the news sun – october 21, 2013

14
Index Classifieds................................. B6-B7 Life..................................................... A5 Obituaries......................................... A4 Opinion ............................................. B4 Sports......................................... B1-B3 Weather............................................ A6 TV/Comics ....................................... B5 The News Sun P.O. Box 39, 102 N. Main St. Kendallville, IN 46755 Telephone: (260) 347-0400 Fax: (260) 347-2693 Classifieds: (toll free) (877) 791-7877 Circulation: (260) 347-0400 or (800) 717-4679 Info Vol. 104 No. 290 GOOD MORNING PRO FOOTBALL Get the latest news on your favorite team kpcnews.com Sports > Pro Football NFL Bears lose Cutler, fall to Washington Page B1 Fall Fest Scarecrow contest winners named Page A2 Weather Partly cloudy skies with a 30 percent chance of rain. A high of 56 and an overnight low of 34. Page A6 MONDAY October 21, 2013 Memorial Victim of accident remembered Page A6 Kendallville, Indiana Serving Noble & LaGrange Counties kpcnews.com 75 cents “Life,” a 24,000-piece jigsaw puzzle, hangs in the basement of Steve Briskey of rural Angola, left. Briskey spent more than three years assembling “Life” with the help of family and friends, becoming the first in the state to complete the puzzle. AMY OBERLIN BY AMY OBERLIN [email protected] ANGOLA — Piece by piece — like any long-term labor of love — the world’s largest puzzle went together. It was assembled in the basement of a rural Angola home by Steve Briskey and occasional assistants. More than 14 feet long, the 24,000-piece creation took three years and four months to complete — a total of 819.45 hours. Briskey kept track of everything, from the moment he opened the box and mixed together four separate bags of 8,000 pieces each. The bags held the four quadrants of the puzzle, and Briskey decided he wanted to combine them for difficulty. A jigsaw aficionado, he found out about the Guinness World Record puzzle when he read an article in a newspaper on Dave Landwehr of Ottoville, Ohio, the first person in his state to complete it in January 2008. “I wanted to be the first in Indiana,” said Briskey. He achieved his goal, and has logged his success at worldslargestpuzzle. com on the Hall of Fame blog. A California family was the first to put it together in 2007 and the first individual to complete the puzzle was a woman from Belgium. Briskey has videos and photographs of the progression of the puzzle, which was assembled in his family’s basement. He used saw horses, foam board and a 16-foot table to first sort, then begin piecing together the puzzle. “When I had a chance, I was down here working,” said Briskey, scanning a basement where he now envisions a bar, widescreen TV Angola man first in state to assemble largest puzzle NEIGHBORS STEUBEN COUNTY Video at kpcnews.com Steve Briskey’s son Kyler kept a video log during the more than three-year process of building the world’s largest puzzle. See excerpts in an online video at kpcnews.com. Scan the QR code to watch it on your tablet or smartphone. SEE PUZZLE, PAGE A6 Putting it all together JOHN MOHRE Band advances to semistate East Noble High School’s marching band performs in a regional contest Saturday at Lafayette Jefferson High School. East Noble placed among the top 10 bands in Class B, qualifying for the semistate competition next Saturday at Pike High School in northwest Indianapolis. WASHINGTON (AP) — “Obamacare” escaped unharmed from the government shutdown Republicans hoped would stop it, but just as quickly they have opened a new line of attack — one handed to them by the administra- tion itself. While Congress was arguing, President Barack Obama’s plan to expand coverage for the uninsured suffered a self-inflicted wound. A computer system seemingly designed by gremlins gummed up the first open enrollment season. After nearly three weeks, it’s still not fixed. Republicans hope to ride that and other defects they see in the law into the 2014 congres- sional elections. Four Democratic senators are facing re-election for the first time since they voted for the Affordable Care Act, and their defeat is critical to GOP aspira- tions for a Senate majority. Democrats say that’s just more wishful thinking, if not obsession. Although Obama’s law remains divisive, only 29 percent of the public favors its complete repeal, according to a recent Gallup poll. The business-oriented wing of the Republican party wants to move on to other issues. Americans may be growing weary of the health care fight. “This is the law of the land at this point,” said Michael Weaver, a self-employed photographer from rural southern Illinois who’s been uninsured for about a year. “We need to stop the arguing and move forward to make it work.” It took him about a week and half, but Weaver kept going back to the healthcare.gov website until he was able to open an account and apply for a tax credit that will reduce his premiums. He’s not completely finished because he hasn’t selected an insurance plan, but he’s been able to browse options. It beats providing page after page of personal health informa- tion to insurance companies, Weaver said. Under the new law, insurers have to accept people with health problems. Weaver is in his mid-50s, with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, but otherwise in good health. He says those common conditions made it hard for him to get coverage before. GOP: It’s not over Republicans making Obamacare their next target SEE GOP, PAGE A6 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A pair of reports released last week highlighted different angles of the continuing troubles faced by Indiana’s working poor and raised questions about who ends up paying for their safety net. The Kaiser Family Foundation found that 182,000 residents fall into a health insurance coverage “gap” because the state has not expanded Medicaid coverage and a jobs study from the University of California, Berkeley found almost half of Indiana’s fast food workers are also receiving public assistance. The two reports provided sobering details as the state continues to struggle to pull out of the recession — the unemployment rate has hovered above 8 percent for more than a year now while the median income has declined over the past decade. It also helped shine some light on why the state’s leaders have been so heartily focused on improving job training programs statewide. “It’s not a good state to be poor, or out of work, or uninsured,” said Morton Marcus, a veteran Indiana economist and former professor at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. Putting the health care gap in context: there are 182,000 adults earning between roughly $2,700 and $11,500 a year who will not receive federal health insurance. That excludes poor residents with children and Indiana’s elderly, who receive Medicare. The Kaiser report found that Indiana’s numbers are not out of step with other states which have not expanded Medicaid under the federal health care law, but also noted that in the states which did approve an expansion, there is no insurance gap. That shortfall could be temporary here, however. Republican Gov. Mike Pence, long a vocal critic of traditional Medicaid, has said he would like to see the state expand the Healthy Indiana Plan to cover residents earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, of roughly $15,400. State’s working poor highlighted in studies DENNIS NARTKER Chili cookoff winners Winners in the fifth annual Rome City Chamber of Commerce chili cookoff held Saturday at the Gene Stratton-Porter State Historic Site are, from left: Dave Abbott, best traditional; Martin Fletcher, people’s choice; and Brian Mervau, best non-traditional. Each received a wood carving board. There were 12 entries. Judges were April Wolschleger, Greg Todd, Charley Fisher, Lance Harmon and Robert Bir. Abbott, the defending champion, said V8 tomato juice is one of his favorite chili ingredients. WASHINGTON (AP) — Sixteen days in October could change everything, or not much at all. Will the partial government shutdown prove to be the turning point after three years of partisan skirmishing in Washington? Or was it just a halftime show to fire up the players? With federal employees back at work for now, lawmakers are getting a chance to find a compro- mise on spending cuts and settle their vast differences. If they fail, they risk a repeat shutdown in mid-January, followed a few weeks later by the recurring danger of the government defaulting on its debts. A look at where things stand after the shutdown: The players • President Barack Obama won a round by refusing to back down. The public didn’t applaud his handling of the crisis, but scored congressional Republicans even lower. Obama’s overall approval rating held steady, and so did the nation’s divided opinion of his health care law. He strengthened his hand for next time. • House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, conceded a loss for his party. But personally he came out OK. Boehner placated his boisterous tea party-backed members by letting them take a doomed stand against the health law, then got credit for finally allowing the shutdown to end on Shutdown is over; now what’s next SEE SHUTDOWN, PAGE A6

Upload: kpc-media-group

Post on 23-Mar-2016

232 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

The News Sun is the daily newspaper serving Noble and LaGrange counties in northeast Indiana.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

Index•

Classifi eds ................................. B6-B7Life ..................................................... A5Obituaries ......................................... A4Opinion .............................................B4Sports......................................... B1-B3Weather............................................ A6TV/Comics .......................................B5

The News SunP.O. Box 39, 102 N. Main St.

Kendallville, IN 46755 Telephone: (260) 347-0400

Fax: (260) 347-2693Classifi eds: (toll free) (877) 791-7877

Circulation: (260) 347-0400or (800) 717-4679

Info•

Vol. 104 No. 290

GOOD MORNING

PRO FOOTBALL

Get the latest news on your favorite team

kpcnews.com Sports > Pro Football

NFL Bears lose Cutler, fall to WashingtonPage B1

Fall FestScarecrow contest

winners named Page A2

Weather Partly cloudy skies with a 30 percent

chance of rain. A high of 56 and an overnight low of 34.

Page A6

MONDAYOctober 21, 2013

MemorialVictim of

accident remembered Page A6

Kendallville, Indiana Serving Noble & LaGrange Counties kpcnews.com 75 cents

“Life,” a 24,000-piece jigsaw puzzle, hangs in the basement of Steve Briskey of rural Angola, left. Briskey spent more than three years assembling

“Life” with the help of family and friends, becoming the fi rst in the state to complete the puzzle.

AMY OBERLIN

BY AMY [email protected]

ANGOLA — Piece by piece — like any long-term labor of love — the world’s largest puzzle went together.

It was assembled in the basement of a rural Angola home by Steve Briskey and occasional assistants. More than 14 feet long, the 24,000-piece creation took three years and four months to complete — a total of 819.45 hours.

Briskey kept track of everything, from the moment he opened the box and mixed together four separate bags of 8,000 pieces each. The bags held the four quadrants of the puzzle, and Briskey decided he wanted to combine them for diffi culty.

A jigsaw afi cionado, he found out about the Guinness World Record puzzle when he read an

article in a newspaper on Dave Landwehr of Ottoville, Ohio, the fi rst person in his state to complete it in January 2008.

“I wanted to be the fi rst in Indiana,” said Briskey. He achieved his goal, and has logged his success at worldslargestpuzzle.com on the Hall of Fame blog.

A California family was the fi rst to put it together in 2007 and the fi rst individual to complete the puzzle was a woman from Belgium.

Briskey has videos and photographs of the progression of the puzzle, which was assembled

in his family’s basement. He used saw horses, foam board and a 16-foot table to fi rst sort, then begin piecing together the puzzle.

“When I had a chance, I was down here working,” said Briskey, scanning a basement where he now envisions a bar, widescreen TV

Angola man fi rst in state to assemble largest puzzle

NEIGHBORSS T E U B E N C O U N T Y

Video at kpcnews.comSteve Briskey’s son Kyler kept a video log during the more than three-year process of building the world’s largest

puzzle. See excerpts in an online video at kpcnews.com. Scan the QR code to watch it on your tablet or smartphone.

SEE PUZZLE, PAGE A6

Putting it all together

JOHN MOHRE

Band advances to semistateEast Noble High School’s marching band performs in a regional contest Saturday at Lafayette Jefferson High School. East Noble placed among the top

10 bands in Class B, qualifying for the semistate competition next Saturday at Pike High School in northwest Indianapolis.

WASHINGTON (AP) — “Obamacare” escaped unharmed from the government shutdown Republicans hoped would stop it, but just as quickly they have opened a new line of attack — one handed to them by the administra-tion itself.

While Congress was arguing, President Barack Obama’s plan to expand coverage for the uninsured suffered a self-infl icted wound. A computer system seemingly designed by gremlins gummed up the fi rst open enrollment season. After nearly three weeks, it’s still not fi xed.

Republicans hope to ride that and other defects they see in the law into the 2014 congres-sional elections. Four Democratic senators are facing re-election for the fi rst time since they voted for the Affordable Care Act, and their defeat is critical to GOP aspira-tions for a Senate majority.

Democrats say that’s just more wishful thinking, if not obsession.

Although Obama’s law remains divisive, only 29 percent of the public favors its complete repeal, according to a recent Gallup poll. The business-oriented wing of the Republican party wants to move on to other issues. Americans may be growing weary of the health care fi ght.

“This is the law of the land at this point,” said Michael Weaver, a self-employed photographer from rural southern Illinois who’s been uninsured for about a year. “We need to stop the arguing and move forward to make it work.”

It took him about a week and half, but Weaver kept going back to the healthcare.gov website until he was able to open an account and apply for a tax credit that will reduce his premiums. He’s not completely fi nished because he hasn’t selected an insurance plan, but he’s been able to browse options.

It beats providing page after page of personal health informa-tion to insurance companies, Weaver said.

Under the new law, insurers have to accept people with health problems. Weaver is in his mid-50s, with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, but otherwise in good health. He says those common conditions made it hard for him to get coverage before.

GOP:It’s notoverRepublicans making Obamacare their next target

SEE GOP, PAGE A6

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A pair of reports released last week highlighted different angles of the continuing troubles faced by Indiana’s working poor and raised questions about who ends up paying for their safety net.

The Kaiser Family Foundation found that 182,000 residents fall into a health insurance coverage “gap” because the state has not expanded Medicaid coverage and a jobs study from the University of California, Berkeley found almost half of Indiana’s fast food workers are also receiving public assistance.

The two reports provided sobering details as the state continues to struggle to pull out of the recession — the unemployment rate has hovered above 8 percent for more than a year now while the median income has declined over the past decade. It also helped shine some light on why the state’s leaders have been so heartily focused on improving job training programs statewide.

“It’s not a good state to be poor, or out of work, or uninsured,” said Morton Marcus, a veteran Indiana economist and former professor at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business.

Putting the health care gap in context: there are 182,000 adults earning between roughly $2,700 and $11,500 a year who will not receive federal health insurance. That excludes poor residents with children and Indiana’s elderly, who receive Medicare. The Kaiser report found that Indiana’s numbers are not out of step with other states which have not expanded Medicaid under the federal health care law, but also noted that in the states which did approve an expansion, there is no insurance gap.

That shortfall could be temporary here, however. Republican Gov. Mike Pence, long a vocal critic of traditional Medicaid, has said he would like to see the state expand the Healthy Indiana Plan to cover residents earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, of roughly $15,400.

State’s working poor highlighted in studies

DENNIS NARTKER

Chili cookoff winnersWinners in the fi fth annual Rome City Chamber of Commerce chili cookoff held Saturday at the Gene Stratton-Porter State Historic Site are, from left: Dave Abbott, best traditional; Martin Fletcher, people’s choice; and Brian Mervau, best non-traditional. Each received a wood carving board. There were 12 entries. Judges were April Wolschleger, Greg Todd, Charley Fisher, Lance Harmon and Robert Bir. Abbott, the defending champion, said V8 tomato juice is one of his favorite chili ingredients.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sixteen days in October could change everything, or not much at all.

Will the partial government shutdown prove to be the turning point after three years of partisan skirmishing in Washington? Or was it just a halftime show to fi re up the players?

With federal employees back at work for now, lawmakers are getting a chance to fi nd a compro-mise on spending cuts and settle their vast differences. If they fail, they risk a repeat shutdown in mid-January, followed a few weeks later by the recurring danger of the government defaulting on its debts.

A look at where things stand after the shutdown:

The players

• President Barack Obama won a round by refusing to back down. The public didn’t applaud his handling of the crisis, but scored congressional Republicans even lower. Obama’s overall approval rating held steady, and so did the nation’s divided opinion of his health care law. He strengthened his hand for next time.

• House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, conceded a loss for his party. But personally he came out OK. Boehner placated his boisterous tea party-backed members by letting them take a doomed stand against the health law, then got credit for fi nally allowing the shutdown to end on

Shutdown is over; now what’s next

SEE SHUTDOWN, PAGE A6

Page 2: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

BY BOB [email protected]

SUMMIT LAKE — Noble County’s littlest “library” is now open, and it’s part of a nationwide movement.

The Little Free Library is open at 1729 S. C.R. 500E, just north of Summit Lake. Its steward is Sharon McDowell, who lives there.

“It’s a book exchange,” McDowell said. “It’s to promote literacy.”

The idea didn’t originate with McDowell. She quite literally came upon it during a trip to Wisconsin to visit her daughter.

McDowell and her daughter were walking the daughter’s dog when they saw a box on a post, shaped like a little, red, one-room schoolhouse. In it were books and a sign saying, “Little Free Library,” McDowell said.

McDowell learned there are Little Free Libraries all over Wisconsin. Checking online, she learned they are part of a nationwide movement that now has thousands of locations. “It started in Wisconsin,” she added.

Since McDowell always had loved books and wanted to work with a library, and since the closest library to her home in Green Township is eight miles away, she decided to open a Little Free Library at the entrance to her driveway.

Hers is the fi rst Little Free Library in Noble, DeKalb, LaGrange or Steuben counties. The closest are in Fort Wayne and Leesburg, according to the Little Free Libraries map on the group’s website.

Little Free Libraries come in a variety of shapes and sizes, from simple boxes to more elaborate shapes. Images on a Little Free Library brochure show libraries in the shape of decorated barns, London phone booths and even a robot.

McDowell chose a Wizard of Oz theme for her library.

“I collect Wizard of Oz memorabilia,” she said, adding, “I wanted to make

it fun.”The library box is the

Gale House, just after Dorothy Gale and Toto have landed on the Wicked Witch of the East in the classic fi lm adaptation of L. Frank Baum’s book. The witch’s feet, still wearing the ruby slippers, stick out from beneath the house.

The sides of the library have been decorated with images from the Yellow Brick Road in the fi lm. The front glass shows Dorothy and her traveling compan-ions on the same road. A motto around the glass reads, “Follow the Yellow Brick Road to Literacy.”

People can come to either add or take books, McDowell said. It’s all free. A label on each book

reads, “Always a gift, never for sale.”

McDowell opened her library in September. Even in its remote location, 12 people have signed the guest book, with two people from Wolcottville having driven the farthest to it as of Thursday.

Children’s books are moving faster than others, McDowell said. At least one family with children has found the library and is both bringing books to and getting books from it.

Little Free Library provides its stewards with a variety of supporting materials, McDowell said. Among them are the labels, brochures and other tips to help make the library a success and get books into the hands of readers who want them.

McDowell said she’s glad to share her love of books with others, and glad to have the fi rst Little Free Library in the area.

“I’m having fun with it,” she said.

The McDowells’ driveway is shared with the King family next door. It can be used to turn around. Sharon McDowell recommends caution exiting the driveway, since vehicles can come over the hill to the north as patrons exit.

To learn more about the Little Free Library program, go to littlefreeli-brary.org

THE NEWS SUNTHE 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.

DELIVERY SERVICE — MISSED/DAMAGED

NEWSPAPERS If your newspaper was damaged or had not been delivered by 6:00 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7 a.m.

Saturday and Sunday, call customer service by 10 a.m. and we will ensure

a replacement copy is delivered to you.

CIRCULATION CUSTOMER SERVICE TELEPHONE HOURS

(260)347-0400 or 1-800-717-4679Monday through Friday 6 a.m.-

5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 7 a.m.-10 a.m.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES — Motor and Foot Routes

Delivery Type: 7-DAY FRI./SAT./SUN.

Monthly: $15.40 $8.003 Months: $46.20 $22.506 Months: $89.00 $44.001 Year: $169.00 $85.00

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Out of Four-County Area

Delivery Type: 7-DAY

Monthly: $18.00 3 Months: $54.00 6 Months: $108.00 1 Year: $216.00

Published by KPC Media Group Inc. at 102 N. Main St.

Kendallville, IN 46755.Published every day except

New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day, day after Thanks-

giving and Christmas Day.Periodical postage paid at Kendallville, IN 46755.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:

THE NEWS SUNP.O. Box 39 Kendallville, IN 46755

A2 THE NEWS SUN kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

PHOTOS BY BOB BUTTGEN

Ligonier Fall FestPumpkin pie and friendly scarecrows were the order of the day for the annual Fall Festival, held Friday in downtown Ligonier. The scarecrow contest attracted several entries including this fi rst-place winner, on the left, which greatly resembles local attorney Tom Wigent. It was created and placed in front of his offi ce by his family. Second-place in the contest went to a scarecrow made in the likeness of Dr. Robert Stone. The festival was sponsored by the Future Ligonier Alliance (FLA), whose members were kept busy serving up pumpkin pie and coffee. In the photo below, FLA member Betty Peterson, left, is shown cutting a piece of pie for Cindy Furkis.

Scarecrow contest winners named

Every October, at least once usually on a day when the bright blue sky of the fall season is masked by clouds, I read about the

chemical changes occurring then in tree leaves. These are the changes that result in the colors of fall. The changes involve the loss, the breakdown of chloro-phyl, the green color of spring and

summer, and that exposes chemicals called carotenoids, which have the yellow and orange and brown pigments of fall. At the same time, other chemicals are being formed, chemicals called anthocya-nins, and those produce the red and purple pigments of fall.

When I was very young, I was told that Jack Frost spread the colors of fall, painting leaves red and yellow and orange on frosty nights. That didn’t seem right to me even when I was very young, because some of the leaves always changed color before there was any frost, before I waked in the morning and saw frost on my bedroom window.

Decreasing length of day, autumn’s changing colors, falling leaves speckling the ground with red and yellow and brown, the fl owers of Queen Anne’s lace turning brown and curling up into shapes like bird nests, and goldenrod blossoms losing their gold and turning to brown are all signs of fall. Farmers harvesting their

corn and soybeans leaving fi elds of stubble, all these things are a backdrop for things that interest me more, the activities of birds.

There is no precise time when bird activities we associate with summer change to activities of fall. Shorebirds that nest farther north, in the tundra, sandpipers and dowitchers and yellowlegs, fi nish nesting and begin migrating south while robins and mourning doves, goldfi nches and catbirds and many other of our resident songbirds are still feeding nestlings or fl edglings.

The fi rst conspicuous bird activity indicating a change from summer to fall bird, other than an occasional fl ock of shore birds, is starlings and male red-winged blackbirds gathering in fl ocks. During the day, these fl ocks drift about the countryside, landing in fi elds and feeding.

The starlings feed on insects and seeds on the ground, the redwings often go to fi elds of corn where they feed on the ears and make themselves unpopular with the farmers. At dusk, fl ocks of each join together in communal roosts.

Robins disappear from lawns as tree leaves begin to change color. They, too, gather in fl ocks, but instead of going to fi elds to feed, they go to woodlots and forests where they scavenge for fruits and insects. Then one day, I realize I haven’t seen a fl ock of red-winged blackbirds during the day for several days, and I recognize that fall migration is no longer just an occasional fl ock of shore birds from farther north passing through.

This then is the time to get outdoors, to visit woods and look for fall warblers. It’s the time to go to lakes and look for fl ocks of ducks. On days when the weather

is cold and wintry, it’s the time to drive slowly on country roads hoping to see a fl ock of snow buntings or Lapland longspurs.

I once saw a fl ock of common redpolls in the grass along the edge of a road. I looked carefully at each bird in the fl ock as I always do when I see redpolls, hoping to spot a hoary redpoll, a bird I had never seen then and still haven’t.

I don’t have to go outdoors to look for fall migrants or winter arrivals. I looked away from my computer screen and out the window at the bird feeder beyond one morning recently, and a red-breasted nuthatch landed on the feeder. White-breasted nuthatches visit that feeder year-round, but a red-breasted is a winter visitor.

Does this one in October indicate winter weather is on the way?

Fall color signals changes for birds

OUTDOOR NOTES

Neil Case

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

“This then is the time to get outdoors, to visit woods and look for fall warblers.

It’s the time to go to lakes and look for fl ocks of ducks.”

Little Free Library open for exchanges

BOB BRALEY

Sharon McDowell has opened the Little Free Library, a book exchange, at her property at 1729 S. C.R. 500E, just north of Summit Lake in Noble County.

FRANKLIN (AP) — Students with special needs who have attended four years of high school can move on to college with their peers through a new program at Franklin College.

The program that starts in January is a partnership between the college and Special Services Johnson County. The Daily Journal reported it will allow up to a dozen students in special education classes to take one college course a semester for

one to two years and work in the community.

The program is expected to fi ll a key gap for students with special needs who might never receive a high school diploma. Indiana law allows such students to continue taking high school classes until age 22, but many aren’t ready to live independently when school ends, said Franklin schools special education director Mindy Staton.

“They’re so used to living

bell to bell,” Staton said. “That’s not life. We’re trying to help these students become successful adults. There’s a big gap now because their whole world is planned, then suddenly they’re on their own.”

The goal of the program is to make students employable, but it also will allow them to learn about things they might not have had the chance to study, organizers said.

Students will audit the courses and won’t receive

credit for them. Their classes will be paid for with a Center Grove Education Foundation grant.

Gloria Duke said she’s excited about the opportu-nity for her 19-year-old son, Dalton.

Dalton wasn’t able to meet all of the required class and testing requirements for graduation because of his autism. But Duke didn’t want him to get stuck in the comfort of high school with its familiar teachers.

College tries new open-door policy

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The former board chairman of Ivy Tech Community College sent emails with political diatribes, sexist jokes and nude pictures of women to state offi cials before college offi cials asked him to stop earlier this year, a report Sunday said.

V. Bruce Walkup sent the emails to offi cials including Ivy Tech President Tom Snyder; Jeff Terp, Ivy Tech’s senior vice president for engagement Jeff Terp, Earl Goode, then the chief of staff to former Gov. Mitch Daniels; and Rob Carter Jr., the former director of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources who’s now Ivy tech’s security chief, The Indianapolis Star reported.

One email suggested a skunk as a new symbol for President Barack Obama: “It is half black, half white, and everything it does stinks.”

Terp and Snyder did not open any of the emails, Ivy Tech told the Star, which obtained the emails in a public records request.

Sexist emails are subject of probe

SOUTH BEND (AP) — A University of Notre Dame offi cial says Democratic Party leaders are encouraging him to run for northern Indiana’s 2nd District U.S. House seat against fi rst-term incumbent Republican Jackie Walorski.

Joseph Bock, director of global health training for Notre Dame’s Eck Institute for Global Health, told the South Bend Tribune for a report Sunday that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is encouraging him to run and he could formally announce his candidacy this month.

“I’m taking a very serious look at it,” Bock said. The committee and state and

district Democratic leaders have been searching for a candidate to challenge Walorski, who defeated Democrat Brendan Mullen by just 1.4 percent of the vote in 2012 in a district drawn to strongly favor Republicans. Mullen decided not to run again.

Bock, 55, said he’s a moderate, anti-abortion Democrat. He served three terms as a state representative in Missouri after defeating a Republican incumbent in 1986. He came to Notre Dame seven years ago after directing Catholic Relief Services programs and relief efforts overseas in Haiti, Thailand and Bosnia.

Man considers run for House seat

Page 3: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

Marriage licensesThe following were

issued recently in Noble County:

• Kyle D. Ehret, 28, and Paige N. Horne, 21, both of Kendallville.

• Anthony J. Spade, 40, and Sherry I. Shelpman, 39, both of Albion.

• Zackary Stephen Wolf, 30, and Christina Ann Chorpenning, 33, both of Kendallville.

• Ryan Philip Young, 23, and Brittany Ellen Wyatt, 21, both of Kendallville.

• Nathan James Megething, 19, of Cromwell and Sharee Nichole Latta, 18, of Albion.

• Jeremy W. Baker, 28, and Kylee M. Edwards, 23, both of Kendallville.

• Gregory Sherman Strawser, 54, and Katie Marie Braid, 44, both of Kendallville.

• Gabriel Joseph McRoberts, 28, and Sierra Nicole Reiser, 21, both of Kendallville.

• Roger L. Smith, 69, and Kimberly A. McCann, 34, both of Kendallville.

• Jack R. Searls, 33, and Elizabeth A. Carter, 33, both of Ligonier.

• Joshua Ryan Noe, 19, and Catessa Tiffany Butler, 23, both of Albion.

Divorces• Elizabeth Knox and

Brandond Knox.• Kody L. Hunt and Heidi

J. Hunt.• John J. Shoudel and

Debra J. Shoudel.• Crystal Waltenberger

and James Waltenberger.• Ramona Rae Marshall

and Rick Allen Marshall.• Jennifer Agee and

James Agee.• Clint Hess and Destiny

Hess.• Katrina Marie Gregory

and Kerry Gene Gregory.• Karman D. Cornwell

and Kennth D. Cornwell.

Criminal dispositionsThe following were

issued recently in Noble County courts:

Circuit Court• Cody C. Langley, 24,

of Kendallville, Count I — dealing a Schedule I, II or III controlled substance, Class B felony. Six years incarceration, two years suspended and on probation, two days credit. To pay $368 court costs, $13 sheriff’s service fee and $400 substance abuse assessment fee.

Superior Court I• Christopher N. Meyers,

27, of Wolcottville, Count I — possession of metham-phetamine, Class D felony. Six months incarceration, fi ve days credit. To pay $100 fi ne, $368 court costs and $400 substance abuse assessment fee. Counts II and III dismissed.

• Kiersten B. Fury, 23, of Kendallville, Count I — neglect of a dependent, Class D felony, and Count II — neglect of a dependent, Class D felony. Fifty-six days incarceration, 491 days suspended and on probation, 28 days credit. To pay $50 fi ne, $168 court costs and $100 public defender fee.

COUNTY SEATMONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013 kpcnews.com A3

N O B L E

AROUND THE COURTHOUSETHE NEWS SUN

122 N. Orange St., Albion • 636-2790www.docshardware.com

DOC’S HARDWARE*Must present this coupon at time of purchase. 1 tank per coupon.

$2 OFFPROPANE FILL*

JENKINSAUTOMOTIVE

960 E. Harlash St.Kendallville

260-347-2211

Preview 2 hours prior to auction at both properties

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 20136 PM • 114 ORANGE ST., CROMWELL, IN

East of downtown Cromwell on Orange Street or just east of Lake City Bank off of State Road 5.

Hahn Auctioneers, Inc.Visit us at www.hahnrealtyandauction.com

Office (574) 773-4184 • Nappanee, IN • AC39800021Phil Hahn • (574) 535-3783 • IN Lic. # AU01012967

Brian Wurthrich, Sale Mgr. • (574) 268-4940 • Milford, IN

2 PROPERTY AUCTIONS

Terms: 10% down payment on the day of the auction with the balance in cash due at closing in approximately 30 days. The down payment may be made in the form of cash, cashier’s check, personal check or corporate check. Your bidding is not conditional upon financing, so be sure you have arranged financing, if needed, and are capable of paying cash at closing. All final bid prices are subject to approval by the sellers.

GEORGE & CAROL ANGLEMEYER, OWNERS

Kitchen: 9x13 w/electric range & refrigeratorLiving room: 9x15Bedroom: 7x15 w/closetBedroom: 7x9 w/closetBedroom: 16x11 w/closetLaundry: Small w/hookupsFurnace: gas forced air

Water Heater: gasElectrical: 100 ampRoof: asphalt in good conditionExterior: re-painted, new floors, move-in or rentable conditionLot: large 50x128Shed: included

UPPER: Kitchen: 12-1/2x7-1/2 w/refrigerator & electric stove Living Room: 12x13-1/2 Bedroom: 8x11 Bedroom: 7x15 Laundry: hook-ups available Bath: 1 full Furnace: gas forced air

LOWER: Living Room: 15x15 Bedroom: 8-1/2x11 w/closet Bedroom: 13x15 w/large closet Bath: 1 full Kitchen: 15x15 w/washer/dryer hookups, gas stove, refrigerator Roof: good Condition: structurally good and well-kept

7 PM • 314 N. MAIN ST., KENDALLVILLE, INSouth of US 6 on Main Street to above address.Construction: Duplex - lower & upper levels both rented

ALBION — Cash prizes will be part of the Super Town of Albion Revitaliza-tion Team’s second annual Scare on the Square event Oct. 25 at 6 p.m.

The event features the second annual “live” Clue game taking place on the Noble County Courthouse square.

Several local businesses located on Courthouse Square will participate in the “live” Clue game by representing the scene of the crime. Various weapons are still being assembled.

Various local residents have volunteered to represent the possible perpetrators. So far the list of potential perpetrators includes County Sheriff Doug Harp, County Commissioner Chad Kline, County Auditor Jackie Knafel, County Clerk Shelly Mawhorter, CSB Bank’s Carla Fiandt, Campbell and Fetter Bank’s George Bennett, State Rep. David Ober, attorney Eric Blackman and Noble REMC’s Kevin Dreibelbis.

Teams of four will seek to determine which local residents “performed the crime,” using what weapon and at what location. Pre-registration is recommended by calling Mary Ann Troutner at 564-0341 or Steve Hook at 438-5959.

The cost to participate is $6 per person, or $20 for a team of four. Partic-ipants are to meet at the police booth located at the southeast corner of Courthouse Square by 5:45 p.m. to sign in or register for game play.

The winning team will be rewarded with a 75-percent payout. Game play will consist of up to six teams at one time. Multiple fl ights may be necessary.

Everyone participating, whether as part of a team or a spectator, is encour-aged to dress up as your favorite Clue character or other costume of your choice. STAR Team volunteers will choose the

best costume after game play at the police booth around 7:30 p.m. and award $25 for fi rst place, $15 for second place, and $10 for third place.

Other planned activities include a “Trunk-or-Treat” activity where volunteers will hand out candy from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on the west side of Courthouse Square (York Street).

Upon completion of game play and the costume contest, join the night tour starting around 8 p.m. at the gazebo located on the west side of Courthouse Square. Listen to true stories of unusual deaths that have occurred in Albion.

The tour will start at the gazebo and proceed to Rose Hill Cemetery. The tour should last about 45 minutes. Tour admission is $5 per person and will be collected the night of the tour.

To RSVP for the tour, register with Beth Shellman at 564-5408 or [email protected].

Scare on the Square costumes can win cash

ALBION — People of all ages are all invited to visit the animals while trick-or-treating at Black Pine Animal Sanctuary during Howl O’Ween at Black Pine from 3-7 p.m. Saturday at the refuge, located at 1426 W. C.R. 300N, Albion.

Entry to Howl O’Ween costs $5 per person for ages three and up, and free for ages two and under. Horse-drawn wagon rides, several trick-or-treat candy stations throughout the sanctuary, a bonfi re, refresh-ments, and the opportunity to see the big cats, small

cats, foxes, wolves, bears, reptiles, and more before winter comes will be available.

Black Pine is a 501(c)3 nonprofi t, volunteer organization that provides permanent, end-of-life care to displaced captive-raised exotic animals. Proceeds of this annual event help provide funding for winter care for more than 100 animals at Black Pine.

For more information, or to make a donation in lieu of attending, call 636-7383 or visit the sanctuary’s website at www.blackpine.org.

Howl O’Ween to haunt Black Pine

Briefs•

Sweet Church to host square dance

ALBION — The annual Fall Square Dance at the Sweet Church Community Center will be Saturday from 7-10 p.m.

Justus III will perform. Refreshments will be available. Freewill donations will be accepted. The historic church, now restored as a community center, is located at 3015 E. C.R. 415N, Albion.

Chamber plans Halloween party

ALBION — The Albion Chamber of Commerce will host its annual Halloween party at the Albion Fire Station from 7-8:30 p.m. Oct. 31, following the town’s trick-or-treat hours.

The party will include games, a costgume contest,

free hot dogs, popcorn and beverages.

Fundraising to shift from Lions to Albion’s park board

ALBION — Albion Lions Club fundraising for Operation Splash Pad will conclude Nov. 1 through the Noble County Community Foundations, the Albion Park Board said in a press release.

Donations for more on-site amenities and maintenance of the splash pad will be accepted after Nov. 1 at the Albion Municipal Building, 211 E. Park Drive, Albion IN 46701.

The park board will purchase more picnic tables and shade umbrellas and structures when more funds come available.

ALBION — The Super Town of Albion Revitalization Team and Noble County Public Library-Cen-tral in Albion are sponsoring the STAR Bazaar on Nov. 2 in the lower level of the Albion Library from 8a.m. to 2 p.m.

Sixteen vendors are scheduled. Door prizes will be available.

Booths cost $10 per table. If interested in having a booth, call Shelli Porter at 610-3412. Setup for vendors is 6 a.m. to 8 a.m.

STAR Bazaar planned at library

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Splash Pad helpDonations continue to come in to support the Splash Pad at Albion’s Hidden Diamonds Park In the photo at left, Pulver Asphalt Paving Inc. donated $5,000 of material and labor for the Splash Pad construction area. Their work included leveling and compacting the pad area, adding gravel for additional parking and hauling many loads of stone, providing parking stop curbs and asphalting the Splash Pad area for parking which included a cross walk to the concession/restroom area. In the photo at right, Herb and Fancheon Ressler recently donated two commercial grade waste recepta-cles to be used at the Splash Pad. They are members of the Albion Lions Club.

BOB BRALEY

Trial court training completeAnne Fleck, right, recently completed the Indiana Trial Court Staff Implementation Training program. Fleck works in Noble Circuit Court. Presenting her with her certifi cate is Noble Circuit Judge G. David Laur.

Noble County Courthouse News•

This special feature page highlighting news centering on the Noble County Courthouse and the Albion-area community runs every Monday in The News Sun.

The News Sun extends an invitation to all Albion-area groups and clubs to send us their newsletters,

meeting minutes and other news for this page.

Items can be mailed to Bob Braley, P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, emailed to [email protected] or faxed to 347-2693. The deadline for items to be considered for each Monday’s page is 11 a.m. Thursday.

Submit Items•

Subscribe to

THE NEWS SUNYour 7-day-a-week hometown morning newspaper

1-800-717-4679Phone customer service hours:

6 am-5 pm Mon.-Fri.; 7-10 am Sat. & Sun.Special home-delivery and online-only rates available!

kpcnews.com

NASCAR NASCAR Every

Thursday in the Sports Section

1-800-717-4679To Subscribe

pTHE NEWS SUN

Page 4: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The lost-and-found items at Indianapolis International Airport are all over the place — sunglasses, paperback books with Fabio on the cover, a mint julep cup with the names of the Kentucky Derby winners since 1875 — and it all gets shunted away into a closet under the main stairway.

There it gathers dust and is forgotten.

One item, however, airport staffers haven’t forgotten, can’t forget. It’s a cardboard box the size of toaster. It weighs maybe seven pounds. Someone has written on it “PERCY COLVIN,” and in fact, the box’s contents would appear to be Colvin — his earthly remains, his ashes, a fi ne gray powder.

The ashes, or cremains, were left behind in the terminal’s lower level, near baggage claim — in 2010. Somebody turned them in to airport offi cials, who at fi rst placed them in the lost-and-found but soon transferred them to the security of the airport police department’s

evidence room. They fi gured someone would come forward to claim the ashes. But three years later, nobody has.

First the airport police and then an airport attorney tried to get to the bottom of it by calling the funeral home that handled the arrangements, and the church where the funeral was held. Nothing came of it. They called the Marion County coroner, but Colvin was not a “coroner’s case,” meaning foul play had not been suspected (the death certifi cate says Colvin died of lung cancer), and so the coroner’s staffers could only shrug.

“Maybe it was decedent’s last wish to stay in the airport, or travel the world,” chief deputy coroner Alfarena Ballew told The Indianapolis Star. “You know how people have those wishes to have ashes spread out in the ocean or something. Or maybe the family was attempting to take him home.”

Colvin, according to his death certifi cate, was born, in 1938, in Romulus, Ala., in rural Tuscaloosa County. It is unclear when he moved to Indianapolis, but he may well have been part of the Great Migration, the mostly post-World War II movement of some 7 million blacks from the rural south to northern U.S. cities. Colvin worked as a machinist, according to his death certifi cate. He was widowed. He had at least two children. They declined to comment for this story.

And so what exactly Colvin’s cremains were doing near the airport’s baggage claim in 2010

remains a mystery.It’s possible that in

a post-9/11 world with sometimes confusing rules over what a person can and can’t bring onto an airplane there was a mix-up at an airport checkpoint, and Colvin’s cremains were abandoned in a panic, or accidentally. Several years ago at the Indianapolis airport a man attempting to bring his father’s ashes onto a plane created a major stir — after the man had been waived through a checkpoint, a Transpor-tation Security Adminis-tration offi cer had second thoughts and tried to fi nd him, couldn’t fi nd him and so sounded the alarm: 500 people were evacuated and eight fl ights delayed.

Some airlines don’t allow cremains as carry-on. The TSA allows cremains, but with conditions: “If the container is made of a material that generates an opaque image, the Transpor-tation Security Offi cer will not be able to clearly determine what is inside the container and the container will not be permitted.”

Unclaimed cremains aren’t that uncommon. There are laws governing them — in Indiana, funeral homes must hold cremains 60 days before disposing of them but typically hold them much longer. “Funeral directors are loathe to get rid of ashes,” said Curtis Rostad, executive director of the Indiana Funeral Directors Association, “out of, I’d suppose, respect, and the thought that someday someone might show up and want those ashes back.”

Man’s ashes left in airport

Jerry WilsonKENDALLVILLE —

Jerry James Wilson, 23, of Kendallville, died Friday, Oct. 18, 2013. at Parkview Noble Hospital, Kendallville.

Jerry was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Dec. 13, 1989 to Jerry Wilson and Barbara Ann (Shuty) Miller. He graduated from East Noble High School in 2009. In the past, Jerry worked at Foundations of Albion.

Survivors include his mother, Barbara and James Miller of Kendallville; his father, Jerry Wilson of Pittsburgh; his sisters, Jennifer Wilson and Jarod Parker of Wolcottville, and Courtney Wilson and Greg Crager of Kendallville; his maternal grandpar-ents, Robert and Diane Shuty of Kendallville; his paternal grandmother, Janet Wilson of Etna, Pa.; his maternal great-grandmother, Catherine Shuty of Pennsyl-vania; and his godparents, Rex Blech of Kendallville and Cindy Duncan of Columbia City.

He was preceded in death by great-grandparents, Edwin and Rosemary Blech, and great-grandfather, Michael Robert Shuty.

Calling will be Tuesday from 3-7 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home, Kendallville.

Services will be Wednesday at 5 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home continuing with a celebration of Jerry’s life gathering at the Kendall-ville Eagles following the funeral service. There will be an hour of calling before the funeral.

Memorials are to his family.

Send a condolence to the family or view a video tribute of Jerry by Tuesday at www.hitefuneralhome.com

Robert HillegassGARRETT — Robert

Hillegass, 82, of Garrett died Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013 at his home.

Arrangements are pending at Thomas Funeral Home, Garrett.

Kathleen KokengeFORT WAYNE —

Kathleen Ann Kokenge , 82, passed away Saturday, October 19, 2013 at the Hospice Home in Fort Wayne.

Born in Fort Wayne, Kathleen was a graduate of Central Catholic High School and Indiana Univer-sity. She worked as a copywriter with WKJG-TV and was also a fashion coordinator for Wolf and Dessauer. She was a member of the Cedar Creek Women’s Club, Fort Wayne Museum of Art, Art League and Bishop Dwenger Saints Alive. She enjoyed spending weekends at Lake Wawasee and vacationing in Siesta Key Florida.

Surviving are her husband of 57 years, Robert E. Kokenge; son, Robert A (Elaine) Kokenge of Warsaw; daughter, Christine (John) O’Rourke of Fort Wayne; grandchil-dren, Laurel and Patrick O’Rourke; and eight nieces and nephews.

Kathleen was preceded in death by her parents Ernest and Florence Hackman and sister, Jeanmarie Coffee.

Mass of Christian Burial is Wednesday, October 23, 2013 at 10:30 am at St. Jude Catholic Church, 2130 Pemberton Drive with calling one hour prior. Fr. Jake Runyon offi ci-ating. Calling will also be Tuesday, October 15, 2013 from 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm & 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm at D. O. McComb and Sons Pine Valley Chapel 1320 E Dupont Rd. Burial in Catholic Cemetery, Fort Wayne.

Memorials may be made to the Masses.

To sign the online guest book, go to www.domccom-bandsons.com.

Gloria PaytonKENDALLVILLE —

Gloria Jean Payton, 62, of rural Kendallville died Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013, at her home.

Calling will be Tuesday from 4-8 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home, Kendallville.

Services will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the funeral home with an hour of calling before services.

Burial will be later at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, rural Kendallville.

Memorials are to the American Heart Association.

Louise BerkleyFORT WAYNE —

Louise Luetta Berkley, 89, died Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Covington Memorial Funeral Home, 8408 Covington Road, Fort Wayne, with calling one hour before services. Burial will be in Covington Memorial Gardens.

Richard KruseFORT WAYNE —

Richard E. Kruse, 80, of Fort Wayne and formerly of Rome City died Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013, in Covington Commons Assisted Living, Fort Wayne.

Arrangements are pending at Young Family Funeral Home, Wolcottville Chapel, S.R. 9, Wolcottville.

Linda SmithWOLCOTTVILLE —

Linda L. Smith, 72, of Wolcottville died Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013, in her residence.

Arrangements are pending at Young Family Funeral Home, Wolcottville Chapel, S.R. 9, Wolcottville.

Lotteries

Deaths & Funerals •

Obituary Policy•

KPC Media Group daily newspapers (The News Sun, The Star and The Herald Republican) do not charge for death notices that include notice of calling hours, date and time of funeral and burial, and memorial information. An extended obituary, which includes survivors, biographical information and a photo, is available for a charge.

Deadline for funeral homes placing obituaries is 5 p.m. for next day publica-tion. The email address is [email protected].

Submitted obituaries must contain the name and phone number of the funeral home.

For information, contact Jan Richardson at 347-0400, ext. 131.

Obituaries appear online at this newspaper’s Web site. Please visit the Web site to add your memories and messages of condolence at the end of individual obituaries. These messages from friends and family will be attached to the obituaries and accompany them in the online archives.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013A4 kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •

411 W. Main St.,Montpelier, OH 43543

800-272-5588facklermonument.com

Since 1924

“Over 400monuments inside

our showroom”

Fackler Monument CompanyFUNERAL HOME

1589 Lincolnway South • Ligonier • 260-894-4900www.yeagerfuneralhome.com

Yeager

502 N. Main St., Auburn260-925-3918

www.Pinnington-McComb.com

Beams Funeral Home

200 W. Toledo St., Fremont

260-495-2915www.beamsfuneralhome.com

260-347-1653www.northernindianafuneralcare.com

Young Family Funeral Home

State Road 9 North Wolcottville, IN260-854-2251

222 South State St. Kendallville, IN260-347-0950

www.youngfamilyfuneralhome.com

Funeral Homes

HiteFuneral Home 260-347-1653

www.hitefuneralhome.com

403 S. Main Street, Kendallville, IN

Brian DeCamp & Andy DavidFuneral Directors

114 E. 6th St.Auburn

260-925-0777

LAGRANGE MONUMENT WORKS

260-463-2438800-998-2511

4770 East US 20LaGrange, IN 46761

www.lagrangemonumentworks.com

Hours:

Mon.-Fri.9-5

Sat.9-Noon

ACE

CustomMonuments

260-927-5357

1108 W. Auburn Dr., Auburnacemonuments.com

Miscellaneous Services

Cremation Services

FloristsWe Can Help In Your Hour of Need

FREMONT 495-2015 ANGOLA 665-5505

BAKER’S ACRESFLORAL & GREENHOUSE LLC

We Deliver Flowers For

All Occasions

260-894-3161TheLegacyRemembered.com

Out Of TheWoods Florist

Serving Northeast Indiana andNorthwest Ohio with our 2 locations

Angola, IN and Napoleon, OH

Delivery to all area funeral homes Order 24/7 • 260-665-6808

1-800-922-4149www.outofthewoodsflorist.comwww.outofthewoodsflorist.net

Mon.-Fri. 9-5; Sat. 9-12

FIND DIRECT LINKS TO THESE BUSINESSES ON THE OBITUARY PAGE OF

THE ONLINE EDITIONS AT:kpcnews.com

WELLNESSCENTERMed. Lift ChairsMassage ChairsPower Recliners2 Person Spas

Power AdjustableBeds

Come In And Try Them Out!

1990 W. Maumee, Angola

For Your Home

Mr. Wilson Mrs. Kokenge

Mrs. Kokenge

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — The last piece of legislation President John F. Kennedy signed turns 50 this month: the Community Mental Health Act, which helped transform the way people with mental illness are treated and cared for in the United States.

Signed on Oct. 31, 1963, weeks before Kennedy was assassinated, the legisla-tion aimed to build mental health centers accessible to all Americans so that those with mental illnesses could be treated while working and living at home, rather than being kept in neglectful and often abusive state institutions, sometimes for years on end.

Kennedy said when he signed the bill that the legislation to build 1,500 centers would mean the population of those living in state mental hospitals — at that time more than 500,000 people — could be cut in half. In a special message to Congress earlier that year, he said the idea was to successfully and quickly treat patients in their own communities and then return them to “a useful place in society.”

Recent deadly mass shootings, including at the Washington Navy Yard and a Colorado movie theater,

have been perpetrated by men who were apparently not being adequately treated for serious mental illnesses. Those tragedies have focused public attention on the mental health system and made clear that Kennedy’s vision was never fully realized.

The legislation did help to usher in positive life-al-tering changes for people with serious illnesses such as schizophrenia, many of whom now live normal, productive lives with jobs and families. In 1963, the average stay in a state institution for someone with schizophrenia was 11 years. But only half of the proposed centers were ever

built, and those were never fully funded.

Meanwhile, about 90 percent of beds have been cut at state hospitals, according to Paul Appelbaum, a Columbia University psychiatry professor and expert in how the law affects the practice of medicine. In many cases, several mental health experts said, that has left nowhere for the sickest people to turn, so they end up homeless, abusing substances or in prison. The three largest mental health providers in the nation today are jails: Cook County in Illinois, Los Angeles County and Rikers Island in New York.

Kennedy’s vision for mental health unrealized

INDIANAPOLIS — The following numbers were drawn Sunday in area lotteries:

Hoosier Lottery: Evening, 0-4-5 and 0-2-4-3;

Michigan: Midday,

8-1-7 and 2-5-1-3; Evening, 9-5-0 and 8-8-8-5; Fantasy 5, 04-10-17-33-37; Keno, 01-03-22-24-30-34-35-37-38-40-42-46-48-49-51-52-55-57-58-68-69-77.

Ohio: Midday, 1-7-3 and 8-4-2-1; Evening, 4-9-9 and 2-0-6-7; Pick 5, 4-6-7-0-6 (Midday) and 4-5-4-6-2; Rolling Cash 5, 03-11-17-28-39.

kpcnewskpcnewswww.

.com

AP

In this Oct. 31, 1963, fi le photo, President John F. Kennedy signs a bill authorizing $329 million for mental health programs at the White House in Washington. Former U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy will host a conference Thursday in Boston to mark the 50th anniversary of the act.

CHECK OUT THE LATEST POSTS ON kpcnews.com

Page 5: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

BY CHRISTINA DYMOCK“A successful marriage

requires falling in love many times, always with the same person.” — Mignon McLaughlin

We thought we had it all — a beautiful house, three healthy children and one more on the way, two cars, a couple of four-wheelers for entertainment — and we loved it. We spent money like it was going out of style. Then the market turned and my husband’s job as a bigwig

at a construction company was gone. The company had declared bankruptcy and was

closing down for good.We both started looking

for jobs right away, but there weren’t any to be found. With each passing day our panic increased and we continued to work together in order to pull our family through. The more we pulled together, the closer we got. I felt feelings of adoration for my husband that I hadn’t felt in years.

That’s why it was so hard for me to watch him blame himself for our current situation. I knew that he had

no control over the economy; however, he constantly degraded himself, and his spirits sunk lower with each snide comment. I continually asked him to stop, but he seemed to want to punish himself for not having a job.

Finally, one afternoon, I pulled him aside and said: “We have four healthy children and each other. That’s what’s important. That makes you a rich man.”

“But what if we lose the house? They’ll hate me — you’ll hate me,” he replied.

I smiled at him and put my hands on both sides of his face to make him look me in the eye. “If we live in a cardboard box on the empty lot across the street I will be happy — as long as I have you.” I smiled again as I realized that I wasn’t just saying it. Somehow, in all the struggling together I had found that deep abiding love for him that I had on the day we said “I do.”

I could see relief wash through him as his shoulders and neck relaxed and the tension left his body. He held

me close and we were able to talk and plan and dream together in a way that we hadn’t in quite some time. It was a turning point for us as a couple and a family.

We are still struggling fi nancially, but I consider us well-off because we have something that money can’t buy and no one can take away from us.

A mother and wife fi nds the good in her family’s situation

THE NEWS SUN

TodayBingo: For senior

citizens every Monday. Noble County Council on Aging, 111 Cedar St., Kendallville. 12 p.m.

Alzheimer’s Disease Support Group: Heartfelt support group. For informa-tion call Tricia Parks at 897-2841, Ext. 250. Presence Sacred Heart Home, 515 N. Main St., Avilla. 1 p.m. 897-2841

Lego Club: Create and play with Legos during this after school club for grades K-5. Kendallville Public Library, 221 S Park Ave, Kendallville. 3:30 p.m. 343-2010

Lego Quest: Stop after school to have some fun playtime with Legos. Geared toward children in grades K-5. Limberlost Public Library, 164 Kelly St., Rome City. 4 p.m. 854-3382

Rainbow Crayon Pumpkins: See the rainbow, melt the rainbow, around a pumpkin. Head on over to the Limberlost Public Library as we show you how to make Rainbow Crayon Pumpkins. It’s simple but amazing. Teen Program (Grades 6-12). Limberlost Public Library, 164 Kelly St., Rome City. 4 p.m. 854-3382

Zumba Class: Provided by zumbafi tnessnj.com Presence Sacred Heart Home, 515 N. Main St., Avilla. 6 p.m. 897-2841

Little River Chorus rehearsal: Little River Chorus of Sweet Adelines International, a national barbershop organization for women, rehearses every Monday. The group is open to new members. For more information, call 475-5482. Fairview Missionary

Church, 525 E. C.R. 200N, Angola. 6 p.m.

Windows 8 Workshop: The Kendallville Public Library welcomes Mike Bodenhafer of PMC Computers & Surveillance. Mr. Bodenhafer will be instructing this hands-on workshop. Patrons may bring their laptops with Windows 8 preloaded. If you don’t have Windows 8 but would like a preview of the software, please join us as well. Several laptops will be provided. This workshop has a $5 fee. Space is limited so register today. Adult Program (age 18 and older). Kendallville Public Library, 221 S. Park Ave., Kendallville. 6 p.m. 343-2010

Limberlost Coupon Club: At the Limberlost Coupon Club, share deals, clip coupons, trade coupons with our coupon binder, learn from others who love to coupon and fi nd the best deals. Adult Program (age 18 and older). Limberlost Public Library, 164 Kelly St, Rome City. 6 p.m. 854-3382

Kendallville Lions Club: Club meets fi rst, third and fi fth Mondays. American Legion Post 86, S. Main St., Kendallville. 6:15 p.m.

Tuesday, October 22Shipshewana Flea

Market: The Midwest’s Largest Flea Market. 900 vendors on 100 acres offer arts & crafts, farmer’s market, plants & trees, fl owers & hanging baskets, gifts, furniture, tools and so much more. Tuesdays & Wednesdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. until October 30. Downtown Shipshewana.

Euchre Game: Public welcome. Francis Vinyard VFW Post 2749, 112

Veterans Way, Kendallville. 1 p.m.

Yu-Gi-Oh Tournament: Stop in for our Yu-Gi-Oh Tournament and battle your buddies. This is a free tournament for students in grades 3-12. Please bring your own deck of cards. The library will not provide cards. Snacks will be provided. Registration is requested but not required. Limberlost Public Library, 164 Kelly St, Rome City. 4 p.m. 854-3382.

Understanding Your Grief: A 10-week program to provide guidance to caregivers and families for those who are experi-encing loss of a loved one or illness. Presented by Parkview LaGrange Home Health & Hospice. Call 800-292-9894 for more information. First Presby-terian Church, 200 W. Michigan St., LaGrange. 4 p.m.

ESL Instruction: English as a second language. Standing class every Tuesday and Thursday. Vistula Headstart, 603 Townline Road, LaGrange. 5 p.m.

ESL Instruction: English as a second language class. Standing meeting every Tuesday. LEAP of Noble County, 610 Grand St., Ligonier.

5:30 p.m.

Pediatric Parents Support Group: Guest speaker Diane Shoppell from the Dekko Founda-tion’s “Before 5 Program” will provide simple, enjoyable strategies to help parents face the challenges and responsibilities of parenting. A light dinner will be provided with a Halloween snack for the children. Contact Parkview Noble Therapy at 347-8824 for reservations or more information. Parkview Noble Hospital Therapy, 1292 Drake Road, Kendall-ville. 6 p.m.

Kendallville Rotary Club: Regular meeting. Four County Vocational Cooperative, 1607 Dowling St., Kendallville. 6:15 p.m. 349-0240.

Narcotics Anonymous Meeting: Narcotics Anonymous is a fellow-ship for those who have a problem with any drug, legal or illegal, including alcohol. This “open” meeting may be attended by anyone, but we ask that verbal participation be limited to those who have (or who think they may have) a problem with drugs. For more information, call 427-9113 or go tona.org. Club Recovery, 1110 E. Dowling St., Kendallville. 7 p.m.

Area Activities•

The News Sun prints color wedding photos with wedding stories free of charge the fi rst Sunday of every month. You can submit your announcement online at kpcnews.com. At the top of the home page, under Share News, there are links to wedding forms. You may also send your information by mail to:The News Sun c/o Jan Richardson P.O. Box 39102 N. Main St.Kendallville, IN 46755 If sending a photo by mail, please include a self-ad-dressed, stamped envelope to have it returned. Or you can attach a high quality, color photo to your online form. For information, call Jan at 347-0400, ext. 131, or email her at [email protected]. The deadline for wedding submissions is Monday at noon prior to publication.

Weddings In Color

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013 kpcnews.com A5

Legal Notices•

LEGAL NOTICENotice is hereby given that the Town Council of the Town of Wolcottville, Indi-

ana, on the 5th day of November, 2013, at 6:00 p.m. shall hold a public hear-ing at which users of the water works, owners of property or to be served bythe works, and other interested persons may be heard concerning proposedfees for the water works system of the Town of Wolcottville. An Ordinance hasbeen introduced amending the rates and charges beginning December 1,2013, for the following services rendered by the water works system of theTown of Wolcottville as follows:

Metered Rate Per Month New Rates(Per 1,000 Gallons) (Per 1,000 Gallons)First 2,500 Gallons $12.25Next 4,500 Gallons $10.84Next 8,000 Gallons $9.42

Next 25,000 Gallons $8.01Next 60,000 Gallons $6.54

Over 100,000 Gallons $5.11

Public Fire Protection New Rates(Per Month)

5/8” - 3/4” Meter $12.551” Meter $17.55

1-1/4” Meter $20.001-1/2” Meter $22.55

2” Meter $36.303” Meter $137.754” Meter $175.356” Meter $262.95

Minimum Monthly Charge* Gallons New RatesAllowed (Per Month)

5/8” - 3/4” Meter 2,500 $30.651” Meter 6,250 $76.55

1-1/4” Meter 10,000 $122.501-1/2” Meter 12,500 $153.15

2” Meter 20,000 $245.003” Meter 37,500 $459.404” Meter 62,500 $765.656” Meter 125,000 $1,531.30

* Does not include Public Fire Protection Charges which is an additionalcharge.

Fire Hydrants New Rate(Per Month)

Municipal Hydrants - per hydrant $0.00Private Hydrants - per hydrant $556.10

Private Fire Protection New Rates(Per Month)

2” fire line $103.454” fire line $498.856” fire line $1,104.458” fire line $1,959.55

10” fire line $3,064.15

Tap-In ChargeNew Charge

5/8” - 3/4” Meter $182.50

Water Meter DepositCharge

5/8” - 3/4” Meter $100.00Notice is further given that said hearing shall be held at 6:00 p.m. at the Wol-

cottville Town Hall, 104 W. Race Street, Wolcottville, Indiana 46795. At suchhearing, which may be adjourned from time to time, the Town Council, afterconsidering all testimony, shall take final action on the ordinances establishingsaid rates and charges for the services, rendered by the water works systemof the Town of Wolcottville.

Dated this 14th day of October, 2013.Town Council of the Town of Wolcottville, Indiana

By: Jeanette Combs, Clerk-TreasurerNS,00356748,10/21,hspaxlp

ROME CITY — Once you see this quaint cottage-style home, you’ll fall in love with it but that wasn’t always the case. When Dawn O’Connor and Holly Goneau decided to purchase this foreclosure with lake access, they had every intention of remodeling it down to the studs. But substantial damage from termites, evidence of fi re, and a deteriorating founda-tion forced them to tear down and rebuild.

The new home they built at 198 Weston Ave. in Rome City is included on this year’s Rome City Chamber of Commerce Holiday Walk on Nov. 16.

The women’s business, H & D Painting, specializes in new construction and remodeling so they did most of the work themselves. The 1920s kitchen sink and pre-1900s pantry doors were repurposed and reused from some other home remodeling jobs.

The spacious front porch is perfect for visiting with neighbors and friends.

This house refl ects the spirit of giving at Christmas. There is a “Rescue Me” tree

inside to benefi t the animal shelter. Rescue dogs, Daisy, a Chihuahua/poodle mix and Thistle, a Brussels griffon mix, approve of the project.

A friendship tradition is bringing a gift to place under the tree. It is their hope that one day there will be a waiting list of people to adopt pets, not the pets waiting on the people. When you visit this home, feel free to take a gift for the animal shelter to put under the tree.

Other homes on the tour are those of Tony and Tracey Freiburger, 1498 North Shore Drive, Dave and Cindy Wick, 781 E. Willow Lake, Steinbarger Lake, and John “Jack” and Martha Evans at 501 Lions Drive.

The tours will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tickets are available at the Specialty House, Limberlost Library, the Rome City Town Hall and at each home the day of the event.

Newly-built home to be featured on Holiday Walk

Home of Dawn O’Connor and Holly Goneau at 198 Weston Ave., Rome City

Our Cruise/Tours offer value you won’t find anywhere else!

VISIT WWW.CHICKENSOUP.COM (c)2013 by Chicken Soup for the Soul Publishing LLC. Distributed by King Features.

Page 6: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

Although Weaver seems to have gotten past the major website obstacles, he’s still fi nding shortcomings. There’s no place to type in his medications and fi nd out what plans cover them. “I wish there was more detail, so you could really fi gure it out,” he said.

Such a nuanced critique appears to be lost on congressional Republicans.

“#TrainWreck: Skyrock-eting Prices, Blank Screens, & Error Messages,” screamed the headline on a press release Friday from House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. A House hearing on the “botched Obamacare rollout” is scheduled for this coming week. GOP lawmakers want Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to resign.

Administration offi cials, in their most detailed accounting yet of the early rollout, said Saturday that about 476,000 health insurance applications have been fi led through federal and state exchanges. But the offi cials continue to refuse say how many people have enrolled in the insurance markets.

Without enrollment fi gures, it’s unclear whether

the program is on track to reach the 7 million people projecting by the Congres-sional Budget Offi ce to gain coverage during the six-month sign-up period.

The president was expected to address the problems on Monday during a health care event at the White House. The administration has yet to fully explain what has gone wrong with the online signup system.

“To our Democratic friends: You own ‘Obamacare’ and it’s going to be the political gift that keeps on giving,” said Sen. Lindsey

Graham, R-S.C.“Irresponsible obsession,”

scoffs Rep. Sander Levin of Michigan, ranking Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, which oversees much of the health law.

Democratic pollster Celinda Lake says she doesn’t see how going after the health law rollout will help Republicans by the time of next year’s election.

“Americans are technology optimists,” said Lake. “You tell them the

website has problems today, and they’ll assume it will be better tomorrow. I mean, we’re Americans. We can fi x a website.”

There may be a method to the GOP’s single-mind-edness.

Republicans are intent on making the health law an uncomfortable anchor around the neck of four Democratic senators seeking re-election in GOP-leaning states, weighing them down as they try to unseat them. Republicans need to gain six seats to seize the majority in the Senate, and any formula for control includes fl ipping the four seats.

Sens. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, Mark Begich of Alaska and Kay Hagan of North Carolina will be facing voters for the fi rst time since they were among the 60 Democrats who voted for the health law in 2009.

More than a year before the election, Republican Rep. Tom Cotton is airing an ad that criticizes Pryor for his vote, telling Arkansans that Pryor “cast the deciding vote to make you live under Obamacare.” The commer-cial’s fi nal image shows Pryor with Obama, who took a drubbing in Arkansas last year.

GOP: Obamacare suppose to reach 7 million peopleFROM PAGE A1

Graham

A6 THE NEWS SUN kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

Promise™ Technology

BELTONE HAS SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR: HUMANA, ANTHEM, AARP & INDIANA TEACHERS ASSOCIATION MEMBERS!MANY HEALTH INSURANCES ACCEPTED!

ANGOLA411 W. Maumee St.

260-624-2600

AUBURN215 Duesenberg Dr. (Plaza East Across from Hospital)

260-920-2222

FORT WAYNE NORTH260-489-2222

WARSAW574-269-6555

FORT WAYNE S. WEST260-436-2800

HUNTINGTON260-356-2220

COLUMBIA CITY260-244-4111

WABASH260-563-6333

Many convenient locations throughout Indiana. For additional locations near you, call 1-800-371-HEAR.Benefits of hearing aids vary by type and degree of hearing loss, noise environment, accuracy of hearing evaluation and proper fit.

and pool table.“It used to be the kids’

play area,” said the father of three, now in their early 20s.

The basement has been dedicated to the puzzle since Christmas 2009, when his wife, Helen, gave it to him as a gift. He started working on Jan. 2, 2010, and fi nished May 2, 2013.

“A total of 31 people helped out,” said Briskey. “We kept record of our time, our days.” Among his statis-tics are how many pieces were put together each day.

A train conductor whose job sometimes takes him away for stretches of time, Briskey always has enjoyed puzzles. He would put them together on a coffee table with his children.

When he heard about the world’s largest puzzle, marketed by Educa Borras, he wanted it right away.

Titled “Life,” the mural depicts animals, sea life and the cosmos in a detailed, colorful, blended montage. It took shape in the Briskey home, a curiosity for visitors and a pastime for Steven.

One time, his mother, Jequeta Briskey of Stryker,

Ohio, brought people from the senior citizens’ home she works at to visit, “so they could put a puzzle piece in or just see it,” said Briskey.

His mother spent a lot of time in the basement with him over the past several years working on the puzzle, along with friends, his wife and his children.

“A year ago, I realized I was missing a piece,” Briskey said. He kept working, and then, when he got down to one empty slot on the picture, he knew the piece was truly gone. He ordered that one piece

from the Spanish manufac-turer and waited weeks for it to arrive in the mail so he could mount the puzzle. It now hangs on a wall in the basement, supported by polystyrene board, a bottom rail and metal support bars.

He was given a much smaller, 3,000-piece replica of “Life” that he plans to do next, though that one he can assemble upstairs in the living room, he said.

And, if he decides he wants to go for another record, a new world’s largest puzzle — at 32,000 pieces — is now available.

PUZZLE: One missing piece was ordered from SpainFROM PAGE A1

Steve Briskey stands in front of a section of “Life.”AMY OBERLIN

ILL.

MICH.

OHIO

KY.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

Today's ForecastMonday, Oct. 21

City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for

Chicago48° | 43° South Bend

52° | 46°Fort Wayne

55° | 46°

Lafayette55° | 41°

Indianapolis59° | 45°

Terre Haute59° | 39°

Evansville66° | 41° Louisville

68° | 45°

Sunrise Tuesday 8:01 a.m.

Sunset Tuesday 6:51 p.m.

Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain today. A daytime high of 56 is expected with an overnight low of 34. Tuesday will be mostly sunny with a high of 48 and a low of 34. There is a chance of rain the remainder of the week. The daytime high will drop to 46 on Wednesday.

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

National forecastForecast highs for Monday, Oct. 21

Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High

-10s 100s-0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 110s

Today’s drawing by:Miranda FlindersSubmit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept.P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755

Local HI 63 LO 40 PRC. tr.Fort Wayne HI 63 LO 38 PRC. 0

South Bend HI 62 LO 39 PRC. tr.Indianapolis HI 63 LO 38 PRC. 0

Sunday’s Statistics

BY AMY [email protected]

KENDALLVILLE — Some 75 candles fl ickered under a full Friday-night moon along the Norfolk Southern railroad tracks off Main Street.

The gathering was in remembrance of 41-year-old Ray Sills, who died late Tuesday afternoon when he went onto the rails on his mobile chair into the path of an oncoming train.

Family and friends attended the observance organized by Faith Meyer, a friend and nurse’s aide who had cared for Sills, who had cerebral palsy. When John Slone spoke during the vigil, he said his brother is free from the confi nes of the chair now, walking in heaven.

“Ray wanted to be happy. Ray wanted to laugh,” Slone said.

The memorial included music and a moment of silence, during which Meyer encouraged people to think of Sills and all the times he’d made them laugh. He had a favorite joke, one he told over and over, that wasn’t forgotten Friday: “What do you call a fi sh with two knees? …. A two-knee fi sh.”

It was a never-ending source of amusement for Ray, who was known by many for his witty, curmud-geonly personality. He grew up in the city and graduated

from East Noble High School.

“This town will never be the same without him,” said his longtime friend, Brad Titus.

Many remember Ray Sills

AMY OBERLINAround 75 people gathered Friday night at 8 p.m. for a candlelight memorial ceremony for Ray Sills.

AMY OBERLIN

This cross was erected near the Norfolk Southern tracks, in a parking lot just east of Main Street, in remembrance of Ray Sills, who was killed near there Tuesday.

mostly Democratic votes.• Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas,

made a name for himself by leading the tea party charge toward shutdown. About half of the respondents in a recent Associated Press-GfK poll knew enough about Cruz to form an opinion — impres-sive for a senator elected less than a year ago. The bad news for Cruz? Their opinion was negative by a 2-1 margin.

• Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is catching heat for helping reopen the govern-ment. McConnell agrees with many of his fellow GOP senators that the shutdown was bad strategy and must not be repeated. That puts him on the wrong side of the party’s tea party wing, and a tea party-backed candidate is challenging McConnell in the

primary for his Senate seat.

The tea partyThe tea party, billed as a

movement of the people, is getting slammed in national polls. Democrats say its belligerent tactics have been discredited. Much of the Republican establishment agrees.

Tea party lawmakers don’t care.

Tea party favorites in Congress are more focused on the opinions of voters back home, their big money supporters and outside groups, such as Heritage Action, that infl uence elections.

Cruz, criticized by many fellow Republicans for fomenting the standoff, says he’s content to be “reviled in Washington, D.C., and appreciated in Texas.”

SHUTDOWN: Many people were inconvenienced and lives upsetFROM PAGE A1

Page 7: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

BTheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.comMONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

Scores•

SUNDAY’S GAMESWASHINGTON ......................45CHICAGO ..................................41

CINCINNATI ............................27DETROIT ....................................24

GREEN BAY ............................31CLEVELAND ............................13

CAROLINA ................................30ST. LOUIS .................................15

ATLANTA ....................................31TAMPA BAY ..............................23

SAN DIEGO .............................24JACKSONVILLE .......................6

N.Y. JETS ....................................30NEW ENGLAND ....... 27 (OT)

BUFFALO ..................................23MIAMI ..........................................21

DALLAS ......................................17PHILADELPHIA .......................3

SAN FRANCISCO ...............31TENNESSEE..........................17

PITTSBURGH ........................19BALTIMORE ............................16

KANSAS CITY........................17HOUSTON ................................16

SOCCE R Premier League, Crystal Palace vs. Fulham, N BCS N, 2:55 p.m.N H L HOCKEY Colorado vs. Pitts-burgh, NBCSN, 7:30 p.m.N FL FOOTBALL Minnesota vs. N.Y. Giants, E S PN, 8:25 p.m.

On The Air•

Briefl y•

Packers beat BrownsGREEN BAY, Wis.

(AP) — Aaron Rodgers, despite an undermanned cast, vs. Brandon Weeden was no contest.

Rodgers threw for 260 yards and three touchdowns, Eddie Lacy ran for another score, and the Packers grinded out a 31-13 win Sunday over the Cleveland Browns.

Lacy fi nished with 82 yards, while tight end Jermichael Finley had a 10-yard touchdown catch in the fi rst quarter before leaving with a neck injury.

Green Bay (4-2) won its third straight and took over fi rst place in the NFC North.

Rodgers fi nished 25 for 36 in methodically carving up Cleveland (3-4) despite already being without two of his top targets in injured receivers James Jones and Randall Cobb.

Then Finley left with about 10 minutes to go with a neck injury after a late hit by Brown safety Tashaun Gipson on a 10-yard gain. He was carted off the fi eld, and the team later said Finley had movement and feeling in his extremities.

The defense took care of the rest against a struggling Weeden, who fi nished 17 for 42 for 149 yards. The Browns’ Jordan Cameron caught a 2-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter to cut the lead to 11 with 6:09 left.

Cleveland thought it caught a huge break after recovering an onside kick, only for the play to be erased by an offside penalty.

The Packers got the ball back, and Rodgers found Jarrett Boykin for a 20-yard touchdown and a 31-13 lead. Boykin, making his fi rst start at receiver with Jones and Cobb out, fi nished with eight catches for 103 yards.

AP

Peyton welcomed back to IndianapolisDenver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning (18) runs out on the fi eld before an NFL football game against the Indianapolis Colts Sunday in Indianapolis. Complete coverage of the Broncos-Colts game can be found online at kpcnews.com.

DETROIT (AP) — In a scene emblematic of Detroit’s postseason downfall, Max Scherzer could only watch.

In fact, there was little any of the Tigers’ starting pitchers could have done differently to prevent another disappointing ending to a fi ne year.

“Normally if you pitch the way we pitched in this series, you would probably think that you had won,” manager Jim Leyland said.

The Tigers lost the AL champi-onship series to Boston in six games because the few weaknesses they had all seemed to hurt them at the worst possible time. Whether it was an unreliable bullpen, poor baserunning or shaky fi elding, the Red Sox took advantage of every Detroit fl aw.

Now the Tigers must look ahead to 2014, with a core of players that has done everything Detroit could ask for — except win a World Series for the Motor City for the fi rst time since 1984.

The fi rst question — as it was last offseason — is whether Leyland will be back. He’s been working on one-year contracts the last couple seasons, and although he’s given no indication he plans to leave, nothing is offi cial.

The Tigers have won three straight AL Central titles and reached the ALCS each of those years. The 2012 season ended when Detroit was swept in the World Series by San Francisco, and this year’s team nearly won the pennant again on the strength of a stellar starting rotation.

Scherzer, Justin Verlander, Anibal Sanchez and Doug Fister combined for a 2.39 ERA as starters in the postseason, but the Tigers weren’t able to take advantage. After beating Oakland in a fi ve-game division series, Detroit blanked Boston 1-0 in Game 1 of the ALCS and had a 5-0 lead in Game 2 — but David Ortiz’s series-turning grand slam off closer Joaquin Benoit helped the Red Sox rally to win that game.

In Game 3, Justin Verlander allowed his only run of the postseason, and that was enough for a 1-0 win by Boston. Detroit’s once-powerful offense became increasingly limited because of injuries to Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder’s inability to hit for power.

A grand slam by Shane Victorino — again off a Detroit reliever after Scherzer had been pulled — enabled the Red Sox to end the series with a win in Game 6.

“The difference really, when you look at the series, is they hit a couple of big bombs and we just didn’t quite do that,” Leyland said. “They hit a couple of timely, two or three really timely home runs.”

Starting rotation not enough for Tigers

AP

Cincinnati Bengals kicker Mike Nugent (2) kicks a 54-yard fi eld goal against the Detroit Lions in

the fourth quarter of an NFL game Sunday in Detroit. Cincinnati beat the Lions 27-24.

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Still far from being a good team, the Washington Redskins are at least a successful team for a change.

The Redskins gave up a special teams touchdown to Devin Hester — who didn’t see that coming? — and had their defense shredded by a backup quarterback playing his fi rst regular season game in 21 months.

They took advantage of an injury-depleted Chicago Bears defense and scored their most points since 2005, needing every morsel of offense from Robert Griffi n III and Co., right down to Roy Helu’s game-deciding 3-yard touchdown with 45 seconds remaining.

They beat the Bears 45-41 Sunday, raising their record to 2-4

while not doing much to alleviate the doubts surrounding the reigning NFC East champions.

“When we go watch the fi lm,” Griffi n said, “we won’t watch it with smiles on our face. … But I think we made enough plays today to win the game, and that’s all matters.”

Griffi n completed 18 of 29 passes for 298 yards with two touchdowns and one interception, and he also ran 11 times for a season-high 84 yards. Helu rushed for three scores, and third-round rookie tight end Jordan Reed had a breakout performance with 134 yards and a touchdown, catching all nine passes thrown his way.

“Every game is big, but we sure needed it after being 1-4,” coach Mike Shanahan said. “You don’t

Cutler hurt in Bears’ loss

DETROIT (AP) — Andy Dalton and Matthew Stafford combined to throw a lot of highlight-worthy passes — especially to A.J. Green and Calvin Johnson.

But the Cincinnati Bengals used superior special teams for a second straight hard-fought road win, 27-24 against the Detroit Lions on Sunday.

Mike Nugent’s 54-yard fi eld goal as time expired won it, but two punts and a blocked fi eld goal also were crucial.

“We wrote a pretty good script there at the end,” Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said.

The AFC North-leading Bengals (5-2) won a game for the second straight week by the same score thanks to Nugent’s right foot. He made an overtime kick to give

Cincinnati a win after it blew a 14-point, fourth-quarter lead at Buffalo.

“I love how confi dent everyone always is,” Nugent said. “Nobody freaks out. I think it all begins with (Marvin Lewis) because he and his staff don’t get too high or too low.”

The Lions (4-3) rallied from an 11-point, third-quarter defi cit and looked as if they did enough to send the game to OT, but rookie Sam Martin shanked a punt just 28 yards to midfi eld in the fi nal minute.

“I thought they were going to try blocking the punt and I rushed myself,” Martin said. “I was trying to put the ball on the sideline and keep it away from the returner and I pulled it.”

Dalton threw two short passes to gain 15 yards and called the team’s

last timeout with 4 seconds left to set up Nugent’s game-winning fi eld goal.

“Pretty clutch kick, two weeks in a row,” Dalton said.

Dalton was pretty good again, too.

He was 24 of 34 for 372 yards, the third-highest total of his career and threw three touchdown passes for the second straight game. He didn’t have an interception.

After Dalton was sacked for the fi rst and only time Sunday, Bengals punter Kevin Huber hit a perfect, 45-yard punt that pinned Detroit to its 6 with 1:43 left.

“We were in a tough spot,” Stafford said. “If we would have dropped back in a pass play on that fi rst play, I would have been in my own end zone.”

Bengals prevail in Detroit

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) — Everyone expects the big one to happen at Talladega Superspeedway.

For some reason, it never occurred Sunday.

Oh sure, there was a wreck on the fi nal lap, which allowed Jamie McMurray to coast to the victory under caution.

But by the standards of this place, it was about as clean as can be.

“Once you get toward the end, it usually gets more intense and everybody starts taking bigger risks,” McMurray said. “I was listening to my spotter and he would say, ‘A line is forming, but it’s not very organized and they’re not making up any ground.’ I’m really surprised they couldn’t put something together to make more of a run. I’m shocked by that, actually. I thought guys would take bigger chances at the end.”

McMurray won for the fi rst time in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series since 2010, snapping a 108-race winless streak, and didn’t even have to worry about a planned last-lap charge from Dale Earnhardt Jr. after Dillon spun coming out of the second turn.

The only other driver collected

in the crash was Casey Mears, who slammed into Dillon’s car and sent it fl ying into the air before it came back down upright. Everyone was OK.

“I was trying to go for the win there,” said Dillon, who was fi lling in for injured Tony Stewart in the No. 14 car and competing in just his 12th Sprint Cup race. “A wild ride. I just have to thank NASCAR for everything they have done for safety. That hit was fi ne. I got to drive the car back” to the garage,

though he settled for 26th after going to the fi nal lap in third.

A race known for massive crashes was essentially trouble free. There was a minor wreck early on when Marcos Ambrose got loose in front of the main grandstand and took out Juan Pablo Montoya, and 103 consecutive laps under green until the yellow and checkered fl ags waved together at the end.

Earnhardt settled for second, followed by Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Paul Menard and Kyle Busch.

McMurray wins at Talladega

AP

Sprint Cup Series driver Jamie McMurray (1) celebrates after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at the Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala., Sunday.

SEE BEARS, PAGE B2

Page 8: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

B2 kpcnews.com SPORTS •

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

New bowling recordThe Auburn Bowl team set a new game and series record for the DeKalb County USBC association last week at Auburn Bowl. Competing in the Booster League, the team posted a single-game score of 1,269 and a series of 3,559, topping the old mark of 3,476 set last year by Auburn

Bowl. Ken Henry led the team with a 289 game and 760 series. Bob Carper had 754 series, followed by Mark Medler (752), Chris Toyias (714) and Jason Flaugh (579). Pictured, from left, are Toyias, Medler, Henry, Flaugh and Carper. Team member Jess Redden is not pictured.

Trine Sports Roundup•

College Cross CountryThunder run at Wilmington

WILMINGTON, Ohio — Trine University’s teams took part in Wilmington College’s #JennaStrong Fall Classic Friday with teams at various college levels. The Thunder men were 22nd with 570 points while the Trine women placed 27th with 762.

The Trine men were paced by freshman Austin Ganger in 27th place in an 8-kilometer time of 26:03.16. Adam Schaaf was 110th in 27:17.23. Michael Hammond was 151st in 27:48.12, and West Noble High graduate Aaron Mast was 177th in 28:09.47.

Garrett’s Ariel McCoy led the Thunder women in 133rd place in 20 minutes, 37.37 seconds for 5 kilometers. Kelsey Ortiz was 184th in 21:23.44, and Cynthia Yoder 202nd in 21:34.42.

Fremont’s Tyler Herber was 25th for Huntington out of 416 men’s runners in 26:00.17.

Ball State freshman Ericka Rinehart of Angola placed 46th out of 398 runners in the women’s race in 19:27.03.

College VolleyballTrine 1-1 over the weekend

Trine University went 1-1 in Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association match this past weekend. It won at home over Saint Mary’s Friday 25-17, 25-22, 25-16, but lost at Adrian 25-27, 25-23, 25-23, 25-19 on Saturday.

The Thunder (11-14 overall) are in sixth place in the MIAA at 5-8. They are 1 1/2 matches out of fourth place and the fi nal qualifying spot for the MIAA Tournament with three confer-ence matches left to play.

On Saturday, Jordan Brisson had 11 kills and Kristi Walker had 16 digs for the Bulldogs (9-14, 4-9 MIAA).

Carly Searles had 44 assists, 14 digs and nine kills for Trine. Taylor Rabel had 15 kills and three block assists. Carlee Felber had 24 digs. Lauren Verkamp had 19 digs and six kills.

On Friday, Rabel had 11 kills and Felber had 16 digs for the Thunder. Searles had 29 assists, seven digs and two block assists. Verkamp added eight kills, seven digs and two aces for the Thunder.

College SoccerTrine men lose at Calvin

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Trine University’s men’s team lost to Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association co-leader Calvin 6-2 on Saturday.

The Thunder scored fi rst. But the Knights (8-5, 7-2 MIAA) led 3-2 at halftime before pulling away in the second half. Travis Vegter had two goals for Calvin.

Mac Green and Kenny Rappuhn scored for Trine (2-11-1, 0-9). Karston Shephard and Bill Wilson each had an assist. Chris Stewart made two saves in goal.

Bulldogs defeat TU womenANGOLA — Trine University’s

women’s soccer team lost to Adrian 6-0 in a Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association match Saturday played at home.

Sam Barker had three goals and an assist for the Bulldogs (10-5, 8-4 MIAA), who led 4-0 at the half. Sloan Davis made three saves in goal for the Thunder (2-12, 1-11).

AP

New York Jets running back Chris Ivory (33) fends off New England Patriots strong safety Logan Ryan (26) and New England Patriots strong safety Steve Gregory (28) during the second half of an NFL football game Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J.

want to dig yourself a bigger hole.”

The Redskins’ two victories have come against backup QBs — Matt Flynn, who has since been released by the Oakland Raiders — and now Josh McCown, who entered Sunday’s game in the second quarter after Jay Cutler left with a groin injury.

McCown was seeing his fi rst action since the 2011 season, but the Bears improved with him in the game. Chicago had 46 yards of total offense in the fi rst half and 313 in the second. He completed 14 of 20 passes for 204 yards, including a 7-yard touchdown pass to Martellus Bennett that gave his team a 41-38 lead with 3:57 to play.

“I didn’t ask him what he liked, what he didn’t like,” Bears coach Marc Trestman said. “I just called the plays according to the plan we had put together. I thought he functioned very well in the offense.”

Matt Forte rushed for three touchdowns, Alshon Jeffery had 105 yards receiving, and Hester tied Deion Sanders’ NFL record for return touchdowns with an 81-yard punt runback, but the Bears (4-3) couldn’t keep up because the defense was running out of playmakers.

Having already lost middle linebacker D.J. Williams and two defensive tackles to season-ending injuries, Chicago had to make do without linebacker Lance Briggs (shoulder) and Charles Tillman (knee) down the stretch after both were hurt in the second half.

“They’ve been here a long time, made a lot of plays. Defi nitely wish we could have had them out there,” linebacker Jonathan Bostic said.

Cutler was injured when he was brought down on the fi rst career sack by 333-pound nose tackle Chris Baker. Cutler clutched at the top of his left leg and limped off the fi eld. He will have an MRI on Monday. Trestman didn’t have an update on Briggs or Tillman.

FROM PAGE B1

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jamaal Charles ran for 86 yards and a touchdown, Alex Smith also ran for a score and the scrappy Chiefs held off the banged-up Houston Texans 17-16 on Sunday to remain unbeaten.

The Chiefs were forced to punt the ball to Houston with 1:46 left in the game. But after Case Keenum threw an incompletion on fi rst down, the young quarterback was stripped by linebacker Tamba Hali at his 2. Derrick Johnson recovered the fumble for the Chiefs.

Kansas City (7-0) extended the second-best start in franchise history. The 2003 team began the season 9-0.

Keenum, making his fi rst NFL start in place of the injured Matt Schaub, threw for 271 yards and a touchdown for the Texans (2-5). But he didn’t get much help from his run game after Arian Foster left in the fi rst quarter with a hamstring injury and did not return.Jets 30, Patriots 27, OT

In East Rutherford, N.J., Nick Folk kicked a 42-yard fi eld goal with 5:07 left in overtime. Folk got a second chance after he missed a 56-yarder moments earlier. But Chris Jones was called for unsportsmanlike conduct for pushing a teammate forward to try to block the kick, a new NFL rule.

New York, given new life, ran the ball three times to set up Folk’s winner.

Geno Smith threw a touchdown pass and ran for another score as the Jets (4-3) topped Tom Brady and the Patriots (5-2). New England tied it at 27 with 16 seconds left in regulation on Stephen Gostkowski’s 44-yard fi eld goal.Steelers 19, Ravens 16

In Pittsburgh, Shaun Suisham drilled a 42-yard fi eld goal with no time remaining. Suisham’s fourth fi eld goal of the day pushed the Steelers (2-4) to their second straight win.

Ben Roethlisberger completed 17 of 23 passes for 160 yards and a touchdown. He hit Antonio Brown

for a pair of big gains on Pittsburgh’s fi nal drive, putting Suisham well within range to win it. Running back Le’Veon Bell ran for a season-high 93 yards on 19 carries.

Joe Flacco passed for 215 yards and a touchdown, but couldn’t stop the defending Super Bowl champions (3-4) from losing for the third time in their last four games.49ers 31, Titans 17

In Nashville, Tenn., Colin Kaepernick threw for 199 yards and ran for 68 and a touchdown. The 49ers (5-2) won their fourth straight before heading to London for a game with winless Jackson-ville by jumping out to a 17-0 halftime lead. Frank Gore also ran for a pair of 1-yard TDs as San Francisco cruised.

The Titans (3-4) lost their third straight even with Jake Locker starting after missing two games with a sprained right hip and knee. Locker threw for 326 yards with two TD passes in a fourth-quarter spurt that came up short.Cowboys 17, Eagles 3

In Philadelphia, Tony Romo threw for 317 yards and one touchdown and the Cowboys overcame a sluggish start to take sole possession of fi rst place in the NFC East.

Two teams that averaged a combined 58 points per game and allowed a combined 55 totaled 13 punts in a fi rst half that ended with Dallas (4-3) leading 3-0. It was more two inept offenses than two dominant defenses.

The Eagles (3-4) have lost a franchise-worst nine straight games at home.

A Cowboys defensive line missing three of its projected starters pressured and harassed Nick Foles before sending him to the sideline with a head injury on the last play of the third quarter.Falcons 31, Buccaneers 23

Matt Ryan threw for 273 yards and three touchdowns, including two to Jacquizz Rodgers, and host Atlanta snapped its three-game losing streak.

Harry Douglas had seven receptions for a career-best 149 yards, including a 37-yard touchdown catch, for the Falcons (2-4).Bills 23, Dolphins 21

In Miami Gardens, Fla., Mario Williams forced a fumble when he sacked Ryan Tannehill with less than three minutes left, setting up the winning fi eld goal. Dan Carpenter beat his former team by making a 31-yarder with 33 seconds to go.Panthers 30, Rams 15

Cam Newton completed 15 of 17 passes for 204 yards and a touchdown for host Carolina in a heated game.

The Rams (3-4) lost their cool with several personal foul penalties — and then lost quarterback Sam Bradford to an apparent left knee injury late in the fourth quarter.Chargers 24, Jaguars 6

Philip Rivers threw for 285 yards and a touchdown, Ryan Mathews ran for 110 yards and a score for visiting San Diego.

Chiefs fi ght off Houston

NFL•

WIN $500

WILDWILDbingobingoCOVERALL

Complete rules on back of card.

# I

16# # O

64#

KPCToday’s Today’s

10-21

BEARS: Forte scores 3 TDs

Page 9: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

SPORTS BRIEFS•

Irish QB Rees day-to-day

SOUTH BEND (AP) — Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly sounded hopeful quarterback Tommy Rees will be ready to play Saturday against struggling Air Force after sustaining a neck injury against USC.

“He’s feeling better today. Still a little sore, but it will be a day-to-day situation,” Kelly said Sunday.

Kelly said he expects Rees to practice Tuesday. The Fighting Irish (5-2) probably need Rees to heal quickly after seeing the offense become incapacitated when Rees left the game with a sprained neck with 9 minutes left in the third quarter when linebacker Lamar Dawson sacked him.

With backup Andrew Hendrix in the game, the Irish managed just two fi rst downs and the Irish went three-and-out on three other posses-sions and lost the ball on a fumble on another.

The Irish offense wasn’t dominating against USC, but looked solid while Rees was in. Rees completed 14 of 21 passes for 166 yards and two touchdowns in the 14-10 victory.

“We liked the way he played,” Kelly said.Fans may have a renewed fondness for

Rees after seeing how the Irish offense looked in his absence. Rees, who lost the starting job after his sophomore season after throwing 14 interceptions and fumbling the ball away fi ve times in 2011, was roundly booed when he was called on to replace Everett Golson against Purdue in the second game last season. But his popularity grew as he rallied the Irish to victories last season against Purdue, Michigan and Stanford and started in a victory over BYU and played a signifi cant role in helping the Irish get to the BCS championship game.

MSU wins with little fanfareEAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Last

year, Michigan State needed to win its fi nal game of the regular season to become bowl eligible.

No need for that kind of drama in 2013. The Spartans have already picked up win No. 6 — and they can expect to be fi rmly in the Big Ten title hunt when November rolls around.

Michigan State eased past Purdue 14-0 on Saturday to remain one of three teams unbeaten in Big Ten play. The Spartans didn’t look sharp at all offensively — and coach Mark Dantonio even considered a quarterback change — but the team’s stellar defense was again up to the challenge.

Michigan State (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten) is atop the Legends Division, although the Spartans remained outside the Top 25 on Sunday. It was not a particularly stylish win against Purdue (1-6, 0-3), which had been routed by Wisconsin and Nebraska in its fi rst two conference games.

The toughest part of Michigan State’s schedule is still to come. After playing at Illinois next weekend, the Spartans face Michigan, Nebraska and Northwestern in consecutive games.

“Hopefully, our football team is maturing as we move forward,” Dantonio said. “We’re understanding that nothing is easy, and we mature and we grow. With every game we grow. That doesn’t mean we’re always going to have success, but we grow with that.”

Denicos Allen returned a fumble 45 yards for a touchdown to open the scoring Saturday. On offense, the Spartans didn’t make it past the Purdue 32-yard line until the fourth quarter, when receiver Tony Lippett threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Andrew Gleichert on a trick play.

Blue Jackets best CanucksCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — R.J.

Umberger scored his fi rst goal of the season with 8:46 left and the Columbus Blue Jackets ended a four-game losing streak with a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Sunday night.

Curtis McElhinney, making his fi rst appearance for the Blue Jackets in place of Vezina Trophy winner Sergei Bobrovsky, had 37 saves. Bobrovsky had the night off.

Marian Gaborik and Ryan Johansen also scored for the Blue Jackets, who won for the fi rst time at home this season after losing their fi rst two.

Henrik Sedin had the goal for the Canucks. Eddie Lack stopped 26 shots in place of Roberto Luongo, rested on the second night of back-to-back games for Vancouver.

Umberger and Johansen each had an assist as well.

Phelps still mum on comebackBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Michael Phelps has been working out with his former coach but there is no word yet on a return to swimming for the Rio Olympics.

Bob Bowman told The Associated Press on Sunday that Phelps has been taking part in workouts with the North Baltimore Aquatic Club. He’s not yet committed to the sort of grueling program that would be needed if he decided to return to competition.

In fact, Phelps attended an NBA preseason game in China on Friday, visiting a country where he has extensive endorse-ment deals and remains extremely popular.

“He is occasionally training with the group to get back in shape,” Bowman wrote in a text to the AP.

Phelps and Bowman remain close friends and business partners.

Initially adamant he would never compete again, Phelps softened his stance this past summer after reports began swirling of an imminent comeback. He told the AP during the world championships in Barcelona, “I don’t know what’s going to happen in the future. I don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow.”

Prep Cross CountrySaturdayWest Noble Regionalat LigonierGirls Team Scores(top 5 qualify for the New Haven Semistate Saturday at The Plex, FW)1. Carroll 42, 2. Homestead 94, 3. Concordia 107, 4. Fremont 128, 5. Bishop Dwenger 134, 6. Snider 154, 7. DeKalb 173, 8. West Noble 178, 9. East Noble 190, 10. Angola 217.Girls Top 31(i-semistate qualifi ers from teams that did not qualify for semistate)1. A. Hostetler (F) 18:41.94, 2. i-Marriott (Leo) 18:53.63, 3. Konow (Con) 18:59.15, 4. Fruchey (Car) 18:59.77, 5. i-Roush (Columbia City) 19:03.27, 6. Metzger (Car) 19:04.27, 7. Distel-rath (Home) 19:06.14, 8. Walther (Home) 19:08.22, 9. i-Zawadzke (EN) 19:19.56, 10. i-Dirr (PH) 19:28.57, 11. i-McCormick (DK) 19:30.9, 12. i-Korte (A) 19:32.39, 13. Doty (Car) 19:33.07, 14. i-Bri. Fensler (Sni) 19:34.69, 15. Whaley (Car) 19:44.93, 16. Morris (Car) 19:46.11, 17. Chastain (Car) 19:48.31, 18. Welch (F) 19:50.97, 19. i-M. Malcolm (Garrett) 19:53.37, 20. i-A. Cruz (WN) 19:54.83, 21. Harrison (Con) 19:55.94, 22. Greene (Con) 20:01.08, 23. Brelage (BD) 20:05.45, 24. i-Thieme (F.W. North Side) 20:06.74, 25. Batt (Home) 20:09.01, 26. Bolton (Northrop) 20:15.38, 27. Woosley (F) 20:17.7, 28. Kilbane (BD) 20:20.04, 29. Nemitz (Whitko) 20:23.61, 30. Cade (F) 20:25.71, 31. Bre. Fensler (Sni) 20:27.79.Remaining local girls resultsOther East Noble: 32. Casselman 20:28.97, 64. McLaughlin 21:51.03, 70. Hardiek 22:18.34, 76. Jes. Vandiver 22:40, 77. Allen 22:40.03, 86. C. Jones 24:31.07.Other DeKalb: 35. Robinett 20:40.1, 50. Teders 21:15.05, 61. Beachy 21:43.9, 68. Rieke 22:03.09, 79. Hernandez 22:45.53, 84. Miazgowicz 23:54.79.Other West Noble: 38. K. Jones 20:43.27, 39. Rojas 20:47.09,65. Ness 21:55.86, 71. Salas 22:22.43, 78. C. Ratliff 22:40.95, Leatherman 24:38.59.Other Angola: 45. Buck 21:01.02, 74. Olson 22:30.27, 75. Natalie Roe 22:34.4, 80. M. Clemens 22:58.99, 83. Siders 23:24.59, 85. Barge 24:19.39.Lakeland: 48. M. Maskow 21:12.61,72. A. Maskow 22:22.85, 81. M. Burchett 23:06.99.Other Prairie Heights: 52. C. Scott 21:21.24.Westview: 53. Franklin 21:21.66, 60. Warren 21:41.92, 63. Barker 21:49.26, 69. Weaver 22:16.55.Other Garrett: 56. Stump 21:25.43.Other Fremont: 88. McCrea 24:42.31.Boys Team Scores(top 5 qualify for the New Haven Semistate Saturday at The Plex, Fort Wayne)1. Carroll 50, 2. Bishop Dwenger 64, Homestead 95, 4. Concordia 101, 5. West Noble 126, 6. DeKalb 166, 7. Snider 185, 8. East Noble 201, 9. Lakeland 227, 10. Prairie Heights 273.Boys Top 31(i-semistate qualifi ers from teams that did not qualify for semistate)1. Panning (Con) 15:28.24, 2. i-M. Beckmann (DK) 15:54.94, 3. Clements (Car) 16:09.26, 4. B. Arnold (WN) 16:19.6, 5. B. Law (Home) 16:22.6, 6. Schmeling (Car) 16:25.41, 7. Tippmann (BD) 16:31.29, 8. Klein (BD) 16:37.5, 9. i-Emmanuel (F.W. North Side) 16:45.08, 10. i-Jos. Vandiver (EN) 16:47, 11. Adgalanis (BD) 16:47.82, 12. Pyle (WN) 16:49.06, 13. Kreilach (Car) 16:49.16, 14. Unger (Car) 16:50.92, 15. Koteskey (Home) 16:50.93, 16. Sutaphong (Con) 16:53.02, 17. Schwartz (Car) 16:54.82, 18. i-Ratliff (FWNS) 16:55.55, 19. McIntyre (BD) 16:55.96, 20. i-Starnes (Northrop) 16:56.71, 21. Ehlers (Con) 17:00.3, 22. i-Beams (Fremont) 17:01.16, 23. Kelty (Car) 17:04.52, 24. S. Moore (Home) 17:05.66, 25. Hamilton (Car) 17:06.2, 26. Wuest (BD) 17:07.67, 27. i-Mortorff (Angola) 17:08.18, 28. Scholl (Home) 17:08.28, 29. i-Travis (DK) 17:13.24, 30. i-Nate Roe (A) 17:13.56, 31. i-Peck (Sni) 17:13.88.Remaining local boys resultsLakeland: 32. Trost 17:15.69, 43. K. Burchett 17:30.08, 57. E. Herber 17:45.74, 74. Chrisman 18:13.55, 86. Wadsworth 19:51.16, 87. Riehl 19:59.63, 88. Arseneau 20:08.7.Other West Noble: 33. Deluna 17:16.38, 44. Campos 17:32.24, 61. L. Weimer 17:47.57, 68. J. Contreras 18:01.75, 72. E. Contreras 18:10.13.Other East Noble: 37. Kane 17:19.84, 60. Klinger 17:46.85, 76. Gorski 18:20.33, 77. Kline 18:26.66, 82. Herrera 18:37.4, 83. Shull 18:46.19.Prairie Heights: 45. M. Perkins 17:32.99, 73. Josh Perkins 18:13.08, 75. Gunthorp 18:13.74, 80. Ja. Perkins 18:37.03, 84. R. Lewis 18:57.65, 89. A. Steele 20:19.44, 90. Garman 22:01.6.Other Fremont: 47. D. Schmucker 17:35.28.Other DeKalb: 56. Graham 17:44.24, 63. McBride 17:52.33, 64. Beakas 17:52.48, 78. Baldwin 18:32.09, 79. S. Beckmann 18:36.68.Westview: 59. D. Miller 17:45.99, 67. Flores 17:59.08, 81. Shank 18:37.37.Other Angola: 69. Orn 18:04.39.

College FootballMIAA StandingsTeam MIAA ALL PF PAAdrian 3-0 6-1 172 63Albion 2-0 4-2 148 194Hope 2-1 5-2 230 103Olivet 1-1 5-1 144 114Kalamazoo 1-1 3-3 158 165Trine 0-3 3-4 170 168Alma 0-3 0-7 75 271* — clinched conference titleSaturday’s resultsAdrian 14, Trine 9Albion 31, Kalamazoo 21Hope 43, Alma 23Next Saturday’s gamesAlma at Albion, 1 p.mOlivet at Adrian, 5 p.m.Kalamazoo at Hope, 7 p.m.

College Football SummarySaturdayAdrian 14, Trine 9at Fred Zollner Ath. Stadium, AngolaAdrian 0 0 14 0 — 14Trine 0 3 0 6 — 9Scoring summarySecond quarterTrine — Tyler Keck 45 FG, 5:14Third quarterAdr — Josh Delaney 5 pass from Aaron Tenney (Dustin Salliotte kick) 6:11Adr — Dae’Von Robinson 15 run (Salliotte kick) 2:24Fourth quarterTrine — Jared Barton 4 pass from Andrew Dee (run failed) 3:39Team statistics AC TUFirst downs 12 15Rushes-yards 40-122 33-107Passing (C-A-I) 12-21-0 15-35-0Passing yards 107 201Total plays-yards 61-229 68-308Fumbles-lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-yards 8-75 6-40Return yards 47 55Third-down conv. 4-15 3-16Fourth-down conv. 2-2 3-3Sacks-yards lost 0-0 3-13Punts-Ave. 7-34.6 8-29.1Time of possession 30:49 29:11MISSED FIELD GOALS: Keck (TU) 43 (1:07, 2nd), Salliotte (AC) 30 (5:50, 4th).INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING: Adrian — Damon Brown 17-68, Dae’Von Robinson 12-43, Drew Collins 3-24, Kyle Smock 1-0, Sam Joseph 1-(minus-3), TEAM 1-(minus-4), Aaron Tenney 5-(minus-6). Trine — Richard Gunn 33-107.PASSING: Adrian — Tenney 11-19-0, 98 yds., 1 TD pass; Collins 1-2-0, 9 yds., Trine — Dee 15-35-0, 201 yds., 1 TD pass.RECEIVING: Adrian — Nathan Hartline 7-84, Josh Delaney 3-20, Parish Thomas 1-5, Smock 1-(minus-2). Trine — Zach Hess 5-45, Jared Barton 4-72, Gage Corner 2-35, Travis Durham 2-31, Gunn 2-18.Defensive StatisticsAdrian’s leading tacklers (solos-as-sists-total): Curtis Rhoden 9-3-12,

Charles Fleck 3-4-7, Deontae Bridgeman 3-3-6, Tommy First 3-3-6.Trine’s leading tacklers (solos-as-sists-total): Derek Posey 3-7-10, Jim West 4-5-9, Louis Danesi 2-7-9, James Gregory 4-4-8, Michael Spears 3-4-7, Ryan Hogan 3-3-6, Tim Elick 2-3-5, Aaron Wolf 0-5-5.Tackles for loss: Adrian 2 (First 1, Bridgeman .5, Hunter Juntunen .5), Trine 5 (Danesi 1, Hogan 1, Tyler Guzy 1, Posey .5, Elick .5, Wolf .5, Caleb Nitz .5).Sacks: Adrian none, Trine 3 (Danesi 2, Posey .5, Wolf .5).Pass breakups: Adrian 5 (Rhoden, Fleck, Bridgeman, Matt Sullivan, Ellis Ewing), Trine 2 (M. Spears, Tony Miranda).Quarterback hurries: Adrian none, Trine 1 (Wolf).Blocked kicks: Adrian 1 (First), Trine none.

AP College Football PollThe Top 25 teams in The Associ-ated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 19, total points based on 25 points for a fi rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Rcd Pts Pv1. Alabama (55) 7-0 1,495 12. Oregon (3) 7-0 1,427 23. Florida St. (2) 6-0 1,395 54. Ohio St. 7-0 1,309 45. Missouri 7-0 1,197 146. Baylor 6-0 1,189 127. Miami 6-0 1,130 108. Stanford 6-1 1,118 139. Clemson 6-1 927 310. Texas Tech 7-0 904 1611. Auburn 6-1 867 2412. UCLA 5-1 832 913. LSU 6-2 739 614. Texas A&M 5-2 683 715. Fresno St. 6-0 550 1716. Virginia Tech 6-1 509 1917. Oklahoma 6-1 501 1818. Louisville 6-1 428 819. Oklahoma St. 5-1 382 2120. South Carolina 5-2 381 1121. UCF 5-1 345 NR22. Wisconsin 5-2 258 2523. N. Illinois 7-0 220 2324. Michigan 6-1 169 NR25. Nebraska 5-1 117 NROthers receiving votes: Arizona St. 108, Notre Dame 82, Oregon St. 79, Michigan St. 73, Georgia 30, Mississippi 27, Florida 17, Utah 4, Washington 4, Texas 2, BYU 1, Ball St. 1.

NASCAR Sprint Cup CampingWorld RV Sales 500

Sunday’s resultsAt Talladega SuperspeedwayTalladega, Ala.Lap length: 2.66 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (9) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 188 laps, 115.2 rating, 47 points, $236,345.2. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 188, 119.3, 43, $180,210.3. (21) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 188, 105.5, 42, $187,596.4. (34) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 188, 98.9, 40, $154,726.5. (27) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 188, 79, 40, $162,068.6. (7) David Ragan, Ford, 188, 74, 39, $133,618.7. (24) David Gilliland, Ford, 188, 68.9, 37, $122,293.8. (4) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 188, 91.1, 36, $128,235.9. (17) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 188, 64.5, 35, $128,493.10. (20) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 188, 85.7, 35, $132,793.11. (6) Greg Biffl e, Ford, 188, 90.9, 34, $106,710.12. (33) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 188, 65.6, 32, $134,071.13. (11) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 188, 119.2, 33, $140,346.14. (19) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 188, 70.5, 31, $131,671.15. (36) Michael McDowell, Ford, 188, 70.4, 29, $90,310.16. (18) Joey Logano, Ford, 188, 97.2, 29, $115,343.17. (5) Carl Edwards, Ford, 188, 82.6, 28, $121,660.18. (30) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 188, 98.1, 27, $113,030.19. (38) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 188, 66.2, 25, $108,468.20. (12) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 188, 94.4, 25, $122,076.21. (2) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 188, 85.5, 24, $98,460.22. (1) Aric Almirola, Ford, 188, 81.7, 23, $122,046.23. (26) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 188, 73.2, 0, $84,735.24. (35) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 188, 69.1, 0, $104,018.25. (39) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 188, 54.2, 20, $94,057.26. (16) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, accident, 187, 81.5, 0, $127,535.27. (10) Casey Mears, Ford, accident, 187, 63, 18, $96,510.28. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 187, 43.3, 16, $83,360.29. (13) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 187, 72.3, 15, $133,651.30. (14) Josh Wise, Ford, 187, 37.6, 0, $84,035.31. (31) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 187, 47.6, 0, $79,880.32. (22) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 187, 41.9, 12, $87,660.33. (23) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 187, 64.6, 11, $79,510.34. (29) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 187, 42.5, 11, $87,310.35. (40) Terry Labonte, Ford, 187, 34.1, 10, $79,135.36. (28) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 186, 32.5, 9, $96,980.37. (43) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 183, 44, 0, $78,846.38. (15) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, engine, 142, 66.3, 6, $93,625.39. (3) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 134, 71, 5, $97,039.40. (25) David Reutimann, Toyota, engine, 119, 46.3, 4, $65,825.41. (32) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, accident, 78, 40.6, 3, $89,039.42. (42) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, engine, 60, 25, 0, $57,825.43. (41) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, engine, 2, 25.3, 0, $54,325.Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Race Winner: 178.795 mph.Time of Race: 2 hours, 47 minutes, 49 seconds.Margin of Victory: Under Caution.Caution Flags: 3 for 10 laps.Lead Changes: 52 among 20 drivers.Lap Leaders: A.Almirola 1; J.Burton 2; A.Almirola 3-7; J.Burton 8-10; M.Kenseth 11-14; G.Biffl e 15-18; J.Logano 19-24; G.Biffle 25; M.Kenseth 26-41; J.Logano 42; B.Labonte 43-44; J.Gordon 45; T.Labonte 46; K.Kahne 47; D.Earn-hardt Jr. 48-49; J.Johnson 50-54; D.Earnhardt Jr. 55-57; M.Kenseth 58-68; J.Johnson 69-77; D.Earnhardt Jr. 78-80; Ku.Busch 81-82; J.Johnson 83-84; M.Kenseth 85; J.Johnson 86-93; C.Bowyer 94; J.Johnson 95-97; C.Bowyer 98; J.Johnson 99-101; D.Earnhardt Jr. 102-103; J.Johnson 104; D.Earnhardt Jr. 105; J.Johnson 106-110; R.Stenhouse Jr. 111-113; J.Johnson 114-120; R.Stenhouse Jr. 121; J.McMurray 122; C.Mears 123; J.Gordon 124-125; A.Almirola 126-127; D.Earnhardt Jr. 128-131; J.Johnson 132-135; D.Earnhardt Jr. 136-146; Ky.Busch 147; R.Stenhouse Jr. 148; D.Earnhardt Jr. 149-160; R.Stenhouse Jr. 161; Ku.Busch 162; D.Ragan 163; D.Blaney 164; Ky.Busch 165-170; C.Edwards 171; Ky.Busch 172-173; J.McMurray 174-188.Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Johnson, 10 times for 47 laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 8 times for 38 laps; M.Kenseth, 4 times for 32 laps; J.McMurray, 2 times for 16 laps; Ky.Busch, 3 times for 9 laps; A.Almi-rola, 3 times for 8 laps; J.Logano, 2 times for 7 laps; R.Stenhouse Jr., 4 times for 6 laps; G.Biffl e, 2 times for 5 laps; J.Burton, 2 times for 4 laps; J.Gordon, 2 times for 3 laps; Ku.Busch, 2 times for 3 laps; C.Bowyer, 2 times for 2 laps; B.Labonte, 1 time for 2 laps; D.Ragan, 1 time for 1 lap; C.Edwards, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Blaney, 1 time for 1 lap; C.Mears, 1 time for 1 lap; T.Labonte, 1 time for 1 lap; K.Kahne, 1

time for 1 lap.Top 12 in Points: 1. J.Johnson, 2,254; 2. M.Kenseth, 2,250; 3. Ky.Busch, 2,228; 4. K.Harvick, 2,228; 5. J.Gordon, 2,220; 6. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,202; 7. G.Biffl e, 2,201; 8. C.Bowyer, 2,197; 9. Ku.Busch, 2,193; 10. C.Edwards, 2,186; 11. R.Newman, 2,182; 12. J.Logano, 2,179.

NFL StandingsAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 5 2 0 .714 152 127N.Y. Jets 4 3 0 .571 134 162Miami 3 3 0 .500 135 140Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 159 178South W L T Pct PF PAIndianapolis 4 2 0 .667 148 98Tennessee 3 4 0 .429 145 146Houston 2 5 0 .286 122 194Jacksonville 0 7 0 .000 76 222North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 5 2 0 .714 148 135Baltimore 3 4 0 .429 150 148Cleveland 3 4 0 .429 131 156Pittsburgh 2 4 0 .333 107 132West W L T Pct PF PAKansas City 7 0 0 1.000 169 81Denver 6 0 0 1.000 265 158San Diego 4 3 0 .571 168 144Oakland 2 4 0 .333 105 132NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 4 3 0 .571 200 155Philadelphia 3 4 0 .429 169 196Washington 2 4 0 .333 152 184N.Y. Giants 0 6 0 .000 103 209South W L T Pct PF PANew Orleans 5 1 0 .833 161 103Carolina 3 3 0 .500 139 83Atlanta 2 4 0 .333 153 157Tampa Bay 0 6 0 .000 87 132North W L T Pct PF PAGreen Bay 4 2 0 .667 168 127Detroit 4 3 0 .571 186 167Chicago 4 3 0 .571 213 206Minnesota 1 4 0 .200 125 158West W L T Pct PF PASeattle 6 1 0 .857 191 116San Fran. 5 2 0 .714 176 135St. Louis 3 4 0 .429 156 184Arizona 3 4 0 .429 133 161Thursday’s GameSeattle 34, Arizona 22Sunday’s GamesAtlanta 31, Tampa Bay 23Washington 45, Chicago 41Dallas 17, Philadelphia 3N.Y. Jets 30, New England 27, OTBuffalo 23, Miami 21Carolina 30, St. Louis 15Cincinnati 27, Detroit 24San Diego 24, Jacksonville 6San Francisco 31, Tennessee 17Kansas City 17, Houston 16Green Bay 31, Cleveland 13Pittsburgh 19, Baltimore 16Denver at Indianapolis, lateOpen: New Orleans, OaklandMonday’s GameMinnesota at N.Y. Giants, 8:40 p.m.Thursday, Oct. 24Carolina at Tampa Bay, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 27Cleveland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.Buffalo at New Orleans, 1 p.m.Miami at New England, 1 p.m.Dallas at Detroit, 1 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.San Francisco vs. Jacksonville at London, 1 p.m.Pittsburgh at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Cincinnati, 4:05 p.m.Atlanta at Arizona, 4:25 p.m.Washington at Denver, 4:25 p.m.Green Bay at Minnesota, 8:30 p.m.Open: Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, Indianapolis, San Diego, TennesseeMonday, Oct. 28Seattle at St. Louis, 8:40 p.m.

NFL Regional SummariesChicago 10 7 7 17—41Washington 3 21 7 14—45First QuarterWas—FG Forbath 38, 11:28.Chi—FG Gould 47, 7:03.Chi—Forte 2 run (Gould kick), 6:02.Second QuarterWas—Helu Jr. 14 run (Forbath kick), 13:44.Was—Orakpo 29 interception return (Forbath kick), 13:27.Chi—Hester 81 punt return (Gould kick), 5:52.Was—Reed 3 pass from Griffi n III (Forbath kick), :27.Third QuarterChi—Forte 50 run (Gould kick), 6:34.Was—Helu Jr. 3 run (Forbath kick), 3:19.Fourth QuarterChi—Forte 6 run (Gould kick), 12:44.Was—A.Robinson 45 pass from Griffi n III (Forbath kick), 10:55.Chi—FG Gould 49, 8:39.Chi—M.Bennett 7 pass from McCown (Gould kick), 3:57.Was—Helu Jr. 3 run (Forbath kick), :45.A—83,147.Team Statistics Chi WasFirst downs 21 28Total Net Yards 359 499Rushes-yards 22-140 43-209Passing 219 290Punt Returns 3-85 0-0Kickoff Returns 7-105 3-53Interceptions Ret. 1-28 1-29Comp-Att-Int 17-28-1 18-29-1Sacked-Yards Lost 2-13 1-8Punts 3-49.0 5-43.6Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0Penalties-Yards 5-30 5-47Time of Possession 26:04 33:56INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Chicago, Forte 16-91, McCown 4-33, Jeffery 2-16. Washington, Morris 19-95, Griffi n III 11-84, Helu Jr. 11-41, Young 1-0, A.Robinson 1-(minus 11).PASSING—Chicago, McCown 14-20-0-204, Cutler 3-8-1-28. Washington, Griffi n III 18-29-1-298.RECEIVING—Chicago, Marshall 6-75, Jeffery 4-105, E.Bennett 3-24, Forte 2-18, M.Bennett 1-7, M.Wilson 1-3. Washington, Reed 9-134, Garcon 5-58, A.Robinson 2-75, Hankerson 1-26, Helu Jr. 1-5.MISSED FIELD GOALS—Chicago, Gould 34 (WR).

Cincinnati 7 7 10 3—27Detroit 7 3 7 7—24First QuarterCin—Green 82 pass from Dalton

(Nugent kick), 10:59.Det—Pettigrew 3 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 3:02.Second QuarterDet—FG Akers 36, 11:43.Cin—M.Jones 12 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), :41.Third QuarterCin—Eifert 32 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 10:42.Det—Johnson 27 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 8:17.Cin—FG Nugent 48, 3:37.Fourth QuarterDet—Johnson 50 pass from Stafford (Akers kick), 11:59.Cin—FG Nugent 54, :00.A—63,207.Team Statistics Cin DetFirst downs 18 22Total Net Yards 421 434Rushes-yards 18-57 25-77Passing 364 357Punt Returns 1-8 2-1Kickoff Returns 1-21 1-35Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0Comp-Att-Int 24-34-0 28-51-0Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 0-0Punts 4-47.3 4-43.3Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 6-50 4-30Time of Possession 25:29 34:31INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Cincinnati, Bernard 7-27, Green-Ellis 10-24, Dalton 1-6. Detroit, Bush 20-50, Bell 5-27.PASSING—Cincinnati, Dalton 24-34-0-372. Detroit, Stafford 28-51-0-357.RECEIVING—Cincinnati, Green 6-155, Bernard 5-32, Gresham 4-64, M.Jones 4-57, Eifert 3-45, Sanu 1-12, Sanzen-bacher 1-7. Detroit, Johnson 9-155, Durham 5-41, Bush 3-44, Bell 3-29, Pettigrew 3-7, Ogletree 2-50, Broyles 2-16, Fauria 1-15.MISSED FIELD GOALS—Cincinnati, Nugent 47 (WL). Det., Akers 34 (BK).

Cleveland 0 3 3 7—13Green Bay 14 3 0 14—31First QuarterGB—Finley 10 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 12:22.GB—Lacy 1 run (Crosby kick), 3:44.Second QuarterCle—FG Cundiff 46, 5:11.GB—FG Crosby 26, :03.Third QuarterCle—FG Cundiff 44, 5:03.Fourth QuarterGB—Nelson 1 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 8:30.Cle—Cameron 2 pass from Weeden (Cundiff kick), 6:09.GB—Boykin 20 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 3:44.A—77,804.Team Statistics Cle GBFirst downs 17 26Total Net Yards 216 357Rushes-yards 23-83 29-104Passing 133 253Punt Returns 1-0 1-18Kickoff Returns 4-189 2-45Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-11Comp-Att-Int 17-42-1 25-36-0Sacked-Yards Lost 3-16 1-7Punts 3-44.3 3-30.0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0Penalties-Yards 12-106 10-97Time of Possession 26:40 33:20INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Cleveland, McGahee 11-39, Weeden 2-20, Ogbonnaya 4-15, Whittaker 5-11, Gray 1-(minus 2). Green Bay, Lacy 22-82, Rodgers 4-12, Franklin 2-6, Kuhn 1-4.PASSING—Cleveland, Weeden 17-42-1-149. Green Bay, Rodgers 25-36-0-260.RECEIVING—Cleveland, Cameron 7-55, Little 4-49, Gordon 2-21, Whittaker 2-13, Bess 2-11. Green Bay, Boykin 8-103, Finley 5-72, Nelson 5-42, Lacy 5-26, White 1-9, Kuhn 1-8.MISSED FIELD GOALS—Green Bay, Crosby 52 (SH).

St. Louis 2 3 7 3—15Carolina 7 10 10 3—30First QuarterCar—Munnerlyn 45 interception return (Gano kick), 14:39.StL—Sims safety, 5:23.Second QuarterCar—FG Gano 37, 14:12.StL—FG Zuerlein 28, 5:25.Car—Tolbert 1 run (Gano kick), 1:05.Third QuarterCar—FG Gano 31, 6:46.StL—Stacy 4 pass from Bradford (Zuerlein kick), 5:22.Car—S.Smith 19 pass from Newton (Gano kick), :19.Fourth QuarterCar—FG Gano 50, 11:32.StL—FG Zuerlein 42, 9:09.A—72,686.Team Statistics StL CarFirst downs 15 21Total Net Yards 317 282Rushes-yards 21-63 38-102Passing 254 180Punt Returns 3-26 1-(-1)Kickoff Returns 3-73 2-54Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-45Comp-Att-Int 23-34-1 15-17-0Sacked-Yards Lost 4-20 2-24Punts 4-39.8 3-51.3Fumbles-Lost 4-2 1-0Penalties-Yards 8-68 7-59Time of Possession 26:40 33:20INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—St. Louis, Stacy 17-53, Richardson 3-9, Bradford 1-1. Carolina, D.Williams 15-40, Tolbert 13-36, Newton 10-26.PASSING—St. Louis, Bradford 21-30-1-255, Clemens 2-4-0-19. Carolina, Newton 15-17-0-204.RECEIVING—St. Louis, Austin 5-39, Stacy 4-34, Cook 4-33, Quick 2-97, Pettis 2-17, Harkey 2-14, Kendricks 2-7, Givens 1-24, Richardson 1-9. Carolina, S.Smith 5-69, Olsen 4-47, LaFell 3-35, Ginn Jr. 2-34, D.Williams 1-19.

Baseball PlayoffsLEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIESAmerican LeagueBoston 4, Detroit 2Saturday, Oct. 12: Detroit 1, Boston 0Sunday, Oct. 13: Boston 6, Detroit 5Tuesday, Oct. 15: Boston 1, Detroit 0Wednesday, Oct. 16: Detroit 7, Boston 3Thursday, Oct. 17: Boston 4, Detroit 3Saturday, Oct. 19: Boston 5, Detroit 2National LeagueSt. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2Friday, Oct. 11: St. Louis 3, Los Angeles 2, 13 inningsSaturday, Oct. 12: St. Louis 1, Los Angeles 0Monday, Oct. 14: Los Angeles 3, St.

Louis 0Tuesday, Oct. 15: St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2Wednesday, Oct. 16: Los Angeles 6, St. Louis 4Friday, Oct. 18: St. Louis 9, Los Angeles 0WORLD SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)All games televised by FoxSt. Louis vs. BostonWednesday, Oct. 23: St. Louis (Wainwright 19-9) at Boston (Lester 15-8), 8:07 p.m.Thursday, Oct. 24: St. Louis at Boston, 8:07 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 26: Boston at St. Louis, 8:07 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 27: Boston at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.x-Monday, Oct. 28: Boston at St. Louis, 8:07 p.m.x-Wednesday, Oct. 30: St. Louis at Boston, 8:07 p.m.x-Thursday, Oct. 31: St. Louis at Boston, 8:07 p.m.

Baseball Playoff SummaryLate SaturdayAL CHAMP. SERIES GAME 6Red Sox 5, Tigers 2at Fenway Park, BostonTigers ab r h bi Red Sox ab r h biTrHntr rf 3 1 1 0 Ellsury cf 3 1 1 1MiCarr 3b 4 1 1 0 Victorn rf 3 1 1 4Fielder 1b 3 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 3 0 1 0VMrtnz dh 4 0 1 2 D.Ortiz dh 3 0 0 0JhPerlt lf 3 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0D.Kelly pr-lf 1 0 0 0 Sltlmch c 4 0 0 0Avila c 4 0 0 0 JGoms lf 4 1 1 0Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 Drew ss 3 0 0 0AJcksn cf 3 0 2 0 Bogrts 3b 1 2 1 0Iglesias ss 4 0 2 0 Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 28 5 5 5Detroit 000 002 000—2Boston 000 010 40x—5E—Iglesias (2), Workman (1). DP—Detroit 1, Boston 2. LOB—Detroit 7, Boston 5. 2B—J.Gomes (1), Bogaerts (3). HR—Victorino (1). CS—Ellsbury (1).Detroit IP H R ER BB SOScherzer L,0-1 61-3 4 3 2 5 8Smyly 0 0 1 1 0 0Veras BS,1-1 1-3 1 1 1 0 1Coke 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Alburquerque 1 0 0 0 0 3Boston IP H R ER BB SOBuchholz 5 4 2 2 2 4F.Morales BS,1-1 0 1 0 0 1 0Workman 12-3 2 0 0 0 1Tazawa W,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Breslow H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1Uehara S,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 2Buchholz pitched to 2 batters in 6th.F.Morales pitched to 2 batters in 6th.Smyly pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.HBP—by Scherzer (Victorino). WP—Scherzer. Umpires—Home, Dan Iassogna; First, Joe West; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Ron Kulpa; Right, Dale Scott; Left, Alfonso Marquez. T—3:52. A—38,823 (37,499).

NHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GADetroit 9 6 3 0 12 24 23Toronto 9 6 3 0 12 30 22Boston 7 5 2 0 10 20 10Montreal 8 5 3 0 10 26 15Tampa Bay 8 5 3 0 10 26 21Ottawa 8 3 3 2 8 21 24Florida 9 3 6 0 6 20 32Buffalo 10 1 8 1 3 13 28Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 8 7 1 0 14 31 19Carolina 9 4 2 3 11 22 26NY Islanders 8 3 3 2 8 25 23Columbus 8 3 5 0 6 19 22Washington 8 3 5 0 6 21 25New Jersey 8 1 4 3 5 17 26NY Rangers 7 2 5 0 4 11 29Philadelphia 8 1 7 0 2 11 24WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAColorado 8 7 1 0 14 27 12Chicago 8 5 1 2 12 23 19St. Louis 7 5 1 1 11 27 19Nashville 9 5 3 1 11 19 22Minnesota 9 3 3 3 9 19 22Winnipeg 9 4 5 0 8 22 25Dallas 8 3 5 0 6 20 28Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GASan Jose 8 7 0 1 15 39 16Anaheim 8 7 1 0 14 30 19Phoenix 9 5 2 2 12 27 26Los Angeles 9 6 3 0 12 24 22Vancouver 10 5 4 1 11 27 29Calgary 7 3 2 2 8 23 26Edmonton 9 2 6 1 5 26 36NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Saturday’s GamesPittsburgh 4, Vancouver 3, SOFlorida 2, Minnesota 1, SOEdmonton 3, Ottawa 1Colorado 4, Buffalo 2Nashville 2, Montreal 1Boston 5, Tampa Bay 0New Jersey 4, N.Y. Rangers 0Carolina 4, N.Y. Islanders 3Washington 4, Columbus 1Chicago 3, Toronto 1Phoenix 5, Detroit 2San Jose 6, Calgary 3Los Angeles 5, Dallas 2Sunday’s GamesColumbus 3, Vancouver 1Nashville 3, Winnipeg 1Anaheim 6, Dallas 3Monday’s GamesSan Jose at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.Colorado at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.Calgary at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.Tuesday’s GamesAnaheim at Toronto, 7 p.m.Vancouver at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.New Jersey at Columbus, 7 p.m.Edmonton at Montreal, 7:30 p.m.Chicago at Florida, 7:30 p.m.Nashville at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Washington at Winnipeg, 8 p.m.Calgary at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

NHL SummariesVancouver 0 1 0—1Columbus 1 0 2—3First Period—1, Columbus, Gaborik 3 (Anisimov, Wisniewski), 3:27.Second Period—2, Vancouver, H.Sedin 2 (Garrison, Kesler), 10:42 (pp).Third Period—3, Columbus, Umberger 1 (Johansen, Prout), 11:14. 4, Columbus, Johansen 2 (Umberger), 19:33 (en).Shots on Goal—Vancouver 13-9-16—38. Columbus 2-14-13—29.Goalies—Vancouver, Lack. Columbus, McElhinney. A—14,168 (18,144). T—2:28.

SCOREBOARD•

kpcnews.com B3MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

AHS juniors win powder puff football gameA team of Angola High School junior girls pose for a picture after defeating a team of AHS senior girls in the annual powder puff football game on Oct. 9 at the school’s soccer fi eld. Approximately 50 junior and senior

girls played in the game that was sponsored by Angola’s Student-Ath-lete Advisory Council. Fans who attended the entertaining contest gave canned goods which went to Project Help.

Page 10: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

A kid outside the popular clique impresses so many classmates — especially those belittled by the in-crowd — that she wins the election for class president. Irked by her encroachment into their hallway hierarchy, the preppies shun her. They snub her idea for school spirit rallies. They plan their own homecoming bonfire to compete with the traditional one she’ll preside over. She arranges a wear-our-school-colors day for Fridays; they wear them on Thursdays.

You have to wonder how a school principal or counselor would handle such behavior. What word would they use to describe such disrespect?

Someone within the leadership of the majority party ruling Indiana government should step up and be the metaphorical football team captain who breaks ranks with the clique and shows up at the class president’s bonfire. A Republican in a power position at the Statehouse should stand beside Glenda Ritz and affirm her authority to perform the duties of state superintendent of public instruc-tion — the full duties of that job, just as an overwhelming number of Hoosiers elected her to do last November.

Since taking office in January, Ritz has seen her office’s powers usurped and circumvented by an ideological circle ruling Indiana government still stung by her surprising electoral defeat of Republican former state superintendent Tony Bennett.

Though Ritz was a lifelong Republican, the veteran teacher ran as a Democrat to challenge Bennett, a national star of the school-reform movement. Though outspent by a 10-to-1 margin, Ritz received more than 1.3 million votes.

Ritz polled more votes for superin-tendent than Mike Pence, a former Republican congressman, did in his narrow victory in the governor’s race.

The most powerful of Bennett’s allies have yet to accept that outcome. Their rejection of Ritz’s authority has reached a level of incivility beyond any in recent memory within the state education structure.

Last spring, Pence and aligned GOP legislators essentially created a second state education department to go around Ritz. They shifted $5 million for staffing the State Board of Education from Ritz’s office to the governor’s, setting up a new career-training and education agency that Pence unveiled in August. A more overt attempt by Bennett backers in the Legislature to dilute Ritz’s role by overhauling the State Board and the Indiana Education Roundtable was appropriately stopped in the 2013 General Assembly session.

The shunning continues, though. Last month, one of the 10 members of the State Board — all appointed by either former Gov. Mitch Daniels or Pence — established a strategy planning committee to lead the board and determine priorities for the next three years.

The new strategy panel is backed by all of the State Board members except Ritz, who holds the chairperson’s seat as superintendent. By contrast, Ritz was backed by 1.3 million Hoosier voters.

Ritz campaigned hard in opposi-tion to limits on teachers’ collective bargaining, private-school vouchers and the A-F school rating system pushed by Bennett, Daniels, national reformists and like-minded state lawmakers.

Yet, since her term began, she has gone to great lengths to collaborate with those of opposing viewpoints. A solid core still refuses to work with her. Unless someone intercedes, the childish, detrimental tactics will continue, especially in the upcoming 2014 legisla-tive session.

“I just think there will probably be things coming through the legislative process that will try to diminish my power as superintendent,” Ritz told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “They could include removing me as chair of the board; they could include overseeing more of my budget; they could include overseeing of data.”

Such ideological bullying should not happen. Indiana voters deserve better. In their behalf, a high-level Republican — perhaps House Speaker Brian Bosma — needs to be a voice of reason and publicly support Ritz in the manner of the loyal opposition.

Hoosier school children need that hero.

Tribune-Star, Terre Haute

Bullying of Ritz

must stop

What Others Say•

East Noble students seeking help for Honor Flights for area veterans

To the editor:On behalf of the East Noble High School

Interact Club, I would like to invite our East Noble Community to join in our efforts to honor our veterans. Our current project is helping to fund the Spring 2014, Honor Flight Trip for our local veterans. The World War II Memorial in Washington DC was completed and dedicated in May 2004. It is a long overdue “Thank You” to the men and women who sacrifi ced so much for our freedom and a memorial to those who made the ultimate sacrifi ce. It was so long overdue that many WWII survivors have been unable to visit their memorial due to the barriers of advanced age, such as health matters, stamina, fi nances or other travel impairments.

Honor Flight provides a way for many of these veterans to visit and refl ect at their memorial. The immediate focus of the Honor Flight Network will remain on WWII veterans; however, the vision goes beyond WWII. In the future, Honor Flight plans to pay tribute to America’s other heroes that served during the Korean and Vietnam wars, followed by veterans of more current wars. They, too, have given much and it is time to honor these heroes for all of their enduring efforts.

Our club goal is to raise $10,000 so that we may recognize our local heroes. If you would like to help in our cause, please feel free to contact me at [email protected], or in care of East Noble High School at 347-2032 and leave a message for Matthew Rickey. Donations may also be made to “Honor Flight” East Noble Interact Club, 901 Garden Street, Kendallville IN 46755.

We value our freedom and know that we

owe our freedom to the men and women who fought to preserve it. Each of us have family members who served or are currently serving in the U.S. military, and we appreciate the sacrifi ce and bravery of our troops and all of our veterans. We want to say “Thank You” to our World War II heroes before it’s too late!

Natalie PineClass of 2014

Avilla

‘If the government wants to shut down, we should shut them down’

To the editor:I have a proposal to the American

people… This government shut down is affecting everyone’s lives whether they know it or not.

I suggest that if the government wants to shut down we shut them down. Those who work and pay federal and state taxes can change their exemptions on their state and federal payroll forms to modify what is withheld. I say let’s play their game!

Rachel ReceKendallville

Actions seem to contradict each other

To the editor:First of all, “There is never an excuse or

justifi cation for hatred, greed or abuse.”A man puts the “Ten Commands” on one

end of his property, then brags about the image he let be displayed on his video sign just a few feet away. Go fi gure.

But the sad thing is he sees nothing wrong with it. He only thought about himself. Not what it might do to his community, nor did he care. And this

person is a business man? Not!Vicki DomerWolcottville

Albion Rotary grateful for strong support of porkburger fundraiser

To the editor:Twice a year (for many years) the Albion

Rotary Club sponsors a pork burger sale in Albion. Generally held at the stoplight in town, the sale is well received by the community, offers a great opportunity for the club’s members to work together for a common cause and realizes a profi t which is used for post-secondary scholarships for Central Noble Students.

Thanks are due to many vendors, businesses, community members and Rotarians. Your friends and neighbors benefi t from your generosity!

Most recently, Nick Busche and Busche Enterprises have placed orders of 750+ sandwiches when the sale is conducted in the spring and fall. It takes a well organized Rotary team to pull this off — cooking and delivering the food for three shifts of workers. Thank you, Lori Busche, for your help with planning. It’s certainly a kindness by management to supply “lunch” to its employment group. AND, it creates real IMPACT when the Albion Rotary Club is able to realize a doubled profi t of its annual sales.

Thank you to the Albion community, its businesses, and particularly Busche Enterprises for partnering with the Rotary Club. Our promotion of continued education for our school’s high school graduates is important. This community’s strong collab-oration makes it happen!

Denise LemmonAlbion Rotary Club

WASHINGTON — Two things are often said in this town: “A day is a year in politics.” And, “It’s all about 2014.”

Combined, the two statements mean that much can happen between now and the midterm elections next year when Republicans hope to hold the House and gain the Senate — and Democrats intend to hold the Senate and recover the House.

Each respective goal is equally possible depending on the same single signifi cant determi-nant: Whether Ted Cruz stops talking.

While that thought settles in, we pause to note that right now, the idea that Republicans could convince anyone that they should be allowed to deliver milk, much less hold the nation’s purse strings, seems remote. But things do change quickly around here. With the debt crisis postponed and the government up and running again — faith in the effi ciency of which underscores how dire our political straits — most Americans will settle into the season’s serial holiday distractions and move right along.

Nothing to see here. Even the barricades are gone.

As all know, the fi xes recently applied are temporary and the new year brings fresh problems — implementation of Obamacare and our gluttonous debt, just to name

a couple.Tax and entitlement reform

were the real targets for House Speaker John Boehner, who tried in vain to convince his colleagues that they’d have greater leverage

during debt-ceiling negotiations. Instead, the tea party insurrectionists in the House, incited by Cruz, opted to defund Obamacare, a doomed effort from the start. Farewell leverage.

This is history now. What lies ahead is the GOP’s internal struggle to determine which wing of the party prevails. And which wing prevails likely will determine the balance of power come 2014.

Suffi ce to say, if Cruz’s voice drowns out the so-called establish-ment voices, Republicans may as well start investing in camels. The desert awaits.

The House may be less problematic because many Republicans, thanks to gerryman-dering, are secure in their conser-vative districts. The Senate poses greater challenges, but the National Republican Senatorial Committee has been busy recruiting and training candidates who can bridge the gap and win both primaries and general elections, especially focusing on states where Democrats either are vulnerable (Arkansas) or are retiring (South Dakota, Montana and West Virginia).

This is where Cruz re-enters

the picture. Extreme voices may win primaries, but they do not win statewide elections, especially in a nation where a majority self-iden-tify as centrist. This is a lesson Republicans have learned before but that stubborn factions, who would rather tether themselves to a fl agpole than run the fl ag across a fi nish line, seem unable or unwilling to embrace.

Think back to 2010 and Delaware’s Christine “I’m Not A Witch” O’Donnell and Nevada’s Sharron “Some Latinos Look More Asian To Me” Angle. And then, who can forget 2012’s stars: Richard Mourdock, who explained that rape pregnancies are gifts from God, and Todd Akin, who explored the nuances of “legitimate rape.”

Cruz comes off as smarter than all of the above combined. There’s a reason so many outside the Beltway admire him. To those who feel jilted by the system and insulted by critics, he is a vision of palm trees, dates and fountains. He articulates what they think and feel and, as a bonus, he’s got that Latino thing.

But Cruz is a mirage — an idea conjured in a fantasy that can’t be realized in reality. Like many successful politicians (and narcissists), he refl ects back to others their own projected needs and desires. But then reality sets in — the debt-crisis deadline looms or the defunding ruse is exposed as theater — and only dust and dung remain among the shards of mirrored glass.

To the most important point —

the crux of Cruz: The only person who loves Ted Cruz more than Ted Cruz is Barack Obama. It is the White House and Democrats, not Republicans, who have advanced the idea that Cruz is the face of the GOP. Remember when the White House insisted that Rush Limbaugh was the leader of the GOP? These narratives are useful to Democrats because they loonify the GOP, driving voters away from their fi ery rhetoric just as intense heat repels any sensible mammal.

Cruz and Co. were more useful than Democrats could have hoped for as Obamacare limped out of the starting gate. One can bet that the greater the “glitches,” the bigger the megaphone for Cruz — the useful genius.

The only hope for Republicans going forward is that Cruz resists the allure of his own voice.

KATHLEEN PARKER is a syndicated columnist with Tribune Media Services. She can be reached at [email protected].

Obama only person who loves Cruz more than Cruz

We welcome letters to the editor.

All letters must be submitted with the author’s signature, address and daytime telephone number.

We reserve the right to reject or edit letters on the basis of libel, poor taste or repetition.

Mail letters to:

The News Sun 102 N. Main St. P.O. Box 39Kendallville, IN 46755 Email: [email protected]

The Star 118 W. Ninth St.Auburn, IN 46706 Email: [email protected]

The Herald Republican 45 S. Public SquareAngola, IN 46703 Email: [email protected]

Letter Policy

Letters to The Editor•

TheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICANB4 kpcnews.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

KATHLEEN

PARKER

Suffi ce to say, if Cruz’s voice drowns out the

so-called establishment voices, Republicans may as well start investing in

camels. The desert awaits.

Page 11: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013 COMICS • TV LISTINGS kpcnews.com B5•

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON

DUSTIN BY STEVE KELLEY & JEFF PARKER

ALLEY OOP BY JACK AND CAROLE BENDER

FRANK & ERNEST BY BOB THAVES

THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM

GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS

BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL

BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER

DEAR DOCTOR K: My mother recently had a stroke, and it’s severely impacted her ability to speak. What can be done to help her regain her speech?

DEAR READER: Losing the ability to speak, or to understand speech, takes away an important part of ourselves -- the ability to communicate easily with others. I would rather be blind or deaf than unable to speak or to understand others. But there is hope that your mother can improve.

A stroke occurs when a blood vessel supplying the brain bursts or becomes blocked. In both cases, the injury deprives the brain of a constant supply of oxygen- and nutrient-rich blood. Brain cells can die, possibly aff ecting a person’s ability to move, feel, think or even recognize people. In your mother’s case, it has

taken her ability to speak.Your mother should

begin a rehabilitation program with a speech-lan-guage pathologist as soon

as she is able. Th is therapist will help your mother improve her capacity to speak and understand speech.

Th e two most common stroke-re-lated speech impair-ments are aphasia and dysarthria.

Aphasia is the loss

of the power to use or understand words. In most people, it occurs when a stroke damages the left side

of the brain, which is where language is processed. Some people with aphasia have trouble talking but can easily understand speech. Others talk easily but can’t understand what people are saying.

Rehab for someone with aphasia involves speech and language exercises that help the patient regain the ability to understand, speak, read and write. Exercises include repeating words a therapist says, practicing following directions, and practicing reading and writing. Group therapy sessions pro

vide opportunities to practice talking with others who are recovering from strokes. A therapist may also recommend a voice-output, or speech-generating, device to aid communication in daily life.

Dysarthria is the inability to speak because the stroke

has weakened the muscles of the tongue, palate and lips — the parts of the mouth that utter words. With dysarthria, a person can understand speech and form proper words in his mind, but just cannot get the words out of his mouth. Persons with dysarthria oft en can write their thoughts down perfectly well even though they cannot speak them out loud.

A person with dysarthria can do exercises to help increase strength and endurance in the muscles used for speech. Th e therapist also helps to improve enunciation. He or she might recommend speaking more slowly or taking deeper breaths before speaking.

DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.

Therapy helps stroke patients speak again

MONDAY EVENING OCTOBER 21, 2013 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30

(15) WANE News InsEd. News News Wheel Jeopardy Mother Girls (N) BBigBang Mom (N) HHostages (N) (16) WNDU News 16 News 16 News News InsEd. Access The Voice "The Battles" (N) TThe Blacklist (N) (21) WPTA 21 Alive News News News ET Komets Dancing With the Stars (N) CCastle (N) (21.2) CW Cops Cops King Hill Clevela. Seinfeld Rules Hart of Dixie B. & Beast (N) NNews Seinfeld (33) WISE Dr. Phil (N) NNews News Modern Middle The Voice "The Battles" (N) TThe Blacklist (N) (33.2) MNT Paid Middle FamilyG FamilyG AmerD AmerD SVU "Popular" SSVU "Execution" SSunny Sunny (39) WFWA WordGirl Wild K. PBS NewsHour Business Matters Antiques Rd. Antiques Rd. Independent L. (N) (39.2) KIDS DinoT WordGirl Fetch! Raggs Sid Barney W.World George Arthur Cyberch. Speaks Clifford (39.3) CRE Garden Organic O.House CookNick Ming Chef Lidia's Cook's Joanne CookNick O.House Steves' (39.4) YOU Gen. News Bloom Florida PBS NewsHour On Story Make: News Journal Newsline Make: (55) WFFT Mother Mother 2½Men 2½Men BigBang BigBang Bones (N) SSleepy "Pilot" WWFFT Local News (22) WSBT News News News News Wheel Jeopardy Mother Girls (N) BBigBang Mom (N) HHostages (N) (25) WCWW Middle Middle Mother Mother BigBang BigBang Hart of Dixie B. & Beast (N) NNews Seinfeld (28) WSJV 2½Men 30 Rock Simps. FamilyG Modern Modern Bones (N) SSleepy "Pilot" FFOX 28 News (34) WNIT Wild K. News PBS NewsHour Michiana Steves' Antiques Rd. Antiques Rd. Independent L. (N) (46) WHME America Garden Star Trek: NG Hogan News Sumrall Bible The Harvest Show Hart Life (57) WBND News News News News Feud ET Dancing With the Stars (N) CCastle (N) (63) WINM Fellow. Alive Health Faith H. Talk News Today Manna B.Hinn Life J. Hagee Bible

AMC Movie ��� House of Wax ('05) Elisha Cuthbert. ����� Halloween Donald Pleasence. � Halloween 2A&E The First 48 Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage

CNBC Fast Money Mad Money The Kudlow Report Cocaine Cowboys American Greed CNN The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer OutFront A. Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Live AC360 Later COM :55 Futura :25 Futura SouthPk Tosh.O Colbert Daily Sh. Futura Futura SouthPk SouthPk Brickleb SouthPk DISC Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud (N) BBarHunt. BarHunt.DISN GoodLk GoodLk GoodLk Jessie Austin GoodLk Jessie ��� Twitches Tia Mowry. :10 Jessie Dog Blog

E! K&K Take Miami K&K Take Miami E! News Kardash The Kardashians The Kardashians ENC 3:55 � Little Big ... � That's My Boy ('12) Adam Sandler. � The Andromeda Strain ��� Scary Movie 3ESPN Horn (N) IInterrupt SportsC. Monday Night Countdown (L) (:25) Football NFL Minnesota vs N.Y. Giants (L)

ESPN2 Football Press Horn Interrupt ESPN Magazine Poker World Series PPoker World Series PPoker World Series FAM Middle Middle ��� Alice in Wonderland ('10) Johnny Depp. ��� Twilight ('08) Kristen Stewart. FNC The Five Special Report On the Record The O'Reilly Factor The Kelly File Hannity FS1 Goes Wild (L) FFootball (L) FFinishes Mission Being Being Boxing Golden Boy Promotions

FSMW Snowboarding Poker WPT PPoker WPT FFootball NCAA TCU vs. Oklahoma State HALL Little House Prairie The Waltons The Waltons The Waltons The Waltons Frasier Frasier HBO Movie Movie (:15) � Les Misérables ('12) Russell Crowe, Hugh Jackman. � Life According to Sam (P) Movie

HBO2 4:10 � Parental ... ����� Reversal of Fortune Bill Maher Boardwalk Empire � The SessionsHBOS (:55) ��� Roads to Riches � Lola Versus Greta Gerwig. The Sopranos ���� This Means War Movie HGTV Renovation Renovation Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It (N) HHouseH HouseHIST Lost Book of Nostradamus Aliens "The Greys" AAncient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens LIFE Wife Swap Wife Swap Wife Swap ��� The Ugly Truth Katherine Heigl. � Miss Congenia...MAX Movie (:45) ���� The Lovely Bones ('09) Rachel Weisz, ���� Lethal Weapon 3 Mel Gibson. ��� TedMTV GirlCode GirlCode HookUp GirlCode Big Tips Texas Big Tips Texas Teen Mom 3 Teen Mom 2 NICK Sponge Sponge Sponge Sponge Sam, Cat Awesme F.House F.House F.House F.House F.House F.House SYFY � Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines � A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Fred... ���� Fright Night Anton Yelchin.

SHOW Polanski ���� Lincoln ('12) Sally Field, Daniel Day-Lewis. Homeland Masters of Sex Homeland SPIKE (4:25) ���� The Punisher ���� X-Men ('00) Hugh Jackman. ���� X-MenSTARZ Movie (:40) Dancing on the Edge (:20) ���� Brave Kelly Macdonald. ��� Little Man Movie

TBS Queens Queens Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld FamilyG FamilyG FamilyG FamilyG FamilyG BigBang BigBang TLC Say Yes Say Yes Toddlers & Tiaras The Little Couple Half-Ton Mom Half-Ton Dad Half-Ton Killer? TMC 4:30 � It's a Disa... ��� Transsiberian Woody Harrelson. ��� Autumn in New York � Salmon Fishin...TNT Castle "Demons" CCastle Castle Castle "Kill Shot" Castle "Cuffed" MMajor Crimes

TVLND Bonanza Bonanza Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith Ray Ray Friends Friends USA NCIS NCIS "Heartland" NNCIS "Nine Lives" WWWE Monday Night Raw VH1 Basketball Wives Basketball Wives Basketball Wives Bball Wives (SF) (N) CCrazy Sexy Cool: The TLC Story (P) (N) WGN Law:CI "Pravda" HHome Videos Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos

Crossword Puzzle•

Today is Monday, Oct. 21, the 294th day of 2013. There are 71 days left in the year.

Today in history:• On Oct. 21, 1879,

Thomas Edison perfected a workable electric light at his laboratory in Menlo Park, N.J.

• In 1944, during World War II, U.S. troops captured the German city of Aachen.

• In 1960, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon clashed in their fourth and fi nal presidential debate.

Almanac•

DEAR ABBY: Last summer, aft er 24 years of marriage, I fi nally summoned the nerve to take my teenage daughter and leave my emotionally abusive husband. We are both thriving now. I have been in therapy, lost almost 45 pounds and have rediscovered my self-con-fi dence all over again. A friend I have known for more than 10 years has expressed interest in dating me. I like him very much, but I’m not sure if it would be appropriate to date yet. What do you think? — TENTATIVE IN MASSACHUSETTS DEAR TENTATIVE: Tempting as this is, proceed with caution. When a person has been emotionally starved for a long time, then begins to feel attractive, accepted and validated again, the result can be euphoria — a powerful “high.” Right now you need to be rational. What I think about

your dating this man is less important than what your therapist thinks right now.

Please make this question a priority during your next sessions because the insight you’ll gain into yourself will help you not only in a relationship with this man — if you decide to have one — but in future ones as well. DEAR

ABBY: My boyfriend of two years, “Jesse,” has suddenly changed. He’s pushing me away. We are both 17 and have a 9-month-old baby. Jesse spent the fi rst six months of our son’s life in state custody. Since he has

been back, he has been really distant. He ignores me and isn’t aff ectionate anymore. When I get upset about it, he denies it and says I have no reason to be upset. I’m scared our relationship isn’t as strong as I thought. My son deserves a family, but it’s falling apart. What should I do? — TROUBLED IN TENNESSEE DEAR TROUBLED: You have no idea what might have happened to Jesse aft er he was sent away, so give him some space, but let him know that if he wants to talk about it, you are willing to listen and be supportive. Don’t push and don’t be clingy. You may have to be strong for all three of you. Complete your education, take parenting classes, and encourage Jesse to do it, too. Do this and your son WILL have a family, whether or not it’s the one you thought you’d have with Jesse.

DEAR ABBY

Jeanne Phillips

She’s not sure when to start dating again

ASK DOCTOR K.

Dr. Anthony

Komaroff

Page 12: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

FRESNO, California (AP) — Trucks loaded with tomatoes, milk and almonds clog the two main highways that bisect California’s farm heartland, carrying goods to millions along the Pacifi c Coast and beyond. This dusty stretch of land is the starting point for one of the most expensive U.S. public infrastructure projects: a $68 billion high-speed rail system that would span the state, linking the people of America’s salad bowl to more jobs, opportunity and buyers.

Five years ago, California voters overwhelmingly approved the idea of bringing a bullet train to the most populous U.S. state. It would be America’s fi rst high-speed rail system, sold to the public as a way to improve access to good-paying jobs, cut pollution from smog-fi lled roadways and reduce time wasted sitting in traffi c while providing an alternative to high fuel prices.

Now, engineering work has fi nally begun on the fi rst 30-mile segment of track here in Fresno, a city of a half-million people with soaring unemploy-ment and a withering downtown core littered with abandoned factories and shuttered stores.

Rail is meant to help Fresno, with construction jobs now and improved access to economic opportunity once the project is fi nished. But the region that could benefi t most from the project is also where opposition to it has grown most fi erce.

“I just wish it would go away, this high-speed

rail. I just wish it would go away,” says Gary Lanfranco, whose restau-rant in downtown Fresno is slated to be demolished to make way for rerouted traffi c.

Such sentiments can be heard throughout the Central Valley, where roads are dotted with signs such as: “HERE COMES HIGH SPEED RAIL There goes the farm.” Growers complain of misplaced priorities, and residents wonder if their tax money is being squandered.

Aaron Fukuda, a civil engineer whose house in the dairy town of Hanford lies directly in one of the possible train routes, says: “People are worn out, tired, frustrated.”

Voters in 2008 approved $10 billion in bonds to start construction on an 800-mile rail line to ferry passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles in 2 hours and 40 minutes, compared with 6 hours by car now during

good traffi c. Since then, the housing market collapsed, multibillion-dollar budget defi cits followed, and the price tag has fl uctuated wildly — from $45 billion in 2008 to more than $100 billion in 2011 and, now, $68 billion.

Political and fi nancial compromises led offi cials to scale back plans that now mean trains will be forced to slow down and share tracks in major cities, leading critics to question whether it will truly be the 220-mph “high-speed rail” voters were promised.

The high-speed rail business plan says trains will run between the greater Los Angeles area and the San Francisco Bay Area by 2029. But construction has been postponed repeat-edly, and a court victory this summer by opponents threatens further delays; a Sacramento County Superior Court judge said the state rail authority’s plan goes against the promise

made to voters to identify all the funding for the fi rst segment before starting construction.

Even the former chairman of the California High-Speed Rail Authority, Quentin Kopp, has turned against the current project, saying in court papers that it “is no longer a genuine high speed rail system.”

In the Central Valley, there is intense distrust of the authority, which has started buying up property, land and businesses, some of which have been in families for generations.

At the dimly lit Cosmopolitan Cafe, offi ce workers line up alongside farmers and paramedics to order sandwiches as waitresses expeditiously call out order numbers. Four decades’ worth of memorabilia and yellowing newspaper restaurant reviews line the faux-wood walls in the space that Lanfranco has owned for most of his life.

Lanfranco says the sum he was offered to buy the property does not come close to replacing the space he owns, debt-free. The adjacent parking lot — a rare commodity — is packed with pickup trucks and cars each day at lunchtime. Lanfranco declined to say how much he was offered, and the offers are not public record.

“It’s not like it’s just a restaurant that I’ve owned for a couple of years and now I can just go replace it. It’s something that I’ve put the last 45 years of my life into,” the 66-year-old says.

His is just one of hundreds of properties the state needs to buy for the rail project or seize through eminent domain if they cannot reach a deal. Many owners are resentful after years of what they say have been confusing messages and misleading information.

Rail offi cials acknowl-edge that the agency hasn’t always communicated with those most affected by the project, and part of their work in the Central Valley is strictly public relations.

“Frankly, it set us back, because we, in effect, created questions and even opposition by just failing to give people answers,” says Jeff Morales, the authority’s chief executive offi cer since 2012.

For supporters, high-speed rail is the solution to California’s future transportation needs, when the state’s already jammed, rutted highways and busy airports won’t be enough for a population expected to hit 46 million by 2035.

It will create hundreds of good-paying jobs for several years as offi cials tear down buildings, draw engineering plans, survey wildlife and, eventually, lay track. It will also help move the Central Valley beyond the dominant low-wage agriculture sector, Morales says.

B6 kpcnews.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

To place an ad call 260-347-0400 Toll Free 1-877-791-7877 Fax 260-347-7282 E-mail [email protected]

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.

GARAGE

SALE

S e r v i n g D e K a l b , L a G r a n g e , N o b l e a n d S t e u b e n C o u n t i e s

ClassifiedsKPC

Open Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.Place your ad 24/7 online or by e-mail

kpcnews.com

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

Diffi cult rating: EASY 10-21

1 7

6 2 8 3

2 8 3 5

5 1 4 3

7 8

9 6 2 5

4 5 1 2

5 7 1 3

1 4

Part-Time Positions

• Standing, bending, lifting and continual hand function required• The position also requires reading and math skills

Apply in Person - No Phone Calls102 N. Main St., Kendallville or

3306 Independence Dr., Ft. WayneEOE

HAND INSERTING & POCKET FEEDING

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

*ON-CALL POSITIONS AS NEEDED FOR KPC’S FORT WAYNE MAIL OPERATION

PART-TIME SEASONAL/TEMPORARY LABORERS

NOW THROUGH JANUARY

Part-Time Positions

• Feed printed sections into stitcher/trimmer• Some bending, standing & lifting required• Hand Inserting• Pre-employment drug screen• Must be dependable and hard-working• Light math skills and reading skills

Apply in Person - No Phone Calls102 N. Main St., Kendallville, IN 46755

EOE

Part-Time Positions 9:00 PM - 5:00 AM • $7.25/hr.

THIRD SHIFT LABORERS

EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTOPPORTUNITIESOPPORTUNITIES

• VALID DRIVER’S LICENSE• Responsible Adult • Reliable Transportation• Available 7 days a week.

102 N. Main St., KendallvillePhone: 800-717-4679 ext. 105

E-mail: [email protected] are independent contractors and not employees.

Albion/Kendallvilleroutes available.

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

Circulation DepartmentContact: Misty Easterday

CARRIERCARRIEROPPORTUNITIESOPPORTUNITIES

ADOPTIONS

ADOPT: Birthmother,We welcome and

embrace you during thistime and hope to be theanswer to your adoptionplan. Couple seeks to

adopt a newborn tocomplete our family.

Maria and John888-988-5028 or

johnandmariaadopt.com

♥♥ADOPTION: Adoring♥ Family, Laughter, ♥

♥Unconditional Love,♥♥Sports, Music, Many♥Opportunities await 1stbaby. Expenses paid.

♥♥♥ Mary Pat ♥♥♥♥♥1-800-362-7842♥♥

ADOPTIONS

ADOPTION--Adoringfamily, laughter, uncon-

ditional love, sports,music. Many opportuni-ties await 1st baby. Ex-penses paid. Mary Pat:

1-800-362-7842. (A)

LOST

LOST: Small femaleFox Terrier white

w/black spots & shorttail missing from N.

Martin St. in Ligonier.260 894-7595

REWARD

LOST: Small gray &white Parrot red on tailfeathers. K’ville area.

260 242-5248

BAZAARS

WOW!Bazaar & Craft Show

OCT. 269:00-3:00 PM

PRES. CHAPEL OFTHE LAKES

2955 W ORLAND RDANGOLA

INFO 243-1085

JOB

SJO

BS

Call the Classified Department for a great advertisement price at

877-791-7877

FOR RENT

Do You Have A Vacancy For Rent?

EMPLOYMENT

✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦Assistant

ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANTPOSITION

Looking for candidateswith excellent telephoneand people skills. The

understanding ofaccounting processes

and procedures iscrucial. Effective

communication, organi-zation and customer

service skills are veryimportant in order to

perform the day-by-dayduties of this job.

Qualifications:•GED/H.S. DiplomaAssociate Degree orminimum of 2 years

of experience inAccounting

•Background inconstruction preferred.

Send resume to:ATTN: Human

Resource Manager319 Pokagon Trail

Ste AAngola, IN 46703

✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦

Cashier

Looking for self moti-vated, dependable &trustworthy people tojoin our team. Cash

register experience pre-ferred but willing to trainthe right person. Mustbe over 21, willing to

work night & weekends,able to pass prescreen& random drug testing.

Apply in Person -Valero gas station at

the corner of SR 6 & 9

EMPLOYMENT

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■Driver

Local Companyhas 2 regional

driving positionsopen. Home most

nights & everyweekend.

2 years verifiableclass A CDL

experience required.

PLEASE CALL800-272-8726

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■General

HillsdaleCommunity

Health Center has 4 FULL TIME

POSITIONSavailable in the

Environmental ServicesDepartment. Competi-

tive wage offered.Must possess highschool diploma orequivalent. Prior

experience helpful.Must apply at:

South CentralMichigan Works

23 Care DriveHillsdale, MI

EOE

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■

General

Dairy HerdManagement

Trainee Needed

Apply on line at:

www.bridgewaterdairy.com

AP

High-speed rail opponent Aaron Fukuda poses in front of his Hanford, Calif., home that lies directly in one of the planned train routes. Fukuda is one of many land owners in the Central Valley

who have sued to try to stop the $68 billion project. The state is buying up hundreds of properties to start construc-tion of the fi rst 30-mile segment of the rail line.

Controversy comes with high-speed railNot everyone happy with $68 billion California dealCAIRO (AP) —

Egyptian anti-riot police fi red tear gas Sunday at hundreds of supporters of the country’s ousted Islamist president, besieging them inside a prestigious Muslim institution after stone-hurling protesters cut off a main road.

Sunday’s clashes marked the second day of unrest at Al-Azhar University, Sunni Islam’s most prominent center of learning. Many supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi’s Muslim Brother-hood are students at Al-Azhar, a stronghold of the group. The campus is also near where Islamists had a sprawling protest camp that security forces raided in August, leaving hundreds dead and sparking days of unrest.

The students’ protest started with a march inside campus, where protesters hurled stones at the administrator’s offi ces, smashing windows and breaking doors, said Ibrahim el-Houdhoud, deputy head of the university. He told satellite news channel Al-Jazeera Mubashir Misr that he warned protesters against leaving campus and clashing with security forces.

The protesters however ignored the advice, marching out of the main gates to hold “prayers for the dead” — honoring students killed in earlier clashes between security forces and protesters in July.

The protests come amid heated debate over a new law that would place tougher restrictions on demonstrators, which includes imposing heavy fi nes and possible jail time on violators.

Clashes reported in Cairo

Page 13: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

AT YOUR SERVICEBUSINESS &

PROFESSIONAL

BANKRUPTCYFREE CONSULTATION$25.00 TO STARTPayment Plans, Chapter

13 No Money down. Fil-ing fee not included. Sat.& Eve. Appts. Avail. CallCollect: 260-424-0954

act as a debt relief agencyunder the BK code

Divorce • DUI •Criminal • BankruptcyGeneral Practice

KRUSE & KRUSE,PC260-925-0200 or800-381-5883

A debt reliefagency under theBankruptcy Code.

DRYWALL

Jaime HannahDrywall & PaintingServing Angola area

for 25 years.(260) 833-4849

CONCRETE

WEBB CONCRETECONSTRUCTIONOver 30 yrs. qualityconcrete work. Call

260 or 888 - 925-4364

HOMEIMPROVEMENT

All PhaseRemodeling

and HandymanService - No Job

too Big or Small !!!Free Estimates

Call Jeff260-854-9071

Qualified & InsuredServing You Since

1990

ROOFING/SIDING

County Line RoofingFREE ESTIMATES

Tear offs, winddamage & reroofs.

Call (260)627-0017

UPHOLSTERY

www.charleshaynescustomupholstery.

ecrater.comFURNITURE

Remember When inAngola. Chairs, sofas,bedrooms, dining sets,

paintings, antiques &collectibles.

kpcnews.com B7MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

Sudoku Answers 10-213 9 5 6 8 1 4 7 2

4 7 6 9 5 2 8 3 1

1 2 8 7 4 3 5 9 6

5 8 1 2 9 6 7 4 3

7 4 2 3 1 5 9 6 8

9 6 3 8 7 4 2 1 5

8 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 9

6 5 7 1 2 9 3 8 4

2 1 9 4 3 8 6 5 7

Coupons at your fi ngertips everyday!Coupons at your fi ngertips everyday!Find them behind the Yellow PagesFind them behind the Yellow Pages

inin

PUBLISHED BY KPC PHONE BOOKS, KENDALLVILLE, INDIANA

260-424-0954 * Toll Free 1-800-829-2308 * 1900 Lincoln Tower, Ft. Wayne

*BANKRUPTCY *PERSONAL INJURY* REASONABLE RATES * PAYMENT PLANS *

“Your Auto Accident & Injury Attorneys”

GLASER & EBBS

See PAGE 26 for details!665-7020

WIN$500

IN FREE GAS!

from

kpcyellow

.com

Arm

strong's

Arm

strong's

HEATING & AIR INC.

Steuben County

• Residential Listings • Business Listings• Community Pages • Local Maps

• Yellow Page Directory • Coupons• Restaurant Menus

The Area's Complete Information Source

Since 1986!

�������$����%�����&��

2011-2012

AREA CODE 260HudsonOrlandMetz

MongoPleasant LakePokagonStroh

AngolaAshleyFremontHamilton

P

1-888-600 LAWS

BANKRUPTC

FREE CONSULTATIONS

Noble & LaGrange Counties

2011-2012

kpcyellowpages.com

The Area's Complete Information Source!

AlbionAvillaBrimfieldCospervilleCromwellEtnaHoneyvilleHowe

KendallvilleKimmellLaGrangeLaOttoLigonierMillersburgMongoRome City

ShipshewanaSouth MilfordStrohTopekaTri LakesWawakaWolcottvilleWolf Lake

AREA CODE 260

• Residential Listings• Business Listings

• Community Pages• Local Maps

• Yellow Page Directory• Coupons• Restaurant Menus

Se

e

PA

GE

32

for d

eta

ils!

WIN

$50

0 IN

GA

S

spon

sored by

kpcyellowpages.com

Ashley

Auburn

Butler

AREA CODE 260St. Joe

Spencerville

WaterlooCorunna

Garrett

Hamilton

Hudson

RN RONGFUL DEATH• Honors Graduates

• Jury Trial Experience

me & Hospital Visits

Attorneys"

422-4400

Free Interview

1-800-444-1112

www.blackburnandgreen.comR.T. Green Tom Blackburn

With over 60 years combined

DeKalb County

The Area's

Complete

Information

Source!

Likes Law Office LLC

See PAGE 28 for details!

WIN$500IN FREE GAS!

925-6318

from

�������$����%�����&��

2011-2012

1911

2011

100 Years

• Residential Listings

• Business Listings

• Community Pages

• Local Maps

• Yellow Page Directory

• Coupons

• Restaurant Menus

SAVE MONEY

EMPLOYMENT

GENERALExp. Breafast Cook

Part-time PositionApply between6am -2pm at

Chicago Road Cafe 918 W. Chicago Rd.

Sturgis, MINp phone calls please

■■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■General

People PleasersNeeded!

PositionsAvailable:

• Line & PrepCooks

• Servers• Dishwashers

• Activities• Housekeeping

Apply in person at:Potawatomi Inn

6 Ln 100ALake James

Angola, Indiana

■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■

❏❏ ■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ Medical

MILLER’SMERRY MANOR

GARRETT

100% Employeeowned companyhas openings for:

• CertifiedNurses Aides

All shiftsFull & Part Time

Apply In Person at:

1367 S. RANDOLPHGARRETT, IN

NO PHONE CALLSPLEASE

❏ ■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■

✦✦ ✧ ✦ ✧ ✦ ✧Health

PRESENCESACREDHEARTHOME

We are acceptingapplications for thefollowing positions:

•RN or LPNFull Time2nd Shift

• CNA Part Time3rd Shift Contact

Angie Smithfor an interview.

•CookPart Time2nd Shift

ContactConnie DiFilippofor an interview

•ResidentialAide

Part time AllShifts

ContactClora Meyer

for an interview

(260) 897-2841

Or Apply on line at:

www.presencehealth.org/lifeconnections

EOE

✦ ✧ ✦ ✧ ✦ ✧

Janitorial

Butler$9-$10/ HR start.1st & 2nd Shift, PTJanitorial PositionMust have clean background.Apply online at

www.thecleaningco.com

Questions? Call1-888-832-8060M - F between

8 am - 4 pm only

Mechanic

Tractor/TrailerForeman/MechanicClass A CDL a plusbut not necessary.

Pay based onexperience.

If interested call

800-272-8726

CLASSIFIEDDon’t want the

“treasure” you found while cleaning the attic?

Make a clean sweep ...

advertise your treasures

in the Classifieds.

kpcnews.com

Email:[email protected]

Fax: 260-347-7282

Toll Free:1-877-791-7877

EMPLOYMENT

Medical

AttentionActivity

AssistantTHE

LAURELSOF DEKALB,

IS SEEKINGAn ActivityAssistant

to host theprogramming for ourMemory Care Unit

Guests. Applicantsmust be leaders whoenjoy caring for indi-

viduals. The idealcandidates are alsomotivated to host

activities for clientele.We offer

excellent wages &benefits! You will

receive vacation timeat 6 months.

To find out moreinformation, please

call

(260) 868-2164or come in and see

ourDirector ofNursing at:

520 W. Liberty St.Butler, IN 46721

Or email:laurelsofdekalb

.com

EOE

■■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■

Restaurant

THE BLUE GATEIS NOW HIRING

GREAT SERVERS

Part Time&

Full Time

Please apply at theCraft Barn locatedacross the street

from theBlue Gate Restaurant

in Shipshewana,ask for John.

Download anapplication at:

Riegsecker.com

■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■

❖❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ Restaurants

Bon Appetit Management

Company At Trine University

Now Hiring -

All Positions

Please call:(260) 665-4811to schedule an

interview

❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖

kpcnews.com

Your connection to

local and world news

EMPLOYMENT

■■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■Support Analyst

Support Analyst –Hillsdale Community

Health Center seeks a

Full-timeSupport Analyst to join our fast paced

IT department.

Work hours areTuesday – Saturday,8a to 4:30p; to include

on-call rotation.

Associate’s degree incomputer science

or related discipline orequivalent workexperience and

technical training.

Please have minimumof one year experience

in IT environment;healthcare preferred.

Apply at -www.hchc.com.

EOE

■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■

DriversCDL TRAINEES

NEEDED! *No Experi-ence Required. *Learnto Drive for US Xpress.*Train & be Based Lo-cally! *Earn $800 per

Week After SponsoredTraining Program.1-800-882-7364

DriversDriver Trainees NeededNow! Learn o drive forUS Xpress! Earn $800+

per week! No experi-ence needed! CDL-

Trained and Job Readyin 15 days!

1-800-882-7364

DriversGORDON TRUCKINGA better Carrier. A bet-ter Career. CDL-A Driv-

ers Needed. Up to$5,000 Sign-on Bonus!Starting Pay Up to .46cpm. Full Benefits. Ex-cellent Hometime. No

East Coast. EOE Call 7days/wk! GordonTruck-ing.com 888-757-2003.

GeneralHeavy Equipment Op-

erator Training! Bulldoz-ers, Backhoes, Excava-

tors. 3 Weeks HandsOn Program. Local JobPlacment Assistance.National Certifications.

GI Bill Benefits Eligible.1-866-362-6497

AC1213

RE

NT

AL

SR

EN

TA

LS

APARTMENTRENTAL

CROSSWAITCROSSWAITESTATESESTATES

FREE HEAT, WATER, FREE HEAT, WATER, SEWER & TRASHSEWER & TRASHRESIDENTS PAY RESIDENTS PAY ELECTRIC ONLYELECTRIC ONLY

LOW RENTAL RATESLOW RENTAL RATESCall today to schedule Call today to schedule a Tour!a Tour!

260-668-4415260-668-4415199 Northcrest Road199 Northcrest Road

Angola, IN 46703Angola, IN 46703PETS WELCOME!PETS WELCOME!

Restrictions apply.Restrictions apply.www.mrdapartments.comwww.mrdapartments.com

E-mail to: crosswaitestates@E-mail to: [email protected]

A New ApartmentHome Awaits You at

AngolaONE BR APTS.

$425/mo., Free Heat.260-316-5659

APARTMENTRENTAL

APARTMENTS$49 Deposit

12 Month Lease Nov. & Dec.

$200. OFF fullmonth’s rent.

Spacious 1 & 2 BR,Peaceful, Clean,

Pet Friendly.No appl. fee.

260-868-2843

www.whereUmatter.com

◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆

Avilla1 & 2 BR APTS$450-$550/ per

month. Call260-897-3188

Avilla1 BR APT: $140/wk.

Includes Util., Dep.Req’d. No Pets.

260-318-2030

GarrettNice & Clean w/lots ofroom, 2 BR possible 3,

WD hook up plusstorage area. $700/mo.

all util. included.260 316-1835

HOMESFOR RENT

ButlerLand contract, 3 BRgarage, $400/mo.

260 615-2709

Dallas LakeRENT or BUY!2 BR, 1 1/2 BA

Full basement, 2 cargarage, LARGE LOT,no smoking, no pets,

$800/mo. + util. 260-488-2239

MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT

Lake of the WoodsRENT OR BUY:

3 BR, 1BA, includeswater, sewer, trash.

$500/mo. + dep. (260) 367-1049

Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wkalso LaOtto location.

574-202-2181

HO

ME

SH

OM

ES

HOMES FOR SALE

All real estateadvertising inthis newspaperis subject to theFair Housing

Act which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preferencelimitation or discriminationbased on race, color, relig-ion, sex, handicap, familialstatus, or national origin, oran intention, to make anysuch preference, limitationor discrimination." Familialstatus includes children un-der the age of 18 living withparents or legal custodians;pregnant women and peo-ple securing custody of chil-dren under 18. This news-paper will not knowingly ac-cept any advertising for realestate which is in violationof the law. Our readers arehereby informed that alldwellings advertised in thisnewspaper are available onan equal opportunity basis.To complain of discrimina-tion call HUD Toll-free at1-800-669-9777. Thetoll-free telephone numberfor the hearing impaired is1-800-927-9275.

HOMES FOR SALE

USDA 100% GOVERN-MENT--Loans! Not justfor 1st time buyers! Allcredit considered! Lowrates! Buy any homeanywhere for sale by

owner or realtor. Acad-emy Mortgage Corpora-tion, 1119 Lima Road,Fort Wayne, IN 46818.

Call Nick at260-494-1111.

NLMS146802. Somerestrictions may apply.Equal Housing Lender.Se Habla Espanol. (A)

MOBILE HOMESFOR SALE

Mobile Homes for Salein Waterloo, Rome City& Butler. Small parks.

No big dogs. Ref req’d.(260) 925-1716

GA

RA

GE

SALE

SG

AR

AG

E SA

LES

GARAGE SALES

Pleasant LakeMcNamara

Storage UnitsHuge

Warehouse Sale1340 W. Main St.

Downtown PleasantLake 2 blocks NW ofPleasant Lake School

260 475-5850Oct. 24 - 26

9:00 am - 5:00 pmLarge curio cabinet,dinette set, musicalinstrument, glass-ware, small appli-

ances, tools, sportinggoods & much,

much more.•2000 Chevrolet HHR,

LT, sunroof, heatedleather seats, low

mileage Florida car,•2005 Ford Ranger,4x4, well equipped

low mileage Floridatruck, 1 owner,

•2002 Ford WindstarLX, 1 owner Floridavan, low mileage,

very clean, must see.

ST

UF

FS

TU

FF

ANTIQUES

NOW OPENANTIQUES ON FIFTH

109 E. FIFTH ST.SUITE E

AUBURN, INM - SAT. • 10 - 5

SUN. •NOON - 5DEALERS ARE FROM

THE FORMER 6THST. EMPORIUM

260 333-0586

FURNITURE

Brand NEW in plastic!QUEEN

PILLOWTOPMATTRESS SETCan deliver, $125.

(260) 493-0805

BUILDINGMATERIALS

PIONEER POLEBUILDINGS

Free EstimatesLicensed and Insured

2x6 Trusses45 year WarrantedGalvalume Steel

19 ColorsSince 1976

#1 in MichiganCall Today

1-800-292-0679

MUSIC

18 Classical CD’s For Sale $10/ ea.

Will sell individuallyCall 242-5266

1969 Hondo Guitarwith stand. $100/obo

260 242-7435

SPORTING GOODS

GUN SHOW!!Crown Point, IN - Octo-ber 26th & 27th, LakeCounty Fairgrounds,

889 Court St., Sat. 9-5,Sun 9-3 For information

call 765-993-8942Buy! Sell! Trade!

WANTED TO BUY

TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before

starting. Walnut needed.

260 349-2685

WANTED: Coin collec-tions - silver, gold, old

guns, Native Americanarrow heads, slate, etc.

Call Tim Carlintoll free

1-866-704-7253

WH

EE

LS

WH

EE

LS

AUTOMOTIVE/SERVICES

$ WANTED $Junk Cars! Highest

prices pd. Freepickup. 260-705-7610

705-7630

SETSER TRANSPORTAND TOWINGUSED TIRES

Cash for Junk Cars!701 Krueger St.,

K’ville. 260-318-5555

ATTENTION:Paying up to $530 forscrap cars. Call me

318-2571

IVAN’S TOWINGJunk Auto Buyerup to $1000.00(260) 238-4787

CARS

2008 Dodge Caliber4 DR, White, LooksBrand New $6500

Call 897-3805

2005 GRAND AM SRS89k mi., automatic

PB, PW, PS,6 cylinder, AC, AM/FM

CD Player, goodmileage, runs great.

$4,500/OBOKendallville

260 705-1270

1999 Mercury Sable LS,62,000 mi., 3.0, V6, 24

valve, Leather,No Rust, $3900,

Many other options,after 10am call

349-1324 /460-7729

92 Bonneville,runs good, bodygood, new tires.260-315-2454

CARS

1 & Only Place To Call-to get rid of that junk

car, truck or van!! Cashon the spot! Free tow-

ing. Call 260-745-8888.(A)

Guaranteed Top DollarFor Junk Cars, Trucks& Vans. Call Jack @

260-466-8689

TRUCKS

2000 Chevy 2500 Low Mileage, 4 Dr.Ext Cab, Long Bed,2 Wh Dr., No Rust.Call (260)927-6864

97 F150 ExCab,6Cyl/5Speed:

Air/Title/Cruise Power-Win/Locks/Mirrors

MILES:79,000 $4200Call: 260-460-7729

TRAILERS

2006 - 20 Ft. EnclosedHAULMARK TRAILERLess than 2000 miles

used. Dual axle, electricbrakes, 48 in. roadside

door, round front(260)316-6502

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

22” Poulan Push MowerRuns like new. Starts

first pull. $50.00.Albion, (260) 239-2897

4’ Double FluorescentLight fixtures. $10.00.

(260) 318-3961

5 Ed Hardy candles.New in box nice gift.

3 x 4in. $20Call (260)221-0520

8’ Fluorescent Bulbs$4.00

(260) 318-3961

80” Sofa. Brown plaidwith wood trim. $50.00.

(765) 265-4339

Antique Hickory Co.Tufted French WalnutWood Chair, $50.00.Text, (260) 573-9116

Beautiful TraditionalCoffee Table.

Excellent cond. $30.00.(260) 837-7128

Books 20 +. Assortedauthor’s. Nice cond.

$10.00. (260) 636-2295

Brother SewingMachine. VX-857.Like new, $45.00.

(260) 667-3926

Brothers 1270 FaxMachine. $50.00(260) 316-5180

Brown & White 10x10pop-up canopy. New,

$50.00. (260) 333-6392

Brown Leather Coatwith fox fur collar.Size large, $50.00.

(260) 347-4293

Cast Iron Stairway PlantStand. 6 ft. tall. 7shelves, $25.00.

Text, (260) 573-9116

Cherry EntertainmentCenter. 4-doors,

2-drawers, very goodshape. $50.00.(260) 837-7690

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Collapsible Ice FishingShanty $50

Call 927-1120

Dale Earnhardt, Jr.winter AMP Jacket.

Size 4X, new. $50.00firm. (260) 553-1951

Entertainment Center3 pcs. with doors.

$20.00. (260) 333-6392

Filing Cabinet2 drawer, solid

unfinished wood.$25.00. (260) 347-6881

Fimco 15 gal. tanksprayer. 12 volt pump,

$45.00. (260) 316-6502

Golf Bag, large size.Good shape, $25.00.

(260) 667-3926

Golf Clubs Mens lefthanded. 8 clubs, 3

woods & putter, Giafeshaft. Like new, $50.00.

(260) 667-3926

Horse or Ponny West-ern Saddle. $50.00.

(765) 265-4339

HP 4P Laser Jet$50.00

(260) 316-5180

HP 920C Deskjet$50.00

(260) 316-5180

HP Photosmart C3100All in one scan/

copies/prints. $50.00.(260) 360-5180

Ignition Modual & CoilPacks for Buick 3800

V6. $20.00(260) 302-2123

Kitchen Table48”x30”, pine top,good cond. $25.00.

(260) 402-6116

Ladies Leather JacketBlack GIII, small.

$20.00. (260) 347-6881

Large Computer Deskwith drawer & storage.

$50.00. (260) 243-4142

Love Seat$20.00

(260) 333-6392

McCoy Happy FaceBank & Planter.$30.00 for both.(260) 349-1319

Ping Pong TableStandard new $300.Used by adults only.

$50.00. (260) 316-5180

Pink Girl’s Bikein awesome cond. For a

5-6 yr. old. $40.00.(260) 350-4862

Pollenex PortableWhirlpool foot bath.Good cond. $25.00.

(260) 402-6116

Rabbit Fur CoatSize large, $50.00

(260) 347-4293

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Retro White Living roomSchweiger leather look

chair. $25.00.Text, (260) 573-9116

Shape Up Gym ShoesWorn once, white.

$35.00. (260) 333-6392

Used Trampoline ingreat shape. 14 ft.

Could buy for parts.$40.00. (260) 281-2889

Wii Fit travel bags,New in box $12

Call (260)221-0520

Wii Fit Workout Kit plusTravel Bag. New, inbox. Nice Gift! $50

(260) 221-0520

Wii HD A/V componentcables. New in box $10

Call (260)221-0520

Wii NunchukNew, in Box

2 for $20call (260) 221-0520

Winter Leather Coat3/4 length dark brown,

size M/M, $50.00.(260) 318-3821

KPCLIMITATIONS

LIMITATIONS OFLIABILITY:

KPC assumes no liabil-ity or financial responsi-bility for typographicalerrors or for omission ofcopy, failure to publishor failure to deliver ad -vertising. Our liability forcopy errors is limited toyour actual charge forthe first day & one incor-rect day after the adruns. You must promptlynotify KPC of any erroron first publication.Claims for adjustmentmust be made within 30days of publication and,in the case of multipleruns, claims are allowedfor first publication only.KPC is not responsiblefor and you agree tomake no claim for spe-cific or consequentialdamages resulting fromor related in any mannerto any error, omission,or failure to publish ordeliver.

1-877-791-7877

Place an ad showing your love

THE HERALDREPUBLICAN

THE NEWS SUN

StarThe

Page 14: The News Sun – October 21, 2013

The Canvas Shop850 N. Taylor Dr., Shipshewana, IN

(260) 768-7755309 S. Main St., Wolcottville, IN

(260) 585-7512

Quality canvas products, customdesigned to fit your exact needs.

We’ve Got You COVERED!

340 Hoosier Drive • Angola(Located behind Oasis Car Wash)

Phone 260-665-8604Fax 260-665-8989

ANGOLA COLLISION SERVICES

F FN C SU A TABOUT CARS

The most expensivecity in the world topark in is London.

Between Witmer & Westler Lakes1510 E 700 S • Wolcottville, IN

260-854-2425

DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS 12-9

Watch All the Big Games Here!

DOC’S HARDWARE

122 N. Orange St., Albion • 636-2790www.docshardware.com

Gold Dealer

DON & SALLY MERRIMAN

Mon.-Fri. 7-7 • Sat. 7-3:30Sunday 10-4

Angola Office

260.624.2108

Auburn Office

260.927.1550

Butler Office

260.868.2177

Hicksville Office

419.542.6603

Member FDIC

NMLS ID# 407535

Apply online at fm-bank.com

State Farm Home Offi ce, Bloomington, ILP097314

When I say “good”

you say “neighbor.”

Now that’s teamwork.

CALL FOR A QUOTE 24/7Morgan Hefty, Agent

1153 W. 15th StreetAuburn, IN 46706Bus: 260-925-2924

[email protected]

UPICK‘EMPRO FOOTBALL CONTEST

kpcnews.com“Are you ready for some football?”

WE ARE!Join KPC Media Group Inc. as

we bring chances to win prizes every week by picking winners

in one of America’s favorite sports – professional football! There will be local and national winners weekly and a National Grand Prize Winner for a trip

for two to Hawaii at the end of the contest.

Play Now at kpcnews.comOfficial Rules Online

SPONSORED BY:

B8 kpcnews.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

Week 1 winner : Darby Boyd, rollmover (Kendallville)Week 2 winner: Phil Vanderbosch, pudvandy (auburn)

Week 3 winner: Kenny Gentile, kennyg (Angola)Week 4 winner: Ronnie Stanley, ronnie (Kendallville)

Week 5 winner: Charles Schudel, dawgtribe (Coldwater, MI)Week 6 winner: Amy Penningroth, amyp (Ft Wayne, IN)