers are alsoprohibited and the maxi-mum legal speed is 35 mph.

    Maze said scooters andmopeds are often on thelosing end of traffic acci-dents because of theirsmall size and weight.

    They are definitely a lit-tle more vulnerable tobeing pushed or thrown,

    he said. You get clippedby something, and youdont have the stability ofa heavier bike.

    Thousands of mopedsnow registered at BMV

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    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2015B4 SPORTS

    Tue-Fri Noon-5;

    Sat 11-32001 N Ewing St,

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    Ingredients

    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Mix ingredients in a cocktail shaker with

    ice. Strain into a shot glass rimmed with

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    Directions

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    1 oz. Baileys Irish Cream Liqueur

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    I thought the first part ofthe second half we came outreally strong, Jones said.We did get the own goal, butit was because (MatthewPyle) hit that cross inside thebox. We ground it out fromthere. They fought hard andheld on. We will take goals

    any way we can take them.Tensions were high from

    then on as the TwistersAaron Huber and the OwlsEthan Greene were bothissued yellow cards on sepa-rate occasions.

    Throughout the game, therewere multiple collisions thatwent without whistles.

    I think our guys can playdifferent types of games,whether its physical or agame that they call a lot offouls in it, Jones said.

    The kids worked reallyhard over the summer in theweight room, and they can

    play however they need tofor wins.

    The Twisters StuartLamping notched his teamslone goal on the game nearthe 11-minute mark aftersquaring a shot in a sea ofbodies off a corner kick.

    While the Twisters fired offmultiple shots in the finalminutes, they couldnt mustera score.

    The Owls out-shot theTwisters 15-9 in the game.

    In goal, the Owls ElliottClark recorded three saves.

    With the win, the Owls (7-3,1-2 Hoosier Hills Conference)

    are riding a three-game win-ning streak heading intoTuesdays HHC matchup atFloyd Central.

    Twisters beat girlsIn a back-and-forth affair,

    the Twisters girls squadbested the Owls 3-2 in theearly game at C.B. HessMemorial Field.

    The Owls struck first whenMaria Cerda finished shot offa Kayla Griffin assist in theopening around 14 minutesinto play.

    At 21:49, the Twistersanswered when Haleigh

    Reed slid a shot past Owlsgoalkeeper Rachel Collett ona counter-attack.

    With 11:25 left before half-time, the Twisters ElizabethSchulte capitalized on a pen-alty kick to give her team the2-1 lead.

    Unwavering, the OwlsMarie Lenart was able toscore off a lead pass fromAndrea Ferrer with 32:38 leftto tie the game at 2-2 follow-ing intermission.

    Reed scored her secondgoal of the game with afloater from 18 yards at the31:55 mark.

    There were little lapses inour intensity after wescored, Owls coach Greg

    Musser said.Five minutes after we

    scored the first goal, they hada goal. Two minutes after oursecond goal, they scored. Itssomething to learn from. Weneed to have an attackingmindset after scoring.

    Neither team found theback of the net the rest ofthe way.

    Collett finished with 14saves in goal and the Twistersoutshot the Owls 17-13.

    Musser said his team isgetting better at puttingtogether strings of passes inthe midfield.

    Weve been doing a greatjob possessing the ball in themiddle, Musser said.Theyre doing what we ask,weve been trying to becomea possession team. Were see-ing that more and more inevery game.

    With their tallies on theday, Lenart has amassed 10goals on the season andCerda has notched six scores.

    Their speed and aggres-siveness gets them somegoals by default, Mussersaid. Were finally gettingthe ball into the midfield, andits not just a one-man effort.

    Now were getting the ballslotted in to them, and itsnice to see. Theyre a toughduo to handle.

    Following the loss, theOwls move to 3-5-1 withFloyd Central coming totown Tuesday.

    We kind of had a toughweek with games on Tuesdayand Thursday, and webounced back hard onThursday but unfortunatelydidnt come up on the win-ning end, Musser said. Ithought the girls came outagainst a very strong oppo-nent and controlled a majori-

    ty of the game.We were winning a majori-

    ty of the 50-50 balls in themiddle which was nice. Wehad some unlucky bouncesand an unlucky (penaltykick). Its just the way ofthe game.

    Owls(CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1)

    Pictured clockwise from top: SeymoursKyle Jones heads a loose ball to a team-mate during Saturdays home gameagainst Oldenburg Academy.//The OwlsMaria Cerda dribbles past an OldenburgAcademy defender during the girls match.//Seymours Griffin Sciarra, right, stealsthe ball from a Oldenburg Academydefender.//Seymours Carmen Smithpasses the ball past an OldenburgAcademy midfielder.//See more photos

    at tribtown.com.JORDAN MOREY | THE TRIBUNE

    The Associated Press

    RICHMOND, Va.

    Joe Gibbs Racingcemented itself as theteam to beat for NASCARs

    championships with a dom-inating run Saturday nightthat ended in

    Matt Kenseths fourth winof the season.

    The win put Kenseth ina tie with teammate KyleBusch and six-time cham-pion Jimmie Johnson for

    the top seeds in the Chasefor the Sprint Cup champi-onship. The 10-race playoff

    series begins next Sundayat Chicagoland.

    Kenseth has won three ofthe last six races, and JoeGibbs Racing has won eightof the last 11.

    Certainly right now as acompany were on a roll,Kenseth said.

    Kenseth earns Sprint Cup victory

    COLLEGE FOOTBALL

    ROUNDUPIndiana 36FIU 22BLOOMINGTON

    Indiana quarterbackNate Sudfeld ran for twoscores, threw for anoth-er and watched as JameelCook Jr. sprinted 96 yardsfor a touchdown to seal

    Saturdays win against FIU.

    Purdue 38Indiana State 14WEST LAFAYETTE

    Austin Appleby threwfour touchdown passesSaturday, including three of50 yards or more during thefirst half, leading Purdue tovictory against FCS oppo-nent Indiana State.

    No. 9 Notre Dame 34Virginia 27CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.

    Backup quarterbackDeShone Kizer threw a40-yard touchdown pass toWill Fuller with 12 secondsremaining as No. 9 NotreDame beat Virginia.

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    THE TRIBUNE, JACKSON COUNTY, IND.MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2015A4 LOCAL

    Text us for information on:

    Specials, Events, & Updates

    Autumn Spiced Cider

    2 cups apple cider1/2 cup orange juice1/4 cup peach schnapps or vodka1/4 cup triple sec (or other orange-flavored liqueur)1 pinch ground cinnamon1 pinch ground nutmeg

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    into a saucepan. Bring to a simmer overmedium-high heat, then reduce heat to low,and cook for 10 minutes. Or, place ingredientsin slow cooker and heat on high until hot.Serve in mugs.

    Hildreths Liquor Mart

    Ingredients

    Directions

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    e Tribunewill have a series of pages throughout the month of October,dedicated to Cancer Awareness. All types of cancer have had a tremendous

    impact on families throughout our communities. We would like to honorboth those who have lost a battle to cancer, as well as those who are survivors.You may submit a photo if desired, along with the form below. We will featureeach submitted name in one of the three sections (depending on whenthey are received), that will be published on Fridays, October 9, 16, 23and 30. Entries may be submitted free of charge and may be emailed,mailed, or dropped off at the Tribune offi ce. e entry will bepublished on the next available Friday during the program. Finalentries must be received in e Tribune offi ce no later than Wednesday,October 23, to be guaranteed placement in the paper before the program ends.

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    BYSEANNAADCOXANDJEFFREYCOLLINSTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    COLUMBIA, S.C.

    A dangerous rainstormdrenching the East Coastbrought more misery

    Sunday to South Carolina cutting power to thou-sands, forcing hundreds ofwater rescues and closingscores of roads because offloodwaters.

    Emergency manage-ment officials sent a state-wide alert telling people tostay off roads and remainindoors unless their homeswere in danger of flood-ing. Interstate highwayswere closed by flooding

    including a 75-mile stretchof I-95 in the eastern partof the state that is a keyroute connecting Miami toWashington, D.C. and NewYork.

    This is different thana hurricane because it iswater, it is slow movingand it is sitting, We cant

    just move the water out,Gov. Nikki Haley said ina news conference at theheadquarters of the StateEmergency ManagementDivision.

    Nearly 30,000 customerswere without power.

    The region around thestate capital of Columbiawas hit the hardest Sunday,with the citys police

    department tweeting: Toomany roads to name thatare flooded. Please heedour warning! DO NOT ven-ture out!

    Local officials said 100people had been rescued bymidmorning from vehiclesafter trying to cross flood-ed roads, while state offi-cials reported a total of 200swift-water rescues aroundthe state. Columbia policesaid another 200 rescuecalls were pending as ofmidmorning.

    One of the hardest hitareas in Columbia wasnear Gills Creek, wherea weather station record-ed more than 18 inches ofrain, nearly all of it in 24

    hours. The creek was 10feet above flood stage, spill-ing floodwaters that almostreached the stoplights at afour-lane intersection.

    Hundreds of business-es, homes and apartmentsflooded, and dozens of

    boats fanned out to rescuetrapped people.

    Vladimir Gorrin said heled his 57-year-old auntthrough floodwaters about7 feet deep surroundingher apartment near GillsCreek. He said his aunt,Wanda Laboy, waited sev-eral hours after calling 911,so family came to help.

    Shes very distressedright now, said Gorrin, 38.She lost everything.

    Dangerous East Coast storm brings misery

    Dozens rescued; thousands without power in South Carolina

    BYBENFOX

    ANDJASONDEARENTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    NASSAU, Bahamas

    Rescuers spottedfloating debris and anoil sheen Sunday asU.S. crews continued anintensive search off thesoutheastern Bahamasfor a U.S. cargo shipwith 33 people on board.The company that ownsthe ship said a con-tainer that appears tobelong to the vessel hadbeen found as well.

    The ship, the 790-foot

    El Faro, has not beenheard from since it lostpower and was tak-ing on water in fierceseas churned up byHurricane Joaquin.

    By early Sundayafternoon, the U.S.Coast Guard said itsaircrews spotted life

    jackets, life rings, con-tainers and an oilsheen in the sprawl-ing search area butthey have not yet beenable to confirm wheth-er the debris and oil isfrom the El Faro. On

    Saturday, the CoastGuard said it locatedan orange life ring fromthe cargo ship thatemitted a distress pingThursday, but then wentsilent.

    The missing vesselsowner, TOTE MaritimePuerto Rico, said a con-tracted tugboat andanother of its ships hadfound a container that

    appears to be from the

    El Faro. But therehas been no sighting ofthe El Faro or any lifeboats, company presi-dent Tim Nolan said ina statement.

    U.S. Navy and AirForce planes and heli-copters were help-ing Coast Guardcrews looking for theship across a broadexpanse of the AtlanticOcean around CrookedIsland, which the ElFaro was passing asthe storm turned intoa powerful Category 4

    hurricane.An Air Force base

    in south Mississippisaid two planes withHurricane Hunter aircrews that had flowninto Hurricane Joaquinwere also called onto participate in thesearch for the cargoship.

    Maj. Marnee Lasurdotold the Sun Herald ofBiloxi that the two C-130crews were studyingthe storm on Thursdaywhen the Coast Guardasked their help. She

    said the crews searchednear the Bahamas onThursday and Fridayfor the El Faro.

    TOTE MaritimePuerto Rico told fami-ly members of the crewgathered at a union hallin Jacksonville, Floridanot to be discouragedafter news of the lifering found Saturdaywas circulated.

    Debris spotted as crews lookfor ship lost near Bahamas

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    George Myers with the city of Isle of Palms directs equipment to c lear a road after heavy rains fell Sunday on the I sle of Palms, S.C. TheSouth Carolina coast is getting hammered with historic rains along with an unusual lunar high tide causing flooding all over the state.