The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

16
Angola, Indiana kpcnews.com 75 cents Index Vol. 157 No. 2 Classified.............................................. B6-B8 Life.................................................................A5 Obituaries.....................................................A4 Opinion ........................................................ B4 Sports.................................................... B1-B3 Weather........................................................A8 TV/Comics .................................................. B5 First hike of 2014 sees more than 75 hit the snowy trails at Pokagon Page A2 Serving the Steuben County 101 lakes area since 1857 Weather Partly sunny today with a high in the mid-teens. Low of 9. Page A8 GOOD MORNING FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014 106 Peckhart Court, Auburn, IN • (260) 927-8267 Celebrate the New Year with quality flooring! Use your Van’s card this January and receive up to 60 months to pay with NO interest! There’s no better time... Stop in and see us today! OF OUR NEW FLOORING CENTER 2014 NEW YEAR SALE GRAND OPE N ING & SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — After a troubled rollout, President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul now faces its most personal test: How will it work as people seek care under its new mandates? Most major pieces of the Affordable Care Act take full effect with the new year. That means people who had been denied coverage because of a pre-existing medical condition can book appointments and get prescriptions. Caps on yearly out-of-pocket medical expenses will mean people shouldn’t have to worry about bankruptcy after treatment for a catastrophic illness or injury. And all new insurance policies must offer a minimum level of essential benefits, ranging from emergency room treatment to maternity care. The benefits apply to individual policies as well as those offered through employers. The burden for implementing the law now shifts to insurance companies and health care providers. Dr. John Venetos, a Chicago gastroenterologist, said there is “tremendous uncertainty and anxiety” among patients who have been calling his office, some of whom believe they have signed up for coverage but have not yet received insurance cards. “They’re not sure if they have coverage. It puts the heavy work on the physician,” Venetos said. “At some point, every practice is going to make a decision about how long can they continue to see these patients for free if they are not getting paid.” Administration officials said this week that 2.1 million consumers have enrolled through the federal and state-run health insurance exchanges that are a central feature of the Affordable Care Act. Yet how many of those who signed up for coverage on the exchanges will follow through and pay their premiums will not be known for a couple of weeks. People who signed up on the federal website have until Jan. 10 to pay premiums for coverage retroactive to Jan. 1, while consumers in some states have until Jan. 6. Those who enrolled during the exchanges’ first three months, persisting through serious techno- logical problems and jammed Relief, confusion as health benefits begin BY JENNIFER DECKER [email protected] ANGOLA — Drake John Nilson decided to come into the world 10 days early Thursday at 6:46 a.m. and was the first baby of the new year born. Drake was born at the Cameron Memorial Community Hospital Birthing Center to Tiffany Nicole and Dustin Todd Nilson, Angola. They arrived at the hospital at about 5:30 a.m. and about one hour later, Dr. William Smith delivered a healthy 8-pound, 8-ounce Drake. He measured 21 1/2 inches. It’s probably a good thing the couple only lives five minutes from the hospital with all the snow of late. But they had no issues. “He came really fast,” said Tiffany, who was up and about Thursday afternoon. “We were pretty much ready. He’s a big baby and I was surprised how fast it went.” Dustin said he was really grateful, while admiring his son with Tiffany. Dad was present with mom in the delivery room. “She was doing the breathing,” he joked. The couple had Drake’s name picked out in advance. A drake is a male duck and Dustin likes hunting waterfowl. Drake’s grandparents are Dawn Nilson, the late John Nilson, Jeff and Karen Counterman and Steve Romine, all of Angola. Drake has a sister at home, Gia Maria Gulvas. For being the first baby, Drake and his family received the following donations from area retailers: a ceramic duck bank and small stuffed sheep from Accents; an arrangement/ plant from Baker’s Acres; a $30 gift card from Walmart; a key rattle, lion rattle, duck soap, ceramic magnet photo frame and ice-packed stuffed pet; a crocheted blanket from Cameron Auxiliary; baby items from Lakeland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center; a $25 gift certificate to area merchants from the Angola Area Chamber of Commerce; a fluffy white bear snowsuit from Carter’s Outlet; a three-piece outfit and denim bear from OshKosh Outlet; a stuffed holiday bear from Aeropostale; and handmade diaper bag and goodies from Cameron Obstet- rics. Baby Drake an early arrival Ringing In The New Year With A New Baby JENNIFER DECKER Though he arrived 10 days before his mother’s due date, Drake John Nilson was the first baby of the new year born Thursday at 6:46 a.m. at the Cameron Memorial Community Hospital Birthing Center. His parents are Tiffany and Dustin Nilson, Angola. BY MIKE MARTURELLO [email protected] ANGOLA — Many of the motions made in the case pitting owners of a Fort Wayne strip club and the city of Angola have been denied in a ruling handed down in U.S. Federal District Court in South Bend Thursday. Alva and Sandra Butler, Fort Wayne, and their company, BBL Inc., have sued Angola in federal court, alleging their First and 14th Amendment rights have been violated by the city when they tried to open a strip club at the former location of Slider’s Grill and Bar, 310 W. Wendell Jacob Ave. Judge Robert L. Miller’s ruling was handed down shortly after 4 p.m. Thursday. “The city’s initial review is the court ruled favorably on the majority of the city’s issues and we are no doubt pleased,” said Scott Bergthold, one of the attorneys representing the city, Thursday night. Strip club ruling issued FROM STAFF REPORTS ANGOLA — The snow keeps piling up in the area after another round hit Thursday, adding to that which had fallen starting on New Year’s Eve. Plus, the start of winter 2014 is going to get dangerously cold in the coming days. In Angola, snow on the ground measured 8 inches as of 7 a.m. Thursday, said statistics kept by Ed Nagle, National Weather Service cooperative weather observer. The bulk of those 8 inches came on New Year’s Day, with 5.3 inches of new snow recorded by 7 a.m. Thursday. The NWS is forecasting more potentially dangerous winter weather in the coming days. “There is the potential for another round of accumulating snowfall — possibly significant — late this weekend,” an NWS advisory said. Today it is expected to get to about 13 degrees for a high. With winds of 5 to 10 mph, the wind chill values could get as low as 15 below zero. Through Wednesday, an extremely cold air mass is supposed to arrive early next week. Sub zero lows are expected Monday, with lows 10 to 15 below zero. The high for Tuesday is expected to be 2 below zero with a low that night of 15 below zero before warming to 10 degrees for a high on Wednesday. The wind will make matters worse. “Dangerous wind chills, possibly as low as 25 to 35 below zero may be seen Monday through Tuesday night,” the NWS said. More snow, bitter cold weather due JENNIFER DECKER Thursday’s drifting snow created difficulty keeping walks clear, especially for Alan Knisely, who called keeping the diagonal walk in the courtyard clean futile. Knisely works in maintenance at the Steuben County Courthouse. He was cleaning the sidewalk between the courthouse and the Steuben County Jail — or at least was trying. An Arctic blast and snow are expected to continue into the weekend. 2014 snow piling up Angola snow emergency vehicle order in place ANGOLA — The city of Angola has a snow removal order in place that’s enacted by police when 4 inches or more of snow has fallen. Residents have 24 hours to remove vehicles so plows can remove snow. If vehicles have not been removed after 24 hours, police will red tag the vehicle. If the vehicle has not been moved after another 24 hours, it will be impounded at the owner’s expense. For more details, contact the Angola Police Department at 665-2121. Carnegie announces some January events ANGOLA — Carnegie Public Library of Steuben County, 322 S. Wayne St. has some upcoming events to be noted this month: • Friday, Jan. 17, the library will be closed for staff in-service training. • Adult Winter Reading will be held between Jan. 20-March 1. Adults may read what they wish in library materials, four books, e-books or audio books. A prize will be given. See the display in the library for more details. • With Valentine’s Day approaching, Blind Date With a Book will stretch from Jan. 20-Feb. 14. See the library’s display and check out a book there. Books are wrapped in paper. Read the book and return the inside bookmark to be entered in a drawing Feb. 14 at 1 p.m. For more details, call 665-3362. Fremont Library has upcoming activities FREMONT — The Fremont Public Library, 1004 W. Toledo St., has upcoming free activities: • Learn more things to do with your Kindle Fire tablet Thursday 6-7:30 p.m. • Beginning Internet will be presented 10-11:30 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 15. Attendees should have basic computer skills. • Learn the basics of Medicare Thursday, Jan. 16, with sessions at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. with Dennis Postema with Postema Insurance & Investments LLC. For more details, call 495-7157. Judge denies most motions SEE SHOWGIRL, PAGE A8 SEE HEALTH CARE, PAGE A8 Affordable Care Act faces biggest test yet

description

The Herald Republican is the daily newspaper serving Steuben County in northeast Indiana.

Transcript of The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

Page 1: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

Angola, Indiana kpcnews.com 75 cents

Index•

Vol. 157 No. 2

Classifi ed .............................................. B6-B8Life .................................................................A5Obituaries .....................................................A4Opinion ........................................................ B4Sports.................................................... B1-B3Weather........................................................A8TV/Comics .................................................. B5

First hike of 2014 sees more than 75 hit the snowy trails at Pokagon Page A2

Serving the Steuben County 101 lakes area since 1857

Weather Partly sunny today with a high in the mid-teens. Low of 9. Page A8

GOOD MORNING

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

106 Peckhart Court, Auburn, IN • (260) 927-8267

Celebrate the New Year with

quality flooring! Use your

Van’s card this January and

receive up to 60 months to

pay with NO interest!

There’s no better time...Stop in and see us today!

OF OUR NEW FLOORING CENTER

2014 NEW YEAR SALEGRAND OPENING&

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — After a troubled rollout, President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul now faces its most personal test: How will it work as people seek care under its new mandates?

Most major pieces of the Affordable Care Act take full effect with the new year. That means people who had been denied coverage because of a pre-existing medical condition can book appointments and get

prescriptions.Caps on yearly out-of-pocket

medical expenses will mean people shouldn’t have to worry about bankruptcy after treatment for a catastrophic illness or injury. And all new insurance policies must offer a minimum level of essential benefi ts, ranging from emergency room treatment to maternity care.

The benefi ts apply to individual policies as well as those offered through employers.

The burden for implementing the law now shifts to insurance companies and health care providers.

Dr. John Venetos, a Chicago

gastroenterologist, said there is “tremendous uncertainty and anxiety” among patients who have been calling his offi ce, some of whom believe they have signed up for coverage but have not yet received insurance cards.

“They’re not sure if they have coverage. It puts the heavy work on the physician,” Venetos said. “At some point, every practice is going to make a decision about how long can they continue to see these patients for free if they are not getting paid.”

Administration offi cials said this week that 2.1 million consumers have enrolled through the federal and state-run health

insurance exchanges that are a central feature of the Affordable Care Act.

Yet how many of those who signed up for coverage on the exchanges will follow through and pay their premiums will not be known for a couple of weeks. People who signed up on the federal website have until Jan. 10 to pay premiums for coverage retroactive to Jan. 1, while consumers in some states have until Jan. 6.

Those who enrolled during the exchanges’ fi rst three months, persisting through serious techno-logical problems and jammed

Relief, confusion as health benefi ts begin

BY JENNIFER [email protected]

ANGOLA — Drake John Nilson decided to come into the world 10 days early Thursday at 6:46 a.m. and was the fi rst baby of the new year born.

Drake was born at the Cameron Memorial Community Hospital Birthing Center to Tiffany Nicole and Dustin Todd Nilson, Angola. They arrived at the hospital at about 5:30 a.m. and about one hour later, Dr. William Smith delivered a healthy 8-pound, 8-ounce Drake. He measured 21 1/2 inches.

It’s probably a good thing the couple only lives five minutes from the hospital with all the snow of late. But they had no issues.

“He came really fast,” said Tiffany, who was up and about Thursday afternoon. “We were pretty much ready. He’s a big baby and I was surprised how fast it went.”

Dustin said he was really grateful, while admiring his son with Tiffany. Dad was present with mom in the delivery room. “She was doing the breathing,” he joked.

The couple had Drake’s name picked out in advance. A drake is a male duck and Dustin likes hunting waterfowl.

Drake’s grandparents are Dawn Nilson, the late

John Nilson, Jeff and Karen Counterman and Steve Romine, all of Angola.

Drake has a sister at home, Gia Maria Gulvas.

For being the fi rst baby, Drake and his family received the following donations from area retailers: a ceramic duck bank and small stuffed sheep from Accents; an arrangement/plant from Baker’s Acres; a $30 gift card from Walmart; a key rattle, lion rattle, duck soap, ceramic magnet photo

frame and ice-packed stuffed pet; a crocheted blanket from Cameron Auxiliary; baby items from Lakeland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center; a $25 gift certifi cate to area merchants from the Angola Area Chamber of Commerce; a fl uffy white bear snowsuit from Carter’s Outlet; a three-piece outfi t and denim bear from OshKosh Outlet; a stuffed holiday bear from Aeropostale; and handmade diaper bag and goodies from Cameron Obstet-rics.

Baby Drake an early arrival

Ringing In The New Year With A New Baby

JENNIFER DECKER

Though he arrived 10 days before his mother’s due date, Drake John Nilson was the fi rst baby of the new year born Thursday at 6:46 a.m. at the Cameron Memorial Community Hospital Birthing Center. His parents are Tiffany and Dustin Nilson, Angola.

BY MIKE [email protected]

ANGOLA — Many of the motions made in the case pitting owners of a Fort Wayne strip club and the city of Angola have been denied in a ruling handed down in U.S. Federal District Court in South Bend Thursday.

Alva and Sandra Butler, Fort Wayne, and their company, BBL Inc., have sued Angola in federal court, alleging their First and 14th Amendment rights have been violated by the city when they tried to open a strip club at the former location of Slider’s Grill and Bar, 310 W. Wendell Jacob Ave.

Judge Robert L. Miller’s ruling was handed down shortly after 4 p.m. Thursday.

“The city’s initial review is the court ruled favorably on the majority of the city’s issues and we are no doubt pleased,” said Scott Bergthold, one of the attorneys representing the city, Thursday night.

Strip club ruling issued

FROM STAFF REPORTSANGOLA — The snow keeps piling

up in the area after another round hit Thursday, adding to that which had fallen starting on New Year’s Eve.

Plus, the start of winter 2014 is going to get dangerously cold in the coming days.

In Angola, snow on the ground measured 8 inches as of 7 a.m. Thursday, said statistics kept by Ed Nagle, National Weather Service cooperative weather observer. The bulk of those 8 inches came on New Year’s Day, with 5.3 inches of new snow recorded by 7 a.m. Thursday.

The NWS is forecasting more potentially dangerous winter weather in the coming days.

“There is the potential for another round of accumulating snowfall — possibly signifi cant — late this weekend,” an NWS advisory said.

Today it is expected to get to about 13 degrees for a high. With winds of 5 to 10 mph, the wind chill values could get as low as 15 below zero.

Through Wednesday, an extremely cold air mass is supposed to arrive early next week. Sub zero lows are expected Monday, with lows 10 to 15 below zero. The high for Tuesday is expected to be 2 below zero with a low that night of 15 below zero before warming to 10 degrees for a high on Wednesday. The wind will make matters worse.

“Dangerous wind chills, possibly as low as 25 to 35 below zero may be seen Monday through Tuesday night,” the NWS said.

More snow, bitter cold weather due

JENNIFER DECKER

Thursday’s drifting snow created diffi culty keeping walks clear, especially for Alan Knisely, who called keeping the diagonal walk in the courtyard clean futile. Knisely works in maintenance at the Steuben County Courthouse. He was cleaning the sidewalk between the courthouse and the Steuben County Jail — or at least was trying. An Arctic blast and snow are expected to continue into the weekend.

2014 snow piling up

Angola snow emergency vehicle order in place

ANGOLA — The city of Angola has a snow removal order in place that’s enacted by police when 4 inches or more of snow has fallen.

Residents have 24 hours to remove vehicles so plows can remove snow. If vehicles have not been removed after 24 hours, police will red tag the vehicle. If the vehicle has not been moved after another 24 hours, it will be impounded at the owner’s expense.

For more details, contact the Angola Police Department at 665-2121.

Carnegie announces some January events

ANGOLA — Carnegie Public Library of Steuben County, 322 S. Wayne St. has some upcoming events to be noted this month:

• Friday, Jan. 17, the library will be closed for staff in-service training.

• Adult Winter Reading will be held between Jan. 20-March 1. Adults may read what they wish in library materials, four books, e-books or audio books. A prize will be given. See the display in the library for more details.

• With Valentine’s Day approaching, Blind Date With a Book will stretch from Jan. 20-Feb. 14. See the library’s display and check out a book there. Books are wrapped in paper. Read the book and return the inside bookmark to be entered in a drawing Feb. 14 at 1 p.m.

For more details, call 665-3362.

Fremont Library has upcoming activities

FREMONT — The Fremont Public Library, 1004 W. Toledo St., has upcoming free activities:

• Learn more things to do with your Kindle Fire tablet Thursday 6-7:30 p.m.

• Beginning Internet will be presented 10-11:30 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 15. Attendees should have basic computer skills.

• Learn the basics of Medicare Thursday, Jan. 16, with sessions at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. with Dennis Postema with Postema Insurance & Investments LLC.

For more details, call 495-7157.

Judge denies most motions

SEE SHOWGIRL, PAGE A8

SEE HEALTH CARE, PAGE A8

Affordable Care Actfaces biggest test yet

Page 2: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

USF launches program to serve new tech grads

FORT WAYNE (AP) — The University of Saint Francis has become the fi rst campus in a fi ve-state area to embark on a faculty training program aimed directly at better serving students arriving from new tech high schools, said Alan Veach, director of Regional Develop-ment at the New Tech Network in Cincinnati.

Indiana has 29 of the country’s 134 new tech schools, edging out larger states such as California with 22 and

Texas with 13, according to the New Tech Network, an organi-zation that works nationwide to provide services and support to develop new tech programs in public schools.

The northeast corner of Indiana is bustling with new tech schools, including Lakeland’s Leading EDGE in LaGrange and DeKalb County New Tech High School.

Man stole, sold brain samples

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Authorities say a man stole brain samples of long-dead mental patients from the Indiana Medical History Museum that were later sold online.

Marion County court documents say 21-year-old David Charles of Indianapolis broke into the museum several times over the past year and stole jars of preserved human tissues.

The Indianapolis Star reports police arrested Charles on Dec. 16 after investigators were tipped off by a San Diego man who became suspicious about six jars of brain tissue he bought off eBay for $600.

State auditor sworn in Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Former state Rep. Suzanne Crouch has been sworn in as Indiana’s new state auditor

during a ceremony at the Statehouse.

Gov. Mike Pence signed paperwork making fellow Republican Crouch the state’s chief fi nancial offi cer while former Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Randall Shepard administered the oath of offi ce during Thursday’s ceremony. Shepard and Crouch both hail from southwestern Indiana’s Vanderburgh County.

Crouch will serve out the remainder of former Auditor Tim Berry’s term, which runs through January 2015. Berry left the job this past summer after Pence tapped him to run the Indiana Republican Party.

Five people arrested over holidayANGOLA — The following people were booked into

the Steuben County Jail following arrests made by law enforcement offi cers Tuesday and Wednesday.

• Uriah M. Bird, 39, Fort Wayne, arrested on S.R. 827 at C.R. 300N for misdemeanor operating while intoxicated, driving while suspended and leaving the scene of a property damage accident.

• Matthew Drew, 30, Angola, arrested at home for misdemeanor domestic battery.

• Dennis R. Foreman Jr., 34, Fremont, arrested in the 400 block of West Spring Street, Fremont, for misdemeanor battery.

• Travis W. Krontz, 32, Butler, arrested in the 7400 block of Enterprise Drive, Hamilton, for felony domestic battery.

• Abhishek N. Prasad, 35, Hayward, Calif, arrested in the 9600 block of North Old U.S. 27, Fremont, on a felony fugitive warrant.

Police Blotter•

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A2 THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

FRED WOOLEY

First hike, camp fi re of 2014Throughout Indiana, in all state parks and reservoirs, folks gather to kick off the new year in healthy style by hiking property trails. A group of more than 60 people swelled from the Potawatomi Inn Lonidaw Lounge early in the afternoon Wednesday. Interpreter Fred Wooley followed introductions with a winter reading appropriate to the out-of-doors on Jan. 1, and by the time the group marched through several inches of fresh snow on the Inn

lawn, it grew to more than 75. A visit to Lake Lonidaw and surrounding wetlands led to a hike back to the Inn and onward to the famous Pokagon Toboggan Run and the nearby fi re ring, now very popular on a 19-degree day. More than 125 folks gathered for Pokagon’s fi rst campfi re of the year, complete with Nature Center volunteers Alice Ummel and Emilio Vazquez handing out the fi xings for s’mores.

BY JENNIFER [email protected]

ANGOLA — National major arts and home decor retailer Hobby Lobby is expected to open this spring in County Fair Shopping Center, company offi cials said in a news release.

The privately-held company is projected to open in the late fi rst quarter at 1801 N. Wayne St. that used to house Scott’s Foods, a 20-year Country Fair anchor. Construction is underway on the 57,000 square-foot building.

Hobby Lobby’s 23rd store in Indiana is projected

to open in the fi rst quarter of 2014, bringing about 35 to 50 jobs to the community paying $14 per hour for fulltime and $9.50 per hour for part-time associates, the news release said.

“Angola and its surrounding area have many vibrant crafting communities that we look forward to serving. We are very pleased to become an integral part of yet another community by providing new jobs, exceptional selection and value in the craft and home decor market, and revitalizing an empty facility, all of

which enables us to share in the economic growth of both the state and the community,” said John Schumacher, Hobby Lobby assistant vice president of advertising.

Hobby Lobby, whose parent company Hobby Lobby Stores Inc., is headquartered in Oklahoma City, Okla. It is consid-ered a leader in the arts and crafts industry, the company’s website says.

Hobby Lobby stores nearest to Angola are in Fort Wayne and Battle Creek, Mich.

The company operates 557 stores across the nation

that average 55,000 square feet and offer more than 67,000 crafting and home decor products. Hobby Lobby is listed as a major private corporation in Forbes and Fortunes lists of America’s largest private companies.

The company started as an extension of Greco Products, a miniature picture frames company founded in a garage by David Green in 1970, the company website said. Hobby Lobby offi cially began operation on Aug. 3, 1972, with 300 square feet of retail space, and has been growing ever since.

Hobby Lobby opening soon

RICHMOND (AP) — Some of Indiana’s hospitals are reporting sharp increases in fl u cases as the state heads into what’s typically the peak months for the illness.

The Centers for Disease Prevention and Control say Indiana is among 23 states reporting regional infl uenza outbreaks, the Evansville Courier & Press reported.

Doctors have seen a big increase in patients with fl ulike symptoms at St. Mary’s Convenient Care in Evansville, where physician John Honningford said there’s been “a marked increase” in fl u cases over the past two weeks. He estimated there have been between 30 and 40 diagnosed cases of fl u at the clinic within the last month.

January and February typically are the peak fl u months in the U.S., although small numbers of fl u cases circulate for much of the year.

Dr. Fred Wallisch, medical director at Deaconess Clinic in Evansville, said there’s still time for people to get vaccinated.

“Most of the people coming in with it have not been vaccinated,” he

said. “It’s not 100 percent (effective), but it is benefi -cial.”

At Reid Hospital in Richmond, Dr. Thomas Huth said the hospital has seen about 50 fl u cases during the past week alone.

“It’s defi nitely fl u season in our area,” Huth said in a statement.

The average age of Reid Hospital’s fl u patients so far is 23; the youngest was a 1-month-old and the oldest 78.

Flu symptoms often appear quickly and include a fever, cough and/or sore throat, runny nose and headaches or body aches. Unlike a stomach virus, the fl u virus typically does not cause symptoms such as diarrhea and vomiting.

The best time to treat fl u symptoms is 72 hours after the symptoms begin, said Randi Whitesel, registered nurse and unit manager for Reid Hospital’s occupational medicine department.

“If you feel uncommonly ill with fl ulike symptoms and are experiencing shortness of breath or a high fever, it’s time to see your primary care doctor,” she said. “An urgent care center is the next-best option, and then the emergency department.”

Hospitals seeing hike in fl u cases

Regional Roundup•

Page 3: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

NATION • WORLD kpcnews.com THE NEWS SUN & THE HERALD REPUBLICAN A3•

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

WASHINGTON (AP) — Expectations are rising for a stronger U.S. economy in 2014 after reports Thursday showed solid growth in manufacturing and construc-tion spending at the end of last year.

Factory activity in December stayed near a 2 ½ -year high. Americans are buying more cars and homes, increasing demand for steel, furniture and other manufactured goods. Manufacturers have boosted hiring to meet that demand and may add jobs at a healthier pace this year.

And builders stepped up spending on home construc-tion in November, despite recent increases in borrowing rates. That suggests many remain confi dent in the housing recovery.

The economy has had bursts of healthy growth since the recession ended in June 2009, only to be followed by disappointing slowdowns. But many analysts think growth is now more sustainable.

“There was strength in some important sectors of the economy at the end of last year,” Paul Dales, an economist at Capital Economics, said. “2014 could be the year where the recovery really starts to gain some ground.”

The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, said Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity slipped to 57 in December from 57.3 the previous month. But that’s still the second-highest reading since April 2011. And any reading above 50 signals growth.

The ISM’s measure increased for six straight months through November.

A measure of new orders rose to the highest level since April 2010. And a gauge of hiring increased to its highest level since June 2011. Indexes of produc-tion and manufacturers’ stockpiles fell.

Separately, construction spending rose 1 percent in November to a season-ally adjusted annual rate of $934.4 billion, the Commerce Department said. That’s the highest in more than four years.

Spending on home and apartment construction rose 1.9 percent to the highest level since June 2008. And commercial project spending increased 2.7 percent, led by offi ce, communication and transportation projects.

The reports add to other hopeful signs that 2014 could mark a turning point for an economy that has suffered through fi ts and starts since the recession ended.

Dales said the economy faces fewer barriers this year. Steep spending cuts or tax increases, which held back growth in 2013, are unlikely. Europe’s economy is picking up slightly after a long recession. And U.S. consumers have more money to spend, thanks to greater hiring and last year’s stock market surge.

Dales forecasts the economy will expand 2.5 percent this year, up from just below 2 percent in 2013. Other economists expect growth will top 3 percent in 2014. It hasn’t been above that level for a full year since 2005.

Hopes high foreconomy afterstrong fi nish

WASHINGTON (AP) — For Democrats and Republi-cans, the early stages of the 2016 presidential contest are worlds apart.

Many Democrats already view Hillary Rodham Clinton as a quasi-incum-bent, someone who could take the reins from President Barack Obama. The former secretary of state has made no decisions about her political future but has done little to dampen enthusiasm about another presidential campaign, traveling the country making speeches and preparing to release another book.

Republicans have no clear front-runner and expect a crowded primary fi eld that could include fresh-faced candidates like New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. For a party that typically backs established politicians, 2016 could be the most jumbled GOP White House campaign in a generation.

As the Obama era nears its fi nal midterm elections, the campaign to succeed him has already begun: Prospective candidates on both sides have been quietly courting donors, taking steps to build an organization and making scouting trips to early voting states like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. The offi cial starting line, however, is likely a year away.

The coming year will be about building the foundations of a campaign, compiling a policy agenda and raising money for House, Senate and guberna-torial candidates who could become future allies.

And each side faces its own intra-party divisions.

Republicans are in the middle of a feud that pits establishment fi gures against tea party adherents. Democrats run the risk of souring on Obama’s brand — polls have shown

a decline in his popularity since his re-election — and face a brewing split between liberals and centrists.

For Democrats, the presidential race hinges on whether Clinton runs again.

The former New York senator and fi rst lady to President Bill Clinton has dominated early polls among Democrats, with Vice President Joe Biden a distant second. There is no obvious challenger from the left, considering Massachu-setts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s vow to serve her full six-year term.

Potential candidates like Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and former Gov. Brian Schweitzer of Montana have visited early voting states but remain largely unknown to most voters. Some liberals might encourage former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean to run

again, but Clinton has the potential to unite the party.

Clinton’s movements will be closely watched this year. She avoided most political activity in 2013 but is expected to be a top draw at Democratic fundraisers. The spring release of her memoir about her State Department years will include a national book tour, allowing her to discuss themes that might precede a presidential campaign. Until she announces her decision, every word will be parsed for clues.

“It’s maybe an unprec-edented situation, with Hillary Rodham Clinton being as strong as an incumbent president running for re-election,” said Democratic strategist Tad Devine. “I really see her in a unique situation.”

If Clinton decides not to run, the Democratic primary

could turn into a free-for-all.Biden could inherit

many Obama and Clinton supporters, but a Clinton-free race would open the door to candidates like O’Malley, who has assembled a record admired by many liberals, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a fundraising powerhouse, and Warren, who would be pressured by progressives to run. Other potential candidates could include New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Virginia Sen. Mark Warner.

Republicans face much different terrain.

During the past half-cen-tury, the GOP has rarely nominated a candidate who has not previously run for president — the exceptions are Gerald Ford in 1976 and George W. Bush in 2000.

Parties’ paths to 2016 vary greatly

AP

Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. As the Obama era nears its fi nal midterm elections, the campaign to succeed him has already begun: Prospective candidates on both

sides have been quietly courting donors, taking steps to build an organization and making scouting trips to early voting states like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. The offi cial starting line, however, is likely a year away.

Page 4: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

James Avery of ‘Fresh Prince’ fame dead at 68

NEW YORK (AP) — James Avery, the bulky

character actor who laid down the law at home and on the job as the Honorable Philip Banks in “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” has died.

Avery’s publicist, Cynthia Snyder, told The Associated Press that Avery died Tuesday in Glendale, Calif., following compli-cations from open heart surgery. He was 68, Snyder said.

Avery, who stood more than 6 feet tall, played the family patriarch and a wealthy attorney and judge on the popular TV comedy that launched the acting career of Will Smith as Banks’ troublemaking nephew.

The sitcom, which aired on NBC from 1990 to 1996, was set in the Banks’ mansion, where Smith’s character was sent from Philadelphia when things got tough in his own neighborhood. Fans came to know the imposing Banks as “Uncle Phil.”

Avery liked to say that the way to be an actor was to act, and he had a busy and diverse career before, during and after “Fresh Prince.” His TV credits included “Grey’s Anatomy,” ”NYPD Blue”

and “Dallas,” and among his many fi lms were “Fletch,” ”Nightfl yers” and “8 Million Ways to Die.” His voice alone brought him many jobs, notably as Shredder in the animated TV series “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.”

According to Snyder, he will be seen in the fi lm “Wish I Was Here,” directed by Zach Braff and scheduled to premiere later this month at the Sundance festival.

Avery grew up in Atlantic City, N.J., and served in the Navy in Vietnam in the late 1960s. After returning to the states, he settled in California and studied drama and litera-ture at the University of California at San Diego.

He is survived by his wife, Barbara, and stepson Kevin Waters.

School of Seven Bells co-founder Curtis dies

DALLAS (AP) — Benjamin Curtis, guitarist and co-founder of the popular indie-rock band School of Seven Bells, has died of cancer. He was 35.

Brady Brock with New York-based GoldVE Entertainment, which co-manages the band, says Curtis died Sunday evening of lymphoblastic lymphoma at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Curtis was diagnosed just under a year ago.

An Oklahoma native, Curtis lived in Dallas, where he played in bands including Tripping Daisy and Secret Machines. Brock says Secret Machines relocated to New York before Curtis went on to form School of Seven Bells with Alejandra de la Deheza.

Dorothy RobinsonBATTLE CREEK, Mich.

— Dorothy A. Robinson, 87, of Battle Creek passed away Monday, December 30, 2013, at Kairos Dwelling in Kalamazoo.

She was born on November 18, 1926, in Marshall to Howard L. and Mary A. (Cooper) DeLaney.

Dorothy graduated from Marshall High in School in 1944. She was united in marriage on June 24, 1944, to Ernest E. “Ed” Robinson, and he preceded her in death on July 2, 1993.

Dorothy worked for many years at Johnson Ceramics and Verona Ceramics.

Surviving are her sons, Dennis L. (Becky) Robinson of Grayling, and Kenneth L. (Debbie) Robinson of Richland; her daughters, Nancy J. Mercer, of Angola, Ind.; and Debra S. (Tim) Jordan, and Patricia A. (Bill) Yost, both of Battle Creek, nine grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, and her brothers, Richard E. (Sandi) DeLaney of Battle Creek and Kenneth J. “Jack” (Dot) DeLaney, of Marshall.

She was a member of Trinity United Methodist Church, and served as Circle Chairman, president of the United Methodist Women, on the Board of Trustees, vice president of Church Women United, Four Square Sunday school class secretary, and sang in the choir. Dorothy enjoyed her church family and activities at Trinity United Methodist Church. She sang with the Valentine Singers of Burnham Brook and had also been a volunteer at Leila Hospital Auxiliary for fi ve years. During WWII she sang at Percy Jones Hospital to entertain the troops.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. today, January 3, 2014, at the Richard A. Henry Funeral Home.

Interment will follow at Floral Lawn Memorial Gardens.

Memorial contributions may be given to Trinity United Methodist Church or Kairos Dwelling.

Go to www.henryfuner-alhome.org to send online condolences.

Lester TaylorFREMONT — Lester R.

Taylor, 72, of Fremont died Jan. 1, 2014, at his home.

There will be no services. Burial will be at a later date.

Memorials are to the family or to the donor’s choice.

Condolences may be sent online to www.beamsfuner-alhome.com.

Beams Funeral Home in Fremont is in charge of arrangements.

Raymond KennedyAUBURN — Raymond

L. Kennedy, 83, of Auburn passed away Tuesday, December 31, 2013, at DeKalb Health in Auburn.

He was born in Garrett on May 17, 1930, to the late Donald D. and Velma E. (Jordan) Kennedy.

Ray was an electrician at Phelps-Dodge in Fort Wayne for 40 years, then worked at Auburn Foundry before retiring in 1993. He also served as a Police Reserve Offi cer for the Auburn Police Department for almost 40 years.

He was a member of the Auburn First United Methodist Church.

Ray married Beverly E. Deetz on September 11, 1949, and she passed away February 12, 2010.

Surviving is a daughter-in-law, Sharon Kennedy of Auburn; two grandchildren, Kelly (John) Richie of Avilla and Aaron (Heather) Kennedy of Wolcottville; fi ve great-grandchildren, Allyssa Richie, Jonathon Richie, Ava Kennedy, Cole Kennedy and Ethan Hoover; three brothers and two sisters, Russell A. (Beverly) Kennedy of Garrett, Edward A. (Ginger) Kennedy of Garrett, Dale Kennedy of Garrett, Marilyn K. Miller of Garrett and Jane A. (Mike) Campbell of Albion.

Ray was preceeded in death by his parents, wife, a son Rodney Kennedy, a sister Patricia Royer and two brothers, Eugene Kennedy and Paul Kennedy.

Services are at 11 a.m. Saturday January 4, 2014, at Feller and Clark Funeral Home, 1860 Center Street, Auburn, IN with Rev. Ted Jansen offi ciating. Burial is in Fairfi eld Cemetery, Corunna.

Calling is 3 to 7 p.m. today at the funeral home.

Preferred Memorials can be directed to Auburn First United Methodist Church.

To send condolences visit www.fellerandclark.com.

Mary EashSHIPSHEWANA

— Mary Etta Eash, 78, of Shipshewana died Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2014, at Parkview LaGrange Hospital in LaGrange.

Visitation will be all day today at the Marlin Eash residence, 0785 N. C.R. 1000W, Shipshewana.

Funeral services will be at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday at the Mervin Wingard residence, 0635 N. C.R. 1000W, Shipshewana. Burial will be in Yoder Cemetery, Shipshewana.

Miller-Stewart Funeral Home, Middlebury, is in charge of arrangements.

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The California Supreme Court granted a law license Thursday to a man who has been living in the U.S. illegally for two decades, a ruling that advocates hope will open the door to immigrants seeking to enter other professions such as medicine, nursing and accounting.

The unanimous decision means Sergio Garcia, who attended law school and passed the state bar exam while working in a grocery store and on farms, can begin practicing law immediately.

The decision is the latest in a string of legal and legislative victories for people who are living in the country without permission. Other successes include the creation of a path to citizenship for many young people and the granting of drivers licenses in many states.

“This is a bright new day in California history and bodes well for the future,” the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles said in a statement.

The court sided with state offi cials in the case, which pitted them against the White House over a 1996 federal law that bars people who are in the U.S. illegally from receiving profes-sional licenses from government agencies or with the use of public funds, unless state lawmakers vote otherwise.

Bill Hing, a law professor at University of San Francisco, said the court made clear the only reason it granted Garcia’s petition is that California recently approved a law authorizing the state to give law licenses to immigrants living in the country illegally, a measure inspired by Garcia’s situation. The new law took effect Wednesday.

It was unclear how many people will qualify to practice law under the ruling and whether it will spread to other states. Legislatures and governors in more conservative states such as Alabama and Arizona are likely to be less receptive to the idea.

Garcia, who plans to be a personal injury attorney in his hometown of Chico, said he hoped the ruling would serve as a “beacon of hope” to others in the same situation.

He “can hang up a shingle and be his own company,” said Hing, who represented the state bar in the case. “Once he does that, a client can retain

him as a lawyer.”But some questions remain

unresolved, such as whether Garcia can argue cases in federal court or in other states. Federal law makes it illegal for law fi rms to hire him.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, who wrote the opinion, said the new state law removed any barrier to Garcia’s quest for a license.

“And there is no other federal statute that purports to preclude a state from granting a license to practice law to an undocumented immigrant,” Cantil-Sakauye wrote.

The court also found that Garcia “possesses the requisite good moral character” to be admitted to the state bar.

Garcia arrived in the U.S. as a teenager to pick almonds with his father, who was a permanent legal resident. His father fi led a petition in 1994 seeking an immigration visa for his son. It was accepted in 1995, but because of the backlog of visa applica-tions from people from Mexico, Garcia has never received a visa number.

He applied for citizenship in 1994 and is still working toward that goal.

The U.S. Department of Justice argued that Garcia was barred from receiving his law license because the court’s entire budget comes from the public treasury, a violation of the federal mandate that no public money be used to grant licenses to people who are in the country without permission.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Tenney, who argued the case, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

The Obama administration’s position in the case came as a surprise to some, since the White House has shielded from deportation people who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children, graduated from high school and kept a clean criminal record.

At a hearing in September, a majority of the state Supreme Court justices appeared reluctant to grant Garcia the license under current state and federal law, saying it prohibited them from doing so unless the Legisla-ture acted.

Garcia, 36, worked in the fi elds and at a grocery store before attending community college. He then became a paralegal, went to law school and passed the bar on his fi rst try. His effort to get licensed was supported by state bar offi cials and California’s attorney general, who argued that citizenship is not a requirement to receive a California law license.

Two other similar cases are pending in Florida and New York, and the Obama administration has made it clear it will oppose bar entry to immigrants unless each state’s Legisla-ture passes its own laws allowing it, Hing said.

California Attorney General Kamala Harris had supported Garcia’s petition, and applauded the court’s ruling.

Nick Pacilio, a spokesman for Harris, said California’s success “has hinged on the hard work and self-suffi -ciency of immigrants like Sergio.”

California grants law license to immigrant

AP

In this Aug. 2013 fi le photo, Sergio Garcia speaks at The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles news conference in Los Angeles. The California Supreme Court granted a law license on Thursday, to Garcia, who is living in the United States illegally. Garcia, who graduated from law school and passed the state bar exam, can begin practicing law despite his immigration status. He arrived in the U.S. illegally 20 years ago to pick almonds with his father.

Lotteries•

Wall Street Glance•

INDIANAPOLIS — These are the winning numbers drawn Thursday:

Indiana: Midday: 7-3-6 and 6-5-0-7. Evening: 5-1-2 and 0-5-0-3. Cash 5: 3-19-23-33-38. Quick Draw: 12-15-17-24-25-26-28-38-45-48-50-55-58-60-66-68-71-72-73-75. Poker Lotto: 2 of Clubs, 3 of Diamonds, 10 of Clubs, King of Spades, 9 of Hearts.

Ohio: Midday: 3-5-5, 3-7-1-3 and 4-3-0-2-4. Evening: 8-3-4, 9-2-2-1 and 4-9-7-0-4. Rolling Cash 5: 02-04-07-08-24.

Michigan: Midday: 7-5-4 and 0-2-9-6. Evening: 7-1-3 and 3-1-4-7. Fantasy 5: 01-11-15-20-25. Keno: 02-08-12-13-14-18-19-26-31-33-38-43-45-49-51-57-61-66-69-73-75-77. Poker Lotto: King of Clubs, Ace of Diamonds, Queen of Spades, 3 of Hearts, 10 of Spades.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSThursday’s Close:Dow Jones IndustrialsHigh: 16,573.07Low: 16,416.49Close: 16,441.35Change: —135.31Other IndexesStandard&Poors 500

Index: 1831.98 —16.38NYSE Index: 10,283.40

—116.93Nasdaq Composite Index:

4143.07 —33.52NYSE MKT Composite:

2403.34 —22.85Russell 2000 Index:

1150.72 —12.92Wilshire 5000 TotalMkt:

19,533.84 —172.19VolumeNYSE consolidated

volume: 3,005,887,616Total number of issues

traded: 3,196Issues higher in price:

1,049Issues lower in price:

2,073Issues unchanged: 74

Page 5: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

Today• Bingo: 6 p.m. Angola Kids League

Bingo Hall, 1409 N. Wayne St., Angola. 665-2900

• Bingo: 6 p.m. Orland American Legion, 211 N. Bronson St., Orland.

• New Beginnings for Narcotics Anonymous: 7 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous, 412 S. John St., Angola.

Saturday, Jan. 4• Bingo: 6 p.m. Angola Kids League

Bingo Hall, 1409 N. Wayne St., Angola. 665-2900

Sunday, Jan. 5• Narcotics Anonymous: 6 p.m.

Narcotics Anonymous, 412 S. John St., Angola.

• New Beginnings for Narcotics Anonymous: 6:00 pm. First Congrega-tional United Church of Christ, 314 W. Maumee St., Angola.

Monday, Jan. 6• GED Classes: 4 p.m. Steuben County

Literacy Coalition, 1208 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-3357

• Angola Rotary Meeting: 6 p.m. Elks Lodge, 2003 N. Wayne St., Angola.

• Independent Order of Odd Fellows: 7:30 p.m. Odd Fellows Lodge, 501 S. John Street, Angola.

Tuesday, Jan. 7• ImagiKnit: 10 a.m. Carnegie Public

Library of Steuben County, 322 S. Wayne St., Angola.

• Euchre Community Game: 12:30 p.m. Steuben County Council on Aging, 317 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-9856

• GED Classes: 4 p.m. Steuben County Literacy Coalition, 1208 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-3357

• Grief Support Group: 4:30 p.m. Cameron Woods, 701 W. Harcourt Road, Angola.

• Community Soup and Supper: 5 p.m. Faith Harvest Church, 200 Park Ave., Angola.

• Knitters Group: 5:30 p.m. Fremont Public Library, 1004 W. Toledo St., Fremont.

• Bingo: 6 p.m. Angola Kids League Bingo Hall, 1409 N. Wayne St., Angola. 665-2900

Wednesday, Jan. 8• Blood Pressure Checks: 10 a.m.

Steuben County Council on Aging, 317 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-9856

• Euchre Community Game: 12:30 p.m. Steuben County Council on Aging, 317 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-9856

• Faith Community Health Clinic: 5 p.m. Holy Family Episcopal Church, 909 S. Darling St., Angola.

• New Beginnings for Narcotics Anonymous: 7:30 p.m. First Congrega-tional United Church of Christ, 314 W. Maumee St., Angola.

Thursday, Jan. 9• Euchre Community Game: 9:30 a.m.

Steuben County Council on Aging, 317 S. Wayne St., Angola. 665-9856

• Ashley-Hudson 2000 Lions Club: 6:30 p.m. Ashley OES Hall, Morgan St., Ashley.

Friday, Jan. 10• New Beginnings for Narcotics

Anonymous: 7 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous, 412 S. John St., Angola.

Community Calendar•

THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.com A5FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

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PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Birthday gifts for shelterMcKenzie Parnin, left, 8, Fremont, didn’t want presents for herself for her Dec. 8 birthday. Instead, she requested items to help four-legged friends at the DeKalb Animal Shelter. She donated dog and

cat food, toys, dishes and other animal supplies. The donations were presented to Anna Feller wth the DeKalb County Humane Society.

FROM STAFF REPORTSLAGRANGE — Tickets

are on sale for the upcoming 3rd annual Super Bowl Chili Shuffl e, set to take place in LaGrange on Saturday, Feb. 1

The annual event pits local chili cooks against one another in a contest to see who earns both cash and the right to lay claim to the having the best chili in town.

Cooks set up their chili on tables set up in one of three different LaGrange restaurants — Chicago Joe’s, Courtside and Our Place Cafe — and then serve up samples to the people who paid for the privilege of shuffl ing from

table to table, tasting and voting for their favorite chili.

This year, the grand prize winner will take home a prize of $250 cash. First place wins $150 and second place, $50. The cost to enter is $15, and can be done by registering for the contest by visiting Chicago Joe’s restaurant in LaGrange no later than Jan. 28.

For those who would rather eat than cook, sampling those secret recipes starts at 3 p.m. and lasts until 5 p.m. The cost to shuffl e from table to table sampling chili is $8 for adults and children 13 and older. Children 12 and under eat free.

The grand prize winner will be announced after the sampling ends at 5 p.m. Following the chili shuffl e, the band Autumn Grey performs at an after party at Chicago Joe’s.

The chili shuffl e is sponsored by Focus LaGrange, a nonprofi t organization composed of LaGrange businessmen and women working to revitalize the downtown area.

Tickets for the shuffl e are available at the LaGrange Town Hall, Chicago Joe’s or from any Focus LaGrange member. Proceeds raised by the event will be used by Focus LaGrange to continue its efforts to revitalize the downtown.

Chili cook off slated

FROM STAFF REPORTSBLOOMINGTON,

Minn. — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Midwest Region has launched Endangered Species Daily, a free electronic calendar featuring 365 facts about rare plants and animals.

Endangered Species Daily facts cover life history and conservation efforts for federally endangered in threatened species around the world, with a focus on Midwest species.

The Midwest is home to a fascinating variety of rare plants and animals – some instantly recognizable and some less well known. Did you know Missouri’s Ozark

hellbender, at almost 2 feet long, is one of the world’s largest salamanders? Or that Indiana bats hibernate in clusters of up to 500 bats per square foot? Or that the purple cats paw mussel survives in only one place in the world: an Ohio creek?

Find out how the Endangered Species Act has helped recover the bald eagle, gray wolf and peregrine falcon in the Midwest and learn about recovery efforts for species in danger of extinction, including species around the country and around the globe, like the loggerhead sea turtle, African elephant and giant panda.

Educators, students and anyone interested in wildlife conservation can keep up to date these and other rare plants and animals with Endangered Species Daily. Subscribers will learn about imperiled species in the Midwest, the United States and around the world. Subscribers can sign up to automatically receive the daily fact by visiting fws.gov/midwest/ESdaily.html. A full monthly calendar of facts also appears on the site.

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Page 6: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Organizers of a New Year’s Eve bash at one of Dubai’s most prominent hotels have apologized after many ticketholders were unable to attend because of the Gulf city’s record-breaking fi reworks attempt.

Local newspapers reported Thursday that

hundreds of partygoers attending the Sandance concert at the Atlantis hotel were left stuck for hours on buses or by the roadside after authorities restricted access to the manmade Palm Jumeirah island for the fi reworks.

The hotel is located at the far end of the island, which was a centerpiece of the

pyrotechnics display.The event featured

British singer Emeli Sande and veteran DJ Paul Oakenfold. The cheapest advance tickets cost the equivalent of $123.

Organizers said in a statement they are “extremely sorry” and will work to fi nd a resolution soon.

Dubai organizers sorry for New Year’s Eve mess

A6 THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.com HAPPENINGS! •

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

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HR,00364788,1/3,hspaxlp

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGNotice is hereby given that the

Steuben County Board of Zoning Ap-peals will hold a Public Hearing onMonday, January 13, 2014, at 7:00pm in the Multi-Purpose Room of theSteuben County Community Center,317 S Wayne St., Angola, IN, forconsideration of the followingagenda:

1. Election of BZA Officers for2014, inc luding: Chairman,Vice-chairman, & Secretary

2. SE-14-01 Craig & Donna Hannapetition for a special exception usefor an accessory dwelling in an Envi-ronmental Control & Residential-1zoning districts. Property is locatedat 4660 W Binkley Rd, Section 31 ofJamestown Twp (Map#76-03-31-000-005.030-006)

3. V-14-01ABCD Michael Betts &JPJ Construction Co., Inc. petition forfour dimensional-standard variancesfor a detached garage addition. Vari-ances are for a road-front setback offive (5) feet rather than thetwenty-five (25) feet required, aside-yard setback of three (3) feetrather than the five (5) feet required,a height of two (2) stories rather thanthe one (1) story, eighteen (18) feetallowed, & a building to building set-back of seven (7) rather than the ten(10) feet allowed. Property is locatedacross from 35 LN 460 JimmersonLk, Section 32 of Jamestown Twp.(Map#76-03-32-410-210/211.000-006)

4. V-14-02 Teresa Smith & Pace-maker Builders petition for one di-mensional-standard variance for anaccessory structure.. Variance is toconstruct a detached garage on aparcel that is greater than three hun-dred (300) feet from residence.Property is located between 3265 WOrland Rd & 2985 N 300 W, Section8 of Pleasant Twp. (Map#76-06-08-000-009.000-011)

5. V-14-03AB Harold Igney & Kevin& Denise Hunter petition for two di-mensional standard-variances for anew home. Variances are for aside-yard setback of one (1) footrather than the five (5) feet required& a height of three (3) stories ratherthan the two stories, twenty-seven

(27) feet allowed. Property is locatedat 480 LN 440 Lk James, Section 4of Pleasant Twp. (Map#76-06-04-210-101.000-011)

6. V-14-04ABCD Brian & LauraDav i s pe t i t i on f o r f ou rdimensional-standard variance for ahome addition. Variances are for aside-yard setback of four-tenths (0.4)feet rather than the five (5) feet re-quired, a side-yard setback of four(4) feet rather than the five (5) feetallowed for a concrete steps, aside-yard setback of two (2) feetrather the five (5) feet required for adeck, & a lake-front setback of sev-enteen (17) feet rather than thetwenty (20) feet required. Property islocated at 55 LN 460 Jimmerson Lk,Section 32 of Jamestown Twp.(Map#76-03-32-410-312.000-006)

7. V-14-05 Gary & Christina Lallopetition for one dimensional-standardvariance for a detached garage.Variance is for a rear-yard setback offive (5) feet rather than the twenty(20) feet required. Property is lo-cated at 3485 W Shady Side Road,Section 17 of Pleasant Twp.(Map#76-06-17-210-201.000-011

The above petitions are on file forpublic examination in the Plan Com-mission Office, 317 S Wayne St, Ste3H, Angola, IN. Written statementsmay be filed with the Plan Directorand may be considered by the BZAat the public hearing. Interested per-sons wishing to present their viewson a petition will be given the oppor-tunity to do so at the hearing. Hear-ings on particular petitions may becontinued at the discretion of theBZA. Petitions requiring the consid-eration of the Board of Commission-ers will be heard at their next regu-larly scheduled meeting with agendaopenings.

Frank Charlton, Plan DirectorHR,00364510,1/3,10,hspaxlp

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGNotice is hereby given that the

Steuben County Plan Commissionwill hold a Public Hearing onWednesday, January 8, 2014, at7:00pm in the Multi-Purpose Room ofthe Steuben County CommunityCenter, 317 S Wayne St, Angola, IN,for consideration of the following

agenda:1. Election of Plan Commission Offi-

cers for 2014, including: President,Vice-President, & Secretary

2. (SE-14-01) Craig & DonnaHanna petition for a special excep-tion use for an accessory dwelling inan Environmental Control & Residen-tial-1 zoning districts. Property is lo-cated at 4660 W Binkley Rd, Section31 of Jamestown Twp (Map#76-03-31-000-005.030-006)

3. (Z-14-01) Craig & Margaret Bal-liet, Stanley & Lona Richardson, Gail& Elaine Balliet and Phil Meyers peti-tion for a zone change. The zonechange is from Environmental Con-trol to Lake Residence. Property islocated at N Old 27 & N Otter Lk,Section 26 of Jamestown Twp(Map#76-03-26-310-201.000-006

4. (Z-14-02) Steuben County PlanCommission petitions for a zonechange. The zone change is fromLake Residence to Agricultural.Property is located at 1710 W SouthDr., Section 15 of Steuben Twp(Map#76-11-15-340-403.020.017

5. (Z-14-03) Steuben County PlanCommission petitions for a zonechange. The zone change is fromLake Residence to Agricultural.Property is located east of 1710 WSouth Dr., Section 15 of SteubenTwp (Map#76-11-15-340-417.000-017

The above petitions are on file forpublic examination in the Plan Com-mission Office, 317 S. Wayne St.,Ste 3H, Angola, IN. Written state-ments may be filed with the Plan Di-rector and may be considered by thePlan Commission at the public hear-ing. Interested persons wishing topresent their views on a petition willbe given the opportunity to do so atthe hearing. Hearings on particularpetitions may be continued at the dis-cretion of the Plan Commission. Peti-tions requiring the consideration ofthe Board of Commissioners or theBZA will be heard at their next regu-larly scheduled meeting with agendaopenings.

Frank Charlton, Plan DirectorHR,00364508,12/27,1/3,hspasxlpsk@ THE

EXPERT.comkpcnews

NEW YORK (AP) — Jerry Seinfeld loves cars. He’s fond of coffee. And, of course, he’s a comedian who loves to talk comedy.

But the inspiration for his online talk show, “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” (wherein he and a fellow comedian crack wise while powered by a car and caffeine), was inspired by an episode of his eponymous 1990s sitcom.

In that memorable episode, Jerry’s sad-sack pal, George, decided success might await him if he lived his failed life in the opposite manner.

“That,” recalls Seinfeld in a recent interview, “gave me the idea to create a talk show that was the opposite of the typical show.

“With a typical talk show,” he explains, “you have to go to a studio. You have to tell them in advance what you’re going to talk about. You have to dress up. You have to put on makeup. It’s very, very organized.

“I thought, maybe there’s a different way than being stuck on a couch: Outside and moving is the opposite of inside and still.

“That,” he sums up, “is where it began.”

“Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” launched on the Crackle digital network in 2012, and its third season hits the road Thursday with Seinfeld joining Louis C.K. for a cup of joe after a zany ride

on a clown-car-scale 1959 Fiat Jolly.

“I pick you up at your house and we literally go out for a cup of coffee.” Future ride-alongs include Patton Oswalt, Howard Stern, Tina Fey, Todd Barry and Jay Leno.

“I wanted to make a show that people would like to be on, instead of groaning and going, ‘Yeah, all right, I’ll do it,’” says Seinfeld in his offi ce in Manhattan’s famed Brill Building, where soon he will begin another editing session to whittle the Leno episode to a tight 18 or 20 minutes from the two or three hours of recorded chitchat.

Each show is meticu-lously crafted. But that’s no surprise, considering how, at age 59 with nothing left to prove, Seinfeld continues to revise and refi ne his stand-up act. Here, too, Seinfeld is a stickler for detail, as when he huddles with an editor a few minutes later to tweak the music accompanying a shot of the car (a 1949 Porsche 356/2) he and Leno will share.

“Do you feel like that music is a little bit of a rough transition?” he muses. “It’s a little abrupt. But you know the second phrase of that track is a little more gentle. Maybe we could start there, you know what I mean?”

Even so, the fl avor of each episode is insistently no-frills, candid and off-the-cuff.

Seinfeld says he never prepares for a taping.

“Things just occur to me. Like asking Howard Stern to tell me how his life ends, what he’s doing in that last moment. It just occurred to me as we were driving. He seemed like a guy who’s really afraid of death. So I wanted to ask him about it.”

As for Oswalt, “he seemed very comic-book geeky, so I asked him, ‘What’s your favorite superhero?’ And he froze. That was like the worst thing I could ask him. He couldn’t commit to one comic book superhero being his favorite!”

Needless to say, Seinfeld mostly focuses on comedy with each guest. Welcome to his world.

“That’s what I NORMALLY talk about during the day,” he says, looking very Jerry at his desk clad in jeans, a gray sweater with a rakish black scarf at his throat and a pair of Nike Shox. “At least 50 percent of the waking life of every comedian is gossiping and analyzing with other comedians about comedy. Comedy is a very mysterious profession, so we’re always trying to fi gure it out.

“This show is a little bit of a valentine to a certain subset of humanity,” he goes on, winding up for a Seinfeld-esque riff that, even on the fl y with mixed metaphors and bumpy syntax, spins out humorously. “I wanted

to put a few comedians into this one petri dish — that’s what this show is — ‘cause you got to get them in the wild. If you’re going to study a species, you got to study them in the wild, otherwise the experiment is tainted! The evidence is tainted!”

In the untainted back-and-forth that results on his show, Seinfeld proves to be an excellent audience, clearly enjoying each guest’s bons mots as much as he enjoys

delivering his own.“I got really excited

about the Leno episode,” he says, “with me being his friend all these years, and now having this opportunity to show the old comedy-crazy Jay. So many people think of him as a talk-show host. This captures him as a comedian.”

Fine, but how compet-itive does Seinfeld feel in the company of another comedian?

“Zero,” he declares, and flashes a quizzical

smile: “I haven’t done well enough?! But even if I hadn’t,” he adds, growing serious, “no, I do not have that gene.”

And yet, as you watch Seinfeld matching wits with a guest, it’s not hard to imagine he’s on high alert for any fresh idea embedded in the banter that, with just the right tweaking, could end up in his act.

You bet, Seinfeld nods.“That’s my whole life,”

he says. “That’s every single second of my life.”

More cars and coffee on Seinfeld’s Web talk show

AP

This image released by Crackle shows comedians Louis C.K., left, and Jerry Seinfeld in a scene from Seinfeld’s new web series talk show “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.” The series

launched on the Crackle digital network in 2012, and its third season cranks up this week, with Seinfeld joining Louis C.K. for a cup of joe after a zany ride on a clown-car-scale 1959 Fiat Jolly.

1111 Smaltz Way, AuburnNext to The Home Depot

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#No $5 Tuesday evening rate.@No $5 rate available.

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LONDON (AP) — A lawyer who let slip J.K. Rowling’s secret thriller-writer identity has been fi ned 1,000 pounds ($1,645) for breaching client confi dentiality rules.

Chris Gossage of London law

fi rm Russells Solicitors — which represents Rowling — told a friend of his wife that the “Harry Potter” creator was author of “The Cuckoo’s Calling,” published last year under the name Robert Galbraith. The friend tweeted the

information, and it was followed up by the Sunday Times.

The law fi rm apologized and paid damages to Rowling for the leak.

The Solicitors Regulation Authority says it issued Gossage

with a written rebuke for disclosing confi dential information about a client to a third party.

The ruling was dated Nov. 26 but published this week.

Sales of the thriller rocketed after Rowling was outed as its author.

Lawyer fi ned for outing Rowling as thriller writer

Place them in the classifi eds!

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Page 7: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

Who’s Noteworthy

Weekend Whereabouts•

HAPPENINGS! kpcnews.com A7•

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

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DINING and ENTERTAINMENT

Orland• Draft Horse Saloon,

9475 W. S.R. 120. Deejay with music. January 3.

Angola• Piggy’s Brew Pub, 2201

N. Wayne St. DJ providing music. January 3.

• Club Paradise, 3861 N. Bayview Road. DJ Rockin Rob will provide music. January 3, 9 p.m.

Garrett• Martin’s Tavern, 115 N.

Randolph St. Live music from Double Kik. January 3, 10 p.m.

• Martin’s Tavern, 115 N. Randolph St. Live music from Double Kik. January 4, 10 p.m.

• Traxside, 118 N. Peters St. Music from a D.J. January 3, 10 p.m.

• Traxside, 118 N. Peters St. Live music from Autumn Leed, January 4. 10 p.m.

Farmers MarketFort Wayne Farmers Market.

Lincoln Financial Event Center, 1301 Ewing St., Fort Wayne. Enter from Douglas Street, near Harrison Street. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Free admission. The winter market will be held the fi rst and third Saturdays, from October through May. The market features more than 40 vendors. More than half of the booths will offer items from the ‘farm category,’ which comprises fresh local meats, free-range eggs, and products such as organic or chemical-free honey, maple syrup, wine, locally roasted coffee and plants. Watch the calendar for

special cooking demonstrations. For details, visit ftwaynesfarmersmarket.com. 9 a.m. January 4

MusicThe Jondo Trio and B-List

Boys. Cupbearer Cafe, 138 E. Seventh St., Auburn. Live music from The Jondo Trio and B-List Boys 7 p.m. January 4

Golden Memories Band. American Legion Post 97, 1729 Sprott St, Auburn. Live music from the Golden Memories Band 6 p.m. January 9

Elvis Lives. Embassy Theatre, 125 W. Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne. Elvis Lives is an unforgettable

multimedia and live musical journey across Elvis’ life. His iconic style, embraced by many of today’s artists, continues to intrigue audiences of all generations. Featuring fi nalists from Elvis Presley Enterprises’ worldwide Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist Contest, as well as a tribute to Ann-Margret. 7:30 p.m. January 9

NatureLittle River Ramblers Class.

Eagle Marsh Barn, 6801 Engle Road, Fort Wayne. Meet at the Eagle Marsh barn from March through December and at the Boy Scout offi ce parking lot January through February. Hike to explore and record

the fl ora and fauna of Eagle Marsh. Make sure to dress for the weather. 9 a.m. 478-2515. January 7

FitnessYoga in the Gardens.

Foellinger-Freimann Botanical Conservatory, 1100 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne. The practice of yoga is a wonderful way to build strength and fl exibility, reduce stress, and enhance general well-being. Taught by certifi ed yoga instructor and world traveler Lanah K. Hake. A few blankets, mats, and straps are available but bring your own supplies if you have them. 5:30 p.m. 427-6440. January 8

KendallvilleANCHORMAN 2

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THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG 3D (PG-13) — NCG Cinemas. Today-Thurs. at 3:15 and 9:55, Mon.-Thurs. at 3:15.

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WALKING WITH DINOSAURS (PG) — NCG Cinemas. Today-Thurs. at 10:05.

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Silver Screen. Fri. at 7, Sat. and Sun. at 2 and 7.

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At The Movies•

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A8 THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

A key decision was Miller denying a request for prelim-inary injunction that could have paved the way toward Butler opening a strip club sooner than later, if ever.

Miller ruled that BBL had not yet established a business that could have later been regulated out of existence by administrative rulings by the city, changes in zoning and the creation of a sexually oriented business law as alleged by Butler. Miller also ruled that Butler lost certain property rights because he did work on the premises without a building

permit, a matter that was greatly disputed in an Oct. 25, 2013, hearing.

What remains is the Butlers’ First Amendment claim that when the city created a new ordinance relating to sexually oriented businesses, there were not adequate alternative sites. Butler’s claim for costs and attorney fees also remains active.

“The plaintiffs’ First Amendment claim on the suffi ciency of adequate alternative sites and claim for costs and attorney fees (via case law) survive,” Miller wrote.

Bergthold said he did not want to comment on parts of the litigation that survive. Instead, Bergthold said he and the city’s legal team will analyze the ruling and determine how best to move forward in handling the case.

Comment from Butler’s legal team was sought Thursday night, but they were still analyzing the judge’s decision, which was 73 pages.

Butler and his company, BBL Inc., are the founders of the Showgirl strip clubs in Fort Wayne. He is the owner of Showgirl III in Fort Wayne.

SHOWGIRL: Two of Butler’s claims survive caseFROM PAGE A1

call center phone lines, are probably motivated to make sure they have a policy in place as soon as possible, said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, which advocates for lower-income people and supports the federal health care changes.

“These are people who made a point of signing up and signing up before the deadline so they could start on Jan. 1. That suggests to me that that will be a population that is more likely to follow through with the payment,” he said.

Premiums paid after the deadline will be applied to coverage starting Feb. 1 or later. Consumers have until March 31 to sign up in time to avoid a federal tax penalty for remaining uninsured. That fi ne starts at $95 for an individual this year but climbs rapidly, to a minimum of $695 by 2016. There is an additional fi ne for parents who do not get health insurance for their children.

Although the federal website is apparently fi xed for consumers, the start of the year was expected to bring plenty of confusion.

Medicaid, the state-fed-eral health insurance program for the poor, already was experiencing problems in some states.

In Pennsylvania on Thursday, Gov. Tom Corbett’s offi ce cautioned

that people who applied for health insurance through the federally run website and were found to be eligible or potentially eligible for Medicaid might not have coverage.

The federal website was supposed to send their applications to the Medicaid agency in their state. But that had yet to happen in Pennsylvania and the other 35 states relying on the federal insurance exchange.

A spokesman for the Corbett administration said the federal government continues to have trouble transferring the electronic fi les of more than 25,000 applications to the Pennsyl-vania Department of Public Welfare.

“We are doing everything we can to ensure these individuals receive the coverage they’ve applied for as quickly as possible,”

department spokesman Eric Kiehl said.

Once the applicants are enrolled in Medicaid, coverage will be retroactive to Jan. 1, he said.

Even before the January start of coverage, health insurance companies said they were receiving thousands of erroneous sign-up applications from the government, and some people who thought they had enrolled for coverage have not received confi rma-tion.

Some states, including Minnesota and Rhode Island, extended their sign-up period until the fi nal day of 2013, leading to a last-minute crush of paperwork for insurers. Call center wait times in Minnesota extended beyond two hours on Tuesday, a possible sign of heavy consumer interest.

Anticipating disruptions, major drug store chains such as CVS and Walgreens have announced they will help customers who face coverage questions, even providing temporary supplies of medications without insisting on up-front payment. Many smaller independent pharmacies also are ready to help.

Some parts of the Afford-able Care Act took effect previously, such as the ability of young people to remain on their parents’ insurance policies until age 26.

HEALTH CARE: Deadline March 31 to skip penaltyFROM PAGE A1

AP

Criag Bond makes a delivery on Court Street in Buffalo, N.Y, Thursday. A winter storm promising signifi cant snowfall, strong winds and frigid air bore down Thursday on the Northeast, making commutes hazardous for the fi rst work day of the new year and giving some students an extra day off school following Christmas break.

BOSTON (AP) — A storm expected to bring more than a foot of snow, stiff winds and punishing cold pushed into the Northeast on Thursday, extending Christmas break for some students while posing the fi rst test for New York’s new mayor and perhaps the last challenge for Boston’s outgoing one.

Some schools in New England and New York closed well ahead of the snow, while cities mobilized plows and salt spreaders, and state offi ces sent workers home early. Some major highways were ordered closed overnight. U.S. airlines canceled more than 2,300 fl ights nationwide on Thursday in advance of the storm.

The heavy weather began rolling in just a day after New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was sworn in to lead the nation’s largest city and a few days before Boston Mayor Thomas Menino ends 20 years in offi ce.

Menino announced a parking ban and said schools would be closed Friday in Boston, where up to 14 inches of snow was expected. Boston’s airport said it would not handle any fl ights after 8:30 p.m. Thursday.

“What a New Year’s gift, to receive one last snowstorm as mayor,” said Menino, whose successor takes offi ce Monday.

De Blasio, who as public advocate in 2010 criticized predecessor Mayor Michael

Bloomberg for his handling of a post-Christmas storm, said hundreds of plows and salt spreaders would be on the streets as soon as the snow started falling Thursday night.

“We have to get it right, no question about it,” de Blasio said. “We are focused like a laser on protecting this city and getting everyone ready. We have all hands on deck.”

Snow began falling overnight Wednesday in parts of New England and New York state, but the brunt of the storm wasn’t expected until late Thursday. Forecasters said temperatures would plummet, with some areas seeing highs just above zero and wind-chill readings of minus-10 and colder.

The National Weather Service issued a blizzard warning for Cape Cod and Long Island, where 8 to 10 inches of snow could fall and winds could gust to 45 mph.

“We’re going to see a lot of snow and a lot of wind,” forecaster Jason Tuell said. “We’re concerned about whiteout conditions possibly tonight with the blowing and drifting snow.”

Douglass Bibule shopped for rock salt and other supplies at a home improve-ment store in Watertown, Mass.

“Well, there will be some shoveling that I will have to do and some sanding. I’ve got to go home and do some stretching exercises to make sure I don’t hurt myself while doing that, and do a little shopping to make sure

that we have all the supplies that we need. We need food because we have three older children at home.”

Interior southern New England and New York state could get up to a foot of snow. New York City was expecting 8 inches, while Philadelphia could see 3 to 7.

In New York, Con Ed spokesman Sidney Alvarez said the utility was expecting the snow to be powdery rather than wet and heavy, “but with any type of snow, you’re looking at extra weight on branches that can snap and bring power lines down.”

As the storm pushed eastward on New Year’s Day and Thursday, it dropped as much as 18 inches on suburban Chicago and up to a foot on Michigan, prompting the cancellation Wednesday of hundreds of fl ights in and out of Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. Below-zero cold is expected across the region over the next few days.

AAA Michigan said it received 500 calls by midmorning Thursday from drivers dealing with spinouts, cars in ditches and dead batteries. Accidents and delays were also reported from Missouri to New Hampshire.

“Anything below 25 degrees and the salt isn’t nearly as effective,” said Becky Allmeroth, a maintenance engineer with the state of Missouri, where crews were mixing chemicals and beet juice with salt to try to make roads passable.

Fierce storm pushes toward Northeast US

JERUSALEM (AP) — Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who has been in a coma for eight years, was in critical condition on Thursday, clinging to life after a decline in the functioning of various bodily organs, his doctors said.

Dr. Zeev Rotstein, director of Tel Hashomer hospital, said Sharon’s condition had deterio-rated over the past two days and that a number of vital organs, including his kidneys, were suffering from “critical malfunc-tion.” His family was at his bedside, he added.

“He is in critical condition and his life is defi nitely in danger,” Rotstein told reporters at the hospital, just outside Tel Aviv. “The feeling of the doctors treating him and also that of the family with him is that there is a turn for the worse.”

Israeli TV stations were

broadcasting live from the hospital where they reported all the comings and goings while special retrospectives on his life were aired along with interviews with old friends and political allies. Old interviews with his were shown, highlighting the charming, grandfatherly image he cultivated later in life. Sharon’s medical condition also dominated the front pages of newspapers and radio shows all day.

Visiting U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry also addressed his condition ahead of a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“My thoughts are with the Sharon family as they sit in vigil with the former prime minister of Israel, Arik Sharon,” Kerry said, referring to Sharon by his nickname. “We remember his contributions, sacrifi ces he made to ensure the survival and the well-being of Israel, and I have many personal thoughts about my meetings with him on many different occasions — always robust and strong and clear about his positions.”

The 85-year-old Sharon,

one of Israel’s most iconic and controversial fi gures, has been in a coma since suffering a devastating stroke in January 2006. At the time, he was prime minister and at the height of his political power. His condition has largely been out of the spotlight since, as his two sons have cared for him while restricting most access to outsiders.

Sharon’s career has stretched across Israel’s 65-year history.

As one of Israel’s most famous generals, Sharon was known for bold tactics and an occasional refusal to obey orders. As a politi-cian he became known as “the bulldozer” — a man contemptuous of his critics while also capable of getting things done.

Sharon is credited with helping turn the tide of the 1973 Mideast war when Arab armies launched a surprise attack on Israel on the solemn fasting day of Yom Kippur, causing large Israeli casualties. He led an Israeli force across the Suez Canal, trapping part of the Egyptian army and turning the war in Israel’s favor.

Former Israeli leader listed in critical condition

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Legal experts say the U.S. Supreme Court will likely take up the issue of whether religiously-affi l-iated nonprofi ts must pay for employees’ birth-control under the federal health care overhaul.

Federal judges in northern Indiana recently issued opposing opinions in separate cases in which

the University of Notre Dame and Grace College and Seminary sought preliminary injunctions blocking implementation of the federal birth-control mandate.

The confl icting rulings mean Notre Dame must provide birth-control coverage, while Grace College and Seminary does not. The Grace

College ruling also applies to the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend and Franciscan Alliance.

David Orentlicher, co-director of Indiana University’s Hall Center for Law and Health, tells The Indianapolis Star those and other confl icting rulings make it likely the nation’s high court will take up the issue.

Birth control rulings confl ict

Sharon

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

“We are doing everything we can to

insure these individuals receive the coverage they’ve applied for as quickly as possible.”

Eric Kiehl

Pennsylvania Department

of Public Welfare

Partly sunny today with a high in the mid-teens. Low tonight of 9 degrees. Warmer Saturday with cloudy skies. Daytime highs will be in the low 30s. Nighttime low of 21. Snow expected Sunday with a high of 30 and an overnight low dropping to 8. Very cold Monday with highs in the single digits.

ILL.

MICH.

OHIO

KY.

© 2014 Wunderground.com

Today's ForecastFriday, Jan. 3

City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for

Chicago20° | 4° South Bend

14° | 2°Fort Wayne

15° | -6°

Lafayette21° | 2°

Indianapolis22° | 5°

Terre Haute25° | 6°

Evansville29° | 16° Louisville

28° | 15°

Sunrise Saturday 8:08 a.m.

Sunset Saturday 5:24 p.m.

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

National forecastForecast highs for Friday, Jan. 3

Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High

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

Local HI 14 LO -4 PRC. 6Fort Wayne HI 16 LO -4 PRC. 5.4

South Bend HI 15 LO 3 PRC. 8Indianapolis HI 18 LO 4 PRC. 0

Thursday’s Statistics

Page 9: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

BTheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICAN kpcnews.comFRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

AP

Jacksonville Jaguars’ Chad Henne (7) is tackled by Indianapolis Colts’ Robert Mathis (98) and Bjoern Werner (92) on Sunday. Mathis was

honored Thursday as the inaugural winner of the NFL’s Deacon Jones Award, which goes to the league’s sacks leader.

JAMES FISHER

Sterling Lutter in action this season for the East Noble wrestling team.

BY KEN FILLMOREkfi [email protected]

KENDALLVILLE — East Noble and Fremont’s wrestling teams have built upon their strong 2012-13 seasons entering the second annual Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association’s Team State Duals, which will be held Saturday at Westfi eld High School starting at 10 a.m.

Eight of the top teams in three different classes based on enroll-ment will take part in this event. The Knights and the Eagles will both be making their debuts in the IHSWCA Team State Duals.

East Noble, ranked 10th in the latest IHSWCA Class AAA team poll released on Dec. 12, will face second-seeded Evansville Mater Dei in the fi rst round. The winner of this dual will take on the winner of the Penn-Indianapolis Cathedral dual in the semifi nals.

The other half of the Class AAA draw has top-ranked Perry Meridian taking on Bloomington South and Warren Central facing Franklin. Perry Meridian won the AAA team state duals last year and is the defending Indiana High School Athletic Association team state champion.

Coach Keith Hoffar’s East Noble team is coming off a third-place fi nish at the Conners-ville Spartan Classic last weekend and was led by Garrett Pepple winning the 113-pound weight class. Nate Weimer (106), Connor Knapp (120) and Jacob Weimer (145) all reached championship matches and fi nished second.

Four of the six Knight state qualifi ers from last year are back in Pepple, Knapp, Weimer and Brandon Joest. The Eagles (19-2, 7-1 Northeast Corner Conference) are ranked second in Class A and seeded second in the eight-team Class A tournament at the team duals. They will face South Putnam in round one.

Knights, Eagles set for IHSWCA Duals

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Ohio State’s Urban Meyer has never had any issue acclimating to the biggest stages in college football. Clemson’s Dabo Swinney is sounding like someone who’s getting comfortable under the brightest lights as well.

Meyer has coached in four BCS games. He’s never lost.

Swinney has taken his team to the BCS one other time, and lost by 37 points.

Of course, come Friday night, none of that will matter. The seventh-ranked Buckeyes (12-1) and the 12th-ranked Tigers (10-2) will be squaring off in the Orange Bowl, where Meyer will aim to keep his BCS record perfect and Swinney will try to have his team, as he put it, “continue to climb the mountain.”

“When you have an opportu-nity to come to a BCS ball game and lose it, you want to get back

and have another opportunity,” Swinney said Thursday. “There’s

only six teams, I think, in the country that have been in two BCS bowls the last three years, and we’re one of them. So it’s a great opportunity for us to have a chance to win one.”

Meyer would say the same thing. His team had visions of playing in Pasadena, Calif. for the BCS national championship next week, but the loss in the Big Ten title game — the fi rst under Meyer in 25 games since he took over in Columbus — knocked the Buckeyes out of the title picture.

So instead, Ohio State headed to South Florida, where Meyer will look to add the Orange Bowl to his BCS collection that already includes two title-game wins and a Sugar Bowl victory while at Florida, and a Fiesta Bowl triumph from when he coached Utah.

Meyer, Swinney guide teams back to BCS stage

AP

Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer, left, and Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney pose for photographers with the Orange Bowl trophy. Ohio State will face Clemson in the Orange Bowl classic today.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Jamaal Charles spent this week dissecting the Chiefs’ fi rst game against the Colts.

On Saturday, Charles and his Kansas City teammates will fi nally get a chance to show they’ve learned from all those mistakes.

“They’re going to have their best game plan and best players on the fi eld,” Charles said. “We know what’s at stake here. We have to play fast and we have to play harder than them.”

In Week 16, the Chiefs had four turnovers and Indianapolis (11-5) spent most of the game negating Charles by playing keep-away.

Nobody expects a replay this week — not Charles, not Andrew Luck, not even Andy Reid or Chuck Pagano. The two coaches understand most playoff rematches come with a surprise twist, even when the sequel is two weeks after the original.

How much can really change in 13 days?

For starters, the game will be played on Indianapolis’ climate-controlled home turf rather than the raucous, outdoor atmosphere of Arrowhead Stadium. And facing a potentially loud crowd on the road may force the Chiefs to stick with the game plan a little longer than they did in Round 1.

“I’m sure we’re going to see Jamaal,” Pagano said, referring again this week to Charles as public enemy No. 1 even after he had only 13 carries in the fi rst meeting. “If he doesn’t touch the ball 30 times I’d be shocked.”

Kansas City (11-5) could have a noticeably different look, too.

Receiver Dwayne Bowe was knocked out of the fi rst matchup with a concussion and was still sidelined last week.

Chiefs chase different result in rematch

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Robert Mathis never got to see Deacon Jones take down opposing quarterbacks in person.

He learned to appreciate Jones’ creativity over time.

The Colts Pro Bowl linebacker and newly crowned sacks champion was honored Thursday as the inaugural winner of the NFL’s Deacon Jones Award, which goes to the league’s sacks leader. Mathis will be recognized at the NFL award banquet Feb. 1.

“Deacon Jones is the creator of the sack, so to be able to win the fi rst award in his honor is an honor,” Mathis told reporters in Indianapolis. “I’m very proud that I was able to win it and I thank my

teammates, mainly the d-line, who were very instrumental in helping me get to the quarterback.”

League offi cials named the award after Jones died June 3 at age 74. Jones was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980.

Mathis has been one of the league’s top sack artists since joining the Colts as a fi fth-round draft pick in 2003. For nearly a decade, Mathis and Dwight Freeney were among the NFL’s most feared pass-rushing tandems.

But when Freeney left in free agency during the offseason, the critics contended Mathis would struggle without his longtime teammate and close friend.

Instead, Mathis used it as motivation. When asked Thursday why he has played so well over the years, Mathis responded: “The fact that I do have a chip on my shoulder every time I play. When people say you can’t do something, you want to show them that you can.”

So the 32-year-old who is in his second season as a rush linebacker delivered the best season of his career.

He broke Freneey’s franchise record for sacks in a season (16) with 19½ and became the Colts’ career sacks leader (111), surpassing Freeney’s previous mark (107½).

NFL honors Colts’ Mathis with Deacon Jones Award

AP

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith (11) is tackled by Indianapolis Colts defensive end Cory Redding (90) during a December meeting.

SEE WRESTLING, PAGE B2

SEE REMATCH, PAGE B2

SEE ORANGE, PAGE B2

The sack man

SEE MATHIS, PAGE B3

THURSDAY’S GAMESBOSTON .......................................3NASHVILLE.................................2

CHICAGO .....................................2N.Y. ISLANDERS .....................3

CAROLINA ...................................4WASHINGTON .........................3

OTTAWA ........................................4WINNIPEG ..................................3

THURSDAY’S GAMESCLEVELAND ............................87ORLANDO ................................81

GOLDEN STATE ................123MIAMI .......................................114

TODAYBOYS BAS KETBALL Central Noble vs. Caston at Caston Shootout , 8 p.m. Eastside at West Noble, 6 p.m.

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On This Day•

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Tamba Hali also hurt his knee against Indy, while fellow linebacker Justin Houston sat out that game with a dislocated elbow. Bowe has already been cleared to play and Houston is expected to return this week, too, though Hali hasn’t practiced all week.

If Hali does play, he and Houston may force Luck to cope with even more pressure than just winning his home playoff debut.

But the bigger question for the Chiefs is whether they’ve fi xed the miscues that proved so costly against the Colts two weeks ago.

“As a coach it’s a little bit like a farmer: Your work is never done, right?” Reid said. “There are always areas to work on, and that’s how it goes. We’re always striving to be better.”

Here are fi ve things to watch Saturday at Indianap-olis.

MOMENTUM vs. HEALTH: The Colts wanted to build momentum for the postseason. The result: They went 4-1 in December. Once the Chiefs fell out of conten-

tion in the AFC West, they tried to get healthy. Kansas City is 2-5 since the bye week, has lost two straight, hasn’t beaten a team with a winning record since Week 3 and has dropped seven in a row in the playoffs. Saturday’s result will show which coach made the right call.

GOAL TO GO: Indy achieved one of its goals by winning the AFC South to host its fi rst home playoff game in three years. It can’t achieve the next two — an AFC championship and a Super Bowl title — without protecting its home turf. The Colts understand six of the last eight Super Bowl winners played on wild-card weekend, and the last two world champs, the Giants and Ravens, were seeded No. 4. Indy has a chance to extend that streak.

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS: No team has been better at minimizing mistakes than Indianapolis, which had a league-low 14 turnovers and 66 penalties. This game features the AFC’s top two teams in

turnover ratio. Kansas City has forced 36 turnovers. The team that stays closest to its regular-season form is likely to be celebrating Saturday night.

WHO’S NO. 1?: Luck and Alex Smith were both No. 1 overall picks. While Luck has been incredibly successful in his two NFL seasons, Smith had to be more patient and eventu-ally became Kansas City’s solution to last season’s turnover-prone ways. Luck was the clear winner of this matchup in the last game, and if he plays that well again, the Colts should be in good shape.

LOOKING FOR PROTECTION: If there’s one equally troubling bugaboo for both teams, it’s their inability to protect the quarterback. Injuries have forced both coaches to mix and match starters along the offensive line. That could be an especially big problem this week with the likely return of Houston and with Robert Mathis, the newly crowned NFL sacks champion, playing on the same fi eld.

REMATCH: Colts to host 1st playoff game in 3 yearsFROM PAGE B1

The winner of that dual will face the winner of the fi rst-round dual between Bremen and third-seeded Churubusco.

The other side of the bracket has top seed and defending team duals Class A champion Adams Central taking on Clinton Central and fourth-seeded West Central taking on South Adams.

Fremont will be at full strength at Westfi eld. The Eagles were without injured 182-pounder Austin Maggart for the Northeast Corner Conference Super Duals on Dec. 7 at Lakeland and they suffered narrow losses to Central Noble (37-36) and West Noble (36-34). The fi rst meeting between NECC teams counts toward the conference standings and Fremont already beat the Cougars in the Bluffton Invitational on Nov. 23.

Last year’s success and anticipation for continued success play a big role in receiving an invite to participate in the IHSWCA

Team State Duals. Fremont returned three semistate qualifi ers from a team that won NECC regular season and tournament titles and fi nished second in the Westview Sectional last year: Maggart, senior Tylor Willms and sophomore Hunter Leskowyak.

“All the guys on the team are pretty excited,” Eagles coach Eric Bryan said. “The guys are eager to get some momentum heading into the postseason. I hope we can represent Fremont the best we can. It’s a privilege to be down there.

“It gives our guys a chance to wrestle in front of a larger crowd. I would not say there would be more pressure. But it is a big event and we get a chance to put Fremont back on the map,” he continued. “If the kids wrestle hard and wrestle to their abilities, good things will happen.”

Bryan said several wrestlers have emerged as leaders in their own ways, led by seniors Willms (152), Brock Baker (160),

Brad Owen (170), David Schmucker (138) and Adam Dossett (220).

“Baker has stepped up and has been an animal,” Bryan said. “Willms has shown an explosive offense. Dossett has held his own. Our underclassmen are even leading. Everybody coming back is a lot more comfort-able.

“There’s been a target placed on our back. There were a lot of questions going into the season. We’ve been put in a situation where we have to be ready to go from the fi rst whistle. We’ve maintained the fi re. We had a hiccup at the NECC duals, but we’ve bounced back strong since then.”

The Eagles repeated as Greentown Eastern Invitational champions last weekend outside of Kokomo. They won all nine of their duals and had four weight class champions in Owen at 170, Willms at 152, Schmucker at 138 and Kyle Lowe at 113. Dossett also went 9-0 largely at 220 and with one heavyweight match.

WRESTLING: Fremont claimed title at GreentownFROM PAGE B1

“It’s a chance to go compete,” Meyer said. “Whether it’s checkers or ping pong, we’re going to try to win the game. Our job every time we keep score is to win. It’s the mentality we try to create within our program. Whether it’s the Orange Bowl, whether it’s the eighth game of the season, we’re trying to win the game.”

Clemson lost the Orange Bowl two years ago to West Virginia, 70-33 — the game turning when the Tigers fumbled the ball away in the second quarter, on a play where they would have taken the lead. Instead, the fl oodgates opened.

The Tigers are 21-4 since.

“This team has more than responded,” Swinney said.

THE QB BATTLE: Tickets to the Orange Bowl aren’t inexpensive, but the shows that Clemson quarterback Tajh Boyd and Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller can put on

may make the admission price seem like a bargain. Boyd has accounted for 38 touchdowns this season; Miller has scored 32 with either his arm or his feet. It’s Boyd’s fi nale; it may be Miller’s as well if he elects to go pro, as some expect he may.

BUCKEYE D: If there’s a weakness on a team that’s 24-1 in the past two seasons, it may be Ohio State’s pass defense. Each of the Buckeyes’ last four opponents have completed at least 60 percent of their passes, throwing for 1,363 yards in that stretch. And with that side of the ball dealing with some injury concerns for the Orange Bowl, it’s clearly to Clemson’s advantage.

RUN (AND) HYDE: Ohio State RB Carlos Hyde has 1,408 yards in 10 games this season, and says he’d like to cap his college career by setting the Orange Bowl record for yards in a game. Hyde has averaged 7.7 yards per carry; Clemson’s defense has yielded 3.7 per

attempt. Hyde is the fi rst running back to top 1,000 yards under Meyer, and is 116 yards away from fi fth all-time on Ohio State’s list.

WELCOME HOME: The Buckeyes and Tigers both recruit the Sunshine State heavily. Together, the teams have 13 players from the state, including six starters. Among the notables: Clemson WR Sammy Watkins (who may be playing his college fi nale), Clemson DB Jayron Kearse; Ohio State top tackler Ryan Shazier; Hyde, the Ohio State running back; and Ohio State DL Joey Bosa, who hails from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and the powerhouse St. Thomas Aquinas program.

KICKERS: If the game comes down to a kick, odds are that either Clemson’s Chandler Catanzaro or Ohio State’s Drew Basil will deliver. Catanzaro has made all 56 of his extra-point tries and is 13 of 14 on fi eld-goal attempts. Basil is 74 for 75 on extra-points and 9 for 10 on fi eld goals.

ORANGE: Buckeye’s Hyde has 1,408 yards rushingFROM PAGE B1

DETROIT (AP) — Michigan State wrapped up the Rose Bowl in fi tting fashion — with brute force on defense.

Now the Spartans have only one real goal left: Can they win the national championship?

“That’s our plan,” coach Mark Dantonio said. “You have to dream big.”

The 2013 season felt like a dream for Dantonio and his team, especially the last couple months. From the moment Michigan State pounded rival Michigan in early November to emerge as serious contenders for the Big Ten title, the Spartans turned back every challenge in their own bruising style.

Go unbeaten in conference play during the regular season? Check.

Beat Ohio State in the Big Ten title game to earn a spot in their fi rst Rose Bowl since 1988? Check.

Then Michigan State edged Stanford 24-20 on Wednesday, stuffi ng the Cardinal on fourth-and-short near midfi eld in the fi nal minutes to put the game away. The Rose Bowl victory means the fourth-ranked Spartans may be ranked even higher to end the season after about a quarter-cen-tury of frustration and untapped potential.

If any team had an excuse for a bowl letdown it was Michigan State. The Spartans had already accomplished so much just by making it to the Rose Bowl — then they lost star linebacker Max

Bullough to a suspension.It was Kyler Elsworth, a

fi fth-year senior fi lling in for Bullough, who fl ung himself over the pile on that key fourth-down stop against Stanford.

“The situation with Max, when we fi rst heard of it, I wasn’t too worried because I know Kyler Elsworth,” linebacker Denicos Allen said. “Just to play with the guys I played with on defense, to play with them for a senior year and to play the way we did, it was just a journey well worth it.”

After back-to-back 11-win campaigns, Michigan State went 7-6 last season. Then the Spartans lost running back Le’Veon Bell, tight end Dion Sims and defensive lineman William Gholston early to the NFL.

At the beginning of the season, the Spartans looked like just another Big Ten team. Michigan State’s defense was ranked No. 1 in the country, and the offense improved consistently after a slow start. With major uncertainty at quarterback, it was unproven Connor Cook who eventually won the job.

Cook, a sophomore, ended up throwing for 22 touchdowns and only six interceptions.

“We’ve always believed in ourselves, no matter what the situation is,” Cook said. “Our defense, they have been doing their thing the entire year. They’ve been shutting out our opponents and then our offense has really stepped up and become a lot more

balanced in the pass game and run game.”

Cook has every reason to feel confi dent heading into next season, but Michigan State will have to replace three senior starters on the offensive line. The Spartans also lose Bullough, Allen and defensive backs Darqueze Dennard and Isaiah Lewis from that terrifi c defense.

“After this year, obviously, the expectations are sky high. I think we’ll have to realize that,” Cook said. “Guys have to step up every single year. Seniors graduate, underclassmen have to step up. I think the main thing we have to be is so hungry and realize that together we can accomplish anything.”

Dantonio said after the Rose Bowl he intends to be back at Michigan State. Defensive coordi-nator Pat Narduzzi is certainly a candidate to leave for a head coaching job, but he hasn’t done so yet.

If Michigan State’s staff does return intact, this should remain a program to be reckoned with in the Big Ten.

“People keep asking me, ‘Does the championship feel better?’ — all these different things, these levels of excitement,” Dantonio said. “It’s sort of living a dream.”

National title the next goal at Michigan State

AP

Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio reacts to a turnover by Stanford during the Rose Bowl on Wednesday. Michigan State won 24-20.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Carolina Hurricanes and Washington Capitals compressed most of their excitement into a four-minute span.

We score; you score. You score; we score. Sort of like one of those mini-games with the peewee players that are sometimes featured during intermission.

Both coaches were aggravated, to say the least, but Carolina’s Kirk Muller was in a better frame of mind about the whole thing because his team eventually won, taking a 4-3 victory in overtime Thursday night on Jeff Skinner’s third goal.

“Yeah, it’s not what coaches are wanting to see,” Muller said with a chuckle. “Tonight it just looked like just whenever someone made a mistake, it was in our nets.”

With Washington’s Dmitry Orlov out of position, Skinner decided the game when he took a pass from Ryan Murphy to cap a 3-on-1 break at 1:20 of the extra period, giving the Hurricanes their second straight win after a fi ve-game losing streak.

The goal seemed far removed from the whirlwind stretch early in the second period, when fi ve players scored goals and Alex Ovechkin missed a penalty shot — all in 3 minutes, 45 seconds.

It was a brand of don’t-leave-your-seat hockey that’s become all too familiar for the Capitals, who have a knack this season for letting up after scoring a goal.

“I know it’s exciting for the fans,” said Troy Brouwer, who scored for the Capitals during the goal cavalcade. “I know it’s a fun game to watch, but we’ve got to be able to calm it down. Whenever we score a goal — we had a couple of big goals that put us ahead there — we’ve got to be able to build off that and make sure that we’re not giving them opportuni-ties right away. It’s been a problem all year.”

Skinner’s second hat trick in less than a month gives him 19 goals for the season. Manny Malhotra also scored for the Hurricanes.

Islanders 3, Blackhawks 2, OT

Kyle Okposo scored 58

seconds into overtime to lift the Islanders to a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday night after they blew a two-goal lead to the Stanley Cup champions.

Casey Cizikas scored in his 100th NHL game, and Thomas Vanek added a goal for the Islanders. Defenseman Andrew MacDonald had two assists, and Evgeni Nabokov made 37 saves in the contest.

Okposo ended it with his 16th goal.

The Islanders have won three straight, building off a pair of comeback road victories against Minnesota and Boston — Chicago’s opponent in last year’s Cup fi nals.

Hurricanes win in OT

AP

Carolina Hurricanes left wing Jeff Skinner (53) celebrates his goal with Manny Malhotra (22) and Ryan Murphy (7) during the overtime period of Thursday’s NHL game against the Washington Capitals. The Hurricanes won 4-3 in overtime.

Page 11: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

SPORTS BRIEFS•

Snow forces postponementsLEO — Two high school sporting

events scheduled for Thursday were among those postponed because of the snowstorm that hit the area.

No makeup dates have been announced for the Northeast Hoosier Conference Triple Dual at Norwell that included East Noble and DeKalb and Angola’s girls basketball games at Leo.

Angola’s wrestling dual at West Noble has been moved to Thursday and will start at 6:30 p.m.

Trine wins on New Year’s EveMOUNT VERNON, Ohio — Trine

University’s men’s basketball team closed out 2013 with a 57-47 victory over NAIA program Mount Vernon Nazarene Tuesday afternoon at Ariel Arena.

The Thunder (6-4) held the Cougars scoreless in a span of 10 minutes, 16 seconds late in the fi rst half and early in the second half. In that time frame, Trine turned a tie game into a 17-point lead. Mount Vernon Nazarene would not shrink the defi cit to single digits until the closing minutes.

Nick Tatu led the Thunder with 20 points. He went 6-of-15 from three-point range.

Will Dixon had 14 points and six rebounds for Trine. Tyler Good added 12 points, six boards, fi ve assists and three steals. Jared Holmquist had nine points and six rebounds.

Bryan Redic paced the Cougars with 11 points and seven rebounds.

Both teams shot 34 percent from the fl oor. MVN outrebounded the Thunder 40-30. Trine forced 20 Cougar turnovers while only giving the ball away 11 times.

Newell honored by MIAAROYAL OAK, Mich. — Trine

University junior forward Amy Newell was named a Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association Co-Player of the Week for last week’s efforts. Newell shared the honor with Olivet senior guard Chelsea Ciba.

Newell averaged 20.5 points and seven rebounds per game as the Thunder went 1-1 in a holiday tournament at Bluffton, Ohio, Saturday and Sunday. The Three Rivers, Mich., native was named MIAA Player of the Week for the fi rst time in her Trine basketball career.

Every NFL playoff game to be streamed for 1st time

NEW YORK (AP) — Every NFL playoff game will be streamed live online for the fi rst time.

The league said Thursday that CBS and Fox would be providing live streams of their broadcasts this season. The Super Bowl and NBC’s wild-card games were available online the last two seasons.

All the games will also be streamed on smartphones through Verizon’s NFL Mobile app.

The games on CBS and NBC will be available online to any user through the networks’ websites. For the games on Fox, fans must authenticate that they’re a subscriber to a participating cable company through the Fox Sports Go app or website.

No. 4 Wisconsin cruises past Northwestern 76-49

EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) — Freshman reserve Nigel Hayes had a career-high 19 points and No. 4 Wisconsin remained unbeaten with an easy 76-49 victory over Northwestern in their Big Ten opener Thursday night.

Hayes went 8 for 12 from the fi eld and had six rebounds while showing a nice combination of power and fi nesse. The prize recruit is averaging 15.3 points in his last three games.

Sam Dekker scored 15 points and Traevon Jackson had 10 for the Badgers (14-0, 1-0), who earned their seventh consecutive win against the Wildcats. They shot 55 percent (32 for 58) from the fi eld and enjoyed a 38-27 rebounding edge.

Northwestern (7-7, 0-1) has dropped two straight after a three-game winning streak. Alex Olah had a career-high 23 points, and Drew Crawford fi nished with 10 points on 3-for-11 shooting.

Wisconsin improved to 14-0 for the fi rst time since the Badgers won each of their 15 games in the 1911-12 and 1913-14 seasons. It was their 11th straight win in a Big Ten opener.

Boys Basketball StandingsNortheast Hoosier Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LHomestead 1 0 7 3New Haven 1 0 5 2Columbia City 1 0 4 5Norwell 1 0 3 1Carroll 0 1 6 3DeKalb 0 1 3 8Bellmont 0 1 2 4East Noble 0 1 0 8Thursday, Jan. 2Heritage at Bellmont, 7:45 p.m.Greenfi eld-Central vs. Norwell at Richmond, 6 p.m.Friday, Jan. 3 Heritage at Bellmont, 7:45 p.m. Norwell vs. Fox Creek Christian (Ky.) or Jefferonsville at Richmond, noon or 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 4Norwell vs. TBA at Richmond, TBAColumbia City at Wawasee, 7:30 p.m.South Adams at Bellmont, 7:45 p.m.Van Wert (Ohio) at Carroll, 7:45 p.m.Tuesday, Jan. 7East Noble at Westview, 7:30 p.m.New Haven at Fort Wayne Snider, 7:30 p.m.Wednesday, Jan. 8Fort Wayne Dwenger at Carroll, 7:45 p.m.

Northeast Corner Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LPrairie Heights 3 0 6 1Westview 3 0 4 2West Noble 1 0 5 0Eastside 1 1 4 3Fairfi eld 2 1 3 2Angola 1 1 3 4Fremont 1 1 1 6Hamilton 1 2 4 4Lakeland 1 3 2 4Churubusco 0 2 0 5Central Noble 0 3 0 6Friday, Jan. 3Eastside at West Noble, 7:30 p.m.Caston ShootoutChurubusco vs. Lowell, 2 p.m.Central Noble at Caston, 8 p.m.Northwood TournamentFairfi eld at Rochester, 7:30 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 4West Noble at Prairie Heights, 7:30 p.m.Caston ShootoutChurubusco vs. Northfi eld or Rensse-laer Central, 11:30 a.m. or 1 p.m.Central Noble vs. Kankakee Valley or Oregon-Davis, 11:30 a.m. or 1 p.m.Northwood TournamentFairfi eld vs. Tippecanoe Valley or Northwood, 6 p.m. or 7:30 p.m.Tuesday, Jan. 7East Noble at Westview, 7:30 p.m.Lakeland at Sturgis, 7:45 p.m.Wednesday, Jan. 8Churubusco at Woodlan, 7:30 p.m.

Allen County Athletic Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LGarrett 2 0 6 1Bluffton 2 0 4 3Leo 1 1 4 3Adams Central 1 1 3 4Woodlan 1 1 3 3Heritage 1 1 2 3South Adams 0 2 2 5Southern Wells 0 2 0 5Thursday, Jan. 2Heritage at Bellmont, 7:45 p.m.Friday, Jan. 3Bluffton at Winchester, 7:30 p.m.Daleville at Southern Wells, 7:30 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 4Leo at FW Concordia, 7:30 p.m.South Adams at Bellmont, 7:45. p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7 Cowan at Southern Wells, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 8 Churubusco at Woodlan, 7:30 p.m. Eastbrook at Heritage, 7:30 p.m.

Boys Prep Basketball ScoresBarr-Reeve 50, Orleans 40Indpls Pike 60, Pendleton Hts. 56Bob Wettig TournamentFirst RoundBedford N. Lawrence 50, E. Central 49Columbus North 78, Tindley 27Ft. Wayne North 85, Indpls Metro 60Jefffersonville 118, Fox Creek Christian 46Jennings Co. 54, Connersville 49Norwell 81, Greenfi eld 50Richmond 86, Rock Creek Academy 38POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCEL-LATIONSEdinburgh vs. Seymour, ppd. to Jan 16.Heritage vs. Bellmont, ppd.Lapel vs. Indpls Park Tudor, ppd.Plymouth vs. Penn, ppd.S. Putnam vs. S. Vermillion, ppd.Caston ShootoutFirst RoundCaston vs. Central Noble, ppd. to Jan 3.Lowell vs. Churubusco, ppd. to Jan 3.Oregon-Davis vs. Kankakee Valley, ppd. to Jan 3.Rensselaer vs. Northfi eld, ppd. to Jan 3.

Girls Basketball StandingsNortheast Hoosier Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LHomestead 3 0 10 0East Noble 3 0 10 3DeKalb 2 0 9 3Norwell 1 2 6 3Columbia City 1 2 9 4New Haven 1 2 6 5Carroll 0 3 3 9Bellmont 0 3 0 13Friday, Jan. 3Kokomo at Carroll, 7:45 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 4Plymouth ShootoutNorwell vs. Plymouth, 10 a.m.Norwell vs. Wawasee, 6 p.m.Tuesday, Jan. 7Eastside at DeKalb, 7:45 p.m.Wednesday, Jan. 8Angola at East Noble, 6:15 p.m.Leo at Norwell, 7:30 p.m.

Northeast Corner Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LFairfi eld 5 0 7 1Westview 6 0 10 2West Noble 5 2 7 5Angola 4 2 4 6Lakeland 3 4 5 8Churubusco 2 3 5 6Fremont 2 4 6 5Prairie Heights 3 4 6 6Central Noble 1 5 3 7Hamilton 0 4 2 5Eastside 0 5 2 10Thursday, Jan. 2Angola at Leo, 6:30 p.m.Central Noble at LaVille, 7:30 p.m.Friday, Jan. 3Churubusco at Heritage, 7:30 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 4Fairfi eld at NorthWood, 1:30 p.m.Monday, Jan. 6Manchester at Central Noble, 7:30 p.m.Tuesday, Jan. 7Eastside at DeKalb, 7:45 p.m.Fairfi eld at Jimtown, 7:30 p.m.Lakeland at Sturgis (Mich.), 6 p.m.Prairie Heights at Bronson (Mich.), 7:30 p.m.West Noble at Tippecanoe Valley, 7:45 p.m.Wednesday, Jan. 8Angola at East Noble, 6:15 p.m.

Allen County Athletic Conference Conf. Ovrl W L W LGarrett 4 0 12 0Leo 3 1 9 1Heritage 3 1 8 3Woodlan 2 2 7 3Southern Wells 2 2 5 5South Adams 1 3 8 3Bluffton 1 3 3 8Adams Central 0 4 2 8Thursday, Jan. 2Angola at Leo, ppd.Friday, Jan. 3Churubusco at Heritage, 7:30 p.m.Muncie South at Adams Central, 7:30 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 4Southern Wells at Randolph Southern, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7 Antwert (Ohio) at Woodlan, 7:30 p.m. Bluffton at Northfi eld, 7:30 p.m. Heritage at Fort Wayne Dwenger, 7:30 p.m.

Lakewood Park at Adams Central, 7:30 p.m.Wednesday, Jan. 8Leo at Norwell, 7:30 p.m.

Girls Prep Basketball ScoresBrownstown 54, Eastern (Pekin) 46Castle 55, Boonville 28Dubois 45, Crawford Co. 36Springs Valley 68, Perry Central 60Vincennes Rivet 50, Mt. Vernon (Posey) 49Washington 51, N. Daviess 26POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCEL-LATIONSAnderson vs. Noblesville, ppd. to Jan 3.Angola vs. Leo, ppd. to Jan 4.Culver vs. Oregon-Davis, ppd.Eastbrook vs. Frankton, ppd.Indpls Roncalli vs. Lawrence North, ppd. to Jan 3.Kokomo vs. Huntington North, ppd.LaVille vs. Central Noble, ppd.Oldenburg vs. Morristown, ppd.Randolph Southern vs. Union City, ppd.S. Dearborn vs. Rushville, ppd.S. Vermillion vs. S. Putnam, ppd.Shenandoah vs. Union Co., ppd.Sullivan vs. Brown Co., ppd.Union (Modoc) vs. Hagerstown, ppd. to Jan 3.

NFL Playoff ScheduleWild-card PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 4Kansas City at Indianapolis, 4:35 p.m. (NBC)New Orleans at Philadelphia, 8:10 p.m. (NBC)Sunday, Jan. 5San Diego at Cincinnati, 1:05 p.m. (CBS)San Francisco at Green Bay, 4:40 p.m. (FOX)Divisional PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 11Green Bay, San Francisco or New Orleans at Seattle, 4:35 p.m. (FOX)Cincinnati, Indianpolis or Kansas City at New England, 8:15 p.m. (CBS)Sunday, Jan. 12Philadelphia, Green Bay or San Francisco at Carolina, 1:05 p.m. (FOX)Indianapolis, Kansas City or San Diego at Denver, 4:40 p.m. (CBS)Conference ChampionshipsSunday, Jan. 19AFC, 3 p.m. (CBS)NFL, 6:30 p.m. (FOX)Pro BowlSunday, Jan. 26At HonoluluTBD, 7:30 p.m. (NBC)Super BowlSunday, Feb. 2At East Rutherford, N.J.AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6:30 p.m. (FOX)

NHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GABoston 41 27 12 2 56 120 88Tampa Bay 40 24 12 4 52 114 95Montreal 41 23 14 4 50 103 94Toronto 42 21 16 5 47 118 120Detroit 42 18 14 10 46 109 120Ottawa 43 18 18 7 43 122 138Florida 41 15 20 6 36 96 130Buffalo 41 11 26 4 26 72 117Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 42 29 12 1 59 131 96Washington 41 20 15 6 46 125 123Philadelphia 40 20 16 4 44 105 111New Jersey 41 17 16 8 42 97 103N.Y. Rangers 41 20 19 2 42 96 109Carolina 41 16 16 9 41 100 121Columbus 40 17 19 4 38 109 117N.Y. Islanders 42 14 21 7 35 110 140WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 43 28 7 8 64 160 118St. Louis 40 28 7 5 61 144 93Colorado 39 24 11 4 52 114 100Dallas 39 20 12 7 47 115 113Minnesota 43 21 17 5 47 101 110Winnipeg 43 19 19 5 43 117 125Nashville 41 18 18 5 41 97 122Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAAnaheim 42 29 8 5 63 137 106San Jose 40 25 9 6 56 131 104Los Angeles 42 25 13 4 54 110 88Vancouver 42 23 12 7 53 113 101Phoenix 39 20 10 9 49 120 120Calgary 40 14 20 6 34 96 126Edmonton 42 13 24 5 31 109 143NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Wednesday’s GamesToronto 3, Detroit 2, SOTampa Bay 4, Vancouver 2Thursday’s GamesBoston 3, Nashville 2, OTN.Y. Islanders 3, Chicago 2, OTCarolina 4, Washington 3, OTOttawa 4, Winnipeg 3St. Louis 5, Los Angeles 0Minnesota 4, Buffalo 1Montreal at Dallas, latePhiladelphia at Colorado, lateColumbus at Phoenix, lateEdmonton at San Jose, lateFriday’s GamesChicago at New Jersey, 7 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.Tampa Bay at Calgary, 9 p.m.Edmonton at Anaheim, 10 p.m.Saturday’s GamesWinnipeg at Boston, 1 p.m.San Jose at Colorado, 3 p.m.New Jersey at Buffalo, 7 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at Toronto, 7 p.m.Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p.m.Nashville at Florida, 7 p.m.Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.Columbus at St. Louis, 8 p.m.Detroit at Dallas, 8 p.m.Washington at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Philadelphia at Phoenix, 8 p.m.Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.

ECHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAWheeling 29 14 10 0 5 33 78 82Reading 26 15 10 1 0 31 74 66Elmira 28 9 16 1 2 21 67 93North Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GACincinnati 29 18 9 1 1 38 100 80Evansville 28 16 7 2 3 37 100 92Kalamazoo 28 15 11 0 2 32 78 72Fort Wayne 28 12 11 1 4 29 85 94Toledo 28 9 16 3 0 21 80 107South Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAS. Carolina 31 23 5 1 2 49 99 60Florida 30 19 9 1 1 40 107 83Orlando 30 16 12 1 1 34 80 81Greenville 30 14 14 1 1 30 76 77Gwinnett 31 10 19 0 2 22 68 96WESTERN CONFERENCEMountain Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAColorado 30 17 8 3 2 39 99 83Alaska 28 18 9 1 0 37 89 54Idaho 30 16 10 2 2 36 96 87Utah 28 11 14 1 2 25 61 73Pacifi c Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAOntario 30 21 5 1 3 46 89 70Stockton 30 16 10 0 4 36 103 94S. Francisco 31 11 16 3 1 26 75 110Bakersfi eld 28 12 15 0 1 25 71 86Las Vegas 29 8 18 3 0 19 67 102NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win, one point for an overtime or shootout loss.Thursday’s GamesSouth Carolina 4, Gwinnett 1Utah 3, Orlando 2, OTFriday’s GamesElmira at Wheeling, 7 p.m.Florida at Greenville, 7 p.m.Gwinnett at South Carolina, 7 p.m.Reading at Toledo, 7:15 p.m.Utah at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.Cincinnati at Kalamazoo, 7:30 p.m.Fort Wayne at Evansville, 8:15 p.m.Bakersfi eld at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.Ontario at Las Vegas, 10:05 p.m.San Francisco at Stockton, 10:30 p.m.Idaho at Alaska, 11:15 p.m.Saturday’s GamesGreenville at South Carolina, 7 p.m.Florida at Gwinnett, 7:05 p.m.Wheeling at Elmira, 7:05 p.m.Toledo at Kalamazoo, 7:30 p.m.Evansville at Fort Wayne, 7:35 p.m.Reading at Cincinnati, 7:35 p.m.Bakersfi eld at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.Ontario at Las Vegas, 10:05 p.m.Stockton at San Francisco, 10:30 p.m.Idaho at Alaska, 11:15 p.m.Sunday’s GamesUtah at Orlando, 1 p.m.

Kalamazoo at Fort Wayne, 5:05 p.m.San Francisco at Ontario, 6 p.m.

NBA StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBToronto 15 15 .500 —Boston 13 19 .406 3Brooklyn 11 21 .344 5Philadelphia 10 21 .323 5½New York 9 21 .300 6Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 24 8 .750 —Atlanta 18 14 .563 6Washington 14 15 .483 8½Charlotte 14 19 .424 10½Orlando 10 22 .313 14Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 25 6 .806 —Detroit 14 19 .424 12Chicago 13 18 .419 12Cleveland 11 21 .344 14½Milwaukee 7 24 .226 18WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBSan Antonio 25 7 .781 —Houston 21 13 .618 5Dallas 19 13 .594 6New Orleans 14 16 .467 10Memphis 13 17 .433 11Northwest Division W L Pct GBPortland 25 7 .781 —Oklahoma City 25 7 .781 —Minnesota 16 16 .500 9Denver 14 17 .452 10½Utah 10 24 .294 16Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 22 12 .647 —Phoenix 19 11 .633 1Golden State 21 13 .618 1L.A. Lakers 13 19 .406 8Sacramento 10 20 .333 10Wednesday’s GamesDallas 87, Washington 78Toronto 95, Indiana 82Minnesota 124, New Orleans 112Philadelphia 114, Denver 102L.A. Clippers 112, Charlotte 85Thursday’s GamesCleveland 87, Orlando 81, OTGolden State 123, Miami 114Chicago 94, Boston 82Brooklyn 95, Oklahoma City 93New York at San Antonio, lateMemphis at Phoenix, lateMilwaukee at Utah, lateCharlotte at Portland, latePhiladelphia at Sacramento, lateFriday’s GamesToronto at Washington, 7 p.m.New Orleans at Boston, 7:30 p.m.Golden State at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.New York at Houston, 8 p.m.L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Memphis at Denver, 9 p.m.Utah at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.Saturday’s GamesMiami at Orlando, 7 p.m.New Orleans at Indiana, 7 p.m.Cleveland at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.Atlanta at Chicago, 8 p.m.Oklahoma City at Minnesota, 8 p.m.L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.Milwaukee at Phoenix, 9 p.m.Philadelphia at Portland, 10 p.m.Charlotte at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

NBADL StandingsCentral Division W L Pct GBRio Grande Valley 12 2 .857 —Sioux Falls 11 4 .733 1½Iowa 10 4 .714 2Texas 9 4 .692 2½Austin 6 6 .500 5Tulsa 2 13 .133 10½West Division W L Pct GBIdaho 9 5 .643 —Santa Cruz 9 6 .600 ½Reno 7 7 .500 2Bakersfi eld 7 8 .467 2½Los Angeles 5 7 .417 3East Division W L Pct GBCanton 9 4 .692 —Maine 7 6 .538 2Fort Wayne 6 7 .462 3Springfi eld 3 10 .231 6Delaware 3 12 .200 7Erie 1 11 .083 7½Wednesday’s GamesNo games scheduledThursday’s GamesMaine 105, Tulsa 96Iowa 104, Sioux Falls 94Los Angeles at Reno, lateCanton at Bakersfi eld, lateFriday’s GamesTulsa at Springfi eld, 7 p.m.Erie at Delaware, 7 p.m.Iowa at Fort Wayne, 7:30 p.m.Texas at Austin, 8:30 p.m.Rio Grande Valley at Idaho, 9 p.m.Reno at Santa Cruz, 10 p.m.Saturday’s GamesSpringfi eld at Maine, 7 p.m.Texas at Austin, 8:30 p.m.Rio Grande Valley at Idaho, 9 p.m.Bakersfi eld at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.Canton at Santa Cruz, 10 p.m.

College Football FBS Bowl Games

Saturday, Dec. 21New Mexico BowlColorado State 48, Washington State 45Las Vegas BowlSouthern Cal 45, Fresno State 20Famous Idaho Potato BowlSan Diego State 49, Buffalo 24New Orleans BowlLouisiana-Lafayette 24, Tulane 21Monday, Dec. 23Beef ‘O’ Brady’s BowlEast Carolina 37, Ohio 20Tuesday, Dec. 24Hawaii BowlOregon State 38, Boise State 23Thursday, Dec. 26Little Caesars Pizza BowlPittsburgh 30, Bowling Green 27Poinsettia BowlUtah State 21, Northern Illinois 14Friday, Dec. 27Military BowlMarshall 31, Maryland 20Texas BowlSyracuse 21, Minnesota 17Fight Hunger BowlWashington 31, BYU 16Saturday, Dec. 28Pinstripe BowlNotre Dame 29, Rutgers 16Belk BowlNorth Carolina 39, Cincinnati 17Russell Athletic BowlLouisville 36, Miami 9Buffalo Wild Wings BowlKansas State 31, Michigan 14Monday, Dec. 30Armed Forces BowlNavy 24, Middle Tennessee 6Music City BowlMississippi 25, Georgia Tech 17Alamo BowlOregon 30, Texas 7Holiday BowlTexas Tech 37, Arizona State 23Tuesday, Dec. 31AdvoCare V100 BowlArizona 42, Boston College 19Sun BowlUCLA 42, Virginia Tech 12Liberty BowlMississippi State 44, Rice 7Chick-fi l-A BowlTexas A&M 52, Duke 48Wednesday, Jan. 1Heart of Dallas BowlNorth Texas 36, UNLV 14Gator BowlNebraska 24, Georgia 19Capital One BowlSouth Carolina 34, Wisconsin 24Outback BowlLSU 21, Iowa 14Rose BowlMichigan State 24, Stanford 20Fiesta BowlUCF 52, Baylor 42Thursday, Jan. 2Sugar BowlAlabama vs. Oklahoma, lateFriday, Jan. 3Orange BowlOhio State (12-1) vs. Clemson (10-2), 8 p.m. (ESPN)Cotton BowlMissouri (11-2) vs. Oklahoma State (10-2), 7:30 p.m. (FOX)Saturday, Jan. 4BBVA Compass BowlVanderbilt (8-4) vs. Houston (8-4), 1

p.m. (ESPN)Sunday, Jan. 5GoDaddy.com BowlArkansas State (7-5) vs. Ball State (10-2), 9 p.m. (ESPN)Monday, Jan. 6BCS National ChampionshipFlorida State (13-0) vs. Auburn (12-1), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)Saturday, Jan. 18East-West Shrine ClassicEast vs. West, 4 p.m. (NFLN)Saturday, Jan. 25Senior BowlSouth vs. North, 4 p.m. (NFLN)

Men’s Top 25 Basketball Schedule

Friday’s GameNo. 9 Baylor vs. Savannah State, 8 p.m.Saturday’s GamesNo. 1 Arizona vs. Washington, 2 p.m.No. 2 Syracuse vs. Miami, 2 p.m.No. 3 Ohio State vs. Nebraska, NoonNo. 5 Michigan State at Indiana, 2 p.m.No. 6 Oklahoma State at Kansas State, 4 p.m.No. 7 Duke at Notre Dame, 4 p.m.No. 12 Florida vs. Richmond, 3 p.m.No. 13 Iowa State at Texas Tech, 1:30 p.m.No. 14 Louisville at Rutgers, 6 p.m.No. 17 UConn at SMU, 2 p.m.No. 18 Memphis vs. Cincinnati, NoonNo. 23 UMass vs. Miami (Ohio), 7 p.m.No. 24 Gonzaga vs. Pacifi c, 8 p.m.No. 25 Missouri vs. Long Beach State, 5 p.m.Sunday’s GamesNo. 4 Wisconsin vs. No. 22 Iowa, 8 p.m.No. 8 Wichita State vs. Northern Iowa, 2 p.m.No. 10 Oregon at No. 20 Colorado, 5 p.m.No. 11 Villanova vs. Providence, 7 p.m.No. 16 Kansas vs. No. 21 San Diego State, 4:30 p.m.No. 19 North Carolina at Wake Forest, 8 p.m.

Women’s Top 25 Basketball Schedule

Friday’s GamesNo. 4 Stanford vs. Oregon, 9 p.m.No. 12 Colorado at Southern Cal, 11 p.m.No. 23 California vs. Oregon State, 11 p.m.No. 24 Arizona State at Washington State, 10 p.m.Saturday’s GamesNo. 1 UConn at Memphis, 3 p.m.No. 7 Louisville vs. Cincinnati, 2 p.m.No. 11 Oklahoma State vs. West Virginia, 7 p.m.Sunday’s GamesNo. 2 Notre Dame vs. Clemson, 2 p.m.No. 3 Duke at Georgia Tech, 2 p.m.No. 4 Stanford vs. Oregon State, 5 p.m.No. 5 Tennessee at No. 19 Georgia, 4 p.m.No. 6 Kentucky vs. Florida, 3 p.m.No. 8 Maryland at No. 10 North Carolina, 3 p.m.No. 9 Baylor vs. Kansas, 4 p.m.No. 12 Colorado at UCLA, 10:30 p.m.No. 13 South Carolina vs. Vanderbilt, 1 p.m.No. 14 Iowa State at No. 25 Oklahoma, 2 p.m.No. 15 Penn State at No. 22 Iowa, 3 p.m.No. 16 LSU at Tulane, 3 p.m.No. 20 Syracuse at N.C. State, 2 p.m.No. 23 California vs. Oregon, 3 p.m.No. 24 Arizona State at Washington, 5 p.m.

Orange Bowl WinnersJan. 1, 2013 — Florida State 31, Northern Illinois 10Jan. 4, 2012 — West Virginia 70, Clemson 33Jan. 3, 2011 — Stanford 40, Virginia Tech 12Jan. 5, 2010 — Iowa 24, Georgia Tech 14Jan. 1, 2009 — Virginia Tech 20, Cincinnati 7Jan. 3, 2008 — Kansas 24, Virginia Tech 21Jan. 2, 2007 — Louisville 24, Wake Forest 13Jan. 4, 2006 — Penn State 26, Florida State 23, 3OTJan. 1, 2005 — Southern Cal 55, Oklahoma 19Jan. 1, 2004 — Miami 16, Florida State 14Jan. 2, 2003 — Southern Cal 38, Iowa 17Jan. 2, 2002 — Florida 56, Maryland 23Jan. 3, 2001 — Oklahoma 13, Florida State 2Jan. 1, 2000 — Michigan 35, Alabama 34, OTJan. 2, 1999 — Florida 31, Syracuse 10Jan. 2, 1998 — Nebraska 42, Tennessee 17Dec. 31, 1996 — Nebraska 41, Virginia Tech 21Jan. 1, 1996 — Florida State 31, Notre Dame 26Jan. 1, 1995 — Nebraska 24, Miami 17Jan. 1, 1994 — Florida State 18, Nebraska 16Jan. 1, 1993 — Florida State 27, Nebraska 14Jan. 1, 1992 — Miami 22, Nebraska 0Jan. 1, 1991 — Colorado 10, Notre Dame 9Jan. 1, 1990 — Notre Dame 21, Colorado 6Jan. 2, 1989 — Miami 23, Nebraska 3Jan. 1, 1988 — Miami 20, Oklahoma 14Jan. 1, 1987 — Oklahoma 42, Arkansas 8Jan. 1, 1986 — Oklahoma 25, Penn State 10Jan. 1, 1985 — Washington 28, Oklahoma 17Jan. 2, 1984 — Miami 31, Nebraska 30Jan. 1, 1983 — Nebraska 21, LSU 20Jan. 1, 1982 — Clemson 22, Nebraska 15Jan. 1, 1981 — Oklahoma 18, Florida State 17Jan. 1, 1980 — Oklahoma 24, Florida State 7Jan. 1, 1979 — Oklahoma 31, Nebraska 24Jan. 2, 1978 — Arkansas 31, Oklahoma 6Jan. 1, 1977 — Ohio State 27, Colorado 10Jan. 1, 1976 — Oklahoma 14, Michigan 6Jan. 1, 1975 — Notre Dame 13, Alabama 11Jan. 1, 1974 — Penn State 16, LSU 9Jan. 1, 1973 — Nebraska 40, Notre Dame 6Jan. 1, 1972 — Nebraska 38, Alabama 6Jan. 1, 1971 — Nebraska 17, LSU 12Jan. 1, 1970 — Penn State 10, Missouri 3Jan. 1, 1969 — Penn State 15, Kansas 14Jan. 1, 1968 — Oklahoma 26, Tennessee 24Jan. 2, 1967 — Florida 27, Georgia Tech 12Jan. 1, 1966 — Alabama 39, Nebraska 28Jan. 1, 1965 — Texas 21, Alabama 17Jan. 1, 1964 — Nebraska 13, Auburn 7Jan. 1, 1963 — Alabama 17, Oklahoma 0Jan. 1, 1962 — LSU 25, Colorado 7Jan. 2, 1961 — Missouri 21, Navy 14Jan. 1, 1960 — Georgia 14, Missouri 0Jan. 1, 1959 — Oklahoma 21, Syracuse 6Jan. 1, 1958 — Oklahoma 48, Duke 21Jan. 1, 1957 — Colorado 27, Clemson 21Jan. 2, 1956 — Oklahoma 20, Maryland 6Jan. 1, 1955 — Duke 34, Nebraska 7Jan. 1, 1954 — Oklahoma 7, Maryland 0Jan. 1, 1953 — Alabama 61, Syracuse 6Jan. 1, 1952 — Georgia Tech 17, Baylor 14Jan. 1, 1951 — Clemson 15, Miami 14Jan. 2, 1950 — Santa Clara 21, Kentucky 13Jan. 1, 1949 — Texas 41, Georgia 28Jan. 1, 1948 — Georgia Tech 20, Kansas 14Jan. 1, 1947 — Rice 8, Tennessee 0Jan. 1, 1946 — Miami 13, Holy Cross 6Jan. 1, 1945 — Tulsa 26, Georgia Tech 12Jan. 1, 1944 — LSU 19, Texas A&M 14Jan. 1, 1943 — Alabama 37, Boston College 21

Jan. 1, 1942 — Georgia 40, TCU 26Jan. 1, 1941 — Mississippi State 14, Georgetown 7Jan. 1, 1940 — Georgia Tech 21, Missouri 7Jan. 2, 1939 — Tennessee 17, Oklahoma 0Jan. 1, 1938 — Auburn 6, Michigan State 0Jan. 1, 1937 — Duquesne 13, Missis-sippi State 12Jan. 1, 1936 — Catholic U. 20, Missis-sippi 19Jan. 1, 1935 — Bucknell 26, Miami 0

Cotton Bowl WinnersJan. 4, 2013 — Texas A&M 41, Oklahoma 13Jan. 6, 2012 — Arkansas 29, Kansas St. 16Jan. 7, 2011 — LSU 41, Texas A&M 24Jan. 2, 2010 — Mississippi 21, Oklahoma St. 7Jan. 2, 2009 — Mississippi 47, Texas Tech 34Jan. 1, 2008 — Missouri 38, Arkansas 7Jan. 1, 2007 — Auburn 17, Nebraska 14Jan. 2, 2006 — Alabama 13, Texas Tech 10Jan. 1, 2005 — Tennessee 38, Texas A&M 7Jan. 2, 2004 — Mississippi 31, Oklahoma St. 28Jan. 1, 2003 — Texas 35, LSU 20Jan. 1, 2002 — Oklahoma 10, Arkansas 3Jan. 1, 2001 — Kansas St. 35, Tennessee 21Jan. 1, 2000 — Arkansas 27, Texas 6Jan. 1, 1999 — Texas 38, Mississippi St. 11Jan. 1, 1998 — UCLA 29, Texas A&M 23Jan. 1, 1997 — Brigham Young 19, Kansas St. 15Jan. 1, 1996 — Colorado 38, Oregon 6Jan. 2, 1995 — Southern Cal 55, Texas Tech 14Jan. 1, 1994 — Notre Dame 24, Texas A&M 21Jan. 1, 1993 — Notre Dame 28, Texas A&M 3Jan. 1, 1992 — Florida St. 10, Texas A&M 2Jan. 1, 1991 — Miami 46, Texas 3Jan. 1, 1990 — Tennessee 31, Arkansas 27Jan. 2, 1989 — UCLA 17, Arkansas 3Jan. 1, 1988 — Texas A&M 35, Notre Dame 10Jan. 1, 1987 — Ohio St. 28, Texas A&M 12Jan. 1, 1986 — Texas A&M 36, Auburn 16Jan. 1, 1985 — Boston College 45, Houston 28Jan. 2, 1984 — Georgia 10, Texas 9Jan. 1, 1983 — Southern Methodist 7, Pittsburgh 3Jan. 1, 1982 — Texas 14, Alabama 12Jan. 1, 1981 — Alabama 30, Baylor 2Jan. 1, 1980 — Houston 17, Nebraska 14Jan. 1, 1979 — Notre Dame 35, Houston 34Jan. 2, 1978 — Notre Dame 38, Texas 10Jan. 1, 1977 — Houston 30, Maryland 21Jan. 1, 1976 — Arkansas 31, Georgia 10Jan. 1, 1975 — Penn St. 41, Baylor 20Jan. 1, 1974 — Nebraska 19, Texas 3Jan. 1, 1973 — Texas 17, Alabama 13Jan. 1, 1972 — Penn St. 30, Texas 6Jan. 1, 1971 — Notre Dame 24, Texas 11Jan. 1, 1970 — Texas 21, Notre Dame 17Jan. 1, 1969 — Texas 36, Tennessee 13Jan. 1, 1968 — Texas A&M 20, Alabama 16Jan. 2, 1967 — Georgia 24, Southern Methodist 9Dec. 31, 1966 — LSU 14, Arkansas 7Jan. 1, 1966 — Arkansas 10, Nebraska 7Jan. 1, 1964 — Texas 28, Navy 6Jan. 1, 1963 — LSU 13, Texas 0Jan. 1, 1962 — Texas 12, Mississippi 7Jan. 2, 1961 — Duke 7, Arkansas 6Jan. 1, 1960 — Syracuse 23, Texas 14Jan. 1, 1959 — Air Force 0, Texas Christian 0Jan. 1, 1958 — Navy 20, Rice 7Jan. 1, 1957 — Texas Christian 28, Syracuse 27Jan. 2, 1956 — Mississippi 14, Texas Christian 13Jan. 1, 1955 — Georgia Tech 14, Arkansas 6Jan. 1, 1954 — Rice 28, Alabama 6Jan. 1, 1953 — Texas 16, Tennessee 0Jan. 1, 1952 — Kentucky 20, Texas Christian 7Jan. 1, 1951 — Tennessee 20, Texas 14Jan. 2, 1950 — Rice 27, North Carolina 13Jan. 1, 1949 — Southern Methodist 21, Oregon 13Jan. 1, 1948 — Penn St. 13, Southern Methodist 13Jan. 1, 1947 — Arkansas 0, LSU 0Jan. 1, 1946 — Texas 40, Missouri 27Jan. 1, 1945 — Oklahoma St. 34, Texas Christian 0Jan. 1, 1944 — Randolph Field, Texas 7Jan. 1, 1943 — Texas 14, Georgia Tech 7Jan. 1, 1942 — Alabama 29, Texas A&M 21Jan. 1, 1941 — Texas A&M 13, Fordham 12Jan. 1, 1940 — Clemson 6, Boston College 3Jan. 2, 1939 — St. Mary’s (Cal.) 20, Texas Tech 13Jan. 1, 1938 — Rice 28, Colorado 14Jan. 1, 1937 — Texas Christian 16, Marquette 6

TransactionsBASEBALLCan-Am LeagueNEW JERSEY JACKALS — Traded RHP Jorge Vasquez to Amarillo (AA) for OF Chris Valencia.FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueARIZONA CARDINALS — Re-signed C Philip Blake, WR Dan Buckner, LB Kenny Demens, C Tom Draheim, TE Darren Fells, RB Robert Hughes, S Orhian Johnson, DT Anthony McCloud, and LB Kenny Rowe to reserve/future contracts.CHICAGO BEARS — Signed QB Jay Cutler to a seven-year contract, and G Matt Slauson and CB Tim Jennings to four-year contracts.CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed RB Jamaine Cook and DB Brandon Hughes to reserve/future contracts.HOUSTON TEXANS — Named Bill O’Brien coach.Pro Football Hall of FamePFHOF — Named David Baker president and executive director.HOCKEYNational Hockey LeagueCOLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Activated F Nathan Horton, G Sergei Bobrovsky and D Dalton Prout from the injured list. Reassigned F Jonathan Marchessault, D Tim Erixon and G Mike McKenna to Springfi eld (AHL).DALLAS STARS — Recalled F Colton Sceviour from Texas (AHL).MINNESOTA WILD — Recalled G Darcy Kuemper from Iowa (AHL). Activated D Clayton Stoner from the injured reserve list. Placed F Zenon Konopka on waivers.American Hockey LeagueAHL — Suspended Bridgeport D Marc Cantin three games for an illegal check to the head of an opponent in a Dec. 31 game at Portland.ECHLECHL — Announced the earlier indefi nite suspension of Utah’s Kris Hogg will ammount to 14 games. Hogg was suspended on Dec. 24 for his actions in a Dec. 21 game at Alaska and will miss 11 more games. Fined Wheeling’s Ryley Miller an undisclosed amount for his actions in a Dec. 31 game against Reading.SOCCERMajor League SoccerFC DALLAS — Re-signed D Zach Loyd.COLLEGEOREGON STATE — Announced junior WR Brandin Cooks will enter the NFL draft.PENN STATE — Named Larry Johnson interim football coach.

SCOREBOARD•

kpcnews.com B3FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

Mathis fi nished the regular season with 65 tackles, matched his career high with eight forced fumbles — two of which led to safeties — and helped lead the Colts to their fi rst AFC South title without Peyton Manning.

Indy (11-5) will host Kansas City (11-5) on Saturday afternoon in a wild-card game.

Mathis, who was the sacks leader most of the season, even came up with two sacks in the regular-season fi nale to move past St. Louis’ Robert Quinn and join Freeney as the only Colts players to win a sacks title. Freeney took that honor in 2004.

MATHIS: Big game ahead for IndianapolisFROM PAGE B1

Page 12: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

Certainly, the Indiana Legislature should be aware of the recently released research report that warns that the state’s new sentencing guidelines will increase rather than decrease the state’s prison population.

At the same time, lawmakers should not take the conclusions of the report by an Atlanta consulting fi rm as absolute gospel, and keep in mind the overall intent of the law is to make criminal sentencing more appropriate and fair, rather than sending a huge number of people down a road that too often

leads to a life of crime.As pointed out by state Rep. Matt Pierce,

D-Bloomington, who worked several years helping to draft the state’s new criminal code and sentencing guidelines, the law doesn’t go into effect until July. And lawmakers went into the process with the understanding that it would need fi ne tuning, he says.

The redesigned code calls for charging and sentencing reductions for many non-violent crimes, a lot of them involving low-level drug activity, keeping violators out of the state prison system and thus permitting them the chance to eventually regain their place in the community. That’s a chance that quite often is lost forever once a violator has spent hard time in prison, something the old charging and sentencing system commanded.

Such violators would routinely be sentenced not to the state prison system but to supervised community alternatives, with a goal to change the direction of a life, not simply to mete out punishment.

At the same time, the practice of awarding inmates in the state prison system “good time,” a reduction in time served by half from the sentence handed down by the courts for inmates who remain on good behavior while incarcerated, would be toughened. Under the new law, sentences can be reduced by only 25 percent and some sentences for serious, violent felonies will be increased.

The latest report, which was presented last month to legislators, predicts that despite reductions in charging and sentencing for non-violent offenders, the state’s prison population will continue to rise, largely because of the tougher “good time” rules and longer sentences for violent offenders.

Pierce believes the report takes a worst case perspective. We hope he’s right, not as much because we’d all be paying more one way or the other to create more state prison space but because under the old law, society was too sharply divided into the criminal class and the rest of us. And that division is almost forced on us by the labels applied to those who’ve served time in prison and by the embittering and hardening experience of prison life itself.

We are not interested in coddling criminals. But we must recognize that few of us are born criminals — that it takes a lot of effort on society’s part as well as on the individual’s to turn somebody into a hard-case villain. Strict monitoring and intense follow-through for a lesser offense has the potential to redirect someone just starting down that path. That’s what is supposed to happen within a local context, with a plan built around intensive substance abuse and alcohol programs and careful monitoring of progress.

Monroe County already has a program that intervenes in such cases — the Monroe County Drug Treatment Court that’s been in place for more than a decade. The court process, with includes intense treatment and monitoring of participants, has cut in half the rate of recidi-vism for those who have gone through it versus similar defendants who have not.

Even if in the short term, prison populations were to increase because most recently convicted violent criminals get longer sentences and get less good time off with this new law, fewer might end up on that track in the long term.

All this is said with this caveat, and it’s a big one: None of it will work unless those intense intervention programs at the local level get adequate funding from the state. That’s the next and biggest hurdle for our state legislators to jump. If they fail, the plan will certainly fail. This is not an unfunded mandate that any county government could afford.

Bloomington) Herald-Times

Give new criminal code,

sentencing system chance

to work

What Others Say•

In chatting with her niece about bedtime stories, Sherry asked Jessica, 4, about her favorite Bible story. She said, “It’s the story of Noah and the Ark, with all the animals; like mice, elephants and snakes.” Sherry asked, “Aren’t elephants afraid of mice, and what if a snake tried to eat the mice? How do you think Noah handled those problems?” Jessica thought for a few seconds, then her face beamed as she answered, “Noah must have put the mice on TOP of the elephant.” — Sherry Griffi n of Canada

The grandparents were visiting with Cohen, 5. At supper (while Mom was tending to the wash), Cohen’s dad got him to tell about how he had been punished that afternoon. Cohen said, “I was running in the house, and my daddy spunk me.” Daddy Geron explained that he had told Cohen not to run in the house, so the spanking was deserved. Later, Mommy Lydia tried to get Cohen to tell the story again, since she had missed it earlier. Cohen said, “I believe that’s already been discussed.” — Susan Meadors (grandmother of Cohen) of Georgetown, Kentucky

Dawn’s cousin’s daughter Anna came out of her room on a recent Saturday wearing a striped shirt and a skirt with polka dots. Her mom told her, “Wow, you don’t match

at all.” Anna said. “That’s because I have adventures using my clothes!” — Dawn Keen of New Mexico

Dawson, 5, and his older brother, Caleb, were wrestling. Dawson yelled, “Nine plus nine is 18. Help me!” Dawson later explained, “My teacher said math facts will get you out of trouble.” — Quinn Ward of Noble County

Dawson likes a girl in his class. When his father asked him why he likes her, Dawson said,

“because she’s highly intelligent, never says no and is helpful.”

Jennifer, who works at a daycare, overheard Cindy, 4, tell another child that her dad sometimes says life isn’t fair. Jennifer told her that her dad is pretty smart. Cindy replied, “My dad IS smart because he works at work.” — Jennifer of Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Thank you to everyone who contributes stories. If you have a story to share please don’t put it off … call 347-0738 or email me. (I welcome photos by email, too.) My new email address is [email protected]. You can also mail stories to me at 816 Mott St., Kendallville, IN 46755, but please don’t mail me any photos (only use email for photos). Thank you in advance!

GRACE HOUSHOLDER is a columnist and editorial writer for this newspaper. Contact her at ghoush [email protected].

Little girl fi gures out possible plan for Noah

WASHINGTON — America’s capacity for optimism and hope has been boundless through much of our short history.

The tangible returns of hard work; the ordered liberty sustained through community consent; and opportu-nity honed over time to apply equally to all men and women — these were the currency of what we called the American Dream.

Essential to these achievements was courage. The Founding Fathers were above all courageous as they challenged a king, fought and died for freedom, and created a country from scratch with little more than mettle and intellectual vigor.

If this isn’t exceptional, then we have lost the meaning of words.

As we begin yet another new year, it is less easy to summon the dream. Instead of hope, a word that brought us a new president, we have entered an era of envy and doubt — envy for those who have more, and doubt that we can ever dig ourselves out of debilitating debt. What happens when even our debtors no longer want our dollars anymore, as China recently declared? A country that no longer wants our money likely doesn’t want our debt, either.

Depending on whose prognostications one believes,

we are either rebounding, by dribs and drabs, or perched on the precipice of economic

ruin. Let’s fi gure we’re somewhere in between, which falls short of inspiring. What is certain is that our economic standing in the world is damaged, our credit and credibility are weak and business confi dence is still in limbo.

Do weak economies and moral decay go hand in hand? We certainly seem poised to fi nd out.

From Miley Cyrus’ naked cavorting on a wrecking ball — well, one can at least admire her metaphoric succulence — to Anthony Weiner’s Twitter projections of His Very Own Self, we have lost all sense of decorum, that voluntary commitment to behavior that combines a willingness to consider others fi rst (at minimum keeping our clothes on), enforced through the exercise of self-restraint.

Note the term self-restraint. No one’s arguing for a new Puritanism, heaven forbid, but a pivot toward responsible adulthood would be helpful in re-creating a culture that doesn’t pinch our faces with revulsion. How do we expect children to navigate through this tawdry muck to become the sort of people most of us would like to know?

Part of the problem is our

sense of helplessness before the overwhelming power of technology, which has erased the physical boundaries of community. With so many liberated ids running around, it’s hard to fi nd a safe place to grow children. Figure it out we must. Does shame have a place in the American Dream? Why aren’t irresponsible parenting and behavior as abhorrent to society as, say, smoking?

I suppose what I’m lamenting is the loss of our national imperative to do and be better. Where once we fashioned ourselves according to best behaviors, we now accommo-date ourselves to the least. Take a look around a mall, if you can bear to enter. Valium recommended.

So, yep, we’re a mess, but, in the spirit of American optimism, not doomed. To preserve the dream, two resolutions come to mind: Denounce envy and resurrect the community standard.

Envy is the core emotion driving the current debate about income inequality and the notion that the poor are poor because the rich are rich. Nonsense. The economy is not, in fact, a pie. When one gets a bigger slice, others do not ipso facto get a smaller one. Instead of redistrib-uting wealth to spread misery around, the goal should be to make the poor richer, which means jobs, education and tax/regulation relief for employers.

Fundamental to all else is allegiance to community standards — the tacit agreement

among adults that our communi-ties be as physically secure and psychologically safe as possible for the well-being of children, who someday soon will be in charge. For guidance, the correct answer to nearly any question is another question: What is best for children?

Perhaps I am naive, but cynicism isn’t allowed today. And besides, I am in good company when I propose that America’s strength and well-being come from her goodness. Our lack of attention to our goodness, combined with our craving for instant gratifi ca-tion and near-toxic stimulation, has led us far afi eld from our Founders’ intentions. Don’t worry, my angel wings are in sorry shape.

We may have been created with a universal yearning for freedom, but we have learned through experience that freedom is earned rather than bestowed. To keep it, one must be vigilant.

All it takes is courage.

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

Nation has lost imperative to do better

Online Poll•

TheStarTHE NEWS SUN THE HERALD REPUBLICANB4 kpcnews.com FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

The redesigned code calls for charging and sentencing reductions for many non-violent crimes, a lot of them

involving low-level drug activity … But “good

time,” a reduction in time served while

incarcerated, would be toughened.

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Cheryl Myers of Auburn contributed this photo. She wrote, “Baby face … you’ve got the cutest little baby face.”

GRACE

HOUSHOLDER

How do we expect children to navigate through this

tawdry muck to become the sort of people most of us

would like to know?

Our new poll at kpcnews.com asks: How do you feel about Colorado’s legaliza-tion of marijuana?

The responses to choose from are listed below. Go to kpcnews.com to express your opinion and/or write a letter to the editor.

It is better than the costly war on drugs.

More teens will use marijuana.

It will provide new tax revenue for Colorado.

Drug addiction will sky rocket.

Our previous poll asked: What is the best Christmas/New Year’s food?

The responses were:Egg nog/special drinks —

6.5 percentHomemade cookies — 20

percentHam or roast with all the

trimmings — 43 percentHomemade fudge and

candies — 21.5 percentNut mixes and cheeses —

9 percentOnline polls are not

scientific but they provide an interesting snapshot of public opinion.

KATHLEEN

PARKER

Page 13: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

COMICS • TV LISTINGS kpcnews.com B5•

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

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 son suff ers from occasional nosebleeds. What’s the best way to stop a nosebleed?

DEAR READER: Many people suff er from nosebleeds. I tend to get them this time of year when the air is cold and dry, as it irritates the normally warm, moist surfaces inside the nose.

Most nosebleeds occur when a blood vessel in the nose’s soft cartilage leaks. If your son is like most people, his nosebleeds probably stop quickly. Sometimes, though, if the nosebleed is more severe, he may need medical attention.

A recent research study looked at treatment options for serious nosebleeds. It found that simpler and gentler options work just as well as more invasive eff orts. Th ey also have fewer negative side eff ects and cost less.

More invasive options include using electricity or heat to burn a bleeding blood vessel, surgery to tie off the bleeding blood vessel, or injecting a plug of

material into the artery to block its fl ow.

My colleague Dr. Mary Pickett at Harvard Medical School has reviewed medical studies of nosebleed treatments. She tells me that a low-tech option — a good,

strong pinch in the right place — will oft en do the trick. Specifi cally, she recommends the following technique to treat a

nosebleed at home:• Nod your head

forward. Th is prevents the fl ow of blood from going down the back of your throat.

• Place your thumb on one side of your nose and your forefi nger on the other side, up near the bridge. Slowly slide them down to the sudden “drop-off ” where the bones give way to cartilage.

• Pinch your thumb and forefi nger together, and hold.

• Pinch with enough pressure to press both sides of your nose fi rmly against the septum — the cartilage in the middle of your nose. Th e tissue on either side of the nose puts pressure on the bleeding blood vessel, which is usually on the septum.

• If the bleeding slows or stops, you are pinching in the right place. If not, start over, and pinch lower or

higher.• Hold the pinch for a

minimum of fi ve minutes before you release. You may need to repeat this again for another fi ve-minute session.

One fi nal thought, prompted by a patient I saw not long ago. Th e patient was in his mid-40s and had never had nosebleeds in the past. But he had suff ered from three of them in the past week, and they didn’t always stop with the technique I’ve just recommended. I diagnosed a blood condition (low platelets) that, fortunately, was treated and cured. Th is is rare, and blood tests are rarely necessary in people with nosebleeds. But even common problems can sometimes have more serious causes.

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

Simple solutions work well for nosebleeds

FRIDAY EVENING JANUARY 3, 2014 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30

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Crossword Puzzle•

On this date Jan. 3 • In 1959, Alaska became the 49th state. • In 1521, Martin Luther was excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church by Pope Leo X. • In 1938, the March of Dimes campaign to fi ght polio was established by President Roosevelt. • In 1967, Jack Ruby, the man who shot and killed accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, died in a Dallas hospital.

Almanac•

DEAR ABBY: I am a 27-year-old mom who has always been overweight. I have tried all sorts of diets and programs, and have lost a few pounds and then gained it all back and more. My boss has off ered to pay for me to have weight loss surgery. It is something I have always wanted, but could never aff ord. My family is behind me and supports my decision to have it done. My concern is that once others in my offi ce learn it was paid for by the boss, I’ll be treated diff erently. I’m concerned about possible catty comments. Th ey are gossips, and I hate being the center of attention in situations like that. Th e truth is bound to come out, so how can I comment on the gift I’ve been given? — SO GRATEFUL IN TEXAS DEAR SO GRATEFUL: You have a generous and empathetic boss who

obviously cares about you. Unless one of you reveals that she paid for your surgery, “the truth” is NOT bound to

come out. How your operation is paid for is nobody’s business. DEAR ABBY: My father recently told me his girlfriend is pregnant with twins. She is in her 40s and he is in his 50s.

She already has two kids who are quite a handful. Th ey both have low-paying jobs and I don’t think they can handle two more children. My father now is asking me to move in with him to help out. I’m afraid this is a

huge risk. If I tell him what my concerns are, I am sure he’ll think I’m heartless and stop talking to me. I don’t know what to do. Dad might not even be around to see those kids graduate from high school. What can I do? — TROUBLED SON IN COLORADO DEAR TROUBLED SON: Unless you’re willing to give up your freedom I don’t recommend doing what your father is proposing. He should not expect you to assume child care or fi nancial responsibility because his birth control method failed. Th at privilege rightfully belongs to him and his girlfriend. Tell your father no.

DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

DEAR ABBY

Jeanne Phillips

Wagging tongues inoffi ce can be silenced

ASK DOCTOR K.

Dr. Anthony

Komaroff

Page 14: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

B6 kpcnews.com FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

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.

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

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

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DIGITAL MEDIA ASSISTANT

If you’re interested in working within the publishing,

multimedia, or marketing industries, this job may interest

you.

We’re seeking qualifi ed applicants to become a part of one

of the region’s largest publishing and media companies.

Th e Digital Media Assistant will work with our online ed-

itors, creative directors, web designers, account reps, and

others to help us ensure quality, consistency, and profes-

sionalism in our marketing and digital services division in

a position that is one part tech support/one part creative.

On a typical week, the DMA will help troubleshoot issues

with digital products (like websites), work in a custom-

er/tech support service capacity to address issues, update

daily, monthly or weekly online ads, work with creative

team on web design/development projects and in vid-

eo production, assist online editors in story production,

writing, uploading, and social media strategies, assist in

miscellaneous digital tasks like domain name purchasing,

fi le transfers through FTP, and web editing.

Our Fort Wayne offi ce off ers a casual atmosphere with lots

of humor and teamwork in creating compelling digital

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Send resume to Nancy Sible, Human Resource Manager, KPC Media Group Inc. at [email protected]

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No phone calls please.

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

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THE NEWS SUN THE HERALDREPUBLICAN

StarThe

EMPLOYMENT

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■Accounting

ACCOUNTS PAYABLELocal RV Manufacturing

has an opening in ourAccounting Department

for an AccountsPayable person.

Essential JobFunctions and Skills

Required:• 2+ years of Payables

Experience• Proficient in Excel

•Experienced with ERPsystems

• Must possess excel-lent verbal and writtencommunication skills

• Excellent attendancerequired

• Must be able to workin a fast paced

environmentDuties and Tasks:

• Vendor maintenanceand resolution

• Payable reconcilia-tions

• Processing payables• Three way match

process• Assisting with check

runs

Please send resume to:Human Resources,

Open Range RVP. O. Box 291

Shipshewana, IN46565

or email to:bdumont@

openrangerv.com

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

Drivers

Class A CDLMinimum Two years

Experience.Good pay and

benefits.Home every night.

No touch freightfor our Butler,

Indiana locationor apply online at:Fabexpress.com

Call Jim800-621-1478

Ext. 131

EMPLOYMENT

● ❍ ● ❍ ●General

BRIDGEWATERDAIRY, LLC

Multiple Full TimeJob Opportunities:• Farm Manager,• Crop Production

Specialist,•General Maintenance

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● ❍ ● ❍ ●

General

HELP WANTEDPersons to do light

temp. delivery work, forthe Cash Bonanza Pro-gram. Good pay. Musthave your own trans-

portation, valid driver’slicense and know the

Steuben Co. area well.Must be neat and

dependable.Apply in person at:603 N. Wayne St.

Suite CAngola, IN

General

Looking forPart Time Work?

.The National

Association of StateDepts. of Agricultureis hiring year round,part time agricultural

interviewers. A farm background

is desirable.

Applicants must be atleast 18 yrs. of age,have a high school

diploma, a valid driverslicense, and

dependable transporta-tion. Basic computer

knowledge is required.Starting Salary is

$10.43 /hr. includingtraining time plus travel

reimbursement

Please send aresume to:

Carolyn Journay 5144 E. 600 N

Bryant, IN 47326or call:

260-997-6434

Fair EmploymentOpportunity

Employer

EMPLOYMENT

General

Small downtownAuburn firm seeking

LEGAL SECRETARY.Please apply to:

Ad # 662,PO Box 39,

Kendallville, IN 46755

or email your resumeto: resumes@

kpcmedia.com.

Must include ad number & job title

in e-mail.

General

WANTEDPersons to do temp.

telephone work for theCash Bonanza Pro-

gram. No exp. nec., noage limit. Must be ableto read well and speak

clearly. Two shifts avail-able; 9 am to 3 pm or4 pm to 9 pm. Hourly

compensation orcommission.

Apply in person to theOffice Manager at 603 N. Wayne St.

Suite CAngola, IN

■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■Healthcare

Happy New Year!From

Home NursingServices

Lisa is seeking CarePartners to assist ourclients in their homes.C.N.A/HomemakersHome Health Aides

1st shift or WeekendsApply on line

InHomeNursingServices.com(260) 927-9840

Lisa, Coordinator

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Your connection to

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EMPLOYMENT

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■Healthcare

HAPPY NEW YEAR!2014 New beginnings

Angel Corps is seekingCare Partners to assist

our clients in theirhomes.

One to one care.CNA/Home Health

Aides/Homemakers2nd shift or weekends

LaGrange CountySteuben County

Apply on lineCorpsOfAngels.com

(260) 463-2101Ask for

Kim, CoordinatorLaGrange, IN

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■

Healthcare

BrightStar is needing

Home HealthAides

in the Kendallville area.

Minimum 1 year exp.

Call 260-918-0932or apply at our websiteBrightstarcare.com

EMPLOYMENT

Healthcare

“FAMILY TAKINGCARE OF FAMILY

is Courtyard Health-care Center’s mission.It is our purpose thateveryone encounters

kindness, competence,and compassion upon

entering our facility.

While we accept appli-cations for all depart-ments 365 days/year,

we are particularlylooking for individualsseeking employment

for the following:

NursesQMAs

CNAs

Unit NursingManager-

RN required

Full & Part TimeAll Shifts

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please fill out anapplication online at

www.courtyardhcc.com

or apply in person at2400 College Ave.,Goshen, In 46528

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OFFICE CLEANINGImmediate Openings

P/T Positions inAlbion & Auburn, IN

Call Our Job Line @1-888-395-2020

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Dining and Dining and EntertainmentEntertainment

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THE NEWS SUN347-0400

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925-2611

StarSSSSSSSThe

THE HERALD REPUBLICAN

WASHINGTON (AP) — More than half of female Marines in boot camp can’t do three pullups, the minimum standard that was supposed to take effect with the new year, prompting the Marine Corps to delay the requirement, part of the process of equalizing physical standards to integrate women into combat jobs.

The delay rekindled sharp debate in the military on the question of whether women have the physical strength for some military jobs, as service branches move toward opening thousands of combat roles to them in 2016.

Although no new timetable has been set on the delayed physical requirement, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos wants training offi cials to “continue to gather data and ensure that female Marines are provided with the best opportunity to succeed,” Capt. Maureen Krebs, a Marine spokes-woman, said Thursday.

Starting with the new year, all female Marines were supposed to be able to do at least three pullups on their annual physical fi tness test and eight for a perfect score. The requirement was tested in 2013 on female recruits at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C., but only 45 percent of women met the minimum, Krebs said.

The Marines had hoped to institute the pullups on the belief that pullups require the muscular strength necessary to perform common military tasks such as scaling a wall, climbing up a rope or lifting and carrying heavy munitions.

Offi cials felt there wasn’t a medical risk to putting the new standard into effect as planned across the service, but that the risk of losing recruits and hurting retention of women already in the service was unaccept-ably high, she said.

Because the change is being put off, women will be able to choose which test of upper-body strength they

will be graded on in their annual physical fi tness test. Their choices:

—Pullups, with three the minimum. Three is also the minimum for male Marines, but they need 20 for a perfect rating.

—A fl exed-arm hang. The minimum is for 15 seconds; women get a perfect score if they last for 70 seconds. Men don’t do the hang in their test.

Offi cials said training for pullups can change a person’s strength, while training for the fl ex-arm hang does little to adapt muscular strength needed for military tasks

The delay on the standard could be another wrinkle in the plan to begin allowing women to serve in jobs previously closed to them such as infantry, armor and artillery units.

The military services are working to fi gure out how to move women into newly opened jobs and have been devising updated physical standards, training, education and other

programs for thousands of jobs they must open Jan. 1, 2016, said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Nathan Christensen, a Defense Department spokesman. They must open as many jobs to women as possible; if they decide to

keep some closed, they must explain why.

Military brass has said repeatedly that physical standards won’t be lowered to accommodate female applicants. Success for women in training for the

upcoming openings has come in fi ts and starts.

In fall 2012, only two female Marines volunteered for the 13-week infantry offi cers training course at Quantico, Va., and both failed to complete it.

Women struggle to meet Marines’ fi tness standards

AP

Female recruits listen to an instructor at the Marine Corps Training Depot on Parris Island, S.C., recently. More than half of female Marines in boot camp

can’t do three pull-ups, the minimum standard that was supposed to take effect with the new year. So the Corps is delaying the requirement.

Page 15: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

AT YOUR SERVICEBUSINESS &

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kpcnews.com B7FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

Sudoku Answers 1-03

LEGEND ofLEADERSHIP AWARD

Business Weekly

Honoring Irene WaltersBreakfast

Thursday, February 27 7:30 AMLandmark Centre

Join community leaders as they pay tribute to this legendary leader.

Master of Ceremonies: Ben Eisbart, Steel Dynamics

Featuring remarks by:Marilyn Moran-Townsend, CVC Communications

Larry Lee, Leepoxy PlasticsCheri Becker, Leadership Fort Wayne

Mike Cahill, Tower BankSharon Eisbart, Sharon Eisbart Corporate Art

Tickets $25 each • Table of eight $150Visit fwbusiness.com or call 260.426.2640 ext. 313

EMPLOYMENT

DriverDRIVER LOOK!-- Werespect Home Time!

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

DriversGORDON TRUCKINGCDL-A Truck Drivers.Up to $5,000 Sign-onBonus & $.56 CPM!

Solo & Teams. Dedi-cated/Home Weekly

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GordonTrucking.com

General1st & 2nd shift CNCMachine openings

Quake Manufacturingis looking for people to

setup/run CNC Ma-chines. Star/CitizenSwiss experience aplus. Hurco/Haas

experience also a plus.Great compensation,Holidays, vacation,

insurance, 401K.Email, fax, or mail

resume.paulquake@

quakemfg.comFax: 260-432-7868

RENTALS

RENTALS

APARTMENTRENTAL

260-349-0996260-349-09961815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 467551815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 46755

nelsonestates@mrdapartments.comwww.nelsonestatesapts.comwww.nelsonestatesapts.com

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Start the New Yearoff at Nelson Estate

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DEPOSITS STARTING AT

$99FREE HEAT!

AngolaONE BR APTS.

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

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

month. Call260-897-3188

HOMESFOR RENT

Kendallville4 BR, 1 1/2 bath, newly

remodeled, parking,$750/ mo 260-242-3868

Rome City3 BR ranch house w/at-tached gar. Oak ShoresAddition $500/mo + util.

+ dep. No Pets.260 854-4839

Submit your news & photos at

MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT

Barton LakeLakewood Mobile

Home Court2008 Liberty 16 x 80,2 BR, 2 BA, $575/mo.

No Pets.260 833-1081

Hamilton Lake

2 BR,Newly remodeled,Nice! One block to

lake, others available.$550/mo.

(260) 488-3163

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

574-202-2181

STORAGE

Corner 200 Storage$16 & up.

Open 7 days a week.Owner on premises

260-833-2856

HOMES

HOMES

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.

THE EXPERT@sk

HOMES FOR SALE

USDA 100% HOMELOANS--Not just 1st

time buyers! Low rates!Buy any home any-where. Academy

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Mortgage Banker.Indiana Corp StateLicense-10966 Corp

NMLS-3113 LOLicense-14894. EqualHousing Lender. (A)

STUFF

STUFF

MERCHANDISE

Do Stairs w/ Ease.Acorn Stairlift- Used very little.

$950.00(260)925-1267

FURNITURE

2ND BESTFURNITURE

Thurs & Fri 10-5, Sat 8-3

8451 N. S.R. 91 MILE N. OF 6 & 9

Brand NEW in plastic!QUEEN

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(260) 493-0805

SPORTING GOODS

GUN SHOW!!Lawrence, IN - January

4th & 5th, LawrenceArmory, E. 59th St.,Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3For information call

765-993-8942Buy! Sell! Trade!

WANTED TO BUY

TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before

starting. Walnut needed.

260 349-2685

PETS/ANIMALS

6 Week Old PuppiesBoxer/ Terrier mix

Puppies.Cute & Playful. $75

(260)593-2793

Adoptable Dogs•Pippid-3 yr old black

lab male•Brett-1 yr old pitt bull

male•Marley-4 yr old mix

female•Rupe-7 yr old yellow

lab male•Spunky-4 yr old mini

pin male•Aries- 3yr old pitt bull

female•Zulu-1 yr old lab/pitt

mix female•Ginger-3 yr old boxer

mix female•Annie-8 mnth old pitt-

bull female•Darla-1 yr old beagle

female•Chloe Jo- 5 yr oldboxer mix female

Humane Society ofNoble County, Inc.1305 Sherman St.

Kendallville, IN 46755260-347-2563

AKC Toy Poodle Pups,2 white males, 1 parti

black & white, 1 apricotfemale $200. & up.

Home raised.260-997-6906

WHEELS

WHEELS

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 $1000 forscrap cars. Used tires4 sale also. 318-2571

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

CARS

2004 Buick LeSabre98,000 mi. With or with-out wheelchair carrier.

$5,900 or $7,900.(260) 347-4866

1 & Only Place To Callto 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

WE BUILD POLEBARNS AND--Ga-

rages. We also re-roofand re-side old barns,garages and houses.Call 260-632-5983 or

260-255-7463. (A)

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Cantana black swordlike new $20.00 Albion

260 242-7094

Child’s table 24x30x21 H & 2 Chrome

Chairs. Needs work. $5.(260)925-1143

Computer Desk w/Hutch. 5’x5’x2’,

light wood $50.00.(260)925-3431

Delta 9 in. Bandsaw$50. Angola

260 243-0119

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Deluxe Pokerchip KitSolid Carrying Case

3 colors weighted. 2 Decks. $30.00

260 920-8676

Detecto physician’sweight scale. Accuratebalance model. $50.

260 925-3093

Indoor dog kennel41”L x 28”H x 25”W

$25.00260 894-1692

Pedal type exerciser;strengthens arms &legs $25.00 Auburn

260 925-0896

Pet carrier for smalldog or cat. $20.00

260 894-1692

Waterproof snow pantssz. mens small, Colum-bia brand; worn once.$30. 260 925-2672

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.

KPC Media Group Inc.kpcnews.com

Toll Free: 1-877-791-7877Email: [email protected]

Fax: 260-347-7282

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includes access to KPC’s website!

Go to kpcnews.com and click on Login Help at the top of the main page to get started or call customer service at 1-800-717-4679.DON’T MISS ANY OF THE

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CHECK OUT THE LATEST POSTS ON

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Page 16: The Herald Republican – January 3, 2014

B8 kpcnews.com FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014

1998 Toyota 4RunnerLimited 4x4

$5,995

Local Trade, One-Owner, V6, Sunroof, Leather, Automatic, All Power

2013 Ford TaurusSHO AWD

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DRULEY INVESTMENTS, INC.LOWEST MILES, LOWEST PRICES, OR BOTH!LOWEST MILES, LOWEST PRICES, OR BOTH!

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2004 CHEVROLET SILVERADO1500 Z71 CREW CAB 4X4

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2004 Dodge StratusSXT

$7,995

One-Owner, Automatic, Air, All Power,Alloy Wheels, 48,000 Miles

2009 Ford EdgeLimited

$18,995

One-Owner, Panoramic Roof, HeatedLeather, Power Liftgate, Chromes

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

2013 FORD FUSION S

$18,995

Local Trade, Automatic, Air, All Power,Sync, Warranty, 2,000 Miles

2013 Mazda 6sGrand Touring

$21,995

V6, Navigation, Rear Camera, Sunroof,Leather, Bose Audio, 10,000 Miles

2010 Chevrolet MalibuLS

$12,995

One-Owner, Automatic, Air, All Power,Factory Warranty, 45,000 Miles

2008 Saturn Aura XE

$12,995

V6, Sunroof, Leather, Heated Seats,Alloys, All Power, 62,000 Miles

2001 Chevrolet Cavalier Sedan

$3,995

Automatic, Air Conditioning, Anti-Lock Brakes, Cruise Control

2010 Mitsubishi GalantFE

$9,995

Automatic, Air, All Power, Side Airbags,Alloys, Warranty, 57,000 Miles

2007 Chevrolet HHRLT

$9,995

One-Owner, Power Seat, Automatic,Air, All Power, 58,000 Miles

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

2008 LINCOLN MKZ

$14,995

Leather Seats, Heated and Cooled Seats,All Power Features, 53,000 miles

2010 Dodge Avenger SXT

$10,995

One-Owner, Auto, Air, All Power,Side Airbags, Warranty, 56,000 Miles

2007 Chrysler Town & Country Touring

$10,995

Power Sliders & Liftgate, Full Stow‘N Go, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels

2006 Nissan Titan XEExt. Cab

$12,995

Local Trade, 5.6L V8, Automatic,Air, Tilt, Cruise, CD, 41,000 Miles

2011 Ford Escape Hybrid 4x4

$16,995

30 MPG, Power Seat, All Power Options, Alloys, Warranty, 66,000 Miles

2013 Ford F-150 XLT Crew Cab 4x4

$29,995

V8, 7350 GVWR Package, All Power,Factory Warranty, 15,000 Miles

2013 Ram 1500 SLT Quad Cab 4x4

$29,995

Big Horn Edition, Hemi V8, PowerSeat, 20” Chromes, 16,000 Miles

2013 Chevrolet Silverado1500 LT Crew Cab 4x4

$30,995

5.3L V8, Automatic, Air, All Power,Factory Warranty, 17,000 Miles

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

1999 HONDA ACCORDEX

$4,995

Local Trade, Great Condition, Sunroof,4 Cylinder, Auto, Air, All Power

1999 GMC Suburban1500 SLE 4x4

$8,995

3rd Seat, 5.7L V8, Power Seat, Running Boards, Tow Package, 78,000 Miles

2012 Ford Fiesta SE Hatchback

$11,995

5 Speed, Heated Seats, “Sync”, All Power, Cruise, Warranty, 12,000 Miles

2010 Dodge Ram 1500 ST Crew Cab 4x4

$20,995

One-Owner, V8, Auto, Air, All Power,Factory Warranty, 49,000 Miles

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

2006 FORD FUSIONSE

$8,995

Local Trade, Power Seat, Automatic, Air,All Power, Alloy Wheels

2005 Ford Five Hundred SEL AWD

$9,995

One-Owner, Power Seats, Alloy Wheels, ALL Power Options, 65,000 Miles

2006 Hummer H3 4x4

$11,995

Local Trade, Sunroof, Heated Leather, Chrome Wheels, Tow Package

2010 Dodge GrandCaravan SE

$12,995

One-Owner, Full Stow ‘N Go, QuadBuckets, All Power, Warranty

2007 Buick LucerneCX

$10,995

“3800” V6, Power Seat, Trac. Control, Side Airbags, Alloys, 69,000 Miles

2007 Chevrolet MalibuLS

$10,995

One-Owner, Auto, Air, Trac. Control, Side Airbags, ABS, 19,000 Miles

2012 Chevrolet Malibu2LT

$15,995

Sunroof, Heated Leather, RemoteStart, Chrome Wheels, Warranty

2001 Ford Focus SEWagon

$4,995

Local Trade, Automatic, Air, PowerWindows & Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys

2002 Ford TaurusSES

$6,995

One-Owner, 24V DOHC V6, Sunroof,Leather, Power Seat, Spoiler

2012 Ford Fusion SEL

$17,995

V6, Back-Up Camera, BLIS, Sunroof, Heated Leather, 25,000 Miles

See our entire inventory online at www.DruleyInvestmentsInc.com

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2005 Dodge CaravanSE

$8,995

One-Owner, V6, Auto, Air, All PowerOptions, Dual Sliders, 46,000 Miles

2004 Chevrolet MalibuMaxx LS

$8,995

3.5L V6, Sunroof, Leather Seats, PowerSeat, Alloys, Traction Control

2009 Pontiac G6 Sedan

$10,995

One-Owner, V6, Auto, Air, All Power,Spoiler, Alloys, 39,000 Miles

2006 Dodge GrandCaravan SE

$12,995

One-Owner, Stow N Go Rear Seat,Rear Air, All Power, 27,000 Miles

2005 Lincoln NavigatorUltimate 4x4

$12,995

DVD Player, Navigation, Power Liftgate, Sunroof, Heated/Cooled Leather

2012 Ford FusionSE

$14,995

One-Owner, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels,Factory Warranty, 27,000 Miles

2011 Ford Fusion SEL

$15,995

Back-Up Camera, BLIS, Sunroof,Heated Leather, Warranty, 32,000 Miles